I found yesterday, from morning to late in the evening, a real treat. This sport, from the pageantry of a Triple Crown race, to eliminations for a set of very good harness races, can deliver a lot of excitement in one single day.
Let's go to Mohawk!
The tilt in the (sadly) elimination of the North America Cup was the talk of the sport. This race felt much more like a thoroughbred race to me, where horses are meeting truly for a "first time".
Beau Jangles toiled at home most of his life, and only had a couple races against open competition. Indiana World Champion Odds on Mr. Mamba hadn't traveled. And Brandon Blvd was here last year, but to me his form cycle was over the top for the Breeders Crown. He was coming off five races where he had to go sub 1:50, and he shipped north from the Lexington heat. I think he was kinda chewed come the final.
We were likely going to see these three good colts meet, when all three were fresh.
I think this race delivered in spades.
Odds on Mr. Mamba came into the race having shown a tremendous cruising speed, and he seemed to never get tired. He surely was a very impressive winner in a super-fun horse race, but I wonder if the glass is half full or empty for next week's final.
To go full speed in a harness race, things have to go very well from an energy distribution (fractions) standpoint, and this gelding might have shown us a kink in his armor when he ended up in the ten path.
Leaving aside the fact that coming home in :26.3 while doing that (and showing so much speed and talent he was running over his cover while they're going 1:21.1) is freakish, if he does it next week how does he provide any value?
Last night I bet him and took what I thought was an overlaid price; even being scared James would underdrive him, which I think he did. And this was only his second start of the year so he should peak in the coming weeks. But I'll likely look elsewhere in the final.
Regardless, I am happy for this horse and his connections. I don't know if it's because the horse races in Indiana, he's a gelding, he's not bred like the east coast blue-bloods love, or what. But Dexter Dunn bails on him like he's discarding an old shoe, a bunch of people I see were picking him for third or worse last night. This gritty horse shows up on race day and says "take that!". Way to go.
Beau Jangles is probably the first good horse we have had to judge in the sires stakes age, where they can rhyme off win after win against lesser, and our opinion lacks the proper perspective. We had a couple data points with Beau against open competition, but he did show us his bottom in the Metro, and I don't even think the Metro field was very good.
Last night we would probably learn something for the first time, which to me made the race amazingly compelling.
I'm a little surprised he did not go by Gentleman's Club faster, and I suppose even if he did, he just tows Mamba into a better position and still gets beat. But I am not sold we saw the best of him last evening. It was a sticky track, and sure, I think he was tired and loose-lined at the wire in his 49.3 romp a couple starts ago, (and Doc always has his horses ready) but he still hasn't had to be stretched out like the other two have.
Although today we're back to reality and the superhorse talk has quelled, I think there are some signs he can improve and win this thing next week. I just think it will be tough to get a price.
I'm too hard on Brandon Blvd, and it's probably not fair. But unlike the top two I don't think there's any mystery. He's a fast pacer who has had many races against others pacers who can go around 1:49. He was fine last night and almost won. I think the crowd had the horse pegged right at 6-1 (making Dex's choice look a little more curious), and I don't think he's faster than the top two. He can certainly win next week with a trip, in my view.
The other big contender to me looks to be Sweet Lovin' Lou, and there's a lot of mystery left with this fella. Third off a layoff we figured he'd fire a big one and he did, with most of the crowd joining us at 3-5. I still don't think he's all there - he doesn't look sure on his feet to me yet - but wow, he's fast!
He's one of these horses you expect to be great late in the season or as a four year old. The Swedes wait on these types and they only get better and better. I love this little horse. If the price is right next week I'll bet him, but I'd rather be betting Breeders Crown futures if we had such a market.
We throw around "Superstar" in this sport way too often, in my opinion, but one horse on last night's card who hasn't had it thrown around much but deserves it was Loua Dipa. After coughing up a lung in her debut, she was given time off and she's back to crushing good fillies like they're conditioned claimers.
Last year this filly won in 1:48, which is surely something, but she did it with her ears pricked. That's something I've never seen before, male female, two year old or four year old.
A year ago the locals were talking about Chantilly entering the North America Cup while she is all out in 1:49 and change, but I'd pay admission if this filly was in the Cup box this weekend. There's a strong chance I'd bet her.
She, to me, is as close to a superstar we have in this sport. I don't care if she has off-days and loses a race, because her on-days are something I haven't seen since Rainbow Blue.
On to Belmont!
We can complain - and many of us did - about a racetrack bias, but overall I found Belmont Day really interesting.
A good many sharps I knew were not touting Segesta, and that provided some value in the Just a Game. Finding Classic Q was one of my few successes of the "Stakes Festival", so there's that.
In the True North there was a weird vibe on Book em Danno, where the traditional handicappers wondered if he had tailed off last year, and wasn't the same horse. Offshore completely disagreed - he was about even money most of the week, with Bentornato about 2-1. The odds board reversed these prices and Danno backers were paid. That's such a nice horse.
I think a few of you liked John The Beer Man at a price in the sprint, and I joined you. He seemed to decide he was a steeplechase horse in the middle of the lane and jumped something, but I don't think we were cashing the win end anyway.
What a performance by Englishman. The two horses he left in the dust are no slouches. Speechless.
Golden Tempo winning the Belmont annoyed me for a couple of reasons, i) I make a ton of money if Commandment won and ii) I think trainers not wanting to run horses back reasonably are pox on this sport.
But, taking nothing away from the horse himself - he just shows up and runs when they ask him - wow, really nice job. He closed from last on a speed track and dug in like a good horse should. They could've went around three more times and they weren't going to beat him.
I do wonder if the track changed at all - migosh the kickback looked dreadful - but you can't take anything away from the winner; other than he was probably a Triple Crown winner if the connections wanted it to happen. My rant is now over.
Have a nice week everyone!