Keepmeinmind, Rombauer arrive at Keeneland for Blue Grass
Trainer Robertino Diodoro gave Keepmeinmind the morning off Thursday after the colt arrived at Keeneland from Oaklawn Park at 11 p.m. Wednesday.
“He’ll go the track after 9 (Friday) morning,” Diodoro said of the Laoban colt, who is owned by Spendthrift Farm, Cypress Creek Equine and Arnold Bennewith.
Keepmeinmind’s success at Keeneland last fall was a major reason Diodoro opted to run in Saturday’s $800,000 Blue Grass (G2) instead of waiting a week for the Arkansas Derby (G1) at Oaklawn.
“The track down there at Oaklawn has been speed favoring,” Diodoro said. “We know he loved this track last year and decided to bring him back.”
Keepmeinmind finished second in the Breeders’ Futurity (G1) and third in the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile (G1) behind Blue Grass rival Essential Quality.
In his lone 2021 start, he finished sixth in the Rebel (G2) at Oaklawn on March 13. Initially, the plan had been to start the year in the Southwest (G3), but the race was delayed twice because of weather.
“I’m from Canada and that was a true Canadian storm that hit there,” Diodoro said of the track in Hot Springs, Arkansas. “We missed 12 days of training but we got lucky in that with the barn we have, we were able to jog inside so we didn’t miss a whole lot. It was just disappointing planning to run and not being able to.”
Rombauer returns to Keeneland for Blue Grass
John and Diane Fradkin’s homebred Rombauer is back at Keeneland to run in Saturday’s $800,000 Blue Grass (G2), marking his first start here since finishing fifth in the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile in November. Between the two Keeneland races, the Twirling Candy colt won the Feb. 13 El Camino Real Derby over the all-weather surface at Golden Gate Fields
“Our decision to run in the Blue Grass was primarily an ABB decision: avoid Bob Baffert,” John Fradkin said.
While he will evade the successful trainer in the Blue Grass, Rombauer faces a rematch with undefeated Essential Quality, who won the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile en route to being named champion 2-year-old male. Essential Quality is the 3-5 morning line favorite, and Rombauer is 15-1.
“At the time we made the decision (to run in the Blue Grass),” Fradkin said, “we thought it would be a relatively short field, but others must have felt the same way as Hush of a Storm, Keepmeinmind and Untreated all became late additions to the field. It should be an interesting race. I think the race will be run somewhat like a European turf race. It will be all about acceleration in the stretch, and that’s not a bad thing for Rombauer. Hopefully, (jockey) Florent Geroux can work out a good trip for us.”
Fradkin, who is retired as an institutional bond salesman for Citigroup, was in his late 20s when he learned to handicap while attending the races where he lived in Southern California. He acquired his first racehorse in 1993 when he claimed the 7-year-old Raise a Man gelding Ruff Hombre at Del Mar for $25,000.
Not long afterward, he and Diane attended the Keeneland September Yearling Sale and purchased a filly by Afleet for $10,500. Named Ultrafleet, she went on to produce Grade 1-winning millionaire and Breeders’ Cup Turf Sprint winner California Flag and Grade 3 winner Cambiocorsa, who is the second dam of European champion Roaring Lion.
Ultrafleet is Rombauer’s second dam.
“This family is so good that there really should be a stallion representing it going forward, and we are hoping that maybe Rombauer will someday take on that role,” Fradkin said.
The Fradkins live in Santa Ana, California, and have a small broodmare band in Kentucky. Rombauer was foaled at Machmer Hall in Paris, Kentucky, and as a youngster spent time at Ben Berger’s Woodstock Farm in Lexington. For several months at Woodstock, he shared a paddock with Hot Rod Charlie, who was second in the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile and won the March 20 Louisiana Derby (G2).
“Rombauer was always a nice mover, and he’s an intelligent, curious horse,” Fradkin said. “We had a lengthy memorable interaction with him in September of his yearling year in his paddock where he chose to play with us for a lot longer than most horses will do. I think he likes humans more than most horses. My wife says she thought he had the look of eagles that day.”
Trained by Michael McCarthy, Rombauer will start from post 5 in the Blue Grass. He is 15-1 in the morning line.