The Next Big Stakes Races

By: Greg Melikov

There were 16 horses nominated for Saturday’s $400,000 Suburban Handicap at Belmont. Because the defending champion was among them, most avoided the race.Now Invasor, 2006 Horse of the Year, must skip racing entirely. The Argentine-bred came out of a five-furlong workout last Saturday with a fractured sesamoid in his right ankle. Trainer Kiaran McLaughlin sadly announced that the son of Candy Spots was being retired.

Invasor, who won 11 of a dozen races and earned more than $7.8 million, suffered the sesamoid injury while racing in Uruguay where he was crowned Horse of the Year and champion 3-year-old colt in ‘05.

McLaughlin pointed out the latest fracture was clean and probably won’t need surgery, unlike when he was a young horse and had a piece of sesamoid removed.

That leaves Corinthian the likely favorite in the Grade 1 contest at 1-1/4 miles. The remaining challengers aren’t exactly well known performers: Fairbanks and Harlington, both trained by Todd Pletcher, and Political Force, trained by Allen Jerkens. However, Fairbanks is coming off a victory in the Tokyo City Cup Handicap at Santa Anita Park on March 31.

Several other recent stakes winners were ducking Invasor. Papi Chullo had an excuse - he will miss the 121st Suburban with a quarter crack and point to Saratoga’s $750,000 Whitney at 1-1/8 miles on July 28. Invasor won that race last year before capturing the Breeders’ Cup Classic.

Corinthian, trained by Jimmy Jerkins, will attempt to become the first horse since In Excess in ‘91 to capture both the Metropolitan Mile and Suburban in the same year. Some pretty good thoroughbreds have performed the feat: Buckpass, ‘67; Kelso, ‘61; and Tom Fool, ‘53.

McLaughlin also had nominated Jazil, last year’s Belmont Stakes winner, saying he was kept in reserve for the Suburban. Now it appears he will run.

Jazil had been considered for the $750,000 Hollywood Gold Cup the same afternoon. Lava Man, top dog on the West Coast, is the defending champ.

Lava Man, winner of this year’s Santa Anita Handicap, and Buzzards Bay, victorious in Hollywood’s Californian Stakes, were supposed to meet in the 68th Gold Cup, but the latter will miss the race because of a sore back. Instead at least five challengers will take on the two-time Gold Cup winner, led by Molengao, the runner-up to Lava Man in the Santa Anita Handicap who later captured the Mervyn LeRoy

Other likely runners are A. P. Xcellent, who scored on Hollywood’s cushion track three times before running third last time out in the Californian; A. P. Arrow, victorious in Gulfstream’s Skip Away Handicap; My Creed, who took the Berkeley Handicap at Golden Gate; and Big Booster, an optional claiming winner.

Possible starters include Wilko, seventh in the Californian who hasn’t won since the BC Juvenile in ‘04; El Roblar, who was victorious in the Ack Ack Handicap; Awesome Gem, the trailer in the Santa Anita Handicap; and Mr. Splash, who ran seventh in a Hollywood Park allowance race.

The $150,000 Dwyer Stakes at Belmont on July 4 will feature several 3-year-olds prepping for lucrative races later in the summer on the East Coast.

They include Nobiz Like Showbiz, the Wood Memorial winner that ran tenth in the Kentucky Derby; Sightseeing, runner-up in the Wood; Any Given Saturday, who ran eighth at Churchill Downs after losing by a nose to Street Sense in the Tampa Bay Derby; and Hewitts, victorious in his first start against winners.

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Greg Melikov, a native Chicagoan and retired South Florida newspaperman who resides in Greater San Antonio, has been handicapping and writing about thoroughbreds for decades. His articles and columns appear globally in print and online, including on his own site: www.horsingaround.info. He became a racing fan at 13 when he saw 1948 Triple Crown winner Citation whip 20 older horses at old Arlington Park. He can be contacted at gmelikov@satx.rr.com.

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