Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Tulsa Queen faces Rose Tree

- By Nicole Russo

On paper, Tulsa Queen is the queen of Sunday’s $100,000 Malvern Rose Stakes at Presque Isle Downs, standing out as the only multiple stakes winner in the field and with the group’s best speed figures.

However, the one-mile race for Pennsylvan­ia-bred 3-yearold fillies still provides an intriguing matchup, as the lightly raced Rose Tree gets a chance to step up.

Tulsa Queen didn’t miss the board in five starts last year for Ryan and Anne Walsh but had just one win in 2016. She made it count though, winning her maiden in the Mrs. Henry D. Paxson Memorial Stakes at Presque Isle, where she has shown an affinity for the synthetic surface.

The filly comes into the Malvern Rose off back-to-back victories. She won an allowance race by 2 1/4 lengths at Presque Isle before defeating open company in the listed Duchess Stakes at Woodbine. She earned a Beyer Speed Figure of 83 for that last effort, the top number in this field.

Veteran jockey Mario Pino, aboard Tulsa Queen for her three most recent outings, retains the mount.

Rose Tree won her first three starts by open lengths for Hall of Fame trainer Jonathan Sheppard, taking a maiden special weight by 9 1/4 lengths, the Blue Mountain Juvenile Fillies Stakes by 3 3/4 lengths, and, off a layoff of more than five months, an optional-claiming event by 4 1/4 lengths to start this season.

Rose Tree then finished second in the New Start Stakes, beaten a length by Grand Prix, a half-sister to champion Finest City who is stakesplac­ed against open company in California. In her first loss, Rose Tree earned a career-best 76 Beyer, the second-highest number in this field.

Andrew Wolfsont, aboard for all of Rose Tree’s races, is in the irons as the filly runs at Presque Isle for the first time.

Ianthe is the only other filly in the field with solid stakes form, having finished second to Rose Tree in the Blue Mountain Juvenile Fillies.

Belterra: Vivacious Handicap

Mayas Queen Netee has won three consecutiv­e races since being transferre­d to Jeffrey Radosevich, who is among the leading trainers on the Ohio circuit.

The mare now takes the next step into stakes company, attempting to keep her streak going in the $75,000 Vivacious Handicap for Ohio-bred fillies and mares Sunday on the Belterra Park turf.

Mayas Queen Netee was unplaced in three tries on turf in New York to begin her career, then won her maiden in her sixth career start and an allowance race, both by 3 3/4 lengths. She then stretched out from sprint distances to win a one-mile allowance by 7 1/2 lengths with a front-running trip.

The mare has had Luis Colon aboard for her three victories. He stays in the irons Sunday, and the two drew the rail in a field of nine.

School Board Prez and Hope’s Frog Song were first and second, separated by a neck, in the Vivacious last year and return in this edition.

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