Arlington Million Winner Santin Back at Del Mar for G2 Seabiscuit

November 25, 2022

Santin wins the Arlington Million, moved to Churchill Downs (Coady Photography)

DMTC Press Release

DEL MAR, Calif.— The last time an Arlington Million winner ran at Del Mar was in 2017 when Beach Patrol came for the Breeders’ Cup Turf. Before that it was in 2015 when The Pizza Man came to the seaside oval for the G2 Hollywood Turf Cup.   

This year’s Arlington Million winner has ventured out west for Saturday’s feature, the $250,000 G2 Seabiscuit, a mile and sixteenth test for horses 3-years old and up. Santin won the re-located Arlington Million at Churchill Downs this summer.

“He’s doing good,” trainer Brendan Walsh says. “He got out there last Saturday.”

The son of Distorted Humor ran in the G1 Hollywood Derby at Del Mar last year and missed by a neck to Beyond Brilliant. He also won the G1 Turf Classic at Churchill Downs on the Kentucky Derby undercard earlier this year.

“There wasn’t a lot of other options for him,” Walsh says, using the same reasoning most out-of-town trainers use for coming out to Del Mar this time of year. “He liked it out there last year and there isn’t a lot going on on the east coast without any turf racing this year. There wasn’t any obvious spot for him here (Churchill Downs), so we decided to give it a shot.”

Juddmonte Farm’s Set Piece, from the Brad Cox barn, also is entered in the Seabiscuit. He ran in the Turf Mile at Keeneland, too, running fourth but beaten by only 1 ¾ lengths in the G1 event.

“He’s doing very good,” assistant trainer Blake Cox says. “He shipped in Sunday. He’s galloped everyday he’s been here and he’s taken it in well.”

The son of Dansili has run against nothing but graded stakes company this year, winning twice. He took the G2 Dinner Party on the Preakness undercard in May and the G3 Baltimore/Washington Turf Cup three months later, also at Pimlico.

“We were going to run him at Churchill but the race came off the turf,” Cox says. “This was kind of the only other option. Either this or sit him home for a little winter vacation and we decided to do this.”

Kentucky Ghost is another Midwest ‘invader’ in the Seabiscuit. He ships in from the Victoria Oliver barn. He pulled off a last-to-first win in a non-winners of four allowance at Keeneland last out. In the past, the son of Ghostzapper has had a rough go of it in graded stakes company. He has never finished better than fifth in his five graded stakes starts.

While all three invaders have the potential of getting their picture taken, the ‘locals’ in the G2 Seabiscuit are no pushovers.

Smooth Like Strait stretches his legs in a workout Nov. 19 (Ernie Belmonte/Past The Wire)

Smooth Like Strait has been running with some of the best turf milers in the country the past two years. Since his last win, the G1 Shoemaker Mile at Santa Anita in May of 2021, the 5-year old son of Midnight Lute has finished second in six of his last eight races. It’s something that can get frustrating for a trainer.

“Sure it does,” trainer Michael McCarthy says. “I’d be lying if I said it doesn’t. But the horse shows up every time, he seldom runs a bad race. I’d say you can draw a line through the Breeders’ Cup. I expect him to run a big one on Saturday.”

Smooth Like Strait faded to ninth in the Breeders’ Cup Mile. In the race prior, he finished second to Santin in the Arlington Million.

“He had a little bit of an extended break between the Arlington Million and the Breeders’ Cup Mile,” McCarthy says, “so he’s a horse with some fresh legs. He’s run well at Del Mar and we thought we’d go ahead give this a shot.”

Beyond Brilliant, out of the John Shirreffs barn, beat Santin in the Hollywood Derby at Del Mar last year. He’s since won the G1 Charlie Whittingham at Santa Anita in April and the G2 City of Hope last month. The 4-year old son of Twirling Candy faded to eighth in the Breeders’ Cup Mile three weeks ago.

“He came out of the Breeders’ Cup in great condition and he’s training well for this race,” according to Shirreffs. “We thought he ran really well in the Breeders’ Cup, he was only beaten by about four lengths against the best horses in the world.”

Irideo works Oct. 29 (Ernie Belmonte/Past The Wire)

A couple of horses who won during the summer meet at Del Mar are back for the Seasbiscuit. Irideo won the $100,000 Wickerr Stakes in July and then was runner-up to Hong Kong Harry in the G2 Del Mar Mile in September. Trained by Marcelo Polanco, the 6-year-old gelding ran fifth in the G2 City of Hope behind Beyond Brilliant last out.

Trainer Phil D’Amato brings a powerful one-two punch to the fight in Hong Kong Harry and Masteroffoxhounds. Hong Kong Harry looked brilliant in his win in the G2 Del Mar Mile after finishing second behind Master Piece in the G2 Eddie Read.

Masteroffoxhounds didn’t’ fare so well in his two trips around the Jimmy Durante turf course this summer, finishing fifth in both the G2 Eddie Read and the G2 Del Mar Handicap. But he went up to Santa Anita and won the G2 John Henry Turf Championship last out.

There are those in the know saying the G2 Seabiscuit is the race of the meet. It goes off as the seventh of nine races on the Saturday card. First post is at 12:30 p.m.

Here’s the field from the rail with the jockeys and the morning line:

Santin (Umberto Rispoli, 3-1); Masteroffoxhounds (Mike Smith, 12-1); Hong Kong Harry (Flavien Prat, 7/2); Smooth Like Strait (John Velazquez, 4-1); Beyond Brilliant (Victor Espinoza, 4-1); Lincoln Hawk (Joe Bravo, 20-1); Irideo (Hector Berrios, 10-1); Set Piece (Juan Hernandez, 5-1), and Kentucky Ghost (Ramon Vasquez, 20-1).

@PastTheWire @jonathanstettin if you ever want to share HOW you consistently pick winners that win by 6, and still get 7/2, let me know!

Kevin West @KFWest003 View testimonials

Facebook