Summer
is here and so is the next phase of the racing season. The sophomore class of
2013 has made their Triple Crown bids and are now targeting the country’s most prestigious
stakes races for their summer campaigns. As the season stands now Oxbow and Orb
should be considered the leaders of the division due to their Classic wins and
consistent performances throughout the year. Contrary to what many seem to
think, I believe this crop is actually pretty good and has proven to be very
durable. Orb and Oxbow both ran four times in 2013 before the Derby and then
competed in all three legs of the Triple Crown. Even Palace Malice, who skipped
the Preakness Stakes, ran four times before the Derby including just 2 weeks between
his disastrous Louisiana Derby run and his strong Toyota Blue Grass Stakes
runner-up effort. Running four times before the Derby isn’t a spectacular feat,
but coming through the first half of the year and the Triple Crown season
without any serious injuries and always performing well is admirable.
Verrazano began the summer season for
this crop with a scintillating 9 ¼ length win in the Grade 3 Pegasus Stakes
that was sadly marred by the injury of Itsmyluckyday. The More Than Ready colt
ran the 1 1/16 mile distance in a very
solid time of 1:41.72. Visually it was a very flashy win, but with Itsmyluckyday
being taken out of contention with the injury it was basically a paid workout
for Verrazano, so there wasn’t really a challenge to measure his worth coming
off his 14th place finish in the Kentucky Derby. Still, there is the
good running time to take into consideration and it was just a prep race for
the Haskell Invitational Stakes on July 28th so his real test will
come at the end of next month. He is a dynamic runner with a large fan base so
it would be nice to see him come back with a big win in the Haskell, plus it
would make the battle for leadership of the division even more intriguing.
Three
of the runners from the Belmont Stakes have returned to the worktab in the past
week, including Belmont victor Palace Malice who breezed an easy :49.45 half
mile for trainer Todd Pletcher on Sunday at Belmont Park. Pletcher remarked
that he felt that the son of Curlin was “just telling me to give [him] a breeze,”
so just two weeks after his victory in the Belmont Stakes Palace Malice has
begun his preparation for the Jim Dandy Stakes (Gr.2) on July 27th. This
colt makes me like him more and more; he has Curlin for a sire, runs his heart
out every time he hits the track and is apparently full of energy and raring to
go just two weeks after the biggest race of his life. I can’t wait for the Jim
Dandy Stakes to see what he’s capable of after garnering his first big win.
Dreaming
of Julia failed to live up to her reputation once again on Saturday and this
time there was no excuse for her distant second place finish behind the
brilliant Close Hatches in the Mother Goose Stakes. The result was a huge
surprise to me. Not that I doubted the talent or ability of Close Hatches, (I
even remarked to a friend that if there was an upset Close Hatches was the only
one I’d pick) it was just that the talent Dreaming of Julia flashed in the
Gulfstream Park Oaks was so huge that my opinion of her ability was bloated
beyond proportion. She ran a decent second, but Close Hatches stole the show
with her powerful 7 ¼ length win. The First Defence filly proved that the undefeated
record she lost in the wake of her 7th place finish in the Kentucky
Oaks, was no fluke. Her final time of 1:41.36 for the 1 1/16 mile distance was very
solid and the top three fillies finished 1-2-3 so I think her win is a legitimate
one based on her own ability and not a factor of Dreaming of Julia’s falling
short. The 3-year-old filly division is just as dynamic and confusing as the 3-year-old
male division now and is shaping up for a very exciting summer season.