Showing posts with label Bayern. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bayern. Show all posts
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Host Derek Simon recaps "Super Saturday" and offers a bevy of Breeders' Cup stats sure to cure insomnia.* What BC race best suits Bayern?* Which sophomore star fits the profile of a Breeders' Cup Classic winner: California Chrome, Shared Belief or Tonalist?* Is the great Untapable back?* Did Beholder do enough in the Zenyatta to make her the Distaff favorite?* How do Belmont shippers do in BC races at Santa Anita?These questions -- and more -- will be answered... maybe not well, but they will be answered.
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Morning Musings
POSTED Jul 31, 2014 By Derek SimonA Perfect StormOn Aug. 1, 1922, a seven-year-old gelding by the name of Exterminator finished last, beaten 10 ¼ lengths by Grey Lag, in the Saratoga Handicap. Grey Lag was the 3-5 favorite that day, while Exterminator was 5-1 in the betting.For Grey Lag, the win atoned for an earlier head loss to Exterminator in the Brooklyn Handicap at Aqueduct, where the chestnut colt was once again the 3-5 public choice. In fact, in 1922, Grey Lag was favored in every race he ran. After winning nine of 13 starts and being named Horse of the Year in 1921, the four-year-old son of Star Shoot was victorious in five of six trips to post in 1922.However, it was Exterminator, a horse that lost six of 17 races — three by double-digit margins — who was voted top older horse that year. Because, in 1922, winning mattered; losing was just a step on the path to success.Fast forward to 2014 when 17 starts would be viewed as a gut-wrenching campaign and losing even a single race is considered a badge of shame.When Untapable, a magnificent three-year-old filly, who drew comparisons to Rachel Alexandra by longtime turf writer Jennie Rees, finished a well-beaten fifth in the Haskell Invitational last Sunday one would have thought that Zippy Chippy had raced in her stead judging by the reaction on social media.(Click on image to enlarge)
I witnessed Untapable called “a fraud,” “overrated” and “counterfeit.” Untapable’s jockey, Rosie Napravnik, who, earlier this year, was being touted as one of the best female jockeys ever, received even more abuse. According to the social media crowd, it’s a wonder Napravnik can even dress herself, much less ride a horse.Yet, lost in all the hyperbole, is the fact that the Haskell was one race… one stumble… one fall in an otherwise stellar campaign for a filly that may not be Rachel Alexandra (which is like saying that a great basketball player is not Michael Jordan), but is still pretty darn good.What’s more, as I stated on my podcast two weeks before the race, Monmouth Park is not exactly a neutral playing field. In 2013, 42 percent of all dirt sprints and 31 percent of all dirt routes were won in wire-to-wire fashion at the New Jersey track. At 1 1/16 miles or greater, 39 percent of the winners led from flag fall to finish.With Bayern as the controlling speed — Social Inclusion’s best-ever early speed ration (ESR) wasn’t as good as Bayern’s -6 figure in the Woody Stephens — the result was hardly unpredictable.(Click on image to enlarge) (Click on image to enlarge)
Medicinal Grass for Social Inclusion?(Click on image to enlarge)
So I had a thought: With Social Inclusion now in the care of Chad Brown, why not try the son of Pioneerof the Nile on the grass?First of all, Brown is an outstanding turf trainer, having won 25.2 percent of his 1,390 starts on the lawn since 2008. Better still, he shows a positive ROI (albeit a slight one) with horses making their turf debuts.Secondly, although Social Inclusion’s mama (Saint Bernadette) never raced on the green stuff, nor foaled a turf winner, his papa (Pioneerof the Nile) broke his maiden on the grass and, in fact, never won on the dirt (his four other wins came on synthetic surfaces). What’s more, Pioneerof the Nile’s progeny have won eight (of 61) turf races and earned an average Brisnet speed figure of 72.6 — three points higher than their average BSF on dirt (69.6).Lastly, Social Inclusion’s running style makes me think he could a Sidney’s Candy type. On the dirt, Sidney’s Candy had only moderate early foot; but on the turf, he was a front-running dynamo and it propelled him to two graded wins and a course record in his turf debut, the La Jolla Handicap.Say it Ain’t So AllenFor the first time in over 65 years, H. Allen Jerkens, the legendary trainer who beat Secretariat twice, is not at Saratoga for that track’s 40-day meet. Instead, the 85-year-old trainer is in Hallandale, Florida, preparing a small stable of horses to race at Gulfstream Park.Unlike Mark Sanchez, Jerkens is greatly missed.“His not being here just feels wrong,” former jockey and current NYRA racing analyst Richard Migliore told timesunion.com.
In a related news story, the temperature in Hell reached a record low yesterday and flying swine were spotted over parts of the northeast.
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Crazy Over Keeneland
POSTED Apr 11, 2014 By Derek SimonDon’t look now (well, you can if you want to), but there’s some big races coming up at Keeneland this weekend. Located in the heart of Bluegrass Country in Lexington, Kentucky, Keeneland Racecourse is among the most beautiful thoroughbred facilities in the country — perhaps the world.So what better place to watch the 2014 debut of two-time Horse of the Year Wise Dan or the most prolific Kentucky Derby prep in history?(Click on image to enlarge)On Friday, Morton Fink’s six-year-old gelded son of Wiseman’s Ferry will take on six rivals in an attempt to win the Maker’s Mile for the second year in a row, while, on Saturday, Bobby’s Kitten heads a full field of 15 entered in the Blue Grass Stakes, a race which has produced a record 23 Kentucky Derby winners.Below is a look at each event, along with the Arkansas Derby, another great Derby prep scheduled for Saturday:(Click on image to enlarge)Suggested Play(s): 3-WISE DAN is clearly the horse to beat, but his probable price — and the short field — have me hunting for potential value in the show pool. Simply put, I expect “Danny Boy” to generate a (large) negative show pool and I think, given his age and recent workout pattern (I’m not a fan of the three-furlong breeze on April 8), the defending champ may be vulnerable.
Plus, negative pools give one a shot at a huge payday with very little risk. Hence, I’m looking at show bets on 4-GENTLEMAN'S KITTEN, who has a pace advantage, and 7-KAIGUN, who ran a bang-up race at Gulfstream Park in his latest.(Click on image to enlarge)Suggested Play(s): Print out the past performances, buy a dart and fire away.(Click on image to enlarge)Suggested Play(s): Primarily, I’m looking to beat 8-BAYERN, who had things all his way last time and makes his stakes debut following a 58-day layoff. 3-TAPITURE and 9-STRONG MANDATE are the logical alternatives, but I’m really intrigued by 2-KNOCK EM FLAT. Not only has the son Flatter shown tremendous improvement in recent weeks, his speed and pace figures are among the best in the field.
(Click on image to enlarge)
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Bet Against Bayern
POSTED Feb 14, 2014 By Derek Simon
There’s a hot new Kentucky Derby candidate out there and his name is Bayern.(Click on image to enlarge) Trained by Bob Baffert, Bayern shoved his way into the Derby picture with an eye-catching 15-length score in an allowance race at Santa Anita Park on Feb. 13. The son of Offlee Wild covered the one-mile distance in 1:35.77 that day and earned a 99 Brisnet speed figure for his effort.Needless to say, racing fans were all abuzz after the race — chief among them, Bob Baffert.
“This is what you want to see and it gets your hopes up,” the three-time Derby-winning conditioner said. “I would just make sure he comes out of it and give him plenty of time. He ran fast.”Look, I respect Baffert and I can certainly understand fans getting excited about a horse that won by such an impressive margin, but Bayern is no Derby candidate — at least not at this point.No, I’m not invoking the “Curse of Apollo” when I say that, although the fact that no horse has won the Run for the Roses sans a two-year-old campaign since Apollo in 1882 — the year outlaw Jesse James was killed — hardly inspires confidence.Nah, my biggest concern regarding Bayern is, oddly enough, that “great” last race. Simply put, I don’t think it was as good as it seems. In fact, here’s what jockey Gary Stevens said about it:
“I don’t think I was quite test-driving him but when I did ask him to pick it up at the eighth pole, he exploded,” Stevens told Jennie Rees of the Courier-Journal. “I didn’t want to get into a speed duel and taking the blinkers off was a big help today. He was listening to what I did and was relaxed down the backside and he was relaxed throughout.”Now, to many I’m sure, that simply sounds like a jockey thoroughly impressed with the speed and professionalism of his mount. To me, however, something stuck out like Bruce Jenner at a men’s retreat: Stevens said Bayern “was relaxed throughout.”Although I’m sure the veteran jockey meant this as a compliment, to me, it was a huge negative based on what the race chart and my pace figures tell me. The fact is, Bayern ran evenly throughout on Feb. 13, which, as Huey Mahl pointed out in “The Race is Pace,” is the easiest kind of trip a horse can get.
As you can see, Bayern was relaxed — so relaxed that I wouldn’t be surprised if he caught a few Z’s during the race. Of course, his catnap was aided by Tap It Rich and Brother Soldier, both of whom had trouble at the gate — and were anything but relaxed in the early going.(Click on image to enlarge) And speaking of Tap It Rich, what does it say about the quality of the field when the second choice in the race — at 6-5, no less — was coming off a 52 ½-length drubbing at the hands of another Derby contender, Shared Belief?
To me, it says that Bayern is a fraud — as phony as a sasquatch with a $3 bill (who’s ever heard of a $3 bill?). He may develop into something special, only time will tell. But, right now, he’s Verrazano II and I wouldn’t touch him in the Derby with a 10 ½-foot pole.