Fore Harp Front-Running Winner of $100,00 Laurel Dash
Fore Harp Front-Running Winner of $100,00 Laurel Dash
Sweet Victory for 6-Year-Old Coconut Cake in $75,000 Jameela
Jockey Sheldon Russell Completes Turf Stakes Sweep
BALTIMORE – LC Racing, James Bonner and Wellesley Stable’s Fore Harp, stepping up to stakes company for the first time in his 18th start, led every step of the way and had plenty left to turn back a late bid from Witty to register a two-length victory in Saturday’s $100,000 Laurel Dash at Laurel Park.
The 25th running of the Laurel Dash for 3-year-olds and up and 35th renewal of the $75,000 Jameela for Maryland-bred/sired fillies and mares 3 and older, both sprinting six furlongs on the turf, served as supporting stakes to the $100,000 Concern for 3-year-old sprinters.
Trained by Robert E. ‘Butch’ Reid Jr., Fore Harp ($11.60) finished up in 1:11.29 over a Fort Marcy course rated good to give jockey Sheldon Russell a sweep of the turf stakes after guiding Coconut Cake to victory for trainer and co-owner Tim Keefe in the Jameela. Earlier in the day, Russell was named to replace Frankie Pennington on Fore Harp.
“We got another great ride from Sheldon Russell. He got to the front and stayed there,” Bonner said. “It’s taken [Fore Harp] a while to figure out he’s a turf horse. Butch has done a great job nursing him along to this point.”
Fore Harp entered the Laurel Dash having stretched out to a mile and 70 yards in his 5-year-old debut May 29 over his home track at Parx, forging a determined neck victory over fellow Pennsylvania-breds. It was the second straight turf sprint win over open company for Fore Harp, following a 5 ½-furlong optional claimer last November at Laurel.
“We were all shocked he got the two turns [last time]. So, we brought him back shorter,” Bonner said. “It went as we hoped. It was very exciting.”
Breaking from the outermost post in a field scratched down to seven with the withdrawal of multiple stakes winners Alwaysinahurry and Wondrwherecraigis, both entered for main track only, Fore Harp broke alertly and quickly found himself on the lead after the opening quarter-mile went in 23.15 seconds.
Fore Harp maintained his advantage after a half in 47.06 as favorite Mid Day Image, seeking his fourth straight win, raced along the rail with Noble Emotion three wide and stakes winner Grateful Bred between horses. Russell straightened for home in command and pulled clear of his pursuers as Witty, a multiple dirt stakes winner trying turf for the second time, belatedly made up ground on the far outside.
Witty finished 2 ½ lengths ahead of Mid Day Image for second, with Smokin’ Jay another 1 ¼ lengths back in fourth. Steal the Cash, Grateful Bred and Noble Emotion completed the order of finish.
Fore Harp improved his career record to six wins, three seconds and five thirds and pushed his bankroll near $300,000. He is now four-for-six since being moved to the grass last summer, with one second and two thirds.
Steinlen, winner of the inaugural 1988 Laurel Dash, won 11 graded-stakes and more than $3 million in purses over 45 starts for Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas. The Laurel Dash was contested as a Grade 3 from 1990 to 2000 and has been won by horsemen such as Hall of Fame jockeys Laffit Pincay Jr., Angel Cordero Jr., Chris McCarron and Edgar Prado and international champion Frankie Dettori; Hall of Fame trainers MacK Miller, Jack Fisher, Todd Pletcher, King Leatherbury and Bill Mott; and Hall of Fame rider Bill Shoemaker, the trainer of 1992 winner Glen Kate.
Sweet Victory for Coconut Cake in $75,000 Jameela
N R S Stable, James Chambers and Avalon Farm’s Coconut Cake, making her second start of the year, got a ground-saving trip under jockey Sheldon Russell and surged up the rail through the stretch to capture Saturday’s $75,000 Jameela for Maryland-bred/sired fillies and mares.
Coconut Cake ($13.40) covered six furlongs in 1:12.28 over a Fort Marcy turf course rated good to earn her second career stakes victory and give both Russell and trainer and co-owner Tim Keefe their first wins in the Jameela.
Russell and Coconut Cake were unhurried in the early going as three-time turf stakes winner Can the Queen broke sharply and carried the field through a quarter-mile in 23.71 seconds and a half in 47.67 pressed to her outside by Gift of Gab with Whiteknuckeflyer on the rail in third and Money’s Worth outside in fourth.
Can the Queen was still in front turning for home while Russell patiently held his ground inside waiting for room, which didn’t come until midway down the stretch. Once finding daylight, Coconut Cake showed a quick turn of foot to pass her rivals and win by three-quarters of a length.
Spun Glass, the 6-5 favorite, finished second in a bid to defend her title and make trainer Mike Trombetta the first three-time Jameela winner. It was 1 ½ lengths back to Money’s Worth in third, followed by Whiteknuckleflyer, Hollywood Walk, Next Episode, Can the Queen, My Thoughts, Dulce Kiara and Gift of Gab. Brzina (main track only), Summer Odds and Sweet Gracie were scratched.
Coconut Cake won the 1 1/8-mile Maryland Million Ladies last fall on the Laurel turf, opening her 6-year-old season running fifth behind Can the Queen in a 5 ½-furlong optional claiming allowance May 28 at historic Pimlico Race Course.
“We thought she fit in here. It’s better than the 5 ½ [last time], the extra half-furlong. I think the softer turf maybe helped us a little bit as well. It was a little bit tiring for horses that were running on the front,” Keefe said. “Sheldon, as usual, gave her a great ride, saved all the ground and came running. At the eighth pole I was hoping to get a piece of it, but he came through and got it all.
“You hope for the win, but you never expect to win. She’s been training well. She’s doing super. I know she loves walking out of her stall and running right here at home, she loves the grass and she loves Sheldon,” he added. “Everybody in the barn has done a great job with her. She was coming intothe race well and I was looking for a good effort.”
Keefe said he expects to bring Coconut Cake back in the $100,000 Big Dreyfus scheduled for 1 1/8 miles July 15 at Laurel, a race where she closed to be fourth by two lengths at odds of 21-1 last summer.
“We’re pointing her toward the Big Dreyfus,” he said. “She ran a big number last year. She likes the two turns I think a little bit better.”
Meaning ‘beautiful’ in Arabic, Jameela won 16 stakes including the Maskette (G1), Ladies (G1) and Delaware (G1) handicaps before being retired following the 1982 season as the first Maryland-bred to surpass $1 million in lifetime earnings. She had two foals, the first being 1988 champion sprinter Gulch, before passing away from colic in 1985. She was elected to the Maryland-bred Hall of Fame in 2013.