November 19, 2024

Rebel candidates post works; The Factor could join the cast

Last updated: 3/6/11 9:24 PM











Archarcharch will seek his
second straight graded win in the Rebel

(Coady Photography)

At Oaklawn Park on Sunday, a quartet of three-year-olds posted works in
preparation for the March 19 Rebel S. (G2) — ARCHARCHARCH (Arch), winner of the
February 21 Southwest S. (G3); ELITE ALEX (Afleet Alex), a wide-trip third in
the Southwest; CALEB’S POSSE (Posse), winner of the January 17 Smarty Jones S.;
and ALTERNATION (Distorted Humor), a two-time allowance winner this meet.

Archarcharch turned in what trainer Jinks Fires described as the colt’s best
workout since arriving in Arkansas with a six-furlong breeze in 1:13 2/5 under
regular jockey Jon Court.

“I’m very pleased with the work,” Fires said. “Jon was really happy with it
and said it felt like he’s getting better. I told him, ‘I sure hope he is.'”

Archarcharch came onto the fast track during the busy rush after the
renovation break around 9 a.m. (CST) on a chilly morning. Court dropped him into
the drill at the five-furlong pole and cut out fractions of :24 2/5 and :49 4/5
according to Oaklawn’s clockers. Court was instructed to work the colt past the
wire and around the clubhouse turn, galloping out seven furlongs in 1:26 3/5.




“I sent him around both turns because I want him to get used to it and I
think some horses learn where the wire is,” Fires said. “They learn that when
the jockey pops up at the wire, they’re done. Then they start waiting for it.”

Moments earlier, Elite Alex set off on a more elaborate piece of track work
involving his regular jockey Calvin Borel and two pace-setting workmates. The
Tim Ritchey trainee settled three or four lengths behind two other Afleet Alex
sons, Alex’s Vision and Will’s Afleet.










Calvin Borel is comparing Elite Alex
to 2007 Derby winner Street Sense

(Coady Photography)

Borel guided his mount through fractions of :24 and :47 3/5, clicking his
first three furlongs in tight 12-second clips. Borel angled Elite Alex three
wide coming off the turn, notable in that the colt was nearly seven-wide turning
for home in the Southwest.

The colt easily caught the workmates in hand, then spurted away from them in
a matter of yards after a quick cross from Borel, reaching the wire more than
two lengths clear, getting five furlongs in :59 3/5. They poured it on,
galloping to the turn and getting the bullet six-furlong time of 1:12 2/5, best
of seven works at the distance.

Will’s Afleet and Alex’s Vision were both credited with five-furlong times of
1:01.

“That was very awesome,” Borel said. “He’s just hitting everything right.
He’s such a big horse, I think he’s only going to get better the farther we go.
He’s going to love the big sweeping turns at Churchill.

“He really reminds me of (2007 Kentucky Derby [G1] winner) Street Sense. I
think that’s why I love him so much. I wouldn’t trade places with anybody for
nothing right now.”

Ritchey is aware of Borel’s enthusiasm, and as the man who trained Afleet
Alex, he’s not completely afraid of the comparisons with some of the leading
stars of the last decade.

“Now, we’ll see if he can live up to the hype,” Ritchey said. “If things had
been different, he could be undefeated right now. He stumbled coming out of the
gate in his first race (here) and then had a bad trip (in the Southwest). That’s
just horse racing.”

Ritchey also said he gave no instructions to Borel about how to engage the
lead runners.

“I left all that up to him,” he said. “The first work he came up the rail.
The last work he went between. This time he went around them. We know he can do
all three now, and at least it wasn’t seven wide like his race.”










Alternation will make his
stakes bow in the Rebel

(Coady Photography)

Bracketing those two workouts were the moves by the Donnie Von Hemel pair of
Alternation, who beat Elite Alex in an allowance race January 15, and Caleb’s
Posse, still “angry” according to his jockey Eddie Razo Jr., over the horrible
trip they got in the Southwest.

Von Hemel sent Alternation out under jockey Luis Quinonez at 7:30 a.m., and
they went in company with fellow Pin Oak Stable homebred Pulpitarian (Pulpit).
Quinonez kept his mount as many as seven lengths behind the target, but similar
to his two Oaklawn allowance victories, uncoiled Alternation’s long stride,
guided him through a hole Pulpitarian left by design along the rail, and
finished well clear at the wire.

Alternation was credited with the bullet five-furlong move of :59 4/5,
fastest of 47 trials at the trip. Pulpitarian earned a 1:01.

“It’s probably going to be a big field he sees next time,” Von Hemel said.
“We wanted to make sure he could come through there like that, and Luis said he
handled it nicely.”




Caleb’s Posse was part of Von Hemel’s second set after the break, and he was
a “little more relaxed” than his stablemate two hours earlier.

Razo started the drill slowly, with the first quarter in :25, and kept the
homebred largely under wraps until the wire. He was clocked going five furlongs
in 1:02 1/5, but Von Hemel and Razo were excited by the way he reacted past the
wire.




“Right at the wire, Eddie asked him to pick it up,” Von Hemel said. “He dug
right back in and was telling him he really wanted to go some more. That’s just
what we needed to see.”

“He was on the muscle,” Razo said. “He always works good, but today he just
felt more solid. He’s getting better every time. I think next time he’s going to
be really tough.”

In other Rebel news, trainer Bob Baffert told Daily Racing Form that
THE FACTOR (War Front) is now likely to ship in from Southern California for the
1 1/16-mile test, which would mark his two-turn debut.

“If he works well next week, and I’m happy with him, we’ll go to the Rebel,”
Baffert said Sunday. “If I’m not happy, we’ll go to the next one. That’s my
plan.”

A track record-setting winner of a six-furlong maiden at Santa Anita on
December 26, The Factor captured the seven-furlong San Vicente S. (G2) last time
out on February 20.

The highly-regarded gray returned to the worktab Saturday, scorching six
furlongs in a bullet 1:10 3/5 at Santa Anita. If The Factor doesn’t end up going
to Oaklawn for the Rebel, his alternative engagement is the March 27 Sunland
Park Derby (G3).