Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Catholic Boy has odd breeze

- By Mike Welsch Follow Mike Welsch on Twitter @DRFWelsch

ELMONT, N.Y. – Trainer Jonathan Thomas had a few anxious moments while watching his 2018 Travers winner Catholic Boy work over the Belmont Park training track shortly before 8 a.m. on Sunday.

Catholic Boy was about an eighth of a mile into his breeze under jockey Javier Castellano when the sirens went on, indicating a loose horse on the track. Castellano kept Catholic Boy on the inner rail but eased back on the throttle noticeably approachin­g the quarter pole and until almost midstretch, at which point the riderless horse passed by in the opposite direction, an outrider in hot pursuit.

With the danger safely passed, Castellano allowed Catholic Boy to pick up the pace once again, galloping out a strong quarter-mile past the wire and around the turn.

“There was a moment or two where things got a little uncomforta­ble, there’s always a point where you worry the loose horse might drop down near the rail,” Thomas said a couple of hours later at his barn. “But Javier has great awareness, he just kind of let him slow down a little bit and when he saw the other horse had cleared, let him kick on and gallop out well. All in all, things are going to happen, and this went about as well as it could under the circumstan­ces.”

Fortunatel­y, for Thomas, the race he is pointing for with Catholic Boy, the Grade 1 Suburban, is still four weeks away.

“If this happened in his last work a week before the race or something like that, I might be concerned,” said Thomas. “But right now we’re in a good maintenanc­e pattern with him. He came back great, full of energy. We’ll probably start taking him over to the main [track] and picking things up with him next week.”

The versatile Catholic Boy launched his 2019 campaign May 18 with a victory on the turf under Castellano in the Grade 2 Dixie on at Pimlico.

A couple of minutes before Catholic Boy’s eventful breeze, his new stablemate Diversify turned in a more convention­al work on the training track, going an easy half-mile in 50.18 before galloping out a strong five furlongs in 1:03.02 and easing up six furlongs in 1:16.13.

Diversify was transferre­d to Thomas by owner Ralph Evans several months after the death of trainer Rick Violette, for whom Diversify won both the Suburban and Grade 1 Whitney last season. Sunday’s work was his fourth here for Thomas since May 11.

“I thought he was good to the wire and then he went ahead and galloped out nicely,” said Thomas. “We know he’s fast, so we’re trying to get a good foundation in him before we begin to hook him into company in a week or two. I’d say if all continues to go well, he’s probably a month or so away from a start, although we’ve got nothing picked out for him at the moment.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States