JC / Railbird

Weekend Notes

– Trainer Carla Gaines and jockey Joe Talamo had a very good afternoon at Del Mar, pairing up for three wins, including one in the feature. Boxed in on the rail by Victor Espinoza aboard Balance, unbeaten Nashoba’s Key made up ground fast over the Polytrack stretch to win the Hirsch going away. “I was so confident,” said Talamo after. “She has a kick that is out of this world” (Blood-Horse). Final time for the race, the first for Nashoba’s Key over the surface, was 1:48.29. The four-year-old filly is now 6-for-6.
– Any Given Saturday looked fantastic scoring his first G1 victory in the Haskell at Monmouth today, accelerating with ease in the stretch and finishing 4 1/2 lengths ahead of Hard Spun. Favored Curlin, making his first start since his hard-fought nose loss to Rags to Riches in the Belmont, was third, which didn’t please Steve Asmussen. “He ran the worst race of his career and we have to find out why,” the trainer grumbled after (DRF). With the Travers three weeks away, it’ll be interesting to see what news come out of Asmussen’s barn about Curlin’s condition and schedule, as it will be to hear whether or not Any Given Saturday will run at Saratoga. Trainer Todd Pletcher would only say after the colt’s decisive win that the Breeders’ Cup was a target.
– Dream Rush followed up on her win in last month’s Prioress with another stakes victory on Saturday in the Darley Test at Saratoga. It was a nice race for her, but an even better one for runner-up Boca Grande, a filly who showed promise winning the Demoiselle last year, then returned to run sixth in the Forward Gal, her first race as a three-year-old, and finished third in her last, the Mother Goose. By A.P. Indy, out of Country Hideaway — a full sister to BC Distaff winner Pleasant Home and a member of a very classy female family that includes champions Sky Beauty and Gold Beauty — Boca Grande may well be a late blooming talent.
– Bob Baffert’s unraced $4.6 million Vindication colt Maimonides, scratched from an opening day start at Del Mar, could debut at Saratoga as early as this Wednesday (DRF). The two-year-old belongs to Ahmed Zayat, who withdrew his stock from Del Mar in a huff last week after an argument with track president Joe Harper over the Polytrack surface.