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Drosselmeyer shocks in Classic
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| Drosselmeyer shocked at 14-1 odds when rallying for Classic victory
(Churchill Downs/Reed Palmer Photography) |
Prior to Saturday, Drosselmeyer's biggest claim to fame came when he
won the 2010 Belmont Stakes. Fast forward one year and five months
later, and the WinStar Farm colorbearer can add a win in the
Breeders'
Cup Classic to his resume following an upset score under jockey Mike
Smith.
Game on Dude tried to lead the field all the way home, dolling out
fractions of :23 3/5, :47 4/5 and 1:12 4/5 while tracked by Uncle Mo and
So You Think. Drosselmeyer was well back near the rear of the field and swung out in
the middle of the track rounding the turn. That didn't deter the Bill
Mott charge from setting his sites on Game on Dude and running down the
pacesetter to win by 1 1/2 lengths in a final time of 2:04 1/5 for 1 1/4
miles on the fast track.
What a difference year makes, not only for Drosselmeyer but for his
jockey. The Classic gave Smith his 15th Breeders' Cup victory, tying him
with Jerry Bailey as the winningest jockey in Breeders' Cup history, but
came one year after getting nosed out aboard Horse of the Year and
supermare Zenyatta in the same race. |
"Last year I sat here just devastated, thought my life was over," Smith
admitted. "Just to come back and have a day like I did today and to win the race
that I got beat by a nose in last year, it's just amazing. Thank God.
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| A jubilant Mike Smith celebrated Classic victory aboard Drosselmeyer one year after Zenyatta's
heart breaking loss
(Breeders' Cup Ltd.) |
"Until now," he added when asked how long it took him to get over
Zenyatta's loss. "I mean, that's one that will always hurt, but this
sure helps, man. It really does. As soon as I found out I was riding
Drosselmeyer, I kept praying about it. Wow, this could really take the
sting away. It did. It really did. I feel very happy and content. Can't
wait to celebrate."
Drosselmeyer was sent off as the 14-1 eighth choice in the 12-horse
field, returning $31.60, $13.20 and $8.80 to his faithful backers.
"(Drosselmeyer) ran an awesome race right from the first jump. Right
out of the gate, he got into a great rhythm," Smith said. "The key to this
horse is to keep him moving. If you put on the breaks it messes him
up. I knew I was going to wheel out, so I just kept him going."
"He ran a super race. He was mowing them down the last eighth of a
mile," Mott agreed. "I guess his biggest attribute is his stamina, and
he showed it today. When they were wearing down, he was coming. It's
great."
Game on Dude was a length in front of Ruler on Ice, this year's Belmont conqueror
who upheld the "Test of the
Champion" form when taking third. Havre de Grace managed to
get her head in front of 7-2 favorite Flat Out for fourth on the wire. "We didn't get the trip we wanted," explained Havre de Grace's trainer, Larry
Jones. "The 11-horse (Headache) leaned on us pretty good from the start, but she
ran well. (Owner) Rick (Porter) likes to run where the gusto is. No regrets
about running here. She didn't do anything to tarnish herself. She has another
year ahead of her." |
"No excuse, he just got outrun. That's it," horseman Scooter Dickey said of
Flat Out.
So You Think faded to sixth, with To Honor and Serve, Ice Box,
Rattlesnake Bridge, Uncle Mo, Stay Thirsty and Headache completing the
order under the wire. Prayer for Relief was an early scratch.
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| Drosselmeyer could now be
headed to the breeding shed
(Lauren Pomeroy/Horsephotos.com) |
Drosselmeyer entered the Classic owning just one win this season,
with that coming in Belmont Park's One Count Stakes going the Classic
distance of 10 furlongs. That was actually just his second black-type
score as he wasn't seen in competition following his Belmont Stakes
victory until March of this year. The four-year-old ran fourth in that
seasonal debut, the Challenger Stakes at Tampa Bay Downs, before filling
the fifth spot in the Grade 3 Skip Away Stakes at Gulfstream Park.
Drosselmeyer ran a one-paced second in the Grade 2 Brooklyn Handicap
after his One Count win, then was given one-month layoffs between a
seventh in the Grade 1 Sword Dancer Invitational and a runner-up effort
in the Grade 1 Jockey Club Gold Cup.
"We backed out of the horse after the Belmont last year," Mott explained. "We
gave him a lot of time. He had a couple of easy months off, didn't do anything.
We brought him back the beginning of the year. He was fat and really kind of
didn't get in the rhythm the first two or three races. As the year progressed,
he seemed to get a little better and a little better.
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"Really midway through Saratoga, after we ran him in the Sword Dancer, it was
kind of like somebody had flipped a switch, and he just turned around. He was
moving great. He was into his training. There again, he ran a big one in the
Jockey Gold Cup to be second."
The chestnut colt opened his racing career with a 2-2-1 mark from
five starts against maiden and allowance rivals before suffering his
first off-the-board run when fourth by 1 3/4 lengths in the Grade 2
Risen Star Stakes last year. He made two more starts before the Belmont
Stakes, missing by a length when third in the Grade 2 Louisiana Derby
and finishing second in the Grade 2 Dwyer Stakes.
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| Drosselmeyer lit up the toteboard when upsetting the Classic
(Melissa Wirth/Horsephotos.com) |
"He was coming on," Mott continued. "We didn't beat the winner (in
the Jockey Club), but it looked like --
really, (WinStar President) Elliott (Walden) kind of made the decision,
I think, to lean towards the Classic with him after that race. Really,
it was a great decision, and we've been here for a month, and the horses
have had good work on the racetrack. I think it really paid off.
The winner's share from the Classic purse of $4,545,000 skyrocketed
Drosselmeyer's career earnings to $3,728,170. His lifetime mark now
reads 16-5-5-2. The Classic could wind up being Drosselmeyer's swan
song.
"We're probably going to retire him, but we'll sit down and huddle up
tomorrow and talk about making that decision then," Walden said. "But
the plans were to retire him after this race. Horses in this day and age
don't run a lot of starts. He's had 15. A lot of them don't have
stamina, and he will get you the Classic-type horse. So that's an
exciting thing for his breeding credential, and we'll just sit down and
huddle and see how that is." |
Bred in Kentucky by Aaron and Marie Jones, Drosselmeyer is a son of the
Moscow Ballet mare Golden Ballet, who captured six stakes including the Grade 1
Santa Anita Oaks and Grade 1 Las Virgenes Stakes during her time on the track.
In the breeding shed Golden Ballet would produce Stage Luck, winner of the 2008
Affectionately Handicap and second in that year's Grade 1 Ruffian Handicap. The
broodmare
is a half-sister to Gilded Gem, who scored in the Grade 3 Las Flores Stakes and
ran second in the Grade 1 Santa Monica Stakes this year.
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