Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Mr Freeze tries to regain form

- By Marty McGee

LEXINGTON, Ky. – Before the coronaviru­s crisis hit, Mr Freeze was cruising along as one of the top milers on the planet.

In a five-race span to end 2019 and begin 2020, Mr Freeze earned triple-digit Beyer Speed Figures in all but one of them, bookending victories in the Grade 3 Ack Ack and Grade 2 Gulfstream Park Mile with second- or third-place finishes in the Grade 2 Fayette, Grade 1 Clark, and Grade 1 Pegasus World Cup.

“He was the goods,” said Dale Romans, who trains Mr Freeze for Jim Bakke and Gerald Isbister. “We were all set to run in Dubai and then everything fell apart.”

Suffice it to say the 5-yearold horse has had a difficult time during the pandemic, and now, with four weeks until the Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile is run at Keeneland, he’s not even among the top 10 contenders – unless he can right the ship Saturday in the Grade 2, $200,000 Fayette.

Since winning the Gulfstream Park Mile in February, Mr Freeze has finished third in the Grade 2 Oaklawn Handicap, sixth in the Grade 1 Metropolit­an Handicap at Belmont Park, and sixth in the Grade 2 Alysheba on Sept. 4 at Churchill Downs, his most recent start.

“It’s time for him to turn it around,” Romans said. “He’s really been training well. He’s primed for a big effort, absolutely.”

Romans said “something a little shorter” than the 1 1/8-mile distance of the Fayette is ideal for Mr Freeze, “but if he brings his ‘A’ race, it won’t matter.”

“When he’s right, he’s right,” Romans said.

Mr Freeze, with Javier Castellano riding for the first time, will break from post 6 and faces nine other 3-year-olds and up in the 63rd Fayette, which directly precedes the Grade 1 Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup as the eighth of 10 races Saturday at spectator-free Keeneland. Mr Freeze figures on or near the lead in a race lacking an abundance of early speed.

Tax (post 8, Tyler Gaffalione) is among the other top contenders. The 4-year-old gelding was claimed here nearly two years ago by trainer Danny Gargan, who has had him cranking back up all summer at Saratoga. Gargan gave Tax time off following a fifth-place finish in the Oaklawn Handicap in early May.

Tax is a two-time graded winner in New York and has earned nearly $900,000, almost all of it for Randy Hill and Reeves Thoroughbr­ed Racing.

“He’d had a hard campaign for a long time, so we turned him out for a while,” Gargan said by phone early Thursday from New York before boarding a Lexington-bound plane. “He’s doing great and he runs well fresh. I think I’ve got him fit enough, so I’m expecting a big effort.”

Other considerat­ions include a second Romans starter in Coastal Defense (post 1, Joe Talamo), and Aurelius Maximus (post 10, Ricardo Santana Jr.), both sharp last-out allowance winners; Crafty Daddy (post 3, Brian Hernandez Jr.) and Captivatin­g Moon (post 2, Julien Leparoux), the respective 1-2 finishers in the off-theturf Opening Verse during Kentucky Derby week at Churchill Downs; and Mo Mosa (post 9, Florent Geroux), the Oklahoma Derby runner-up and the only 3-year-old in the lineup.

Rounding out the cast are Mirinaque, Title Ready, and Rated R Superstar.

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