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Blind Luck gallops, schools ahead of Oaks

Blind Luck strikes a reflective pose (Lauren Pomeroy/Horsephotos.com)
Kentucky Oaks (G1) morning-line favorite BLIND LUCK (Pollard's Vision) visited the paddock Thursday morning before galloping 1 1/2 miles and also schooled in the paddock during Thursday's 2ND race. Trainer Jerry Hollendorfer said Blind Luck simply will walk the shedrow Friday morning on the brink of her Oaks attempt.

Hollendorfer has two Oaks wins on his resume, Lite Light (1991) and Pike Place Dancer (1996), and stands a major chance to add a third. It's a race that he's grown fond of over the years.

"I've won it twice, but you never get tired of adding the Kentucky Oaks to your resume," he said. "It's hard to compare horses over the years. Pike Place Dancer was so much of a bigger horse than the other two, Lite Light and Blind Luck. I'd say Blind Luck has a lot of the same style as Lite Light."

Does the trainer think Blind Luck is his best Oaks chance ever?

"You can't say that," he said laughing. "Because we've already won the other two! I'll take two known wins over a morning-line favorite any day you offer it."

CHAMPAGNE D'ORO (Medaglia d'Oro) was once again on the track as soon as it opened at 5:45 a.m. (EDT) Thursday. The attractive bay lass jogged one mile and galloped one mile under exercise rider Froylan Garcia.

Trainer Eric Guillot has joked that the reason he goes so early, as opposed to during the Derby and Oaks training session, is so that nobody will see what he's up to. The real reason, though, is far more practical. With Champagne d'Oro his only horse at Churchill Downs, the trainer has no help of his own to rely on and doesn't want to be at the track after training hours end tending to his filly.

Later in the morning, Champagne d'Oro was brought out of her stall to show off for some visitors and elicited glowing compliments from onlookers for her good looks and exceptionally dappled coat.

Guillot picked Champagne d'Oro out of Keeneland's September 2008 Yearling Sale, where she was purchased for $210,000.

"I picked her out because of her demeanor," Guillot said. "She came out and started walking and had her neck lowered and her ears pricked. I told Mike (Moreno, owner, Southern Equine Stables), man, if she's good up front I'm going to buy this filly."

Amen Hallelujah has won or placed in eight of nine starts (Lauren Pomeroy/Horsephotos.com)
CRISP (El Corredor), winner of the Santa Anita Oaks (G1) in her most recent effort, went trackside at 6:10 a.m. Thursday for a good gallop of 1 1/2 miles under exercise rider Lupillo Alferez.

Trackside in the viewing stand next to the six-furlong gap known as the "Lukas gap" because of its proximity to the Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas' barn on the Churchill Downs backstretch, were Crisp's trainer, John Sadler, and owner, Michael Talla.

"We've got to beat Jerry's filly (Blind Luck)," Sadler said. "She's tough. But I think all three California fillies in the race (Blind Luck, Crisp and EVENING JEWEL [Northern Afleet]) could run well. Both of the other two have shipped out (of California) and won stakes this year and I'd hope we could, too."

Blind Luck captured Oaklawn Park's Fantasy S. (G2) on April 2 and Evening Jewel scored by a neck in Keeneland's Ashland S. (G1) the following day.

Sadler indicated that he would put Crisp on the racetrack early Friday morning for a one-mile jog.

"Just a little something to take the edge off," Sadler said. "She won't be racing until late in the afternoon and if they have to wait in the barn all day they get too antsy."

IT'S TEA TIME (Dynaformer) completed her preparations for Friday's Oaks with a 1 1/2-mile gallop after the renovation break with exercise Ronin Quinn up.

"She'll walk in the morning," trainer Rusty Arnold said. "She's done. She schooled in the paddock yesterday and was excellent, even though it will be totally different Friday. She galloped well this morning."

Tidal Pool is inbred to both Flying Paster and the successful broodmare Bad Seed (Lauren Pomeroy/Horsephotos.com)
It's Tea Time is the least experienced of the 14 Oaks starters with only three career starts. Also, she is the only Oaks starter not to have raced as a two-year-old.

Is Arnold surprised to be sitting a day away from putting his filly in the Kentucky Oaks starting gate?

"Absolutely. Everything had to go well," Arnold stated. "If she hadn't run as well as she did in the Ashland (a fast-closing second to Evening Jewel), we would not be having this conversation. We would be looking at a grass stake the middle of next month at Arlington Park.

"She ran well enough to tempt me and then the way she came out of the race also tempted me. She is a big, strong filly and we are going to take our shot."

JOANIE'S CATCH (First Tour) galloped 1 1/2 miles at Churchill Thursday to the satisfaction of Calder Race Course-based trainer Barry Rose. The Rose Family Stable homebred has finished first, second or third in 16 of 18 starts, only finishing off-the-board in a two-furlong sprint in her debut and the Susan's Girl S. in her eighth start because of sudden problems in the starting gate.

"We took the blinkers off and spent a month every day at the starting gate," Rose said. "We figured it out. Now she doesn't have a problem. You'll notice she'll go into the gate with a blanket on her back."


 

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