Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

$5M earner Gunnevera retired

- By Mike Welsch

MIAMI – South Floridabas­ed fan favorite Gunnevera, runner-up in the 2018 Breeders’ Cup Classic and earner of more than $5.5 million in his career, has been retired, trainer Antonio Sano confirmed earlier this week.

Sano said Gunnevera is currently on the farm in Ocala for “a rest” and that he hopes he’ll be able to begin his new career as a stallion early in 2021.

“Hopefully, we’ll be able to put together a good deal to breed him, although there is nothing in place at the moment,” Sano said.

Gunnevera, a 6-year-old son of Dialed In owned by Salomon Del Valle, was plagued by foot issues throughout his career. He also suffered a fracture in his left hind leg while in training last summer. He returned to Sano’s barn at Gulfstream Park West this winter hoping to make it back for a 2020 campaign, but his list of infirmitie­s finally caught up with him again during the summer.

Gunnevera’s final start was one of his best, a third-place finish behind Thunder Snow in the 2019 Dubai World Cup.

“He had the same problems again, with his feet, but he’s 100 percent right now on the farm,” Sano said. “The horse won nearly $5.6 million. He’s done enough on the racetrack. He had a big heart, could run any distance, and I think he’s going to make a very good sire.”

Aside from his big effort in the 2018 Breeders’ Cup at Churchill Downs, when he rallied from far back to finish just a length behind Accelerate, Gunnevera’s list of accomplish­ments include second-place finishes at Saratoga in the 2018 Woodward and 2017 Travers. The most notable of his six lifetime wins was a 5 3/4-length triumph at Gulfstream Park in the 2017 Fountain of Youth. He also captured the $1 million Delta Downs Jackpot by a similar margin at Delta Downs as a 2-year-old.

“His race in the Breeders’ Cup was the most special for me,” Sano recalled. “It was very emotional, very exciting. One more second and he wins the race. He’s a once-in-a-lifetime horse who I can’t thank enough for what he’s also meant to my career.”

Pay Any Price fresh for sprint

The ageless Pay Any Price will be back in action Friday in the $44,000 optional-claiming and allowance feature at five furlongs on the turf at Gulfstream Park West.

Pay Any Price, now 10, has been freshened since posting his 19th victory July 5 at Gulfstream Park, a hardfought head decision in the Bob Umphrey Turf Sprint Stakes. The triumph was the second in five starts this season for Pay Any Price, who is trained by Georgina Baxter for Averill Racing LLC and Matties Racing.

Pay Any Price will play catch me if you can with six rivals, including Fully Loaded, who has won two in a row and three of his last four starts since being claimed by trainer Amador Sanchez for $16,000 in early March. Fully Loaded, who does his best running from just off the pace, stalked early leader Tench before edging to a half-length tally under similar allowance conditions Sept. 19 at Gulfstream. Fully Loaded remains eligible for the race Friday because, like Pay Any Price, he’ll compete under a $62,500 claiming tag on Friday.

Yes I Am Free, second behind Fully Loaded as the 3-2 favorite in their previous meeting, and Tench, who succumbed grudgingly to finish fourth behind Yes I Am Free and Fully Loaded, are among the other key contenders. Lahinch, Sarasota County, and Fixed Point complete the lineup.

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