The historic Churchill Downs
dirt surface had been turned into an oval of slop, ready for ten talented
three-year-old fillies to gallop across it for the most prestigious race generated
for fillies their age: the Kentucky Oaks (GI). Proud Spell, a stocky bay filly
in the orange and green colors of former governor of the Bluegrass State,
Brereton C. Jones, loaded into the starting gate below the Twin Spires before
100,046 fans. Her stablemate, Eight Belles, had been scratched out of the Oaks,
her preference belonging to the next day’s renowned Kentucky Derby (GI). Tragically,
Eight Belles’ remarkable performance in the Derby would end in catastrophe. For
Proud Spell, however, she would carry the same trainer and jockey to a victory.
Following her Oaks triumph,
Proud Spell captured two more graded stakes victories en route to being named
Champion Three-Year-Old Filly of 2008. Her trainer, Larry Jones, had earlier
that year announced that it would be his final year of training. With teary
eyes, the racing world bid him farewell.
However, Jones soon returned to
racing in 2011. He was greeted with a warm welcome and picked up right where he’d
left off, conditioning the eventual 2011 Horse of the Year, the brilliant mare
Havre de Grace. He continued to strong into 2012, revealing several talented
three-year-olds at Fair Grounds Racecourse in New Orleans, Louisiana. Among
those sophomores was Believe You Can, a filly who was sired by the same sire as
Proud Spell – the graded stakes-winning Proud Citizen, who had finished second
in the Kentucky Derby and third in the Preakness Stakes (GI) in 2002 behind War
Emblem.
Believe You Can debuted in June
of her two-year-old career at Delaware Park, finishing fourth behind two eventual
stakes-placed fillies. Her second start would be much more successful; she ran
gamely to score in a five-furlong maiden special weight over the same track by
a neck after leading from start to finish. She continued her Delaware winning
ways next out, dominating a non-winners of two lifetime allowance optional
claiming by 4 ½ lengths in August after racing just off the pace.
Believe You Can’s graded stakes
debut came at the competitive Belmont fall meet, in which she impressively took
the six-furlong Tempted Stakes (GIII) over a small field that included the
graded stakes-winning Gerogie’s Angel and the stakes-placed Select Cat. She
displayed a slightly new dimension, coming from off the pace to score, though
she wasn’t far from the leaders due to the short field.
Her final juvenile start came
in the Pocahontas Stakes (GII) at Churchill Downs, in which she finished an
uninspiring sixth of twelve. It was a deep field, however. Crossing the wire
ahead of Believe You Can was the eventual multiple graded stakes-winning On
Fire Baby, the graded stakes-placed And Why Not, and the stakes-placed and
future multiple stakes-winning Glinda the Good. In the Pocahontas, Believe You
Can defeated horses that had won or would go on to win a total of two graded
stakes and one ungraded stake and fillies that had placed in or would go on to
place in three graded stakes and three ungraded stakes races altogether.
Believe You Can made her
sophomore debut at the Fair Grounds in the Silverbulletday Stakes in late
January, in which she set a steady pace from start to finish to capture the
mile and seventy yards race by 1 ½ lengths. The filly who finished second to her
in the Silverbulletday, Summer Applause, turned the tables on her next out in
the Rachel Alexandra Stakes (GIII) over the same track, however. In the Rachel
Alexandra, Believe You Can settled in third rather than going to lead and raced
along the inside before being maneuvered to the outside and faltering to fourth
as the six-horse field bounded across the finish line.
The Larry Jones trainee rebounded next out, however, leading most of the way in the Fair Grounds Oaks (GII) over a small field to defeat her apparent rival Summer Applause by a head in a valiant effort to hold the other filly off while drifting out.
Despite the fact that Summer
Applause has only managed to conquer Believe You Can once, many feel that she
is the better filly. Though I am part of that group, I believe that Believe You
Can is a gritty, talented filly with the pedigree to allow her to perform well
in the Oaks, despite the fact that her only start over the Churchill Downs
surface was not spectacular.
Obviously, Proud Citizen has already sired a Kentucky Oaks winner – and for the same connections at that. However, his success with three-year-olds does not stop there. He is the sire of two of the leading Kentucky Derby contenders for this year: the multiple graded stakes-placed Mark Valeski and the graded stakes-winning Went the Day Well. Proud Citizen, who is a grandson of the influential sire, sire of sires, and broodmare sire Gone West, is a direct descendant of the great mare Natalma and when bred to Believe You Can’s dam, El Fasto, the two form two crosses of Buckpasser, Natalma, Nearctic, and Tom Fool. El Fasto, a daughter of the significant sire El Prado, is a half-sister to the multiple graded stakes-winning Classic Elegance. She exhibits several crosses of Blue Larkspur, Mahmoud, Pharos, and Turn-To, some of the most influential sires found in the pedigrees of Thoroughbreds.
Believe You Can will have to
run the race of her life in the Kentucky Oaks, but she has previously shown
that she will lay it all on the line to get her nose in front. Her pedigree, though impressive, may
not be quite as dazzling as other fillies pointing for the Run for the Lilies
and her racing performances may not be as spectacular, but she is a
hard-knocking filly running for connections with past successes in the Derby’s
sister. She is certainly a justifiable contender for the Kentucky Oaks.
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