The Captain
can’t race in the Jug because of a scheduling conflict, a conflict with taking
a snooze and eating some grass, perhaps. There are 26 days between the Cane and
the Bluegrass. How will The Captain, who already gets more down time than Clay Buchholz,
occupy himself during that stretch? table manager Myron Bell says there may be
a mystery race next week. It’s not the PASS consolation for his class, because
he’s not entered.
We are sure
of one thing: the Captain has to race next year. We know that because Bell reminds
us about it every five minutes. While rationalizing the colt’s boycott of the
Jug he even raised the specter of The Captain having to take on his elders in
the TVG final. No, don’t tell me that. Let’s get serious; there’s as much chance
of CT tangling with Pet Rock, ARNRD, Duer and company in November as there is
of the Tea Party offering strippers as the entertainment at their next
convention. These folks are afraid of a challenging draw in Delaware and still they’re
going to take on the FFA set in the TVG? Please! And someone give Myron Bell a
big, fluffy crying towel. Every time he starts in on the colt’s demanding schedule,
this that and the other thing for the good of the horse, and having to race
next year, the tears start falling like rain.
Bell’s contention
that top standardbreds are raced more like thoroughbreds these days is not
without merit but it does run contrary to what Jeff Gural has been trying to
achieve: more races and longer careers for star attractions. The Captain has
made only eight starts thus far; if this magical mystery race fails to
materialize the Bluegrass will be his next, then the Tattersalls Pace and the two
starts required for the Breeders Crown. Putting aside the talk about the TVG,
that would add up to a dozen starts for the season and 21 for his first two
campaigns. No need to go back 40 or 50 years for comparisons, contrast his potential
12 starts with the 24 made by NA Cup champ, Thinking Out Loud, last year, the
20 made by the O’Brien champion, Michaels Power, or the 18 by Dan Patch winner,
Heston Blue Chip.
Last year
Pet Rock wasn’t eligible to the Jug so his connections entered him in a 10K
open at Delaware on Jug Day and put a very fast mile on his resume with little
sturm und drang . Along the same lines, Linda Toscano didn’t want to expose
Market Share to multiple heats in the Kentucky Futurity, so instead of
supplementing him, she raced him in one of the 10K opens at Lexington. Perhaps
Team Treacherous could take a similar approach with The Captain. Race him in
one of the soft, single heat opens at Delaware. Folks would get to see him and
he’d earn a fast mark over a half. Yes, that’s the solution to this dilemma. I’m
quite certain that’s what Mr. Bell will do.
Kudos to
Casie Coleman for coming right back with Vegas Vacation and Lucan Hanover in
the Simcoe, five days after the Cane. Coleman isn’t torn like Hamlet about
racing or not racing her charges in the Jug, which she won last year with
Michaels Power. A couple of years ago she got third in the Jug with Cheddar. Winning
the Cane is the only way a colt that hasn’t been nominated can get into the race
and I believe Cheddar, who won the Cane, was supplemented to both. Can’t help
thinking the unwavering love of the Jug Casie has been dishing out in her post
race interviews serves as a veiled shot at Team Treacherous.
Speaking of
the Jug, Johny Rock’s w-w win against older horses in :47 at Pocono on Saturday
was an eye opener. While Pet Rock was battling ARNRD for the lead in the Ewart
at Scioto, where they hit the quarter in :25 flat, Johny Rock, with Andy Miller
sitting behind him, was pretty much on his own from start to finish. This is
the type of colt that can come up big in the Jug, especially with a favorable
draw. He finally made it on to the Road To The Jug top ten contenders list at
number nine. The big news today is that the OSS gelding, Mach It So, who has
had the number five spot locked down for some strange reason, won’t be
competing in the Jug. He finished fourth
Saturday night in the Simcoe. Not sure why Jay Wolf is so taken with him; he
hasn’t met with any success outside his restricted stakes program. File that
one under head scratchers. Johny Rock
was 12/1 in the first Jug Wagering Pool.
**********
The fear
that a lack luster four-year-old campaign will diminish a horse’s value as a
stallion is real. Heston Blue Chip’s inability to win anything but opens at
Tioga and Saratoga or a winners over at Harrah’s has probably made quite a dent
in his desirability as a stallion. He drew the rail in his Quillen elimination Monday
but was no factor as Clear Vision won easily over Michaels Power and Escape The
News. Market Share is in a similar situation, although he did win the Maple
Leaf and a FFA leg of the TVG. Still, he failed to convert in the Credit
Winner, Maxie Lee and a couple of others. And being a son of Revenue doesn’t
help in NA to begin with. A poor showing in the Allerage/BC would be a problem.
However, wins in those races might turn things around for him.
Pet Rock and
A Rocknroll Dance, both of whom experienced plenty of success as well as their share of disappointing moments at three, have
markedly increased their value in the breeding market. The premature passing of
their sire certainly enhances their appeal. If Captaintreacherous wins his two starts in
Lexington as well as the BC, he’ll have nowhere to go but down. And if Pet
Rock, ARNRD, Duer, Sweet Lou and friends hang around for another year The
Captain could wind up off the path and wandering in the desert like HBC.
**********
Saturday was
a big day for the New York Sire Stakes program at Mohawk; three of the four
Champlain divisions were taken by NY sired youngsters and both Simcoe splits
went to New York breds. Art Major had three winners and American Ideal and
Bettor’s Delight one each. There was also a coming out party for three promising
players from Brittany Farms. They share ownership of Master Of Law, Winds Of
Change and Fort Knox.
**********
Bulletproof Enterprises
bred Shock It To ‘Em, The Western Terror—Tootsie J gelding who upset Ultimate
Beachboy in the Stallion Series Final for Pierce at Pocono Saturday night.
Bulletproof will linger on the breeding line for years to come.
*********
The youth
movement that has taken control of the aged divisions on both gaits leaves old
timers Arch Madness, Foiled Again and Golden Receiver as the only three from
the Social Security set still trying to compete at the FFA level. Arch finished
second in the Elitlopp in May but his only win in NA was a virtual walkover
against a short, weak field in an open at Tioga. He broke at the start of the
Credit Winner the other night. Golden Receiver, the King of Winter, hasn’t won
since May 11, when he took a leg of the TVG. He last raced on August 17. Foiled
keeps earning those big checks and still leads his division in dollars earned,
however he hasn’t won for more than two months and no longer has a lock on the
small track circuit stakes: the Levy,
Battle of Lake Erie and Quillen. Although he did win his Quillen elimination
over four overmatched foes on Monday night.
**********
It will be a
few years before the stallions that took up residence in Ohio in 2012 and 2013
bear fruit. Those would include: Big Bad John, Art Official, The Panderosa,
McArdle, No Pan Intended, Break The Bank and Dejarmbro. Many of the colts and
fillies vying for 150K purses at the Scioto Downs Super Night were awful. The
slots dollars have outpaced the breeding program.
**********
The aged
pacing mares have faded into the background; they’re being marginalized by a
lack of opportunities. The Lady Liberty on August 3—Hambletonion Day—was their
last stakes race. There was nothing on Super Stakes Day at Pocono and WEG hasn’t
offered anything. Anndrovette and Rocklamation made their last two starts in a
Preferred at Pocono and a winners over at Harrah’s. Meanwhile the trotting
mares participated in a leg of the Miss Versatility and the Muscle Hill. And they’ll
be in Ohio on Jug Day for the Miss Versatility Final. The next meaningful
stakes race for the pacing mares is the Milton on September 21.
Off of her
impressive win in the preferred trot at Pocono the other night, where
Anndrovette was third, as well as her wins in the Lady Liberty and a 50K inv at
Pocono in mid-August, Drop The Ball is the division leader.
Losing
Peelers two years ago, Jewel at the beginning of last season and Put On A Show
at the close of last season has prevented this division from turning into the
powerhouse their opposite number has become.
**********
When Your So
Vain, a Donato out of a Muscles Yankee sister to Credit Winner, won a CPD
elimination the other night, I was thinking he may wind up being Donato’s best
colt. He won a split of the ISS last year and one of the Simcoe recently.
Check Me Out
has had a terrible campaign, but some of Donato’s fillies have performed well,
primarily in the PASS. Mistery Woman, Shake It Cerry, Honor Thy Daughter and
Designed To Be are a few of them. Real Babe has come into her own with the
older trotting mares, too. But Possess The Will, from Donato’s first crop, is
still his top earning male. Check Me Out has earned 67% more than the second
place Donato, male or female. Possess The Will only started five times last
year. Power Play only made nine starts. Weingartner got on the track three
times last year. Solvato was fourth at 80/1 in the Meadowlands Maturity last
time out, in early May. Stand out colts? Bluto, Possessed Fashion, Don
Donato???? The buyers gave Donato a haircut last year and his fee was cut by
25%. We’ll have to keep an eye on his colt/filly breakdown in the upcoming
sales.
If you
booked a mare to Direct Scooter back in 1994, the agreement called for a 10K
stud fee payment if she produced a colt and 5,500 if it was a filly. Maybe they
should do that with Donato, with the premium being paid for the filly.
***********
Spider Blue
Chip and Master Of Law are staked to the Old Oaken Bucket on Jug Day. It would
be great to see those two show up. Frau Blucher looks like a standout in the
Buckette, if she’s entered. Pet Rock, ARNRD, Michaels Power, Thinking Out Loud
and Foreclosure are all eligible to the Winbak Aged Pace.
**********
Casie
Coleman’s Dragon Again filly, Scandalous Hanover, who has won her last six,
including the Shady Daisy in her last start, goes in the 50K PASS 3YOPF
consolation at The Meadows Friday, probably with David Miller…..Another one in
light in the 50K consolation round is the Andover Hall colt, Creatine. He won
the 200K Colonial consolation as well as his Hambletonian elimination. Lindy’s
Tru Grit, winner of the Zweig consolation, is also in that race.
2 comments:
Maybe the Captain has other issues related to soundness as a reason for the long layoffs between certain starts...
They don't make them like they used to do they? So much for improving the breed.
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