Although Dale Romans has Dullahan slated to face
Triple Crown hopeful I’ll Have Another in the June 9 Belmont Stakes, it
is Monday’s Grade 1, $750,000 Metropolitan Handicap, not the “Test
of the Champion,” that the trainer said could end up being “the
race of the year.”
“[The Met Mile] has quality horses, and I’m glad to be part
of it,” said Romans, who will send out Shackleford in the Memorial Day
feature. “I wouldn’t be surprised if we see a champion in this
race.”
Four Grade 1 winners, a Grade 2 winner, and a New York-bred riding a
five-race winning streak were entered in the Met Mile, which will be conducted
for the 120th time on Monday and will serve as the first North
American Breeders’ Cup Challenge race this year. As part of the
“Win and You’re In” series, the Met Mile offers the winner’s
connections a waiver of the $30,000 in entry fees for the Breeders’ Cup
Dirt Mile and a $10,000 travel allowance, should he be nominated to the
Breeders’ Cup program by October 22. The foal nominator or horse owner
will also receive a $10,000 breeder award.
The one-mile Metropolitan Handicap will be run as race 10 on the
11-race holiday card, which also features the Grade 1, $300,000 Acorn for
3-year-old fillies, the Grade 2 $200,000 Sands Point for 3-year-old turf
fillies, and the Grade 1, $400,000 Ogden Phipps Handicap for fillies and mares.
Together, they comprise a $500,000 Guaranteed All Graded Stakes Pick 4,
beginning with the Sands Point in race 7. MSG+ will show the Met Mile and the
Acorn live during a telecast that runs from 5-6 p.m.
The Met Mile will be the second start of 2012 for To Honor and Serve,
who prepped for the race with a 5 ¼-length victory over Monday’s course
and distance in the Grade 3 Westchester on April 27.
“He’s had two good works [since the Westchester],
and he seems to be looking good,” said Hall of Famer Bill Mott, who
trains To Honor and Serve for Charlotte Weber’s Live Oak Plantation.
“It looks like it’s a good race coming up. Nice horses here,
without a doubt.”
The five-time graded stakes winner carries a two-race winning streak
into Saturday’s race, having won the Grade 1 Cigar Mile Handicap by 1 ¾
lengths in November. The homebred has won four of his last five starts, including
a Saratoga
optional claimer and the Grade 2 Pennsylvania Derby prior to his seventh in the
Grade 1 Breeders’ Cup Classic in November.
To Honor and Serve, made the 3-1 co-second choice on the morning line
and assigned 120 pounds, will leave from the rail with Jose Lezcano aboard.
Lining up to face To Honor and Serve are the top three finishers from
the Grade 1, seven-furlong Carter Handicap on April 7 at Aqueduct Racetrack:
Jackson Bend, Caleb’s Posse, and Shackleford.
In the Carter, Jackson Bend split horses nearing the three-eighths to
challenge pacesetter Shackleford, took over in upper stretch, and held off
Caleb’s Posse’s furious stretch run to prevail by a nose.
Shackleford finished 1 ½ lengths behind in third.
The Carter was the second Grade 1 win for Robert LaPenta’s Jackson
Bend, who took the 2011 Forego at Saratoga Race Course. Between the Forego and
the Carter he was second in the Grade 2 Kelso Handicap at Belmont,
third in the Grade 1 Breeders’ Cup Sprint at Churchill Downs, and first
and third, respectively, in a pair of starts at Gulfstream Park,
the Grade 3 Hal’s Hope and in the Grade 2 Gulfstream Park Handicap.
Jackson Bend is the 121-pound co-highweight for the Met Mile, which his
Hall of Fame trainer, Nick Zito, sees as both a badge of honor and a challenge
to overcome.
“We’re proud of him, and everyone knows what he has done,”
said Zito. “The weight is a pretty big assignment. He’s a small
horse; it’s not like he’s the Incredible Hulk. He’s the
smallest horse in the field, but you can’t measure the size of his heart,
and that’s what matters. Giving weight to To Honor and Serve shows you
the deal. Jackson Bend has a great reputation, and hopefully he runs his usual
race.”
Corey Nakatani will ride Jackson Bend, 3-1 on the morning line, from
the outside in the field of six.
The 8-5 morning-line favorite for the Met Mile is McNeill Stables and
Cheyenne Stables’ Caleb’s Posse, who is looking to go one better
after finishing a close second in both the Grade 3 Tom Fool Handicap at six
furlongs and the Carter at Aqueduct. In 2011, the well-traveled son of Posse won
five of 10 starts, including the Grade 1 Foxwoods King’s Bishop at Saratoga over Uncle
Mo and the Grade 1
Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile over Shackleford.
Caleb’s Posse is a deep closer, and trainer Donnie Von Hemel said
the nebulous pace scenario created by the Met Mile’s smaller field is a
“legitimate concern.”
‘There’s nothing you can do about it,” said Von
Hemel. “He has a good rider [Rajiv Maragh], who hopefully can take
advantage of whatever happens during the race.”
“You can make a case for everybody in the race,” added Von
Hemel. “It’s very competitive. It’s a heck of a race.”
Caleb’s Posse will depart from post 3 under 121 pounds, including
Maragh.
Unlike Jackson Bend and Caleb’s Posse, Shackleford has competed
since the Carter, edging reigning Champion Sprinter Amazombie in a stretch
battle to take the Grade 2 Churchill Downs on May 5 by one length, his first
victory since his score in the 2011 Preakness. Prior to the Carter, he was
seventh in the Grade 1 Donn Handicap in February at Gulfstream Park.
“He ran huge to defeat the champion, and that was a big deal,”
said trainer Dale Romans. “It took him a couple of races, but he seems to
be returning to his old self. He’s getting better every time.”
Romans has no qualms about having run Shackleford, who carries the
colors of breeders Michael Lauffer and W.D. Cubbedge, between the Carter and
the Met Mile.
“Shackleford likes to do a lot of work, and having a race under
his belt will only help,” said Romans. “He thrives on the activity.
It keeps him happy.”
Tabbed at 4-1 and assigned 119 pounds, Shackleford will leave from post
2. John Velazquez will be aboard Shackleford for the first time in the Met
Mile.
Mike Repole’s Caixa Eletronica achieved a career high in his most
recent start, posting a three-length success in the Grade 2 Charles Town
Classic on April 14. Claimed by his current connections for $62,500 in the
winter of 2011, Caixa Eletronica joined To Honor and Serve, Jackson Bend,
Caleb’s Posse, and Shackleford in the millionaire ranks with his Charles
Town Classic victory.
The Charles Town Classic was the second victory of 2012 for Caixa
Eletronica, who took the Rise Jim overnight stakes in January at Aqueduct, then
was third in that venue’s Grade 3 Toboggan on February 4. He was a
well-beaten sixth in the Grade 2 General George Handicap on February 20.
“He ran in the General George off a quick rest, 16 days off the
Toboggan,” said Michael McCarthy, assistant to trainer Todd Pletcher.
“Things just never worked for him that day. He got bumped around and
wasn’t in a great position down the backside. He came out of the race
sick. With a horse like him, it’s about his attitude more than anything
else. You don’t have to do a lot with him. With a horse who has run as
many times as he has, different surfaces, different distances, he pretty much
takes care of himself. He’s amazing. There’s not much else he
can’t do. You saw that in the Charles Town race, and you’ve seen
that in the sprint races here. Nothing would surprise me. Even if he
doesn’t win, I don’t think he’ll disgrace himself. I think
he’s good enough to win.”
Caixa Eletronica, who at the age of 7 is the oldest Met Mile entrant,
was installed at 15-1 on the morning line and assigned 117 pounds. Javier
Castellano will ride the son of Arromanches.
Saginaw
will attempt to emulate Caixa Eletronica and become a graded stakes winner
after having been acquired by his present connections via the claim box.
Trainer David Jacobson, who owns the 6-year-old in partnership with
Drawing Away Stable, claimed Saginaw
for $30,000 in January at Aqueduct. The purchase has proven to be a good one as
Saginaw has won four straight, including the
Carr Heaven overnight stakes on April 29 and the Affirmed Success last Saturday
at Belmont Park, since the claim.
David Cohen will ride Saginaw,
10-1 on the morning line and weighted at 115 pounds. The duo will leave from
post 4.
The field for the Grade 1, $750,000 Metropolitan
Handicap:
|
PP
|
Horse
|
Jockey
|
Wgt
|
Trainer
|
Odds
|
|
1
|
To Honor and Serve (KY)
|
J Lezcano
|
120
|
W I Mott
|
3-1
|
|
2
|
Shackleford (KY)
|
J R Velazquez
|
119
|
D L Romans
|
4-1
|
|
3
|
Caleb's Posse (KY)
|
R Maragh
|
121
|
D K Von Hemel
|
8-5
|
|
4
|
Saginaw (NY)
|
D Cohen
|
115
|
D Jacobson
|
10-1
|
|
5
|
Caixa Eletronica (KY)
|
J Castellano
|
117
|
T A Pletcher
|
15-1
|
|
6
|
Jackson Bend (FL)
|
C S Nakatani
|
121
|
N P Zito
|
3-1
|