Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Norm Casse no ordinary rookie

- By Marty McGee Follow Marty McGee on Twitter @DRFMcGee

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – A first stakes starter for a rookie trainer might be cause for a case of nerves. But for Norm Casse, that event is hardly daunting.

In recent years, Casse had daily oversight of such major stars as Tepin, World Approval, and Classic Empire as the top assistant to his father, trainer Mark Casse. So when he sends out Tales of Chaucer in the stakes debut for both the colt and trainer – either Saturday in the Grade 3 Bashford Manor at Churchill Downs or in the restricted Rockville Centre on July 14 at Belmont Park – Casse won’t be shaking in his boots.

Casse said Wednesday he was “50-50” on which race will be next for Tales of Chaucer, a New York-bred whose career debut resulted in an 84 Beyer Speed Figure, the highest number in a bulky field of 13 2-year-old colts and geldings in the $100,000 Bashford Manor.

“I’d like to run here because it’s our home and we could win our first stakes here,” said Casse, who graduated high school and college from Louisville-area schools. “I’d be very proud of that. Conservati­vely, though, you’d have to think running against statebreds might put him in a better spot.”

Whatever the decision, Casse, 34, is happy with the direction his career is taking. He ran his first horse in February at Gulfstream Park while gradually weaning himself away from his father’s farflung operation. His overall record stood at five wins from 22 starts entering this week. More importantl­y, he is building a solid foundation. He has about 30 horses split between Churchill and the Trackside training annex and will be active mostly at regional tracks this summer while dispatchin­g “four or five” to Saratoga.

“It’s going as well as we could have hoped for,” said Casse, who on Sept. 8 will be married to Gabby Gaudet, who works as an analyst for New York Racing Associatio­n television and on other racing broadcasts. “We’ve got a nice mix of older horses and 2-year-olds. It’s an exciting time.”

The six-furlong Bashford Manor is one of three stakes on closing day of the 38-day spring meet, along with its sister race, the $100,000 Debutante, and the $75,000 Kelly’s Landing for older horses.

As for the seven-furlong Kelly’s Landing, trainer Shawn Davis said he intends to run Chief Cicatriz here after giving serious considerat­ion to sending the 5-year-old gelding to Gulfstream for the Grade 3 Smile Sprint the same afternoon.

“He had a little foot bruise coming out of his last breeze” Saturday, Davis said Wednesday. “I think we’ve got him 99 percent now, but I didn’t want to ship all that way in case it didn’t heal up right. We should be good to go Saturday.”

Chief Cicatriz earned an eyepopping 110 Beyer in winning the Grade 3 Aristides here June 2, and Davis said he and owner-breeder Roy Gene Evan have been besieged since then with “all kinds of offers” for a private purchase.

Besides the three stakes, there are two allowances and several maiden-specials on the 12-race finale, including one at the infrequent­ly run distance of 1 1/4 miles. First post Saturday is 12:45 p.m. Eastern. Mandatory disburseme­nts of all jackpot wagers, including the Single 6, will be held Saturday because of the meet closing.

11 races on tap Friday

Three allowances serve as highlights on the penultimat­e card of the meet Friday, with a $62,000 second-level turf route (race 5) being the richest of the trio. Special Ops, Krampus, Vigiliante, and Zorzor all rate as contenders in an oversubscr­ibed field of 3-year-olds and up.

Back-to-back first-level allowances with $59,500 purses follow later in the day as races 9 and 10. First post is 12:45 p.m.

Focus on juveniles at Ellis

With live action on the Kentucky circuit shifting Sunday to Ellis Park in western Kentucky, there will be a major focus on 2-year-old racing throughout the summer.

Purses for 2-year-old maiden-specials will be a track-record $42,000, which includes bonuses for registered Kentucky-breds. Most starters are Kentucky-breds. A recent canvassing of historical trends by track publicist Jennie Rees found that 107 horses who raced at Ellis at 2 in the last 20 years have gone on to win a graded race, including 18 in a Grade 1.

Last year, the track revived a pair of $75,000 stakes for 2-yearolds that had been dormant for nearly a decade, the Ellis Juvenile and Ellis Debutante. Those races will be renewed on Aug. 19.

Trainer Dale Romans has become such a staunch supporter of the 2-year-old program at Ellis that he said none of his babies will be part of the string he will be sending soon to Saratoga.

“If they’re any good, nobody is going to care where they broke their maiden,” Romans said. “If they aren’t any good, they’re not going to win at Saratoga anyway.”

Untrapped euthanized

Untrapped, most recently a dead-heat runner-up in the May 18 Pimlico Special, had to be euthanized Tuesday from complicati­ons of laminitis that followed a bout of colic.

Based for much of his career at Churchill with trainer Steve Asmussen, Untrapped won the Grade 3 Oklahoma Derby at Remington Park last fall and was stakes-placed nine times en route to earning $857,005 from 16 starts, all for owner Mike Langford. The Trappe Shot colt was 12th in the 2017 Kentucky Derby.

 ?? CHELSEA DURAND/NYRA ?? Trainer Norm Casse will run debut winner Tales of Chaucer in the Bashford Manor at Churchill or a stakes at Belmont.
CHELSEA DURAND/NYRA Trainer Norm Casse will run debut winner Tales of Chaucer in the Bashford Manor at Churchill or a stakes at Belmont.

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