GIOVEDÌ 28 APRILE 2016 Ascot: Doppietta Atzeni con Mizzou verso la Gold Cup e con la promessa Dawn Of Hope. Gifted Master vince ancora, Wesley Ward punta le Queen Mary // Maiden Trojan Nation Seeks Derby Upset // Chantilly : Marypop décolle au propre comme au figuré, We Are déçoit

 

Ascot mercoledì 27 aprile 2016: Doppietta Atzeni con Mizzou verso la Gold Cup e con la promessa Dawn Of Hope

 
 
 
Mercoledì pomeriggio ad Ascot, un convegno molto interessante in chiave futura. Innanzitutto l’onda lunga di Andrea Atzeni che continua a mietere successi su successi, ad ogni ippodromo, ad ogni latitudine. Il jockey sardo ha di nuovo completato una doppietta in giornata, inaugurando il proprio pomeriggio con Dawn Of Hope (Mastercraftsman) per i colori di Saleh Al Homaizi & Imad Al Sagar ed il training di Roger Varia, ha vinto una condizionata che la preparerà per qualcosa di importante, magari proprio le Oaks G1 anche se il suo allenatore è rimasto cauto rimandando ogni discorso al prossimo trial il 10 Maggio. Per la cronaca, nell’occasione ha battuto la grigia Raaqy (Dubawi), prodotto della campionessa Natagora (Divine Light). VIDEO QUI.
 
Il pomeriggio è proseguito grazie al 5 anni Mizzou (Galileo con mamma da Darshaan), ancora vincitore delle Sagaro Stakes G3 come non avveniva dal 1995/1996 da Double Trigger. Il progressivo figlio di Galileo ha come appuntamento quello della Gold Cup di Ascot il 16 Giugno prossimo, che si correrà in onore del 90° anniversario di Sua Maestà la Regina. Nell’occasione Mizzou, con una monta decisa di Andrea, ha battuto il “Nap” di alcuni tipster Clever Cookie (Primo Valentino), con Flying Officer e Frankie rimasti al terzo. VIDEO QUI.
Le Pavilion Stakes sui 1200 in pista dritta preparavano alla Commonwealth Cup G1 nel meeting del Royal Ascot (a proposito, quest’anno sarà out per tutta la stagione l’atteso campione di 2 anni Shalaa per infortunio al bacino), che ha lanciato il fulmine Gifted Master (Kodiac), capace di vincere la sua quinta corsa consecutiva, da quando è stato castrato…
Il portacolori di Dr Ali Ridha allenato da Hugo Palmer si è disinteressato del favorito Washington Dc (Zoffany), poi 7° su 9, squagliatosi come un cioccolatino dopo partenza con qualche problema, ed ha vinto in maniera convincente. Non sappiamo dove arriverà Gifted, intanto si è pappato tutti i ricchi trofei delle aste organizzati da Tattersalls, dove è il migliore in assoluto e vince tantissimo in termini di soldi. Poi potrà diventare uno sprinter di assoluto livello nelle mani di un allenatore davvero molto bravo. VIDEO QUI.
 
John Gosden ha vissuto il suo momento più alto della giornata grazie alla vittoria del progressivo GM Hopkins (Dubawi), al rientro da Ottobre, e già in palla per vincere la sua prima corsa stakes nelle Paradise Stakes da cavallo progressivo. Il 5 anni, castrone, ha fatto lo scalpo dell’atteso Arod (Teofilo) anche se per il Qatariota, al rientro dalla campagna australiana, c’era più di qualche avvisaglia sulla sua non totale forma per questo appuntamento. Innanzitutto la quota di 7/4, troppo alta per uno come lui, e poi lo scetticismo prima della corsa negli scorsi giorni di Peter Chapple Hyam. VIDEO QUI.
 
In apertura di pomeriggio l’Americano Wesley Ward ha dimostrato di averci preso gusto con l’ippodromo della Regina con i suoi raid ed i cavalli presentati con il paraocchi nero e la “W” gialla. Ieri ha fatto debuttare vincendo Create A Dream (Oasis Dream), prodotto della fattrice Anabaa’s Creation (Anabaa), dominatrice a 6/1 nella prova per cavalli di 2 anni, con in sella Jose Valdivia Jr. Si tratta di una cavalla di proprietà della St Elias Stable, cioè dei Newyorkesi Vincent Viola e sua moglie Teresa (in Italia hanno interessi ne La Trinacria, seconda nel Regina Elena G3 domenica scorsa) per una cavalla che ora correrà le Queen Mary Stakes G2 al Royal Ascot. IL VIDEO DELLA VITTORIA QUI.
 
 
 

Maiden Trojan Nation Seeks Derby Upset

Maiden Trojan Nation Seeks Derby Upset
Photo: Courtesy of Zoe Metz

Trojan Nation works April 28 at Santa Anita Park.

There are ample longshots in every running of the Kentucky Derby presented by Yum! Brands (gr. I), but one scheduled to make his way into the gate at Churchill Downs May 7 is unique.

No horse likely made more of an improvement in the last Derby preps than Aaron Sones and Julie Gilbert’s homebred Trojan Nation did in the Wood Memorial (gr. I).

The Street Cry colt trained by Patrick Gallagher, still a maiden after five maiden special weight starts, went off at 81-1 and rallied furiously from last in the eight-horse field to come up a head short to winnerOutwork.

“We were hoping the distance would help him, and we knew it would be a step up, but that was a day with three prep races and we were just trying to look around and see which one on paper we might have the best shot to try,” Gallagher said the morning of April 28, before he watched Trojan Nation’s final timed workout at Santa Anita Park in preparation for the Derby. “I had just saddled a horse (at Santa Anita) and was watching on television, but at first I was just hoping he’d show up on the screen.”

Trojan Nation looked very much like an 81-1 shot early on in the Wood—he found himself 17 lengths back after the first quarter on the muddy track—but his closing drive for second on the rail under jockey Aaron Gryder earned enough points for a Derby start. The Wood is his best result to date. In his previous five maiden tries, Trojan Nation never finished better than third.

“It was a surprise and I was delighted,” Gallagher said. “He was sitting back and back, and I was hoping he had a good experience, but when he came around there, he almost got there.”

PEDULLA: Outwork Outlasts Longshot in Wood Memorial

If all goes well, Trojan Nation will be the first maiden starter in the Run for the Roses since Nationalore in 1998. Three maidens have won the Derby—Buchanan in 1884, Sir Barton in 1919, and Brokers Tip in 1933—but relatively recent history has not been kind on maiden starters. Only Nationalore (ninth) and On The Mark (eighth, in 1950) have finished better than 10th. Others—Pendleton Ridge (13th in 1990), Great Redeemer (10th, 1979), Fourulla (19th, 1971), The Chosen One (14th, 1959), Flamingo (13th, 1958), Senecas Coin (14th, 1949), and Bert G. (14th, 1945)—have been well out of contention. Trojan Nation will be Gallagher’s second Kentucky Derby starter. His first, Domestic Dispute  , finished 10th in the 2003 edition.

 


Photo: Coglianese Photos

Trojan Nation (right) battles in the stretch with Outwork in the Wood Memorial (gr. I).

 

“He ran good in the Wood and we earned the points, so the owner said ‘Should we give it a shot?’” Gallagher said. “He knows we’re a longshot, but he’s optimistic about it.”

For Sones, who bred the colt in Kentucky out of the Summer Squallmare Storm Song, getting to the Kentucky Derby has been his plan from the start.

“I bred the horse and my goal all along was to breed a horse to get a mile and a quarter in May,” Sones said. “It’s all been planned out that way in my mind, even though it sounds insane.”

Sones, in an act on the level of treason in the Southern California sports landscape, named Trojan Nation after the mascot of the University of Southern California, despite the fact that he and his wife (Gilbert, also listed as an owner) went to hated rival UCLA. The backstory goes pretty deep, but Gilbert’s father, who died when she was in her teens, was a fervent USC supporter and both husband and wife are now USC fans, despite what their diplomas say.

As for his final workout Thursday, Trojan Nation covered six furlongs in 1:12 3/5 under regular exercise rider Helen Isler, with splits of :25, :36 4/5, :48 4/5, and 1:00 1/5, with a gallop out to seven furlongs in 1:27. It was the fastest of 19 works at the distance Thursday. Gallagher said the colt is scheduled to ship to Churchill May 2 and will gallop over the Louisville track for his final preparations.

“He’s nice to work,” Isler said. “He’s very professional with big, long strides. He looks like he’s going in slow motion, and that’s how he feels.”

The way the colt works in the mornings has always shown talent, Gallagher said, which certainly had an impact on the trainer’s decision to ship cross-country to run in a grade I as a maiden, but there’s also a possibility Trojan Nation may have a reason to improve in his next start. He was gaining on Outwork to the wire in the Wood and may have been hampered by the tight quarters on the rail.

“Maybe, in hindsight, it got a little tight there and maybe he got intimidated for a split second that made the difference, but those are split-second decisions,” Gallagher said. “He’s a nice-looking, big horse and he’s always been that way. He always seems to do it the right way.

“He’s showed talent, but he’s still a maiden. We didn’t think he would be, but he is.”

Sones is even more optimistic.

“Since he got back from New York, he’s been a different horse. It’s incredible,” Sones said. “Trojan Nation thinks he won the Wood, so as far as he’s concerned, he’s not a maiden anymore.”

fonte : Bloodhorse.com

 

 

Chantilly : Marypop décolle au propre comme au figuré, We Are déçoit

 

Marypop

Créé le 28 avril 2016   par François Pradeau
 

Lauréate du Prix Zarkava en terrain lourd (Listed du 3 avril à Saint-Cloud) Marypop confirme qu’elle est sur la pente ascendante et remporte un groupe 3. Dans ce Prix Allez France, elle domine Nymerya et Contribution. We Are, la favorite, manque sa rentrée…

R1C6 – Prix Allez France – Groupe 3 – Marypop s’envole pour les USA

A l’issue d’une excellente fin de course, Marypop s’impose et décroche son premier groupe. Elle démontre ici qu’elle a le niveau groupe, confirme sa forme et également son aptitude a tous types de terrains. Autant d’atouts pour son avenir proche, un avenir qui devrait avoir pour cadre les Etats-Unis.

 Arrivée et rapports : 12 – 5 – 7 – 2, cliquez ici.

Que dire de We Are, la favorite? Elle ne fait pas sa course et manque sa rentrée après quasiment 7 mois d’absence. Elle était absente depuis Prix de l’Opéra Longines en octobre (3eme).

 

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fonte : Equidia.