Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Curlin’s Approval cuts back

- By Mary Rampellini Follow Mary Rampellini on Twitter @DRFRampell­ini

Curlin’s Approval is the ultimate horse-for-course at Gulfstream Park. She’s registered all eight of her wins over the main track for local earnings of $584,190. Sunday, the multiple Grade 2 winner will be out to add to her stellar local record when she starts as a strong favorite in the $75,000 Sugarloaf Key Handicap.

The overnight stakes is for fillies and mares and it will be run over six furlongs. The field of six also includes Too Much Tip, a Group 1 winner making her first start since October, and Yes I’ll Go, who comes off a win in an optional $62,500 claiming sprint last month at Gulfstream.

Curlin’s Approval has made 15 of her 19 starts at Gulfstream, and among her local wins are the Grade 2 Princess Rooney, the Grade 2 Royal Delta, and Grade 3 Hurricane Bertie, all last year at 4. Happy Alter, who co-owns and trains Curlin’s Approval, said running the mare out of her own stall contribute­s to the record at Gulfstream.

“It’s just that Gulfstream is home,” he said. “You never know what traveling, flying, vanning is going to take out of a horse, and she trains at the Gulfstream track.”

Curlin’s Approval won the Ana T. Stakes on June 3 at Gulfstream and has made one start since, finishing a troubled fourth as the favorite in the Princess Rooney on June 30.

“The last race we had the one post, and at seven-eighths here it’s not the best post to have,” Alter said.

Curlin’s Approval will break from post 5 in the Sugarloaf Key, with Tyler Gaffalione aboard. She will be shortening up in distance for a rare appearance at six furlongs. Alter said he prepared the mare for the cutback with a quarter-mile blowout on Aug. 9.

“Any change is always an adjustment – that was the reason for the blowout,” he said. “She won a Grade 2 at seven-eighths and she won another Grade 2 going a mile and a sixteenth, so she’s been very, very honest.”

Curlin’s Approval won her career debut at six furlongs at Gulfstream in 2016.

Alter said the direction to be taken after Sunday with Curlin’s Approval – who last year ran a troubled 13th in the Breeders’ Cup Filly and Mare Turf – will be determined following discussion­s with George Isaacs, farm manager for co-owner Bridlewood Farm.

“This has been a very special filly,” said Alter, who bred the daughter of Curlin.

Milestone for Dennis Ward

Dennis Ward, a former jockey and the father of trainer Wesley Ward, hit 1,000 career Thoroughbr­ed training wins in North America on Thursday at Gulfstream when Greely Is Back ($17.80) won the fifth race. Dennis Ward added to his win total one race later, taking the sixth with Dreaming of J C ($21.80).

Ward won the first race of his training career on Oct. 29, 1983, at Turf Paradise, according to Daily Racing Form records. He is a 71-year-old native of Seattle and was a jockey at Longacres in Washington from 1962 to 1968, according to a press release from Gulfstream.

Dennis Ward also spent time in racing working as a jockey’s agent. He’s had more than 7,350 starters as a trainer, and those horses have earned more than $9.9 million. Stakes winners for Dennis Ward include I.B. Forty, Branchory Baron, and Bay Runner.

◗ Kathleen O’Connell is nearing 2,000 wins. She was at 1,991 wins in North America through Thursday, according to statistics from Equibase.

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