He came, he saw, he conquered. That’s the motto jockey
Garrett Gomez hopes to follow on Road to the Derby Kickoff Day at Fair Grounds Race Course & Slots.
With five mounts on the undercard and a commitment aboard
Wilkinson for trainer
Neil Howard in the Grade III Lecomte Stakes, the California-based Gomez
returns to New Orleans for the first time since 2008 when he won the
Silverbulletday Stakes on
Indian Blessing, the Grade II New Orleans Handicap with
Circular Quay, and the Grade II Mervin Muniz Jr. Memorial Handicap on
Proudinsky.
“New Orleans is great,” said Gomez, who will ride maiden runner
First and Ten in the fifth race of the day, Apart in the $60,000 Louisiana Handicap,
Bernie Flint trainee Sheer Beauty in the Dr. A. B. Leggio Memorial,
Aide in the $100,000 Silverbulletday and turf sprinter
Elsaroarin in the 11th for trainer
Ronny Werner. “The city
is a neat place to visit and the racetrack is great; a lot of guys go
down there in the winter to get horses ready for the spring campaign so
it makes sense for us to come in and ride a
few if we have the opportunity.”
First and Ten, Apart, and Aide are trained by
Al Stall Jr., with whom Gomez partnered to win the 2010 Breeders’ Cup Classic over
Zenyatta with 2010 Champion Older Male
Blame. Agent Ron Anderson
said the relationship between the rider and Stall developed
over the past two years as the Claiborne Farm runner took his path to
prominence with 39-year-old Gomez in the saddle.
“They gravitated toward us and we gravitated toward them,”
Anderson said. “I know Al’s a big fan of Garrett’s and
Seth (Hancock)
is, too, and of course we love Claiborne because they breed beautiful,
nice horses that win races. A lot of it has to do with that comfort
zone, too, the
confidence factor that trainers and jockeys have with each other, and
Al and Garrett obviously communicate well and see eye-to-eye.”
The
last time Gomez and Stall teamed up was at Churchill Downs for the
Grade I Clark Handicap and undercard races. Then, Apart ran eighth in
the Clark and Aide finished fourth in the Grade II Golden Rod Handicap –
both disappointing efforts considering that the 4-year-old son of
Flatter had strung together three wins in the Prelude Stakes, the Grade
II Super Derby, and the Grade III Ack Ack Handicap
and the 3-year-old Arch filly had registered an allowance score at
Churchill on Oct 31 by 19 ¾ lengths. But Gomez said he still has high
hopes for both.
“We know Apart is talented, the question is how talented he is,” the jockey remarked. “In the
Clark, just didn’t get over the track.
He traveled well until I asked him to run and then he just fell apart
for some reason. We know he’s got ability, he’s a good-moving horse, so
hopefully he’ll rebound from whatever was going
on.”
Aide’s
issue in the Golden Rod was an extremely rank performance, but Stall is
hoping familiar surroundings will help her relax in the
Silverbulletday.
“I
don’t really know what happened there; we have no physical excuse,
nothing,” he said. “The time before when she won for fun she was just
like loping along. This time, Garrett was like, ‘Whoa, whoa, whoa,’ his
knees were straight out… we were all watching, I was like, ‘What?!’ We
have absolutely no idea what went wrong. So we just brought her back
down here, gave her a bit of a freshening, picked
her back up, and she’s gonna run. Maybe it’ll help her walking right
out of this barn to the paddock; we raced and returned from Keeneland
that particular day, whereas when she won by 20 she came over with Blame
and all those horses so she was there four or
five days. She can be a little like that.”
Stall
said both horses – and his maiden starter – are entered on Saturday to
determine where they should be placed down the road.
“At
this point in the year, some maiden races are a different strength than
others, some allowance races are a different strength than others;
you don’t know exactly where everybody stands,” he explained. “That’s
what these races are for, to sort everybody out, and hopefully we can do
that this weekend.”
Of
course, having Gomez in town – a finalist for the 2010 Eclipse Award
for Outstanding Jockey and already a two-time Eclipse Award winner –
is an added bonus for local trainers like Howard, who lost Wilkinson’s
regular rider Robby Albarado
to a Jan. 2 heel injury. And the jet-setting jockey is always shopping for potential horses on the Triple Crown trail.
“We’re
definitely looking to get on whatever we can get on right now in the
3-year-old division; it’s that time of year,” Gomez said. “We’re
searching for the good ones again and hopefully we end up on a couple
head like that.”