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Market Garden Needs
Pace
By Steve Andersen
Daily Racing Form
ARCADIA, Calif. - With his eyes on
prospects for Del Mar, Sid Craig called trainer Bill Spawr in July and asked him
to inspect and possibly claim a 4-year-old filly running at Hollywood Park.
Spawr claimed Market Garden that day
for $80,000. Two weeks later, she finished second in the Daisycutter Handicap at
Del Mar.
What Market Garden has done since has
made that purchase seem like a bargain. Racing for Craig and his wife, Jenny,
Market Garden won the Pio Pico Stakes at Fairplex Park on Sept. 17 and enters
Saturday's $150,000 California Cup Distaff over about 6 1/2 furlongs on turf at
Santa Anita as a top contender.
"I'm glad the Craigs called," Spawr
said. Market Garden may be ideally suited for the Distaff. S
he is a stalker who may get a perfect
trip behind Alphabet Kisses and Icantgoforthat. She also is feeling good, Spawr
said.
"She keeps improving," Spawr said.
"She's happy, her coat looks better, and she keeps putting on weight. It makes
her easier to train."
Market Garden may not go favored in a
competitive race. As a stalker, she will have company from Western Hemisphere,
the winner of the Fleet Treat Stakes over seven furlongs at Del Mar and the
runner-up in the Grade 2 Honeymoon Breeders' Cup Handicap at Hollywood Park in
June.
Western Hemisphere has been entered in
the Distaff because her stablemate Yearly Report starts in the $150,000 Matron
earlier in the day. Trainer Bob Baffert and Golden Eagle Farm, which owns both
of the 3-year-old fillies, wanted to keep them apart.
"I didn't really have a choice,"
Baffert said of the placement of Western Hemisphere. "She's doing pretty good.
She's a fast filly."
The Distaff may be the last California
Cup appearance for Icantgoforthat, who has won 7 of 34 starts and $472,484. She
may be retired this winter.
Last year, Icantgoforthat was fourth
in the Distaff after challenging for the early lead. She has won two stakes in
the last year, the Grade 3 Monrovia on the hillside turf course and the
Daisycutter, in which she finished three-quarters of a length in front of Market
Garden.
"Who is going to be the pace?" said
Steve Knapp, who trains Icantgoforthat. "We're going to go full out."
Alphabet Kisses, who has yet to start
on the hillside turf course, and Jetinto Houston, a minor stakes winner at Bay
Meadows last month, could join Icantgoforthat on the front.
Trained by Marty Jones, Alphabet
Kisses was second in the Fleet Treat Stakes and third in the one-mile Torrey
Pines Stakes at Del Mar. She led or disputed the lead in both of those starts.
Jetinto Houston has won two stakes on dirt, but has yet to start on turf.
A speedy scenario is ideal for Market
Garden. She won a $40,000 claimer on the hillside turf course last March and
closed from off the pace to finish third in a one-mile race on turf earlier this
year.
"She can be anywhere you want," Spawr
said. "If Icantgoforthat takes the lead, it sets up for us. The distance hits
her right between the eyes."
Copyright © 1998-2004 California Thoroughbred Breeders Association
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