Nothing Better looks to resume where he left off in $150K Elusive Quality

Colts Neck Stables’
multiple stakes-winner Nothing Better headlines a strong field of nine veterans
in Saturday’s Listed $150,000 Elusive Quality, a six-furlong outer turf sprint
for older horses, at Belmont at the Big A.
Trained by Jorge
Duarte, Jr., the 7-year-old Munnings gelding returns from a near six-month
layoff dating to an impressive victory in the six-furlong Aqueduct Turf Sprint
Championship in November. There, he broke sharply under returning rider Dylan
Davis to lead by one length at each call through swift splits of 21.90 seconds,
44.38, and 55.70 with enough in the tank to finish a 1 3/4-length winner in
1:07.27 over the firm outer turf.
Last year, Nothing
Better’s seasonal debut came in a local optional claimer where he set the
six-furlong outer turf course record finishing in 1:06.80 over firm going on
April 13. He has breezed extensively at Colts Neck Stables in New Jersey for
his return, including a bullet half-mile over turf in 52.50 Friday
“Nothing Better is
like they say, ‘a horse for course.’ He loves Aqueduct and he loves a firm
turf, and I think we might get that with the weather coming up,” said Duarte,
Jr. “It’s an hour from the farm and our training center and he runs well there,
why change it?”
Nothing Better
exited his record-setting effort with a neck defeat to dual Grade 3-winner Beer
Can Man in the five-furlong Jim McKay Turf Sprint on May 20 Preakness Day at
Pimlico Race Course. He next set the pace in the six-furlong Grade 1 Jaipur on
June 10 Belmont Stakes Day at Belmont Park, where he faded to fifth late,
beaten 2 1/4 lengths by the multiple Grade 1-winning mare Caravel.
With a strong
performance Saturday, Duarte, Jr. said that he hopes to return to this year’s
Grade 1, $500,000 Jaipur presented by Resolute Racing, set for 5 1/2 furlongs
on June 8 Belmont Stakes Day at Saratoga Race Course. The Jaipur offers a ‘Win
and You’re In’ berth to the Grade 1 Breeders’ Cup Turf Sprint which will be
contested at five furlongs in November at Del Mar
“He’s getting a
little older now but seems well. If he’s good, he could set us up to probably
go to the Jaipur,” said Duarte, Jr. “This year is attractive, it is at Saratoga
and a half-furlong less. It comes down to him and if he comes back to form, but
I think he’s doing well.”
Nothing Better’s
other stakes scores came in 2022 with a frontrunning effort in the Aqueduct
Turf Sprint Championship after a prominent score in the 5 1/2-furlong Rainbow
Heir in August at Monmouth Park.
“When he gets loose
on the lead, he is tough to get by,” Duarte, Jr. said. “He runs well fresh. My
barn doesn’t always run great off the layoff, but as an individual, he runs
well.”
Nothing Better has
surpassed the half-million mark in career earnings with $566,217 through a
25-9-5-3 record.
Bred in Kentucky by
Don Alberto Corporation, Nothing Better is out of the Irish-bred Duke of
Marmalade mare One True Love – a half-sister to Grade 1-winner Folk Opera. He
was a $230,000 purchase at the 2019 OBS April Sale.
Davis will be
aboard from post 4.
Trainer David Donk
will send out a pair of half-brothers in dual graded stakes-placed Thin White
Duke [post 9, Trevor McCarthy] and graded stakes-placed Yes and Yes [post 1,
Jose Gomez] – both are out of the Distorted Humor mare Aberdeen Alley.
The New York-bred
Thin White Duke, owned by breeder and former trainer Phil Gleaves, in
partnership with Steven Crist, Ken deRegt and Bryan Hilliard, was last seen
finishing eighth in the aforementioned Aqueduct Turf Sprint Championship won by
Nothing Better.
The 6-year-old
Dominus gelding previously ran twice over the Aqueduct main track in October
finishing third in the 6 1/2-furlong state-bred Hudson after runner-up honors
in the off-the-turf six-furlong Belmont Turf Sprint. The highlights of Thin
White Duke’s past campaign came over the summer at Saratoga, finishing third in
the Grade 3 Troy for the second consecutive year and winning the Harvey Pack
over multiple graded stakes-winner Big Invasion, both at 5 1/2 furlongs.
Last year, Thin
White Duke finished fourth in the Elusive Quality before running tenth in the
Jaipur.
The Kentucky-bred
Yes and Yes, bred and owned by Gleaves with Joseph R. Straus, Jr. and the
Estate of Hugh Fitzsimons, Jr., ran a close second in last year’s Elusive
Quality, beaten a nose by Anaconda after taking the lead with a sixteenth
remaining. The 8-year-old Sidney’s Candy gelding then finished ninth in the
Jaipur after traveling in last-of-14 following a bump at the break.
The seasoned turf
sprinter Yes and Yes seeks his first stakes score after finishing a close
second in August's Select at Monmouth and July's Van Clief at Colonial Downs,
before an off-the-board finish in the Belmont Turf Sprint.
Diamond M Stables
and breeder J and N Stables Grade 3-winning New York-bred Dancing Buck [post 5,
Manny Franco] looks to improve upon close second-place finishes beaten a
half-length in both December’s Grade 2 Joe Hernandez and March’s Grade 3 San
Simeon, sprinting 6 1/2 furlongs at Santa Anita Park.
The 6-year-old War
Dancer gelding returns to the care of trainer Michelle Nevin after making his
West Coast outings for conditioner Rick Dutrow, Jr. His previous 18 starts came
on the NYRA-circuit for Nevin and included a win in the 2022 Grade 3 Belmont Turf
Sprint that October at Belmont at the Big A after a nose defeat to Thin White
Duke in the Lucky Coin at Saratoga.
“He’s doing well.
He’s a hard-knocking horse. A trier,” said Nevin.
Out of the multiple
stakes-placed Catienus mare Frivolous Buck, Dancing Buck is a full-brother to
Mz Big Bucks, who won the 2023 Cupecoy’s Joy division of the New York Stallion
Stakes Series last June at Belmont Park.
Gatsas Stables,
Steven Schoenfeld, and trainer John Terranova’s graded stakes-placed Our Shot
[post 2, Romero Maragh] was a last out fourth in the 5 1/2-furlong Grade 2
Shakertown on April 6 at Keeneland and is cross-entered in Grade 2 Twin Spires
Turf Sprint on Saturday at Churchill Downs.
In the Shakertown,
the 5-year-old Kantharos gelding found himself 6 1/4-lengths back in
ninth-of-12 early before climbing to fourth in the stretch, missing
place-honors by less than one length as he closed between Grade 1-winner
Mischief Magic and stakes-winner Eamonn in the event won by multiple graded
stakes-winner Arzak.
Rounding out the
field are Durante [post 8, Isaac Castillo], a Grade 3-winner on the main track
for owner/trainer David Jacobson; Charles Matses’ stakes-winner Alogon [post 7,
Kendrick Carmouche] for trainer Edward Allard; and a pair of stakes-placed runners
in Mike Rutherford’s American Monarch [post 6, Jose Lezcano] for Hall of Fame
trainer Bill Mott and Charles Hallas’ Bring Me a Check [post 3, Eric Cancel]
for conditioner Patrick Reynolds.
The Elusive Quality
is slated for Race 9 on Saturday’s 11-race card that also features the Grade 2,
$200,000 Fort Marcy [Race 8] at nine furlongs on the turf for older horses and
the Grade 2, $200,000 Ruffian at a one-turn mile for older fillies and mares
[Race 10]. First post is 1:05 p.m. Eastern with the facility open to the public
from 10 a.m. - 8:45 p.m. to accommodate a 10:30 a.m. first post at Churchill
Downs for their 14-race card that features the Grade 1, $5 million Kentucky
Derby in Race 12 at 6:57 p.m. The Big A will host a Kentucky Derby watch party
Saturday featuring free bourbon tasting, a premium cigar stand, live music and
food trucks.
America’s Day at
the Races will
present daily coverage and analysis of the Belmont at the Big A spring/summer
meet on the networks of FOX Sports. For the complete broadcast schedule, visit https://www.nyra.com/aqueduct/racing/tv-schedule.
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