Sisterson looks to be 'aggressive' with Ky. Downs entries

Photo: Coglianese Photos/Joe Labozzetta

Trainer Jack Sisterson likes the idea of Calumet Farm homebred Channel Cat taking home the top prize in the $1 million, Grade 2 Turf Cup – sponsored by Calumet – on Sept. 11 at Kentucky Downs.

“It would be pretty cool to win a race like that for the farm,” he said.

After considering the $750,000 Sword Dancer (G1) at Saratoga Race Course on Saturday, Sisterson said the 6-year-old chestnut son of Calumet stallion English Channel will wait a few weeks for the Turf Cup. The all-turf Kentucky Downs meet, which offers the richest purses in America, runs Sept. 5, 6, 8, 9, 11 and 12.

“He's doing great,” Sisterson, the former University of Louisville soccer player turned private trainer for Calumet Farm, said in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. “He could have run in the Sword Dancer, but I think the most logical spot would be to bring him home. He's won at Kentucky Downs in the past, so he handles that sort of configuration. It might come up a touch lighter than the Sword Dancer and it's a million dollars and it's a ‘win-and-you’re-in’ for the Breeders’ Cup. It makes more sense to us to go down there.”

The winner of the 1 1/2-mile Turf Cup, which will be broadcast on NBC, gets a fees-paid spot in the $4 million Breeders' Cup Turf at Del Mar on Nov. 6.

Channel Cat, then trained by Todd Pletcher, picked up the first stakes win of his career in the 2018 Dueling Grounds Derby. He won Bowling Green (G2) at Saratoga last summer and earned a prized Grade 1 victory in the Man o’ War in May at Belmont Park. In his most recent start, he was the beaten favorite, finishing fourth in the Bowling Green (G2).

Sisterson said Channel Cat, whom he has trained since last year, will breeze on Sunday and will ship back to Kentucky on Monday or Tuesday. As usual, Sisterson said, Calumet Farm is aiming to run for the big purses offered at Kentucky Downs.

“We'll kind of try to be aggressive in the entry box. If we get in, that’s a different question,” he said. “I'm sure multiple guys are doing the same thing. We’ve still got a lot of 2-year-olds to run down there, horses with conditions. We'll try a couple of stakes races. We will try and support the meet as much as possible.”

Calumet Farm is owned by Brad Kelley, the self-made billionaire from Bowling Green and Franklin, Ky., who owned Kentucky Downs in partnership or outright from 1997 until 2007.

Calumet’s American Derby winner Tango Tango Tango also is headed to a Kentucky Downs stakes, the $600,000 Franklin-Simpson (G2) — one of five graded stakes on the track’s blockbuster Sept. 11 card. In his most recent start, Tango Tango Tango was second in the Bruce D. (G1 – formerly the Secretariat) at a mile at Arlington Park.

“I don’t think he will get the mile and 5/16ths for the Dueling Grounds Derby, so we’re going to cut him back in trip,” Sisterson said. “Sometimes that 6 1/2 might lean more towards a mile with the uphill incline finish. We’ll give him a shot in the Franklin-Simpson.”

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