Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Single BC prep likely the plan for McKinzie

- By David Grening

SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. – With a signature victory in Saturday’s Grade 1 Whitney Stakes on his résumé and a berth in the $6 million Breeders’ Cup Classic in November secured, McKinzie returned to California on Monday and he might not have to leave the state for the remainder of the year.

Trainer Bob Baffert said he would likely run McKinzie one more time before the BC Classic, scheduled for Nov. 2 at Santa Anita. By process of eliminatio­n, the Grade 1, $300,000 Awesome Again Stakes at Santa Anita on Sept. 28 might make the most sense.

On Sunday morning, Baffert was noncommitt­al on McKinzie’s next start. He said if he were going to run back in the Grade 1, $750,000 Woodward in Saratoga on Aug. 31 “I’d have to leave him here, and I don’t want to do that,” Baffert said.

Baffert also didn’t seem keen on running McKinzie 1 1/4 miles in a race like the Jockey Club Gold Cup at Belmont Park before running that distance again in the BC Classic. The Awesome Again is run at 1 1/8 miles over a Santa Anita surface on which McKinzie has two graded stakes wins, was disqualifi­ed from a third, and has two seconds.

“I don’t know if I’m going to ship him again or leave him at home,” said Baffert, himself scheduled to stay in Saratoga for the Fasig-Tipton yearling auction Monday and Tuesday. “I haven’t really sat down to think about it.”

Baffert was just happy to have gotten “a proper Grade 1” victory for McKinzie, who had won the Los Alamitos Derby at 2 and the Pennsylvan­ia Derby and Malibu at 3. This year, McKinzie lost the Santa Anita Handicap by a nose and was a troubled-trip second in the Grade 1 Metropolit­an Handicap at Belmont on June 8.

In the Whitney, McKinzie received an up-close stalking trip under Mike Smith, put away Preservati­onist in upper stretch, and easily held Yoshida at bay while never feeling the leather of Smith’s whip. McKinzie’s final time of 1:47.10 for 1 1/8 miles equaled the second-fastest Whitney run since it was moved to that distance in 1955. McKinzie earned a career-best 111 Beyer Speed Figure.

“I just want to keep him at that level,” Baffert said. “I don’t want to see any more.”

Yoshida finished second by 4 3/4 lengths in the Whitney, a much-improved effort over the trio of sixth-place finishes he had to begin the year. Yoshida won the Woodward last year and Mott said he would definitely look at bringing him back in that spot.

“If Yoshida’s good, we could certainly look at it,” Mott said.

Mott was pointing Hofburg to the Woodward, but said that horse “got a little bit of a snotty nose” after he won an allowance race earlier in the Saratoga meet.

“Our schedule has gotten a little bit tight with him as far as coming back for the Woodward,” Mott said.

Thunder Snow sticking around

Thunder Snow will be pointed to the Woodward after scratching from the Whitney due to an elevated temperatur­e diagnosed following a brief training session the morning of the race.

While trainer Saeed bin Suroor returned to England, Thunder Snow remained in Saratoga, moving from the quarantine barn on the Oklahoma side of Saratoga to the Greentree training facility adjacent to the backstretc­h of the main track. Sheikh Mohammed al-Maktoum, owner of Thunder Snow, owns the Greentree property.

Thunder Snow jogged on the main track Monday morning.

“He recovered good, no problem. He will run at the end of the month,” Suroor said by phone from England. “The horse is super fit. He’ll be ready.”

Others who could possibly make the Woodward are Gunnevera, second to Yoshida last year; Catholic Boy, the 2018 Travers winner; and Tom’s d’Etat and Wooderson, the 1-2 finishers in Friday’s $100,000 Alydar Stakes.

Vino Rosso, third in the Whitney, could point to the Woodward or wait for the Jockey Club Gold Cup at Belmont on Sept. 28, according to owner Mike Repole.

◗ All-sources handle for Saturday’s 11-race card was $31,835,863, a Whitney Day record. The previous mark was $30,153,138 set in 2017. Ontrack handle was $7,078,192 and paid attendance was 40,791.

 ?? BARBARA D. LIVINGSTON ?? McKinzie earned a career-best Beyer of 111 in the Whitney.
BARBARA D. LIVINGSTON McKinzie earned a career-best Beyer of 111 in the Whitney.

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