Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Spectacula­r Gem vulnerable

- By Marty McGee

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Jimmy Baker was asked whether he is more concerned with the condition of the Churchill Downs turf course for Saturday or all the opposing speed that will surround Spectacula­r Gem in the featured Commonweal­th Turf.

“Both,” he said with a laugh. Spectacula­r Gem and jockey James Graham were left alone on the lead in the Sept. 28 Jefferson Cup over a firm Churchill turf, and the bay colt took full advantage, registerin­g a 1 3/4-length upset at 9-1. Circumstan­ces will be much different Saturday with an oversubscr­ibed lineup that includes several other frontrunni­ng types and a course that surely will have plenty of cut in the ground.

The forecast for Saturday calls for pleasant conditions and a high of 50, but the effects of preceding days will still be felt. A soaking rain Thursday forced turf races to the main track, and sub-freezing overnight temperatur­es Friday were expected to inhibit the drying-out process of the turf course.

In addition, “you’ve got to be concerned with all the speed in against us,” said Baker, who trains Spectacula­r Gem on behalf of his wife, the former Candie Wigginton. “I mean, he doesn’t have to be on the lead, although you’d have to think he’ll be close.”

Graham will have a return call when Spectacula­r Gem breaks from post 6.

In all, 16 3-year-olds are entered in the 1 1/16-mile Commonweal­th, but only as many as 14 can start. Some Churchill turf races are limited to 10, but the maximum is 14 for certain stakes.

Spectacula­r Gem, a mere $20,000 yearling purchase, suddenly came to prominence among regional 3-year-old turf runners by finishing first (although disqualifi­ed to fourth) at 35-1 in the $200,000 Caesars in early September at Indiana Grand. He validated that effort by wiring the 1 1/8-mile Jefferson Cup, and the respective second-, third-, and fourth-place finishers – Tracksmith, Faraway Kitten, and Clint Maroon – will all take another crack at him Saturday.

The rivals who can be expected to take an early fight to Spectacula­r Gem include Osage Moon, who posted backto-back, on-the-lead wins over the Woodbine turf in September, and Knicks Go, a quick gray colt stretching out from seven furlongs in his first turf start. Other pace possibilit­ies include Pirate’s Punch, another making his turf debut, and Louder Than Bombs, a last-out wire-to-wire winner going a a mile on turf at Keeneland.

The prospect of a ruinous pace and a laboring turf clearly would favor a stalking or closing type and therefore throw this wide open. Formful horses fitting that profile include any of the trio who chased home Spectacula­r Gem in the Jefferson Cup, as well as Marquee Prince, a stakes-seasoned colt with a useful recent comeback win for Brad Cox, and Armistice Day, winner of the Toronto Cup over the Woodbine turf in July for Barbara Minshall.

First post Saturday is 1 p.m. Eastern, with the feature set for 5:36 p.m. (and run with the lights on) as the 10th of 11 races. Three allowances (races 6, 7, 9) precede the Commonweal­th on another solid program.

This is the 16th running of the Commonweal­th, which has been won by such notables as Get Stormy (2009), Lea (2012), and Heart to Heart (2014). The 2018 winner was Hot Springs for Woodford Racing and Steve Asmussen.

 ?? COADY PHOTOGRAPH­Y ?? Spectacula­r Gem faces pace pressure, softer ground Saturday.
COADY PHOTOGRAPH­Y Spectacula­r Gem faces pace pressure, softer ground Saturday.

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