Afleet Alex Works A Half-Mile In :48.40
High Limit, Greeley's Galaxy To Work Wednesday
Buzzards Bay, Giacomo Scheduled To Arrive Wednesday
AFLEET ALEX - Cash is King Stable's Afleet Alex completed his major
preparation for the 131st Kentucky Derby by working a half-mile in
:48.40 under Derby rider Jeremy Rose this morning.
Going out after the renovation break, Afleet Alex jogged briefly
in the mile chute before making one trip around the track with trainer
Tim Ritchey alongside on the pony. Working solo, Afleet Alex was caught
in fractions of :13.40, :25.60, :36.80 and out five furlongs in 1:01.40.
The move tied for the fourth fastest of 37 at the distance.
"It was just what we wanted," Ritchey said. "He started out nice
and easy and finished down the lane, which is what we wanted him to do.
That's all I needed to do today, kind of an easy maintenance work that
should set him up well for the race."
It was the second work at Churchill Downs for Afleet Alex since
winning the Arkansas Derby (GII) on April 16. He worked a bullet five
furlongs in :59 on April 26.
"It is good to get this work underneath you," Ritchey said. "Now
he will have a few light days and look forward to running Saturday. He
will probably go out tomorrow and jog one or two times around, and maybe
go twice (to the track) on Thursday and once Friday. Saturday morning,
he probably will walk a long time, two or three times and then go to the
paddock (for the Derby)."
Afleet Alex has six victories and two seconds in nine career
starts with the lone off-the-board finish coming in the March 19 Rebel
Stakes (GIII) in which he finished last of six in a race in which he ran
with a lung infection.
"When we detected the problem, I was still very confident that
we would go on to the Triple Crown races," Ritchey said. "It is not a
major thing. It just affects horses and they don't run their race. It is
an easily curable problem. He showed in the Arkansas Derby it was
obviously curable.
"We scoped him after his first work here and he was fine. We
will scope him later today just to be sure, but I don't foresee any
problems. I think if he runs his race, he will be right there. I really
think he has a legitimate shot."
With six starts in graded stakes, three in Grade I's, Afleet
Alex has more appearances in U.S. graded events than any prospective
starter for Derby 131.
"He has been battle tested," Ritchey said. "He has always shown
up, except for the one race when he had the lung infection. He's a
trier. If somebody beats him, they are going to have to run to beat
him."
That seasoning is a big plus to Ritchey.
"I think it helps a lot," Ritchey said, "but I know just running
horses in general, when you get to bigger races, when you have a horse
that has been tested, you know what he is and what he is capable of.
Some of the horses that are moving way up have got only two or three
races in them. Yes, they might have run very well, but now they are
looking at a 20-horse field."
Ritchey was asked if he thought the mile and a quarter Derby
distance would be a problem for Afleet Alex.
"I think he'll go two miles," Ritchey said with a laugh. "He
trained five miles the other day and was pretty fresh after the second
time he came back. I don't understand that (the question about
distance), because on his bottom side, there is a ton of distance
pedigree. You have Hawaii, Hawkster; mile and a quarter, mile and a half
horses. I could never understand that. When we originally bought this
horse, one of the reasons I bought him was to have a horse go a distance
of ground. He has natural speed, but I think you've got a ton of
endurance."
MEDIA ADVISORY: Ritchey has requested that media members with
questions about Afleet Alex gather each day at 10:15 a.m. (EDT). Afleet
Alex is stabled in Barn 41.
ANDROMEDA'S HERO/BELLAMY ROAD/HIGH FLY/NOBLE CAUSEWAY/SUN KING -
Trainer Nick Zito was back at Churchill Downs Tuesday morning after
spending Monday morning at Keeneland to oversee the 25 horses he has
stabled there.
Among the Keeneland contingent is Robert LaPenta's Andromeda's
Hero, who galloped a mile and a half at Keeneland on Tuesday under
exercise rider Megan Smillie.
The Fusaichi Pegasus colt had worked at Churchill Downs on
Thursday and Zito was asked if he was pleased with what he saw Monday
after a spate of four days.
"He looked fabulous," the two-time Derby winning conditioner
said. "He will come back over here Thursday."
Rafael Bejarano, who has ridden Andromeda's Hero in three of six
starts, picked up the mount Monday when his scheduled Derby call,
Consolidator, was retired because of injury.
Zito's four Churchill Downs-based hopefuls galloped a mile and a
half Tuesday. Carlos Correa was on Bellamy Road, Noble Causeway and Sun
King, and Maxine Correa was on High Fly.
MEDIA ADVISORY: Zito has requested that media members who wish
to discuss his Derby 131 contenders gather each morning for a
question-and-answer session beginning at 9:30. His horses are stabled in
Barn 36.
BANDINI/COIN SILVER/FLOWER ALLEY - Peachtree Stable's Coin Silver had a
quietly busy morning Tuesday, the day after his final Derby tune-up as
he jogged a mile and a half, schooled in the paddock and stood in the
starting gate.
Hall of Famer Angel Cordero Jr. was aboard for Tuesday's
exercise, and guided Coin Silver through a five furlong work in 1:01
Monday.
Bandini and Flower Alley, who breezed on Sunday morning in
1:00.80 and 1:00.60, respectively, just walked under the shedrow
Tuesday.
Trainer Todd Pletcher said he is happy with the way his team is
coming up to Kentucky Derby 131.
"This is the strongest group of horses I've ever brought to the
Derby, and I think all three are coming up to the race at the peak of
their careers," the trainer said. "I'm confident that all three horses
will get the trip. They have the breeding and the talent to do well
here."
Bandini, owned by Michael Tabor and Derrick Smith, has made five
lifetime starts, winning the Blue Grass most recently. Melnyk Racing
Stables' Flower Alley has had just four career outings, with a victory
in the Lane's End Stakes and a second in the Arkansas Derby.
"I think that's the way it's going - fewer starts before the
Derby and more time between starts," Pletcher said.
Of the three, Coin Silver came out the earliest, running in a
maiden event at Belmont last July. He wasn't seen again until January at
Gulfstream, and broke his maiden when stretched out to nine furlongs in
March. Since then he has raced twice, earning his Derby berth with a
victory in the Lexington Stakes 10 days ago.
"Coin Silver came around early and started early because he was
ready," Pletcher said. "I wasn't concerned when he lost his first two
starts, because I knew he wasn't a sprinter. I always thought he needed
more distance to do his best."
Bandini, a son of 2000 Derby winner Fusaichi Pegasus, did not
make his first start until late November last year and broke his maiden
in his 3-year-old debut in January.
"Bandini has always been impressive looking," Pletcher said.
"When he first came to the track, you had to like him because he looked
like a racehorse. We tried to follow the same map they used with his
father to get him to the Derby."
Flower Alley will wear blinkers for the first time Saturday, a
change of equipment Pletcher feels is for the best.
"He's a colt that just needs to focus," the trainer said, "and
the blinkers will help him do that."
In the Derby, John Velazquez has the mount on Bandini, Pat
Valenzuela rides Coin Silver, and Jorge Chavez will be aboard Flower
Alley.
BUZZARDS BAY - Santa Anita Derby winner Buzzards Bay emerged from his
six-furlong Monday workout in "great" style, said trainer Jeff Mullins
from his barn at Santa Anita Park this morning.
Buzzards Bay, who won the Santa Anita Derby at odds of 30-1,
drilled a bullet 1:11.40 under jockey Mark Guidry Monday at Santa Anita
and walked under the shed this morning. He's scheduled to be shipped to
Louisville on an early flight out of Ontario Airport Wednesday.
Mullins said the Fog City Stable colt will be on the track at
Churchill Downs Thursday morning to go through his usual routine,
jogging a mile and then galloping a mile and one-half.
For the third straight year, Mullins will be running the Santa
Anita Derby winner in the Kentucky Derby. Buddy Gil was sixth to Funny
Cide two years ago and Castledale finished 14th behind Smarty Jones last
spring.
CLOSING ARGUMENT - The Successful Appeal colt who represents trainer
Kiaran McLaughlin's first Kentucky Derby starter just walked under the
shedrow Tuesday morning, the day after breezing five furlongs in 1:01.
"He came out of the work just fine," McLaughlin said, "and he'll
gallop up to the Derby. He's doing really well here."
Philip and Marcia Cohen's colt won the Holy Bull Stakes on Feb.
5, and was aiming for the Florida Derby when a bruised foot stopped him
cold the first week of April.
"It happened just a few days before the Florida Derby,"
McLaughlin said, "and that was supposed to be his final Derby prep. He
recovered quickly, but we had to run him in the Blue Grass instead as
his last Derby prep."
Closing Argument, who never has been worse than third in a
career of seven starts, finished in the show spot at Keeneland, nine
lengths behind Bandini.
"That was about 75 days between starts for him, and he needed
the race," McLaughlin said. "I think he's ready for this."
McLaughlin has been to the Derby before, when he was assistant
to D. Wayne Lukas, who saddled Winning Colors to win in 1988.
"But it's different when you bring a horse on your own," he
said. "I was born and raised in Lexington. I'm living my dream to have a
horse in the Kentucky Derby."
DON'T GET MAD - Trainer Ron Ellis announced this morning that top
Southern California jockey Tyler Baze will ride Derby Trial winner Don't
Get Mad in Saturday's "Run for the Roses." Baze piloted B. Wayne Hughes'
colt in all three West Coast starts this spring, including a runner-up
finish in the Grade II San Vicente Stakes in February.
Baze replaces Gary Stevens in the saddle. Stevens guided the son of
Stephen Got Even to victory in the Derby Trial, but committed to ride
Florida Derby runner-up Noble Causeway on Derby Day. Baze has one career
Derby mount, a 14th-place finish aboard Indian Express in the 2003
Derby.
Back at the barn, Don't Get Mad enjoyed a third planned day of leisure
following his blowout victory in last Saturday's Derby Trial. He walked
the shedrow 30 minutes and then went to work feverishly on his hayrack.
Later he was taken out for a graze, further showing his appetite was not
in question just days after a strong raceday performance.
"We'll take him back to the track tomorrow (Wednesday)," Ellis said.
"He's acting like he's rebounded pretty well. We'll take him out and let
him jog a little bit in the morning."
GIACOMO - Giacomo, one of the West Coast hopefuls in Saturday's 131st
Kentucky Derby, returned to the Hollywood Park track to exercise this
morning, jogging a mile and then galloping the same distance for trainer
John Shirreffs.
The gray son of Holy Bull, fourth to Buzzards Bay in the Santa
Anita Derby on April 9, breezed six furlongs in a bullet 1:11:80 Sunday
and walked in the barn Monday.
Giacomo, owned by Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Moss, will be shipped to
Louisville on a flight out of Ontario Airport Wednesday morning and will
be stabled in Barn 45. Also on the flight will be Buzzards Bay, trained
by Jeff Mullins.
Shirreffs, 60 years old, received his trainer's license in 1978 after an
early apprenticeship with trainer Gene Cleveland and a time breaking
yearlings for Lakeview Thoroughbred Farm in California. Giacomo
represents his first entrant in the Kentucky Derby.
GOING WILD - Bob and Beverly Lewis' remaining Derby 131 hopeful jogged
an easy mile-and-one-half Tuesday just after the track opened at 6 a.m.
under exercise rider Stacy Prior. Going Wild will "go it alone" in
Saturday's main event following yesterday's announcement that stablemate
Consolidator had suffered a career-ending fracture to his right front
sesamoid.
On Tuesday, Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas focused his full
attention on Going Wild's chances in the Derby, saying "I know a lot of
you (the media) don't think he's got a chance, but, I'll tell you, I've
been high on this horse all along.
"He's a horse who definitely has a preference in tracks," Lukas said.
"Santa Anita, he loved. He didn't like it in New York or at Keeneland at
all. But since he's been here, he's been training beautifully. He
relishes it here."
Going Wild has been well beaten in each of his past two starts, the
Grade I Wood Memorial at Aqueduct and the Grade II Lexington Stakes at
Keeneland. In the Wood, he got a taste first-hand of what Derby 131
favorite Bellamy Road can do. It was a race most thought was a two-horse
affair on paper, and Going Wild was nearly dead even on the toteboard
(5-to-2) with the eventual 17 ½-length winner. While complimentary of
Bellamy Road, Lukas cautioned not to overplay the significance of the
Wood Memorial finish of both the winner and his horse.
"My horse didn't show up that day and he was probably the one who could
have (competed)," Lukas said.
Jockey Jose Valdivia Jr. will ride Going Wild in the Derby.
GREATER GOOD - Lewis Lakin's Greater Good galloped a mile and a half
before the renovation break under exercise rider Betsy Couch. Trainer
Bob Holthus said the morning activity went very well.
Jockey John McKee, one of three riders entering the Derby to
have ridden their hopefuls in all their career starts (Mike Smith on
Giacomo and Ramon Dominguez on High Limit are the others), was asked his
impressions of Greater Good.
"I really like the way he is coming around," McKee said. "He
gets over this racetrack very well and he won the (Kentucky) Jockey Club
(GII) here last year. I think he gives every indication that he is going
to handle the distance. We are just hoping for a fast pace and hopefully
they back up. I know my horse is going to give a big kick at the end. In
the Arkansas Derby, there was no pace and he washed out real bad. I
think he will put in a big effort Saturday."
McKee rode in his first Derby last year, finishing 13th on Pro
Prado for Holthus. He did not know early on if Greater Good would
provide his second Derby shot.
"I never really thought about it. I just took it one day at a
time," McKee said."I know Mr. Holthus really thought highly of this
colt as a two-year-old. I am glad to be a part of everything, and
hopefully we get lucky this time, just for Bob's sake."
McKee was asked about the sensation of riding in his first Derby
last year.
"It is a feeling I really can't describe, but I will cherish it
a lifetime," McKee said. "Coming off the quarter pole (with the sound of
the crowd), that's amazing. It is just something you have to experience
for yourself. It is overwhelming."
GREELEY'S GALAXY - B. Wayne Hughes' Greeley's Galaxy, apparently
assured of a spot in the 131st Kentucky Derby with the unfortunate
injury to Consolidator, went through his usual routine this morning,
galloping a mile and one-half under regular exercise pilot Mikki
Fincher.
Trainer Warren Stute, attempting to become the oldest
conditioner to win the Derby, at age 83, is scheduled to return to
Louisville Tuesday evening and will be on hand to oversee Greeley's
Galaxy final race prep, a five-furlong breeze, Wednesday.
With his drill Wednesday, Greeley's Galaxy will have four
workouts over the Churchill Downs track since winning the Illinois Derby
by 9 ½ lengths April 9 at Hawthorne Race Course.
On April 16, he breezed a half-mile in :47.60; he returned April
22 to work six furlongs in 1:16.80 and then went a mile April 28 in
1:40.60
Kent Desormeaux, three-for-three on the son of Mr. Greeley,
purchased for $220,000 at Keeneland's April sale of two-year-olds, has
the call again in Saturday's Derby.
HIGH LIMIT - Blue Grass Stakes runner-up High Limit went to the track
this morning after the renovation break to have his usual mile and
one-half gallop under Jose Cuevas for trainer Bobby Frankel.
High Limit, an easy winner of the Louisiana Derby, is slated for
a half-mile breeze after the break Wednesday morning under jockey Joe
Deegan. Whereas High Limit worked in company, with stablemate and Horse
of the Year Ghostzapper, April 28, Wednesday he will be alone.
SORT IT OUT - After breezing a half-mile in :47.20 Monday, Sort It
Out's activity this morning was limited to walking under trainer Bob
Baffert's shedrow at Barn 33.
The son of Out of Place, who is certain to be a big longshot
despite his trainer's three-victory record of success in the Kentucky
Derby, will return to the track Wednesday morning to jog.
Brice Blanc has the mount on Sort It Out, who is owned by the
Stonerside Stable of Janice and Robert McNair and the Preferred Pals
Stable, which is a partnership headed by attorney Larry Paltrowitz.
Sort It Out earned his way into the 131st Kentucky Derby with a
runner-up effort behind Coin Silver in the Lexington Stakes April 23 at
Keeneland.
SPANISH CHESTNUT - The colt by Horse Chestnut galloped a mile and a half
at Keeneland under exercise rider Rodolph Brisset Tuesday morning.
Spanish Chestnut, owned by Michael Tabor and Derrick Smith, who
also have Bandini in the Derby, had his final Derby prep at
Churchill Downs Sunday when he breezed five furlongs in 1:00.40.
He will remain at Keeneland until Saturday morning, shipping to
Churchill Downs just hours before the Derby.
"It is the same as I did with Lion Heart last year," Biancone
said of the colt who finished second behind Smarty Jones in the 2004
Derby.
The trainer said Spanish Chestnut is doing well in the quiet
confines of Keeneland and is coming up to the race in good order. Joe
Bravo, who won last year's Haskell Invitational aboard Lion Heart, has
the mount on Spanish Chestnut.
WILKO - With horse and trainer well rested after arriving from
California late Sunday night, Wilko got his first look at the Churchill
Downs strip Tuesday morning.
The Awesome Again colt galloped a mile and a half under exercise
rider Sergio Martin in what trainer Craig Dollase termed a "sightseeing
tour."
"We just let him go along easy and look around," Dollase said.
"He's settled in and doing well here."
Wilko, owned by J. Paul Reddam and Susan Roy, will try to become
the first Breeders' Cup Juvenile winner to score in the Kentucky Derby.
Dollase took over the colt's training from Jeremy Noseda after that Lone
Star Park race. Under his care, Wilko has run third in the Hollywood
Futurity and Santa Anita Derby and fourth in the San Felipe.
Corey Nakatani, who has ridden him twice before, has the mount
Saturday.
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