November 23, 2024

McGaughey has championship in mind for Point of Entry

Last updated: 9/30/12 5:02 PM











Point of Entry is building a resume worthy of Eclipse Award consideration
(Jessie Holmes/EquiSport Photos)





Hall of Fame trainer Shug McGaughey has November 3 circled on his calendar as
Point of Entry will now target the Grade 1 Breeders’ Cup Turf at Santa Anita
after picking up his third straight Grade 1 victory in Saturday’s Joe Hirsch
Turf Classic Invitational.

McGaughey said he was concerned when the turf came up yielding on Saturday
but was impressed with how Point of Entry coped with the off going and other
adversity in his 1 3/4-length win over European invader Treasure Beach.

“I did think (Treasure Beach) was the horse to beat when the turf came up
that way,” McGaughey said. “But (the turf) will be hard out there (in
California). All things being equal, I’m looking forward to going. Five weeks in
between (starts), he’ll be in good form after running on that soft ground. He’s
a pretty durable horse.

“I think he won yesterday not on his best race with the pace scenario and the
way the turf was. The tactics of Treasure Beach, I think, fooled us a little
bit. That horse opened up around the turn and floated us way out there. He was
able to overcome all of that and still win pretty impressively, I thought.”

A win in the Breeders’ Cup Turf would make Point of Entry, a Phipps Stable
homebred who owns additional Grade 1 wins in this year’s Man o’ War and Sword
Dancer Invitational, a strong contender for champion turf male and Horse of the
Year, McGaughey said.

“I think that should be looked at,” McGaughey said. “We’ll see how he does in
the Breeders’ Cup, but I think with his winning streak and how dominant he has
been in some of his races that an Eclipse Award should be in his sight if he
makes a decent effort out there.”



McGaughey said he has no definite plans for when he’ll send Point of Entry to
Santa Anita, but mentioned that in the past he has given his turf horses a
workout over that venue’s turf course prior to the Breeders’ Cup.

“The two times I’ve had some luck out there, both horses had worked,”
McGaughey said. “Lure, a long time ago, worked over the turf course (before he
won the 1993 Breeders’ Cup Mile), and Dancing Forever, who finished third (in
the 2008 Breeders’ Cup Turf), had worked over the course, so that’s going to be
in my mind.”

McGaughey also noted that he will regroup with both Hymn Book, eighth in the
Grade 1 Jockey Club Gold Cup Invitational, and Hit It Rich, seventh in the Grade
1 Flower Bowl Invitational.

“I was disappointed in (Hymn Book’s) effort,” said McGaughey, who trains both
runners for Stuart S. Janney III. “I thought he was coming into the race really
well. I thought he would like the track. Maybe it was heavier than I thought it
was. Maybe I need to drop him down a notch or two. He seems to be OK. I’ll sort
of wait and see if there will be some sort of two-turn race at Aqueduct and see
what he does there.

“I don’t think (Hit It Rich) handled the turf at all. None of the American
horses did, I guess, because European horses were 1-2-3-4. With Point of Entry,
I didn’t know if he would like it or not like it, but with Hit It Rich I felt
like she might not like it with her running style.

“Javier (Castellano) said she was running along, was very relaxed and going
along fine, but when he said, ‘Let’s go on’ along the backside and maybe open up
a little bit and maybe make those other horses commit some, she didn’t open up.
I realize she was jumping into another league, so if she comes out of the race
fine I’ll just point her for the Long Island (Grade 3 on November 10 at
Aqueduct, which she won last year).”



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