Owner Gatsas hopes Vekoma flashes 'unreal' talent in Met Mile

Photo: Eclipse Sportswire

After running the race of his life with an emphatic 7¼-length romp in the Grade 1 Carter, R.A. Hill Stable and Gatsas Stables' Vekoma tackles an even tougher field assembled for Saturday's $500,000 Met Mile (G1).

The recent eye-popping victory under Hall of Fame rider Javier Castellano, which garnered a 110 Beyer, was a second start of the year for the Candy Ride chestnut colt who made his 2020 bow a winning one in the Sir Shackleton on March 28 at Gulfstream Park. Last year, Vekoma earned accolades heading into the Kentucky Derby after drawing away to victory in the Blue Grass (G2) at Keeneland for trainer George Weaver.

To earn a second Grade 1 victory, Vekoma will have to topple a field that includes last year's Travers (G1) and Jockey Club Gold Cup (G1) victor Code of Honor and McKinzie, the winner of last year's Whitney (G1) at Saratoga.

Already a winner going a one-turn mile during his 2-year-old campaign in the Nashua (G3), Vekoma will be stretching back out to a mile from the seven-furlong Carter.

"He's got so much talent it's unreal," co-owner Mike Gatsas said. "I think he can handle it. Javier knows the horse very well and he can get the distance without a problem. They have a great rapport with one another, so we'll let him decide on a trip."

In both of his 4-year-old starts, Vekoma has displayed tactical speed sitting just off of the pacesetters before making a winning bid at the top of the stretch. 

Gatsas anticipates that Vekoma will display a similar running style on Saturday.

"He has some early speed, so he'll help set the pace somewhat," Gatsas said. "He won't be on the lead, but he should be forwardly placed. Javier rides him extremely well and understands him well, so he knows what he's doing."

Vekoma, named after a Dutch manufacturing company of roller coasters as a nod to his champion-producing sire's name, has taken his connections on an exciting ride. Hill and Gatsas also partnered with graded stakes-placed Our Country, who ran eighth in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf last November at Santa Anita as well as New York-bred stakes winner Funny Guy.

"It's such a great partnership, but what's really good about it is that it's also a great friendship," Gatsas said. "We've had a lot of fun over the years. We've gone to the Derby, the Breeders' Cup together and we just won the Carter, so it's been such a fun experience."

Vekoma, bred in Kentucky by Alpha Delta Stables, is out of the Speightstown broodmare Mona de Momma who also is a Grade 1 winner going seven furlongs. 

Being a Grade 1 winner with a Grade 1-winning sire and dam makes Vekoma quite enticing as a stallion prospect, but Gatsas said a triumph in the Met Mile, which is known for being a "stallion making race,” could make his breeding value even more appealing.

"Hopefully this adds to his resume," Gatsas said. "He also won the Blue Grass last year so I'm sure a lot of Kentucky farms would be interested in that. He took down that field real well, too.

"He's just such a special horse. He's not a big, strapping colt, but he is really well-built."

2020 Metropolitan (G1)

Read More

This is the 17th and final installment of a weekly feature exclusive to Horse Racing Nation tracking the...
Forever Young earned a sparkling 140 Horse Racing Nation speed figure for his victory in Saturday's Breeders' Cup...
The Fasig-Tipton November Sale, held Monday at the Newtown Paddocks in Lexington, Ky., posted sales of more than...
Owen Almighty , the Grade 3 Tampa Bay Derby winner who most recently placed third in the Perryville...
A decade after Michelle Payne became the first woman win Australia's most famous race, Jamie Melham has etched herself...