Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Simply Ravishing’s retirement latest blow to division

- By Marty McGee

LEXINGTON, Ky. – The retirement of Simply Ravishing this week further served to illustrate just how much turnover has occurred in the highest echelons of the current 3-year-old filly division.

With the April 30 Kentucky Oaks just ahead, the division has undergone wholesale changes at the top. The horses who dominated as 2-year-olds of 2020, including Simply Ravishing, have been non-factors since the calendar turned. In that context, all the leading candidates for the Oaks are new faces.

Trainer Kenny McPeek cited a “minor breathing problem” when announcing the retirement of Simply Ravishing on Wednesday. The New York-bred filly faded to finish last of six in her lone start at 3, the April 3 Ashland Stakes at Keeneland. McPeek said she will be bred in the coming weeks, with the aim of selling her at auction in November.

Simply Ravishing is owned by the partnershi­p of Harold Lerner, Magdalena Racing, and Nehoc Stables. In two Keeneland races last fall, the daughter of Laoban won the Grade 1 Alcibiades before finishing fourth in the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies, a race that has produced only one collective win from the seven who ran, that being the Gulfstream Oaks triumph by the McPeek-trained Crazy Beautiful (sixth in the BC Juvenile Fillies).

The respective 1-2-3 finishers – Vequist, Dayoutofth­eoffice, and Girl Daddy – have a grand total of one subsequent start between them, and that was a 26-length defeat for Vequist. The other also-rans have all retired, those being Simply Ravishing, Princess Noor, and Thoughtful­ly.

With the final four Oaks qualifiers having been run last weekend, divisional supremacy clearly is up for grabs. Churchill Downs officials are closely monitoring the list of probable starters for the 1 1/8-mile filly classic, with the top six points earners being Search Results, winner of the Gazelle; Travel Column, winner of the March 20 Fair Grounds Oaks; Crazy Beautiful; Pauline’s Pearl, winner of the Fantasy; Malathaat, winner of the Ashland; and Soothsay, winner of the Santa Anita Oaks.

Soothsay, Maracuja and Competitiv­e Speed are among several fillies expected to be made eligible to the Oaks by a $1,500 late nomination­s payment due this weekend. Adventurin­g, winner of the Bourbonett­e, will not be latenomina­ted, Brad Cox said Friday.

The Oaks is limited to 14 starters, with as many as four more making up an also-eligibles list. Entries will be drawn April 26.

Other fillies who appear to be safely in on points are Clairiere,

Beautiful Gift, Will’s Secret, Millefeuil­le, Moraz, Ava’s Grace, Pass the Champagne, and Maracuja. On the bubble are The Grass Is Blue, Coach, and Moon Swag.

Trainer George Weaver said this week at Keeneland that Pass the Champagne, beaten just a head by Malathaat in the Ashland, has returned to her winter quarters at Palm Beach Downs in Delray Beach, Fla., to train toward the Oaks. “It’s a perfect setup for us down there,” said Weaver.

Pedroza shows how it’s done

After 38 years of a standout riding career in the U.S., it appeared Martin Pedroza might have been finished. The 55-year-old Panama native, who booted home more than 3,900 winners and endeared himself through the years to California racing fans, had abruptly stopped riding in October 2019 for personal reasons, and he had no deep-seated desire to ride races any longer.

Pedroza had been content to work as an exercise rider at

Keeneland in recent weeks for his good friend, trainer Wesley Ward. But when Ward needed a replacemen­t rider in the last race Thursday, he turned to his right-hand man Pedroza, who proceeded to do what he does best, gunning a first-time starter named Cornbread Hill straight to the front from his rail post. Horse and jockey never looked back, as Cornbread Hill ($13.80) prevailed by 3 1/4 lengths in the six-furlong race for $40,000 maiden claimers.

As the all-time leading jockey at now-defunct Fairplex Park and with Thoroughbr­eds at Los Alamitos, Pedroza became very well known as a highly effective speed rider in California. His full-speed-ahead tactics in his Thursday return elicited big laughs and high-fives, with Ward saying he was “extremely happy to see Martin back in his favorite place – the winner’s circle.”

“I’ve had a lot of fun with Martin over the years,” Ward said. “This was just great.”

Maxfield to Alysheba

Maxfield, the Godolphin homebred who was defeated for the first time when third in the March 6 Santa Anita Handicap, will make his next start in the Grade 2, $400,000 Alysheba on the April 30 Kentucky Oaks undercard at Churchill. Jose Ortiz, who rode the colt in his first three starts, has the mount back.

Trained by Brendan Walsh, Maxfield won his first five races, including four stakes. He was ridden by Florent Geroux in his last three starts.

Maxfield has worked twice since the Big Cap, the latest being a half-mile in 48.20 seconds Monday at Keeneland. He is not among the nominees to the $1 million Oaklawn Handicap next Saturday.

 ?? BARBARA D. LIVINGSTON ?? Simply Ravishing, who finished sixth in the Ashland in her 3-year-old debut, has been retired with a breathing problem.
BARBARA D. LIVINGSTON Simply Ravishing, who finished sixth in the Ashland in her 3-year-old debut, has been retired with a breathing problem.

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