Thursday, November 30, 2017

The Hollywood Futurity - Prelude to the Classics

The Hollywood Futurity - Prelude to the Classics
Joseph Di Rienzi

Mike Powell/Getty Images

As the thoroughbred racing season winds down in late fall every year, most horse racing enthusiasts’ thoughts turn to next year’s classics – the Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont Stakes. It is always an interesting mind exercise to look at the performances of the current year’s two year-old crop and try to anticipate who will be the classic winners during their three year-old season. This task has become more difficult of late with the trend by major trainers to lightly race (if at all) their best prospects as two year-olds. Nevertheless, it has proven over time that we should pay attention to juveniles who race in November and December because we may see these horses in the winner’s circles at Churchill Downs and Pimlico in May and at Belmont Park in June.

The most obvious two year-old race to consider in looking for likely classic winners is the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile which has become the de facto two year-old championship event. It is true over its now 34 year history many horses who have competed in the race have gone on to classic success the following year. However, only three winners – Timber Country (1994), Street Sense (2006) and Nyquist (2015) have reproduced their form and won a classic as a three year-old. (Street Sense and Nyquist were victorious in the Kentucky Derby while Timber Country captured the Preakness Stakes.) In this piece, I want to focus on another two year-old race, the Hollywood Futurity, which, despite its somewhat checkered history, has been a strong indicator of future classic success. In fact, there have been 12 horses contesting this race (with 5 of them winning) who in the following year were victorious in one of the Triple Crown races.

Initiated in 1981 (three years prior to the first Breeder’s Cup), the Hollywood Futurity was designed to be the championship race for two year-olds, and in 1983 boasted a purse of $1 million. Run mostly at 1 1/16 mile (except for 1985 – 1990 when it was contested at a mile), the Hollywood Futurity was staged on an artificial surface from 2006 to 2013. With the closing of Hollywood Park in late 2013, the race was moved to Los Alamitos Race Course. In 2007, the race was renamed the CashCall Futurity when Hollywood Park received sponsorship from that aforementioned company. Back on the dirt at Los Alamitos, the race is now named the Los Alamitos CashCall Futurity.

Right from its inaugural running, the Hollywood Futurity produced a classic winner, although only the most prescient observers would have predicted who in the field that would be. Arthur Hancock III and Leone J. Peters’ Gato Del Sol finished a well beaten seventh behind the winner Stalwart. The rangy gray colt had won the Del Mar Futurity three starts back, but he did not show his best form at Hollywood Park. Notwithstanding in May 1982, Gato Del Sol came charging home first in the Kentucky Derby at odds of 21-1.

The next classic winner to emerge from the Hollywood Futurity was Tank’s Prospect who also failed to place in the race, finishing fourth in the 1984 edition. The Eugene Klein owned and Wayne Lukas trained son of Mr. Prospector rallied from off the pace to win the Preakness the following year. The 1985 renewal of the Hollywood Futurity saw two classic winners emerge from the race who would be staunch adversaries the next two years. Carl Grinstead and Ben Rochelle’s California bred Snow Chief finished first in the Hollywood Futurity while Mrs. Howard B. Keck’s Ferdinand was a distant third. At Churchill Downs the following May, Ferdinand found an opening between horses and stormed to victory in the Kentucky Derby making his trainer Charlie Whittingham and his jockey Bill Shoemaker the oldest trainer-jockey combination to win the Derby. Favored Snow Chief finished a puzzling eleventh, but at Pimlico Racetrack, two weeks later, Snow Chief rebounded winning the Preakness Stakes by 4 lengths with Ferdinand in second place.
      
The following year, Dorothy and Pamela Scharbauer’s Alysheba, a robust son of the famed Alydar, finished a close second (by a neck) to Temperate Sil in the Hollywood Futurity. The Jack Van Berg trainee would find his championship form as a three year-old winning both the Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes before losing the Belmont (finishing fourth) in his bid for Triple Crown glory.

It took five more years for another classic winner to emerge from the Hollywood Futurity. In 1991, Tomonori Tsurumaki’s A. P. Indy began to fulfill the lofty reputation he had from his inception with a game victory in the race. Being a son of Triple Crown winner Seattle Slew out of a mare by Triple Crown winner Secretariat who had produced 1990 Preakness winner Summer Squall, it is not hard to imagine why A. P. Indy was bought at auction as a yearling for $2.9 million. Trained by Neil Drysdale, he had to be withdrawn from the Kentucky Derby the day before the race due to a foot bruise. Sufficiently recovered, A. P. Indy dutifully won the 1992 Belmont Stakes on the way to Horse of the Year honors.

The 1994 Hollywood Futurity was won in runaway fashion by a presumed budding superstar in Afternoon Deelites. Finishing second, beaten 6½ lengths was Thunder Gulch, who had shipped in from the East Coast. The son of Gulch recently acquired by owner Michael Tabor and turned over to trainer Wayne Lukas had just won the Remsen Stakes at Aqueduct for his new connections. Considered at one time second string to Lukas’ two year-old champion Timber Country, Thunder Gulch emerged as the Three Year-old Champion of 1995 winning both the Kentucky Derby and the Belmont Stakes. (A third place finish to stablemate, Timber Country in the Preakness Stakes, prevented Thunder Gulch from a Triple Crown sweep.)

Though both Alysheba and Thunder Gulch, in being dual classic winners, had come within a single victory of capturing the elusive Triple Crown, no horse has come closer than the 1997 Hollywood Futurity winner, Real Quiet. The gangly son of Quiet American whose trainer Bob Baffert nicknamed, “The Fish” for his narrow frame was owned by longtime Baffert patron Mike Pegram.  As with Thunder Gulch, Real Quiet was considered, prior to the Kentucky Derby, the weaker part of an uncoupled entry with Indian Charlie. However, he emerged the victor and followed that with a convincing win in the Preakness Stakes. Strongly favored to complete the Triple Crown, Real Quiet surged to a commanding lead at the top of the stretch in the Belmont Stakes only to find rival Victory Gallop catch him in the last stride to deny his Triple Crown aspirations.

In 2000, The Thoroughbred Corporation’s Point Given, a massive son of Thunder Gulch, who had just missed winning the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile by a nose to Macho Uno, became the next future classic winner to score a victory in the Hollywood Futurity. The Bob Baffert trainee, a strong favorite in the 2001 Kentucky Derby, finished a perplexing fifth to Monarchos. However, Point Given showed his superiority in winning both the Preakness and Belmont Stakes. On the other end of the expectations spectrum was Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Moss’ Giacomo who finished a surprising second in the 2004 Hollywood Futurity, but he really shocked the racing community by winning the following year’s Kentucky Derby at odds over 50-1.

Racing on the Hollywood Park artificial surface in 2009, Lookin at Lucky followed the pattern of Point Given of rebounding from a narrow loss in the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile to win the now CashCall Futurity. Also trained by Bob Baffert, Lookin at Lucky was owned by the partnership of Pegram, Watson and Weitman. He continued to follow Point Given’s tract by finishing unplaced in the Kentucky Derby (sixth) but came back to win the Preakness. However, unlike Point Given, he did not contest the Belmont Stakes.

The final classic winner, to date, to emerge from the former Hollywood Futurity was Calumet Farm’s Oxbow in 2012. No better than fourth in the CashCall Futurity, the son of Awesome Again trained by Wayne Lukas scored an upset victory in the 2013 Preakness Stakes.

The race has produced no classic winners since it has been moved to Los Alamitos in 2014, but the last three victors - Dortmund (2014), Mor Spirit (2015), and Mastery (2016), were all high class performers. Thus, there is no reason that this renamed and relocated race will not still be a signpost to the following year’s classics, and one can hope the 2017 renewal run on December 9, will continue the tradition.




Saturday, October 14, 2017

The 1987 Breeders' Cup


The 1987 Breeders’ Cup
Joseph Di Rienzi
October 9, 2017


As we approach the 2017 Breeders’ Cup – the championship day of thoroughbred racing in the United States, I would like to recall Breeders’ Cup Day, thirty years ago. This would be the fourth edition of this now annual event of lucrative races designed to bring the best horses together in competition at various surfaces, ages, genders and distances. At the time, there was still some reluctance on the part of some “traditionalists” to participate in these races. Their argument was that champions should not be determined on the basis of a single race on a single day but rather be assessed over a full year’s campaign. The objectors also did not like to see the more time honored races, now serve as mere preps for this one day extravaganza. However, the results of the 1987 Breeders’ Cup races and, in particular, the dramatic finish of the Breeders’ Cup Classic went a long way to affirming Breeders’ Cup Day as the defining event on the thoroughbred racing calendar. 

Breeders’ Cup Day in 1987 was run relatively late in the year (November 21) at Hollywood Park. While racing fans in the Northeastern part of the country had to contend with snow and ice outside, they could watch televised races contested on a warm day in Southern California. The Breeders’ Cup Sprint was first on the schedule. Groovy, undefeated this year in six stakes races, was the odds-on favorite in the thirteen horse field.  The Prestonwood Farm color bearer’s main competition in the Sprint appeared to be W. T. Young’s Pine Tree Lane who contributed to his defeat in the 1986 Breeders’ Cup Sprint. Blessed with as much early foot as Groovy, the five year-old mare, had a busy year winning several stakes including the Bold Ruler Stakes and the Carter Handicap, both against males. However, it was Ben Rochelle’s Very Subtle, at 16-1, who took the race away from her opponents after the first ¼ mile. The Mel Stute trainee had previously raced in major three year-old filly contests, mostly at longer distances. Relishing the 6 furlongs of the Sprint, she established a clear lead around the far turn and widened her advantage through the stretch run for a 4 length victory. Groovy breaking from the unfavorable no. 1 post, could not gain on the leader but held second over longshot Exclusive Enough by 1¾ lengths. Pine Tree Lane tired badly and finished eleventh. Despite Very Subtle’s emphatic win, the Eclipse Award for Sprinter went to Groovy for his performances throughout the year.

Next was the 1 mile Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies, and since the two year-old fillies were having a difficult time sorting themselves out, it was likely that a champion would be determined in this race.  In a field of thirteen, the public settled on the four horse Wayne Lukas trained entry of Dream Team, Over All, Lost Kitty and Blue Jean Baby who collectively had won several major juvenile filly stakes. There was also good support for Golden Eagle Farm’s Jeanne Jones, a Nijinsky (Can) filly trained by Charlie Whittingham who had just a maiden win and a second in a minor stake race (against males) to her resume. Dismissed at 30-1 was John A. Bell III’s Epitome, a daughter of 1981 Belmont Stakes winner Summing, who had taken 5 starts to break her maiden but then finished second in the Alcibiades Stakes at Keeneland and won the Pocahontas Stakes at Churchill Downs. In a strange renewal of the Juvenile Fillies, Jeanne Jones challenged the leaders early as extremely fast fractions were being set. Around the far turn, the Golden Eagle Farm homebred opened a commanding lead under Bill Shoemaker and seemed on her way to a comfortable victory. However, whether it was due to not changing leads properly, or being distracted, or just tiring, she clearly slowed visibly in the last 1/8 mile. Epitome, far back early, closed along the inside, then was steered to the outside of Jeanne Jones as she made her belated rally. At the finish, Epitome just brought her nose down in front of Jeanne Jones for an implausible win. In third place, 2¾ lengths behind was Dream Team. Epitome, on the basis of her one big victory and the inconsistency of her peers, was awarded the Eclipse Award for Two Year-old Filly.

The Breeders’ Cup Distaff had the smallest field (six) of the day and featured a modest mix of three years and older fillies and mares. The strong favorite was the Whittingham trained, Arthur Hancock owned, Infinidad (Chi) who had won the Vanity Invitational and Chula Vista Handicaps earlier in the year. Second choice was Beal and French’s three year-old Sacahuista who prior to the Distaff had only won once in 8 starts, that being her last, an impressive win in the Spinster Stakes. Under Randy Romero, the daughter of Raja Baba took the lead right after the start of the 1¼ mile race and maintained a clear advantage right to the finish. Her Wayne Lukas trained entry mate, Clabber Girl was second 2¼ lengths behind with Oueee Bebe, third, 4 lengths behind but a head in front of Infinidad. Two Eclipse Champions trained by Wayne Lukas came out of this race - Sacahuista for Three Year-old Filly and last finishing North Sider as Older Mare. The latter owned by Mare Haven Farm had a busy year racing from January to November and winning the Santa Margarita Invitational, the Apple Blossom, and the Vagrancy Handicaps, in addition to the Maskette Stakes in her 17 starts.

The Breeders’ Cup Mile (on turf) this year had a strong European contingent. Featured was Stavros Niarchos’ celebrated filly Miesque, a Kentucky bred daughter of Nureyev out of a Prove Out mare who was a 1000 Guineas classic winner in both England and France in 1987. However, despite her credentials the slender, almost gazelle-like chestnut was not favored, that honor was given to another European, Sheikh Mohammed Al Maktoum’s Sonic Lady, who was also the favorite in the 1986 Breeders’ Cup Mile. Also, entered was Helena Springfield’s Milligram (GB), a daughter of Mill Reef, who just had defeated Miesque in the Queen Elizabeth II Stakes. Longshot Show Dancer set the pace from the start until the top of the stretch as jockey Freddy Head on Miesque sat close by on the rail. As Show Dancer drifted out slightly coming off the stretch turn, Head called on his filly for some run and the response was electric. She readily drew away to a 3½ length victory in a new course record time. Show Dancer held on for second by a ½ length over Sonic Lady. Miesque was voted the Eclipse Award for Female Turf Horse based on this stunning victory and the lack of a U. S. female leader on turf.

Claiborne Farm’s Forty Niner, the leading East Coast two year-old, was not in the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile, but two Wayne Lukas trainees (Barry Beal and Lloyd French Jr.’s Tejano and Gene Klein’s Success Express) were. Based on his previous stakes wins, a victory by Tejano might have convinced voters of his championship claim. However, favoritism went to Sam-Son Farm’s Regal Classic (Can), a horse who had only raced previously in Canada but had won 4 consecutive stakes races. However, Success Express under Jose Santos flashed brilliant speed over the one turn mile and never looked back. At the finish, he was 1¾ lengths in front of a slowly rallying Regal Classic with Tejano a similar distance back in third. To further muddle the juvenile picture, the first three finishers in the race ran back in the $1 million Hollywood Futurity in December at the same distance, and this time Tejano prevailed, winning by 2¼ lengths over Purdue King with Regal Classic third, 1¾ lengths back. Success Express, who appeared to be a horse who needed the lead to win, never managed to be in front and finished a well beaten sixth. The results of these two races in California, although helping the Lukas “win machine”, gave the Eclipse Award for Two Year-old Male to Forty Niner.

In the absence of the defending champion, Manila (retired due to injury), it might be presumed that the Breeders’ Cup Turf’s trophy would be ripe for a good European raced horse. And yes, this year’s edition had one of the best, namely Paul De Moussac and Summa Stable’s Trempolino, smashing winner of the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe. However, there was a strong American raced contender in Bert Firestone and Allen Paulson’s Theatrical (Ire) who was making his third straight appearance in the Turf. The burly son of Nureyev was eleventh in 1985 and a close second to Manila in 1986. The five year-old was having a stellar year, after being unplaced in his first start, winning the Hialeah Turf Cup, the Red Smith, the Bowling Green, the Sword Dancer (on a disqualification) Handicaps, and the Turf Classic and Man O’ War Stakes. The only blemish in this skein was a third place finish to Manila in the Arlington Million. The Breeders’ Cup Turf was decided between the two favorites - Theatrical and Trempolino. Pat Day on Theatrical had his mount forwardly placed early and when the challenge came from the French runner, Day had made sure he saved some of Theatrical’s strength for the finish. In a rousing stretch battle, Theatrical prevailed by a ½ length with Trempolino, his closing rally somewhat muted by slow middle fractions, finishing a clear second by 3½ lengths over Village Star (Fra). Here we had another Arc winner who was unable to capture the Breeders’ Cup Turf. The first was All Allong (Fra), but she won her Arc a year before she finished second in the inaugural Breeders’ Cup Turf. Despite, his loss to Manila, Theatrical, on the basis of this dramatic victory in the Breeders’ Cup Turf and overall performances throughout the year, was voted the Eclipse Champion Male Turf Horse.     

The stage was set for the fourth Breeders’ Cup Classic. A field of twelve entered the starting gate headed by two Kentucky Derby winners - Ferdinand and Alysheba. The former, an elegantly structured chestnut son of Nijinsky from a strong female family, was bred by Howard B. Keck and owned by his wife, Elizabeth. Ferdinand was an upset winner of the 1986 Kentucky Derby for then 73 year-old trainer Charlie Whittingham and 54 year-old jockey Bill Shoemaker, undoubtedly the oldest trainer-jockey combination to win the Derby. Ferdinand then placed second in the Preakness and third in the Belmont Stakes that year. Returning in December 1986 to win the Malibu Stakes at Santa Anita, he lost his first 6 races of 1987, before winning the Hollywood Gold Cup and two other subsequent stake races.

Alysheba was a muscular bay son of the mighty Alydar, owned by Dorothy and Pamela Scharbauer and trained by veteran Jack Van Berg. Also providing a mild upset in winning the 1987 Kentucky Derby, Alysheba was victorious in the Preakness Stakes but failed to complete the Triple Crown when he finished fourth in the Belmont Stakes. After the classics, the son of Alydar was second in the Haskell Invitational Handicap, unplaced in the Travers Stakes, but he regained his good form with a win in the Super Derby at Louisiana Downs. 

Ferdinand appeared to have the upper hand as the older competitor, racing at a track where he won the Hollywood Gold Cup (at the same 1¼ mile distance as the Classic), riding a 3 race win streak, and bringing a series of sparkling workouts leading up to the Classic. There was some support for the defending Breeders’ Cup Classic winner, Skywalker and Canadian bred three year-old Afleet (Can). Other contenders were Cryptoclearance, Nostalgia’s Star, Gulch, Candi’s Gold and Judge Angelucci. The last named, originally viewed as a pace setter for Ferdinand, was having a successful year on his own. Since his second to his stablemate in the Hollywood Gold Cup, the son of Honest Pleasure had won three (of four) stakes attempts.

The Classic was, to employ an overused expression, a thriller. Candi’s Gold and Judge Angelucci went for the lead and set a steady pace. Ferdinand began in mid-pack but raced into contention along the backstretch. Alysheba was initially placed far back but made a bold move on the outside as the field headed around the far turn. Ferdinand under Bill Shoemaker had cruised up alongside the battling leaders, Judge Angelucci and Candi’s Gold, at the top of the stretch. Knowing his mount’s habit of pulling himself up once he gains the lead, Shoemaker was waiting to the last moment to urge Ferdinand forward. However, when he saw Alysheba coming resolutely to his right, Shoemaker called on Ferdinand who surged forward to gain a clear advantage. However, in the shadow of the finish line Alysheba closed dramatically to just miss winning by a nose. The unforgettable memory is race caller Tom Durkin’s pronouncement that “the two Derby winners hit the wire together”. Third, 1¼ lengths behind was a very game Judge Angelucci with Candi’s Gold another 1½ lengths back in fourth place. (Skywalker, in his attempt to win the Classic again, finished twelfth and last.) As a result of this victory, accepted graciously by Elizabeth Keck, Ferdinand, despite his early defeats, was voted the Eclipse Award both for Champion Older Horse and Horse of the Year. Alysheba, because of his Derby and Preakness successes and his powerful performance in the Breeders’ Cup Classic, was voted Champion Three Year-old Colt.


The 1987 Breeders’ Cup Photo Gallery


Sprint winner: Very Subtle 
                                                      
(bloodhorse.com)

Juvenile Fillies winner: Epitome 
(breederscup.com)


Distaff winner: Sacahuista
(breederscup.com)

Mile winner: Miesque
(breederscup.com)


Juvenile winner: Success Express
(breederscup.com)

Turf winner: Theatrical

(breederscup.com)


Classic winner: Ferdinand

(bloodhorse.com



                                                                          

              
                                                                                                                    

    
           
                   
     
                          


Friday, August 18, 2017

The Travers and the Triple Crown

The Travers and the Triple Crown
Joseph Di Rienzi
August 14, 2017

The Travers Stakes at Saratoga Race Course, renewed for the 148th time on August 26, 2017, has been called “The Mid-Summer Derby” in that it is the most significant prize for classic aged horses (three years-old) after the spring Triple Crown series of races (Kentucky Derby, Preakness and Belmont Stakes). Over the years, horses that have triumphed in one or more of the classics have confirmed their top form in the Travers. Racing exemplars such as Man O’War, Whirlaway, Native Dancer, Damascus, Arts and Letters and Easy Goer have all won the Travers after capturing one of more of the Triple Crown races. However, in the last 70 years, there has been a curious oddity that when the Travers field includes winners of all three classics (note, this can be one, two or three horses), none of them are able to win the Travers Stakes.

Starting from 1957, the first opportunity to see this apparent anomaly was in 1963 when Kentucky Derby and Belmont Stakes winner, Darby Dan Farm’s Chateaugay faced Preakness Stakes victor Candy Spots owned by Rex C. Ellsworth in the Travers. Both classic winners came into the Travers off defeats after their Triple Crown races. Candy Spots had won the Arlington Classic and American Derby but then finished second in the Chicagoan at Arlington Park while Chateaugay finished third in the Dwyer Stakes at Aqueduct Racetrack. Also, in the Travers field was the previous year’s two year-old champion, Never Bend, who had finished second in the Derby and third in the Preakness. The three had their reunion in the Midsummer Derby, and it was anticipated that the Travers would settle the three-year old championship. However, the result was anything but conclusive. At 20-1 odds, George D. Widener’s Crewman found the top level form that had produced a victory in the previous year’s Garden State Stakes. He defeated similar longshot Hot Dust by 1½ lengths with Chateaugay another length back in third, Candy Spots finished fourth and Never Bend was sixth and last.
                                                             
                                                               
1963 Travers Stakes
(Associated Press photo)

                                                                 
It was not until 1978 that the next opportunity for winners of all three classic races to run in the Travers, and this was the year of Triple Crown winner, Harbor View Farm’s Affirmed. This was the 10th and what would be the final meeting of Affirmed and Calumet Farm’s Alydar, his vaunted rival in all three classics. Despite Affirmed’s decided win margin (7 to 2) over his rival, Alydar’s connections were optimistic since the latter seemed to be coming into the race sharper than the former. In addition, Affirmed’s rider, Steve Cauthen, was injured and was replaced by Laffit Pincay. There were only two other horses entered, major stakes winner Nasty and Bold and Shake Shake Shake, a rank outsider, who nonetheless played a role in the Travers’ controversial result. Under Angel Cordero, Shake Shake Shake took the early lead with Affirmed directly to his outside. Alydar settled initially in fourth, just to the flank of Nasty and Bold. Down the backstretch, jockey Jorge Velasquez seized the initiative by moving Alydar abruptly to the rail, coming up the inside of Shake Shake Shake. As the pace setter faltered, Pincay on Affirmed angled his mount toward the rail, squeezing the oncoming Alydar and forcing him to lose his action and drop back suddenly. For a moment, it appeared, Alydar had broken down, but showing extraordinary courage he came back and made a valiant effort to catch Affirmed who had vaulted to a clear lead. At the finish, Affirmed was 1¾ lengths ahead of Alydar with Nasty and Bold some 3¾ lengths further back in third. The blinking lights on the tote board started flashing “Inquiry”, and after some deliberation, the stewards rightly disqualified Affirmed for interference and made Alydar the official Travers winner.
                                                                                                                                                                   
1978 Travers Stakes
(CBS-TV photo)

                                                                      
The 1980’s had three Travers renewals where all the year’s classic winners were entered. In 1981, Derby-Preakness winner Pleasant Colony was the favorite over his Belmont Stakes conqueror, Charles T. Wilson, Jr.’s Summing. A very sloppy oval on Travers Day may have played a significant part in the outcome as Mrs. Marcia W. Schott’s Willow Hour, by mud loving sire Bold Hour, raced just off the pace and took command as they approached the far turn. Pleasant Colony, in fifth place in the early running made a concerted run around the far turn to challenge Willow Hour at the top of the stretch. The Buckland Farm runner appeared able to go right by the Schott horse, but either Willow Hour found more, or Pleasant Colony was not quite fit enough having not run since the Belmont Stakes. Willow Hour maintained a narrow margin throughout the stretch, though at the finish it was a desperate head as Pleasant Colony lunged forward. The 1980 Two Year-old Champion Lord Avie, closed resolutely to finish third, 1¾ lengths back of Pleasant Colony with Summing finishing ninth. At 24-1, Willow Hour joined the long list of upset winners of major races at Saratoga.
                                                       
1981 Travers Stakes
(Associated Press photo)
 In 1982, Henyrk de Kwiatkowski’s brilliant Belmont Stakes winner Conquistador Cielo would be facing the two other classic winners – Arthur B. Hancock and Leone J. Peter’s Gato Del Sol (Kentucky Derby victor) and Preakness Stakes winning Aloma’s Ruler owned by Baltimorean Nathan Scherr. Saratoga in August has many traditions, one of which is that it becomes a vortex of rumors in the close-knit horse community. The top story this year was that all was not well with Conquistador Cielo in the days leading up to the Travers. His win in the Jim Dandy was not overwhelming, and he had been sporting front bandages in his workouts that he also wore to the post in the Travers. Nevertheless, he was the prohibitive favorite in the five horse field, that, in addition to Aloma’s Ruler and Gato Del Sol, included, Lejoli and Canadian invader Albert P. Coppola’s Runaway Groom.

Race strategy may have played a significant part in the result. Angel Cordero on Aloma’s Ruler was not about to let Conquistador Cielo have the race his own way on the front end so he spurred his mount to contest the lead, and the two classic winners dueled head and head. Gato Del Sol, racing in third place, was closer than usual, but Runaway Groom was biding his time in a distant fifth position. As the two leaders battled back and forth, exchanging the lead, Jeffery Fell aboard Runaway Groom mounted his rally. Many race viewers were so intent on the stretch duel between Conquistador Cielo and Aloma’s Ruler, they did not see the upset coming until just before the finish when Runaway Groom swept past the embattled leaders to win by a ½ length. Aloma’s Ruler won the race inside the race by ¾ length over Conquistador Cielo, who racing on the inside may have been compromised by the track bias. Gato Del Sol flattened out badly to finish fifth and last. As the longest shot in the race, Runaway Groom and his connections added their name to the list that give further substance to the “Graveyard of Favorites” attribution to Saratoga.

                                                      
1982 Travers Stakes
(NYRA photo)

                                                                                         
In 1987, not only were the Derby-Preakness winner Dorothy and Pamela Scharbauer’s Alysheba and his Triple Crown denier Cisley Stable and Blanche Levy’s Bet Twice in the Travers field, but it also included major sophomore stakes winners Java Gold, Gulch, Polish Navy, Temperate Sil and Cryptoclearance. Bet Twice had just narrowly defeated Alysheba in the Haskell Invitational Stakes at Monmouth Park in their respective first race after the Belmont Stakes. The question surrounding Alysheba, and it would shadow him for over a year, was whether he could run his best without the administration of Lasix which was prohibited at that time in New York. This talk, as the time for the race drew near, subsided, and the prevailing discussion centered on the condition of the racetrack which had been drenched by heavy morning rains. Alysheba and Bet Twice’s respective form on sloppy tracks was uncertain, but Gulch, Java Gold and Cryptoclearance all had won stake races on off tracks. The public settled on the Derby winner as the slight favorite over Java Gold and Bet Twice.

As the race unfolded, Bet Twice was close to the lead while Alysheba was in mid-pack with Java Gold and Cryptoclearance occupying the two rear positions. As the field headed for the far turn, the complexion of the race changed dramatically. Bet Twice briefly seized the lead, but in the stretch drive, he was quickly passed by Cryptoclearance who making a bold bid surged into the lead looking like a clear winner. However, Pat Day aboard Java Gold had been drafting behind “Crypto’s” wake and in mid-stretch, he asked the Rokeby Stable colt for his run, and the response was immediate. In deep stretch, Java Gold caught and drew past Cryptoclearance for a 2 length victory. The two classic winners, Bet Twice and Alysheba, finished back in fifth and sixth place respectively, and both horses’ connections blamed the track condition for their defeats.

                                                       
Java Gold,winner of 1987 Travers Stakes
(NYRA photo)

                                                                  
In the next decade, 1991 was the only year that winners of the three classics met in the Travers. Kentucky Derby winner Strike the Gold, owned by the partnership of Brophy, Condren and Cornacchia, was coming off a third place finish in the Jim Dandy Stakes, his first start after his narrow Belmont Stakes loss to Preakness winner Lazy Lane Farms’ Hansel. The dual classic winner had also finished third in his previous race, the Haskell Invitational. The Travers was basically a two horse contest between Overbrook Farm’s Corporate Report and Hansel who raced first and second almost the entire 1¼ mile distance. Corporate Report had a daylight lead until Hansel went up to challenge towards the end of the backstretch. At the top of the stretch, it looked like Hansel was going the strongest and seemed ready to pull away from Corporate Report. However, he did not, and Corporate Report regained the lead and held it to the finish for a neck victory. Last year’s two year-old champion Fly So Free was 2½ lengths back in third. He did, however, finish 3 lengths ahead of Strike the Gold whose brief rally around the far turn failed to be sustained.

The reason for Hansel’s inability to draw away in the stretch became apparent when jockey Jerry Bailey, sensing distress, jumped off after pulling up his mount. Examination revealed that Hansel had partially torn a tendon in his front left ankle in the stretch. Fortunately, the injury was not life threatening, but it forced the son of Woodman’s retirement. The Travers victor, Corporate Report, a son of Private Account, who had placed in several major stakes races this year was winning his first stakes race, and his first race of any kind beyond 6 furlongs. The Travers would be his one moment of glory for Corporate Report fractured a coffin bone in his foot training for his next start and also was forced into retirement.
                                                  
1991 Travers Stakes
(NYRA photo)

The next and last (to date) occurrence of this relativity rare circumstance was in 2015. (However, when entries were drawn for the 2003 Travers Stakes, both Kentucky Derby-Preakness winner Funny Cide and the Belmont Stakes victor, Empire Maker, were in the field. Alas, both did not run due to reported illnesses.) In 2015, American Pharoah owned by Zayat Stable and trained by Bob Baffert was the singular Travers attraction. He was the first Triple Crown winner since Affirmed, and his presence in the Travers field drew almost rock star hysteria. American Pharoah had just won the Haskell Invitational Stakes by an eased down 2¼ lengths in his first start since his Belmont Stakes triumph. Despite “Pharoah’s” towering reputation, the Travers drew a field of ten with Texas Red and Frosted, who had finished first and second in the Jim Dandy Stakes, the second and third betting choices, respectively. Overlooked at 16-1 was Donegal Racing’s Keen Ice, although beaten three times previously by American Pharoah, had shown an improved effort in closing ground in the 9 furlong Haskell to finish second. The extra furlong of the Travers Stakes could only benefit this come from behind runner who coming into the Travers had only a single victory in his resume.

At the start of the Travers, American Pharoah jumped out to the lead and appeared to be controlling the pace. However, halfway down the backstretch, Frosted was sent up to confront American Pharoah, and both colts raced head and head around the far turn and into the stretch. Once the leaders straightened out, American Pharoah repulsed Frosted’s sustained run as the Triple Crown hero slowly drew clear. But the duel with Frosted had taken its toll as Keen Ice, who was rating some distance behind the embattled leaders, made his charge in the stretch. Closing steadily, Keen Ice caught American Pharoah about 1/16 of a mile before the finish and despite the latter’s best efforts, Keen Ice prevailed by ¾ of a length. Frosted, whose early challenge to American Pharoah was probably the reason for the latter’s defeat finished third, another 2¼ lengths back.
                                                 
2015 Travers Stakes
(Associated Press photo)

So the anomaly still holds that when winners of all three classics are entered in the Travers Stakes, none of them are victorious. However, since the opportunity has only presented itself seven times in seventy years, this is not a statistically valid conclusion. As of this writing, there is a possibility that Always Dreaming (Kentucky Derby winner), Cloud Computing (Preakness victor) and Tapwrit (Belmont Stakes hero) will all meet in the 2017 Travers. If they do, this will be a test of this anomaly; if there are not all present, we will have to wait for another year.


Friday, June 30, 2017

The Suburban and the Great Geldings

The Suburban and the Great Geldings

Joseph Di Rienzi
June 26, 2017

The Suburban Handicap is a venerable race for horses three years and older. It was inaugurated in 1884 and on July 8, 2017 will have its 131st renewal at Belmont Park. Contested at 1¼ mile (except in 1975 and 1976), the Suburban, run usually around Independence Day, was for much of the 20th century the handicap race, testing champions and major runners by requiring them to carry added weight over their opponents to make the races more competitive. The cavalcade of winners lists some of the legends of American thoroughbred racing such as Equipoise, Assault, Tom Fool, Nashua, Bold Ruler, Buckpasser, Dr. Fager and Easy Goer. In this piece, I would like to focus on two extraordinary geldings, Kelso and Forego, who, in total, ran in the Suburban nine times. They did not win the Suburban regularly (only three wins among them), but each time they carried excessive weight and did their breed proud.

Kelso and Forego raced in different decades with the former in the 1960’s and the latter in the 1970’s. They were both late developers in that their full potential was not realized until the latter part of their three year-old season. Both Kelso and Forego were owned by women who were not afraid to run their horses underweight penalties displaying the true sporting nature that seems so lacking in the contemporary fear of losing stature and monetary value.

Kelso, a son of the brilliantly fast Your Host, was a 1957 foal owned and bred by Mrs. Richard C. du Pont (at Claiborne Farm in Paris, Kentucky) and raced in the name of Bohemia Stable. Gelded before he ever became a racehorse, Kelso was not an impressive physical specimen. He was long and thin with dark bay or brown coat. In the field or the walking ring, he did not give the appearance of anything special. When he was in competition, this impression changed dramatically. He had the perfect racing style as a stalker who could sustain a drive for as long as they ran races in America.
                                                               
                                                                            
Kelso
(www.spiletta.com)

As a two year-old, Kelso won once in three starts with two placings without competing in stakes races. In his sophomore year, Kelso was turned over to veteran Carl Hanford to train. He did not make his first start till June 22, 1960, but he quickly showed his brilliance winning several stakes and capping the year with an American track record performance in the 2 mile Jockey Club Gold Cup. Incredibly, he won this race in five consecutive years.  For his efforts, Kelso was voted both 1960 Three Year-old Champion and Horse of the Year.

Kelso’s first attempt at the Suburban Handicap was in 1961. The reigning Horse of the Year had waited till May to begin his four year-old season with an allowance win at Belmont Park. This led to his first major race, the Metropolitan Handicap, where he was asked to carry 130 lb. In a thrilling finish, Kelso ran down All Hands for a neck victory while conceding 13 lb. in the 1 mile contest. Racing at Belmont Park in the Whitney Stakes again carrying 130 lb., he finished a head behind Our Hope (who carried 111 lb.), but he was repeatedly bumped on the rail and was subsequently awarded the victory. In his first Suburban Handicap carrying 133 lb., Kelso dominated the race winning by 5 lengths over Nickel Boy (112 lb.). In the Brooklyn Handicap, the finale of the New York Handicap Triple Series at Aqueduct Racetrack, Kelso burdened with 136 lb. ran down Divine Comedy (118 lb.) with Yorky (122) third. Winning the Met, the Suburban, and the Brooklyn in the same year was considered quite a feat as up to this point it had been accomplished by only two other horses, Whisk Broom II (1913) and Tom Fool (1953).  At year’s end Kelso was named Champion Older Male Horse and Horse of the Year (again).

Kelso returned as a five year-old in 1962, but he had a more difficult time asserting his leadership of the division. He made his first start in the Metropolitan Mile under 133 lb. and was not ready finishing a poor sixth to Carry Back, the previous year’s three year-old champion and Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes winner, who set a new track record in the Met while getting 10 lb. from Kelso.

Kelso regrouped with a win in an allowance race and met Carry Back again in the Suburban Handicap with the former carrying 132 lb. and the latter 126 lb. But there would be a new adversary for both trained by soon to be legendary Allen Jerkens in Hobeau Farm’s Beau Purple. He came into the Suburban with the reputation of a speedy but erratic racehorse. What no one but Allen Jerkens seemed to know was that if left alone on the lead, Beau Purple’s courage would increase and his pedigree would carry him as far as racehorses needed to travel. Weighted at 115 lb. in the Suburban, Beau Purple set a moderate pace and met the challenge of Kelso winning by 2½ lengths in new track record time at Aqueduct with Carry Back finishing last. In all Kelso and Beau Purple would split 3 and 3 in head to head competition. However, Kelso’s fall campaign would net him additional Horse of the Year and Champion Older Male awards.

Now six years-old, the three-time Horse of the Year began 1963 in Florida with victories in the Seminole and Gulfstream Park Handicaps and a second (to old rival) Beau Purple in the Widener Handicap. On the way to his home base in New York, Kelso stopped off at Bowie Racetrack to run in the 8½ furlong John B. Campbell where he carried (131 lb.) and beat four year-old Crimson Satan (124) by ¾ of a length. Kelso skipped the Metropolitan Handicap but won the Nassau County Stakes easily under 132 lb. He then won his second Suburban (133 lb.) by 1¼ lengths over Saidam (111 lb.). Finishing the year in fine style, the brown gelding garnished his fourth Horse of the Year and third Champion Older Male awards.

In the first half of 1964, Kelso seemed to be showing his age (seven). Slowed by an injury in Florida over the winter, his connections thought he should have a California beginning to his campaign. He started in the Los Angeles Handicap and finished eighth to another transplanted New Yorker, Greentree Stable’s Cyrano, the previous year’s winner of the Met Mile. His next effort was not much better as he finished sixth behind longshot Mustard Plaster in the Californian Stakes. In both these races, he was conceding significant weight to his opponents, but his losses can be more attributed to the hard surface at Hollywood Park.

Returning to the friendly (for Kelso) confines of New York, he won an allowance race at Aqueduct under 136 lb. as a prep for the Suburban Handicap.  Kelso carrying 131 lb. in the Suburban and facing Rex C. Ellsworth’s Olden Times (128 lb.) and Cain Hoy Stable’s Iron Peg (116 lb.). The latter was a returnee from an unsuccessful career in England who had won his first three U. S. starts all by open lengths. The Suburban was a scorcher as Iron Peg, having stalked Olden Times, took over in deep stretch and withstood Kelso’s charge to win by a diminishing head. Despite losing, it was clear from his performance that Kelso was still the horse others would have to overcome to assume the leadership of the older horse division. In the end, Kelso would defend his Champion Older Male title and win the Horse of the Year Award for the fifth time.

Kelso did race in 1965, but due to a late June start he did not run in that year’s running of the Suburban Handicap. He would be stopped by injuries before he could mount his traditional fall surge, and after a single start as a nine year-old in 1966 at Hialeah Racetrack, he was sent home to Mrs. du Pont's Woodstock Farm in Chesapeake City, Maryland.

Forego was born in 1970 in the same crop as Meadow Stable’s immortal Secretariat and foaled at Claiborne Farm (just as Kelso). He was bred and owned by Mrs. Martha Farish Gerry and raced under the colors of Lazy F. Ranch. For the first part of his career he was trained by Sherrill W. Ward and then after his retirement, Frank Whiteley Jr. took over as Forego’s conditioner. Unraced as a two year-old and gelded because of his size, temperament and ankle problems that would persist through his entire career, Forego was a dark bay son of Argentinian champion Forli (Arg) out of the mare Lady Golconda by Hasty Road.

                                                                       
Forego
(www.spilletta.com)
                                                             
                                                                                                                                 
 
Beginning with a fourth in a maiden race at Hialeah, he reeled off two wins in 6 furlong races. Playing catch up with his sophomore contemporaries in 1973, he placed in stakes leading up to the Kentucky Derby and was given a legitimate chance due to his obvious speed and class. The best Forego could finish was fourth as Secretariat set the track record for the Derby that still stands. For most of the rest of Forego’s sophomore year, he was known as the best race horse in the U. S. not to win a stake race. That dubious honor changed in late fall when he was victorious in the both the Discovery and Roamer Handicaps showing an ability to win despite carrying additional weight.

In 1974 Forego started his four year-old campaign in Florida and quickly established himself as the leading older horse on the East Coast winning the Donn, Gulfstream Park and Widener Handicaps with Darby Dan Farm’s doughty True Knight finishing second each time. A study in physical contrasts between the gigantic Forego and the diminutive True Knight, they, nonetheless, were great competitors.

Back in New York, Forego won the 7 furlong Carter Handicap defeating ace sprinter Mr. Prospector and then in the Met Mile, Forego at 134 lb. was unable to hold off 60-1 outsider, Arbees Boy (112 lb.) who caught Forego and pulled away to a 2 length victory. In 1974, the Suburban Handicap was run later in the summer, and Forego, in between the Met and the Suburban, had finished second in the Nassau County Handicap and won the Brooklyn Handicap (defeating True Knight again). In his first try at the Suburban, Forego carried 131 lb. to True Knight’s 127 lb. True Knight rallied from some 20 lengths off the pace to swoop by Forego and Plunk (114 lb.). At the finish, True Knight was 1½ lengths in front of Plunk who bested Forego by a head. This was the first time in five races that True Knight had finished in front of Forego. However, by year’s end, Forego has established himself as the best horse in the U. S. and won Eclipse Awards as Champion Older Male Horse, Sprinter and Horse of the Year.

Forego followed the same path in 1975 as in the previous year on the way for a second try at the Suburban. Starting with a successful beginning in Florida, albeit with a reoccurrence of his ankle injury which forced him to miss a race, he won the Carter Handicap (under 134 lb.) and finished third in the Metropolitan Handicap under a crushing 136 lb. to Gold and Myrrh (122 lb.) and Stop the Music (124 lb.). Carrying 132 lb., Forego won the 1¼ mile Brooklyn Handicap running down Monetary Principle (109 lb.) to win by 1½ lengths breaking the Belmont Park track record.

The Suburban Handicap was stretched out to 1½ miles, to make the finale of the New York Handicap Triple more interesting, and Forego was assigned a hefty 134 lb. Demonstrating the courage and will that defines the best in the breed, Forego fought off old nemesis Arbees Boy (118 lb.) to win by a head. At the end of the year, Forego won again Eclipse Awards for Older Male Horse and Horse of the Year.

In 1976, Forego, the two time defending Horse of the Year, was now trained by Frank Whiteley, Jr. after the long time conditioner for Lazy F. Ranch, Sherrill Ward, had to step down due to ill health. Recovering from ankle problems, Forego wintered at Whiteley’s training base in Aiken, South Carolina and then was sent to New York to start his six year-old season in the late spring. Forego returned to the races in the latter part of May with a comfortable win in an allowance race at Belmont Park that served as a springboard to the Metropolitan Handicap. In a race that eluded him the previous two years, Forego was assigned 130 lb. in the six horse field and faced last year’s Preakness winner, Master Derby (126 lb.) and Lord Rebeau (119 lb.). Coming from next to last in the one mile race, Forego struck the lead in deep stretch over Master Derby, and in a tight finish, the massive gelding prevailed by a head.

Forego, as he had done previously, tuned up for the Suburban by running next in the Nassau County Handicap which he won easily, carrying 132 lb. The Suburban Handicap was run next in the New York Handicap Triple Series, this time at 9½ furlongs at Aqueduct. The 1976 renewal had a four horse field: Forego (134 lb.), 1975 Kentucky Derby winner, Foolish Pleasure (125 lb.), Lord Rebeau (115 lb.) and longshot Gorgo (115 lb.). With a moderate pace that worked against Forego’s closing thrust, a thrilling finish found three horses noses apart with Foolish Pleasure, first, Forego, second and Lord Rebeau third.

With a slight adjustment in the weights, the three faced each other again in the 1¼ mile Brooklyn Handicap which attracted eight entries. This time the pace was faster, and Forego (134 lb.) could launch his bid from off the pace more effectively. He collared Lord Rebeau (114 lb.) at the top of the stretch and drew away to a 2 length win. Foolish Pleasure (126 lb.), rallied mildly to finish third, 4½ lengths back. Highlighted by a dramatic win in the Marlboro Cup Handicap carrying 137 lb. with now regular rider William Shoemaker, Forego won, for the third time, Eclipse Awards for best Older Male and Horse of the Year.  

Forego, now seven, wintered well and returned to the races in 1977, just like he did the previous year with a deceptively easy ½ length win in an allowance race. In the Met Mile, Forego at 133 lb. faced twelve rivals. Running his customary race from well back, Forego swept by all to win going away by 2 lengths over Co Host (111 lb.) with Full Out (115 lb.), third 2 lengths back. In the last four renewals of the Met, Forego had won twice and finished second twice.  

After the Met Mile, Forego, following last year’s script, ran next in the Nassau County Handicap at Belmont Park, and under 136 lb. surged from off the pace to defeat Co Host (110 lb.) by a ½ length with Norcliffe (117 lb.), third, a neck behind. As can be seen, the weight differentials were getting absurd. Carrying a career high of 138 lb. in the back to 1¼ mile distance Suburban, he failed by a neck in catching Quiet Little Table (114 lb.) with three year-old Nearly On Time (104 lb.) another neck away. The winner tracked runaway pacesetter Nearly On Time for most of the race. Taking the lead in the final furlong, Quiet Little Table held on as Forego closed while drifting way out towards the outer rail. In the final race in New York’s Handicap Triple, the 1½ mile Brooklyn Handicap, Forego finished an uncharacteristically weak second (beaten 11 lengths), albeit carrying 137 lb., to the stayer Great Contractor (112 lb.). Forego, despite suffering one of the largest losses in his storied career, was cheered. Over the last four years, he competed in twelve of the New York Handicap Triple races, always under top weight while winning six, four times second and twice third. This is a record for the ages. 

Forego was able to win his fourth consecutive Eclipse Award for Older Male with a powerful victory in the Woodward Handicap in the fall, but injuries prevented him from racing further in 1977. (The Eclipse Award for Horse of the Year went to the Triple Crown hero, Tayhill Farm’s Seattle Slew.)

Forego had one last fling at the Suburban as an eight year-old in 1978.  Running on bad legs, he won an allowance race to start the year as a prep for the Suburban. Forego weighted at 132 lb., faced major winner Cox’s Ridge (130 lb.). Also in the field was Upper Nile (113 lb.), a four year-old son of Nijinsky II (Can) owned by Rokeby Stable. Run on a sloppy track, both Forego and Cox’s Ridge were unplaced, finishing fifth and sixth, respectively. Upper Nile was victorious by 1½ lengths over plucky Nearly On Time (109 lb.) with Great Contractor (114 lb.), 2¼ lengths further back. In the aftermath, Mrs. Martha Gerry, mistress of Lazy F. Ranch, decided that Forego’s racing career had come to an end and he was retired to the Kentucky Horse Park in Lexington, Kentucky. What we are left with is the legacy of the greatest weight carrying champion of modern times.

In all the two great geldings, Kelso and Forego, ran in the Suburban Handicap nine times. Their collective record was three wins, four seconds, one third and one unplacing. They carried weight that varied from 131 – 138 lb., averaging 133 lb.; an amazing feat that almost seems mythical by today’s standards. It is a great testimony to the sportsmanship of their owners, Allaire du Pont and Martha Gerry, the persistence of their trainers, Carl Hanford, Sherrill Ward and Frank Whiteley, and the courage of these mighty steeds – Kelso and Forego.

Saturday, June 3, 2017

Woody's Five Belmont Straight

Woody’s Five Belmont Straight
Joseph Di Rienzi
4 May 2017

In the storied history of the Triple Crown series, there are few greater training achievements than what was accomplished by Woodford Cefis Stephens from 1982 to 1986. Woody, as he was known, was a native born Kentuckian who had established by the latter half of the 20th century one of the more powerful thoroughbred racing stables on the East Coast. He was no stranger to Triple Crown success having won the Preakness Stakes in 1952 with Blue Man and the Kentucky Derby (the 100th renewal) with Cannonade in 1974. But what would put him in the record books was the singular achievement of having horses trained by him win the Belmont Stakes for five consecutive years. In this piece, I will discuss the horses and events leading up to each Belmont Stakes from 1982 through 1986.
Woody Stephens
                                        (gettyimages)                                          
The first two classics of 1982 were inconclusive in establishing a three year-old leader. The Kentucky Derby was won by a longshot, Arthur Hancock and Leone J. Peters’ Gato Del Sol. He subsequently skipped the Preakness Stakes to await the Belmont. Christiana Stable’s Linkage who would have been favored in the Derby, if he ran, was upset in the Preakness by Nathan Scherr’s Aloma’s Ruler.

After the Preakness, both Aloma’s Ruler and Linkage moved on to the Belmont Stakes to face Gato Del Sol. However, there was another horse stirring in the shadows that would create a whirlwind in the next three weeks. Henyrk de Kwiatkowski’s Conquistador Cielo, a racy bay son of Mr. Prospector, bought as a yearling at Saratoga for $150,000, had ended his juvenile year after suffering an injury in finishing a close fourth in the Sanford Stakes at Saratoga. Trained by Woody Stephens, he finished third in a 7 furlong allowance race at Hialeah in February. Then, he was an impressive winner of a similar race 10 days later by 4 lengths. Delayed by a minor injury, Conquistador Cielo ran in what had previously been called the Preakness Prep a week prior to Pimlico’s signature race and came from just off the pace to win by 3 lengths in the 8½ furlong contest. Withheld from the Preakness, Stephens shipped his colt back to Belmont Park when he ran in a 1 mile allowance race for three years and older and stunned the field with an 11 length win in very fast time.

Stephens, realizing what he had in his barn, entered Conquistador Cielo less than two weeks later in the Metropolitan Handicap facing mostly older horses. The New York racegoers saw his form and despite his lack of seasoning made Conquistador Cielo the post time favorite. Under regular jockey Eddie Maple, the son of Mr. Prospector put on a show, racing with the early pace and easily pulling away for a 7¼ length victory. The time for the mile was a new track record, faster than Bald Eagle, Kelso, Bold Lad, Buckpasser and Forego ever ran in their respective Met Mile victories. The buzz in the winner’s circle was the idea of entering Conquistador Cielo in the Belmont Stakes even though it was only five days away. After some thought, owner de Kwiatkowski, an expansive and enterprising personality, gave the go ahead, and Woody Stephens, taking a page from trainer Elliot Burch’s playbook who with his three Belmont Stakes winners had won the Met Mile twice with the other runner finishing second, recognized a Met Mile – Belmont double was not without precedent.

Eleven horses entered the Belmont, and the race had all the prime contenders in Derby winner Gato Del Sol, Preakness winner Aloma’s Ruler, unlucky Preakness loser Linkage and the unknown factor, Conquistador Cielo. The handsome colt’s Met Mile win was off the charts, but the prevailing question, was he too “speedy” with Mr. Prospector and Bold Ruler (through his dam’s sire) in his bloodlines to handle the 1½ mile distance. A pace duel with Aloma’s Ruler, seemed likely, compromising both their chances. Adding to the drama, Eddie Maple, Conquistador Cielo’s rider was injured in a fall at Belmont the day before and could not ride. Woody Stephens made a phone call late in the day to California to secure the services of Laffit Pincay, Jr. After some travel complications, Pincay managed to get to Belmont Park (via Boston) on the morning of the race to ride a horse he had never seen in the Belmont Stakes.

The public settled on Linkage as the favorite, although there were also questions about his stamina. Conquistador Cielo was the second choice and Gato Del Sol the third favorite. A sloppy racetrack on Belmont Day may have played in “Cielo’s” favor, although he had no previous off track experience. As the field left the starting gate, Aloma’s Ruler tried to gain the lead, but he was outsprinted, first by longshot Anemal to his inside, then by Conquistador Cielo racing very wide around the clubhouse turn. Once the leaders straightened out on the backstretch, Conquistador Cielo secured the lead and set credible fractions. His first challenge came from High Ascent who ranged up on the inside. That was easily repelled and, as Cielo extended his lead around the sweeping far turn, Linkage became his closest pursuer. However, the chase was futile, for just as in the Met Mile, Conquistador Cielo was soaring as the name, “Conqueror of the Sky”, implies. He easily pulled away to an astounding margin, that, if visions of Secretariat’s Belmont win in 1973 had faded from memory, this would have been the most dominant Belmont win in recent history. Some 14 lengths behind the flying “Conquistador” was Gato Del Sol who rallied to be second, 4 lengths ahead of Illuminate who had 3¾ lengths ahead of Linkage.  Aloma’s Ruler, who dropped out of contention early, finished ninth. The time was good, considering the sloppy conditions, and everyone at Belmont was convinced they saw an exceptional performance by a brilliant colt. Owner de Kwiatkowski and trainer Stephens were justly rewarded by their courage in running back so quickly, and jockey Pincay had won his first classic race. (For de Kwiatkowski, this Belmont victory would be the first of two. For Woody Stephens, this was the beginning of one of the most incredible streaks in Triple Crown history.)

Conquistador Cielo
(www.horseracingnation.com)
                                                         
 The classic picture in 1983 was just as unfocused as 1982 as the Belmont Stakes approached. The Kentucky Derby winner, David J. Foster’s Sunny’s Halo, who had finished sixth in the Preakness Stakes avoided the Belmont Stakes due to his trainer’s aversion to racing in New York, which at that time prohibited race day medication. However, the Preakness winner, Maryland bred Deputed Testamony [sic] owned by Francis Sears and trained by William Boniface, Jr. was in the fifteen horse field. Favoritism went to Equusequity Stable’s Slew o’ Gold, a tall sculptured son of Seattle Slew out of the mare Alluvial, making him a half-brother to 1979 Belmont Stakes winner Coastal. He had finished a good fourth in the Kentucky Derby and had tuned up for the Belmont with an eye catching victory in the Peter Pan Stakes. Woody Stephen’s entry was Caveat, another Maryland, bred who had made a strong impression with a dramatic close from far back to finish second in the Kentucky Derby. Just like Slew o’ Gold, Caveat had bypassed the Preakness but had won an allowance race impressively against older horses in his Belmont prep.

In an unorthodox renewal of the Belmont, Au Point, went right to the lead and set credible fractions with Slew o’ Gold, in closest pursuit followed by Deputed Testamony. Angel Cordero, unable to restrain his mount, allowed Slew o’ Gold to range up alongside Au Point increasing the tempo of the race. Meanwhile, Laffitt Pincay, who had Caveat initially far back, was making good progress along the inside, so that by the time the field was sweeping around the Belmont final turn, Caveat was just behind the leaders on the inside. At the top of the stretch, Slew o’ Gold moved the lead and Au Point, who had blocked Caveat’s path, abruptly tired, allowing Pincay to drive his mount through the opening. Once free, Caveat surged to the front readily passing Slew o’ Gold to win by 3½ lengths with the latter gamely holding second by 1¾ lengths over Barberstown with Deputed Testamony in sixth. The time was good, but what was remarkable was that the first 10 furlongs were run in under 2 minutes with the fifth quarter in under 24 seconds, which I believe cost Slew o’ Gold the race. (He would show his affinity for the 1½ mile distance in winning the Jockey Club Gold Cup twice and be voted Champion three year-old in 1983 and Champion Older Horse the following year.)

Caveat’s victory represented continuity in racing as he was owned in a partnership that involved August Belmont IV (descendant of the racetrack’s founder), Robert Kirkham and breeder James Ryan (making Maryland breds victorious in two thirds of this year’s classics). Woody Stephens and Laffit Pincay were celebrating their second straight Belmont having won the previous year with Conquistador Cielo. Unfortunately for racing fans, Caveat came out of the Belmont with an injury that would ultimately force his retirement.      
                                                     
Caveat
(www.horseracingnation.com)
                                                 
In early 1984, Woody Stephens trained the two highest ranked sophomores. Hickory Tree Stable’s Devil’s Bag was the undefeated Two Year-old Champion of 1983 and considered a possible super horse. After a shocking defeat in the Flamingo Stakes, his career was carefully managed to avoid future losses. Sensing he was not at his best, Devil’s Bag was retired by his connections after winning the Derby Trial Stakes, a week before the Kentucky Derby. Woody Stephens’ other main hope was a sleek dark bay or brown son of Seattle Slew from a distinguished Claiborne Farm female family, named Swale. The dam, Tuerta, was sired by Argentinian super horse Forli, so the breeding represented a serious effort by the owners of Claiborne Farm (and their partners) at producing a classic racehorse. His two year-old season was marked by some narrow victories in several major races. Swale came to the forefront of the three year-old division winning the Florida Derby at Gulfstream Park.

After a puzzling loss in the slop in the Lexington Stakes at Keeneland, Swale rebounded with a strong performance to win the Kentucky Derby by 3¼ lengths. The victory marked a long sought after goal of the Hancock’s of Claiborne Farm, the birthplace of so many outstanding thoroughbreds. Woody Stephens, who had contracted pneumonia during Derby Week, was miraculously present in the winner’s circle along with jockey Laffit Pincay. However, their Derby joy was tempered when Swale ran poorly in the Preakness, finishing seventh to Ken Opstein’s Gate Dancer who had been disqualified from fourth to fifth in the Derby.

The Belmont Stakes was viewed as the deciding race between the two classic winners, Swale and Gate Dancer. However, there was a great deal of uncertainty whether they would reproduce their best form, given the inconsistency of this classic group. By post time, astute New York bettors made Swale the clear favorite based on the win-lose-win rhythm of his campaign, and the handicapping assumption that being the only real speed in the race, Swale could control the pace.

Right on cue, Pincay sent the panther-like Swale to the lead, and, sure enough, they set a leisurely pace for the first 6 furlongs. Just behind Swale was longshot Minstrel Star and Play On with Angel Cordero keeping Gate Dancer closer to the pace than usual. Around the far turn, Play On and Gate Dancer tried to close ground on Swale, but Pincay kept his mount in front as the stamina in the colt’s pedigree was showing its influence. In the stretch, Swale continued to maintain a daylight margin as his strove to the finish winning by 4 comfortable lengths over late closing Pine Circle who was 3 lengths in front of Morning Bob. Gate Dancer, forced out of his best racing style, finished sixth. The time was good with Swale finishing the last ½ mile very strongly. Seth Hancock, President of Claiborne Farm and family received the Belmont trophy in the winner’s circle. For Woody Stephens (who had recovered from his illness) and Laffit Pincay, this was a Belmont “hat trick” as they both celebrated their third victory in a row in this classic. (For the record, Woody Stephens was the first trainer to accomplish this in almost 100 years. However, Mr. Stephens was not done with his Belmont Stakes streak.)

An incredibly sad endnote to the 1984 classic season occurred eight days after the Belmont Stakes when Swale, returning from a routine gallop to his barn, rolled over and was pronounced dead a short time later. Cardiac arrest was suspected, and after a thorough post-mortem examination, it was discovered the colt had a heart abnormality that might have led to his death. Many of the tragedies involving horses are hard to rationalize, but this may be the most inexplicable of all. The adage, “In horse racing the highs are very high and the lows are very low.”, has seldom been truer than in the case of Swale.
Swale
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Woody’s main classic hope in 1985 was Henryk de Kwiatkowski’s Stephan’s Odyssey. In the first crop of the owner’s stallion Danzig, the bay colt, bred for distance, being out of a Gallant Man mare, had a short but successful juvenile season. After breaking his maiden at Belmont in October and finishing fourth in an allowance race, Stephan’s Odyssey was shipped to California, and after winning an prep race, he was victorious in the Hollywood Futurity. In Florida over the winter, he ran competitively with the best on the East Coast and went into the Kentucky Derby with a viable chance. However, he was unable to catch the runaway leader, Hunter Farm’s Spend a Buck, finishing second by 5¼ lengths. Skipping the Preakness Stakes, Stephens prepared Stephan’s Odyssey for a run at the Belmont.

However, Woody had another entry in the Belmont in Brushwood Stable’s Crème Fraiche. The gelded son of Rich Cream, who seemed to be designated as a “B” level horse, had run second consecutively in the Hutcheson, Swale and Everglades Stakes, and the Louisiana Derby. He broke that string in the Derby Trial rallying from off the pace for a ½ length victory on the muddy Churchill Downs surface.  Stephens, after some thought, did not enter this doughty warrior in the Kentucky Derby. Instead, Crème Fraiche, ran in the Jersey Derby where he faced Spend a Buck who had avoided the other Triple Crown races in order to capture a $2 million bonus by winning four New Jersey stakes races. In the 1¼ mile race, Spend a Buck, just had enough to hold off Crème Fraiche by a neck at the finish. 

On Belmont Day, a field of eleven was assembled on a muddy track surface. Last year’s Two Year-old Champion, Chief’s Crown, who had finished third in the Derby and second in the Preakness, was favored. However, the Woody Stephens’ entry of Stephan’s Odyssey and Crème Fraiche was a close second choice. (Besides, getting two legitimate contenders on one betting ticket, horse players were very aware of Stephens’ Belmont Stakes magic.) Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Klein’s Tank’s Prospect, who had narrowly defeated Chief’s Crown in the Preakness, was the third choice.

The pace was rapid with both Chief’s Crown and Tank’s Prospect taking mid-pack positions with the Stephens’ duo parked in the rear. Around the far turn as the leaders tired, Chief’s Crown launched his dependable bid while Tank’s Prospect lost ground suddenly and was pulled up lame. Meanwhile, Crème Fraiche on the outside and Stephan’s Odyssey on the rail were rallying strongly. At the top of the stretch, the two Stephens’ entrants sandwiched Chief’s Crown between them, and after a brief struggle, they pulled away from the juvenile champion. At the finish, Crème Fraiche bested Stephan’s Odyssey by a ½ length with Chief’s Crown 4½ lengths back in third. A gelding winning the Belmont is never good for the breed, but since Brushwood Farm owner, Elizabeth Moran was a major breeder, buyer and seller of horses, Crème Fraiche’s win was warmly received by the thoroughbred community. For Eddie Maple, who lost the mount on Conquistador Cielo due to injury on the eve of the 1982 Belmont and had been replaced on other occasions by Laffit Pincay, this victory was particularly satisfying. For Woody, well, the beat just kept going on with now four consecutive Belmont victories.    
Crème Fraiche
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Stephens’ Belmont Stakes horse for 1986 followed a similar path as Conquistador Cielo and Crème Fraiche in racing neither in the Kentucky Derby nor the Preakness Stakes. Henyrk de Kwiatkowski’s Danzig Connection was a rangy bay son of Danzig out of a Sir Ivor mare who as a two year-old rose out of allowance competition to win a minor stakes race (on a disqualification) and finish a close second in the Young America Stakes, both at the Meadowlands Racetrack. In the lead up to the Belmont Stakes, Woody Stephens, brought Danzig Connection back just in time. Beaten in his first two races against older allowance horses, the long-legged son of Danzig showed an improved effort in leading all the way to win the Peter Pan Stakes by a measured ¾ of a length.

The Kentucky Derby and the Preakness Stakes had been won by two California based runners who were frequent rivals. At Louisville, Mrs. Howard B. Keck’s Ferdinand trained by the “Bald Eagle” Charles Whittingham and ridden by Bill Shoemaker pulled an upset, while in the Preakness, Carl Grinstead and Ben Rochelle’s Snow Chief trained by Mel Stute, unplaced in the Derby, rebounded to defeat Ferdinand by 4 lengths. Snow Chief’s connections decided to forego the Belmont and shipped their colt back to California. The ten horse Belmont field did feature Ferdinand who was completing his participation in all three classics. The rains came on Belmont Day making the racetrack sloppy, and the public was uncertain of Ferdinand’s ability to handle the off going so they settled on the Derby second, Rampage, as the favorite. Danzig Connection, despite Woody Stephens’ Belmont win streak was fifth choice at 8-1. 

Mogambo, who was unplaced in the Derby, was sent to the lead followed by Danzig Connection. Ferdinand, a resolute one run horse, was positioned close by in third on the rail with John’s Treasure fourth just to his outside. The time for the first ½ mile was fast, but it slowed considerably with each passing ¼ of a mile. At the ½ mile pole, Chris McCarron on Danzig Connection went up to challenge Mogambo with Shoemaker on Ferdinand sensing he had to move earlier than he wanted, did so around the long far turn. In doing so, Shoemaker had to steady his colt a bit as John’s Treasure, also went after the leaders. Mogambo dropped back readily, but at the top of the stretch Danzig Connection, Ferdinand and John’s Treasure were three abreast in what promised to be a rousing duel to the finish. However, McCarron had not asked all from his mount, and, when he did, Danzig Connection spurted clear and finished with a 1¼ length margin of victory. In the battle for second, John’s Treasure edged Ferdinand by a neck.

So Woody Stephens kept his streak going now with five straight Belmonts. (There may have been no Triple Crown winner this year, but there was a triple of sorts in that Stephens was the third separate 70+ year-old trainer (along with Whittingham and Stute) to win a classic in 1986.) Owner Henryk de Kwiatokowski was at the beginning of Stephens’ streak with his Conquistador Cielo in 1982, but Chris McCarron was new to the classic victory party.

Danzig Connection
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 As a postscript, Woody Stephens’ Belmont Stakes streaked ended in 1987 when trainee, Hickory Tree Stable’s Gone West finished sixth. However, his “Five Belmont Straight” is a record that is singular in the  history of American thoroughbred classic races.





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