Carbonero fue bien presentado por el líder Juan Suárez para los colores del Stud Ehden. Juan Eugenio Enríquez estuvo impecable en la silla del hijo de Pegasus Wind nacido en el Haras Alydar.
El juvenil Carbonero (Pegasus Wind) se impuso en el Clásico El Estreno (R), una prueba para potrillos nacionales de 2 años que no hayan corrido, que se corrió el sábado 23 de febrero sobre 1,000 metros en el Hipódromo de Monterrico. El crédito del Stud Ehden, nacido en el Haras Alydar, superó por 2 ½ cuerpos a Fluminante (Privately Held). Tercero a 4 ¾ cuerpos quedó Aquileo (Derby Fever) y cuarto a 6 ¼ cuerpos finalizó Cotton Blu (El Escorial).
Desarrollo
Normando fue el puntero seguido de cerca por Cotton Blu. Tercero se ubicó Fluminante delante de Carbonero, Aquileo, Ollanta y Alo Aloo.
Al promediar el recorrido, Cotton Blue pasó a la vanguardia, pero progresaban Fulminante y Carbonero que superaban a Normando, Aquileo, Ollanta y Alo Aloo.
En los 120 finales, Carbonero atacó por dentro para pasar de largo y dejar como su escolta a Fluminante. Tercero finalizó Aquileo y cuarto fue Cotton Blu. Normando, Alo Aloo y Ollanta llegaron luego.
Antecedentes
Carbonero es un alazán de 2 años, por Pegasus Wind y Dalida (Riyadian), nacido en el Haras Alydar y que pertenece al Stud Ehden. El líder Juan Suárez presentó en buena forma al conducido por Juan Eugenio Enríquez. Al ganar en su debut,Carbonero obtuvo S/. 13,406 en premios. La marca: 0´59”2/5.
domingo, 24 de febrero de 2013
lunes, 18 de febrero de 2013
Rafael Bejarano Sigue Dando La Hora en USA
Super Ninety Nine rolled to an 11 1/4-length win in the $300,000 Southwest Stakes (gr.
III) (VIDEO) Feb. 18 for Susan and Charles Chu's Tanma Corporation, muddling the
3-year-old picture even more as the top three finishers from the Smarty Jones
Stakes finished off the board at Oaklawn Park.
Conditioners of sophomores formerly in high regard at
Oaklawn will likely blame track conditions for their sound defeat; the Arkansas
oval dodged showers for much of the day, but the skies opened up 30 minutes
before the featured race and the track was rated sloppy.
That defeat, however, came at the hands of Hall of
Fame trainer Bob Baffert, who dominates Oaklawn whenever he ships in to unleash
his top California talent. Last year Baffert won two divisions of the Southwest
with Castaway and Secret Circle, returned to take the Rebel Stakes (gr. II) with Secret Circle, and won
the Arkansas Derby (gr. I) with Bodemeister .
Two turns and the slop proved no issue for pretty much
only Super Ninety Nine, the even-money favorite who went wire-to-wire and drew
off straight as an arrow under Rafael Bejarano to finish 1 1/16 miles in
1:44.84 while nine contenders crawled home in his wake. Smarty Jones Stakes
winner Will Take Charge finished sixth, while the runner-up from that Jan. 21 prep, Texas Bling, was ninth.
"Rafael called me before the race," Baffert
said. "I just told him to let him get away from there and do his
thing."
Longshots Fear the Kitten and Heaven's Runway put in efforts to round out the trifecta at a respective 22-1 and
59-1, but the show belonged to Super Ninety Nine.
Bejarano hustled his mount away from the gate and
secured a rail spot in the opening strides, then perched quietly aboard as the Pulpit colt got the first quarter-mile in :23.33. He let Super Ninety Nine
out a notch when pressured by Heaven's Runway just before the half-mile in
:47.49, and the runner easily responded to maintain his 1 1/2-length lead.
Big Lute chased the top two and made a bid after three-quarters in 1:12.29,
but was never a threat as Super Ninety Nine cruised off the second turn and
into the stretch to open an eight-length lead.
"With the way he broke and speed we had, everything
went well," Bejarano said. "There at the end, my horse still had
something left."
From the top of the lane to the finish line it was all
Super Ninety Nine, as Bejarano wrapped up late with the stragglers in his wake.
Fear the Kitten made a five-wide rally but was no match for second, while
Heaven's Runway fought back 2 1/4 lengths behind him for third.
"Turning for home, I could see he had plenty of
horse," Baffert said. "It's exciting. This is the time of year when
these 3-year-olds start getting exciting."
Rosie Napravnik, aboard Fear the Kitten for trainer
Mike Maker, was pleased with the effort of the second-place finisher.
"I was little concerned going into the first turn
because he didn't seem to be handling the track," she said. "But he
settled in real nice and I just kept after him. He really started to rally at
the three-eighths pole. I'm elated with his race."
Super Ninety Nine paid $4, $3.80 and $3, while Fear
The Kitten returned $11.60 and $6.60 with Heaven's Runway bringing $11.60 to show. Channel Isle, Always In a Tiz, Will Take Charge, Big Lute, Brown Almighty, Texas Bling, and Officer Alex completed the order of finish.
Trainer Dominick Schettino had this to say of second
choice Always in a Tiz: "The jock said he just wasn't handling it at all.
We had a great trip, sitting right there on the outside, but then when Paco
(Lopez) asked him on the turn, he started switching his leads back and forth
and not getting anywhere. Back to the drawing board. Hopefully we get a break
here soon."
Racing pundits will recall Super Ninety Nine from the
days leading up to the 2012 Breeders' Cup at Santa Anita Park; highly-regarded, he was scratched from the Nov. 2 Breeders' Cup Juvenile
Sprint after injuring himself in the stall the night before the race.
Later that month the colt ran second to Really Mr.
Greeley in the Hollywood Prevue Stakes (gr. II) at Betfair Hollywood Park; he came into the Southwest off a 3 1/4-length allowance win going a mile
at Santa Anita over stablemate Code West Jan. 31.
Super Ninety Nine was bred in Kentucky by Northwest
Farms out of the Unbridled's Song mare Exogenetic. Becky Thomas pinhooked him for $200,000 at the
2011 Keeneland September yearling sale when he was consigned by Three Chimneys
Sales, agent.
He was purchased for $260,000 from the 2012 Ocala
Breeders' Sales Co. June 2-year-olds and horses of racing age sale by Susan Chu
when consigned by Thomas' Sequel Bloodstock.
Oaklawn's series of prep races on the road to the
Kentucky Derby Presented by Yum! Brands (gr. I) continues with the $600,000
Rebel Stakes (gr. II) March 16 and culminates in the $1 million Arkansas Derby
(gr. I) April 13.
The Southwest Stakes victory earned Super Ninety Nine
10 points on the Kentucky Derby trail. Whether he'll continue along that trail
in Arkansas remains to be seen.
"We know he likes the track now," Baffert
said. "We'll get him back home and see how he does. I don't like to plan
ahead and with these young horses, you just never know, (but) we'll definitely
have something for the Rebel."
Read more on BloodHorse.com: http://www.bloodhorse.com/horse-racing/articles/76328/super-ninety-nine-romps-in-sloppy-southwest#ixzz2LJ6Kf9DI
Rafael Bejarano con Super Ninety Nine |
domingo, 10 de febrero de 2013
NO HAY QUINTO MALO: Juan Eugenio Enríquez
10/02/2013
Regreso al Peru para demostrar que su norte estaba
en la tierra que lo vio nacer, callado y amiguero, su tranquilidad nos hace
pensar que esta sería su arma secreta, lo que le permite analizar el desarrollo
de las carreras, conocer al milímetro a su conducido y guardar la serenidad
para saber pegar y mandar en el momento indicado. Sí, nos referimos a Juan
Eugenio Enríquez, quien el día sábado sumo un quintuplete a su excelente
campaña, ganando en la primera de la tarde con Blake, Chino Taque en la
tercera, El Guerrero en la quinta, Mascar Face en la octava carrera y para
adornar con la cereza en el pastel, termino ganando el Clásico enrique Aguinada
Asenjo con la yegua Confesiones. A la
fecha estaría llevando 27 carreras
ganadas.
Por: Esteban
Gagliardi E.
Juan Eugenio Enriquez |
EL QUE ARRIESGA GANA – JCP
Perú 10/02/2013
Acababa de regresar de Estados
Unidos a pocos meses de terminar el 2011 y de inmediato se puso a la disposición
de los preparadores peruanos, quienes conociendo de sus virtudes, no dudaron en
darle la confianza y la oportunidad para que nuevamente reaparezca con la
calidad que lo distingue. Esta es una nota dedicada al gran jinete profesional
Alfredo Clemente, del que bien dicen que la pena de uno, es la gloria de otro
y, el tiempo me ha ido dando la razón. Cuando las suspensiones castigan drásticamente
o benévolamente a uno de los mejores jinetes del medio, es cuando hay que saber
aprovechar las oportunidades que se le presenten. Lo conocí una mañana de
aprontes cuando llegue temprano a ver el trabajo de mi yegua, pero esta ya había
trabajado y un desconocido jinete se acercaba a mi preparador, Juano, a
comentarle el desempeño de su conducida. Me gusto oír lo que dijo y me dio
muchas ilusiones, pero no quisimos arriesgar y decidimos correr con descargo,
pero los resultados no nos fueron favorables. Desde entonces fuimos siguiendo
su campaña y cada día se fue consolidando, con mejores montas, con carreras
ganadas, actuando para importantes caballerizas y ganando clásicos que lo han
puesto en la mira de muchos propietarios. Regresó al Perú para seguir su
campaña y no lo está haciendo nada mal, es por ello que desde nuestras
instalaciones le auguramos los mejores deseos y que siga cosechando triunfos. Palmas
para Alfredo Clemente.
Por: Esteban Gagliardi
Erausquin
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