Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Large field likely for Ark. Derby

- By Mary Rampellini – additional reporting by Brad Free, Marty McGee, and Jay Privman

HOT SPRINGS, Ark. – The fields for the seven stakes races making up the $3.45 million Racing Festival of the South, which runs Thursday through Saturday at Oaklawn, are taking shape, with a large group of 3-year-olds anticipate­d for the Grade 1, $1 million Arkansas Derby.

“It’s looking like 10 or 11,” Pat Pope, racing secretary at Oaklawn, said Friday. “That’s what we know of.”

The Arkansas Derby is the centerpiec­e of the Oaklawn meet and will highlight a 12-race closing-day card April 15. Pope said the 1 1/8-mile race would be slotted as the 11th on a card that starts at 12:30 p.m. Central.

Entries for the program, which includes three other stakes, will be taken Wednesday. Post positions for the Arkansas Derby will be drawn on the first floor of the grandstand in a ceremony that starts at 12:30 p.m., according to Oaklawn spokeswoma­n Jennifer Hoyt. It is open to the public.

The Arkansas Derby carries 170 eligibilit­y points for the Kentucky Derby, to be awarded to the first four finishers on a scale of 100-40-20-10.

Classic Empire, the 2-yearold male champion of 2016, is on deck for the Arkansas Derby, as are the Todd Pletcher-trained stakes winners One Liner, who captured the Grade 3, $500,000 Southwest Stakes in February at Oaklawn, and Malagacy, who accounted for last month’s Grade 2, $900,000 Rebel. Other potential starters include Blueridge Traveler, Conquest Mo Money, Dilettante, Lookin At Lee, Petrov, Silver Dust, Sonneteer, and Untrapped.

Conquest Mo Money, the runner-up in the Grade 3, $800,000 Sunland Derby last month in New Mexico, was scheduled to arrive at Oaklawn on Saturday, Pope said.

Silver Dust, who is based at Oaklawn, worked Friday, going five-eighths in company in 59.40 seconds, working from the rail in a drill that started at the halfmile pole and went past the wire to the seven-eighths pole. Clockers caught Silver Dust galloping out six furlongs in 1:13.80.

Pope said there are two flights bringing horses to Oaklawn next week, with one from Southern California on Tuesday and the other from Florida on Wednesday.

The other stakes on Arkansas Derby Day are the Grade 2, $750,000 Oaklawn Handicap; the Grade 3, $400,000 Count Fleet Sprint Handicap; and the $150,000 Northern Spur.

The weights for the Oaklawn Handicap are due out Sunday. Horses under considerat­ion for the 1 1/8-mile race include Accelerate, American Freedom, Cupid, Domain’s Rap, Inside Straight, Midnight Storm, and Texas Chrome.

The field for the Count Fleet, run over six furlongs, could include Apprehende­r, Black Bear, Chief Cicatriz, Chief of Staff, Holy Boss, Moe Candy, Whitmore, and supplement­al entrant Sharp Art.

The Northern Spur is a 1 1/16mile race for 3-year-olds. Potential starters including Balandeen and Conquest Wildcat.

The Arkansas Derby is one of two Grade 1 stakes for Thoroughbr­eds in the Southwest region of Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, New Mexico, and Texas. The other is the Grade 1, $600,000 Apple Blossom, a 1 1/16-mile race for fillies and mares to be run here Friday. Pope had a working list of five potential starters: Divine Elegance, champion Stellar Wind, Streamline, Terra Promessa, and Tiger Moth.

The Apple Blossom will share a card with the Grade 3, $400,000 Fantasy, which is being run about a week later than normal this year. The potential field for the race, which carries Kentucky Oaks eligibilit­y points, is Benner Island, Chanel’s Legacy, Conquest Bandido, Conquest Slayer, Ever So Clever, Kell Paso, My Sweet Stella, Spooky Woods, and Vexatious.

Pope said both Kell Paso and Vexatious are now stabled at Oaklawn. He said there will be 10 races on Apple Blossom Day.

The first card of the festival Thursday features the $150,000 Bachelor, a six-furlong race for 3-year-olds. Pope had a handful of probables as of Friday, among them Carson Kan, Rockshaw, and Way Out West. Trainer Steve Asmussen said Crawford is on deck for the Bachelor. The horse was one of several festival probables whom Asmussen schooled in the indoor paddock and infield before the races here Friday.

◗ Oaklawn will race this Wednesday, with the card to start at 1:30 p.m.

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