Jakarta Looking to Make the Grade in Barbara Fritchie G3
Jakarta Looking to Make the Grade in Barbara Fritchie G3
Multiple Stakes Winner Placed Twice in Prior Graded-Stakes
Among Six Stakes, Two Graded, Worth $900,000 in Purses Feb. 19
LAUREL, MD – Jakarta, a bargain purchase for Three Diamonds Farm that has gone on to become a stakes winner on turf and dirt as well as twice graded-stakes placed, goes after the biggest win of her career in the $250,000 Barbara Fritchie (G3) Saturday, Feb. 19 at Laurel Park.
The 70th running of the Fritchie for fillies and mares 4 and older and the 46th edition of the $250,000 General George for 4-year-olds and up, both sprinting seven furlongs, co-headline a 10-race program featuring six stakes worth $900,000 in purses.
Also on tap are the $100,000 Miracle Wood for 3-year-olds going one mile and $100,000 Wide Country for 3-year-old fillies at seven furlongs, and the $100,000 John B. Campbell for 4-year-olds and up and $100,000 Nellie Morse for females 4 and older, each going about 1 1/16 miles.
First race post time is 12:25 p.m. The Fritchie will go off as Race 8 (3:55 p.m.)
Jakarta is a 7-year-old daughter of Bustin Stones, winner of the 2008 General George that went on to win that year’s Carter Handicap (G1) before being retired due to injury undefeated in six starts. Three Diamonds won the Jan. 29 What a Summer at Laurel with another Bustin Stones mare, Time Limit.
Kirk Wycoff of Three Diamonds purchased Jakarta for $35,000 from a dispersal of owner Joseph Besecker’s horses during Fasig-Tipton’s Midlantic mixed sale in December 2019 at the Maryland State Fairgrounds in Timonium. She had raced exclusively on dirt, with four wins from seven starts.
“We’re bargain shoppers and we look for horses to repurpose dirt to turf, short to long. I love Bustin Stones. You saw what Time Limit did the other day,” Wycoff said. “She’s a racehorse. So she had a little of this and a little of that a couple of years ago; that doesn’t bother us. She’s a very sound horse and has never had a problem.”
Jakarta was immediately put on the turf in the first start for her new connections, winning an optional claiming allowance, then was back on the dirt to earn her first stakes win in the Powder Break, both at Gulfstream Park. From there she ran 14 of 15 races over grass or all-weather surfaces, finishing third in the Franklin County (G3) and winning the Claiming Crown Distaff Dash in 2020 and running fourth by a half-length in the 2021 Honey Fox (G3).
Three Diamonds moved Jakarta to trainer Mike Trombetta after she finished fourth in the Holiday Inaugural Dec. 4 at Turfway Park. Put back on the dirt, she responded with a front-running three-length triumph at odds of 18-1 in the Mrs. Claus Dec. 28 at Parx.
“Jakarta had a few issues last summer and Mike Trombetta decided to put her back on the dirt, and she seems like a new horse. We’re very excited,” Wykoff said. “We expected a big race from her off the layoff at Turfway in the Inaugural. She kind of drew inside, and inside there is heavy and you just can’t come up the rail … so it was kind of bad luck. We thought she’d run very well at Parx; we didn’t think she’d be 18-1, that’s for sure.”
Wykoff and Trombetta decided to ship Jakarta back down to Gulfstream after the race for the seven-furlong Inside Information (G2) Jan. 29. She was in front after a half-mile and six furlongs but wound up third behind Just One Time, a fellow Pennsylvania-bred racing first time for dual Eclipse Award-winning trainer Brad Cox following a private purchase.
“It was a ship for her after the race at Parx. I thought she ran incredible at Parx in that stake. We knew that it was a Grade 2 and it was going to come up tough and the filly from Penn National ran a big race. We would have liked to have been second,” Wykoff said.
“She’s a nice mare. She’s going to be bred this year to Essential Quality. We’ve got another race or two picked out for her,” he added. “It’s time. We’d like to retire her sound and on a win.”
Victor Carrasco will ride Jakarta from Post 7 in a field of eight, all carrying 122 pounds.
Fellow stakes winners Belle of the North, Glass Ceiling, Kaylasaurus and Prodigy Doll are also entered in the Fritchie. HnR Nothhaft Horse Racing’s Prodigy Doll, fourth in the What a Summer, captured the Cheryl S. White Memorial in April 2021 at Mahoning Valley, her most recent win.
Stronach Stables homebred Belle of the North won the Nov. 27 Safely Kept over the course and distance for trainer Jose Corrales, who stretched her out to 1 1/8 miles in her most recent start, the Dec. 26 Carousel, where she ran fourth.
“She runs her best probably at a straight mile. I tried her in the mile and an eighth and it did not work for her. Looking back I don’t think she was ready for that,” Corrales said. “The way she runs if there’s a lot of speed in the race, they can go and she can come running at the end and beat them. She doesn’t have that much speed. That’s why I like the seven furlongs. It depends on how the race sets up. She can be tough in there. She’s a nice filly.”
Belle of the North’s Safely Kept win came over four-time stakes runner-up Fraudulent Charge, who came back with a 5 ¾-length romp in her subsequent start, eight-time stakes winner Street Lute and Prodigy Doll. Horacio Karamanos will be up for the sixth straight race from outside Post 8.
“She did not surprise me in that race. I was very confident before thet race. I thought if it set up right, she’s going to catch them at the end,” Corrales said. “She ran the way I expected. It was a pretty tough filly at the end, but she got her.”
Co-owned by New York-based trainer Charlton Baker and Michael Foster, Glass Ceiling takes a two-race win streak into the Fritchie, a race the connections targeted following her 5 ¼-length optional claiming allowance triumph sprinting seven furlongs Jan. 23 at Aqueduct.
In her prior start, the 6-year-old Constitution mare rallied for a 2 ¼-length victory in Aqueduct’s six-furlong Garland of Roses Dec. 11. The race was contested over a sealed, sloppy track, as was her previous outing, the seven-furlong Pumpkin Pie, where she ran second by a head behind subsequent Grade 3 winner Lady Rocket.
“This was a spot I always thought of once she got good last fall. That was the main goal, to try and get her there. I thought seven furlongs would be a better distance for her. It seems like it’s her best distance,” Baker said. “I think she’s hitting her best stride right now and she showed it in her last two races. They were tough to start with, but she won them in a good way.”
Baker claimed Glass Ceiling for $40,000 out of a 6 ½-furlong sprint last May at Belmont Park and she has been worse than third only once in seven starts since with three wins, two seconds and a third. Dylan Davis will come in from New York to ride from Post 2.
“She was just running OK. She was putting up numbers that, once she got over that hump, she’d be good,” Baker said. “She was a 4-year-old and I thought she might not have gotten to her peak yet. I was hoping that she got better and if she could win the a-other-than we’d go from there. She had every right to improve, and she did.”
Bush Racing Stable, Liberty House Racing, BlackRidge Stable and George Sauflet’s Kaylasaurus encountered some early trouble in the What a Summer that had her farther back than usual, but she made a late run to be second by 1 ¼ lengths. He came from off the pace for a 2 ¼-length victory in the six-furlong Willa On the Move Dec. 26 at Laurel, her first start off a $25,000 claim by Penn National-based trainer Tim Kreiser.
Kentucky Derby (G1) and Preakness (G1)-winning trainer John Servis will be represented in the Fritchie by Ben Rollins’ Bold Confection, making her stakes debut. The 4-year-old Candy Ride filly has won three of her last four starts by 11 ½ combined lengths, most recently taking a second-level optional claiming allowance going six furlongs Jan. 5 at Parx.
“She’s a nice filly. They sent her over to me in the fall and she was probably about a month away from being ready to run,” Servis said. “From day one when I started training her, I loved her. I like everything about her, and she’s been very forward for me.
“Honestly I think her best race would probably be a one-turn mile, but I think she’ll fit the seven furlongs just fine,” he added. “She has enough speed to put herself in the race early and she relaxes really nice. That’s why I think she could just cruise fairly close to the pace and then pounce on them if she’s good enough.”
Parx champion Frankie Pennington gets the riding assignment from Post 6.
Also entered are C J I Phoenix Group and No Guts No Glory Farm’s Fille d’Esprit, seven-for-11 lifetime at Laurel for trainer Jerry Robb; and David Charlton, MarchFore Thoroughbreds and Bradley Thoroughbreds’ Regal Retort, fifth in the Pumpkin Pie and What a Summer for Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen.