Published Thursday, November 10th, 2016   ( 7 years ago )

Stable Notes
November 10, 2016

 
Nuovo Record © Zoe Metz for Del Mar Thoroughbred Club
 
JAPANESE IMPORT NUOVO RECORD GETS THE ‘RED CARPET’ TREATMENT
 
The original plan was for Nuovo Record, a five-year-old Japanese-bred grand daughter of Sunday Silence, to  run in the $1 million Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Turf, then stop over and train at Del Mar for next month’s $3.225 million Longines Hong Kong Cup at the Sha Tin course there.
 
The plans have changed, however. And Nuovo Record is now prepping at Del Mar for the Grade III $100,000 Red Carpet Stakes on Thanksgiving Day, Thursday, November 24. She will be the first horse owned, trained and with such high-level competitive credentials from Japan to race at Del Mar.
 
With Japanese riding legend Yutaka Take in the irons, Nuovo Record finished 11th of 13 in the Filly & Mare Turf last Saturday at Santa Anita.
 
“It was hard ground at Santa Anita and we think she didn’t like it,” said Hiroshi Ando, Racing Manager for owner Reiko Hara and trainer Makoto Saito. “In my opinion she didn’t try.”
 
So, given that the 1 ¼-mile Breeders’ Cup run was considerably less than taxing, Ando and two assistants will be at Del Mar every morning, preparing the career earner of $4,933,397 for a U.S. tune-up for the Hong Kong Cup. The chestnut mare has a record of five wins, six seconds and one third in 19 lifetime starts – 16 in Japan, two in Hong Kong and the recent Breeders’ Cup try.
 
Jockey Yasunari Iwata, aboard for 12 races in the Orient, will be brought over to ride in the Red Carpet.
 
Nuovo Record was vanned down the freeways from Santa Anita to Del Mar on Sunday and made her initial trip to the track Thursday morning. She did a “one and one,” as Ando described it – one mile jogging and another galloping around the Del Mar main track.
 
Ando said all went well and the mare seemed comfortable and well-recovered from the Breeders’ Cup race.
 
“This track is quiet, so we can do some regular routine things we couldn’t at Santa Anita. Santa Anita was so busy,” Ando said.
 
Daily exercise will build up to a breeze over the grass course on the morning of November 20 with both the owner and trainer expected to be in attendance.
  

 
ZENYATTA CONNECTIONS LOOK TO KERI BELLE FOR CROSBY SCORE
 
Keri Belle, a 6-year-old Empire Maker mare who runs for the Zenyatta connections of trainer John Shirreffs and Jerry and Ann Moss, will be sent out in the Opening Day Kathryn Crosby Stakes to do something that hasn’t been done since Zenyatta’s remarkable run of Clement L. Hirsch victories from 2008-2010.
 
Win a Del Mar stakes race for them.
 
The last of Shirreffs’ 14 Del Mar Stakes wins came with Mr. Commons in the 2011 Oceanside Stakes for St. George Farm Racing LLC. Before that the Shirreffs/Moss team was on a roll with Zenyatta’s streak and Madeo in the 2008 Del Mar Derby.
 
Keri Belle, the 5-2 morning line second choice in a field of six, shipped in from the East to start a 2016 campaign that has produced one victory in seven starts.  She was sixth in the  Grade II Yellow Ribbon and a late-running fourth in the Grade II John C. Mabee here last summer. Keri Belle was also fourth in her last start, the Grade I Rodeo Drive on October 16 at Santa Anita.
 
“She is very honest and always tries her best,” Shirreffs said Thursday via text from Santa Anita.   
 
The field  from the rail: Amboseli (Mike Smith, 3-1), Keri Belle (Norberto Arroyo, Jr.,  5-2), Dressed to a T (Mario Gutierrez, 10-1), Do the Dance (Tyler Baze, 15-1), Sobradora Inc (Rafael Bejarano, 9-5) and Glory (Flavien Prat, 4-1).
 

 
O’NEILL STABLE AIMS TO SHAKE SUMMER SLUMP IN TITLE DEFENSE
 
The powerful stable of Doug O’Neill, a four-time winner of and a perennial contender for the Del Mar Summer meet training title, wasn’t up to its usual standards in 2016. O’Neill won 11 races from 135 starters and finished in a three-way tie for fifth in the standings, 12 wins behind Phil D’Amato.
 
Team O’Neill is, however, the defending Bing Crosby season champion. Its 15 wins from 69 starters in 2015 was two more than Phil D’Amato. So …
 
“We’re trying to bounce back,” O’Neill’s chief assistant, Leandro Mora, said earlier this week on the Del Mar backstretch. “It (summer meeting) was all right. Not what we expected, but that’s the way it is. Luckily we’ve been in the game long enough to know how it works and you’re going to have ups and downs.”
 
Mora will be the on-site supervisor of the Del Mar operation the bulk of the time. O’Neill is expected to journey down from the Santa Anita base once or twice a week.
 
They have 25 horses here, two entered in the fourth race on the opening day card and several stakes prospects.
 
“We’ve got Jimmy Bouncer here to run short on the grass,” Mora said. “Royal Albert Hall, Guns Loaded -- we’ve got quite a few.”
 
Kentucky Derby winner Nyquist, who summered here and at the San Luis Rey Downs training center in Bonsal, was retired  due to an ankle injury on October 30, six days before a scheduled meeting with California Chrome and Arrogate in the $6 million Breeders’ Cup Classic.  Nyquist’s career at stud begins early next year.
 
“The first week we felt like we lost half of our barn,” Mora said. “We wanted him to stay a little longer, but that didn’t work out. We were happy that we were able to retire him healthy enough that they won’t have to do anything before the breeding season starts.
 
“He had one little thing that was not serious, but to beat those (Breeders’ Cup Classic) guys you’ve got to have a horse that’s 110 percent.”
 

 
SPAWR WOULD TAKE AN OPENER LIKE LAST YEAR
 
Veteran trainer Bill Spawr, 76, arrived early and struck quickly in what had to be considered a successful  2015 Bing Crosby season. Spawr’s was one of the first outfits to move in, with 30 horses and he struck for back-to-back victories in the final two races on the opening-day program.
 
Vanlose Stairway ($19.60) won the seventh and Born To Serve ($7.20) the eighth. Spawr would record four wins from 25 starters and finish in the money five more times, good for a tie for ninth in the trainer standings.
 
Spawr’s back with  approximately the same number of horses in Barn Y, just east of the grandstand, and with expected meeting-opening optimism.
 
“We’d hope to do as well, maybe even better,” Spawr said. “We’ve got four in (on opening day) so we’ll see how we do. The track’s good, weather’s good. We’re ready to go.”
 
Spawr’s early strike potential Friday comes in the form of Out Of Patience (1st, 5-2), Desert Madam (2nd, 2-1), Tribal Jewel (3rd, 9-5) and Rye Patch (6th, 5-2).
 

 
FREE FANTASY FOOTBALL PLAY WITH $1,000 POOL AVAILABLE AT DEL MAR
 
Saturday patrons to Del Mar during the Bing Crosby season will have an opportunity, free of charge, to win up to $1,000 weekly playing Fantasy Football on Sunday’s professional football games.
 
In partnership with AmTote, Del Mar will continue a test program started at the Santa Anita Autumn meeting based on a Fantasy Football format popular for millions of Americans throughout the NFL season.
 
Each Saturday at Del Mar, players can acquire a mutuel ticket-like voucher for use at several designated machines located on the east end of the second floor of the Clubhouse past the Customer Service desk. The vouchers give access to a pick-seven-like series of “races” in which the options are to select one quarterback, two running backs, two wide receivers, one tight end and a defense from a list of possibilities in each of those categories.
 
A thus-designated “team” scores points based on Sunday’s pro games. The highest scoring team or teams each week will divide the $1,000 pool. Highest scoring players, by positions, and teams will be posted Mondays on the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club website (dmtc.com) and payouts available for collection the following Thursday at the track, the first day of the live racing week.
 
Full rules, regulations and other information will be available on both Del Mar’s website and at the designated Fantasy Football terminals.
 

 
CURLIN RULES FAVORED IN SATURDAY’S LET IT RIDE STAKES
 
John Sadler-trained Curlin Rules was established the 2-1 favorite in a field of six for Saturday’s featured $75,000 Let It Ride Stakes for 3-year-olds at one mile on the Jimmy Durante Turf Course.
 
The son of 2007-08 Horse of the Year Curlin has two wins in eight career starts. A switch from dirt to turf for a Del Mar optional claimer on August 16 resulted in a one-length victory at the Let It Ride distance. Curlin Rules was second in a 1 1/8-mile follow-up turf run on October 14 at Santa Anita.
 
The field from the rail out: Camino Del Paraiso (Ricardo Gonzalez, 5-1), Little Scotty (Kent Desormeaux, 4-1), Curlin Rules (Tyler Baze, 2-1), Defiantly (Gary Stevens, 15-1), Barhanpour (Mike Smith, 7-2) and Mittersill (Flavien Prat, 5-2).
 
The Let It Ride will go as the fourth on a nine-race card.
 

 
THE PIZZA MAN SCHEDULED FOR A RETURN VISIT
 
Racing office officials confirmed that The Pizza Man, one of the most popular equine performers of recent years, has been nominated to and is expected to make a title defense in the Hollywood Turf Cup here on Friday, November 25.
 
Owned by Midwest Thoroughbreds and trained by Roger Brueggemann, the 7-year-old son of English Channel has 17 wins in 32 career starts with earnings of more than $2.1 millon.
 
A two-length victory under Mike Smith with a scintillating late rush in the 1 ½ mile Hollywood Turf Cup completed a six-race 2015 campaign for The Pizza Man. He has the same number of starts in 2016 with one victory, that in the Grade I Northern Dancer at Woodbine on October 16.
 

 
SIX TO GO IN SUNDAY’S BETTY GRABLE STAKES
 
A field of six was entered Thursday for Sunday’s featured $100,000 Betty Grable Stakes for older fillies and mares at seven furlongs.
  
The post position draw was scheduled later Thursday. The field, in alphabetical order with trainers and jockeys: Barbara Beatrice (Phil D’Amato/Tiago Pereira), Chao Chom (Gary Stute/Kent Desormeaux), Cuddle Alert (Melissa Saldana/Agapito Delgadillo), Enola Gray (Tyler Baze/Phil D’Amato), Harlington’s Rose (Steve Knapp/Joe Talamo) and My Fiona (Gary Sherlock/Fernando Perez).
 

 
Contact: Dan Smith 858-792-4226/Hank Wesch 858-755-1141 ext. 3793