Major Dude, Candidate will meet again in Penn Mile

Photo: Gulfstream Park

Changing approaches to training and the decision often to duck major confrontations until the Breeders’ Cup has sharply reduced the number of major rivalries that create excitement among racing fans.

On Friday night, however, Major Dude and Candidate, two of the most promising 3-year-old turf stakes horses in the country, face off for the third time in the ninth running of the Grade 2, $400,000 Penn Mile on the grass at Penn National Race Course in Grantville, Pa.

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The most important race of the year at the track drew a high-quality field of eight runners and highlights an 11-race card featuring six stakes races worth a combined $950,000.

Post time for the first race is 5 p.m. EDT, with the Penn Mile scheduled to go off as race 6 at 7:45 p.m.

Famed race announcer Larry Collmus, who calls the Breeders’ Cup and first two legs of the Triple Crown, will call the Penn Mile as well as the five other stakes races.

Spendthrift Farm’s Major Dude, the 8-5 favorite on the morning line, comes into the Penn Mile off a half-length defeat when third after a tremendous stretch battle in the American Turf (G2) on Kentucky Derby day at Churchill Downs.

After beating Candidate to win the Kitten’s Joy (G3) in February at Gulfstream Park, Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher ran Major Dude in the Jeff Ruby Stakes (G3) to see if the turf ace might also be a Triple Crown contender. Major Dude was beaten as the favorite that day on the synthetic Turfway Park surface, but his credentials were sharply enhanced when winner Two Phil’s came back to nearly upset the Kentucky Derby.

“We were kicking it around,” Pletcher said of the idea of running Major Dude in the Derby. “At the time, it looked like he was going to be second on the also-eligible list, which it turned out would have got him in. On entry day, we preferred to know we were in the body of the American Turf. He’s a very solid horse on all surfaces, but, in the end, we know he’s best of turf.”

Major Dude, who will be ridden by champion jockey Irad Ortiz Jr. in the Penn Mile, has competed in eight straight stakes races since breaking his maiden on debut last summer at Monmouth Park. He’s won the Pilgrim (G2) along with the Kitten’s Joy. One of his defeats came to Candidate in the Dania Beach Stakes in January at Gulfstream Park. Pletcher, second last year in the Penn Mile with Annapolis, is keenly aware of his formidable rival.

“We have met him several times, and he’s a nice horse as well,” Pletcher said. “Racing could use more rivalries.”

Mark B. Grier’s Candidate began his career last fall at Laurel Park then over the winter stamped himself as a force in the 3-year-old turf division by knocking off Major Dude and then finishing second to him in the Kitten’s Joy.

In his most recent start, the Transylvania (G3) at Keeneland, Candidate finished a close-up sixth in a race that has proven a giant key heat, with third-place finisher Webslinger coming back to win the American Turf and runner-up Nagirroc running a powerhouse race to take the James Murphy Stakes on Preakness Day at Pimlico.

Candidate, 5-2 on the morning line, had been doing his most effective running on or near the lead until the Transylvania.

“It didn’t set up well last time at Keeneland,” trainer Arnaud Delacour said. “He was a little behind, and he’s a free-running horse. We tried to rate a little bit. (The track) was speed favoring, but it just didn’t set up well for him, that’s all.

“We gave him a little time (off) since Keeneland, and it looks like he is ready to take a step forward.”

Trainer Jack Sisterson will send out Behind Enemy Lines (5-1), the easiest kind of two-length winner in April of the Cutler Bay Stakes. In his next start, the American Turf, the colt hopped in the gate and found himself well back early, buried behind horses along the inside. When jockey Flavian Pratt, who returns to ride in the Penn Mile, came off rail in the stretch to attack, the leaders did not come back to him.

“It was kind of a merry-go-round race,” Sisterson said.

Sisterson helped the owners, Talla Racing, David Bensen and Rockingham Ranch, purchase Behind Enemy Lines privately after the colt made two starts in Europe through his relationship with bloodstock agent Justin Casse and trainer Joseph O’Brien.

The Cutler Bay immediately showed the horse’s quality.

“We kind of expected that for him,” said Sisterson, who will make his first start at Penn National. “He was training like he’d put in a performance like that. Every work when he got to the U.S. got better and better.

Behind Enemy Lines’s speed figures rose slightly in the American Turf even though the trip was less than ideal. Sisterson said he is looking forward to battling the likes of Major Dude and Candidate throughout the year.

“It’s a good division,” he said of the 3-year-old turfers. “That’s what racing needs, for these divisions to be competitive."

Defending Penn Mile-winning trainer James Lawrence returns this year with a Pennsylvania homebred, 20-1 long shot in Fletcher, but the Fair Hill Training Center-based conditioner sounds unflappable, especially after having won the race last year with 83-1 bomb Wow Whata Summer.

Fletcher has been soundly beaten in his two most recent starts and never raced on grass, but Lawrence is full of confidence heading into the race.

“You’re only a 3-year-old once, and (the Penn Mile0 has been good to us,” he said. “This horse is very talented. We’re so lucky at Fair Hill to have all three surfaces, from dirt to synthetic to turf, and he impressed us on all three but really floats on the synthetic surface, really looks phenomenal, and when they do well on that, they usually do well on the turf.

“I’m a small stable, but when we get one that’s talented, I’m not afraid to take shots. Over the years, we have knocked out nice races at big prices.”

Tuskegee Airmen (6-1), like Fletcher, will try turf for the first time in the Penn Mile for trainer John Servis. The son of Kentucky Derby winner Street Sense won a stakes race at 2 at Delaware Park and then finished third in the Remsen (G2). In his return to the races May 2 at Belmont Park, he sprinted to a fourth-place finish in the Gold Fever Stakes.

Tuskagee Airmen has a solid turf pedigree: His great-grand-dam is multiple graded-stakes-placed turf mare Starry Dreamer, who produced Ecclesiastic, the two-time winner of the Jaipur Stakes (G3) on the grass at Belmont Park.

Recruiter (6-1) also will try the turf for the first time after winning five of six starts for trainer Cathal Lynch, all by open lengths. His only defeat came over a muddy track from post position 13 in the Gotham (G3) at Aqueduct.

Recruiter also has a bit of turf blood in his pedigree, coming from the same female family as Grade 3 turf stakes winner Buffalo Man.

Movistor (12-1), trained by Edward Vaughan, and locally based three-time winner Upstate and Back, for trainer Naoise Agnew, complete the field.

2023 Penn Mile G2

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