December 22, 2024

Derby contenders out in force Sunday

Last updated: 5/1/05 9:57 PM












Bellamy Road is but one of Zito’s five Derby entrants
(Michael J. Marten/Horsephotos.com)

Eight horses with Kentucky Derby (G1) aspirations took to the track on Sunday
to prepare for their date with destiny on May 7. Trainer Nick Zito led the pack,
sending out three of his five Derby runners in five-furlong drills.

BELLAMY ROAD (Concerto), sensational winner of the Wood Memorial (G1), led
the trio to the track, getting five-eighths in 1:00 2/5. NOBLE CAUSEWAY (Giant’s
Causeway) followed, working in company with Capac (Deputy Minister) to post five
furlongs in 1:00. HIGH FLY (Atticus) finished out the trifecta, going five
panels in 1:00 2/5 in company with Last Samurai (Pulpit). Maxine Correa was
aboard all three colts.

“With Bellamy Road, I thought Maxine did a great job,” Zito said afterward.
“You could see he was even all the way around, finished up good and he looked
very relaxed doing it. What we try to do in our program, since we are training
horses, especially the last 15 years, is basically try to get all of our horses
to relax. I think our stable now, people know that we try to get our horses to
go a mile and a quarter, no matter what race it is. With Bellamy Road, there has
been so much talk that he won’t rate and this and that. At least this last work
and the work before shows us some indication that he will.”

Bellamy Road could go favored in the Derby off his 17 1/2-length win in the
Wood. His race prior to that April 9 event also came as a double-digit win.

High Fly and Noble Causeway were the one-two finishers, respectively, in the
Florida Derby (G1) in their last one, but the former holds a slight advantage in
that he has lost only one start in his six-race career. His work on Sunday was
made slightly more interesting when another horse
joined in with High Fly and working partner Last Samurai.



“I thought he went extremely well,” Zito said. “I think the main thing with
him was, whoever that horse was (that dropped in at the eighth pole) may be a
blessing, because that last eighth, he really got himself going when he saw that
horse.

“On Noble Causeway, I thought he worked very well. I used a horse with him
named Capac. He’s not Ghostzapper (Awesome Again), so what happened was Capac
obviously could not keep up with Noble Causeway. We needed a little zip in him,
because in the Derby, as we always say, these guys play for real and you’ve got
to get to a spot sometimes and Gary (Stevens) is going to have to get to a spot, so
that worked really well. We know he will go a mile and a quarter. We know he is
royally bred. He went well.”

Zito will be going for his third Derby on Saturday and likes his chances.

“If we don’t get number three now, then I will have to have Secretariat
himself,” he added. “No question. I can’t ask the Man upstairs to give me a
better shot at this.”

His other two Derby contenders, SUN KING (Charismatic) and ANDROMEDA’S HERO
(Fusaichi Pegasus), each went to the track for a gallop on Sunday. The former
went 1 1/2 miles at Churchill, while Andromeda’s Hero, who doesn’t have a rider
confirmed for the Derby yet, galloped at Keeneland.











Bandini is one of two Fusaichi Pegasus colts in the Derby
(Joseph DiOrio/Horsephotos.com)

Trainer Todd Pletcher sent out two of his three Derby entrants in their final
drills before the Run for the Roses. BANDINI (Fusaichi Pegasus) worked in
company with Lion Tamer (Will’s Way), who is scheduled to go in the Churchill
Downs H. (G2) on the Derby undercard, getting five-eighths in 1:00 4/5 while his
stablemate went the same distance in 1:00 1/5.

“He’s getting physically stronger and more mature mentally all the time,”
Pletcher said of Bandini, whose sire won the 2000 Derby. “He’s a late foal
(May), and he’s by Fusaichi Pegasus, so we tried to follow the same map as his
sire, in terms of when he made his first start, and his schedule after that.”

Bandini made his career debut a month earlier than his sire, going in
November, but didn’t do half as well, running sixth by double digits after a
series of mishaps prior to the race.

“In the paddock, he kicked his jockey (Jamie Spencer) in the chest, so we had
to unsaddle him and get a new rider,” Pletcher explained. “Then he got off bad
and ran greenly. But it was a learning experience. He had to run behind horses
and get dirt in his face, and it was a good lesson. He was ready for his next
start and ran the way we thought he could.”

Bandini captured his next start in January at Gulfstream Park, taking a
seven-furlong maiden special weight by 4 1/4 lengths. He followed that up with a
nine-length allowance win, a second in the Fountain of Youth S. (G2) and a
six-length decision most recently in the Blue Grass S. (G1). Jockey John
Velazquez was aboard for the work and has the call for the Derby.

FLOWER ALLEY (Distorted Humor) had a bit more luck in his career bow for
Pletcher, running third, and also broke his maiden in his next start. The
lightly raced chestnut scored in the Lane’s End S. (G2) in only his third career
start, then finished second in the Arkansas Derby (G2) in his final prep for the
Derby. On Sunday, he made his final drill for the classic event under exercise
rider Michelle Nihei while wearing blinkers for the first time, breezing five
furlongs in 1:00 3/5 while in company with champion Ashado (Saint Ballado), who
is possible for the Louisville Breeders’ Cup H. (G2) on Friday and got the same
distance in 1:00 1/5.



“I wanted him to keep his focus,” Pletcher said of his charge. “This morning,
in fact, he was a little too focused when he started his work, but after about a
hundred yards he settled down and kept right up with Ashado.”











Coin Silver could become the first horse since Charismatic to record a Lexington-Derby double
(Michael J. Marten/Horsephotos.com)

Flower Alley will keep the blinkers for the Derby and have jockey Jorge
Chavez in the saddle. Pletcher’s other Derby entrant, recent Lexington S. (G2)
hero COIN SILVER (Anees), is scheduled to breeze on Monday at Churchill.

Multiple stakes hero GOING WILD (Golden Missile) put in his final major work
on Sunday for the Derby, going five furlongs in :59 3/5, the co-fastest of 58
works at the distance for the day. The D. Wayne Lukas trainee put up fractions
of :11 4/5, :23 3/5, :35 1/5 and :47 under exercise rider Stacy Prior and
galloped out six furlongs in 1:14.

“He was full of himself this morning,” Lukas said. “He was tough to pull up.
It was great to see him get over this surface well once again. I have been high
on him all along. He’s got show us something in the next one — that’s for sure
— and I know it’s easy to knock him. But I’ve been around along time to know
these horses, and I just can’t believe what I saw out of him in those last two
starts.”

Going Wild made his sophomore debut in the San Miguel S. in January, scoring
by a nose, then captured the Sham S. by a length in his next one. That was his
last win, and the dark bay ran seventh and fifth, respectively, by double digits
in the Wood Memorial and Lexington S. in his prior two. Lukas named Jose
Valdivia Jr., who was aboard for Going Wild’s maiden victory, to ride the colt
in the Derby. The Hall of Fame conditioner’s second Derby horse, CONSOLIDATOR
(Storm Cat), galloped 1 5/8 miles just after Churchill opened for training at 6
a.m. (EDT)

SPANISH CHESTNUT (Horse Chestnut [SAf]) breezed five furlongs in 1:00 2/5 at
Churchill in his first work on the track for trainer Patrick Biancone. The
chestnut colt is the second entrant in the Derby for his owners, Michael Tabor
and Derrick Smith, who also own Bandini.



“The owners are very happy to have two horses in the race,” Biancone said.
“The Derby is very different from other stakes races. A lot of things can
happen. From what I have seen, 10 horses lose the race in the paddock, five lose
the race on the way to the track, and the other five stay the distance. The more
horses you have in this race, the better.”

GIACOMO (Holy Bull) will be seeking only his second career victory in the
Derby after breaking his maiden in October by 10 lengths. Since then, the John
Shirreffs-trained gray has finished second in the Hollywood Futurity (G1) and San Felipe S. (G2)
as well as third in the Sham. On Sunday, Giacomo worked six furlongs
on the fast track at Hollywood Park in a bullet 1:11 4/5 and made his final prep
for the Derby a close fourth in the Santa Anita
Derby (G1).

With exercise rider Sabina Seibel in the irons, the sophomore worked in
company with Bullistic (Holy Bull), breaking about a length behind but finishing
about 1 1/2 lengths in front at the wire.

“They went off a little keen, but then settled and went steady the rest of the
way. It was exactly what I wanted,” said Shirreffs, who is expected in
Louisville, Kentucky, on Tuesday, one day before his charge is due to arrive.

Mike Smith, who has been aboard for all of Giacomo’s starts, will retain the
mount for the Derby.

In other Kentucky Derby news:

Multiple Grade 1 winner AFLEET ALEX (Northern Afleet) made his usual two
trips to the track on Sunday, making a first appearance on Churchill Downs’ dirt
at 6:05 a.m. to jog two miles. He returned after the renovation break and
also visited the paddock and gate.

“The second time out, he went to the paddock for two or three minutes, then
jogged to the half-mile pole, galloped a mile, went to the gate, jogged to the
half-mile pole and then galloped another mile,” trainer Tim Ritchey said. “He is
the kind of horse that enjoys being out. We started jogging two miles and then
jogging another two miles (after the break) to get him used to it and he just
thrived.”

A loose horse on the track caused Ritchey to take Afleet Alex off at the
clocker’s stand by the five-eighths gap instead of the six-furlong gap.











Buzzard’s Bay will be going for his third Derby on Saturday
(Michael J. Marten/Horsephotos.com)

BUZZARDS BAY (Marco Bay), who surprised at 30-1 in the Santa Anita Derby to
earn his chance at Derby glory, jogged a mile at Santa Anita before galloping 
1 1/2 miles for trainer Jeff Mullins. The chestnut colt, who is set to
arrive in Louisville Wednesday, is scheduled to breeze six furlongs at 8 a.m.
(PDT) under regular jockey Mark Guidry at Santa Anita on Monday.

Grade 3 winner CLOSING ARGUMENT (Successful Appeal), third in the Blue Grass
last out, is also schedule to work Monday, but got his first trip over the
Churchill Downs surface on Sunday, galloping 1 3/8 miles.

“He handled it great and looked good out there,” trainer Kiaran McLaughlin
said. “He’ll breeze Monday morning. We’ll take him out at 8:40 (a.m.) when the
track opens after the break.”

DON’T GET MAD (Stephen Got Even), a seven-length winner of Saturday’s Derby
Trial S., walked 30 minutes around the shedrow at Churchill and will now be
pointed toward the Derby just seven days after his dominating win, according to
trainer Ron Ellis. The bay colt gives owner B. Wayne Hughes a second possible
entrant and will race only after stablemate GREELEY’S GALAXY (Mr. Greeley) draws
in. If both don’t draw in, Ellis said Don’t Get Mad will be pointed toward the
Preakness S. (G1) on May 21.



“He’ll walk for the next few days,” Ellis said. “He’s had his prep for the
Derby, that’s for sure. I think the Lasix dulled him in California. We took him
off Lasix yesterday and he warmed up with a lot more energy before the Trial. We
scoped him (about 30 minutes) after the Trial and he didn’t bleed.”

Greeley’s Galaxy also galloped on Sunday, going 1 1/2 miles, and has to be
supplemented to the Derby at $200,000. He’s scheduled to have his final prep for
the Derby on Wednesday going five furlongs.

Three other Derby contenders — GREATER GOOD (Intidab), HIGH LIMIT (Maria’s
Mon) and SORT IT OUT (Out of Place) — all galloped 1 1/2 miles on Sunday. Rebel
S. (G3) hero Greater Good went before the renovation break for trainer Bob
Holthus, who will be starting a Derby runner for the fourth time. High
Limit suffered his first career defeat when second in the Blue Grass and is set
to make his final major work before the Derby a half-mile breeze on Wednesday.
Trainer Bob Baffert said Sort it Out will breeze Monday morning after the
renovation break.

Breeders’ Cup Juvenile (G1) winner WILKO (Awesome Again) left Hollywood Park
Sunday morning for a flight to Louisville and was expected to arrive at
Churchill Downs in the late afternoon.