**For video from this morning of trainer Nick Zito discussing Jackson Bend, please visit the following link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yEH6JfgXpB0**
Friday, April 2, 2010
Contact: NYRA Press Office
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AQUEDUCT RACETRACK NOTES
- Zito hoping for big things from “Mighty Mite” in Wood
- Borel picks up Jackson Bend
- “Mattress Mack” takes a shot in Wood with Carnivore
- For owner Thrash, it’s all in the name
OZONE PARK, N.Y. – Hall of Fame trainer Nick Zito, who has won three Wood Memorials, is hoping a compact bay son of Hear No Evil will bring him a fourth tomorrow as Jackson Bend takes on Fountain of Youth winner Eskendereya, Gotham winner Awesome Act and three others in the 86th running of the Grade 1, $750,000 race at Aqueduct Racetrack.
Jackson Bend, whom Zito calls “Mighty Mite,” has finished first or second in all eight of his career starts, including a second to Eskendereya in the Grade 2 Fountain of Youth on February 20.
“His greatest strength is that he is so consistent,” said Zito. “With that in mind, that’s what you have to hope for, that some day, those big horses don’t show up and he stays consistent. That’s what happens in sports, too; sometimes, the best team doesn’t always win, but the most consistent does. Consistent makes you good.”
Zito, who saddled Thirty Six Red to win the 1990 Wood, Adonis to win the 1999 edition and
“Jackson Bend has to do well with these horses,” said Zito. “He has to qualify and he has to get money.
“He’s a very courageous horse,” he added. “They all talk about how small he is, but he’s filling out and starting to develop. Everything he does is beautiful right now. As long as he can develop, I can see him doing terrific things in racing.”
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Come Triple Crown season, trainers looking for a jockey with a magic touch start thinking about Calvin Borel. With
After Jackson Bend finished second in the Fountain of Youth on February 20, trainer Nick Zito called Borel’s agent Jerry Hissam and said he and co-owner Robert LaPenta would like Borel to ride the son of Hear No Evil in the Grade 1, $750,000 Wood Memorial this Saturday.
Now Borel, who has two other Triple Crown contenders in Super Saver and Northern Giant, heads into the Wood aboard the 4-1 second choice.
“I thought the Fountain of Youth was one of the most impressive preps,” Hissam said of Jackson Bend’s most recent race against Eskendereya. “They want a ride that Calvin is known for — not way back, but to try to get him to finish.
“I’m not leaning in any direction at the moment,” Hissam said of his potential
Borel, whose lone graded win at Aqueduct came in 1988 on Darby’s Daughter in the Grade 2 Miss Grillo, will ride three horses before the Wood including Hurricane Ike in the Grade 3, $200,000 Bay Shore.
As for hooking up with Zito, Hissam said Borel has only had “a horse or two” with the trainer, but the rider’s reputation carries a lot of weight.
“That’s what two Derbies will do for you,” Hissam said.
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James McIngvale is a racehorse owner who doesn’t mind taking chances.
As owner of Gallery Furniture, one of the top furniture retailers in the country, McIngvale, 59, is known as “Mattress Mack,” renowned in the
Last year, McIngvale, on the suggestion of his wife, brought live monkeys into one of his showrooms, and they were an instant hit with customers. He also caused a stir when he offered to put up $2 million for a showdown between Rachel Alexandra and Zenyatta at
McIngvale, whose company once sponsored the Kentucky Derby prep race now called the Lanes End Stakes, is bringing that kind of moxie to Aqueduct on Saturday with his 3-year-old chestnut colt Carnivore, a 20-1 long shot in the Grade 1, $750,000 Wood Memorial.
A $280,000 sales purchase by top sire Giant’s Causeway out of the six-time stakes-winning mare Biogio’s Rose (an Aqueduct inner track terror in her day), Carnivore broke out for a seven-length maiden win March 10 at Laurel Park in his third start.
While nowhere near as accomplished as morning-line favorite Eskendereya, the Fountain of Youth winner, or Gotham hero Awesome Act, Carnivore has a string of five straight bullet works at the
“I liked the comment Todd Pletcher made, that he would let the 3-year-olds tell him where to go,” McIngvale said. “[Carnivore] looks great, feels great — what the heck, let’s give it a shot. When I first got involved in horse racing, I went to the Kentucky Derby that Canonero II won. I’ve always wanted to race at the highest level. I hope we’re not afraid to take a shot with these horses, and I hope we’re not taking too big a shot with this horse.”
McIngvale, an owner since 1992, has taken many shots before but never had a Triple Crown starter. The closest he came was in 2004 when his Bob Baffert-trained
McIngvale said he “was leaving the house for the airplane to
That same year, McIngvale ran a horse named Consecrate in the Wood and finished ninth behind winner Tapit.
For the past several years, McIngvale has been aligned with Joseph DeLozier III, a former top steeplechase jockey now training horses at Fair Hill in
McIngvale didn’t know DeLozier until the trainer called him out of the blue one day and asked if he could help him pick out some horses at a sale at Timonium.
“I liked his aggressiveness,” McIngvale said. “He cold-called me like a stockbroker.”
McIngvale hopes Carnivore shows the same kind of aggression in the Wood.
“This horse is so ambitious,” he said. “He starts knocking down the walls if you don’t take him out on the track.”
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Owner Ike Thrash found a good luck charm in naming horses after family members, particularly his wife, Dawn.
Dawn after Dawn, who won the Grade 2 La
So everyone, Thrash says, assumes he named his tough 3-year-old sprinter Hurricane Ike, 7-2 third choice in the morning line for the Grade 3, $200,000
“Everyone thinks I named him after myself,” said Thrash, who operates Dawn Properties, which builds, buys and sells apartment complexes. “We had an apartment complex in
Thrash hopes Hurricane Ike — the horse — can avoid trouble, too, and get back on the winning track after losing five straight races following a debut win. Two of those losses came in major stakes races to Lookin At Lucky, who runs 1-2 in most polls with Eskendereya as favorite to win the Kentucky Derby.
Lookin At Lucky made the transition from the Santa Anita Pro-Ride surface to dirt without problem, and Thrash is eager to see if his colt can do the same in the
“The one horse looks like kind of a freak,” Thrash said, “but I think we fit real well in there.”
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