Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Sharp Azteca a possibilit­y for pegasus

- By Mike Welsch

HALLANDALE BEACH, Fla. – Trainer Jorge Navarro said that up until 7:30 on Sunday morning, he really didn’t want to run Sharp Azteca in the $16 million Pegasus World Cup Invitation­al. But that all changed in less than two minutes, the time it took Sharp Azteca to work five furlongs in 59 seconds and gallop out like a freight train over his home base at Gulfstream Park West.

“That work was amazing,” said Navarro, who trains Sharp Azteca for owner Ivan Rodriguez. “I don’t think I’ve ever seen him work that good. Usually, no matter what you do with good horses, they’ll give you eight or nine good months and then they’ll start to decline, to tail off. Instead, he just keeps getting better and better.”

Sharp Azteca is coming off arguably the best race of his career, a 5 1/4-length victory in the Grade 1 Cigar Mile on Dec. 2, for which he received a 115 Beyer Speed Figure. That effort came on the heels of a heartbreak­ing second-place finish in the Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile, when he dropped a half-length decision to Battle of Midway after contesting all the pace while racing against the grain of the racetrack at Del Mar that day.

Sharp Azteca would be a key player and the likely pacesetter in the Pegasus World Cup, although his starting status remains up in the air as his owner continues to shop around for either a buyer or the right deal from one of the slot holders for the race. If he does start, Sharp Azteca would likely go postward as second choice behind the odds-on Gun Runner.

“I told the owner today that I really need to know something,” said Navarro. “I need to know if we’re going to run, and I need to know who is going to ride him. We’ve only got three weeks left and I need to get a rider on him.

“But the one thing I did say to the owner this morning after that work was, ‘If you do go in the race, you’ve got a winner.’”

Javier Castellano, who rode Sharp Azteca in the Cigar Mile, was likely to be aboard West Coast in the Pegasus, Navarro said. Paco Lopez was aboard for Sharp Azteca’s wins in the Grade 2 Kelso and Grade 3 Monmouth Cup, as well as in the Breeders’ Cup. Edgard Zayas was the horse’s regular rider earlier in his career.

Navarro has already confirmed War Story as a definite starter in Pegasus. War Story, who breezed five-eighths in 1:01.20 at Gulfstream Park West on Sunday, has not started since his fifth-place finish in the Breeders’ Cup Classic.

“Just something to keep him happy,” said Navarro. “I don’t go hard on him because he has his issues. He’ll have a harder work next week.”

As of Monday, only eight horses appear confirmed for the Pegasus, led by Gun Runner who worked a solid six furlongs in 1:10.60 at Fair Grounds on Sunday. Aside from War Story, the others are West Coast, Collected, Seeking the Soul, Toast of New York, Gunnevera, and Great Expectatio­ns.

Stellar Wind is also under serious considerat­ion, and continued on her regular work schedule with a four-furlong breeze in 48.80 at Palm Meadows on Sunday.

The status of Singing Bullet remained uncertain following his fourth-place finish with an eventful trip in a first-level allowance race here last Friday. Singing Bullet is owned by track owner Frank Stronach.

“It’s going to be up to the Stronach people whether he runs in Pegasus or not, although as far as I’m concerned that last race just doesn’t count,” said trainer Dale Romans. “Throw a line through it – he had no chance. We’ll just have to wait and see what they want to do.”

Dak Attack returns Saturday

Trainer Dale Romans has confirmed plans for two of his top 3-year-old prospects, Tiz Mischief and Dak Attack, after the pair turned in eye-catching works just minutes apart on Saturday at Gulfstream Park.

Working solo, Tiz Mischief went five furlongs from the half-mile pole in 1:00.14, going as easily as can be before getting one tap of the stick and galloping out six furlongs around the turn in 1:12.84. Tiz Mischief, who closed out his 2-year-old campaign finishing a fast-closing second, beaten a head by Enticed, in the Grade 2 Kentucky Jockey Club at Churchill Downs, will launch his 3-year-old season here on Feb. 3 in the Grade 2 Holy Bull.

Dak Attack will likely be favored when he makes his 3-year-old bow here Saturday in the one-mile Mucho Macho Man. He had a serious work on Saturday, going five furlongs in company in 58.84, also starting at the half-mile pole and finishing well clear of his workmate on the clubhouse turn.

“You couldn’t ask for better works than those two,” said Romans, who said he sees no distance limitation­s for either horse.

Romans also confirmed that both Hollywood Star and Free Drop Billy would have their first breeze since competing in the Breeders’ Cup this weekend.

A small but competitiv­e field is shaping up for the Mucho Macho Man, one that is likey to include multiple stakes winner Bal Harbour; the undefeated Santiamen and his stablemate Forever Taken; impressive debut winner Mask; and recently stakes-placed Wheresheto­ldmetogo.

The Mucho Macho Man is one of five stakes to be run here Saturday.

Allowance feature gets six

A field of only six older horses will compete in Wednesday’s $51,000 main event, carded at six furlongs under entry-level allowance conditions.

Cowboy’s Hero, idle since a fourth-place finish against similar but perhaps slightly tougher competitio­n at Belmont Park on Sept. 20, may be favored in a field that includes speedy Jorge Navarro trainee Rock and Fellers, Bar Down, Malibu Action, and Storm Ruler. Cowboy’s Hero will race with blinkers off on Wednesday while returning off a couple of bullet works at Gulfstream Park West.

 ?? BARBARA D. LIVINGSTON ?? Cigar Mile winner Sharp Azteca worked five furlongs in 59 seconds on Saturday at Gulfstream Park.
BARBARA D. LIVINGSTON Cigar Mile winner Sharp Azteca worked five furlongs in 59 seconds on Saturday at Gulfstream Park.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States