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Skyring springs 24-1 upset in Dixie

Hall of Famer Gary Stevens turned in a masterclass aboard Skyring in the Dixie before doing the same aboard Oxbow in the Preakness (Jessie Holmes/EquiSport Photos)
Saturday's Grade 2, $300,000 Dixie Stakes at Pimlico shaped up as a competitive affair with no real standout on paper, so perhaps it wasn't too much of a shock that 24-1 shot Skyring led throughout under a masterful front-running ride by Gary Stevens. Trained by fellow Hall of Famer Wayne Lukas for Calumet Farm, Skyring held on to earn his first graded victory, and rewarded his loyalists with $50.40, $19.40 and $9.20.

Skyring served as a warm-up act for the Preakness one race later, when Calumet, Lukas and Stevens combined to wire the middle jewel of the Triple Crown with Oxbow.

The winning connections very nearly pulled off the exacta in the Dixie. Optimizer came again between foes late, only to fall a head shy of the hard-charging runner-up Willcox Inn. Skyring and Optimizer are both by English Channel, so the promising young sire nearly had the top two himself.

Skyring was returning to the scene of his only previous stakes score, the James W. Murphy, on Preakness Day a year ago. Winless since, he had come close a few times. Skyring was runner-up to the well-regarded Unbridled Command in the Saranac, third in three-way photos in the American Derby and River City, and finished second by a scant neck in the January 11 Fifth Season on the dirt at Oaklawn.

Fourth to Wise Dan last time out in the April 12 Maker's 46 Mile at Keeneland, he and Optimizer were both flattering the Horse of the Year. Optimizer was coming off a second to Wise Dan in the Woodford Reserve Turf Classic on Kentucky Derby Day.

Skyring hustled from post 8 to secure the early lead and got away with steady splits of :24 2/5, :48 1/5 and 1:11 4/5 on the firm turf. Humble and Hungry, Optimizer and Howe Great were all forwardly placed. The 2-1 favorite Imagining, however,  found himself rating further behind than might have been forecast after being a tad flat-footed at the break.

Given how well speed was playing on the Pimlico turf Saturday, with front-running scores by Pianist in the Grade 3 Gallorette and Redwood Kitten in the James W. Murphy, Skyring was sitting pretty as he cornered for home. He was still full of run in midstretch, spurting two lengths clear when reaching the mile mark in 1:35 3/5.

The only challenger to arrive on the premises was Willcox Inn, and Skyring found enough to parry his late thrust by a half-length. The winner completed the historic nine-furlong affair in 1:47 4/5, improving his scorecard to 20-4-3-2, $424,148.

"He went to the front easy enough," Stevens said, "and we were able to back things up and he just sprinted home. A very impressive performance."

Skyring holds off Willcox Inn (left), who just thwarted a Calumet/Lukas exacta with Optimizer (center) (Wendy Wooley/EquiSport Photos)
"This horse loved this turf course last year," Lukas said. "That's why I told the owner, 'We need to enter both of them.' There's really not that much difference between them. The public totally disregarded him even though he was very good last year.

"Optimizer ran a very good race. I wasn't that disappointed. He had a little trouble and was in tight. Skyring is just a fighter."

James Graham, who rode Willcox Inn, was wishing he could have kicked for home sooner.

"I didn't have quite the trip I wanted to," Graham said. "But I'm certainly not unhappy with the effort he gave me. I thought I had a chance to catch the winner down the stretch, but I was just moving too late."

Trainer Mike Stidham was happy with Graham's ride.

"It didn't look to me like he got into any trouble," Stidham said. "James switched him out to get clear and it didn't look like he had to check at all. We didn't run in the Woodford Reserve at Churchill because Wise Dan was in there and we are tired of chasing him. He will go back to Arlington."

Howe Great reported home three-quarters of a length behind Optimizer in fourth, followed by Two Months Rent, See Tobe, the dead-heating Doubles Partner and Swift Warrior, Forte Dei Marmi, Imagining and Humble and Hungry. Utley and Thunder Lord were scratched.

Imagining's rider, Javier Castellano, said that the favorite never recovered from the start.

"He didn't break that sharp out of the gate," Castellano said. "That changed all the strategy because my horse is not a come-from-behind horse. He likes to be in the clear near the leaders. Unfortunately, he broke kind of slow today."

Skyring is a homebred, having been bred in the name of Brad Kelley's Bluegrass Hall before his acquisition of Calumet. He is out of the Seattle Slew mare Violet Lady, who is also responsible for Grade 2 winner Greenspring, Grade 3-placed stakes scorer Caballero Negro and the stakes-placed trio of Dyna Penny, Loow Key and Dressed to Kill.

Skyring's second dam, Grade 1 star Top Corsage, also factors as the ancestress of Grade 2 winner Doremifasollatido and Grade 3 victress Fortunate Damsel. He descends from the successful producer Rare Bouquet.

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