Justwhistledixie
The Oaks is always overshadowed by the Derby, but this year seems especially so — perhaps because the race will likely draw a small, modestly accomplished field dominated by the awesome Rachel Alexandra. In a small attempt to redress the imbalance here though, a bit of Oaks news …
– Is D. Wayne Lukas feeling cagey, or cranky? When asked yesterday how far Oaks contender Be Fair had galloped, the trainer replied, “Doesn’t matter. She was strong.†Asked the same question today, he said it was up to others to “figure out” the distance. Be Fair, fourth in the Ashland Stakes, will work Sunday or Monday. Tweeter, Lukas’ other Oaks starter as of this morning, worked five furlongs in :59.80, the best of 30 at the distance.
– The addition of Tweeter — lightly raced, stepping up from maiden company, not without fans on Twitter — brought the likely Oaks field back to seven after it was announced that Fitz Just Right will miss the race due to an ankle chip in her right front, discovered after the filly breezed four furlongs in :49. Stablemate Justwhistledixie equaled that time, then galloped out five furlongs in 1:02.20 over the main track (video).
– Rachel Alexandra had a planned morning off, walking the shedrow instead of going to the track. She’s scheduled to work on Monday, with Calvin Borel up. For that, I would like to be at Churchill …
– Rachel Alexandra turned in a sharp work this morning at Churchill Downs, breezing five furlongs in :59.40 and galloping out six furlongs in 1:11.60. “As usual, she went a little bit faster than I really wanted, but she does it so easy,” said trainer Hal Wiggins, adding the filly would wrap up her prep for the Kentucky Oaks with a work on Monday, April 27. Catching wind of the bullet move, rival Justwhistledixie had this to say on Twitter: “Rumor has it my main competition Rachel Alexandra worked pretty nicely this morning. That’s okay, I get to show my stuff tomorrow morning.” Not only is this year’s 3-year-old crop showing a lot of depth, it’s proving pretty web savvy …
– During last year’s Keeneland spring meet, there was quite a bit chatter about lower handle and fewer favorites winning. What a difference a year makes:
Through April 11, the Polytrack and turf surfaces have been rewarding favorites with a usual share of the winnings. After 67 races, there have been 31.3-percent of the favorites on top, which is only slightly lower than the Thoroughbred racing’s historical 33-percent watermark figure.
Order restored. Maybe the Polytrack isn’t so inscrutable, maybe the stats even out, maybe trainer Dale Romans was onto something when he said last April, “I’m not so sure [betting on Keeneland] would be a problem if it were longer than a two-week meet, so they can get a gauge on who’s running well.” With another year to adjust, seems like bettors now have a better gauge.
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