Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Farrier Holsapple scores big with filly Winning Envelope

- By Marcus Hersh

ARLINGTON HEIGHTS, Ill. – When Winning Envelope galloped across the finish six lengths best in a 2-year-old maiden race on the Arlington Million card Aug. 11, bets were cashed. The filly paid $13.20 to win despite having turned heads during morning work for a couple of months before she raced.

Nobody won bigger than Winning Envelope’s owner, Hutch Holsapple.

There were six-figure offers for Winning Envelope before she ever started, but Holsapple elected to roll the dice and see if Winning Envelope could boost her value in a race. Did she ever.

Earlier this week, the prominent Minnesota owner Bob Lothenbach paid several times the prerace price to acquire Winning Envelope.

Holsapple? He bought her for $3,000 at the Keeneland sale in January.

Winning Envelope is by the very good sire More Than Ready and from a solid family that includes the graded stakes winner Lilly Capote, but at the Keeneland auction, the newly turned 2-year-old was marketed as a future broodmare, not a racing prospect.

“There was supposed to be something wrong with her stifle, a cyst or something,” Holsapple said. “I liked her so much I bought her anyway.”

A prominent Kentucky-based trainer, hearing about Winning Envelope through the grapevine, called Holsapple and told him he’d contacted the filly’s breeder, Ramspring Farm. Winning Envelope, he was told, was never supposed to be able to race.

“She’s vetted out twice now,” said Holsapple. “I’ve never found anything wrong with her.”

Holsapple, 48, has been a blacksmith on the Chicago circuit since 2000. Raised in a small southern Illinois town, he came here in 1998 as a low-level trainer from the bush tracks and county fairs, couldn’t fully make ends meet going that route, and so took up the farrier trade. Every winter, Holsapple goes to a couple of Kentucky sales hunting bargain buys, and has found some decent horses. The 2017 model, a $1,000 filly named Espressa, was bought with a paralyzed arytenoid flap that compromise­d her breathing, but she managed to finish third in the Arlington-Washington Lassie last September.

Holsapple still tinkers on the training side and kept a close eye on Winning Envelope as she progressed for trainer Justin Johns, and while doing blacksmith work for trainer Chris Block, Holsapple extolled his filly’s virtues.

“Hutch is a good friend of mine, and we’ve been talking for quite some time,” Block said. “He let me have [Carlos] Marquez work her one day, and he came back and told me she was the real deal.”

Block’s father, the owner and breeder Dave Block, took a run at Winning Envelope, but Holsapple resisted, betting that his filly would show as much racing as she had training. And she did. Going straight to the lead, Winning Envelope floated over the local Polytrack and won without ever being asked by Marquez. She ran 5 1/2 furlongs in 1:04.21 and earned a good 77 Beyer Speed Figure.

Now, Lothenbach owns her and Block trains her, and Holsapple doesn’t see who can beat Winning Envelope next month in the Lassie. Flush with the profit from his big score this summer, perhaps at the sales next winter Holsapple will dabble in the higher end of the market – something above $5,000 or so.

Carnival Colors impresses

Five and a half furlongs was too short for the 2-year-old filly Carnival Colors, who finished third at that distance while making her career debut here July 27. In fact, the 1 1/16 miles that Carnival Colors raced in an off-the-turf maiden race Thursday at Arlington might also have been shorter than ideal, since Carnival Colors galloped out around the clubhouse turn like a filly who was just getting warmed up.

A furlong past the finish, her competitio­n had been left back on the horizon line, and even at the finish, she had 11 1/2 lengths on her nearest pursuer.

Carnival Colors, never asked to run by Mitchell Murrill and moving with an encouragin­g, fluid stride, was timed in 1:45.21 and got a 73 Beyer Speed Figure. Trained by Mike Stidham for Godolphin, Carnival Colors is by Distorted Humor and out of Carnival Court, and her dam is a half-sister to the great Royal Delta.

Stidham’s main string resides at Fair Hill in Maryland this summer, but he has enough Godolphin 2-year-olds to split between there and Arlington. Carnival Colors has been here since she left Florida for the racetrack, and if she bounces out of her sharp maiden win well enough, Stidham said, she’ll be considered for the Arlington-Washington Lassie on Sept. 8.

◗ Betting handle on the Arlington Million card was $16,446,137, up almost $2 million (more than 15 percent) from the 2017 Million card. Both programs had 12 races, but the 2017 card included the American St. Leger, which was not run this year, and placed the Secretaria­t Stakes, which went with a short field, earlier on the program.

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