Sparkle Blue Making Title Defense in $100,000 Big Dreyfus

Sparkle Blue Making Title Defense in $100,000 Big Dreyfus

Multiple Graded-Stakes Winning Mare Tops 1 1/8-Mile Turf Test
Laurel Summer Meet Resumes with Nine-Race Program Friday

BALTIMORE – Following a steady diet of graded-stakes to start the year, Catherine Parke and Augustin Stable’s dual graded winner Sparkle Blue will get some class relief when she returns to Maryland to make a title defense in Sunday’s $100,000 Big Dreyfus at Laurel Park.

The fifth running of the 1 1/8-mile Big Dreyfus for fillies and mares 3 and up scheduled on the Dahlia turf course headlines a 10-race program that includes the $75,000 Miss Disco for Maryland-bred/sired 3-year-old fillies sprinting seven furlongs.

First race post time is 12:25 p.m.

Bred by Parke and trained by Graham Motion, the 5-year-old Sparkle Blue captured last year’s Big Dreyfus by 2 ¼ lengths as the favorite over a field that included Italian Group 3 winner Atomic Blonde and fellow stakes winners Candy Light, Coconut Cake and Deciding Vote.

The daughter of Hard Spun figures to be well-backed again coming out of her first four races of 2024 that included a win in the March 9 Hillsborough (G2) and a third in the Feb. 3 Endeavour (G3) at Tampa Bay Downs and a second, beaten one length, in the May 3 Modesty (G3) at Churchill Downs. Both the Hillsborough and Modesty are run at 1 1/8 miles.

Sparkle Blue stepped up to Grade 1 company in her most recent start for just the second time and first since running third by less than a length in the 2022 American Oaks when she finished ninth after chasing the pace in the 1 3/16-mile New York (G1) June 7 at Saratoga. Eight of the 13 horses that day were bred in Europe, four already had Grade 1 success and the winner, Didia, was a Group 1 winner in her native Argentina.

“It was a very difficult race. It was like a Breeders’ Cup prep. The ground was not ideal, it was on the soft side,” Motion said. “Things just didn’t work out, so I wanted to get her in a more conservative, sensible spot and this seemed logical since she was able to win it last year. And it’s close to home.”

Based at the Fair Hill Training Center in Elkton, Md., Sparkle Blue will be making her third career start at Laurel, having finished fourth as a 2-year-old in the 2021 Selima behind Consumer Spending, who went on to run in the Breeders’ Cup and is a three-time graded-stakes winner. Overall, Sparkle Blue has finished third or better in 12 of 17 starts with six wins including the 2022 Christiana and Valley View (G3) and banked $897,988 in purse earnings.

“She really is versatile. Honestly her only disappointment is when I kind of threw her to the wolves a little bit last time, which was probably a little unfair, really. She’s been a really consistent, hard-knocking, blue collar horse for us,” Motion said. “And the family is amazing.”

Out of the Smart Strike mare Silk n’ Sapphire, Sparkle Blue’s siblings include Grade 3 winner Colonial Flag and millionaire Shared Account, a three-time graded winner topped by the 2010 Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Turf (G1). Shared Account is the dam of another millionaire in Sharing, winner of the 2019 Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf (G1), both of whom were trained by Motion. Sparkle Blue is the last of nine foals out of Silk n’ Sapphire, who Parke purchased for $40,000 at Keeneland’s November 2008 breeding stock sale.

“A very sharp move. Catherine is a phenomenal breeder, and she’s really enjoyed the ride with this horse. That’s been our connection, through this family. She’s a very successful breeder and consignor in her own right,” Motion said. “It’s a great family. It’s been very good to me. How many people get to win two Breeders’ Cups from the same family?”

Jorge Ruiz, up for last year’s win, rides back from Post 5 in a field of seven as the 124-pound highweight.

Motion also entered Calumet Farm homebred Sun Bee, who will have Kevin Gomez up from Post 6. The 4-year-old English Channel filly will be making her 16th start and fourth against stakes company, having run third by 4 ¼ lengths in the 1 1/16-mile PTHA President’s Cup June 8 at Parx. The winner, Canisy, came back to be second in the Beverly D. Preview July 13 at Colonial Downs.

“I don’t like to run these two together, but it’s a good spot for her. She’s coming off what was a really good effort, probably a little unlucky,” Motion said. “The horse that won came back and was second at Colonial, so the form is pretty good. This filly has done nothing but improve which is so often the case with these English Channels. I think the distance suits her.”

Hunter Valley Farm’s Glittering Lights, bred in England by Godolphin and trained by Brendan Walsh, is seeking her first North American win in the Big Dreyfus. The 4-year-old daughter of four-time Group 1 winner Kingman will be making her longest trip to date after three races in Kentucky, most recently finishing second by 1 ½ lengths in a 1 1/16-mile optional claiming allowance June 20.

Haymarket Farm homebred Cats Inthe Timber, a stakes winner on the dirt, will be adding blinkers and trying turf for the first time in the Big Dreyfus. By Honor Code, the 4-year-old won Laurel’s Weber City Miss last spring to earn an automatic berth in the Black-Eyed Susan (G2), where she ran sixth. She raced once more at 3, finishing off the board in the Delaware Oaks (G3), returning from eight months away to be fourth in a March 2 optional claiming allowance at Laurel.

Each of Cats Inthe Timber’s last three races have come at one mile. She was third in the April 13 Heavenly Cause at Laurel and fourth in a stakes-quality optional claiming allowance May 25 at Delaware Park behind multiple stakes winner Malibu Beauty. Jevian Toledo is named to ride from Post 3.

“We were thinking about trying the grass. She’s not a real big filly and she’s kind of a grinder type on the dirt,” trainer Brittany Russell said. “Really we wanted to try the grass with her, just to kind of rule it out. Looking at the options in front of us for her, it’s a tough spot to try it but when you’re a stakes winner, you kind of have to run in stakes. We are taking a swing with her, but I don’t think it’s the craziest idea that she could take to it.”

Cut From Class, a 5-year-old winner of three straight entered to make her stakes debut for the father-daughter team of Steve and Caitlin Keil; Ronald Salerno’s Charmed Way, second or third in each of her three starts this year, beaten a total of two lengths; and Randolph Guill, Gregory Steigler and Andrew Bedard’s seven-time stakes-placed Tic Tic Tic Boom complete the field.

Laurel Park’s 36-day summer meet resumes Friday with a nine-race program beginning at 12:25 p.m. There will be carryovers of $3,306.49 in the 20-cent Rainbow 6 (Races 4-9) and $1,213.76 in the $1 Jackpot Super High Five (Race 6) wagers.