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Bold Chieftain Bypasses Mile for
Classic
By DRF.com
ARCADIA, Calif. - The election results may never be known, but the four
owners of Bold Chieftain made a surprise decision for their colt in
Saturday's California Cup program at the Oak Tree at Santa Anita meeting.
The quartet - owners Dwaine Hall,
Ernest Langbein, Kenneth Robinson, plus trainer and part-owner Bill Morey
Jr. - have decided to try the three-time stakes winner in Saturday's
$250,000 California Cup Classic and not the $175,000 Mile on turf on the
same day.
"We had a vote within our
foursome," Morey said, explaining the decision. Asked what the vote was,
Morey smiled, sheepishly.
"No matter where we go, it will be tough," he said. "I expect to be
tough."
The decision to try the California
Cup Classic with Bold Chieftain is something of a gamble. Bold Chieftain
has won 6 of 12 starts and $315,775, but he has never faced a rival as
accomplished as Lava Man, the multimillionaire who will be strongly
favored in the Classic. Had Bold Chieftain started in the Mile, he may
have been favored.
The Classic has drawn a field of
11, with Lava Man starting from post 10 in the 1 1/8-mile race. Bold
Chieftain, the mount of Russell Baze, breaks from the outside. Celtic
Dreamin, another top contender, starts from post 4.
The 11-race California Cup program
features eight stakes, two starter handicaps, and one maiden race, all for
statebreds.
Bold Chieftain, by Chief Seattle, won the California Dreamin' Handicap at
Del Mar in August and was fourth in the Grade 3 Bay Meadows Breeders' Cup
Handicap on Sept. 22, his most recent start.
A start on Santa Anita's Cushion
Track synthetic track presents another unknown variable. Bold Chieftain
has never won on such a surface, but he was a game second on a similar
surface at Hollywood Park during the summer.
Morey said he was encouraged that
Bold Chieftain worked well on Golden Gate Fields's Tapeta synthetic
surface last month.
"That was another factor that
played into" starting in the Classic, Morey said.
Lava Man will start in the
California Cup Classic under a cloud. After successfully defending his
titles in the Santa Anita Handicap and Hollywood Gold Cup earlier this
year, he has been sixth in his last two starts - the Pacific Classic, and
the Oak Tree Mile on turf here Oct. 7.
Those losses have given trainer
Rafael Becerra encouragement that Celtic Dreamin deserves to challenge
Lava Man.
"Maybe we'll catch him on a bad
day," Becerra said of Lava Man. "But he can be dangerous."
Owned by K.K. Sengara, Celtic
Dreamin, 3, has won 5 of 6 starts, the most recent of which was his first
stakes - a win by 5 1/2 lengths in the Grade 3 British Columbia Derby at
Hastings on Sept. 23.
"I think he's on top of his game,"
Becerra said.
Celtic Dreamin races near the
front. He will be ridden for the first time by Garrett Gomez in the
California Cup Classic. The presence of Celtic Dreamin and Lava Man at the
front of the field will make for interesting tactics.
"He likes to fight," Becerra said
of Celtic Dreamin. "I think I have to be close to Lava Man."
The Classic is the 10th race on the
program, which begins at noon Pacific. Earlier on the program,
Somethinaboutlaura will try for her 17th career win in the $150,000 Matron
for fillies and mares at 1 1/16 miles.
Dancing Edie, the winner of the
Grade 3 Sen. Ken Maddy Handicap on Sept. 26, will be favored in the
$150,000 Distaff at about 6 1/2 furlongs on the hillside turf course.
In the $150,000 Sprint at six
furlongs, Bilo makes his first start since winning the Grade 1 Triple Bend
Handicap going seven furlongs at Hollywood Park in July. He was sidelined
during the summer with foot problems, trainer Marty Jones said.
One of the best betting races of
the day is the $175,000 Mile. The field of 12 includes defending champion
Epic Power, who drew the rail; the rapidly improving Joy's Comet; and 2007
stakes winners Big Bad Leroybrown, Jack's Wild, Now Victory, Unusual
Suspect, and Zoning In.
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