dryrunguy wrote: ↑Thu Oct 20, 2022 8:44 pm
After several failed attempts to get Doc Ballard into a race, we finally got one that filled. He'll run Sunday in the third race at Keeneland. It's just 2-year-olds, 7 furlongs on dirt, maiden claiming at $20K. That's still probably not as much distance as he really wants. But we'll take it.
I really like him in this spot. It's not a strong field at all. In fact, the field is so weak that I'd be tempted to bet one of the two first-time starters. It won't take much to beat this field.
EXCEPT...
One of the first-time starters is a Wesley Ward trainee sired by Curlin (a hot, hot sire producing scads of winners) and out of a multi-stakes winning mare sired by Into Mischief who won 10 of her 20 lifetime starts, including a Grade 2 stakes race, and earned $891K in purse money. Pretty impressive stuff, right?
But he'll be for sale for $20K in his debut. And by the looks of his training works to date, $20K is way overpriced. That's how this works sometimes. A stellar pedigree doesn't always translate to the track. But he'll go off as the favorite for the Wesley Ward factor alone. His win rate with first-time starters is obscene. But I can't believe that, with that pedigree, they didn't at least take a chance at a maiden special race on the first out so he couldn't be claimed. That said, I'm pretty sure Wesley knows what he's doing.
BTW, the owners of the dam paid a $175K stud fee to breed that mare to Curlin. Once.
It was a strange race.
Doc Ballard broke as well as he ever has in five races. But then most everyone passed him shortly after the break. And he was one of two horses in the back of the pack and trailing badly. Corey Lanerie (the jockey) moved him up a few spots late in the backstretch and sustained the bid all the way around the turn and into the stretch.
Doc ultimately finished 3rd, about 7 lengths behind the winner. This was on a Keeneland dirt track that generally isn't nice to horses that finish late.
So except for breaking well and then falling to the back of the field, it was a good race. He finished beautifully. It probably adds further weight to our feeling that he really wants longer races than 7 furlongs.
He got $4085 in purse money. That will cover his barn bill for the month. Unfortunately, he's several months behind on this front.
I'd love to give him a whirl on turf. If he truly is a closer, that surface should be more friendly to his style. Gulfstream or Tampa Bay may be his only turf options given the time of year. But we'll see.
He's such a strange horse.
BTW, 4 horses in the race were claimed, including the Wesley Ward 2nd-place finisher I mentioned in the quoted post. They clearly wanted to get rid of him--and they did.
Doc was NOT claimed. So we keep him.