December 26, 2024

Oaklawn Park Notebook

Last updated: 2/9/05 4:00 PM


OAKLAWN PARK
NOTEBOOK

FEBRUARY 10, 2005

by Mark Weatherton

The third weekend featured the 56th running of the King Cotton S. on Saturday
for older horses and for the first time this meet, a stakes race did not have a Steve Asmussen horse as one of the post-time favorites. Last year’s winner, Pro Prado (El Prado [Ire]),
was heavily favored at even money. However, DEPUTY STORM (Forestry), with Luis Quinonez in the
irons, jumped out in front and stayed there the entire way. He was pressured through the early fractions by
both That Tat (Faltaat) and Wildcat Shoes (Forest Wildcat) and after withstanding those challenges, gained some separation from the field that he
needed as two closers came flying down the stretch.

Deputy Storm reached the
wire a head in front of Engineered (Langfuhr) and a length better than Level Playingfield
(Level Sands). The six-furlong running time of 1:10 1/5 is the
fastest so far in 2005, and trainer Ralph Nicks recorded his first Oaklawn stakes win,
stopping Asmussen’s stakes victory skein at three.

Just as thrilling to the Oaklawn faithful was the last-to-first signature move
of CHINDI (El Prado [Ire]) in the 2ND race earlier on the card. The 11-year-old
gelding moved to within neighing distance of the $1 million mark in earnings
with the win over a tough field of six allowance/optional claiming rivals. It was
his 18th career victory and improved his earnings to $997,238 (seven wins and over
$300,000 at Oaklawn Park). He’ll likely become a millionaire
before the Spa meeting closes in April.

Calvin Borel also sparkled, picking up a win on Friday before he blistered
the track with four victories and two seconds on Saturday.
He is now within two of the 4000-win club and will take up the chase
again this Friday.

Borel’s eight wins tie him with Quinonez for the lead in the jockey
standings in this young season. Tim Doocy, John McKee, Jeremy Rose and Jamie
Theriot all are only one win behind the co-leaders.

McKee has been suspended seven calendar days (he will be allowed to ride in the
Mountain Valley S. this Saturday) for careless riding as a result of an incident
in the 9TH race on Friday. McKee had his mount at the back of the pack inside
three horses and as they turned for home, he angled out, causing the two horses
to check. He then guided his horse up the outside to finish second, 3 1/4
lengths ahead of the show horse. The two horses involved finished eighth and
ninth in
the field of nine, 14 1/2 and 15 lengths behind the seventh-place finisher.
Both riders claimed foul and the stewards upheld the claim, disqualifying McKee’s mount
and placing him last.

Frankly, the stewards ruling is an example of what many fans see as
arbitrariness in rulings, with claims of interference often being disallowed on the
grounds that it did not “affect the outcome.”
Here is a classic case of an incident at the back of the pack with two horses
who were losing ground to the leaders when the incident
occurred, and yet the claim was upheld. The incident did not affect the
final outcome of the race because the two horses retreating had no
chance at being a factor in the final outcome. To add a suspension on top of
an extremely questionable disqualification
seems unusually harsh.

Cole Norman emerged on top of the trainers standings with seven wins, while
Bob Holthus and Martin Lozano have sent out five winners. Lozano, in his second
year at the Spa, has brought in a string of horses from Sunland Park and is
winning on the drop.

HORSES TO WATCH

Friday (2/4)

5TH – SUPERIOR CAT (Smart Strike), a three-year-old filly, showed a game heart
after being collared in midstretch, fighting back to break her maiden in
her third try. Look for the Martin Lozano charge later in the meet.

9TH – FREE THINKING (Unbridled), in his second outing for Donnie Von Hemel,
returned to the dirt with a new running style. The confirmed closer broke on top
and led every jump as he easily handled a very solid group of allowance older
horses. He is now two for two for the new barn with Don Pettinger in the irons.
The first win came on the turf, so he apparently can handle any surface.

Saturday (2/5)

6TH – CASANOVA SLAMMER (Grand Slam), claimed by John Cox off a win at the $14k
claiming level at Hawthorne, has put together two very solid efforts here at
double the price ($25/30k). He stirred interest two weeks ago with a strong
closing effort, getting place money at 29-1 odds. The gelding again closed
for place, this time at 8-1. While competitive at this level, he could be real
dangerous on the drop.

8TH – First time starter SIR BARRETT (Jambalya Jazz), from the
Terry Brennan
barn, cruised under Calvin Borel to a 6 1/4-lengths victory at the $50k
level. The three-year-old colt pressed the leader through the first quarter (:22
1/5 seconds) then assumed command to the wire. The performance may be more
significant since Brennan, an excellent local trainer, is not noted for winning
with first-time starters.

Sunday (2/6)

1ST – In his third start for Steve Hobby, GIN REAL OFFICER (Go
For Gin) may have found his stride. The first start after the claim
was a solid effort over a good track and the gelding then
disappointed over the turf in his next start. On Sunday, he wired a
field of maiden special weights at the 1 1/16-mile distance on a
track rated wet fast that looked sloppy. His time of 1:45 4/5
seconds compared favorably to the time of the day’s feature race.