Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Claim of Justify’s half-sister proves a smart investment

- By Marcus Hersh

ARLINGTON HEIGHTS, Ill. – Trainer Neil Pessin dropped a claim slip before the second race Jan. 1 at Fair Grounds on a 4-year-old filly named Holiday Music. Pessin and the group of owners that ponied up $30,000 for the claim were the only ones in for the horse. Holiday Music won, but that hardly was the point. The filly resided at Pessin’s Fair Grounds barn for one day before being shipped off the racetrack and on to Kentucky. Then the waiting game began.

Holiday Music is by Harlan’s Holiday and out of Stage Magic, by Ghostzappe­r, which means she is the older half-sister to a colt named Justify. By Jan. 1 the word had leaked out, at least through small cracks in the foundation, that trainer Bob Baffert was high on an unraced colt named Justify. Someone in Pessin’s group had heard the talk, and that was the nature of the claim – a play on her brother’s talent.

“We knew Justify was a nice horse,” said Pessin, who is based during the summer at Arlington. “But it was six weeks before he even ran. Oh yeah, we were watching for him.”

Justify’s name finally showed up in the entries, and he debuted Feb. 18 at Santa Anita. The colt was a talking horse, a star of morning training, an odds-on favorite first time out, and a supremely impressive winner of his debut. The plan with the Holiday Music claim had kicked fully into gear.

“We had her two weeks after he ran and we had offers from everywhere – every state, every country,” said Pessin. “I started answering my phone, ‘Holiday Music!’ ”

Pessin has been in the racing game his whole life and the group that claimed Holiday Music had a plan from the start: Sell the filly as soon as Justify showed what he might be worth. And so, a couple weeks after Justify’s first race, Summer Wind Farm privately purchased the filly for an undisclose­d sum. Now Holiday Music is in foal to Pioneerof the Nile and is worth considerab­ly more than the price her current owners paid.

But Pessin is going about his business this summer in Chicago, he said, with no regrets, no thoughts about what might have been had he and his partners held out until June instead of jumping in March.

“We got an offer that was what we thought she’d be worth if Justify won the Santa Anita Derby,” Pessin said. “Am I sad that we sold her? Absolutely not. People who need money sell, and people who have money can wait. Everybody made money, and everyone’s happy.”

Everyone, perhaps, except the owners who ran Holiday Music for the $30,000, unaware, evidently, that a monster, her brother, was training out in California.

Correas debuting latest import

The success Argentine native Ignacio Correas has found in the United States – first training the good older horse Kasaqui and more recently the even better mare Dona Bruja, both Argentine imports – apparently has opened a new channel in his operation.

Team Valor Internatio­nal earlier this year sent Correas four stakes winners purchased from Brazil and imported to North America, and on Sunday at Arlington, Love ‘n’ Happiness will be the first of those horses to race here.

Love ‘n’ Happiness is part of a compact but strong group in the second race Sunday – a one-mile turf event with multiple allowance conditions and an $80,000 claiming option. Love ‘n’ Happiness lost her first two starts then reeled off three straight wins, including a decisive tally in a Group 1 race that made her champion 2-year-old in Brazil last year. The filly shows up as a 4-year-old, but was bred on Southern Hemisphere time and doesn’t officially turn 4 until July 1.

“She’s just medium-sized, a good-looking chestnut, well balanced with a little bit of a temper,” said Correas. “You look at her and you see she’s a 3-year-old. But from what I’ve seen in her training, she can run.”

Love ‘n’ Happiness, by leading Brazilian sire Setembro Chove, races on Lasix for the first time. Her chief competitio­n should come from Daddy’s Boo and Lovely Loyree, both tough mares.

Meanwhile, Dona Bruja, unraced since a fifth-place finish in the Grade 1 Jenny Wiley on April 14 at Keeneland, is gearing up for the Beverly D. on Aug. 11. Dona Bruja deadheated for second in the Grade 1 Beverly D. last summer.

◗ Devileye and Puntsville, Illinois-bred stakes winners on the June 2 card at Arlington, could ship to Canterbury Park for their next start, trainer Michele Boyce said.

Devileye is possible for the $50,000 Dark Star Cup over 6 1/2 furlongs on dirt, while Puntsville could run in the $50,000 Hoist Her Flag over six furlongs on dirt, a race she won last summer. Both races are next Saturday. Devileye and Puntsville are half-siblings.

◗ Princess La Quinta, winner of the Grade 3 Arlington Matron on May 19 at Arlington, will cut back from 1 1/8 miles to seven furlongs in the June 23 Chicago Handicap at Arlington, trainer and part-owner Jim Gulick said.

 ?? TOM KEYSER ?? Dona Bruja, an Argentine import trained by Ignacio Correas, is set to make another attempt in the Grade 1 Beverly D.
TOM KEYSER Dona Bruja, an Argentine import trained by Ignacio Correas, is set to make another attempt in the Grade 1 Beverly D.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States