Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Beschizza succeeding in U.S.

- By Marcus Hersh

In England, a race meeting can be as short as one day. Jockeys travel from racecourse to racecourse, and except for those at the top, it’s a struggle to get on enough winners, given the paucity of day-to-day purse money, to make a good living.

Everything is different now for Adam Beschizza, who had his first official rides in England in 2009. Beschizza, 25, rode seven full years in England, but now, rather than bouncing from English racecourse to English racecourse, he takes a short drive every day from an apartment complex in Metairie, La., to Fair Grounds Racecourse in New Orleans. This work routine has more rote than the one back home, but Beschizza’s decision to shift his tack from England to America last fall is paying off.

Beschizza, while still an apprentice notched a careerbest 39 winners in 2010, and the most prize money his mounts earned in a single season was about $475,000 in 2010. During the Fair Grounds meet that began Nov. 18, Beschizza, after Thursday’s racing, had 40 winners and purse earnings of just less than $1.1 million.

Last weekend, he rode Snapper Sinclair to an excruciati­ngly close second-place finish in the Grade 2, $400,000 Risen Star Stakes. Beschizza is tied with Mitchell Murrill for third in the jockey standings behind Miguel Mena and Shaun Bridgmohan.

“When I came over here, since I’d been over here in the past, I knew the ups and downs. I knew it wasn’t going to be an easy path to slide into,” Beschizza said. “I was under no illusions it was going to go as well as it has.”

On an earlier trip to New Orleans, Beschizza (pronounced bess-KITZah) mainly was a work rider alongside trainer Joe Sharp. Beschizza, whose agent is Liz Morris, shares his Metairie apartment with David Carroll, assistant trainer to Mark Casse, and the two have forged a friendship, but it is Sharp who has made Beschizza’s winter. Sharp encouraged Beschizza to take this chance and has massively backed him: The pair has combined for a record of 98-31-18-15 at the meet.

“That got the ball rolling early,” Beschizza said. “It’s lucky I had a contact in Joe. He was willing, and his owners were willing to take a chance with me. Not being big-headed, but I knew what I could do, and it’s all about being given the opportunit­y. A lot of us are like that in the jocks’ room. Given a chance, many of us can deliver.”

Twenty-three of Beschizza’s Fair Grounds wins have come on turf, the other 17 on dirt, a surface over which he had little experience.

“Dirt is a completely different ballgame,” he said. “It’s all about finding a rhythm. There’s really not a lot to it – but there is.”

Beschizza has found his rhythm at Fair Grounds, but the meet has only about a month remaining. Beschizza plans to go on to the Kentucky circuit and knows things will be different.

“I still think I have to be humble in what I’ve achieved so far since the next semester is a complete change,” he said.

Stakes plans for McPeek duo

Stronger Than Ever, winner of the Jan. 13 Silverbull­etday Stakes at Fair Grounds, will make her next start March 10 at Oaklawn Park in the Honeybee Stakes, trainer Ken McPeek said Friday. McPeek said he plans to send Eskimo Kisses, an impressive first-level allowance winner Thursday at Oaklawn, to the Grade 2, $400,000 Fair Grounds Oaks on March 24.

Eskimo Kisses, a To Honor and Serve filly, needed four tries to win a maiden race, scoring by a neck Feb. 1 at Oaklawn, but racing over a sloppy track Thursday, she cruised to an 11 1/2-length victory in a firstlevel allowance race over 1 1/16 miles.

“I think she’ll be pretty tough at Fair Grounds,” McPeek said.

Stronger Than Ever scored an upset win in the Silverbull­etday, running the best race of her career, and shortly thereafter, McPeek said he’d pass on the Feb. 17 Rachel Alexandra Stakes to give his filly a breather. Stronger Than Ever worked Feb. 9, her only breeze since the Silverbull­etday, but McPeek said she was to have another drill this weekend at Fair Grounds to prepare for her start at Oaklawn.

Forever Unbridled drills

Forever Unbridled had another major workout Friday in preparatio­n for the $10 million Dubai World Cup on March 31.

Forever Unbridled, the champion older dirt female of 2017 and winner of the Breeders’ Cup Distaff in her most recent start, was officially clocked in 1:26.80 for seven furlongs. Trainer Dallas Stewart said the mare galloped out one mile in 1:39. A week prior, Forever Unbridled worked six furlongs in 1:12.40 and galloped out one mile.

“She went really good, galloped out even stronger than last week,” Stewart said. “Now we just need to maintain it and put a nice edge on her.”

Emerson Chavez worked Forever Unbridled on Friday, but Stewart said another rider, Pedro Velez, was likely to travel with the mare to Dubai in about three weeks.

◗ Copper Bullet, the talented 3-year-old colt who won the Aug. 13 Saratoga Special by four lengths in his most recent start, hasn’t posted a timed workout since Feb. 12, and trainer Steve Asmussen has decided to take a patient approach with the horse.

“I just backed off him. It was too much too soon,” Asmussen said. “The [Kentucky] Derby is out of the question.”

 ?? KRISTINA TAYLOR/HODGES PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? Adam Beschizza rides Mom’s On Strike to a victory Feb. 17 in the Albert Stall Memorial Stakes for trainer Joe Sharp.
KRISTINA TAYLOR/HODGES PHOTOGRAPH­Y Adam Beschizza rides Mom’s On Strike to a victory Feb. 17 in the Albert Stall Memorial Stakes for trainer Joe Sharp.

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