Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Flightline works five furlongs

- By Steve Andersen

Less than a month before his expected 4-year-old debut in the Grade 1 Metropolit­an Mile Handicap at Belmont Park on June 11, Flightline had a familiar pilot for his five-furlong workout in 59.60 seconds at Santa Anita on Monday.

Jockey Flavien Prat, who has ridden Flightline in all three of his wins, flew from his new base in New York to partner the exciting colt. The workout was the first time Prat had been aboard Flightline since the colt won his stakes debut by 11 1/2 lengths in the Grade 1 Malibu Stakes at seven furlongs on Dec. 26.

On Monday, trainer John Sadler timed Flightline galloping out six furlongs in 1:12.40 and seven furlongs in 1:25. The $1 million Met Mile will be the longest race of Flightline’s career. Sadler said Flightline’s recent training has focused on getting the colt to show patience in the initial furlongs of a workout.

“We’ve put a lot of work in getting him to relax,” Sadler said. “He looks like he’s going in a mere gallop. He’ll always have speed to get position. He doesn’t have to be a front-runner. We’re dialing in.”

Flightline won his first two races, both at six furlongs – a maiden special weight race by 13 1/4 lengths at Santa Anita in April 2021 and an allowance race by 12 3/4 lengths at Del Mar last September. In the allowance race, Flightline was second by a length after the opening quarter-mile and had a commanding lead by early stretch.

Owned by the partnershi­p of Hronis Racing, Siena Farm, Summer Wind Equine, West Point Thoroughbr­eds, and Woodford Racing, Flightline has earned $259,800.

Prat has been the leading rider in Southern California in recent years, but departed earlier this spring for Kentucky and then New York. Prat is currently riding at Belmont Park.

Prat is booked to return to ride at Santa Anita on May 30, a day with three Grade 1 stakes. Prat is scheduled to ride Going Global in the $400,000 Gamely Stakes for fillies and mares at 1 1/8 miles on turf and Smooth Like Strait in the $500,000 Shoemaker Mile on turf.

Prat worked Going Global and Smooth Like Strait on Monday.

Going Global ran five furlongs in 1:01.60 on the infield training track. Trained by Phil D’Amato, Going Global has won seven stakes since arriving from Ireland in the winter of 2020-21. Prat has been aboard for six of those wins.

“She had a nice gallop-out,” trainer Phil D’Amato said. “I wanted a nice, long stamina drill.”

Smooth Like Strait, trained by Michael McCarthy, worked five furlongs in a quick 59.40 seconds on Monday.

Prat has not ridden Smooth Like Strait since a ninth-place finish in a maiden special weight race on dirt in 2019.

Smooth Like Strait has improved since then. The winner of six stakes, including the 2021 Shoemaker, Smooth Like Strait has won seven of 20 starts and earned $1,481,572. In the Shoemaker, Prat will replace Umberto Rispoli, who recently relocated to ride in Kentucky.

Pick six paid out May 30

The 20-cent Rainbow pick six will have a mandatory payout on May 30 at Santa Anita, track officials said on Saturday.

The May 30 program includes three Grade 1 races – the $500,000 Shoemaker Mile on turf, the $400,000 Hollywood Gold Cup at 1 1/4 miles on dirt, and the $400,000 Gamely Stakes at 1 1/8 miles on turf for fillies and mares.

The pick six last had a mandatory payout on March 19. The bet began with a carryover of $395,500. Bettors added $3,401,029 on March 19. The bet paid $26,755 to 112 tickethold­ers that day.

Without a mandatory payout, the bet is paid only if there is a single winning ticket, which occurred on April 15. The bet paid $436,787 on a day that began with a carryover of $365,240.

Through Sunday, the carryover was $348,046. There are five racing days before the May 30 program – Friday through Sunday and May 28-29.

After the mandatory payout on May 30, there is likely to be only one additional day with a mandatory payout on June 19, closing day of the winter-spring meeting.

Blanc still sidelined

Jockey Brice Blanc said on Sunday that he hopes to resume riding as early as next weekend after he was stepped on by a horse behind the gate at Santa Anita on May 7.

Blanc said he sustained no broken bones when he jumped from Albayaader, only for the filly to promptly step on his right foot.

“It literally ripped my boot off,” he said.

Blanc was briefly hospitaliz­ed that evening. He was released and told to rest the foot.

“It’s a slow process,” he said over the weekend. “There is not a lot to do besides icing.”

Blanc said on Sunday that he will monitor the foot before deciding whether to take any mounts over the weekend. Blanc, 49, has won three races from 51 mounts this year, including the Grade 3 San Francisco Mile at Golden Gate Fields on April 30 on Evening Sun.

For comfort, Blanc did not wear a shoe in the week after the incident.

“I’ve been in flip-flops all week,” he said. “I guess I’m prepping for Del Mar with flipflops.”

Eurton fined

Trainer Peter Eurton was fined $1,000 by Santa Anita stewards Luis Jauregui, David Nuesch, and Kim Sawyer on Friday for failing to report that Octopus had been gelded before he was entered to race on April 15.

Octopus was withdrawn from the race because of the lack of informatio­n. California trainers are required to report when horses are gelded before entries are taken.

 ?? BENOIT PHOTO ?? Flightline is pointing to the Met Mile on June 11 at Belmont for his next start. He hasn’t raced since winning the Dec. 26 Malibu.
BENOIT PHOTO Flightline is pointing to the Met Mile on June 11 at Belmont for his next start. He hasn’t raced since winning the Dec. 26 Malibu.

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