Kentucky Derby Notes: Wednesday, May 4, 2022

CROWN PRIDE STREAKS BULLET HALF-MILE; TAIBA BLOWS OUT THREE-EIGHTHS


LOUISVILLE, KY (Wednesday, May 4, 2022) – Teruya Yoshida’s Crown Pride (JPN), with Derby rider Christophe Lemaire aboard, blazed through a half-mile breeze in :46.60 over a fast track Wednesday morning under overcast skies.

   Working on his own, Crown Pride produced fractions of :12.40, :24.20, :35.60 and galloped out five furlongs in 1:00. The move was the fastest of nine at the distance for the morning.

   Working shortly after Crown Pride was Zedan Racing Stables’ Santa Anita Derby (GI) winner Taiba who blew out three furlongs in :38.40 and galloped out a half-mile in :52.60.

 

BARBER ROAD – William Simon’s Barber Road, most recently second in the Arkansas Derby (GI), changed his training schedule slightly Wednesday, going out to gallop at 6:30 a.m. with regular rider Elexander Aguilar aboard rather than waiting until the 7:30 a.m. training time set aside of Derby and Oaks horses.

   “He likes to go out early,” Simon said. “He gets keyed up and wants to get out there, then he comes back and takes his usual nap.”

   Barber Road is named for the road in rural North Carolina where Simon’s wife, Tammy, grew up and that is named after her grandfather, Clarence. The horse is their first Kentucky Derby starter.

   “This is an incredible honor,” Simon said. “It’s a blessing. You can’t make up a story like this. He’s a $15,000 weanling purchase that decided he wanted to be a champion.”



CHARGE IT, MO DONEGAL, PIONEER OF MEDINA – The Todd Pletcher Derby trio of Charge It (handled by Hector Ramos), Mo Donegal (Amelia Green) and Pioneer of Medina (Humberto Zamora) once again took advantage of the special 7:30-7:45 training period at Churchill Downs to stretch their legs and do some schooling four days out from their dates in the Kentucky Derby.

   With the Hall of Fame conditioner looking on from trackside, the threesome went through solid gallops of a bit more than a mile and a quarter, then headed up the mile chute for a session with the starting gate.

   “They were all good at the gate,” Pletcher said. “They went right in.”

   On Saturday their gate positions will be No. 8 for Charge It, No. 1 for Mo Donegal and No. 11 for Pioneer of Medina.

   The trainer has scheduled a further bit of educational time for the colts this afternoon with paddock schooling with the horses in today’s sixth race.



CLASSIC CAUSEWAY – Kentucky West Racing and Clarke Cooper’s Classic Causeway galloped 1 � miles Wednesday at 7:30 a.m.

   “So many people have just been focused on his last race in the Florida Derby but if you draw a line through it, he belongs with a lot of others in this field,” trainer Brian Lynch said.

   Julien Leparoux rides the speedy Classic Causeway in the Kentucky Derby.

   “I don’t think he necessarily needs to be on the lead,” Lynch said. “He’s fast but he’s able to track just off horses.”



CROWN PRIDE (JPN) – Teruya Yoshida’s UAE Derby (GII) winner Crown Pride (JPN) started his morning jogging in the mile chute under Masa Matsuda during the first harrow break of the morning.

   Once the tractors left the track, jockey Christophe Lemaire jumped aboard to guide Crown Pride through a half-mile work that was timed in :46.60.

   Working on his own, Crown Pride produced fractions of :12.40, :24.20, :35.60 and galloped out five furlongs in 1:00. The move was the fastest of nine at the distance for the morning.

   Following the breeze, Lemaire took Crown Pride back to the mile chute where Matsuda again took the reins for the leisurely trip back to the Quarantine Barn.

   “I have worked him before in Japan and I very happy with his work today and with the way he changed leads. He did it very well,” said Lemaire, who is back at Churchill Downs for the first time since he rode in the 2010 and 2011 Breeders’ Cups.

   Lemaire said he has watched video of recent runnings of the Kentucky Derby and the huge fields that accompany the race.

   “The start is very important and then it is all about the fractions,” Lemaire said. “You ride him to where he is comfortable and then see what happens.”

   Trainer Koichi Shintani was all smiles after the work by Crown Pride who is scheduled to have a walk day Thursday.



CYBERKNIFE, TAWNY PORT, ZOZOS – Trainer Brad Cox sent all three of his Kentucky Derby hopefuls to the track during the special 7:30 a.m. training period and all three galloped 1 � miles with their regular exercise riders and visited the starting gate. Arkansas Derby (GI) winner Cyberknife was ridden by Katie Talbot, Lexington Stakes (GIII) winner Tawny Point had Edvin Vargas aboard and Louisiana Derby (GII) runner-up Zozos was ridden by Kelvin Perez.

   “I’m happy with all three of them,” Cox said. “They’re doing good.”



EPICENTER – Coming out to the track later than usual Wednesday, Winchell Thoroughbreds’ Epicenter jogged down the backstretch and walked back during the 7:30 a.m. Derby and Oaks training time.

   Jockey Joel Rosario made a visit to the Asmussen barn afterward to see his Derby mount. On board for all Epicenter’s 3-year-old races, the 2021 Eclipse Award-winning jockey has consistently been Asmussen’s go-to jockey for most of 2022.

   “It seems like [Epicenter] has no problem with anything,” Rosario said. “He has won on the lead, he has won coming from behind horses, so we’ll see how he handles it. He has matured it seems. In the beginning I had to ride him a little more. But now he’s running and grabs the bridle a bit more, it’s what you want to see.”

   Asked about their strategy breaking from post three, Rosario joked: “Maybe we’ll just keep it a secret. We’ll get a good break and see what the horse wants to do. He always breaks well out of the gate, so we’ll see how he does on Saturday.”



ETHEREAL ROAD – Aaron Sones and Julie Gilbert’s Ethereal Road galloped 1 � miles during the special 7:30 a.m. training time Wednesday.

   Ethereal Road was the last horse to make the Kentucky Derby field, not becoming an official starter until late Monday morning, but Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas, who already has four Derby trophies, had been making a case for several weeks why the Quality Road colt deserved a shot in the 20-horse field.

   “I think he has chance to get a piece of it because of his style,” Lukas said. “He’s one of the few horses in the 20 that has that style of making a half-mile run. Some of them can’t even make a quarter-mile run. I’ve learned in all my years of being in this, that if you can make a sustained long run, you have a chance to get a piece of it.”



HAPPY JACK – The Oxbow colt Happy Jack followed his usual Derby pattern Wednesday morning at Churchill during the 7:30-7:45 special training period for Derby and Oaks runners.

   Exercise rider Tony Romero galloped the well-made bay through a mile and a half in good fashion, then headed back to Barn 41.

   Trainer Doug O’Neill watched the proceedings from the grandstand, but his longtime right-hand-man, Leandro Mora, oversaw the backside business and stated all was well.

   “’Jack’ is happy,” Mora said. “And when ‘Jack” is happy, we’re all happy.”

   Rafael Bejarano has the call Saturday on Happy Jack for the 148th running of the Kentucky Derby.



MESSIER, TAIBA – Trainer Tim Yakteen had his two Derby colts – the Empire Maker bay Messier and the Gun Runner chestnut Taiba – on the track for the special Derby/Oaks training period from 7:30-7:45 a.m. Wednesday at Churchill Downs.

   Messier, with exercise rider Beto Gomez up, went about his usual business and galloped a mile and a half on a cool, overcast Louisville morning.

   But with Taiba, the Santa Anita Derby (GI) winner, the conditioner put a wrinkle into the proceedings and pulled out a stratagem from days gone by that he first saw when he worked on the shedrow of one of the game’s greats, Charlie Whittingham.

   Yakteen deputized crack rider Joel Rosario – an old friend from the jockey’s days in California – to take a leg up on his colt for his morning exercises. He also put a pair of blinkers on his lightly raced ace (“The blinkers were just something to help him focus; he doesn’t need them to race,” the trainer noted.), then had the two backtrack to the seven-furlong pole before turning to gallop to the three-eights where they broke off and went through a three-furlong breeze.

   “I don’t know how fast he went,” Rosario said afterward at Barn 37. “But I do know he felt good.”

   Yakteen had spent a half dozen years in the early 1990s working and learning under Hall of Famer Whittingham, who made it SOP to give his stakes horses a short blowout in the days just ahead of a race.

   “We blew him out three furlongs this morning,” Yakteen said back at the barn. “Nothing special; I got him in :38 and two (the Churchill clockers did likewise). It was just what we wanted. I’m following the same pattern we used coming up to the Santa Anita Derby. He blew out there, too.”

   In the Santa Anita Derby – only the second start of the precocious colt’s career – he came running late under Hall of Fame rider Mike Smith to beat stablemate Messier by 2 1/4 lengths.



RATTLE N ROLL, SMILE HAPPY, TIZ THE BOMB – Trainer Kenny McPeek had Magdalena Racing’s Tiz the Bomb and Lucky Seven Stable’s Smile Happy on the track Wednesday, for maintenance mile-and-a-half gallops. Edwardo Ruvalcaba was on Tiz the Bomb, while Danny Ramsey was aboard Smile Happy.

   “All routine,” McPeek said. “We backed up, schooled in the paddock, then stood in the gate at the end of the gallop.”

   Also out at the time reserved for Oaks and Derby horses for a gallop was also eligible Rattle N Roll, with James Graham, who will ride him Saturday if he makes the field.

   Tiz the Bomb comes into the Derby off a win in the Grade III Jeff Ruby Steaks at Turfway Park, while Smile Happy had strong seconds in the Grade I Blue Grass at Keeneland to Zandon, and in the Grade II Risen Star to Epicenter.

   “Smile Happy is doing super, so strong,” McPeek said. “He wanted to go around again.”

   Smile Happy starts from the No. 5 post in the Derby with Corey Lanerie, while Tiz the Bomb, with Brian Hernandez Jr. aboard, drew the No. 9 post.



RICH STRIKE – RED TR-Racing’s Rich Strike galloped a mile and a half under Gabriel Lagunes and is scheduled to school in the paddock this afternoon early in the 10-race program.

   Trained by Eric Reed, Rich Strike is the first also-eligible for the Derby and would not one defection by Friday’s 9 a.m. scratch time to make the field.



SIMPLIFICATION – Tami Bobo’s Simplification visited the starting gate and then galloped a mile and a half under Ismal Ramirez for trainer Antonio Sano.

   For Sano, who has 72 horses stabled in South Florida, this is his second shot in the Kentucky Derby having seen his Gunnevera finish seventh behind Always Dreaming in the 2017 Run for the Roses.

   “I am taking the same approach as I did with Gunnevera,” Sano said. “We got here about eight or nine days before the race and did all of the major work in Florida.”

   There is one small difference this time. In 2017, Gunnevera was the only horse Sano brought to Louisville but accompanying Simplification on the van ride to Kentucky was the 3-year-old maiden Logico who is entered in the first race Saturday.

   “He knows some of the Derby horses,” Sano’s son and assistant Alessandro said. “He has run against Charge It and White Abarrio.”



SUMMER IS TOMORROW – Michael Hilary Burke and Negar Burke’s Summer Is Tomorrow visited the starting gate and galloped a mile and a half under Heinz Runge. Summer Is Tomorrow is scheduled to school in the paddock this afternoon.

   Runner-up in the UAE Derby (GII), Summer Is Tomorrow will be making his first start outside of Dubai in the Kentucky Derby. In his seven-race career, Summer Is Tomorrow has not raced on an off track, a surface he may face Saturday with rain in the forecast for the weekend.

   “He has been on an off track and handled it well in training,” trainer Bhupat Seemar said.

 

WHITE ABARRIO – C2 Racing Stable and La Milagrosa Stable’s White Abarrio was again the standout on the track Wednesday morning — for his dazzling appearance. The son of Spendthrift Farm sire Race Day, with his brilliant gray coat, had the cameras clicking during the morning workouts. He’s one of three gray colts in the field of 20, but he trends more to gray than Barber Road or Charge It.

   Trainer Saffie Joseph Jr. had the Grade I Florida Derby and Grade III Holy Bull winner out Wednesday with exercise rider Vincente Gudiel on a track drying out from a rainy Tuesday. In the 2020 Derby, Joseph made his first training appearance with NY Traffic, finishing eighth at 12-1.

   “He’s doing well,” Joseph said of White Abarrio. “He had a good gallop of a mile today and all is in order. He’s shown class from Day One. He won his debut, which made the owners buy him, and he’s been doing great all the way.”



ZANDON
– Jeff Drown’s Blue Grass Stakes (GI) winner Zandon galloped 1 � miles Wednesday morning.

   “He was so visually impressive in the Blue Grass and he’s continued to do very well since arriving at Churchill Downs,” trainer Chad Brown said.



THE KENTUCKY DERBY FIELD – Here’s the field from the rail out for the Grade I, $3 million Kentucky Derby presented by Woodford Reserve (GI): Mo Donegal (Irad Ortiz Jr.); Happy Jack (Rafael Bejarano); Epicenter (Joel Rosario); Summer Is Tomorrow (Mickael Barzalona); Smile Happy (Corey Lanerie); Messier (John Velazquez); Crown Pride (JPN) (Christophe Lemaire); Charge It (Luis Saez); Tiz the Bomb (Brian Hernandez Jr.); Zandon (Flavien Prat); Pioneer of Medina (Joe Bravo); Taiba (Mike Smith); Simplification (Jose Ortiz); Barber Road (Rey Gutierrez); White Abarrio (Tyler Gaffalione); Cyberknife (Florent Geroux); Classic Causeway (Julien Leparoux); Tawny Port (Ricardo Santana Jr.); Zozos (Manny Franco); Ethereal Road (Luis Contreras). Also Eligibles: Rich Strike (Sonny Leon); Rattle N Roll (James Graham).

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