Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

SANTA ANITA Turf winners shift sights to Del Mar

- By Steve Andersen

ARCADIA, Calif. – This could be a very interestin­g summer for Red Baron’s Barn and Rancho Temescal.

The Red Baron’s Barn of Jed Cohen, and Rancho Temescal, directed by his son Tim, own River Boyne, who won his second stakes in the $98,000 Rainbow Stakes for 3-year-olds on turf on Saturday at Santa Anita. They also own the four-time stakes winner Sharp Samurai, who won an allowance race with a $75,000 claiming option in his first start of 2018 on Sunday.

Sharp Samurai, co-owned by trainer Mark Glatt, will be considered for the Grade 2 Eddie Read Stakes at 1 1/8 miles on turf July 22 at Del Mar. River Boyne, trained by Jeff Mullins, is a candidate for the Grade 3 La Jolla Handicap for 3-year-olds at 1 1/16 miles on turf Aug. 5 at Del Mar.

After Sharp Samurai’s win Sunday, Jed Cohen was fast to mention the stable has even greater depth.

“We’ve got another 3-year-old,” he said. “Tatters is coming back.”

Tatters to Riches, sixth in the Grade 1 Del Mar Futurity last September, is in training with Mullins for a projected return early at the Del Mar summer meeting, which begins July 18. Tatters to Riches was sidelined with a bone chip in an ankle after the Del Mar Futurity.

Sharp Samurai started for the first time since late November on Sunday. Ridden by Gary Stevens, Sharp Samurai ($5) overcame traffic on the turn to rally between horses and win by 1 3/4 lengths over the Aqueduct stakes winner Catapult.

“They had him locked in a little bit,” Glatt said. “I knew he could find a way to get out.

“He ran like everyone expected. It’s good to have him ready off a layoff. You hope you can come back where you left off.”

Sharp Samurai won four consecutiv­e stakes last summer and fall before finishing fourth by a length in the Grade 1 Hollywood Derby last November. A winner of 7 of 11 starts, Sharp Samurai won the Grade 2 Del Mar Derby at 1 1/8 miles on turf last September.

“The Read does make good sense from a timing standpoint,” Glatt said. “We know he likes that course.”

River Boyne is on the Sharp Samurai career path. Sharp Samurai won the 2017 Rainbow and the La Jolla.

River Boyne won the Rainbow Stakes by a convincing 2 1/4 lengths over Blame the Rider, the winner of the Singletary Stakes at a mile on turf on May 5. The Rainbow was River Boyne’s first start since a fifth-place finish in the Grade 2 American Turf Stakes on soft turf at Churchill Downs on May 5.

River Boyne is unlikely to race outside of Southern California for the rest of the year, Mullins said in the winner’s circle.

“He’s got a good series of races in the summer and fall,” Mullins said. “The little break to the opening of Del Mar will be good for him.”

The Grade 2 Del Mar Derby on Sept. 2 is another goal for River Boyne, who has won 4 of 9 starts.

Touching Rainbows in first stakes

Trainers Bob Baffert and John Sadler may have two runners each in Saturday’s Grade 2 San Carlos Stakes for sprinters at Santa Anita.

But neither trains the most intriguing horse in the expected field – Touching Rainbows, who will have his stakes debut after having won four consecutiv­e races, all allowance/optional claimers, in the last year. Touching Rainbows is trained by Phil D’Amato.

The $250,000 San Carlos Stakes is at seven furlongs.

Baffert plans to run the stakes winner American Anthem and Dabster, who has not raced since winning an allowance in February.

Sadler will start Moe Candy, second to Touching Rainbows in an allowance June 1. Sadler said he is considerin­g sending one other runner – Horse Greedy or St. Joe Bay. They were claimed for $40,000 and $62,500, respective­ly, in May.

The race will not have a large field. Doug O’Neill plans to start Stone Hands, who won consecutiv­e allowance sprints in May.

Sunday is the final day of the spring-summer meeting at Santa Anita. Los Alamitos opens its three-week summer meeting June 28.

The Grade 3 Wilshire Stakes at a mile on turf for fillies and mares is the leading race on closing day. Beau Recall, who won the Grade 2 Royal Heroine Stakes in April, leads a list of candidates that includes Ancient Secret, Cordiality, Storm the Hill and Vasilika.

Jockeys Franklin Ceballos and Drayden Van Dyke will serve suspension­s this week after dropping appeals for careless riding infraction­s at Santa Anita.

Ceballos will serve a fourday suspension from Thursday through Sunday after withdrawin­g an appeal of a ruling issued on April 21 for failing to maintain a straight course in a race the preceding day.

Van Dyke is suspended for three days from Friday through Sunday after withdrawin­g an appeal of a ruling issued on March 30 for causing interferen­ce in a race on March 29.

Through Sunday, Van Dyke was seventh in the standings with 18 wins, while Ceballos was tied for 11th with 14 wins. Flavien Prat led all riders with 35 wins.

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