Chancer McPatrick. (Janet Napolitano)
By Christian Abdo
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. – Flanagan Racing’s late-running debut-winner Chancer McPatrick closed impressively once again to win Closing Day Monday’s Grade 1, $300,000 Hopeful, a seven-furlong sprint for juveniles, at Saratoga Race Course.
In victory, four-time Eclipse Award-winning trainer Chad Brown earned a sixth Grade 1-victory at the meet, adding to top-flight scores with Domestic Product [H. Allen Jerkens Memorial], Raging Sea [Personal Ensign], Carl Spackler [FanDuel Fourstardave], Ways and Means [Test presented by Ticketmaster], and Whitebeam [Diana].
Brown, who led all trainers with 45 wins at the meet, captured five races in total on the 12-race card – a feat he also completed here on August 25, 2021 – with additional wins on Monday from Marvelous Madison [No. 2, $4.10] in Race 2; Prerequisite [No. 2, $4.40] in Race 5; Dea Matrona [No. 6, $8.80] in Race 9; and Child of the Moon [No. 11, $4.80] in Race 11.
“It means the world. They [the team] work so hard, and my clients and the horses we have to work with – it’s just a magical meet. It’s a meet for the ages, and I don’t know how myself or anyone else could replicate this. It seems impossible,” said Brown. “My team showed off their talents to be able to train any kind of horse – different ages, surfaces, distances.”
Back aboard Chancer McPatrick after a victorious debut on July 27 here, jockey Flavien Prat extended his newly established meet records with a 14th graded stakes score and 18th overall stakes win.
The McKinzie bay broke inward from post 8-of-9 and was quickly dropped back when Prat lost an iron from hitting the gate and then bumping with Mentee to his inside. Prat recovered swiftly and was content to sit well off of the pacesetting Smoken Wicked, who was tracked by Mentee through an opening quarter-mile in 22.76 seconds over the fast main track.
“I hit the gate, lost my stirrups. It was pretty bad. The first jump he went right into the starting gate. From there, I regrouped,” said Prat. “The way he broke, Iost so much ground, I was basically trying to give him a good race and see if he would make a run.”
The favored Ferocious settled into a stalking third position as the nine-horse field traveled down the backside with Chancer McPatrick towards the back of the pack in eighth, only in front of distant first-time starter Mr. Mendelslew.
Around the turn through a half-mile in 45.70, Smoken Wicked continued to duel with Mentee, a full-brother to Grade 1 DraftKings Travers-winner Fierceness, with Ferocious keeping close tabs under Irad Ortiz, Jr. just ahead of Innovator, Tough Catch, and the Brown-trained Incentive Pay.
Coming to the top of the lane, Prat picked it up aboard Chancer McPatrick and angled him to the four-path for a run at Smoken Wicked, who at this stage repelled Mentee, but there were far more challengers to come.
Smoken Wicked held a half-length advantage at the stretch call as Chancer McPatrick got rolling down the center of the course outside of a driving Ferocious with Incentive Pay also kicking along the rail. After three-quarters in 1:10.61, it was down to this four, and Chancer McPatrick had momentum to the outside of Ferocious.
Chancer McPatrick showed a devastating turn-of-foot to turn back the bid of Ferocious and win by a half-length in a final time of 1:23.44, with 1 3/4 lengths back to Incentive Pay in third. It was one more length to Smoken Wicked in fourth, with Innovator, Mentee, Studlydoright, Tough Catch, and Mr. Mendelslew completing the order of finish.
Prat, who won the first Grade 1 of the meet aboard the Brown-trained Whitebeam and now the last, said it was a fitting end to his record-setting meet.
“When it’s meant to be, it’s meant to be,” said Prat. “The break was pretty bad and I never thought from there I could regroup. He did it and he showed that he’s very talented.”
Sean Flanagan of Flanagan Racing, who noted he has been visiting Saratoga since his childhood as early as 1971, said Chancer McPatrick’s rally had him in disbelief.
“He needs even longer than this. To go from last to winning the Hopeful…,” mused Flanagan. “As far as ownership and breeding them, I’m still very much a novice. We wanted to stick to horses that might be Classic, two-turn type horses. I think that Chancer McPatrick is definitely a two-turn horse.”
Brown said a stretch-out could come for both of his runners in the 1 1/16-mile Grade 1, $600,000 Breeders’ Futurity on October 5 at Keeneland or the one-mile Grade 1, $500,000 Champagne on the same day at Belmont at the Big A, both “Win and You’re In” qualifiers for the Grade 1 Breeders’ Cup Juvenile in November at Del Mar.
“The Champagne and Breeders’ Futurity are the two races that were really on my radar if they had run well, so I’ll talk to both owners and see how they come out and what track I think fits who,” said Brown.
Gustavo Delgado, Jr., son and assistant to trainer Gustavo Delgado, said Ferocious lost his front left shoe during the race and still galloped out strongly.
“On the gallop out, you could tell the horse is there, the finesse is there, it’s just experience,” said Delgado, Jr. “He seemed to be a little bit distracted. When the winner passed him by, he got engaged in the race. On the gallop out, he passed the winner again. They are learning what to do and he will get better with races.”
Ortiz, Jr., aboard the $1.3 million OBS March 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale purchase Ferocious for the first time after an injury sidelined Hall of Famer Javier Castellano, said his horse stalled a touch before fighting back.
“He doesn’t really give it to me [kicking in] until that horse get close to me. When that horse gets outside of me, he turned his engine on,” said Ortiz, Jr. “He was fighting back, and he ran a really good race. I have a good trip. I got run down by that one, but he was fighting back so I’m happy with him.”
Bred in Kentucky by Rigney Racing, Chancer McPatrick is out of the winning Bernardini mare Bernadreamy. His second dam is Grade 1-winner Dream Empress. In victory, Chancer McPatrick became sire McKinzie’s first Grade 1-winner.
Chancer McPatrick banked $165,000 while improving his record to 2-2-0-0 and returning $10.80 for a $2 win bet. He brought $725,000 at the OBS Spring Sale of 2-Year-Olds in Training after initially being purchased for $260,000 in the 2023 Fasig Tipton July Select Yearling Sale.
Live racing resumes Friday, September 13 at Aqueduct Racetrack for the start of the Belmont at the Big A fall meet. The 31-day meeting will feature 50 stakes worth $10.35 million and runs through Sunday, November 3. For the complete Belmont at the Big A stakes schedule, visit https://www.nyra.com/aqueduct/racing/stakes-schedule/.
America’s Day at the Races will present daily coverage and analysis of Belmont at the Big A on the networks of FOX Sports. For the complete broadcast schedule, visit https://www.nyra.com/belmont/racing/tv-schedule.