Last year’s Del Mar Mile served as a breakthrough performance for Obviously,
On Sunday, Obviously didn’t go quite as fast, but he also didn’t cut it
Obviously, who has learned how to ration his speed with maturity, posted
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Rounding the far turn, He Be Fire N Ice made a nifty inside move into
contention before angling out, and Silentio loomed on the outside. Their
presence forced Obviously to quicken, and he did. After reaching the
seven-furlong mark in 1:21, Obviously kept up his ferocious pace to keep them at
bay. He zipped the firm-turf mile in 1:32.64, .54 off his record, and returned
$2.60 to win.
“He came away from there a little slow, but that’s not unusual for him,”
Talamo said. “What made it look so noticeable was that the five (El Commodore)
just busted out of there. But I took him wide and let him roll. I look now and
see that he went the half in :46 and 4, and I can’t believe it. That’s as slow
as he’s ever gone.
“But he ran hard all the way. I got after him late, but I usually do. He’s
the kind of horse that if he gets out there on his own, he starts waiting on
horses. When they come to him, he’ll dig in and fight. But you’ve got to stay
after him.
“This is the third Del Mar Mile in a row for me, so you know I like this
race. And Mike (trainer Mike Mitchell) and these owners (Anthony Fanticola and
Joseph Scardino) have been so good to me for so long; especially with a horse
like this. I owe them a lot.”
“He didn’t open up like he usually does,” Mitchell said. “He didn’t have that
(winning) margin that he usually has. But he fired and he dug in when (He Be
Fire N Ice) came at him. It was a real good horse race. I don’t tell Joe (Talamo)
how to ride him, it’s totally up to him, and I think he found out something
today.”
Obviously had a half-length to spare over He Be Fire N Ice, with Silentio
another neck away in third. The winner was spotting eight pounds to He Be Fire N
Ice and six to Silentio. El Commodore and Tigah trailed.
“That wire just came too soon,” said Victor Espinoza, who rode He Be Fire N
Ice. “I couldn’t get it to be a little farther along. I saved all the ground I
could and then made my run. I thought that was the best way. But that winner
runs in 1:32 (and change). What are you going to do with a horse like that?”
Silentio’s jockey, Rafael Bejarano, was hoping for a different pace scenario.
“I thought that 5 horse (El Commodore) was going to put more pressure on the
winner,” Bejarano said. “But after the beginning, he didn’t. I needed some help
that way and I didn’t get it.”
After just missing in his American debut in a downhill sprint at Santa Anita,
Mitchell subsequently stretched him out to a mile for an optional claimer at
Reverting to a turf sprint for his comeback in the April 20 San Simeon at
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Mitchell indicated that Obviously would follow the same path as last year,
using the Arroyo Seco as a stepping stone to the November 2 Breeders’ Cup Mile
at Santa Anita.
Bred by Deidre Cogan in Ireland, Obviously was a bargain $2,578 yearling
purchase at Goffs February. The son of sprint supremo Choisir gets some stamina
from his dam, Leala, an unraced daughter of Montjeu. His second dam, the unraced
Silver Hawk mare Silver Bubble, is a full sister to multiple Grade 1 star
Hawkster, who set a new world record of 2:22 4/5 for 1 1/2 miles on turf; U.A.E.
highweight older stayer Lightning Arrow; Group 1-placed French stakes victor
Silver Kite; and French Group 3 queen Silver Lane, whose progeny include
Japanese Grade 1 scorers Black Hawk and Pink Cameo.
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