Barbadian Runner Game in Miracle Wood
Barbadian Runner Game in Miracle Wood
Onyx Ten wins second straight stakes in Wide Country
LAUREL, MD – After lugging in during the stretch run of his second consecutive race, a third-place finish in the Maryland Juvenile Championship on Dec. 7, trainer Henry Walters decided it was time for some changes.
Walters added blinkers and a new bit to cure Barbadian Runner’s troubling new habit.
Bit by bit, Barbadian Runner has improved. He finished third in the Heft Stakes three weeks later, then avoided stretch trouble when rallying to take the Spectacular Bid in his seasonal debut.
In Saturday’s $100,000 Miracle Wood Stakes for 3-year-olds at one mile at Laurel Park, Barbadian Runner stayed straight and strong for most of the race, benefiting from a perfect ride from Forest Boyce to beat back a game Pay Billy by a nose in 1:38.39.
“[Forest] said she ran as straight as an arrow until it got late in the race,” Walters said. “That could be because he had to run another sixteenth of a mile. He’s a peculiar horse because he doesn’t [lug in] in the morning. I don’t know if he gets anxious. Sometimes he’ll do it down the backside, sometimes he won’t.”
The early pace was glacial in the Miracle Wood as Spectacular Bid runner-up Crab Daddy set fractions of 24.82 and 48.91 seconds while lightly prompted by Pay Billy. Meanwhile, Boyce had Barbadian Runner pocketed behind the leaders in prime position.
“I was expecting a much faster pace,” said Walters. “I was a little worried going down the backside that he wouldn’t have as much punch. I thought everybody would be running at the end. Turning for home, Forest put him where he belonged, and he was right there. He’s very gritty.”
Barbadian Runner went after Pay Billy after six furlongs in 1:13.51, advanced to a short lead in the upper stretch, then had just enough in the tank to last under the second-wire finish. Favored Sacred Thunder finished third, 3 ¾ lengths behind the runner-up. Crab Daddy and All the Hardways completed the order of finish. Studlydoright scratched.
“He didn’t drift nearly as bad as he had in the past,” Boyce said. “I thought we’d get a little more pace. We got to sit the perfect trip. I felt super confident [turning for home]. He’s just so full of himself right now.”
Barbadian Runner was bred in Maryland by Shamrock Farm and is by Barbados. His dam, the Northern Afleet mare Quiet Run, is a half-sister to Grade 3 winner It Happened Again, stakes-winner Lucky Sam and Grade 3-placed Murch.
Walters isn’t sure whether Barbadian Runner will compete in Laurel’s next major test for 3-year-olds, the $100,000 Private Terms at 1 1/16 miles on March 22.
“If I stick to my plans, he’s probably going to go to the farm three or four weeks and rest up for the spring,” Walters mentioned.
*Onyx Ten wins second straight in Miracle Wood
Twenty-four hours after half-brother Secret Zipper won his fourth consecutive start, Onyx Ten captured the $100,000 Miracle Wood Stakes for 3-year-old fillies at seven furlongs.
Onyx Ten warmed up vigorously and was sharp before the race, briefly popping open her starting stall before settling into post position five.
As with Barbadian Runner, Onyx Ten found the pocket on the backstretch while Safe Trust and Field of Roses sparred through splits of 23.21 and 47.05. Jockey J. G. Torrealba found a seam between those two fillies turning into the stretch, surged past them at the three-sixteenths pole, then drove under the wire a length better than hard-trying Safe Trust.
Favored Icona Mama placed another 1 ¼ lengths back in third. Next came Ourdaydreaminggirl, Shkhara Fire, Not Too Late, New Boots, and Field of Roses.
Onyx Ten completed the distance in 1:25.82 and returned $8.20 to win as the public's second betting choice.
"[Torrealba] warmed her up good, hoping she'd break sharp, which she did. It worked out nice. She just got another great trip," said trainer Gary Capuano, who conditions both Onyx Ten and Secret Zipper for owner-breeder Frank Sample.
While Secret Zipper is a hulking gelding that needed time to mature before finding his best stride, Onyx Ten is very professional.
"He's such a big, gangly horse," Capuano said of Secret Zipper. "He's got a lot of length to him like that two-turn kind of horse."
Capuano then described Onyx Ten. "She's big, but she's stout and more compact. She's built more like a sprinter. The dirt hitting her doesn't faze her. For a young filly like that, she's all heart. Nothing seems to bother her."
Onyx Ten is by Street Magician. A 12 ½ length maiden winner in her second start, a waiver maiden at Delaware on Aug. 2, Onyx Ten finished second in her stakes debut 12 days later, the restricted Blue Hen Stakes. She placed third in her penultimate start last year when beaten 3 ¼ lengths by divisional leader Caprice in the Maryland Juvenile Filly.
Onyx Ten has won three of ten starts for lifetime earnings of $191,065. Capuano mentioned the $100,000 Beyond the Wire Stakes at one mile on March 22 as a likely next start.
"As long as everything is good," Capuano said of the Beyond the Wire. "As a 3-year-old, you got to get what you can when you can. Right now, she's doing everything right."