Showing posts with label chad brown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chad brown. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Derby Hopeful: Normandy Invasion

Derby Hopefuls feature the horses I view as the best contenders leading up to the Kentucky Derby. Each horse spotlighted in a Derby Hopeful will join the 2013 PTG Derby Hopeful roster, found on the right side of the blog. Horses will be listed in an order that corresponds to how highly I think of them, with the horse I think most highly of ranking at the top. A horse featured in a Derby Hopeful may be taken off the roster if its performances after its article are published are not up to par or if that horse is taken off the Triple Crown trail, though those articles will remain on my blog.

“You are about to embark upon a great crusade, toward which we have striven these many months. The eyes of the world are upon you. The hopes and prayers of liberty loving people everywhere march with you…” – Dwight D. Eisenhower

This message was relayed to troops by General Eisenhower prior to the invasion of Normandy, but ironically suits the horse Normandy Invasion’s approach to the Kentucky Derby (GI). In many ways, the rush of twenty horses down the dirt oval at Churchill Downs is similar to a battle as jockeys jostle for position aboard their mounts. For months, horse racing enthusiasts anticipate the Run for the Roses and once the great event arrives, the racing world’s eyes are fixed upon it. Thousands of loyal fans hope and pray that their favorite horse will wear the garland of roses in the winner’s enclosure once the Greatest Two Minutes in Sports is over.

Normandy Invasion is merely a maiden winner, but his game performances in graded stakes events have earned him a role as a “wise guy” horse leading up to the 2013 Kentucky Derby. Fifth in his debut last September at Belmont, the Chad Brown trainee dominated his second start, a one-mile maiden special weight at Aqueduct.

The bay colt made his graded stakes debut in the Remsen Stakes (GII) at Aqueduct in late November. Breaking slowly from the outside post in the nine-furlong race, Normandy Invasion settled several lengths behind the pacesetters as the ten-horse field rounded the clubhouse turn. Down the backstretch, Normandy Invasion began to pick up the pace, gaining ground on the rivals ahead of him. Racing past his opponents as if they were standing still, the son of Tapit ate up ground around the final curve, making an impressive rally along the rail before swinging wide in search of a path around the leaders as the field turned for home.

With massive strides, Normandy Invasion strove to take the lead, joining graded stakes winner Overanalyze in a late stretch battle. But in a head-bobbing finish, Normandy Invasion crossed the wire inches behind Overanalyze to finish second. Though the colt did not visit the winner’s circle, his rally had been incredibly impressive, made even more remarkable considering he closed into rather moderate factions.

Making his sophomore debut in the Risen Star Stakes (GII) at the Fair Grounds, Normandy Invasion was sent off as the favorite in the mile and one-sixteenth contest. But the race was over for the colt from the beginning. Slow away from the gate, Normandy Invasion was squeezed by rivals, resulting in a bobble that left him lengths behind the majority of his opponents as the field raced past the stands for the first time.

Rank around the first bend, Normandy Invasion ran wide as the three-year-olds entered the backstretch. The Fox Hill Farm-owned colt gradually gained ground on the group of horses ahead of him and as the army of horses rounded the final curve, Normandy Invasion picked up the pace, making a stunning rally nearly identical to the one he’d made in the Remsen.

But the colt was forced to go very wide around the far turn and while running greenly down the stretch, Normandy Invasion lost imperative ground. In the final stages of the race, however, he kicked into gear, covering much ground with his long, effortless strides. But it was too late. Normandy Invasion crossed the wire in fifth, beaten less than two lengths.

After the Risen Star, Normandy Invasion blossomed under young trainer Chad Brown’s care while preparing for the Wood Memorial Stakes (GI). Chad Brown, former assistant to Hall of Famer Bobby Frankel, has proven to be one of the best in the business since going out on his own, winning two Breeders’ Cup races, as well as a multitude of grade ones with horses like Awesome Feather, Dayatthespa, Maram, Samitar, Stacelita, and Zagora. The Daily Racing Form quoted Brown as saying of Normandy Invasion after his final breeze for the Wood “He’s turning into a real professional horse.”

The Wood would be a critical race for Normandy Invasion. In order to qualify for the Derby under the new points system, the colt would need to finish in-the-money – preferably first or second – to secure a spot in the Derby starting gate.

Drawn near the inside for the first time in his career, Normandy Invasion broke cleanly and was guided to the rail by Javier Castellano, racing mid-pack as the horses rounded the initial turn. Six lengths separated him from the leader as the field galloped into the backstretch, but midway through the straightaway opposite the grandstand, Normandy Invasion accelerated between horses, drawing closer to the pacesetter, Chrisandthecapper, and the heavy favorite, Verrazano. However, he remained a handful of lengths behind those rivals.

As adversaries around him began to accelerate and pass him, Normandy Invasion remained steady as Verrazano took the lead around the final bend. Castellano set to work aboard Normandy Invasion, but he faced the obstacle of a wall of horses before him. Swinging wide to find room, the bay slowly but surely grew closer to the two favorites, Verrazano and Vyjack, and in typical Normandy Invasion style, kicked into high gear in the final stages of the race, closing to reduce Verrazano’s winning margin to ¾ of a length.

Normandy Invasion’s running style has suggested that the colt would relish more distance and Brown has indicated that he believes the same. But a glance at the colt’s pedigree generates thoughts of miler. That is, until, one delves further into his ancestry, finding stamina influences that could aid Normandy Invasion in his quest for the roses.

Normandy Invasion's pedigree
From pedigree.query.com 


Distance tends to be suspect for offspring of Tapit, but it must be pointed out that Tapit has produced winners at the ten-furlong Derby distance. Tapit’s son, Testa Matta, won the Japan Dirt Derby (GI) at 2,000 meters (approximately 10 furlongs), while Tapit’s daughter, Careless Jewel, was an 11-length victress of the 2009 Alabama Stakes (GI), a prestigious ten-furlong race at Saratoga. Tapit’s sire, Pulpit, produced many distance horses, including the Russian group one winner Baletmeister, who won at 2,000 and 2,400 meters on several occasions; Ice Box, runner-up in 2010 Kentucky Derby; Pachattack, who won at ten furlongs and twelve furlongs multiple times; and Church Service, a graded stakes winner that placed in many routes, even up to thirteen furlongs.

It is worth noting that Tapit is a grandson of A.P. Indy, a son of 1977 Triple Crown winner Seattle Slew. A.P. Indy not only won the ten-furlong Breeders’ Cup Classic (GI), but also the twelve-furlong Belmont Stakes (GI). One of the most prominent sires in recent years, A.P. Indy - a son of Triple Crown champion Seattle Slew - has produced the likes of the brilliant distance horses Bernardini, Mineshaft, and Rags to Riches – all classic winners at ten or twelve furlongs.

Tapit’s broodmare sire is Unbridled, winner of the Kentucky Derby and Breeders’ Cup Classic. The 1990 Champion Three-Year-Old colt is also the broodmare sire of Preakness Stakes (GI) winner Shackleford and his half-sister, Lady Joanne, a grade one winner at ten furlongs. Tapit’s granddam, the Reine de Course mare Ruby Slippers, was a daughter of English Triple Crown winner Nijinksy II, a major stamina influence in the ancestry of the Thoroughbred.

Normandy Invasion’s dam, Boston Lady, made five starts, never finishing better than seventh. Her other two foals that have won have only succeeded as sprinters, the longest winning distance between them being six furlongs. Boston Lady’s sire, 1996 Champion Two-Year-Old Male Boston Harbor, never won beyond a mile and one-sixteenth but did produce Healthy Addiction, a grade one winner at nine furlongs.

Though Normandy Invasion’s immediate female family instills worry regarding his ability to excel at classic distances, further study provides greater assurance that the colt can stretch out. The sire of his granddam is Raise a Native – who, though he has proven to be a strong speed influence in Thoroughbred pedigrees, sired Derby and Preakness winner Majestic Prince, Triple Crown “runner-up” Alydar, and Exclusive Native, the sire of Triple Crown hero Affirmed and Kentucky Derby winner Genuine Risk.

The sire of Normandy Invasion’s third dam, Royal Serenade, is also a notable presence in this colt’s heritage. Though a champion sprinter in England, Royal Serenade won the ten-furlong Hollywood Gold Cup after being imported to the United States. The sire of this colt’s fourth dam is Fairy Manhurst, runner-up in the Belmont Stakes, Travers Stakes, and Jockey Club Gold Cup – all contested at ten furlongs at the least. Notably, Fairy Manhurst, a son of the great Man O’ War, was the last stakes-winning offspring of the all-time great.

Interestingly, Normandy Invasion is line-bred to Seattle Slew, as both his parents descend from the Seattle Slew sire line. Close line-breeding to the 1977 Triple Crown champion has also appeared in the pedigree of Atlantic Ocean, a record-priced filly that won up to a mile and one-sixteenth. However, the method of Seattle Slew inbreeding is not particularly popular in the Thoroughbred breeding industry.

Although Normandy Invasion’s bloodlines are not abounding with indications that the colt will enjoy more distance, his running style does imply this. His tendency to not kick into his highest gear until the final yards of a race imply that he will savor added distance. He has already proven that he does not need a blistering pace to close into, though one would likely assist him. Fortunately for him, the presence of horses like Goldencents, and perhaps Oxbow and Verrazano, could set up brisk fractions for him in the Derby.

Saturday, January 5, 2013

After the Auction: Lemon Belle

As an avid fan of sales with possible aspirations to become an adviser/bloodstock agent, auctions are one of my favorite topics to write about on Past the Grandstand. This is the ninth edition in a blog series called "After the Auction" that will feature horses I selected in sales that have found success after the sale. 

Victory is especially sweet when it supersedes disappointment. This proved true when Lemon Belle coasted to victory in her fourth career start and initial start as a three-year-old. Once a very promising filly, Lemon Belle had finished off-the-board and well-beaten in her previous three races, but had finally learned how to win.

Consigned by de Meric Sales to the 2012 Keeneland April Two-Year-Olds in Training Sale under the pending name Beyond Belle, Lemon Belle became one of my selections in the auction due to her remarkable pedigree and her impressive breeze in the under-tack show. Sold as hip 44, Lemon Belle was purchased for $400,000 by trainer Chad Brown on behalf of Martin Schwartz, a team that would later that year win the Breeders’ Cup Filly and Mare Turf (GI) with Zagora.

With a high price tag and a famous sibling in Unrivaled Belle, high hopes were placed upon the bay filly. But when she debuted at Belmont Park in October, Lemon Belle finished mid-pack, running sixth in a twelve-horse field, though she did show some late acceleration. The disappointment only continued when the Chad Brown trainee finished fifth and ninth in Aqueduct and Gulfstream maiden special weights, respectively.

Lemon Belle had gone her entire juvenile campaign without even one on-the-board finish. But in her first start as a sophomore, the filly faced state-bred company for the first time, which served as a likely easier level for her. Facing four rivals in a six-furlong maiden special weight for Florida-breds at Gulfstream Park, Lemon Belle, as she had in her earlier races, displayed minimal early speed, quickly dropping several lengths off the leader as she trailed the small field. With little space separating her four rivals, who all ran ahead of her, Lemon Belle dropped multiple lengths behind.

But around the far turn, jockey Joel Rosario began to urge the filly and the newly-turned sophomore picked up the pace, gaining ground on her opponents as the track began to curve. By the quarter pole, Lemon Belle had passed a pair of her adversaries, swinging to the outside of the two leaders as the field turned for home. With the same imposing stride she displayed in her 10-second breeze in the preview show of the Keeneland April sale, Lemon Belle swept past her rivals en route to an easy 5-length victory.

Perhaps it was the easier state-bred level that allowed Lemon Belle to finally garner a win, or maybe the filly finally learned how to win. One can only hope that, with her triumph, Lemon Belle has found the confidence to perform well from now on.

Another tool that could be used to possibly assist Lemon Belle in being more successful would be a stretch-out in distance. A filly that has yet to race beyond one mile, Lemon Belle has the pedigree to go farther.

Lemon Belle is a daughter of Lemon Drop Kid, a five-time grade one winner that is best known for winning the 1999 Belmont Stakes (GI). The Champion Older Horse of 2000 has sired the grade one winners Citronnade, Christmas Kid, Lemons Forever, Richard’s Kid, and Santa Teresita. A son of the multiple group one-winning sire Kingmambo, Lemon Drop Kid has been among the top fifty sires in North America every year since 2006.

Out of the graded stakes-winning mare Queenie Belle, Lemon Belle is a half-sister to 2010 Breeders’ Cup Ladies’ Classic (GI) victress Unrivaled Belle. Lemon Belle descends from a strong tail female family, which is largely influenced by Thoroughbreds from the British Isles. In fact, the bay filly is a direct descendant of the Reine de Course mares Admiration and Pretty Polly, the latter of which is viewed as one of the greatest racemares and producers of all-time. Winner of 22 of her 24 lifetime starts, Pretty Polly won some of Europe’s most prestigious races, including the 1000 Guineas, the Oaks, and the St. Leger Stakes, the latter in which she defeated males. Other direct descendants of this great mare include the greats Brigadier Gerard and Nearctic.

Lemon Belle’s racing career may have commenced in disappointing fashion, but the filly surely gained confidence when breaking her maiden and could certainly progress. If the potential she displayed in her breeze prior to the Keeneland April sale and her spectacular pedigree are any indication, a bright future could be ahead for Lemon Belle should she continue to improve.