Sunday, April 14, 2024

Spring 2024: Apple Blossom Weekend

 April 12 - 13

It just goes to show, again, that ANY day you go racing you can cash tickets.  Might be a two-lifetime claiming event over sloppy going on a Friday or a Grade 1 $1.25 Million stakes.  If you've got the winner, you get paid regardless!  I stayed away from the races until Friday when Keeneland ran a couple of stakes races, and then I played on Saturday at Keeneland, Laurel, and Oaklawn where all three had stakes including the national feature, the Gr 1 Apple Blossom at Oaklawn.  The Wednesday and Thursday cards at Keeneland had not appealed to me, no big races on the schedule but on Friday there were two stakes events, and I opted to handicap the card and play.  Especially because Kim was taking her Mom to Orlando to visit the grandson and his parents.  In the opener it looked wide open but I thougth Figuereti had a good enough chance to win.  Second best at 9/5.  In the second race I liked Sharp Shot in a maiden claiming sprint.  He was the only MSW class dropper and I noted in my analysis to "watch the board for clues."  When he was getting a LOT of attention I upped the bet.  Right to the front, appeared to be collared at the top of the lane, but rebroke and widened the margin to the wire!

The third was a nine furlong, second level allowance.  I thought only one of the seven would be a surprise but I did like Pyrenees who was lightly raced and improving.  He'd come off a year layoff to win at the FG with a career best 80 Beyer, then upped that with an 88 beating an allowance field.  Off for three months to recover he'd posted six solid works including a bullet move.  Much like Sharp Shot he went right to the front, was challenged turning for home and drew clear through the lane.  Two in a row!

The fourth was a 2-lifetime claiming event going seven furlongs.  And were it NOT a 2L claiming event, albeit an $80K - not $8K claimer -  I might have made Harrodsburg a "prime time" play if not a "BET of the Day" kind of wager.  He was lightly raced and his last three figures were 87-99-87.  He was dropping in for a first time tag and his ten rivals lifetime best figures saw eight a pole slower and the two that had "competitive" figures had been earned last June and last February.  Not a good chance those figures get reproduced today.  Cleared the field in the first few jumps by daylight and was long, LONG gone.  Never in doubt with my triple investment on board.....three in a row with the BEST Bet of the Weekend coming up!

Races 5 and 7 came off the turf and not only did my selections scratch but on the off-going I didn't like anyone.  Races 6 and 8 were already "PASS" events for me, so that brought us to Race 9, the featured Grade 1 Maker's Mark Mile.  You COULD debate if Master of The Seas was a vulnerable favorite, but for me he was a MOST legitimate favorite.  He'd not been seen since November so there was the layoff and he was based in Europe so he had to make the trip.  But that's about it.  As I noted, I would find it REALLY hard to believe that international trainer Charlie Appleby would pick a Grade 1, $600K race across the ocean as a "get one him in" kind of prep race.  Right?  On top of that the last FOUR times he'd run fresh he'd won.  On top of THAT....the last four times regular Euro rider William Buick had ridden him at a mile, he'd won - including the Grade 1 Woodbine Mile and the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Mile.  Buick had the champion perfectly positioned along the rail into the far turn and it was clear to me watching the race that the horse was ready to go, but had no place to run.  Decision time as heads turned for home and the leader drifted off the rail as they often do and Buick shot the champ through.  Like a shot he accelerated to the front and widened through the final furlong as a much the best winner.  That he went off at 3/5 odds I though was immensely generous as I cashed for over $50 to close out a wonderful 4-for-5 afternoon of handicapping! 

Saturday's racing included three venues holding stakes events on my selection sheet.  Not only was Keeneland running a series of stakes, but Laurel had multiple listed stakes for the local upper echelon of runners, but the highlight - to me - was the Apple Blossom card at Oaklawn.  I've been lucky enough to visit Oaklawn twice, and in those seasons the Apple Blossom was run on Friday with the Arkansas Derby run on Saturday.  I'd made both Apple Blossom selections the "Bet of the Day" and they'd both won!  In 2015 Untappable - who would go on to win the Kentucky Oaks with my biggest win bet ever ($200) and in 2017 with Stellar Wind.

The day started with a 4th and a 3rd at 5/2 odds, but with minimum plays.  A two-lifetime claiming event at Oaklawn was their opening event and I liked Savage Darling.  First he was lightly raced with only four starts.  The par for this level of racing was a mediocre 60 BSF, but he was the ONLY runner in the field who'd met that standard.  Two back he "refused to start" and didn't run, the other three produced Beyers of 71, 63, and 63.  Good enough for me!  After getting away slowly he tracked the pace on the rail while fifth turning for home.  Jockey Cristian Torres was looking for a seam when the rail opened, he ducked inside and shot through to the wire.

Ran fourth at Keeneland before it was time for the first stakes event at Laurel, the Heavenly Cause Stakes going a one-turn mile.  Intrepid Dreamer was the pick, and as I noted, at some point she won't deliver but in her six career starts she's won five times, including last time out (as my pick) off a sixteen month layoff at even money at this same one-turn mile here.  Tracked the 9/5 leader into the turn and it looked to me like the rider was having to ask her to be interested.  But once they straightened away she began to gain on the leader.  Caught her in mid-stretch and edged clear through the final 16th of a mile.

Over the next 90 minutes I missed five races, running second, third twice and off the board twice, two of which with short odds favorites.  In Oaklawn's sixth, Corporal was looking to break his maiden in his second start.  The expensive, $1.15 Million colt has been 3/5 on debut at the Fair Grounds.  The son of champion Gun Runner broke slowly and just jogged around the track.  Today he'd try two turns.  It was all about his promise, not what he'd shown.  Tracked the leader into the far turn, cruised to the front and looked long gone but the closers were coming!  Dug down and held on gamely.

The final race before I needed to head out was the Primonetta Stakes at Laurel.  Disco Ebo, I thought, would clear the field and was going to wire this group.  She'd battled from the gate last time out in the much deeper Grade 3 Barbara Fritchie into the lane, emerged with the lead to win the battle.  But she got closed down by the late runners on a day where the track played to closers.  IF she got loose today, I thought it was all over but the shouting.  Right to the front, they came after her in the lane but she would not yield and was clear by a length on the wire with my triple investment on my second straight stakes winner in Maryland.

At this point in the afternoon it was time to head out to the Panthers hockey game.  With Kim gone to Orlando I was meeting up with my buddy Enzo and his family.  He was able to bring two of his boys while he sat with me in Kim's regular seat.  We'd also shared our lower bowl tickets (courtesy of Brad and Lauren) on Tuesday with Enzo and his crew.  It was a significant game because if we won (or lost in overtime we'd seal home-ice advantage for the first round of the playoffs).  It was an exciting finish as we won in overtime on Sam Rinehart's amazing 55th goal of the year with just 1:02 left in the additional period.

As I'd left for the game I set the DVR to record the FanDuel racing broadcast so I could watch the remaining eight races on my selection sheet run on the big screen.  In Keeneland's Grade 3 Giant's Causeway, going five and a half furlongs on the turf, and I thought Christophe Clement's Roses For Debra was a likely winner.  Eleven career starts had produced seven wins!  But wait.....filter out the non-turf starts, and filter the last two graded tries against the boys.  You're left with four turf sprints against fillies & mares:  a nw2x allowance at Pimlico: WIN / a nw3x allowance at Belmont: WIN / Saratoga's Grade 3 Caress Stakes: WIN / and Saratoga's Smart N Fancy Stakes:  WIN.  Oh.  Patiently sat in fifth behind a very quick pace through the far turn.  Swung into the clear and blew by the field to win going away for WIN #5 on the day.

After a nondescript 7th, at 7/1 at Laurel - which I had to watch on the computer because FanDuel had stopped broadcasting the Maryland card, go figure, it was time for the Grade 3 Count Fleet sprint at Oaklawn.  At first glance there looked to be multiple front runners in the field which would set the race up for a closer like, multiple stakes winner Tejano Twist.  But Skelly looked to be way too fast for the other front runners, and that he was listed as the prohibitive even money favorite here was a testament as to how good he probably was.  He'd won seven in a row, including two in a row here - as my top choice - before shipping to Saudi Arabia to run on Saudi Cup Night in the $1.5 Million Group 3 Riyad Dirt Sprint where he was a sharp second.  The layoff and the long trip were a concern, especially if he got pressure early, but still, looked way too good for these.  The gates opened and he broke near the back.  Hustled to the front and when the teletimer clicked off at :21 and change you know with that start he'd run about a :20 opening quarter.  Almost certain to tire late, right?  Held a daylight lead into the lane and when the stalkers and closers kicked in, he kicked away to win as a much the best favorite carrying my triple investment on board.

Missed at 4/5 in the Laurel final stakes event of the day (6th) and ran 2nd as the 8/5 favorite in Keeneland's Grade 1 Jenny Wiley behind a longshot wire-to-wire winner.  The Grade 3 Lexington at Keeneland was the last chance to earn Kentucky Derby points and I liked The Wine Steward to win.  Made a threatening move on the front runner turning into the short stretch, but was only second best.  BUT.....TwinSpires had offered a "Bet Back" if you ran 2nd or 3rd in today's Grade 3 Giant's Causeway and this race, so I "cashed" my ticket :)  The Keeneland finale was an entry level allowance on the turf.  Royal Majesty was a Euro import under the care of Bill Mott.  First start in North America, like so many Euros, produced a WIN.  For his first try against winners he again tried to rally but came up short.  I was more than willing to draw a line through that race, why?  First, it was in stakes company.  And second the splits had been GLACIAL:  :25.2 for the opening quarter and :50.2 for the half.  No chance for a closer.  In spite that he finished with a rush in a field best :21.9 final fraction.  That kind of time for a quarter mile would be regarded as sizzling in an OPENING quarter of a SPRINT, much less the final fraction of a route race.  Sat in the back third to the final turn, moved up the rail, split rivals and rallied down the outside to win going away at a more than generous 3/1 price.  Wish I'd had more on board that one!

The last race on my sheet was the national feature, the Grade 1 Apple Blossom.  Much like the early Gr 3 Count Fleet there appeared on paper to be multiple front runners.  But Bob Baffert is just ultra-deadly shipping into Hot Springs and he was sending multiple Gr 1 winner Adare Manor here today.  If she ran to her numbers I thought she'd be the "speed of the speed."  Right to the front out of the gate and by the time they hit the first turn she was multiple lengths in front.  For all intents and purposes the race was over.  In hand all the way around the track to close out the day in a big way!

For the two days, my Weekend's Totals were:  12-for-25....that's a 48% WIN average my friends, and a flat bet profit resulting in a $2.44 ROI.  You can't ask for much better than that!




Social Media this week......

I have to say starting off here, first having my social media pals is important to me because I don't have hardly any "real life" friends that I interact with frequently.  And if you were asking ME I would say that Lauren Pastrana of CBS-Miami and I have moved into more of a friendship mode and less of a social media friends mode.  This week we went back and forth in some form or fashion a dozen times, six of the seven days of the week.  To be fair a lot of those she just "liked" what I sent her, but that she "notices" me - and on the day she and I didn't exchange anything she "saw" my preview post from our trip.  I've been very happy that she seems to like my sharing these, and I was also very pleased that twice she responded within minutes of me reaching out to her.  The week started off with the amazing Eclipse.  If you remember last week Lauren and I had exchanged messages that she would be hosting the live stream coverage.  I did watch and she "liked" my message to her about the coverage.  Lauren also posted on both FB and Twitter about their coverage and "liked" both my responses on those platforms, and she replied to my twitter message.  Later in the day she saw my private message to her about the first day's preview of the upcoming Greece adventure and she "liked" that message.


My preview message to Lauren on Tuesday was "seen" but she didn't react to it, but on Wednesday she "liked" the message....made me feel better that I wasn't "bothering" her with my messages :)

The same was true Thursday morning when Lauren liked that preview message.  

The Day 4 Preview got another like :)  That evening when the news came on I immediately noticed that Lauren had "done" her hair.  Now in the past I'd often make note of this - girl's like it when you notice things like this of course - but since just last week we'd had a "conversation" about this and she'd remarked to me that her "curly look" would be a "Fun Friday" look, so I messaged her that it was a "Fun Friday/Curly Hair" look on a Wednesday.  She replied back ten minutes later, while on the anchor desk :) that she felt we needed a "Wacky Wednesday" to get through the week!  LOL.  I replied to that and she immediately "liked" that message as well.



Another "like" to my Friday preview private message and on FB that afternoon Lauren posted about her work in the community.  I complimented her on that - it IS cool that despite a full time job, two little ones, and a husband she still finds time to give back in a leadership way in her community.  And then that evening on the news she did a story on new findings in Pompeii.  I messaged her that we'd seen similar remarkable preserved paintings and she wrote right back, while on the air just ten minutes later!



During the Friday evening news Lauren had remarked to Ivan the weather guy about the cool morning on Saturday as she had a T-ball game to go to.  That evening while I was at the hockey game I opened Instagram and Lauren had posted a reel about her daughter's game.  So cute...so I replied to the video and less than five minutes later she "liked" my reply.

My all-time favorite former and now adult gal-pal Kimmy posted the best family pic of her, her husband ("Mr. Kimmy") and her two little ones.  She liked my remark about how good looking they were.

And finally, former Western High student and fellow Miami (Oh) grad Jen had liked the Florida Derby pic of Kim and I so I messaged her how cool it would be if she would come to the Derby next year and she replied back.

Monday, April 8, 2024

Spring 2024 - Opening Weekend

 Opening Weekend at Keeneland

With the Gulfstream winter meet concluding last weekend on Florida Derby Day it's time to turn our attention to the Spring Classics and the racing leading up to that before heading into the summer season where our main attention is on the Monmouth Summer Season.
Friday April 5
After passing the opener, the second race of the day, and the first bet of the spring for me was a 2yo MSW sprint going four and a half furlongs.  If you follow Keeneland, and/or my adventures you know that these races nearly always go through trainer Wesley Ward who scores with nearly every first time starting 2yo at the Keeneland Spring Meet.  And like is often the case, in this event there were TWO Ward runners.  I preferred Bostonian who was working bullets.  The "other" Ward runner was Shoot It True who'd I'd be all over IF that was the only Ward runner.  But as a filly facing colts and the wide draw I preferred Bostonian.  As the day started and I checked the scratches, Ward had scratched Bostonian.  And the crowd was pounding 'True.  OK - I'd noted in my analysis to watch the board and I'd be on the one taking the money.  Well, now there's only one and she's getting hammered so I not only made the wager but tripled the original planned bet.  RIGHT to the front, clear by daylight in the first half dozen jumps and widened through the lane.  Easy-peasy-pie!  And we're on the board to start off the new racing season.

There had been a lot of rain and I expected the third, a turf sprint, to come off the grass but it didn't - kudos to Keeneland management (unlike Gulfstream's who move to the all-weather if it rained last week!).  My selection was thinking it would come off, but he stayed in so I stayed on.  No threat in sixth at a big price.  Next up, another maiden special sprint going seven furlongs.  Roman Grace was my choice.  In her debut she'd drawn the rail and from the top of the turn to the 1/8th pole she was blocked.  When finally clear she had no shot to catch the runaway winner but was five clear of the rest of the field.  With a clean trip I thought she'd prove best in a highly competitive field of 3yo fillies.  Jockey Tyler Gaffalione - who seems to rule the Kentucky circuit these days - broke sharply, went right to the front and drew off by daylight through the stretch.  Went off at nearly 3/1 and I cashed for nearly $40.


The final three best of the day were in the three stakes events and despite having more confidence in all three of these, they finished 3rd, 4th, and 6th.  

Saturday April 6
I had high hopes as the day started as it was Bluegrass Day at Keeneland, Wood Memorial Day at Aqueduct, and Santa Anita Derby Day out west.  The first comment I'll share is that in watching the racing from these tracks I was amazed at the crowds, especially compared to last week's Florida Derby.  I mean, these are THE big days of the season.  At Keeneland, much like at GP last Saturday it was packed.  But when the camera would pan from the infield and you could see the grandstands in New York and Arcadia....it was a ghost town.  Sad.  As sad, I missed on all the big races despite having bet on one of the top two betting choices in all the races.  The day started off smoothly as I scored with three of my first six selections.  I was feeling pretty good about myself if the truth be told.  Then from about 3pm until 7pm I went on a 13-race skid - FIVE of which saw me finish 2nd (and two thirds).  But let's review the winners..... In the first graded stakes of the day, the Grade 2 Carter Handicap at Aqueduct my choice Post Time was the winner.  I'd be the first to admit that the field wasn't the strongest Gr 2 event of the year, but Maryland-based trainer Brittany Russell's colt is talented.  He sat fourth into the turn and made his move.  The leader was former Gulfstream-based Super Chow.  ALWAYS when running thru the stretch he drifts out some 8-9 paths.  So as Post Time closed in on him he was running two strides forward and one stride sideways to keep from running this guy over.  But he was up in time despite the "trouble" with my triple investment on board.

After finishing second and third twice I scored with Discreet Mischief in Keeneland's third, a MSW going seven furlongs for three-year-olds.  His huge 89 Beyer on debut would win for fun if able to reproduce it here.  Pressed the leader into the turn then blew by and drew off as tons the best.

The seventh at Aqueduct (which had started with an early 11:30 am first post) was a first level allowance going a one-turn mile.  Typically these kinds of races are very difficult to predict.  But Bill Mott had entered Bendoog who had been in the running to compete in the $12 Million Group 1 Dubai World Cup.  In Dubai they run a series of races to prep for this big event and Bendoog had run second in both challenge rounds before being outrun in the big event.  On the enormous drop to allowance company I thought he'd prove best.  Near the back early he swooped up six wide into the lane and quickly cleared the field.  Had to dig down deep to hold on, but he was first on the line at better than 2/1 odds allowing me to cash for more than thirty beans.


Prevalance was the next winner for me in Keeneland's fourth - and he's an interesting story.  As a 3yo in 2021 he'd been an exciting winner on debut at Gulfstream and immediately there was some Derby talk.  He came back in a one-turn mile and was much the best - looked to be the real deal.  But disappointed in the Wood Memorial and the Pat Day Mile and his 3yo campaign ended with that effort on the first Saturday in May.  Was an even fifth returning off the shelf at Gulfstream but came back to score in a one-turn mile allowance and followed that with a big win in the Grade 2 Commonwealth here at KEE.  But since that early April victory in 2022 he'd missed in eight straight.  He'd returned from a layoff this past winter and was entered in a synthetic sprint which I felt was odd.  But I thought trainer Brendon Walsh was looking to reboot his career and I bet him.  Nothing.  Came back in a turf sprint and I was on him again.  Distanced badly.  Now he shows up here in a conditioned allowance.  As I looked over the past performances I noted in my analysis, one of two things.......EITHER he just wasn't the same horse he once was as evidenced by his two "no-show" races in South Florida.  OR....maybe, just MAYBE that had been the plan - have two "public workouts" and then be primed for a big effort here today.  That he'd won that Gr 2 here and with Irad Ortiz taking the call I was on board.  Was allowed to go off at a big 5/1 price - which I understand not everyone would dig as deep as I did or be as familiar as I was with this guy's history.  He pressed the 20/1 front runner into the turn and the two of them were several lengths clear of the rest of the field leading me to think, "I'm winning this race!"  Drew off impressively and when he paid nearly $13 for a $2 play I'd had my "bet of the day" to carry my bottom line.


Now came the long drought but got back into the swing of things by winning two of the last three, all in stakes at Santa Anita.  The Grade 3 Monrovia was a six-and-a-half turf dash down the unique hillside and I liked Ag Bullet a lot.  Pressed the leader into the lane and then opened up to win his third race over the SA turf.  Ran second to a longshot with the short-priced Bob Baffert favorite in the Grade 1 Santa Anita Derby - the winner being the "other Baffert" who's Beyers were a pole slower than those of the top two betting choices.  Sigh....racing!  Closed the day out with a runaway winner, Shady Tiger, in the Echo Eddie Stakes on the main track.



Sunday April 7
Two good stories from the weekend finale card at Keeneland.  Sidmara had been second best in his debut for Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott, which would make you take him seriously.  But as I noted in my analysis, I don't think in the 17 plus years I've been handicapping seriously I've ever seen a running line like his.  Not only 2nd....not only a "best-of-the-rest" second.....but had finished second by more than TWENTY-FOUR lengths.  Yes, 24.  Thought for sure he'd be 3/5 or less as I made him the BET of the Weekend.  Somehow, go figure, the crowd let him go off at 6/5.  Was shuffled back to near the back early - sigh, really?  But moved up readily down the backside, got into contention on the turn, then blew by to win as easily best.  Cashed for over $65 to seal a winning day.

In the race immediately after the BIG WIN, I picked Mansa Mousa to win the Palisades Stakes going five and a half furlongs on the turf.  I knew he was a longshot in the program, but really thought he'd take some betting action, especially because he was the DRF Best Bet.  He was making his first North American start for Team Valor and Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott.  In his last three Euro starts he'd scored a win and then two seconds in stakes company.  As they left the gate he was an amazing 15/1.  Was well back, but got a perfect trip up the rail.  As the moved through the turn I thought, "I have a real chance here....."  Inside the final 200 yards he surged to the front and I thought, "OH MY, I'm going to cash for nearly $801"  But then on the wire he was nailed.  WOW....you gotta love racing!


Finally - worth noting that three weeks from today (Sunday) Kim and I kick off our 2024 adventures.  I'm so very excited that we have FIVE big trips over the final eight months of the year.  



Social Media this week.....

Especially now that we're into the spring-summer-fall racing and I won't have much "human contact" (except on our travels) the interactions with my social media friends becomes more "important" to me.  And I think it's fair for me to say that CBS-Miami anchor Lauren Pastrana can be considered a "friend" and not just a social media person I have contact with.  That - for me - is because after having a half dozen contacts with her last week, we interacted SEVEN different times this week, including a three-exchange "conversation" one evening which was the highlight of the social media week.  Our first two interactions came when Lauren posted about her hair style.  Going back over a year I had once commented about her "new do" and she was appreciative of the notice, and since then I've often commented when she curls it.  So this week she asked for opinions on curly vs. straight and then posted about covering up her gray hairs.  Can't even imagine that's true.  The next exchange came when I asked her, following her posting about the solar eclipse if she'd be on air or if she'd still be on vacation because in spite of all our interactions, she wasn't on the anchor desk all week.  Lauren replied nearly right away that she'd be co-hosting with the weather guy, Ivan, on a special streaming feature.  I continued that conversation by sharing that the Viking TV people had replied regarding my "script" and she asked about my presentation - it was the kind of specific question that you'd ask only if you truly had been interested in previous conversations we'd had about this.  I also got a reaction to my message when I sent her a photo of me on a chilly Monday morning with coffee.  And finally I decided I'd share our trip previews with her, and asked her to let me know if she did not want these sent to her or if she was already seeing them on Facebook.  She reacted and replied without telling me not to continue, so I will.








Karli Barnett used to be a regular follower of our trips and so I sent her a message on Twitter that I'd sent her a preview.  And then we exchanged comments on her Sunday live Facebook chat.



I sent my bestie gal-pal Kimmy a link to our travel preview video and she immediately texted back.  Then later in the week she texted me in reply to my message about my Gulfstream totals.


And finally I exchanged reactions/comments with four former students.....
Kristian
Leah
Tati
Megan