Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Owners’ Prestige one to catch

- By Randy Goulding

Owners’ Prestige will be tough to run down if he can get away on his own in a $20,000 waiver-claiming race that serves as the feature race Thursday at Emerald Downs. The 10-race card begins at 5 p.m. Pacific.

Grinder Sparksaglo and Cody’s Choice should keep Owners’ Prestige honest, however. A hot and contested pace will help The Press, who could get the trip in the 5 1/2furlong dash for 3-year-olds and up.

An Australian-bred, Owners’ Prestige began his career in Hong Kong, where he went unplaced in two starts at Sha Tin in 2017. He made his North American debut a winning one for trainer Blaine Wright. Breaking alertly with Gary Wales aboard, he cruised to a 6 1/2-length romp in a maiden special weight race at Emerald in 2018.

His only other win came in his first outing last year. Running over a track rated wetfast, he took control early in a first-level allowance race with a $30,000 claiming price on Sept. 8 at Emerald.

In his most recent start, Owners’ Prestige set the pace and held the lead at the eighth pole before tiring to fifth in a $25,000 claiming race Feb. 29 at Golden Gate Fields.

He will break from post 2 in the eight-horse field with Wales riding.

Trained by Howard Belvoir, The Press was coming off a seven-month layoff when he won a first-level allowance race with a $30,000 claiming option in his initial start last year on May 19. It was a strong performanc­e as he had to steady at the quarter pole and then had to wait for room turning for home. He finished full of run to beat Grinder Sparksaglo by 2 1/2 lengths in the six-furlong sprint.

A five-time winner, The Press has been working well this spring, and Belvoir has a respectabl­e 15 percent strike rate with horses coming back from a layoff of 180 days or more the past two years.

The 7-year-old son of Harbor the Gold drew post 7, where he should get a perfect stalking trip with Jennifer Whitaker aboard.

Grinder Sparksaglo by far has the most wins in the field, 15, and money earned, $250,017. The 9-year-old Washington-bred gelding has good speed but does not necessaril­y need the lead to win.

Trained by Joe Baze, the son of Grindstone is making his first start since he finished eighth in the $25,000 Bienvenido­s on Oct. 12 at Turf Paradise. He forced the issue early before fading in the 6 1/2-furlong dash.

Last year’s leading trainer, Frank Lucarelli, has a solid one-two punch with Freiburg and Bullet Drill. Freiburg figures to be in the mix early. Bullet Drill will be rolling late.

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