BANKROLL
BANKROLL: $790.50
Saturday’s seventh race is the type of event that draws genuine excitement from all sorts of fans. It’s one of the 2-year-old maiden races that boasts an array of exciting prospects from top barns, and we may look back on it as a key race down the road.
Consider this: All 10 horses in this field sold at auction. None of them commanded less than $100,000. Four sold for more than $500,000, while four others hammered for more than $250,000. In total, nearly $4.4 million in horse flesh will be in the paddock before the seventh, and if you’re in attendance, you may want to make your way from wherever you’re sitting to the backyard. You never know when you may be seeing something special.
FRIDAY’S RESULTS: I got too cute. The Grand Slam sequence wound up very chalky, and my $20 post-scratch investment returned just $16.
SATURDAY’S PLAY: My action focuses on another baby race. I thought #1 VICTORY HALL ran well in her debut, and she’s my key to a big day. In addition to a $30 win bet on her, she’s a single in $5 doubles that start in the first with #2 AIRBORNE ELITE, #4 HOUSE UNITED, and #5 SWEETALKINGBOURBON and end in the third with #2 TREATY OBLIGATION, #4 STOLEN BASE, and #6 ALTERNATE REALITY.
TOTAL WAGERED: $60.
SARATOGA SELECTIONS AND ANALYSIS
Best Bet: Victory Hall, Race 2
Longshot: Stolen Base, Race 3
R1
House United
Airborne Elite
Sweetalkingbourbon
#4 HOUSE UNITED (3-1): Did everything but win last time out, when he had a poor start, traveled wide most of the way, and was beaten just a head. He cuts back to the Wilson chute in the Saturday opener, and Irad Ortiz Jr. sees fit to ride back; #2 AIRBORNE ELITE (9/2): Was second at a similar route at Ellis Park in his first start off the claim for Linda Rice. I think he may be at his best going shorter, but he hits me as the main speed in here and he draws well; #5 SWEETALKINGBOURBON (7/2): Hasn’t fired a bad shot all year and was another that suffered a near-miss last time out, when he was second at this level at Churchill. He may need a bit more pace than he’s likely to get, but his best may be good enough in a competitive lid-lifter.
R2
Victory Hall
Probable Angle
Belloro
#1 VICTORY HALL (5/2): Was a solid second in his debut behind a well-meant runner, and she figures to improve second time out. Her two works since that outing look solid, and she should have every chance to save ground from the rail draw; #2 PROBABLE ANGLE (6-1): Ships up from Penn National and seems to be working very well. That surface is a quirky one, but if the form she’s flashed comes up the highway with her, she could have a chance to win on debut; #6 BELLORO (7/2): Was third in the race my top pick exits and adds blinkers for a barn whose runners tend to improve after an initial start. She does have some ground to make up on the likely favorite, but there’s a lot here that says improvement is logical.
R3
Treaty Obligation
Stolen Base
Alternate Reality
#2 TREATY OBLIGATION (5/2): Broke his maiden out of the chute last summer and takes a significant class drop into straight claiming company. He’s run just twice since February, so it’s safe to assume he’s had his issues, but he got quite good late last year and merits respect on the drop; #4 STOLEN BASE (5-1): Has a sheet that looks far better if you cross out races run over off tracks. He’s 3-for-7 over fast dirt tracks, and while the distance here is a bit of a question mark, he certainly fits on speed figures and may offer some value; #6 ALTERNATE REALITY (7/2): Has had plenty of success at this level in the past and exits a pretty competitive race last month. That day’s runner-up has since come back to win, and while the outside post is a problem, this is one that has shown he’s good enough to contend here.
R4
Nonna Teresa
Cognition
Tennessee Belle
#4 NONNA TERESA (7/2): Debuts for Todd Pletcher after an impressive gate drill and is bred to be a good one. Her dam, Teresa Z, was a multiple Grade 3 winner, and her lineage traces back to third dam My Flag, the dam of champion Storm Flag Flying (and a runner in her own right); #5 COGNITION (4-1): Makes her first start for Chad Brown and fetched $170,000 at auction last summer. Digging into the work tab a bit shows a very impressive gate drill on July 13th, and this barn’s 2-year-olds have been firing all summer long; #6 TENNESSEE BELLE (7/5): Ran in spots in her debut last month and finished second, but I have some reservations about betting her at a short price. I’m not sure what she ran against that day, there are some serious prospects in here, and while experience is valuable, I think her likely price is an underlay.
R5
Valentinian (MTO)
Il Siciliano
Fuerteventura
#5 IL SICILIANO (4-1): Did everything but win last time out, when he lost a photo at a big price at this route. He hasn’t won in a while, but to be fair, he’s run up against some serious horses, and it wasn’t long ago he was fourth in the Grade 3 Pan American behind Far Bridge; #4 FUERTEVENTURA (2-1): Is another that hasn’t found the winner’s circle in a long time, but he improved first off the claim when second in a fast race at this route last month. Kendrick Carmouche rides back, and he’s enjoyed probably the best Saratoga meet of his career to this point; #1 KIGALI (6-1): Stretched out with aplomb last month to get the job done and was claimed out of that race by a sharp outfit. This is a step up in class, to be sure, but it’s also possible he’s finally doing what he’s wanted to do all along.
R6
Bibi Dahl
Keto Drink
Santina
#8 BIBI DAHL (4-1): Debuted running second in stakes company before traveling to Royal Ascot, where she beat half the field home in a 17-horse Group 3 event. That day’s winner and runner-up have both come back to win, and if she’s overcome the jet lag from her intercontinental journey, she hits me as the one to beat; #3 KETO DRINK (5/2): May finally get to run here after a few appearances on AE lists, and she’s a major player. She had trouble in her debut but rallied to be third, and this patient barn tends to move horses forward at second asking; #2 SANTINA (7/2): Debuts for Wesley Ward, which already makes her formidable. She’s been working well both here and at Keeneland, but her bottom-side pedigree is pretty stamina-heavy, and I wonder if she may truly want more ground than she’ll get in this turf sprint.
R7
Hero Declared
Cost Effective
It’s Our Time
#4 HERO DECLARED (5/2): Hammered for $575,000 at auction this year, and word seems to be out on this Whit Beckman trainee. He turned in a fantastic gate drill not long ago, and his productive bottom-side pedigree gives him even more reason to be a runner; #6 COST EFFECTIVE (8-1): Hits me as an overlay at this price given his pedigree. He’s by Into Mischief and out of the very classy mare Lewis Bay, who won graded stakes races in four separate seasons. He’s working well, and it wouldn’t surprise me at all if he was well-meant; #5 IT’S OUR TIME (9/2): Boasts a strong series of works for Tom Amoss, whose barn has enjoyed plenty of success at this stand. This is far from an easy spot in which to debut, but this $425,000 auction purchase is another one to take a closer look at in what is, for my money, the most interesting race of the program.
R8
Get a Job
Crimson Light
Cicciobello
#3 GET A JOB (7/2): Is 2-for-2 out of the Wilson chute, a route some horses (and handicappers…) don’t particularly care for. His win last time out was in an off-the-turf race, but his sheet looks far better if you toss his two clunkers at Oaklawn. Do that, and he looks very much like the one to beat in here; #8 CRIMSON LIGHT (6-1): Misfired last time out downstate but ran well off the long layoff two back. That leads me to believe the clunker was a bounce, and that we might see a return to form here. The question is, how much does the outside post compromise him?; #4 CICCIOBELLO (9/2): Won a stakes race two back and probably needed his last race, which was his first outing since November. He’s a bit inconsistent, but his best race could absolutely win this, and the rider switch to Ricardo Santana is notable.
R9
Schwarzenegger
Sandal’s Song
Spirit of New York
#1 SCHWARZENEGGER (4-1): Has been entered a few times but will make his debut in the Skidmore, and rumblings are that this $950,000 yearling purchase may have a lot of talent. He’s been working sensationally for Wesley Ward, and the ambitious spotting lines up with those drills; #2 SANDAL’S SONG (2-1): Was a competitive third in the Group 2 Norfolk at Royal Ascot, and that day’s runner-up has come back to win. George Weaver’s horses have been running lights-out in turf sprints all meet, and this one is a legitimate favorite; #8 SPIRIT OF NEW YORK (7/2): Won his debut like a very good horse last month, when he sat back, pounced, and drew away convincingly. There seems to be some speed signed on in here, and if he gets the setup he got in his unveiling, he could come running once again.
R10
Good Cheer
La Cara
Nitrogen
#2 GOOD CHEER (8/5): Was 7-for-7 going into the Grade 1 Acorn, where she didn’t run a jump. However, that race was contested over a very wet, very quirky track. I don’t put much stock into it, she’s worked very well since, and if she’s back to her old self, I think she’s the one to beat in the Grade 1 Alabama; #6 LA CARA (5/2): Led every step of the way in the Acorn and could establish herself as the top filly in the country with another Grade 1 win. She sure looks like the controlling speed; my question is, just how far does she want to go, and is this 1 1/4-mile distance within her scope?; #4 NITROGEN (9/5): Comes back to the dirt after a near-miss in the Grade 1 Belmont Oaks and is intriguing given her runaway score in the Wonder Again. Having said that, that was an off-the-turf race two back over that aforementioned quirky, wet surface. Maybe she’s a freak, but I can’t bet her at her likely short price.
R11
Assertiveness
Kid Kreesa
Mo Go
#1 ASSERTIVENESS (2-1): Comes up from Monmouth for Todd Pletcher, which is sometimes a red flag. However, this colt takes a big, big drop in class. He was fifth in a stakes race two back, runs against restricted claimers here, and his best race crushes these; #10 KID KREESA (7/2): Is a known quantity at this point. He’ll go out early and lead them for as long as he can. There’s some other speed in here, but he does get a rider upgrade in this spot and he figures to be the one they’ll have to catch turning for home; #5 MO GO (9/2): Goes back to the grass here, and I think that’s his best surface. He earned the diploma in a turf route at Gulfstream last year, and this is his first two-turn event on the lawn since then.
R12
Vekinda (MTO)
Pay the Juice
Spoken Bluntly
#10 PAY THE JUICE (4-1): Cuts back to a sprint here and seems far more effective going short. He was third at this route last summer in a race that’s aged very, very well, and while the outside post isn’t ideal, he should be rolling late in the nightcap; #1 SPOKEN BLUNTLY (9/2): Seems like the main speed and gets both Kendrick Carmouche and the rail draw, both of which bode well. His wire-to-wire score off the bench last time out was a good one, and it sure seems like he’ll be the one they have to catch; #2 NOT FOR HIRE (3-1): Had an adventurous trip last time out and finished a distant fourth. He wants to be much closer to the pace than he was on that occasion, and he’d move forward considerably with a cleaner trip.