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4.29.02
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Photo By: Jeremy Lyverse
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Kinsman Stable's Blue Burner, shown above breezing under exercise rider Judy Nicks, dilled five furlongs in a smart :59 flat on Apr. 29 at Churchill Downs in what was to be the colt's final major drill for the May 4 Kentucky Derby (GI). The French Deputy colt was timed in splits of :23.40, :35 and :46.80 and galloped out six furlongs in 1:12.80. "I thought it was good," stated trainer Bill Mott when asked his impression of the move. "I timed him in :59, too. I wanted to put a decent work into him and I got what I wanted."
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Derby Candidates Active In A.M.; Buddha Is Coming
April 29, 2002
By Derby Notes Team
Kentucky Derby Headlines
BLUE BURNER - Kinsman Stable's Blue Burner worked five furlongs in a
smart :59 Monday morning as his final major drill for his date in
Saturday's Run for the Roses. The French Deputy colt was timed in splits
of :23.40, :35 and :46.80 along the way with an 'out' time of 1:12.80
for six furlongs.
"I thought it was good," stated trainer Bill Mott when asked his
impression of the move. "I timed him in :59, too. I wanted to put a
decent work into him and I got what I wanted."
Blue Burner, a chestnut homebred who first saw light of day at
Kinsman Farm in Florida, had a set of black blinkers on his head and
exercise rider Judy Nicks on his back when he came out just prior to 9
a.m. for his exercise. He entered the track at the five-furlong gap,
backtracked to the frontside, then accomplished his drill in workmanlike
fashion in the chilly Louisville air.
Blue Burner, who'll be ridden by Corey Nakatani Saturday, will
get a day off tomorrow and merely walk the shedrow, Mott noted.
BUDDHA - Reports from the H. James Bond barn in New York were all good
Monday morning concerning Kentucky Derby candidate Buddha, owned by Gary
and Mary West of Omaha. The Wood Memorial (GI) winner had drilled
six furlongs in 1:13.42 around the 'dogs' on a 'sloppy' Belmont Park
training track Sunday morning, but was reported none the worse for the
effort today.
The roan/gray colt by Unbridled's Song was said to have eaten
all his feed last night and to be feeling good this morning. He has a
departure time of 7 o'clock this evening aboard a van for a 10- to
12-hour ride to Louisville that should see him arrive here early
tomorrow morning.
Trainer Bond had a 1:30 p.m. airplane awaiting him and was
expected to be on the grounds at Churchill Downs in the morning to tuck
his horse into a stall at Barn 48 on trainer Tony Reinstedler's shedrow.
CAME HOME - Farish, Goodman, McCaffery and Toffan's Came Home, unbeaten
as a three-year-old, including victory in the Santa Anita Derby,
displayed his sharpness this morning with a five-furlong breeze in
1:00.60 under jockey Chris McCarron.
Trainer Paco Gonzalez sent the son of Gone West to the track
after the renovation break. With a lengthy run to the pole, Came Home
had splits of :24.20 for the opening quarter and a half in :48 flat. He
was timed galloping out six furlongs in 1:13.20.
McCarron and Gonzalez were pleased with Came Home's effort this
morning.
"He went very well," said McCarron, who traveled overnight from
California to pilot his Derby mount today. "He felt good going across
the ground. He's showing us good signs. This is a determined colt with a
lot of try in him."
"It was just what I wanted," said Gonzalez. "He didn't need any
more this close to the race. I want him to stay happy and healthy."
Today's breeze was Came Home's second over the Churchill Downs
track. Last Tuesday, he drilled six furlongs in 1:12.60 under McCarron.
CASTLE GANDOLFO/JOHANNESBURG - Trainer Aidan O'Brien's Kentucky Derby
contingent is scheduled to arrive at Lexington's Blue Grass Airport
Tuesday at 5:10 p.m. (EDT)
The colts will immediately ship to Keeneland where they will
quarantine for up to 48 hours. Once cleared, they will be able to resume
training.
On Saturday morning, the colts will ship to Churchill Downs and
should arrive at approximately 10:00 a.m.
EASY GRADES - Desperado Stables' Easy Grades, the Santa Anita Derby
runner-up, did some high stepping Monday morning at Churchill Downs as
he motored through a five-furlong drill in 1:01.40 shortly after the
mid-morning renovation break.
Jorge Chavez, the rider who won the Run for the Roses last year
aboard Monarchos, was on board for Easy Grades' move, guiding the
gelding through splits of :25 and :49.40 en route. This was the second
time Chavez had been on Easy Grades' back after working him here April
22 in 1:29.40.
"Jorge said he felt good," said trainer Ted H. West, who - at
the age of 28 - will be the youngest conditioner to saddle a horse in
Derby 128. "He said he learned a little bit about his move this morning,
so that's good. The work was just what I was looking for. It was
perfect. I actually caught him going six furlongs in 1:13 and 3
(fifths). He'll walk a day tomorrow and then go back to the track."
ESSENCE OF DUBAI - UAE Derby winner Essence Of Dubai visited the paddock
and starting gate for the second day in a row before galloping a mile
and a quarter under exercise rider Lee Roebuck shortly before 7
o'clock on a brisk Monday morning.
The Godolphin runner is scheduled to work five furlongs before
the renovation break Tuesday with Roebuck up. Essence Of Dubai usually
goes to the track just after 6:30.
"He was really good today," said Tom Albertrani, assistant to
trainer Saeed bin Suroor. "He still had that energy there, but he wasn't
using himself up. We wanted to time it when the gate was opened up and
didn't want to be hanging around there too early because yesterday he
was anxious about walking around there.
"He has a tendency of getting a little silly, and we just wanted
to make sure we got him up there when he could go straight into it."
Essence Of Dubai, who will be ridden by David Flores in Kentucky
Derby 128, schooled in the paddock Sunday afternoon during the race
card.
"It went good and he behaved well," Albertrani said. "He got a
little warm in there, which was to be expected. I would expect him to be
better the second time we go there, which may be Thursday."
HARLAN'S HOLIDAY - Starlight Stable's Harlan's Holiday jogged back to
the chute by the starting gate and then galloped a mile and five-eighths
under exercise rider Helen Pitts after the renovation break.
Trainer Ken McPeek was satisfied with the morning's activity and
has the likely morning-line Derby favorite scheduled for a half-mile
breeze after the renovation break Tuesday with Derby rider Edgar Prado
up.
Since winning the Blue Grass Stakes on April 13 at Keeneland,
Harlan's Holiday has worked once at Churchill Downs, going five furlongs
in :59.40 under Tony D'Amico last Wednesday.
IT'SALLINTHECHASE - Darwin Olson's It'sallinthechase had a morning off
following his five-furlong drill in 1:01.60 Sunday. The Kentucky-bred
colt by Take Me Out merely walked the shedrow on a nippy Monday morning
after eating up the night before.
"He's feeling frisky today. He was a bit of a handful in his
stall," said groom Rusty Paul. "He's not the nasty kind, though. He's
just a good-feeling colt."
Trainer Wilson Brown, who is greatly enjoying his first
experience at the Kentucky Derby, said It'sallinthechase will walk again
tomorrow, then gallop on up to the race Saturday.
LUSTY LATIN - Wendy and Joey Platts' Lusty Latin worked five furlongs in
1:01 after the renovation break with Derby rider Glenn Corbett up.
Churchill Downs clockers caught the gray son of El Prado in :12.40 for
the first eighth, :24.60 for the first quarter, :37.60 for
three-eighths, :49 for the half and galloping out six furlongs in
1:14.80.
"I let him do his own thing early and then turning for home I
kind of clucked to him and let him stretch on out down the lane and he
finished up real well," said Corbett, who left after the work to return
to Prairie Meadows where he had seven mounts Monday afternoon.
"This morning, he galloped out nicely, very smooth. The work was
just as good if not better than last week. He seems to get over this
track very well."
Lusty Latin, outfitted in blinkers as he was last week, was
working at the same time Santa Anita Derby winner Came Home was working
his five-eighths.
"I saw him in front of us and decided to wait a little bit
longer to break off to let Came Home go on," said Corbett, who will
return to Louisville on Thursday for his Kentucky Derby debut. "I didn't
want my horse to work terribly hard."
Lusty Latin worked a half-mile in :49.20 last Monday with
Corbett up.
"He actually worked five-eighths last week and the clockers only
got him for four," said trainer Jeff Mullins, who returned to Louisville
Sunday night from his Hollywood Park base. "He was a little stronger
last week and more relaxed today, but he finished up strong."
Mullins said Lusty Latin would walk in the morning and then
return to the track Wednesday.
MAYAKOVSKY - Michael B. Tabor's Mayakovsky galloped a mile and a half
after the renovation break with exercise rider Cyril Desplanques up.
Trainer Patrick Biancone said Demi O'Byrne, racing manager for
Tabor, was scheduled to arrive in Louisville Tuesday night and a
decision on the colt's Derby status would be made Wednesday, the day of
entry.
MEDAGLIA D'ORO - Trainer Robert Frankel likes to look for every little
plus or edge he can find for his horses, so he noted with pleasure that
his Derby charge Medaglia d'Oro was the very first horse to break off
and drop to the rail for a work Monday morning following the 8 o'clock
renovation break.
The dark El Prado colt had a clear lane along the inside
starting at the five and a half-furlong marker and he picked up the pace
immediately when asked by Marco Ramirez, Frankel's regular exercise
rider who was flown in from California to handle the drill. The
Churchill clockers caught the San Felipe (Grade II) winner in :24, :36,
:48.60, 1:01.60 en route to a final clocking of 1:13.80 for the six
furlongs. He was timed going out an additional furlong in 1:28.20.
Ramirez, a jockey who still holds a license and rides
occasionally, but primarily has worked mornings for Frankel for the past
decade, clocked the horse himself and got his mount in 1:13.60. "He felt
good; he likes this track," Ramirez said.
Frankel, the Hall of Fame conditioner who has been on a roll for
what seems like forever, pronounced himself happy with the exercise.
"It was a good work, just about what I wanted," the trainer
said. "I wanted him to go in :13 (1:13) and he went just a bit slower.
We try to make this business an exact science and, of course, you can't
do that. There is a human element in all that happens. But the horses
seem to overcome that and run well most of the time anyway.
"And I'm a good adjuster. I've got five days here (until the
Derby) to get him right where I want him to be. He's doing great and we
just want to keep moving ahead."
Medaglia d'Oro, second in New York's Wood Memorial (GI) in
his latest outing, will be ridden by Laffit Pincay, Jr. in Derby 128
Saturday.
Ocean Sound - With trainer Jim Cassidy on the scene, Irish-bred Ocean
Sound (Ire) galloped a mile and one-half under exercise rider Adam
Kitchingman.
Cassidy said Ocean Sound's workout schedule is contingent upon
the weather. The plan is to breeze Ocean Sound a half-mile Tuesday if
conditions are favorable or three furlongs Wednesday if they aren't.
"I'd like him to go a little quicker this time," said Cassidy, "possibly
a half in :47 and change or :48." Last Tuesday, the Mujadil colt worked
seven furlongs in 1:28.20, a move characterized by Cassidy as one
designed to build the colt's stamina.
Alex Solis, who rides Ocean Sound in the Derby, isn't due to
arrive in Louisville until Thursday, so Cassidy was attempting to line
up a rider for his horse's workout Tuesday or Wednesday.
PERFECT DRIFT - Stonecrest Farm's Perfect Drift galloped a mile and a
half under Joe Deegan Monday morning at the Trackside Training Center.
Trainer Murray Johnson labeled it as another good morning for
the Dynaformer gelding, who will be ridden Saturday by Eddie
Delahoussaye.
Perfect Drift is scheduled to work five furlongs Tuesday morning
at Trackside after the renovation break, which Johnson said would put
the work time at approximately 8:20.
PRIVATE EMBLEM/WINDWARD PASSAGE - Cassels and Zollars' Private Emblem
and Team Valor's Windward Passage, trainer Steve Asmussen's twin hopes
in Saturday's 128th Kentucky Derby, completed their major preparations
this morning with half-mile workouts under jockey Donnie Meche.
Windward Passage, a son of 1997 Derby runner-up Captain Bodgit,
was first to the track, at approximately 6:30 a.m. He accomplished his
breeze in :48.60 and was timed in 1:02.40 galloping on out five
furlongs.
Stablemate Private Emblem, the son of Our Emblem who won the
Arkansas Derby (GII) in impressive fashion, came out approximately a half-hour
later, again with Donnie Meche, who will ride him Saturday, and drilled
his half-mile in :48.80, striding out five furlongs in 1:01.80. Split
fractions on his breeze were :12.40 for the opening eighth, :25.40 for
the quarter-mile and three furlongs in :37 flat.
"Both horses did well," said Asmussen later at the barn. "I'm
pleased with the way they are getting over the track. This was one of
Windward Passage's better moves ever. I was disappointed with the way
he was training in Arkansas, but he's been a lot more into his works
here. He was aggressive to the pole today, as was Private Emblem. Both
horses have seemed to accept their surroundings.
"In his last work, Private Emblem was noticing things in the
infield and not really paying attention. Since then he's acted like he
knows where he's going. Both of these horses are traveling well and
faster than ever which they are going to need to be Saturday."
Regarding the fact that Private Emblem didn't run for six weeks
prior to the Arkansas Derby and will be running back in the Derby after
only three weeks, Asmussen said, "The spacing of his races was so that
he would be in the shape he is now coming up to the Kentucky Derby."
Asmussen said the schedule for Windward Passage and Private
Emblem during the remainder of Derby week will include walking under the
shed Tuesday, schooling in the gate, a return to galloping Wednesday
and possibly afternoon schooling in the Churchill Downs paddock.
"I feel extremely fortunate to have two horses in the final 20
from a foal crop of approximately 30,000 in the Kentucky Derby,"
Asmussen said. "The physical shape these horses are in is a credit to my
crew, which has done a great job."
PROUD CITIZEN - Bob Baker, David Cornstein and Bill Mack's Proud Citizen
sizzled over a fast Churchill Downs racing surface Monday morning, going
five furlongs in :58.80 under exercise rider Stacy Maker.
The D. Wayne Lukas trainee came on the track immediately after
it opened for training at 5:45 a.m.
"He looked fine this morning and everything went smooth," said
Lukas of the son of Gone West. "He will walk tomorrow and then go back
to the track Wednesday."
Proud Citizen is coming into the Derby off the same route as
Lukas' most recent Kentucky Derby winner, Charismatic. The 1999 Horse of
the Year had his last two Derby preps in the Santa Anita Derby and the
Coolmore Lexington Stakes (GII) and final work the Monday before the Derby in
1:02.80 over a sloppy track.
"This horse is a little quicker and he gives more of himself in
the morning," Lukas said. "You can do almost anything with this horse."
Mike Smith, who rode Proud Citizen in the Lexington, has the
call for the Derby.
REQUEST FOR PAROLE - Jeri and Sam Knighton's Request For Parole galloped
a mile and a half after the renovation break with exercise rider Loren
Diego up.
Request For Parole was on the track about the time five Kentucky
Derby hopefuls were putting in their final major works.
"All of the people out there didn't bother him at all," Diego
said. "He was very good."
Steve Margolis, one of six trainers who will be saddling their
first Kentucky Derby starters, was pleased with the morning's activity.
"He had a good strong gallop today," said Margolis of Request
For Parole, who comes into the Derby off a six-week break from his
third-place finish in the Spiral Stakes. "He is doing well, and he is
not affected at all by all the people. We have shipped him to four or
five tracks with no problems."
Robby Albarado will have the mount Saturday.
SAARLAND - Cynthia Phipps' Saarland, a come-from-behind threat in
Saturday's Kentucky Derby, worked for the first time over the Churchill
Downs track this morning, stepping five furlongs in 1:02 flat with
Adolph Krajewski up.
The son of 1990 Kentucky Derby winner Unbridled had split times
of :13 flat, :25.20, :38 flat and 50.40. He galloped on out six furlongs
in 1:15.60.
Trainer Shug McGaughey, who arrived in Louisville Sunday
evening, expressed satisfaction with the drill, saying, "That was fine,
what I was looking for. He got over the ground very well with a last
eighth in :11 and change."
McGaughey, whose last Derby starter was Easy Goer, second to
Sunday Silence in 1989, said Saarland will walk under the shed Tuesday,
resume galloping Wednesday and possibly school in the paddock Wednesday
afternoon.
STRAIGHT GIN - Marylou Whitney's Straight Gin galloped a mile under
exercise rider Jamie Sanders before the renovation break.
With $52,500 in graded earnings, it appears unlikely that the
Nick Zito trainee will make the Kentucky Derby field, which is limited
to the top 20 graded money earners that enter.
SUNDAY BREAK (Jpn) - Japanese-bred Sunday Break (Jpn), third in the Wood Memorial
but an unlikely participant in Saturday's Kentucky Derby because of a
lack of graded stakes earnings, nevertheless was sent to the track for a
six-furlong breeze in company early this morning by trainer Neil
Drysdale.
The Forty Niner colt had Marcelino Olguin up as usual and was
timed in 1:14.40, pleasing his conditioner who won the Derby two years
ago with Fusaichi Pegasus.
"He was spot on," said Drysdale. "He went in :25, :50 and when
Marcelino asked him to pick it up in the final 70 yards he finished out
strongly."
With Sunday Break unlikely to get into Saturday's race, Drysdale
said he will "see what shakes out after the Derby" and then decide about
the Preakness or another opportunity.
U S S TINOSA - Trainer Jerry Hollendorfer reported that his roan/gray
runner U S S Tinosa will ship to Louisville with a stablemate Tuesday by
air from his Northern California headquarters. Expected time of arrival
on the Churchill Downs backstretch is 4:00 p.m.
The Foxhound colt will be boarded at Barn 42, the most popular
Derby barn of them all this year. Already in residence there are
It'sallinthechase, Easy Grades, Wild Horses and Ocean Sound.
U S S Tinosa, named for a highly honored U. S. submarine during
World War II, will need a bit of help to actually get to run in the
128th Kentucky Derby. He's currently No. 21 on the earnings list and
needs a withdrawal from one of the 20 ahead of him if he's to be in
action on Saturday. Hall of Fame candidate Kent Desormeaux has the call
on the Ohio-bred stretch runner.
WAR EMBLEM - War Emblem, The Thoroughbred Corp.'s hopeful in Saturday's
Kentucky Derby, galloped a mile and one-half again this morning under
Mick Jenner and is on schedule to breeze a half-mile or five furlongs
Tuesday for trainer Bob Baffert. Dana Barnes will be aboard to work War
Emblem after the renovation break.
Tuesday's workout will be the Our Emblem colt's third at
Churchill Downs since arriving April 11. The Illinois Derby winner
breezed five eighths in :59.60 April 18 and followed that with a
six-furlong move in 1:12.40 April 24.
Victor Espinoza, who finished third on the Baffert-trained
Congaree a year ago, has the call on War Emblem.
WILD HORSES - Peachtree Stable's Wild Horses was back on the track for a
mile and one-half gallop Monday morning following his five-panel drill
(1:01.20) the previous day. Besides his gallop, exercise rider and
assistant trainer Cindy Hutter also took the Saint Ballado colt for a
tour of the Churchill paddock.
"He ate up last night and he's bright and sharp this morning,"
said trainer Todd Pletcher. "We're real happy with where he is."
Wild Horses is the only likely Derby runner left who does not
have a rider for the mile and one quarter classic.
"John (Peachtree owner John Fort) and I are going to put our
heads together today and come up with one," said Pletcher. "We know it's
getting late in the day, but we've been hanging back seeing how the
situation shakes out. It could well be that Rene (rider Rene Douglas who
rode him in his second-place finish in the Arkansas Derby) will be our
guy. He's a good rider and we have a lot of confidence in him. It's just
that if you can get one of the stars, you try to get one of the stars.
It's how this business works."
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