Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Walsh has shot at big Saturday

- By Marcus Hersh

NEW ORLEANS – Trainer Brendan Walsh won four stakes races during 2018. It’s not outlandish imagining him winning four Saturday at Fair Grounds.

Walsh has a quartet of stakes entrants for the six-stakes Road to the Derby Kickoff card, all with a legitimate claim on contention. Dubara is 7-2 on the morning line for the $75,000 Marie Krantz Memorial, while Honorable Duty is listed at 5-2 for the $75,000 Louisiana Stakes. Then come the 3-yearolds: The filly Grandaria rates a strong chance in the $150,000 Silverbull­etday Stakes, and the colt Plus Que Parfait is a prime player in the Grade 3, $200,000 Lecomte.

The Lecomte gets top billing on the 14-race card (first post, 12:30 p.m. Central) because this is the crazy season for 3-yearolds, and Walsh comes into 2019 with one of the better-looking prospects in America’s midsection. Plus Que Parfait (French for “more than perfect”) made four starts at age 2, finishing third in an Ellis Park maiden turf route and third in a oneturn Churchill Downs mile before graduating at Keeneland on Oct. 7 in a two-turn dirt race. Walsh jumped him up to the Grade 2 Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes, and despite a challengin­g trip Plus Que Parfait finished second of 14, beaten a neck by Signalman.

Plus Que Parfait, owned by Imperial Racing, raced at the front in his first two dirt starts but rallied from 11th in the KJC after Julien Leparoux (who comes in from Florida to ride Saturday) snatched him back from an impending jam-up into the first turn.

“He’s done really well since the Jockey Club,” said Walsh. “We got a little held up with the rain here, but it’s early and it’s a long year. He’s a pretty active horse. He gets plenty out of his training. He’s an easy horse like that, as straightfo­rward as they come. He doesn’t carry a ton of weight the way he’s made.”

Plus Que Parfait is by Point of Entry and out of the Awesome Again mare Belvedera, and after failing to reach a mere $24,000 auction reserve as a weanling, he sold for $135,000 as a yearling. Point of Entry was a long-winded turf star but a horse with plenty of dirt on the female side of his pedigree, while Plus Que Parfait’s own female family is laden with stamina influences.

“He won’t have any distance limitation­s,” Walsh said.

That also applies to Grandaria, a daughter of Smart Strike out of the A.P. Indy mare Bag of Jewelz for whom owners Wayne Sanders and Larry Hirsch paid $170,000 at a yearling sale. Whereas Plus Que Parfait faces 13 in the Lecomte, Grandaria takes on only six in the Silverbull­etday, and if modest Beyer Speed Figures inflate her price, all the better for her supporters.

Grandaria debuted in a turf race, but not because Walsh believed she was a grass horse.

“I always thought she was a dirt filly,” he said. “I just started her on grass, as I often do with fillies that want to go long. It’s a nicer experience for them.”

Seventh in her first start, Grandaria came back to capture an off-the-turf Churchill maiden route by more than four lengths in the slop and repeated Dec. 21 at Fair Grounds with a 2 1/2-length first-level allowance win over Cosmic Code and Street Band, who formed the exacta Sunday while coming back at the same level.

Grandaria paired 67 Beyers for her two wins, but there was no way she could’ve run fast coming from well off the pace in races where the half-mile split was slower than 49 seconds, a tepid fraction.

“At Churchill, she did everything the hard way, getting back in the kickback, and then went around them all,” said Walsh. “Last time, she was drawn wide, and even though she broke good, we took back to cut in and save the ground. I don’t think she necessaril­y has to come from way out of it. She might be closer than you think.”

And sure, everything would have to fall perfectly into place, but Walsh might be closer than one might think to a four-win stakes day.

Bell’s the One spikes fever

Bell’s the One was an intended starter in the Silverbull­etday Stakes on Saturday, but wasn’t entered in the race after contractin­g a minor illness, trainer Neil Pessin said.

Bell’s the One was set to make her two-turn debut after winning three sprint races – an Arlington maiden, a Keeneland allowance, and the Letellier Stakes here at Fair Grounds last month.

The filly showed signs of being sick late last week and developed a fever that since has subsided. Pessin said Wednesday that Bell’s the One, a Majesticpe­rfection filly owned by Lothenbach Stables, would resume training late this week and could start in the Feb. 9 Forward Gal at Gulfstream Park or one of two races at Fair Grounds, the Feb. 16 Rachel Alexandra or an overnight turf stakes a week earlier.

Leofric to the farm

Leofric, winner of the Grade 1 Clark Handicap in his most recent start, has been turned out to let persistent, serious quarter cracks in his hooves heal, trainer Brad Cox said.

The 6-year-old Leofric, by Candy Ride, ended his 2018 campaign with a flourish, finishing third in the Grade 1 Woodward Stakes at Saratoga before winning the Grade 2 Fayette at Keeneland and the Clark. Cox said there was no timetable for Leofric’s return to the racetrack.

 ?? COADY PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? Grandaria, who runs Saturday in the Silverbull­etday Stakes, wins an off-the-turf maiden race Nov. 24 at Churchill Downs.
COADY PHOTOGRAPH­Y Grandaria, who runs Saturday in the Silverbull­etday Stakes, wins an off-the-turf maiden race Nov. 24 at Churchill Downs.

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