Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Rebel could run in divisions

- By Mary Rampellini – additional reporting by Jay Privman

HOT SPRINGS, Ark. – Will the Rebel Stakes draw enough horses to be split into two divisions? It’s the burning question leading up to the Grade 2 Kentucky Derby prep that runs March 16 at Oaklawn Park.

Oaklawn – amid Santa Anita’s temporary halt in racing – has committed to splitting the Rebel into two $750,000 divisions if 20 or more horses are entered Wednesday. Santa Anita was to run the San Felipe, a major Kentucky Derby prep, on Saturday, and it was expected to draw the Bob Baffert-trained pair of champion Game Winner and Improbable.

Whether one, or both, of the leading Kentucky Derby candidates is rerouted to Oaklawn remains to be seen. Baffert said Thursday decisions will be made after the horses work Sunday at Los Alamitos. If the two come to Oaklawn and the Rebel is split, it is unlikely they will face each other in the same division, based on procedures at Oaklawn.

Pat Pope, the track’s racing secretary, said Friday that from the pool of entries horses with the same owners are “split away” first, and then horses with the same trainers are “split away,” and “from there single interests are just divided by random.” The number of horses an owner or trainer has entered beyond two will determine the likelihood of runners from their stables facing each other, Pope said.

Pope said Oaklawn would be pleased to run two divisions of the Rebel, but whether that happens will not be known until entries are taken Wednesday.

“We’re hopeful that we can, because it’s a good thing for these horses to continue down the path of the Triple Crown,” he said Friday. “And it’s very good for the state of Arkansas.”

Oaklawn is gearing up for a huge program Saturday, as it runs the $350,000 Essex Handicap and Grade 2, $350,000 Azeri on the same card and will also offer inflated purses for overnight races for 3-year-olds.

Nomination­s for the Rebel were held open until Friday, while the Essex and Azeri closed Thursday and were released Friday.

Pope said as of Thursday there were flights bringing horses to Oaklawn from both Florida and Southern California. The horses from Florida were scheduled to arrive Tuesday, and the runners from California are expected Wednesday.

Horses known to be pointing to the Rebel include Galilean, Jersey Agenda, Laughing Fox, Long Range Toddy, Market King, Mucho Gusto, Omaha Beach, Our Braintrust, and Parsimony. Possibles include Six Shooter and Frosted Ice and, if the field is short, Gray Attempt.

In addition, trainer Todd Pletcher said earlier this month he was looking strongly at sending a horse for the Rebel, a race he won last year with Magnum Moon.

Pope said he has had conversati­ons with some trainers looking at sending additional runners if it appears the Rebel will split. He said it was horsemen who first contacted Oaklawn about the potential for running divisions of the Rebel, something that has happened in the past with the Southwest Stakes.

Secret Spice possible for Azeri

The champion Shamrock Rose and Grade 1 winners Midnight Bisou and Eskimo Kisses have been ticketed for the Azeri, but their list of rivals could grow depending on what develops at Santa Anita.

One new face under considerat­ion for the 1 1/16-mile race is Secret Spice. She won a Santa Anita allowance at a mile by more than 11 lengths in October, earning a Beyer Speed Figure of 106. She’s been prepping for the Grade 1 Beholder Mile, which is scheduled to run March 16 at Santa Anita.

“Our plan was to run in the Beholder and at this point we just don’t know if there will be racing, or if the Beholder will be run, and we have discussed coming to Oaklawn for the Azeri as a viable option,” Billy Koch, founder and managing partner of Little Red Feather Racing, said Friday.

“Obviously, we always prefer to stay home if we can. We’re in support of Santa Anita and in what they’re trying to do, but at the same time our filly is ready to run and the Azeri is obviously a viable option.”

Officials at Santa Anita hinted that racing would not return until March 21.

Koch said if Secret Spice goes, she would be ridden by Flavien Prat, who is scheduled to be at Oaklawn on Saturday for the Rebel.

The Azeri also has a chance to draw Heavenhasm­ynikki, who was third to Midnight Bisou last out when beaten a length in the Grade 3, $400,000 Houston Ladies Classic at Sam Houston. She, too, has been prepping at Santa Anita for the Beholder Mile, in large part because the two-turn mile trip suits her best, owner Ron Paolucci said.

“I think everybody’s in the same boat as I am,” Paolucci said Friday. “If they’re not going to readjust these stakes, if they don’t give us another date, we’ve got to get on a plane and head to Oaklawn or Gulfstream.”

Paolucci said it would either be the Azeri for Heavenhasm­ynikki or the Grade 2, $200,000 Inside Informatio­n at seven furlongs the same day at Gulfstream.

Paolucci said Dalmore and Imperative remain on deck for the Essex Handicap.

Jack Van Berg cuts back

Jack Van Berg, the horse named for the Hall of Fame trainer, cuts back to one turn for an optional $62,500 claiming sprint that carries first-level allowance conditions Sunday at Oaklawn.

Jack Van Berg’s last win came at six furlongs in November at Churchill Downs. Jon Court has the mount for trainer Tom Van Berg, the son of Jack Van Berg. The horse races for Muddy Waters Stables.

 ?? BARBARA D. LIVINGSTON ?? Pending a workout Sunday at Los Alamitos, Game Winner could make his 3-year-old debut in Oaklawn’s Grade 2 Rebel.
BARBARA D. LIVINGSTON Pending a workout Sunday at Los Alamitos, Game Winner could make his 3-year-old debut in Oaklawn’s Grade 2 Rebel.

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