What a difference a
few days didn’t make.
When the Grade 1, $300,000 Personal Ensign Invitational was redrawn on
Wednesday after being postponed this past Sunday, the same tough band of
fillies and mares had been signed up to compete.
The Personal Ensign now joins the Grade 1, $250,000 Forego and the
Grade 1, $750,000 Woodward for a blockbuster “Super Saturday at Saratoga” race card.
Heading the field of six is Ask the Moon, the 2-1 morning-line favorite,
who trainer Martin Wolfson said reminds him a lot of another of his top-shelf
winners, Jessica Is Back.
Both mares were claims by trainer Gary Contessa for Farnsworth Stables.
Soon sent to Wolfson, both went on to win Grade 1 races.
Jessica Is Back went for $50,000 in April 2009 and became a steady
stakes performer before taking the Grade 1 Princess Rooney Handicap the
following year at Calder Race Course. Ask the Moon was claimed for $75,000 this
past June at Belmont Park and two races later won the Grade 1 Ruffian
Handicap on July 31 at Saratoga.
On Saturday, the 6-year-old daughter of Malibu Moon will attempt to
repeat at the Grade 1 level in the Personal Ensign.
“She’s training very well,” Wolfson said. “We
claimed her because we – me and the owners – love [her sire] Malibu
Moon. She was one of those hard-knocking mares and she fit the program.”
In her first race for her new connections, Ask the Moon flashed her
high speed in the one-turn $60,000 Sky Beauty at 1 1/16 miles at Belmont Park before fading to third. She went
from Contessa to Wolfson’s barn for her next start and led gate-to-wire,
beating runner-up Super Espresso in the Ruffian by 5 ¾ lengths.
“She was speed crazy going one turn,” Wolfson said of the
run in the Sky Beauty on July 1. “It was a good race to observe her. I
liked the way the race at Saratoga
fell into place. She’s really relaxing better, and I think the two turns
help her.”
Wolfson won the Personal Ensign two years ago with Icon Project, who
crushed her foes by 13 lengths. The trainer has confidence in Ask the Moon but
doesn’t predict that kind of giant score.
“It’s her first time 1 ¼ miles,” he said. “She
seems like she’ll go that far.”
An interesting wild card in the Personal Ensign is Pachattack, a
5-year-old daughter of Pulpit making her first dirt start after 23 races on
turf and artificial surfaces.
Trained by Gerard Butler, the English mare finished eighth in the Grade
1 Beverly D. on August 13 at Arlington
Park. Prior to that, she
dominated the Grade 3 Arlington Matron at 1 1/8 miles on the Polytrack, winning
by six lengths in her American debut.
She also won at the 1 ¼-mile Personal Ensign distance on the Woodbine
Polytrack last year in an ungraded stakes race.
“She’s very, very good,” said Butler’s
assistant trainer, Andrew Morris, who has Pachattack stabled in Todd
Pletcher’s barn at Saratoga.
“The decision to try dirt was between the owner [M.V. Deegan] and trainer.
She’s by Pulpit out of a stakes-producing mare. She has broodmare
potential. We don’t know how she’ll perform until we try her on it,
but all she has to do is translate her form from the Polytrack and she’ll
perform well.”
Pachattack is 4-1 on the morning line.
Second choice at 3-1 is Super Espresso, owned by celebrity chef Bobby
Flay and trained by Pletcher. She finished second in the Ruffian, third two
races back in the Grade 1 Ogden Phipps Handicap at Belmont Park and won the Grade 3 Allaire DuPont Distaff
on Preakness Day at Pimlico.
Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott will send out Juddmonte Farms’
Acronym, second last out in an overnight stakes race at 1 1/8 miles on August 5
at Saratoga.
She has a win and a second-place finish in two starts at Saratoga, and beat Life At Ten by 6 ¼ lengths
in 2009 when trained by the late Bobby Frankel.
“We’re going!” Mott said of Acronym, 6-1 on the
morning line. “She’s put in some nice races early in her career.
She’s had a lot of layoff lines. She had minor things that bugged her,
trouble with her feet.”
Completing the field are Delaware Park-based Tiz Miz Sue, 4-1, third in
the Ruffian for trainer Steve Hobby; and Protesting, 8-1, a 5 ¾-length winner
in an optional claimer on July 27 at the Spa for Hall of Fame trainer Shug
McGaughey.
The
field for the Grade 1, $300,000 Personal Ensign Invitational:
|
PP
|
Horse
|
Jockey
|
Wgt
|
Trainer
|
Odds
|
|
1
|
Acronym
(KY)
|
J. Lezcano
|
116
|
W. I. Mott
|
6-1
|
|
2
|
Ask
the Moon (MD)
|
J. Castellano
|
120
|
Martin Wolfson
|
2-1
|
|
3
|
Pachattack
(KY)
|
R. Maragh
|
116
|
G. Butler
|
9-2
|
|
4
|
Protesting
(KY)
|
J.R. Velazquez
|
116
|
C. McGaughey
|
6-1
|
|
5
|
Super
Espresso (KY)
|
R. Dominguez
|
116
|
T. Pletcher
|
3-1
|
|
6
|
Tiz
Miz Sue (KY)
|
J. Rocco Jr.
|
116
|
S. Hobby
|
9-2
|