Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Manny Wah ready for Lecomte

- By Marcus Hersh

NEW ORLEANS – Diane Pfister does equine therapy work and generally lends a hand in trainer Wayne Catalano’s string at Fair Grounds. Speaking of hands, Pfister’s left one sported a bandaged finger Monday morning.

“I lost part of my pinkie,” she explained. The wound’s source, a flashy chestnut with a mischievou­s eye, stood in the adjacent stall, having just digested several peppermint­s surely more satisfying than human flesh.

“I’ve had a lot worse happen. And it’s easier to take when it’s a good horse.”

Catalano hopes Manny Wah really is a good horse. More on that front will be known late Saturday after he starts in the Grade 3, $200,000 Lecomte Stakes. Manny Wah is one of 15 entered in the Lecomte, while a filly on the other side of the barn, Liora, looks a prime player in the $150,000 Silverbull­etday, the race immediatel­y preceding the Lecomte.

“We’re hoping it all comes together Saturday like we expect it to,” Catalano said.

Catalano, a 62-year-old New Orleans native and former jockey, continues churning along with Manny Wah, Liora, and the promising 3-year-old turf filly Winter Sunset as the young foundation of his Fair Grounds stable. Catalano’s first starters as a trainer came 36 years ago, and he has in admirable fashion weathered the transition from the days when he was private trainer for win-obsessed owner Frank Calabrese. Catalano hit 143 winners in 2010 and generally stayed over 100 per annum through 2014, but now has settled into a 60-win-per-year rhythm. He won seven stakes last year, up from just two in 2015.

Manny Wah got in seven starts last year and, though he failed to win a stakes, showed encouragin­g ability, with his wins coming in an Arlington maiden sprint and a one-mile Keeneland allowance. Catalano raced Manny Way in blinkers for the first time following a fourth-place finish in the Street Sense Stakes at Churchill, and though Manny Wah was second to loose leader Gray Attempt here in the Dec. 24 Sugar Bowl, a six-furlong dash, he got a career-best 91 Beyer Speed Figure.

“He got a race over the track is the way I look at it,” Catalano said. “We’ve been waiting to run two turns.”

Manny Wah nips and can get aggressive in his stall, but he is playful, not roguish, and Catalano might be right about the two turns. The colt, owned by Susan Moulton, is by Travers Stakes winner Will Take Charge and out of a stakeswinn­ing dam, Battlefiel­d Angel, who’s a sister to Kentucky Derby runner-up Lookin At Lee. Catalano said Manny Wah “worked like a monster” in his final Lecomte drill Saturday.

Liora, meanwhile, already has proved her two-turn chops by scoring a 29-1 upset Nov. 24 in the Grade 2 Golden Rod at Churchill Downs, where she outlasted heavy favorite Restless Rider by a nose. Liora, campaigned by the Coffeepot Stables, is by Candy Ride out of the Giant’s Causeway mare Giant Mover. Catalano said she was all long legs in her earlier days, but Liora has filled out nicely in recent months and made a fine appearance in her stall Monday.

Catalano initially had planned to skip the Silverbull­etday in favor of the Feb. 16 Rachel Alexandra Stakes, but “called an audible” when Saturday’s race was coming up with a short field, he said.

“We were training her and she’s ready to roll, and we can’t pass up a spot like that. When you’re ready to run, you’re ready to run. You never know what’s going to happen down the road.”

Liora, at least, has been keeping her mouth to herself in the barn. Her trainer strongly believes she’s ready to sink her teeth into her 3-year-old season.

Mitole’s season on hold

The exciting 4-year-old sprinter Mitole’s comeback is on temporary hold while he gets over what his connection­s hope and believe is only a minor setback.

Mitole hasn’t started since he rocketed to a 6 1/4-length win in the Chick Lang Stakes about eight months ago and came out of that race with a broken splint bone that required rest to heal. Mitole returned to the work tab Nov. 28 at Fair Grounds and was on a steady breeze schedule for trainer Steve Asmussen through Dec. 24, but hasn’t worked since.

“We had a little foot issue with him that I think should clear up,” Asmussen said. “Because of who he is and how fast he is, he has to be 100 percent before you let him go. He only has one gear – and it’s really fast.”

Things are moving more smoothly for 4-year-old filly Midnight Bisou, who worked six furlongs here Friday in 1:13 preparing for the Jan. 27 Houston Ladies Classic. Asmussen also has 4-year-old filly She’s a Julie, winner of the Iowa Oaks, back working steadily at Fair Grounds. She breezed five furlongs in 1:02 on Sunday prepping for her 2019 debut in a race yet to be determined.

Hotshot Anna out 2-3 months

Hotshot Anna, the best synthetic-surface sprinter in North America last year, was scratched from the Pan Zareta Stakes here Jan. 5 after fracturing her withers a few days before the race, trainer Hugh Robertson said.

Hotshot Anna flipped over and fell to her back on the concrete outside Robertson’s barn on a windy morning after startling when an object blew over just in front of her.

“If she’d have fallen on her head it would’ve killed her,” Robertson said.

The withers are the highest part of a horse’s back, situated at the base of the neck above the shoulder. Hotshot Anna remains in Robertson’s barn and is comfortabl­e. The injury requires two or three months’ rest to heal, Robertson said.

 ?? KEENELAND/COADY PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? Manny Wah will enter the Lecomte off a runner-up finish in the Sugar Bowl Stakes on Dec. 22 at Fair Grounds.
KEENELAND/COADY PHOTOGRAPH­Y Manny Wah will enter the Lecomte off a runner-up finish in the Sugar Bowl Stakes on Dec. 22 at Fair Grounds.

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