Inaugura Eddie D Stakes — Autumn Meet Opens THIS FRIDAY at Santa Anita Racetrack!

ARCADIA, Calif. (Sept. 25, 2012)—Santa Anita’s 24-day Autumn Meet will get underway in style on Friday, as a near-capacity field of 13 have signed up to contest the inaugural Grade III, $100,000 Eddie D Stakes, for 3-year-olds and up at about 6 ½ furlongs down the Camino Real Turf Course.

“The race proved to be just as popular as Eddie D.,” said Santa Anita Racing Secretary and Vice President of Racing Rick Hammerle. “Let’s hope this is a good omen for the entire meet.”

Formerly run as the Morvich Stakes, the Eddie D is named in honor of retired Hall of Fame jockey Eddie Delahoussaye, who will be on hand to sign autographs from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and he will also present the trophy for the race named in his honor later in the afternoon.

Comma to the Top, a hard-hitting 4-year-old gelding trained by Peter Miller, figures to get plenty of pari-mutuel attention and is expected to show his customary early zip in the Eddie D. The Kentucky-bred son of Bwana Charlie is in top form, having prevailed by 1 ¾ lengths over 10 rivals in the 6 ½ furlong Pirate’s Bounty Stakes at Del Mar on Sept. 5.

Prior to the Pirate’s Bounty, Comma to the Top was a close-up fourth in the Grade I Bing Crosby Stakes going six furlongs at Del Mar on July 29.

Second in last year’s Santa Anita Derby and last in the Kentucky Derby, Comma to the Top has a 4-2-0-1 record on turf, but has never run down Santa Anita’s unique hillside layout.

Owned by Gary Barber, Roger Birnbaum and Kevin Tsujihara, Comma to the Top sports a lifetime record of 21-9-2-1, with earnings of $916,096.

Trainer Steve Asmussen sends out perhaps the biggest question mark in the 13-horse field in Unbridled Note, who will try turf for the first time Friday and comes off a troubled third in Saratoga’s Grade I King’s Bishop Stakes for 3-year-olds at seven furlongs on Aug. 25.

The Kentucky-bred colt by Unbridled’s Song has an impressive 2 ¾-length win over a sloppy track to his credit three starts back at Churchill Downs on June 17, which could be an indication that he’ll take to the grass. Owned by Mike McCarty, Unbridled Note has a 6-2-0-2 record and $135,741 in earnings.

While contention runs deep in the 13-horse field, California-bred Red Sun would appear to rate a solid chance for trainer Carla Gaines. The 6-year-old Harris Farms homebred gelding by Redattore overcame a one-year layoff to finish second, beaten a half-length while attending the pace in a first-condition allowance at 1 1/16 miles on turf at Del Mar Aug. 30.

Lightly raced, Red Sun is a perfect two for two down Santa Anita’s hillside layout and has an impressive overall record of 9-5-2-2 with earnings of $227,988. He too figures to be on or near the lead Friday.

In addition to Red Sun, Gaines will also saddle Shrug, a winner of the $93,000 Green Flash Handicap at five furlongs on the turf at Del Mar on Aug. 15. Although he has never run down the hill, he possesses a versatile style that should serve him well. The 4-year-old Kentucky-bred colt by Medaglia d’Oro is one for two on turf and has an overall record of 15-4-2-1 with earnings of $190,380.

Trainer John Sadler will also send out a pair, Koast, who was fourth, beaten only a half-length in Del Mar’s Green Flash and Calimonco, who never threatened while running fifth in the Grade II Del Mar Mile (turf) Handicap on Aug. 26.

Koast, who retains the services of top rider Rafael Bejarano, is a 3-year-old Kentucky-bred colt by Lawyer Ron. He’s two for two over the course and has the necessary speed to attend and/or make the early pace. Koast is owned by Hronis Racing and has a career record of 8-3-0-2, with earnings of $128,566.

Calimonco is a turf veteran, who at age six will be making his 34th career start on Friday. Reunited with jockey Martin Garcia, who guided him to a second-place finish two starts back in Del Mar’s one mile Wickerr Stakes on July 25, Calimonco was third in his only start down the hill on Jan. 9, 2010. Bred in Kentucky by Pam and Martin Wygod, he is owned by the Wygods and Ballena Vista Farm.

The complete field for the Eddie D Stakes, carded as the eighth on a nine-race race program, with jockey and weights in post position order: Crimson Giant, Modesto Linares, 115; Chosen Miracle, Alonso Quinonez, 118; Calimonco, Martin Garcia, 118; Koast, Rafael Bejarano, 118; Shrug, Victor Espinoza, 118; Comma to the Top, Martin Pedroza, 118; Boxeur des Rues, Mario Gutierrez, 118; Octane, David Flores, 118; Red Sun, Joe Talamo, 118; Tale of a Champion, Garrett Gomez, 118; Mensa Heat, Juan Hernandez, 118; Canuletmedowneasy, Edwin Maldonado, 115; Unbridled’s Note, Corey Nakatani, 115.

First post time on Friday is 1 p.m. For additional information, visit www.santaanita.com or call (626) 574-RACE.

COURTESY OF YOUR NUMBER ONE ARCADIA REAL ESTATE AGENT

I’ll Have Another Wins Preakness–Second Jewel In Triple Crown!

Gutierrez, Derby winner win Preakness thriller, are one win from the Triple Crown

BY JENNIFER CALDWELL

updated 9:22 p.m. ET May 19, 2012

BALTIMORE – Two weeks ago, J. Paul Reddam’s I’ll Have Another ran down pacesetter Bodemeister to take the Kentucky Derby under the Twin Spires at Churchill Downs. On Saturday, I’ll Have Another took on that pacesetting rival in the 137th running of the Preakness Stakes and gutted out a neck victory to take the second jewel of the Triple Crown at Pimlico.

The front-running Bodemeister took command straightaway and set more reasonable fractions of :23 3/5, :47 3/5, 1:11 3/5 and 1:36 3/5 this time around than what he did in the Derby. Jockey Mario Gutierrez settled I’ll Have Another in behind and to the outside as Creative Cause kept pace with Bodemeister on the backstretch.

Bodemeister, Creative Cause and I’ll Have Another swung around the turn in tandem, but the gray Creative Cause couldn’t keep pace as his two rivals faced off yet again. Bodemeister held the advantage for much of the stretch run, but I’ll Have Another kept inching closer and just got up in the shadow of the wire to finish 1 3/16 miles on the fast dirt in 1:55 4/5.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“We wanted to be a little bit closer to Bodemeister this time because normally that horse runs a huge race,” Gutierrez said. “My horse has a tremendous kick in the end. He has been proving that in the last three races. He didn’t disappoint again today. He has proven a lot of people wrong. I just have to prepare because I want to be at the same level as him. He’s an amazing horse.”

The exciting rematch was witnessed by a record crowd of 121,309 at Pimlico, edging the 2005 Preakness when 121,263 packed Old Hilltop. The 13-race Thoroughbred card generated an all-sources handle of $80,463,005. The handle ranked as the sixth highest for Pimlico’s signature day.

“The numbers say it all. We had a tremendous event,” Maryland Jockey Club president Tom Chuckas stated.

It’s now on to the Belmont Stakes in New York for the Doug O’Neill-trained I’ll Have Another, who cost just $35,000 when purchased by O’Neill’s brother Dennis at the 2011 OBS Spring Sale of Two-Year-Olds in Training. The colt will attempt to become the first Triple Crown winner since Affirmed swept all three races in 1978.

“I’m just numb,” Doug O’Neill said. “I could see him and I felt like he was coming, but you never want to expect that he’s going to be in front. I saw him coming. It seemed like the stretch never ends. Usually you want it to end. Incredible.

“Just absolutely exciting,” O’Neill added in regards to winning the first two legs of the Triple Crown. “It’s what it’s all about. Those are the kind of races you hate to lose. But when you win those kind of races, you always feel like you have a chance the whole race. Then you’re yelling at the top of your lungs. Then to see a horse in front at the wire, there is no better feeling. It’s incredible.”

“I haven’t thought past today,” Reddam admitted when asked about going for the Triple Crown in an NBC post-race interview. “I just can’t imagine it. Hopefully the horse is doing well out of the race. It’s going to get crazy.”

I’ll Have Another paid $8.40, $3.80 and $2.80 as the 3-1 second choice to move his record to 7-5-1-0. The chestnut colt boosted his earnings to $2,693,600 with the winner’s share of the $1 million purse.

Bodemeister reputed himself well in second as the 8-5 favorite, and it was another 8 3/4 lengths back to Creative Cause in third.

“It’s one of those things where it’s good for the sport. It’s good for the Belmont. It’s tough,” trainer Bob Baffert admitted about Bodemeister’s loss. “I felt really good about where he was. He looked like he was traveling nicely down the backside and coming to the three-eighths pole, he just sat on him. The fractions were more reasonable today, so turning for home I really thought he was going to do it. He just got a little late there at the end.

“It was a good horse race. I really can’t complain. We didn’t win it, but my horse ran his race.

“The winner’s a good horse. He’ll get the respect now that he deserves,” Baffert added. “The California horses are really tough. They ran 1-2-3. I’m proud that as a trainer my horse showed up and he ran his race. He just got beat.”

“I thought I put him away, but (I’ll Have Another) reached up and got us with three strides,” said Bodemeister’s jockey, Mike Smith. “Two great horses and I give them all the credit for what they did.”

Zetterholm rounded out the superfecta three lengths farther back, while Teeth of the Dog, Optimizer, Cozzetti, Tiger Walk, Daddy Nose Best, Went the Day Well and Pretension completing the order under the wire.

“We’re happy,” trainer Richard Dutrow said of Zetterholm’s fourth-place run. “He’s not supposed to beat the top two, so we are really pleased with the way he ran today.”

“He ran a huge race,” jockey Junior Alvarado said of Zetterholm’s performance. “He was there and was coming from behind. We were almost last and when I asked him, he started to pick it up.”

I’ll Have Another is following in the illustrious hoofsteps of fellow California-based Sunday Silence, who captured the Grade I Santa Anita Derby en route to victory in the Kentucky Derby and Preakness over Easy Goer. Those two put on a show in the 1989 Preakness similar to I’ll Have Another and Bodemeister, with Sunday Silence just getting the nose win over his chestnut rival.

In the Belmont Stakes, though, Sunday Silence fell short as the 1 1/2-mile distance of the “Test of the Champion” proved too far. I’ll Have Another has thus far proven capable of finding more as the distances have increased and could complete one of the toughest challenges in American sports by adding the Belmont to his resume on June 9.

I’ll Have Another began his career last July at Hollywood Park, breaking his maiden on the synthetic Cushion Track by three parts of a length. He followed up with a second while making his stakes debut in the Grade II Best Pal Stakes on Del Mar’s all-weather Polytrack, then shipped cross-country to New York to try a conventional dirt track in the Grade I Hopeful Stakes at Saratoga. The Flower Alley colt was unable to challenge that day after running wide throughout, ending up sixth, and called it a campaign for his juvenile season.

I’ll Have Another returned five months later to take the Grade II Robert B. Lewis Stakes by 2 3/4 lengths at Santa Anita and is now undefeated this year from four total starts. After the Lewis came a nose win in the Santa Anita Derby, and the chestnut colt overhauled Bodemeister in the Kentucky Derby to win that classic event by 1 1/2 lengths.

Bred in Kentucky by Harvey Clarke, I’ll Have Another is out of the winning Arch mare Arch’s Gal Edith and comes from the family of Grade I winners Roanoke and Into Mischief. He counts as his fifth dam the influential matron Patelin, ancestress of champion Pleasant Stage and such Grade I winners as A Phenomenon, Seattle Meteor, Pillaster and Class Play.