Friday, July 4, 2014

Belmont Park Notes 7/4

The New York Racing Association, Inc.

Friday, July 4, 2014

 

Contact: NYRA Press Office

vkellner@nyrainc.com

 

Belmont Park Notes

 

  • With Belmont Oaks contender Flying Jib, Weld seeking third Grade 1 at Belmont Park
  • Albertrani hoping Romansh continues forward trajectory in G2 Suburban 'Cap
  • Harlan's Honor heads Sunday's Lynbrook
  • Field coming together for next Saturday's G2 Bowling Green, final graded stakes of Belmont spring/summer meet

 

 

ELMONT, N.Y. - Dermot Weld's list of accomplishments includes victories in major races in Ireland, England, Australia, Hong Kong, and Germany, and the 65-year-old also is no stranger to the Belmont Park winner's circle, having taken the 1990 Belmont Stakes with Go and Go and 2003 Flower Bowl Invitational with Dimitrova.

 

On Saturday, Weld will attempt to add a third Belmont trophy to his collection when he sends out Flying Jib in the inaugural running of the Grade 1, $1 million Belmont Oaks Invitational.

 

Go and Go, victorious in the Grade 2 Laurel Futurity on the dirt as a juvenile, registered an authoritative 8 ¼-length win in the 1990 Belmont, covering the 1 ½ miles in 2:27 1/5. With Go and Go's victory, Weld is the only foreign-based trainer to win an American Triple Crown race.

 

"It was a fascinating experience," said Weld by telephone on Monday. "It has never been done since. He ran the seventh-fastest time in the Belmont up to that stage when he beat [runner-up] Thirty Six Red and [fourth-place finisher] Unbridled, who had been the Kentucky Derby winner, so it was a very good performance by him. The result was never in doubt; he won effortlessly. I brought him over as a 2-year-old and I won the Laurel Futurity, which, that year, was run on the dirt, so we knew he'd handle the surface."

 

In 2003, Weld won the listed Leopardstown 1,000 Guineas Trial S. and finished third in the Group 1 Irish 1,000 Guineas with Dimitrova, whom was then pointed toward a stateside campaign. Dimitrova took the second running of the American Oaks Invitational, flew back to Ireland, and then made another trip across the Atlantic before finishing third in the Grade 1 Garden City and taking the Flower Bowl Belmont.

 

"We knew she could travel very well," said Weld. "She had a very busy 3-year-old campaign. She had broken her maiden in March here. She won the 1,000 Guineas Trial Stakes in April. She ran third in one of the best-ever renewals of the Irish 1,000 Guineas. She got on a plane and went to California and won the American Oaks. She flew back [to Ireland]. She had to go by land, sea, and air: she got in a box, she went on the ferry across the Irish Sea to England and then on to the continent to Amsterdam, and she got on a flight out of Amsterdam to Los Angeles because, economically, that's the way we always went."

 

"She went by land, sea, and air to California and to New York, both times," Weld added. She won the American Oaks, came back, she got four or five weeks off here, and then she went back and did the same thing [for the Flower Bowl]. She was an amazingly tough for a 3-year-old filly."

 

Weld has brought a live contender for the Belmont Oaks in Flying Jib, who has won three straight after finishing fourth in her debut as a 2-year-old. After breaking her maiden in her second start and winning the listed Silken Glider in her juvenile finale, she made a winning return by holding on by a half-length in the Group 3 Athasi on May 5 at the Curragh.

 

Flying Jib - who is by Oasis Dream and out of Jibboom, who in the United States won two graded stakes on synthetic surfaces and one on the turf - will be stretching out from seven furlongs to 1 ¼ miles in the Belmont Oaks.

 

"[The distance] has to be the biggest concern," said Weld. "She, as a filly, is very well and she traveled very well, but [the distance] has to be the doubt. She was a winner as a 2-year-old at a mile. This is unknown territory for her, but she has given every indication that she will get the trip."

 

The inaugural Belmont Derby and Belmont Oaks attracted six foreign-based trainers representing four different countries, and Weld is hopeful Stars & Stripes Day will continue to attract international horsemen in the upcoming years.

 

"I want to commend Martin Panza for having the initiative to put on these races," said Weld. "I think in years to come it will really, really open up New York racing to Europe. Not that many European horses had been racing in New York, but with this excellent money available and great program of racing you're going to see more European horses in New York."

 

*           *           *

 

 

With Romansh having put together two good performances in a row, his connections are hoping the 4-year-old Bernardini colt is ready to take his place in the top echelon of older horses on the East coast.

 

The Godolphin Racing representative enters tomorrow's Grade 2, $500,000 Suburban Handicap off a solid third to Palace Malice and Goldencents in the Grade 1 Metropolitan Handicap on Belmont Stakes Day, which followed a game victory in the Grade 3 Excelsior on March 22. Prior to that, however, Romansh finished 11th in the Grade 1 Donn Handicap at Gulfstream Park in his 2014 debut, beaten more than 35 lengths. What made the loss even more confounding was that he had closed out his sophomore campaign with a sparkling 9 ¼-length victory in the Grade 3 Discovery Handicap in November at Aqueduct Racetrack.

 

"Between the Discovery and the Donn, we could not come up with an explanation for that effort," said trainer Tom Albertrani of Romansh, who won two other races as a 3-year-old, including a victory by disqualification in the Curlin at Saratoga Race Course. "Before that, it was a good race, then a not so good race. So I think he's a horse that's under the radar a little bit. His last race probably got more attention, as well as he ran in the Met Mile."

 

Since then, said Albertrani, the dark bay colt has trained forwardly, and the trainer is looking forward to a third straight good effort.

 

"I think it was all part of maturing," he said. "We always had high regards for the colt; after only a few starts, we ran him in the Travers [finishing fifth], which we would not have done if we didn't have any confidence. We always knew there was talent there, but we haven't seen it until his last two races. I love the fact he's coming off a good race and going two more furlongs. I think you can see he'd prefer a little further distance; I'm excited to see how he does going 1 ¼ miles. The horse looks fantastic and he's training great. Hopefully we can keep on that roll where everything is going in the right direction."

 

*           *           *

 

The stakes action continues on Sunday with the $125,000 Lynbrook for 2-year-old New York-bred fillies, headed by Harlan's Honor, a 2 ¼-length maiden winner at Monmouth Park in her first start on June 27. Joining her for the six-furlong race will be Jiggin Witit, a winner second time out on June 7 at Presque Isle Downs over the artificial surface, and Accelebrate, second by a nose on June 19 at Delaware Park in her debut.

 

The field also includes first-time starters Saluda, Jessica's Ride, and Wonder Gal.

 

 

*           *           *

 

The final graded stakes at Belmont Park before racing moves upstate to Saratoga Race Course is next Saturday's Grade 2, $200,000 Bowling Green at 1 ½ miles on the Widener Turf Course.

 

Expected for the 56th running of the race for 4-year-olds and up are multiple graded stakes winner Boisterous, most recently seventh in the Grade 1 Manhattan; Grandeur, fourth in that race; Hangover Kid, second in the Grade 2 Monmouth last time out; Horvat Clan, making his stakes debut, and Irish Mission, Reflecting, and Sky Blazer, second, third and fifth, respectively, in the Belmont Gold Cup on June 6.

 

Calvados and Finnegan's Wake are questionable, according to NYRA stakes coordinator Andrew Byrnes.

 

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