Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Victory, sadness for Catalano

- By Mary Rampellini

HOT SPRINGS, Ark. – It was a bitterswee­t opening weekend for trainer Wayne Catalano at Oaklawn. He sent out stable star Farrell to win her 4-yearold debut in the $125,000 Pippin Stakes on Saturday, but later learned of the passing of champion Dreaming of Anna, whom he trained for breeder-owner Frank Calabrese.

Catalano said Dreaming of Anna, the champion 2-year-old filly of 2006, died in Kentucky. She was 14.

“We’re very sad,” Catalano said. “Mr. Calabrese and I had a lot of fun with her.”

Dreaming of Anna won nine stakes during her career, topped by the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies in wire-to-wire fashion in 2006 at Churchill Downs. Overall, she won 10 races from 17 starts for earnings of $2,204,550.

“She was similar to Farrell,” Catalano said. “She had speed and she’s very smart and she controlled the races at all times.

“She was special to me. She was my first Breeders’ Cup winner.”

Other highlights of Dreaming of Anna’s racing career included five Grade 3 wins on turf, including the Summer at Woodbine at 2 and the Mint Julep at Churchill Downs in her final season of racing in 2008.

Dreaming of Anna, by Rahy and out of the Broad Brush mare Justenuffh­eart, to date has produced two stakes winners in Grade 3 winner Dreamologi­st and Fast Anna.

Farrell started her season with a rousing win in the Pippin, wiring the field for a three-quarter-length victory. It was her second straight stakes victory behind the Grade 2 Chilukki in her 3-year-old finale Nov. 4 at Churchill. For her effort in the Pippin, Farrell earned a Beyer Speed Figure of 87.

“What impressed me about the race was there were some older mares that were very talented and she had to overcome pretty strong pace pressure, then hold off [Ever So Clever] coming at her like that,” Catalano said. “It was a good race.”

Catalano hopes it’s the start to a big year for Farrell, a fourtime Grade 2 winner for ownerbreed­er Coffee Pot Stables who has earned $802,077. She swept the 3-year-old filly series last year at Fair Grounds, where Catalano also has a division this winter. He said he likes the transition Farrell has made from 3 to 4.

“She’s filled out,” Catalano said. “She’s stronger. She looks awesome.

“We’re looking to get a Grade 1 this year and we thought maybe Oaklawn’s race at the end of the meet here would be a good spot, the Apple Blossom.”

The $700,000 Apple Blossom will be run April 13.

The path Farrell will take to get there is to be determined, Catalano said. The next two races in the Oaklawn series are the Grade 3, $150,000 Bayakoa on Feb. 17 and the Grade 2, $350,000 Azeri on March 17.

“We’ll look it over and see how she comes out of the race and see what our options are,” Catalano said. “The main goal is to win a Grade 1, so whatever’s going to get us to win a Grade 1, that’s the way we’re going to go.

“We’re hoping to have a lot of fun with her.”

Sporting Chance drills at Oaklawn

Sporting Chance, the most accomplish­ed young horse at Oaklawn, on Monday had his second work since winning the Grade 1 Hopeful in September at Saratoga.

Jockey Gary Stevens, who was up for the horse’s threeeight­hs work Jan. 9, was again in the saddle for trainer D. Wayne Lukas.

Sporting Chance went a halfmile in 47.60 seconds Monday. The track was fast on a sunny morning, with temperatur­es in the 30s. Oaklawn clockers caught Sporting Chance’s final quarter in 23 seconds and carried him galloping out fiveeighth­s in 1:00.40.

Lukas said Monday that Sporting Chance’s first start of the year will be decided based on how his training progresses. He said the horse could return in the Grade 3, $500,000 Southwest on Feb. 19 or the Grade 2, $900,000 Rebel on March 17.

Lukas has some other promising young horses in the barn. Bravazo, who last year ran second in the Grade 1 Breeders’ Futurity at Keeneland, won his 3-year-old debut Saturday at Oaklawn. He battled Ezmosh to the wire in an optional $62,500 claiming race at a mile, edging that one by a neck under Stevens. Bravazo covered the distance in 1:37.74 and earned a career-high Beyer Speed Figure of 88.

“Bravazo’s pretty nice,” Lukas said. “He ran a real super race. Gary really liked him. He said he was strong, he finished up. And that was a nice horse right next to him.”

Lukas said there was one other significan­t note on the win. The race was split, and Bravazo’s time was quicker than the second division time of 1:39.62.

“He will show up now somewhere down the line in one of these prep races,” Lukas said.

Another promising 3-yearold for the barn this meet is Transgress, who won a maiden special Friday at Oaklawn with a Beyer of 87.

“That horse is a very talented horse,” Lukas said of the son of Into Mischief who was ridden by Stevens. “We always felt like Transgress was right up there with anything we had in the barn.”

Lukas has gotten off to a fast start at the meet, winning three races from eight starts to sit atop the standings in a four-way tie through Sunday.

 ?? COADY PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? Farrell (center), with Channing Hill aboard, races en route to a three-quarter-length victory in the Pippin Stakes on Saturday.
COADY PHOTOGRAPH­Y Farrell (center), with Channing Hill aboard, races en route to a three-quarter-length victory in the Pippin Stakes on Saturday.

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