December 25, 2024

Longshot Si Sage captures Last Tycoon at 42-1

Last updated: 4/25/15 8:47 PM











Si Sage ran away with the
Last Tycoon to earn his first stakes score

(Benoit Photos)





Si Sage (Sageburg) tracked in second throughout Saturday’s $100,750
Last
Tycoon S. (G3)
at Santa Anita Park, but was in front when it really mattered
— at the wire.

With jockey Elvis Trujillo aboard and sporting blinkers for the first time, the Darrell Vienna trainee settled just
behind the pacesetting Joes Blazing Aaron (Graeme Hall) as that one led the
field past the grandstand for the first time and through the backstretch in
fractions of :23 4/5, :48 1/5, 1:13 and 1:37 4/5. Si Sage began his run rounding
the final turn, ranging up to the longtime leader’s outside before easily
cruising on by. The five-year-old bay opened up in the lane to be 3 1/4 lengths clear on the
wire.

“He breezed with blinkers
and he breezed very well so they wanted to keep them on,” Trujillo explained. “He’s a very nice horse.
He’s from France so I think he’s used to the softer turf.

“I rode him the time before his last race and I told
Darrell Vienna that I thought he needed blinkers. He said we’ll wait, race him
without and then work him with the blinkers and see how it goes. He worked with
them and he worked so good. I knew he could win.



“Darrell told me that ‘You know the horse, you work him, it’s your decision
where to place him in the race.’ We sat behind and he was ready to go in the
stretch.”

“I think the blinkers made
a difference on this horse,” Vienna agreed. “Elvis had been working him, he said maybe blinkers
would help and I think he was right. I trained him once in them before but I
didn’t think he liked them. He worked very well in his last work with the
blinkers. Frankly, I was hoping they would make a difference for him.

“I wasn’t actually looking at the fractions, I was watching him, and frankly
I was never worried. I thought he was always running pretty easily. I should say
I was a little worried early when he was tugging, but after he settled on the
turn, I felt pretty good, and then I could see he wasn’t asking him at all, and
then he did.”

Campaigned by Red Baron’s Barn LLC, Rancho Temescal and Vayaconsuerte LLC, Si
Sage completed 1 1/4 miles over the firm turf in 2:02 to claim his first stakes
victory in style. He paid $87.60 to his faithful, but few, supporters as the
42-1 longest shot in the eight-horse field.

Ganesh (Sulamani) was the winner of a three-way photo for second, getting his
nose in front at just the right moment over Abbey Vale (Moss Vale), who in turn
had a head in front of fourth-place finisher Power Foot (Powerscourt).

Not only was Si Sage earning his first stakes win in the Last Tycoon, it was
also his first U.S. victory from 11 starts. Beginning his career in his native
France, the bay’s best black-type effort overseas came as second in the 2013
Prix du Pont-Neuf in his final start. He shipped stateside and proceeded to be
fifth in both the Oceanside S. and La Jolla H. (G2) before a 10th-place finish
in the Del Mar Derby (G2), all at Del Mar.

Wrapping up his sophomore campaign with a dead-heat, short-neck third in the
Sir Beaufort S. (G2), Si Sage produced his best 2014 effort when opening the
season with a second in the San Marcos S. (G2). He was never close to hitting
the board in his remaining four starts last year and thus far in 2015 has been
fourth against allowance/optional claiming company and sixth in the Thunder Road
S.

Saturday’s victory in the Last Tycoon bumped Si Sage’s career earnings to
$255,494 and his line now stands at 23-4-6-2.

Bred in France by Ecurie D., the five-year-old bay is out of San Rien (Poliglote)
and counts as his fourth dam classic-placed Group 3 heroine Boreale (Bellypha).
His female family also includes French champion Princesse Lida (Nijinsky II) and
English champion *Carlemont as well as Group 1 winners Corre Caminos (Montjeu)
and Recital (Montjeu).




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