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Dullahan starts road to the Derby in Palm Beach

Dullahan hopes to use the Palm Beach as a stepping stone to the Blue Grass, scene of his Breeders' Futurity win (Wendy Wooley/EquiSport Photos)
Grade 1 Breeders' Futurity winner Dullahan will take his first step on the Kentucky Derby trail in Sunday's Grade 3, $150,000 Palm Beach Stakes over the Gulfstream Park turf course. Although the Dale Romans trainee will face only five rivals in the 1 1/8-mile affair, he will have to catch a talented front runner in Howe Great.

Dullahan already has a couple of Kentucky Derby associations. A half-brother to 2009 Derby shocker Mine That Bird, he has the same connections as Paddy O'Prado, the third-place finisher in the 2010 Run for the Roses.

Likewise owned by Donegal Racing and trained by Romans, Dullahan is following the same path as Paddy O'Prado, who captured the 2010 Palm Beach and finished second in the Grade 1 Blue Grass at Keeneland en route to Churchill Downs.

"Like Paddy O'Prado, he's proven he can run on anything," Romans said. "We're creatures of habit and it did work for us. We have the luxury of not having to worry about graded earnings. He's proven on turf and Polytrack. We just need to keep him safe and sound."

Dullahan is a fair bit ahead of the curve, however, compared to where Paddy O'Prado was at this point in 2010. Paddy O'Prado was still a maiden going into the Palm Beach, and had been unplaced in his only career dirt start before the Derby. The beginning of Dullahan's juvenile campaign closely resembled Paddy O'Prado's. Dullahan had been well beaten in his first two dirt attempts, just missed in a turf maiden at Saratoga, and checked in third in the Grade 2 With Anticipation.

Unlike Paddy O'Prado, Dullahan raced twice more at two, gaining valuable seasoning and proving his class. Dullahan broke his maiden in the Breeders' Futurity over Keeneland's Polytrack, a victory that catapulted him into the Breeders' Cup Juvenile on the Churchill dirt. Troubled at the start and last of 13 early, Dullahan closed stoutly to get up for fourth.

"His race in the Breeders' Cup was sneaky good," Romans said of Dullahan. "I mean he got really squeezed. He got shut off in the first turn, was all the way back to last, and showed a big run down the lane. He runs well on turf and synthetic, but I think he'll prove to be best on dirt. That was a good group of horses in the Breeders' Cup. We've seen Union Rags and Hansen come back to do so well."

The Breeders' Cup Juvenile has been a key race on the Derby trail this season. Juvenile winner Hansen romped in the Grade 3 Gotham last Saturday; runner-up Union Rags dominated the Grade 2 Fountain of Youth; 10th-placer Drill landed the Grade 2 San Vicente, where Juvenile third Creative Cause was a late-running third; Juvenile 11th Alpha ran away with both the Grade 3 Withers and Count Fleet; and Prospective, the trailer in the Juvenile, has come back to win the Pasco and take second in the Grade 3 Sam F. Davis.

Dullahan will try to bolster the trend on Sunday. Returning to turf for the first time since the With Anticipation at Saratoga last summer, the closer will reunite with regular rider Kent Desormeaux and will break from the middle of the field in post 3.

The early tactical advantage figures to go to Howe Great. Perfect from two starts on turf, both at Gulfstream, the Graham Motion pupil wired a December 15 allowance and the January 21 Kitten's Joy in convincing fashion. The Team Valor International homebred had previously broken his maiden in a dirt sprint at Parx, and thus brings a three-race winning streak into his graded debut.

Howe Great promises to flash early speed from the rail with John Velazquez. The son of Japanese champion Hat Trick figures to control the pace throughout, but Csaba could try to apply a modicum of pressure. A two-time winner in the slop at Calder, Csaba set the pace in the December 18 Dania Beach here before fading to fifth. The Phil Gleaves colt comes off a throw-out performance in the Fountain of Youth, where he never recovered from a bad stumble at the break. Paco Lopez regains the mount.

The Wayne Catalano-trained Coalport looms as a dark horse in his sophomore debut with Julien Leparoux. The Ken and Sarah Ramsey homebred has smart turf form to his credit, with a close second in the Grade 3 Bourbon at Keeneland and a strong fourth in the Dania Beach. Those efforts book-ended a troubled 11th in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf.

Coalport and Csaba are by Kitten's Joy, winner of the Palm Beach during his championship campaign in 2004. Kitten's Joy has sired half of the field, including Scorcher, who was fifth in the Kitten's Joy two starts back.

Coalport was expected to return in the Kitten's Joy, but had to skip that race in honor of his sire because of a "minor (physical) issue," according to Catalano.

Rounding out the field is multiple stakes-placed Argentine Tango. Disqualified from an impressive last-to-first score in an optional claimer here on December 26, the Stanley Gold trainee has hit the board just once in three subsequent outings -- a distant third behind subsequent Grade 2 Risen Star winner El Padrino and Take Charge Indy on the main track.

Dixie Strike scored in the Florida Oaks in her only turf try (Tom Cooley Photography)
Later on Sunday, Kentucky Oaks hopeful Dixie Strike tops the Grade 3, $150,000 Herecomesthebride Stakes, the Palm Beach's companion race for fillies. The Mark Casse pupil raced exclusively over Woodbine's Polytrack as a juvenile, capping her 2011 campaign with a 5 1/2-length triumph in the Ontario Lassie. Trying turf for the first time in the February 4 Florida Oaks at Tampa, she got up in time for a last-gasp victory. Jose Lezcano will attempt to go two-for-two aboard Dixie Strike, who has drawn post 5.

Her stablemate Northern Passion didn't have as much luck in the Florida Oaks, where she was fanned out extremely wide turning for home and was beaten a grand total of three-quarters of a length. Prior to the race, Northern Passion actually had stronger credentials than Dixie Strike, as the winner of the Grade 3 Natalma on the Woodbine turf. If regular rider Luis Contreras can engineer a better trip, she can turn the tables on her fellow John C. Oxley colorbearer. Likewise looking for revenge is Regalo Mia, third in the Florida Oaks fresh off her maiden win for Michelle Nihei.

Dayatthespa, runner-up to Northern Passion in the Natalma, opened 2012 with an impressive score in the January 22 Sweetest Chant at Gulfstream. The Chad Brown filly will renew rivalry with her nearest pursuers from the Sweetest Chant, Wholelottashakin and Frolic's Revenge, respectively, as well as fifth-placer Ann of the Dance.

The 1 1/8-mile Herecomesthebride has also attracted Shadwell Stable's Almusafa, a sharp optional claiming winner last out, and the main-track-only hope Wait Til Dawn, a royally-bred maiden winner from the Todd Pletcher barn.

A stakes-quality field of older sprinters will square off in Sunday's 4TH race, an optional claimer at 6 1/2 furlongs on the main track. Notable entrants include Grade 1 veteran Noble's Promise, Apriority, Nathan's H Q, Bold Warrior and Soaring Stocks, who was cross-entered to Saturday's Grade 2 Gulfstream Park Handicap.


 


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