Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

GULFSTREAM Jockeys face tough decisions

- By Mike Welsch – additional reporting by Jay Privman

HALLANDALE BEACH, Fla. – Being in two places at the same time is never easy, especially when the two places are Miami and Dubai.

Several members of the local jockey colony will be faced with making the decision of whether to be at Gulfstream Park or Meydan Racecourse on March 31, the day two of the most important races of the season, the Grade 1 Florida Derby and the $10 million Dubai World Cup, will be run several hours and approximat­ely 7,800 miles apart.

Javier Castellano made his decision recently, opting to be in Dubai to ride likely favorite West Coast in the World Cup rather than potential favorite Audible in the $1 million Florida Derby. John Velazquez has picked up the mount on Audible for trainer Todd Pletcher.

Irad Ortiz Jr. will stay in Florida rather than riding Mind Your Biscuits in his attempt at a second straight win in the Dubai Golden Shaheen.

“It looks like we’re potentiall­y going to ride one of the favorites in the Florida Derby, and have a lot of other business on the day, so it didn’t pay for Irad to go all the way to Dubai for the one horse,” said Ortiz’s agent, Steve Rushing.

On Tuesday, Luis Saez and his agent also chose Gulfstream Park over Meydan, giving up the mount on Gunnevera in the Dubai World Cup to be aboard Strike Power in the Florid Derby. Strike Power suffered his first setback in three starts when second here last Saturday in the Grade 2 Fountain of Youth.

“It was a tough, tough decision,” said Saez’s agent, Richard Depass. “I spoke to the jockey after the Fountain of Youth, told him to take a few days and think it over, then we talked over all the pros and cons and made the choice to stick with the 3-yearold Strike Power over the older horse Gunnevera.”

Depass said the decision came down to which horse he and Saez felt might have the biggest upside down the road.

“A lot of things come into play here, so we put it all on the table and felt Strike Power, being a 3-year-old, had the potential for a bigger future,” Depass explained. “It’s a lot of money over there, and Luis said Gunnevera worked terrific last weekend. But we tried looking not at the bridge in front of us, but what happens after we cross that bridge. I’d hate to give up a potential Kentucky Derby mount to ride in Dubai. And even if he’s not a Derby horse, I’d say up to a mile Strike Power is as good as any 3-year-old we’ve seen this year. And I don’t know if we get that mount back if we went to Dubai. We’d have also missed several days making the trip over there, and I have other business lined up on Florida Derby Day.”

Joel Rosario is the beneficiar­y of Saez staying home, as he has picked up the mount on Gunnevera in the Dubai World Cup. Rosario also inherited his old seat back on Mind Your Biscuits in the Golden Shaheen. He was already slated to ride Breeders’ Cup Turf Sprint winner Stormy Liberal the same night for trainer Peter Miller in the Al Quoz turf sprint.

Catholic Boy to Florida Derby

Remsen winner Catholic Boy, second in the Sam Davis Stakes at Tampa Bay Downs on Feb. 10 in the first of his two Kentucky Derby preps this year, will use the Florida Derby on March 31 at Gulfstream Park as his final Derby prep, John Panagot, racing manager for majority owner Robert LaPenta, said Tuesday.

“Timing-wise it’s the best, and everybody on the team seems to agree,” Panagot said.

The Florida Derby is five weeks in front of the May 5 Kentucky Derby. The other race that had been considered for Catholic Boy was the Louisiana Derby on March 24 at Fair Grounds.

Jonathan Thomas, trainer of Catholic Boy, worked the colt without blinkers in his drill last weekend and said he was contemplat­ing removing them for his next start.

Thomas wants to run Catholic Boy in the Florida Derby because it’s an easy ship just down the turnpike from Bridlewood Farm in Ocala, Fla., where Catholic Boy is based. Thomas said ideally he’d head to Gulfstream far enough in front of the race to give Catholic Boy his final work there.

Fly So High to miss Oaks

Fly So High, winner of Saturday’s Grade 2 Davona Dale, will be sidelined indefinite­ly due to a suspensory issue, trainer Shug McGaughey confirmed Tuesday.

Fly So High was pulled up shortly past the finish line by jockey Jose Ortiz following her three-length tally in the Davona Dale. She was vanned back to her barn where it appeared she cooled out sound. But upon further examinatio­n, it was discovered Fly So High had suffered an upper suspensory issue, McGaughey said.

The timing of the injury means Fly So High will almost certainly miss the Kentucky Oaks on May 4 at Churchill Downs.

“I just left her at Payson Park, and she looks and acts fine,” McGaughey said. “But she’ll go to the farm in Ocala for 30 to 40 days, and hopefully at that point will be able to return to my barn in New York to resume training. Obviously the timing of this couldn’t be worse, but hopefully she’ll be fine for the second half of the year.”

Owned by Phipps Stable, Fly So High has won three consecutiv­e races after losing her debut.

 ?? BARBARA D. LIVINGSTON ?? Luis Saez rode Strike Power to victory in the Swale (above) and to run second in the Fountain of Youth. He chose to ride the colt in the Florida Derby rather than go to Dubai the same day.
BARBARA D. LIVINGSTON Luis Saez rode Strike Power to victory in the Swale (above) and to run second in the Fountain of Youth. He chose to ride the colt in the Florida Derby rather than go to Dubai the same day.

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