Art Major
and SBSW were not contemporaries, but they do have a history together: SBSW is
still smarting from that loss to Art Major’s son, Art Official, in the Pace.
And while Captaintreacherous and his sire, SBSW, stand as the most obvious and
seemingly compelling story line for the 2013 Cup, remember that while there are
three sons of SBSW in the final, there are also three sons of Art Major. And
one of them, Fool Me Once, put up the fastest winning time on Saturday night.
While SBSW
dominated the sales in the fall, Art Major was, once again in tough times,
amazingly consistent. At Harrisburg 44 Art Majors sold for an average of
$34,000, while in 2011 48 brought an average of $38,000. Yes, his fee dropped
20%, but he’s still the most expensive pacing stallion in New York.
When Captive
Audience closed on The Captain, sending a wave of angina through the collective
heart of Team Treacherous, as well as those who knocked him down to 1/5, it
brought to mind the sour stomach Dragons Lair gave Team Guida when he upset
Nihilator in the 1984 BC. How appropriate, seeing as the fourth dam of Captive
Audience, Shadylu Hanover, was a half-sister to Dragon’s Lair. Both were out of
the super-mom, Sandys Sable.
Captive
Audience was a $95,000 Harrisburg buy, but that didn’t win him much respect
during his freshman campaign. He wasn’t favored in any of his ten starts and
routinely went off at odds of 22/1, 37/1, 13/1, 8/1 and 44/1. He paid $90 when
he upset the likes of Rockin Amadeus, Fool Me Once and Odds On Equuleus in the
Champlain. Captive Audience finished third behind Captaintreacherous in the
Nasagaweya at 37/1 and was also third behind that one in their Metro
elimination, where he went off at 13/1.
Another son
of Art Major, Fool Me Once, was very strong as he won the second elimination in
:48.1, last quarter in :26.4. Last year Sweet Lou won his elimination in :47.4
but he came home almost a second slower than Fool Me Once did. Lou hit the
three-quarter mark in a speedy 1:20.1, while Fool got there in 1:21.2, and the
other two splits got there in 1:22 and 1:22.3.
Fool Me Once
is a full-brother to George Teague’s, Feel Like A Fool. The fast but fractious
gelding finished strong as a freshman with wins in the Bluegrass, ISS and
Matron, and was expected to be a top five sophomore, but he never met
expectations. Fool Me Once’s second dam, Spurred On, is half to the 2003 two-year-old
C&G Pacer of the Year, I Am A Fool.
Odds On
Equuleus, another Art Major, also made the final off a closing second place
finish to Vegas Vacation. Last season Equuleus won the Nasagaweya, a division
of the ISS and, although the curious
crew in the judges stand stole it from him, a split of the Bluegrass.
His dam,
Latte Lady, is a full sister to the almost millionaire, Driven To Win. The dams
of Equuleus and Fool Me Once are both by Jenna’s Beach Boy. The latter’s daddy,
Beach Towel, is the sire of SBSW’s dam, Wheres The Beach. See how it all comes
together. Sure it does.
It is
noteworthy that both Art Major and SBSW are battling to upend the tsunami that
is Meadow Skipper. SBSW is revitalizing the Volomite branch running through
Sampson Hanover, and The Captain could be his first crop extender—Team
Treacherous certainly hopes so. Fourteen-year-old Art Major is carrying the
burden of extending Artsplace, and Adios, too, for that matter, but there is no
obvious extender on the horizon. The first crop of Art Official was received at
the sales with the sort of enthusiasm generally reserved for broken dust collectors
at a yard sale. Hypnotic Blue Chip?? Ah, no. Santana Blue Chip??? Please. Could
it be Fool Me Once or Equuleus? Artsplace will be gone seven years in the fall.
He was only 18 when he passed. The clock is ticking.
And how
about the Art Major filly, Belle Boyd, finishing second behind the two-year-old
champion, I Luv The Nitelife, in the Fan Hanover elimination. Belle, a $90,000
Lexington purchase, is out of the Western Hanover mare, Yankee Luck, a full
sister to 2004 Tattersalls Pace winner, Yankee Lariat. She came into Saturday’s
race a perfect seven for seven in 2012, having swept both the Blossom and
Princess series.
I hope Art
Major gets some recognition in the buildup to the Cup for his fine showing on
Saturday night at Mohawk.
What was more
far-fetched, Jamieson thinking he was going to blow by Anndrovette and TT on
the back in the Artiscape, or Brennan thinking he was going to do the same to
Sweet Lou and YG with Cheddar in the RWJ? Last year it was Gingras and Foiled putting
the heat on JC and Bettor Sweet in this race, but he waited until the last turn
to do that. Lou had been used hard out of the gate, but not that hard.
Anndrovette
had also been used plenty getting to the top at the start in the Artiscape, but
so had Big McDeal in that nasty :25.1 opening quarter. You can see why JJ
didn’t want to sit in behind Anndrovette with Feeling You moving up, but
Tetrick’s mare wasn’t spent to the degree that she was going to let Big McDeal
take the inside from her. I suppose Brennan and JJ both felt that simply
marking time first up was a recipe for slow but sure death against that crowd.
The Bettor’s
Delight is now the Roll With Joe? It makes sense from the perspective that BD
is now in PA and has been replaced at Blue Chip by his little brother, but tell
me, has there ever been a duller three-year-old division winner than RWJ? He
was the equine equivalent of Ambien. Why don’t they call it the Art Major? At
least he earned a million dollars at four. What does RWJ have to do with FFA
pacers?
1 comment:
It's one thing for Brennan to try to outbrush the leader with a well-bet horse, quite another for JJ to pull the pocket at odds of longer than 50-1.
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