fbpx
Home Blog Page 258

World Music Series ‘SPAC On Stage’ Opens Tonight With Russian Renaissance

Tonight (August 6) at 8pm, folk fusion group Russian Renaissance will kick off the popular “SPAC on Stage” concert series at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center (SPAC). Returning after a very successful run last year, the “SPAC on Stage” series will take place every Monday in August at 8pm, and offer patrons a unique and intimate concert-going experience: 350 audience members (that’s it per show; so be sure to buy your tickets well in advance) will get the rare opportunity of sitting directly on the amphitheater stage during performances of first-class music (talk about front row seats!).

The popular series of diverse musical performances is also an opportunity to bring more world music to Saratoga and the Capital Region area. “This year’s lineup represents both an eclectic mix of genres and cultural diversity, bringing vibrant musicians to Saratoga from different parts of the world,” says Elizabeth Sobol, President and CEO of SPAC. And it’s truly a stellar lineup. As I already noted, the series kicks off tonight with Russian Renaissance, a quartet of instrumentalists, who play a fiery brand of Russian folk music on traditional Russian folk instruments. After winning the $100,000 Grand Prize at the 2017 M-Prize Competition, the richest prize for chamber music in the world, Russian Renaissance has gone on to redefine the possibilities of their traditional folk instruments (balalaika, domra, button accordion and the balalaika contrabasso) through stunning fusions of tango, folk and jazz, among other genres.

Below, check out a complete roundup of the “SPAC on Stage” series:

-On August 13, audiences will enjoy the Miami-based Nu Deco Ensemble. This chamber orchestra meshes modern classical music with the performance, verve and visual art of pop music. Nu Deco regularly collaborates with a host of local Miami musicians, composers, dancers, DJs and visual artists to hybridize compelling musical and multi-media art.

-The hip-hop/classical duo Black Violin will be returning to SPAC on August 20 to give another mind-meltingly good performance. Classically trained instrumentalists Kev Marcus and Wil B (both from Florida) will show off their virtuosic abilities to fuse multiple genres of music with just a couple of violins and a killer beat. Sobol’s a big fan. “Black Violin, who were unable to perform last year due to the hurricane, will bring their stereotype-challenging presence across classical, hip-hop, rock and R&B genres,” she says.

-Closing out the series on August 27 will be the band that’s from Montreal-by-way-of-Chad, H’SAO. Of all the groups, H’SAO is perhaps the hardest to classify with mesmerizing harmonies and songs that shift back and forth across the musical spectrum. It might be easiest to say that if you enjoy mostly a cappella music then you’ll definitely love H’SAO (check them out—my socks were thoroughly knocked off).

Tickets to “SPAC on Stage” cost $40-$50, depending on your location on the stage itself. For more information visit spac.org.

Daily Racing Form: Heavenly Prize Highlights Ceremony Rich In History

Hall of Fame trainer Shug McGaughey looked out at the audience and recalled, with clarity and detail, the fairly ordinary afternoon of Sept. 15, 1993 at Belmont Park, when a maiden special weight for 2-year-old fillies was split into two divisions. A pair of homebreds, one owned by Ogden Phipps and one by his son Ogden Mills “Dinny” Phipps, won the two divisions by a combined 16 1/2 lengths.

“We were obviously very encouraged by their respective performances, but I don’t think anyone, at that time, could have predicted that they would both end up in the Racing Hall of Fame,” McGaughey said.

Heavenly Prize joined her stablemate Inside Information and other racing greats on Friday as the lone contemporary runner honored at this year’s National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame induction ceremony. The ceremony was held at Fasig-Tipton’s Humphrey S. Finney Sales Pavilion in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., just around the corner from the museum itself, which will see changes in coming years as it seeks to better showcase the sport’s legends. Museum president John Hendrickson announced at the ceremony that the Hall of Fame will be renovated to include a video theater and interactive information in a multimillion dollar project expected to be completed by 2020.

Champion Heavenly Prize was a model of consistency at the highest levels, winning 9 of 18 career starts, never missing the board while running almost exclusively in stakes company, and winning Grade 1 stakes at ages 2, 3, and 4. She won the Grade 1 Frizette Stakes in just her second outing, then was third in the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies. The following year, she won the Grade 1 Alabama Stakes, Grade 1 Gazelle Stakes, and beat older females in the Grade 1 Beldame Stakes before finishing second by a neck in the Breeders’ Cup Distaff to upset winner One Dreamer. She was voted the Eclipse Award champion 3-year-old female of 1994.

The next season, Heavenly Prize added four more Grade 1 victories in the Apple Blossom Handicap, Hempstead Handicap, Go for Wand Stakes, and John A. Morris Handicap. She was then second in stablemate Inside Information’s tour-de-force 13 1/2-length victory in that year’s Breeders’ Cup Distaff. Inside Information, that year’s champion older female, was voted into the Hall of Fame in 2008.

“I still remember Mr. Phipps’s comment to me after the [Distaff],” McGaughey said. “He looked up at me from his box and said, ‘The wrong horse won!’ I’m quite sure he was kidding, because he had a smile on his face when he said it.”

In addition to her three Breeders’ Cup placings, Heavenly Prize recorded four other Grade 1 placings, including a third against males in the 1996 Donn Handicap, won by the great Cigar.

“It was a tremendous honor to train her throughout her career and to accept this great honor on behalf of the Phipps family,” McGaughey said. “It was a privilege to have a filly like Heavenly Prize in the barn, and she brought us a lot of joy throughout her career.”

Heavenly Prize, by Claiborne Farm stallion Seeking the Gold, was foaled and later resided as a broodmare at Claiborne in Paris, Ky., for the Phipps family, which has long boarded its stock at the farm. Appropriately, Arthur B. Hancock Sr., who founded Claiborne more than a century ago, was among the dozen who entered the Hall on Friday as Pillars of the Turf, a category for Thoroughbred industry influencers unveiled in 2013. Also inducted was the late Penny Chenery, who is indelibly linked to the immortal Secretariat, her 1973 Triple Crown winner who spent his stud career at Claiborne. Chenery’s daughter Kate Chenery Tweedy acknowledged those ties while accepting for her mother, noting that Hancock advised her grandfather Christopher Chenery when he became involved in racing.

Links such as these were apparent throughout Friday’s ceremony. In a year in which racing partnerships have taken center stage, Cot Campbell also took his place onstage Friday as a Pillar of the Turf inductee. Campbell founded the innovative Dogwood Stable, which paved the way for other racing partnerships.

“It made sense,” Campbell said of founding Dogwood to bring new people into the sport. Dogwood merged with Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners in 2013, and many former Dogwood partners have continued on to become involved with additional racehorses.

“Over 1,200 people have come into racing through Dogwood, and I believe half the people racing horses in America are racing in some sort of partnership,” Campbell said.
Campbell, who called his life “exciting, adventurous, glamorous, bizarre, tumultuous,” credited his wife, Anne, and horse racing for his success and happiness. He recalled seeing Man o’ War as a driving force in his decision to pursue racing.

“I thank Man o’ War, because he lit the fuse that caused me to pursue an absolutely wonderful life,” Campbell said.

John Morrissey, the originator of Thoroughbred racing at Saratoga, joined the Hall on the anniversary of when the track first opened, on Aug. 3, 1863. And on the eve of the Whitney Handicap at Saratoga, Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney, Harry Payne Whitney, and Williams Collins Whitney were all also inducted.

“He loved the sport and the people in it,” said Marylou Whitney, former wife of C.V. Whitney, who accepted for the family trio along with C.V.’s nephew Leverett Miller.

Marylou Whitney, an owner and breeder, was one of several active participants in racing who made the great legacies of the Pillars of the Turf honorees apparent.

Accepting for John W. Galbreath was his grandson John Phillips, now the steward of Darby Dan Farm, and accepting for Hal Price Headley was his grandson Headley Bell, who mans Mill Ridge Farm. Arthur Hancock III of Stone Farm accepted for his grandfather, as well.

Elias J. “Lucky” Baldwin, August Belmont I, and Charles H. Strub rounded out the Pillars of the Turf group. The racehorse Preakness, namesake of the second leg of the Triple Crown, and trainer William Lakeland were selected for induction by the Hall’s Historic Review Committee.

“What a wonderful history lesson,” emcee Kenny Rice of NBC Sports said of Friday’s ceremony.

This story originally appeared on DRF.com


Visit DRF.com for additional news, notes, wagering information, and more.

Daily Racing Form: Disco Partner Cuts Back To A Sprint In Troy

Trainer Christophe Clement admitted he probably made a mistake when he stretched out Disco Partner to finish fifth last month in the one-mile Forbidden Apple at Belmont Park. But make no mistake about it, Disco Partner is strictly the one to beat when he turns back to 5 1/2 furlongs for Sunday’s $200,000 Troy Handicap at Saratoga.

Disco Partner was the defending champ in the Forbidden Apple, but he just didn’t kick on as well at the end of the race as he did last summer when he rallied to a 3 1/4-length victory. Now 6, Disco Partner continues to hold his form amazingly well, having won the Grade 2 Jaipur for the second straight year during the spring for his 10th victory in 24 career starts. He won the Troy two summers ago by a neck over Green Mask.

“It was probably a mistake to run him at a mile, but he came back in good shape, and I shipped him up here right away after the race,” said Clement, who trains the homebred Disco Partner for Patricia Generazio. “I’m probably running him back a little quickly, and I’m worried a little bit about the bounce, but there aren’t any turf sprints in New York until October, and it looks like a good spot for him.”

Disco Partner carried only 116 pounds when he won the Troy two years ago. He’ll be the highweight under 124 pounds on Sunday, conceding up to eight pounds to his seven rivals.

Clement said he was concerned about the weight spread.

“But I was aware of it before we entered, and it’s a handicap, so you have to accept it,” he said.

Heavy rain on Friday also created the prospect of a less-than-firm turf course for the Grade 3 Troy.

“I prefer it not too soft for a horse like him because he’s got natural speed,” said Clement. “A course too soft can take that advantage away from a fast horse, and you don’t want to take away what they’re born with. But he’ll run either way if the race stays on the grass. He’ll scratch if the race comes off.”

Several horses who have chased Disco Partner home in turf-sprint stakes will take him on again in the Troy. That group includes Holding Gold, a wide-running fourth in the Jaipur; Ready for Rye, beaten 1 1/4 lengths by Disco Partner when second last fall in the Belmont Turf Sprint; and Blind Ambition, seventh after a wide trip in the Jaipur.
Sandy’z Slew enters in peak form and likely will prove the one to catch while coming off easy wire-to-wire optional-claiming wins in his last two starts.

Tombelaine appears to be rounding back to his peak form. He was claimed two starts back for $62,500 by trainer Robertino Diodoro, and paid quick dividends by outlasting the Clement-trained White Flag in winning an allowance race by a half-length at Belmont on June 17.

Square Shooter, stepping up in company off two straight wins, and Eastwood likely would be the major beneficiaries if rain should wash the Troy onto the main track.

This story originally appeared on DRF.com


Visit DRF.com for additional news, notes, wagering information, and more.

Exclusive Video: Scenes From ‘The Races!’ Party Hosted By ‘saratoga living’

Were you there? On July 31, saratoga living hosted its kickoff party to Saratoga’s summer season, presented by Tequila Avión and co-hosted by Putnam Place, Phinney Design Group and brand-new content partners, the Daily Racing Form. Below, watch the teaser video from this year’s hottest party. (And look out for a full-length version coming soon!)

Daily Racing Form: Patch, Timeline Top Field In Woodward Audition

Patch will be the sentimental favorite, Timeline figures to be the actual favorite, and neither has to win Sunday’s $100,000 Alydar Stakes, which drew a compact but competitive five-horse field at Saratoga.

The Alydar, at 1 1/8 miles, is for horses whose connections didn’t think they were ready for Saturday’s Grade 1, $1.2 million Whitney, but who may have a thought about the Grade 1, $750,000 Woodward here Sept. 1.

Patch, a fan favorite due to his story of having just one eye, made a nice 4-year-old debut at Belmont, winning an allowance race on May 12. He stepped back into Grade 1 company in his next start, finishing seventh behind Pavel in the Stephen Foster at Churchill Downs.

“Second start off a layoff, it might have been too ambitious at that time, so we’ll take a step back into this and hopefully build back up,” trainer Todd Pletcher said.

Timeline, a multiple graded stakes winner at 3, is 1 for 3 this year. In his most recent start, he finished second to Sunny Ridge in the State Dinner Stakes at Belmont on July 6.

“I didn’t see an excuse for him,” trainer Chad Brown said. “The race two back was a very, very good race. [Last time] he just wasn’t the same, maybe because he found himself on the lead.”

If Timeline doesn’t want the lead Sunday, Outplay, another horse trained by Pletcher, may take it. Last year, he won the Curlin Stakes here by 5 3/4 lengths going gate to wire.

In his last two starts, Outplay caught a sloppy track in the Grade 2 Churchill Downs Stakes and then ran eighth in the Grade 2 Brooklyn, something Pletcher called “a bad [owner] Mike Repole idea.”

Kurilov, the other Chad Brown entrant in the Alydar, is returning to dirt after four straight starts on turf. Brown said that Kurilov, a Group 1 winner in Chile in 2017, has been a puzzle he has yet to solve.

“We’re trying to find his sweet spot,” Brown said. “Usually I have a good handle on these things. At least I try my best to get them into what they were meant to do and manage them from there. This horse has been a bit confusing. He first came over and looked like a versatile horse. I’m trying to find out what he wants to do in regards to distance and surface.”

Last weekend, Kurilov did work well in company with Backyard Heaven, who was scheduled to run in Saturday’s Grade 1 Whitney.

Realm, trained by Barclay Tagg, is coming off an allowance win at Belmont on June 29 and could show early speed from the rail under Junior Alvarado.

The Alydar goes as race 10 on an 11-race card that also includes the Grade 3, $200,000 Troy Handicap for sprinters.

This story originally appeared on DRF.com


Visit DRF.com for additional news, notes, wagering information, and more.

National Museum Of Racing Announces Plans For New State-Of-The-Art Hall of Fame Experience

Saratoga Springs’ National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame just punched its ticket for the future. Today (August 3), its President, John Hendrickson, laid out an ambitious new plan to redesign the existing Hall of Fame. The announcement came during the 2018 Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony at Fasig-Tipton, during which three members of the Whitney family were inducted, including Cornelius “Sonny” Vanderbilt Whitney, late husband to Saratoga’s “savior” Marylou Whitney. “At the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame, we’re striving to be the best sports hall of fame in the country,” Hendrickson told the audience. “We knew we needed a game-changer—a must-see destination.” A redesign committee has been appointed to take on the task, headed by some of the leading experts and professionals in the field, such as wine and horse racing mogul Barbara Banke, whose Stonestreet Stables co-owned Kentucky Derby runner-up Good Magic; Owner Debby Oxley, who, along with her husband, John, won the 2001 Derby with Monarchos; horse farm owner Robert Clay, whose Three Chimneys Farm has been home to a panoply of champion horses, including Triple Crown winner Seattle Slew; Penelope Miller, Senior Manager, Digital Media, at America’s Best Racing; and Racing Museum trustee G.D. Hieronymus.

The current Hall of Fame, which features lit displays of colorful jockey silks atop rows of commemorative plaques, will be transformed into a state-of-the-art, interactive educational experience where the touch of a screen will bring patrons deeper into the history and excitement of Thoroughbred racing. The new Hall of Fame will feature multiple projection screens, including an ultramodern, 360-degree screen that will surround the audience with images and clips from the world of Thoroughbred racing, as well as the portraits and stories of each of the Hall’s current inductees. “I believe [the experience] will be one of the most important things that our industry has ever done for this sport in our lifetimes,” said Hendrickson.

The award winning Donna Lawrence Productions, which creates films and immersive experiences, including multiscreen, 4D and 360-degree installations, has been tapped to handle the project. The new Hall of Fame experience is expected to be completed by 2020 and is estimated to cost up to $20 million. Hendrickson acknowledged the scope and complexities of the plan. “It will take the entire industry’s participation to complete this project, because we’re cataloging history and [will be] able to license it to other tracks.” To show his family’s commitment to the project, Hendrickson and his wife kicked off the campaign with a donation of $1 million.

Daily Racing Form: Saturday’s Race Of The Day Is The Whitney Stakes

Daily Racing Form’s Dan Illman and Matt Bernier preview Saturday, August 4’s race of the day: The Grade 1, $1.2 million Whitney Stakes. The 1 1/8-mile race is part of the Breeders’ Cup Challenge Series, and the winner will automatically qualify for the Breeders’ Cup Classic November 3 at Churchill Downs.

Daily Racing Form: Backyard Heaven Seeking Redemption In Whitney

When Backyard Heaven won the Grade 2 Alysheba by 4 1/2 lengths at Churchill Downs on May 4, it looked as though he was ready to position himself atop the East Coast’s older male route division.

Six weeks later, Backyard Heaven flopped as the odds-on favorite in the Grade 1 Stephen Foster there, finishing sixth behind the Southern California-based Pavel and leaving the East Coast older male division in flux.

Saturday, Backyard Heaven will look to reclaim his status in the division when he takes on seven rivals in the Grade 1, $1.2 million Whitney Stakes at Saratoga.

The Whitney, a Win and You’re In race for the $6 million Breeders’ Cup Classic at Churchill on Nov. 3, tops an 11-race card Saturday that also includes the Grade 1 Test for 3-year-old fillies, the Grade 3 Waya for fillies and mares on turf, and the Lure and De La Rose, also on turf.

The Whitney drew an intriguing field of eight, including Diversify, dominant winner of the Grade 2 Suburban at Belmont last month; Mind Your Biscuits, a multiple Grade 1-winning sprinter who tries two turns for the first time; Tapwrit, the 2017 Belmont Stakes winner; and Good Samaritan, the 2017 Jim Dandy winner.

Backyard Heaven didn’t win his first race until last December. But he added two more victories including the Grade 2 Alysheba, his first try at two turns. Trainer Chad Brown is hoping that Backyard Heaven simply didn’t handle the heat and humidity that was prevalent the night of the Stephen Foster.

“We’ve been very excited about this horse,” Brown said. “The Stephen Foster was very disappointing; he just didn’t fire. If you can just draw a line through it and get back in form and get back to the way he ran in the Alysheba, I think he’ll be a horse that’s regarded on the top end of the division. He needs to redeem himself in the Whitney.”
Javier Castellano will ride Backyard Heaven from post 2.

Castellano replaces Irad Ortiz Jr., who got his regular seat back aboard Diversify, who was entered in the Whitney at the last minute. Trainer Rick Violette was going to skip the Whitney with Diversify following his huge race in the Suburban, but Violette said Diversify has shown him all positive signs, and that he couldn’t keep the horse in the barn.

While Diversify got loose on the lead in the Suburban, he could find company in the Whitney in the form of Dalmore, who will be ridden by Ricardo Santana Jr. Diversify did win the Commentator for New York-breds from just off the pace under Jose Ortiz.
“You have to make sure you get away real clean then make [Santana] have to step on the gas and then you can take back,” Violette said. “Both Jose and Irad feel his strong suit is on the lead, but his race in the Commentator was a pretty fast race.”

Mind Your Biscuits, beaten a nose in the Grade 1 Metropolitan Handicap at a mile last out, tries two turns and 1 1/8 miles for the first time in the Whitney. His trainer, Chad Summers, is confident the horse can handle it.

“I think he’s going to be better two turns,” Summers said. “I think he settles into his stride. His biggest advantage is that he’s so athletic he takes the turns well, so if he takes the one turn well hopefully he takes the two turns well.”

Tapwrit is winless in three starts since he won the Belmont. Trainer Todd Pletcher felt Tapwrit had too wide of a trip in the Suburban, where he finished fifth behind Diversify. John Velazquez rides Tapwrit for the first time.

Good Samaritan is a two-time winner at 1 1/8 miles, including the Jim Dandy here last summer. Discreet Lover ran a sneaky good third in the Suburban. Dalmore and McCraken finished second and third in the Grade 3 Cornhusker at Prairie Meadows in their most recent outs.

The Whitney and the Test will be shown by NBCSN during a live broadcast from 5-6 p.m. Eastern.

This story originally appeared on DRF.com


Visit DRF.com for additional news, notes, wagering information, and more.

Daily Racing Form: Separationofpowers Looks To Rebound In Test

It’s hard to measure the level of frustration trainer Chad Brown felt after investing the time it took to bring his Grade 1 winner Separationofpowers back to the races to launch her 3-year-old campaign last month in the Grade 3 Victory Ride, only to have all that hard work go down the drain when she stumbled out of the gate.

But all that will be quickly forgotten if Separationofpowers can bounce back Saturday at Saratoga with a victory in the Grade 1 Test Stakes. She is one of two key contenders Brown will send out in the seven-furlong dash for 3-year-old fillies, along with Alter Moon, who joined his barn less than four weeks ago after being purchased at the Fasig-Tipton July sale of horses of racing age.

Separationofpowers was an instant sensation here last summer, capturing her career debut by 11 3/4 lengths, and became a Grade 1 winner in just her third start by winning the one-mile Frizette at Belmont Park. She concluded her 2-year-old campaign by finishing fourth in the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies, after which she was sidelined for more than eight months before returning to finish a fast-closing fourth following the poor start in the Victory Ride.

“She stumbled and grabbed a quarter leaving the gate, and ran a very good race considering all that,” said Brown. “It’s all healed up, and she’s ready to go again. She’s come back with a couple of good works, and hopefully with a little more distance and a better break from the gate, it will produce a better result.”

While the Test is obviously a goal in itself for Separationofpowers, it is also a stepping-stone to longer races during the second half of the season.

“This looks like a logical spot,” Brown said. “It’s a very prestigious race, which we kind of marked down earlier this year as a target. But after this, I’d like to get her to stretch out further in distance.”

Alter Moon joins Brown’s stable off a pair of one-sided victories at Gulfstream Park that included a five-length tally in the seven-furlong Azalea on June 30.

“I’ve only had her a few weeks,” said Brown. “She came here in really good condition. She’s a good-moving horse. I’ve gotten to work her a couple of times, and the works were really solid. I wish I had a little more time with her. But the Test only comes around once in a horse’s career. She’s run three really good races since they took the blinkers off. Her numbers fit, so right now, I’m inclined to run her.”

Along with Separationofpowers, the Test brings back four other members of the Victory Ride field: Classy Act, Mia Mischief, Spectator, and Norma’s Charm, the second-, fifth-, sixth-, and eighth-place finishers behind Dixie Serenade.

Classy Act turned in a huge effort when caught late by the rail-skimming Dixie Serenade after contesting a rapid pace with the 6-5 favorite Mia Mischief in the 6 1/2-furlong Victory Ride. They figure to be part of the early mix once again in the Test, along with the undefeated and untested Minit to Stardom, who has won her first three starts by a combined 18 3/4 lengths. The 92 Beyer Speed Figure she earned in winning an allowance race at Churchill Downs in her 3-year-old debut is the highest last-out number in the Test lineup.

The multiple graded stakes-placed Kelly’s Humor, who figures to benefit from a solid pace scenario, and the lightly raced Cathedral Reader complete the well-matched field.

This story originally appeared on DRF.com


Visit DRF.com for additional news, notes, wagering information, and more.

Daily Racing Form: Brown Has Two For Waya Stakes

When it comes to female turf stakes horses, trainer Chad Brown seems to have one for every distance.

A Raving Beauty is a Grade 1 winner at a mile. Sistercharlie and Fourstar Crook are graded winners at distances from 1 1/8 miles to 1 1/4 miles.

At 1 1/2 miles, Brown’s best prospect may be Santa Monica, who will seek her third U.S. victory in four tries in Saturday’s Grade 2, $200,000 Waya Stakes at Saratoga.
Santa Monica went 2 for 22 in Great Britain. In three starts in the U.S., all on Lasix, Santa Monica is 2 for 3 with a troubled third in the Grade 2 Sheepshead Bay at Belmont.

Santa Monica is coming off a half-length victory in the Grade 2 Dance Smartly at Woodbine, where she ran down stablemate Inflexibility at 1 1/4 miles.

“A mile and a quarter is as short as she wants to go, but she did get up in time,” Brown said. “These longer distances are what she prefers.”

Brown felt Santa Monica was compromised by an inside, traffic-laden trip in the Sheepshead Bay.

In the Waya, Brown will also send out Homeland Security, who won the River Memories Stakes at 1 1/2 miles at Belmont on July 8. This is her first try in a graded race.

“She’s going to have to step up in this race,” Brown said. “She seems like an improving horse. I can see her being competitive in there.”

Mom’s On Strike, trained by Joe Sharp, won the Grade 3 Bewitch Stakes going 1 1/2 miles at Keeneland before finishing fourth, beaten just two lengths by Fourstar Crook, in the Grade 2 New York at Belmont on June 8. The New York was at 1 1/4 miles.

“With the graded stakes kind of horses, for us to be competitive we definitely need the extra distance,” Sharp said.

Completing the field are Lottie, second in the Sheepshead Bay; Tricky Escape, winner of the Grade 3 Robert Dick Memorial at Delaware last out; Violet Blue, Summersault; and Queen of Connaught.

This story originally appeared on DRF.com


Visit DRF.com for additional news, notes, wagering information, and more.