Perform wins Tesio, requires supplement to make Preakness

Photo: Maryland Jockey Club

It took Perform six tries since last summer to break his maiden, racing against competition that included some of the top point earners for the Kentucky Derby. He needed only one more start, 35 days later in his stakes debut, to make a return visit to the winner’s circle.

Ridden by Feargal Lynch for Hall of Fame trainer Shug McGaughey, Perform sprung a 10-1 upset of Saturday’s $125,000 Federico Tesio Stakes at Laurel Park, making a dramatic rush in the final sixteenth of a mile and sticking his head out at the wire to edge a game Ninetyprcentmaddie.

Click here for Laurel Park entries and results.

The 42nd running of the 1 1/8-mile Federico Tesio served as a win-and-you’re-in qualifier for Triple Crown-nominated 3-year-olds to the 148th Preakness Stakes on May 20 at Pimlico.

Perform, bred in Kentucky by Michael Orem and JB Lane Orem, is not among the six Triple Crown nominees in the Tesio from a field of nine. Owners Woodford Racing, Lanes End Farm, Phipps Stable, Ken Langone and Edward Hudson Jr. have the option to supplement Perform to the Preakness on entry day for a cost of $150,000.

“It’s a shame he’s not (automatically) in the Preakness,” Lynch said in winning his first race of the year, in his fifth start, following his annual winter vacation. “This is a nice horse.”

Multiple stakes winner Coffeewithchris, made eligible for the Triple Crown races by the late March 28 deadline, broke alertly from his rail position and took up residence on the lead, going a quarter-mile in 24.47 seconds. Ninetyprcentmaddie, another late nominee, pressed to his outside in second, and early nominee Fletcher tracked in third. Stakes winner Prince of Jericho, the 9-5 favorite also looking to punch his ticket to the Preakness, raced in fifth. Perform trailed the field.

Coffeewithchris maintained his lead through a half-mile in 48.48 seconds with Ninetyprcentmaddie still glued to his flank and Fletcher tagging along behind. Lynch maintained his course on the inside and was gaining ground around the turn but still needed room to run. Ninetyprcentmaddie put away Coffeewithchris at the eighth pole and began to clear. Lynch tipped Perform out from behind Prince of Jericho and a tiring Fletcher to make a run at the leader.

“I was expecting him to be keen. Shug said, ‘You’ve got to get him to relax,’” Lynch said. “(Jockey) Irad (Ortiz Jr.) said the last time at Tampa he got him switched off and he came home good. When Johnny (Velázquez) rode him in his maiden at Keeneland, he was quite keen and strong. He’s always been a nice horse, but the key’s been getting him to relax.”

Lynch moved back down inside around Prince of Jericho past the sixteenth pole, and instead of taking the opening to Ninetyprcentmaddie’s left, he darted back to the outside and was able to get up in time after completing the distance in 1:51.28 over a fast main track. It was 1 1/4 lengths back to Summer Cause in third.

“I thought I was in trouble down the back, to be honest,” Lynch said. “He just wasn’t handling the track. I got in behind Sheldon, and he was getting braver and braver and just kept picking it up, and I knew at the half-mile pole I’ve just got to figure out a way through here. That’s going to be the hardest part. When we came into the straight, and I saw Paco coming off the rail, I thought, ‘I don’t want to go up the inside on him.’ So I went around him and hoped that I had time.”

Eldest Son, one of two horses in the Tesio for meet-leading trainer Jamie Ness, was fourth. Coffewithchris, Prince of Jericho, Circling the Drain, Time to Cruise and Fletcher completed the order of finish.

“I knew with all that speed up ahead in front there were always a few horses that were going to press the pace. It was going to be a quick pace, and it was going to set up for a horse coming from behind,” Lynch said. “The horse I was worried about was (Summer Cause). I thought he was a nice horse, too. He was a bit close to the pace. I thought he’d be further back with me, and he’d be a horse to jump onto, but I never saw him.”

Perform fetched $230,000 as a yearling in September 2021 and ran second in debut last July at Belmont Park to subsequent Sapling winner Lost Ark. He was fourth behind Disarm his second time out and then third to eventual Gotham (G3) winner Raise Cain at Keeneland in October. Raise Cain and Disarm, the Louisiana Derby (G2) runner-up who ran third in Saturday’s Lexington (G3), have 64 and 56 points, respectively, to clinch berths in the Derby.

In his sophomore opener, Perform ran fourth behind Mage, who would come back to be second to 2022 juvenile male champion and Derby favorite Forte in the Florida Derby (G1) on April 1 at Gulfstream Park. Mage qualified for the Derby with 50 points.

“They thought the world of him as a baby. He went off favored as a 2-year-old at Keeneland with Johnny (Velázquez), and he broke the gates and was just doing too much,” Lynch said. “Two nice horses beat him, and the horse that beat him down at Gulfstream was second to Forte. You can’t get any more solid form than that.

“He was pulling when I was warming him up. He’s not a big, strong horse or anything. I couldn’t believe this was the same horse that I was watching on all the replays this morning. I was expecting having to wrestle with him and getting him to relax, but he was good.”

Lynch, 45, returned to riding March 31 at Laurel, finishing second on Dover Bluff, after spending the winter with his parents in Spain. He also ran second Saturday with Grade 1-placed Pass the Champagne in the $100,000 Heavenly Cause.

“I take the winter off, and it keeps me fresh,” Lynch said. “I think, at my age, I enjoy it more coming back for these races, especially. It really lights me on fire. These are the days I want to be here for.”

A total of 22 Tesio winners have gone on to run in the Preakness, the last being Alwaysmining in 2019. Maryland-bred Deputed Testamony in 1983 was the only horse to sweep both races. Last year’s winner Joe, named Maryland’s male division champion for a second straight year, is nearing his return to the races.

Happy Saver won the Tesio in 2020 for Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher as a prelude to his next-out victory over older horses in the Jockey Club Gold Cup (G1). Runners-up Ruler On Ice in 2011 and Monday Morning Qb in 2020 respectively went on to capture the Belmont Stakes and Maryland Million Classic.

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