November 24, 2024

Summer Bird schools in advance of Jockey Club

Last updated: 9/30/09 6:19 PM










Summer Bird schooled in the paddock
(Photo courtesy of NYRA)

After standing in the gate, Belmont S. (G1) and Travers S. (G1)
winner SUMMER BIRD (Birdstone) opened up through the stretch during his
gallop at Belmont Park Wednesday morning, and schooled between races in
the afternoon as trainer Tim Ice put the finishing touches on the colt’s
preparations for Saturday’s $750,000 Jockey Club Gold Cup Invitational
(G1).

The 1 1/4-mile Jockey Club Gold Cup, the centerpiece of “Super
Saturday,” will be the chestnut colt’s first meeting with older horses,
among them Whitney H. (G1) and Woodward S. (G1) runner-up MACHO AGAIN
(Macho Uno) and Suburban H. (G2) winner DRY MARTINI (Slew Gin Fizz).

“I think he’s up to it,” Ice said. “He’s had seven races, and now is
as good a time as any to face them. He looked super this morning, and he
is doing excellent.”

QUALITY ROAD (Elusive Quality), who set track records in two of his
past three races and finished third to Summer Bird in the Travers, also
appear to be flourishing in the days leading up to the Jockey Club Gold
Cup.

“He’s always been kind of a push-button horse, but we’re really
pleased with the way he’s training,” trainer Todd Pletcher said. “He’s
traveling well and doing everything you’d like to see a horse do leading
up to a big race.”

Although Quality Road is based at Belmont Park, the Jockey Club Gold Cup will
be his first race over the oval.

“He’s run well everywhere he’s raced — Aqueduct, Gulfstream Park, and
Saratoga — so I don’t think it’s going to make a difference one way or
another,” Pletcher said. “We’re hoping for fast conditions, and we’re ready to
go.”

Pletcher added that both CAPTAIN’S LOVER (SAf) (Captain Al) and UNBRIDLED
BELLE (Broken Vow) will be in the $600,000 Beldame S. (G1).

“We like the way (Captain’s Lover) breezed on dirt and like the way she came
out of it,” he said. “The options were to keep her here or ship to Keeneland and
run on a synthetic surface, so we figured we’d take what’s in front of us.”

Pletcher will also be saddling Michael Tabor’s MUNNINGS (Speightstown) on
Saturday in the $400,000 Vosburgh S. (G1). The three-year-old has been no worse
than third in five starts this year, most recently finishing third as the
favorite in the King’s Bishop S. (G1).

“He’s been very consistent all year,” Pletcher said. “He ran hard in the
King’s Bishop and Haskell (Invitational [G1]) on a surface he really didn’t care
for. We’re hoping for him that it doesn’t rain.”

Following a victory this year in the Stephen Foster H. (G1) at Churchill
Downs and an epic confrontation with Rachel Alexandra (Medaglia d’Oro) in the
Woodward at Saratoga, Macho Again has proven to be one of the top handicap
runners in the country.

“He’s a top horse, championship caliber,” trainer Dallas Stewart said. “We
plan to ship in tomorrow (Thursday). We’re looking forward to running.”

After a head loss to Rachel Alexandra in a thrilling Woodward, Stewart knows
how his four-year-old stacks up against the cream of the three-year-old
division, but he did not want to make any predictions about facing Quality Road
and Summer Bird.

“We’ll just see,” said Stewart, who has worked Macho Again just once since
the Woodward. “You’re talking about the Belmont and Travers winner.”

ASIATIC BOY (Arg) (Not for Sale) will be making his fourth American start in
the Jockey Club Gold Cup, having finished second in the Stephen Foster and the
Suburban H. (G2) and fourth to Rachel Alexandra in the Woodward in his most
recent start.

“He’s a neat horse, a nice horse,” trainer Kiaran McLaughlin said of the
six-year-old. “The weights have not been in his favor the last couple of races,
and he’s been a notch below those who have been beating him. But he’s deserving
of a chance.”

McLaughlin had considered entering Grade 3 winner ETCHED (Forestry) in the
race as well but elected to send him to the Meadowlands Cup (G2) on October 16
instead. The trainer added that stakes victor KEEP LAUGHING (Distorted Humor),
seventh in the Forego S. (G1), remained possible for the Vosburgh.

“We’ll see how the entries go tomorrow,” McLaughlin said.