Worldly field of 7 gathers at Pimlico for BWI Turf Cup

Photo: Maryland Jockey Club

Set Piece and defending champion Field Pass, both graded-stakes winners in their only previous trips to Pimlico, and Pao Alto, a European Group 2 winner yet to run in the U.S., were among seven horses entered for Saturday’s one-mile, Grade 3, $200,000 Baltimore-Washington International Turf Cup.

Juddmonte’s British homebred Set Piece was a the winner of the 1 1/16-mile Dinner Party (G2) on the undercard of the Preakness on May 21, employing his usual, come-from-behind style to win by 1 1/4 lengths. It was the sixth career stakes win and second in graded company for the 6-year-old Dansili gelding, a 10-time winner with $753,323 in purses.

“He kind of needs a setup, but he’s honest enough and always seems to show up and put in a good effort,” two-time defending Eclipse Award-winning trainer Brad Cox said. “Having won the Dinner Party, we know he likes the course. It definitely adds to our confidence level.”

Click here for Pimlico entries and results.

Winner of the Wise Dan (G2) and runner-up in the Fourstardave Handicap (G1) last summer, Set Piece followed his Dinner Party triumph by running fifth in the one-mile Forbidden Apple (G3) on July 15 at Saratoga. That was race in which he was blocked behind horses into deep stretch and wound up being beaten by 3 1/4 lengths. Last out he got off a bit slowly and raced last before getting up to be fourth in the 1 1/8-mile Arlington Million (G1) on Aug. 13 at Churchill Downs.

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“He came out of it great. He had his first work back the other day on the dirt at Churchill, and he looked great,” Cox said. “The Arlington Million race, he ran on well. They only ran two races (on the turf), and it looked like speed was good, and horses weren’t really kicking on. Overall, it was a very respectable performance.

“He’s always kept good company, and he’s beat some good horses. He’s another one that’s been Grade 1-placed a time or two. He’s a gelding, but it would be nice to win a Grade 1 with him. It’s always nice to win a graded stakes. He’s been able to accomplish that, and maybe at some point we take another swing at a Grade 1 with him.”

Sheldon Russell got the riding assignment on Set Piece from post 6 in a field of seven as co-top weight of 124 pounds.

Three Diamonds Farm’s Field Pass was forwardly placed in last year’s BWI Turf Cup and got patient handling from jockey Victor Carrasco to find room along the inside late and get up to win by a neck. Ramsey Solution and Talk Or Listen finished second and third, and both horses won stakes in their next starts.

The 5-year-old son of Lemon Drop Kid has won 2 of 8 subsequent starts, taking the 1 1/16-mile Seabiscuit (G2) last fall at Del Mar and being placed first following the disqualification of Megacity in the Texas Turf Classic on June 16 at Lone Star Park. He also exited the Arlington Million, where he wound up eighth after chasing the pace.<

“The last race over at Churchill, it was really more of a dirt track than a turf track, and he didn’t handle it very well, so it was disappointing,” Three Diamonds’ Kirk Wycoff said. “He always tries. In Texas we kind of tracked a loose-on-the-lead horse. We got a break when they put us up.”

Purchased for $37,000 as a yearling during Fasig-Tipton’s Eastern fall sale in 2018, Field Pass has won nine races. His eight stakes victories include the 2020 Jeff Ruby Steaks (G3), the Transylvania (G3) and the Ontario Derby (G3), and he has more than $1.15 million in purse earnings. He was named Maryland’s champion 3-year-old male in 2020 and champion turf male in 2021.

“We’ve had three million-dollar earners in our history over the last 16 years, so he’s meant a lot to us,” Wycoff said. “He’s always there from a mile to a mile-and-an-eighth, and the ground doesn’t matter. He’s kind of a lighter-framed horse. There’s not many Lemon Drop Kids left, and there’s none that have won a million dollars that I know of still racing. So we’re very proud of him.”

Dylan Davis, up for a runner-up finish in the 2021 Knickerbocker (G3) at Belmont Park, was named to ride Field Pass from post 4. Field Pass was cross-entered in Saturday’s Mint Million (G3) at Kentucky Downs.

Wertheimer & Frere’s Pao Alto will be making his North American debut in the BWI Turf Cup. The France-bred gelding won the Irish Thoroughbred Marketing Cup (G2) on Feb. 18 at Doha Racecourse in Qatar and most recently finished fifth, beaten by 1 1/2 lengths, in the Prix du Muguet (G2) on May 8 at Saint-Cloud in France.

“He came to us about a month or two ago,” trainer Graham Motion said. “He’s obviously a pretty useful horse. He’s been very straightforward in the morning. I feel like every time we’ve worked him, he’s improved. He’s kind of getting the hang of the different training over here.”

“I think he’s fit in pretty well. I always think it’s a little tough for these guys when they come over in the middle of the summer, because they’re not quite used to our heat and humidity, but hopefully we’re kind of getting through that a little bit now. He has actually handed it all pretty well.”

Pao Alto is 4-for-7 at the one-mile distance and has breezed four times over the all-weather surface at Fair Hill Training Center in Elkton, Md. since mid-August. Jevian Toledo will be aboard from post 2.

“Often when these European horses come over, they tend to break a step slow. I did pop him out of the gate (Tuesday) morning just to kind of get him familiar with it, and he seemed to handle it well,” Motion said. “I just kind of thought this was a good starting place for him, and the fact that it’s local is appealing to me.”

Bizzee Channel, determined winner of the 1 3/16-mile Arlington (G3) last summer, will be racing for the first time since being claimed for $50,000 by owner-trainer Lacey Gaudet from a runner-up finish Aug. 15 at Colonial Downs.

The 6-year-old son of turf champion English Channel was beaten by a neck in that 1 1/8-mile optional-claiming allowance. Going one mile, he has finished in the top three eight times in 10 tries with a pair of wins, including a May 28 optional-claiming allowance at Hawthorne for previous trainer Larry Rivelli.

“He ran very well. We’ve gone over a lot of his old replays, and it looked like it was little bit of an odd race for him,” Gaudet said. “He usually tries to go to the front, so I don’t know if they just tried to switch something up with him, but he ran great. We just felt like he could be a horse that might benefit from a change of scenery.”

“We really haven’t changed much with him, so we’re just going to kind of let him do his thing. It’s probably not the easiest spot that we could pick, but it’s at home, and I think he’ll like that turf course. He is doing well, so I think it’s worth a shot. If he gets back to half of his back class, I think he definitely fits in there.”

Johan Rosado got the call from post 3.

Trainer Chad Brown, who won the BWI Turf Cup with Projected in 2017, entered Sifting Sands and Public Sector. In a pair of restricted stakes at Saratoga, Peter Brant’s Sifting Sands, 4, won the Better Talk Now last summer and lost by a head Aug. 6 in the Lure. He is 3-0 lifetime at one mile.

Klaravich Stables’ Public Sector is winless in four starts this year after taking the National Museum of Racing Hall of Fame (G2), the Saranac (G3) and the Hill Prince (G3) in succession last summer and fall.

Feargal Lynch got the call on Sifting Sands from post 5. Junior Alvarado was named on Public Sector from the rail.

Completing the field were English Tavern, who is based at Laurel Park in the Hamilton Smith stable. Smith co-owns the 5-year-old English Channel gelding with older brother Goree Smith and with Jerry Romans Jr. Third last out in the Aug. 16 Buckland at Colonial Downs, English Tavern crossed the wire first and edged Eons by a nose in the July 16 Prince George’s County at Laurel but was disqualified for interference and placed second.

English Tavern will break from outermost post 7 with Maryland’s four-time leading rider Trevor McCarthy aboard.

The BWI Turf Cup began as the Colonial Turf Cup in 2005 at Colonial Downs, Va. It was cut back to one mile and renamed the Commonwealth Cup after being moved to Laurel Park in 2015, contested as the Commonwealth Turf Cup in 2016 and under its current name since 2017. The race was not run in 2020 when the COVID pandemic altered the stakes schedule.

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