Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Curlin’s Approval prepping

- By Mike Welsch

HALLANDALE BEACH, Fla. – There are many roads that lead to the Breeders’ Cup on Nov. 3-4 at Del Mar. Among those less taken is the Barely Even Handicap, one of four $50,000 handicap races that will help close the Gulfstream Park summer meeting Sunday.

Racing on the south Florida circuit switches to Gulfstream Park West for eight weeks beginning Wednesday.

Happy Alter, the owner, breeder, and now trainer of record for Curlin’s Approval, cited Hurricane Irma as one of the main reasons he’s chosen to keep his Grade 2 winner home for her final prep for the Breeders’ Cup Filly and Mare Sprint.

“We lost a lot of training time during the hurricane,” said Alter, who sold an interest in Curlin’s Approval this year to Bridlewood Farm. “That’s why, with the goal being the Breeders’ Cup, we wanted to have a prep race at home.”

Curlin’s Approval has had an up-and-down campaign this year. She won the Grade 2 Royal Delta, Grade 2 Princess Rooney, and Grade 3 Hurricane Bertie this year but also turned in disappoint­ing performanc­es in the Grade 2 Inside Informatio­n, Grade 3 Matron, and, most recently, the Grade 1 Ballerina at Saratoga, where she finished sixth, 8 1/2 lengths behind the victorious By the Moon.

Curlin’s Approval is expected to be an odds-on favorite in the seven-furlong Barely Even while toting the high weight of 123 pounds, including jockey Edgard Zayas.

Money Or Love is already a two-time stakes winner this season, having captured the Musical Romance and Added Elegance, both restricted races at seven furlongs. Money Or Love will turn back to perhaps her most effective distance after finishing fourth, beaten nearly six lengths, while facing open company going a mile in her last start Sept. 16.

Lirica, Savingtime, She Takes Heart, Rashette, and Concealedw­ithakiss, complete the field.

◗ The Barely Even is the females’ counterpar­t to the Alabama Jack’s Handicap, which features a wide-open field of nine older male sprinters going seven furlongs.

Hy Riverside was assigned the top weight of 120 pounds despite having not run since May and not won since capturing the Sunshine Millions Classic going 1 1/8 miles Jan. 21.

Abounding Legacy, second in the Perfect Season overnight stakes at a mile just two weeks ago, is among the other key contenders, along with Splash Rules and Coronado Again, who finished first and third, less than a length a part, in the six-furlong Groomstick Handicap on Sept. 3.

◗ The Bull and Whistle Handicap is so wide open that only three pounds separate co-highweight­s Diamond Bachelor and Chepstow from the lightweigh­ts in a field of nine older males slated to go 1 1/16 miles over the main track.

Diamond Bachelor has done the bulk of his racing this year on grass but placed in a stakes on dirt during the championsh­ip meeting over the winter. Chepstow has won four of his last five starts, with the loss being a second-place finish behind Chiseled more than six months ago.

◗ Extravagan­t Kid, the upset winner of the Tamiami Handicap when returning to grass here two weeks ago, the speedy R Limo Joe, and Successful Native top the field of six in the Green Parrot Handicap, scheduled for five furlongs on turf. There was rain in the forecast for the local area throughout the weekend.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States