Steeplechase Horse Claimed at Saratoga
A modern rarity occurred yesterday at Saratoga when Mabou, a steeplechase horse, was claimed for $30,000 out a fifth-place finish in the second race, a 2 1/16-mile optional claimer over hurdles.
Claims clerk Eric Friedman said no horse has been claimed out of a steeplechase race in his five years of working for NYRA. To add the intrigue, the horse was haltered by David Jacobson, who has never had a starter over the jumps.
That will change when Mabou makes his next start, with Jacobson planning to give the 8-year-old Dynaformer gelding another start in a steeplechase before the 2011 Saratoga meet concludes. Among races under consideration is the Grade 1 New York Turf Writers Cup on August 25.
While unorthodox in the 21st century, claiming jumpers was a practice employed decades ago by David’s father, Howard “Buddy” Jacobson, and Oscar Barrera, Jacobson noted.
“It wasn’t as uncommon as it is now,” said Jacobson. “My father claimed a bunch of jumpers and did very well with them on the flat and on the jumps. Jumpers are trained totally differently than the flat horses. Sometimes when you get a horse who has been trained differently, they can improve. That’s what I’m hoping for.”
Jacobson said his father trained prominent jumpers such as Barras, who raced from 1960-1964, and Lake Delaware , whose career spanned 1965-1970.
Following the Saratoga meet, Jacobson plans to run Mabou in flat races, with his most recent start in a non-steeplechase event having come at Laurel Park in August 2008. Prior to being claimed on Thursday, Mabou compiled a record of 5-1-0 from 10 steeplechase starts. Including his flat races, he is 9-2-3 from 31 career starts.
“Most steeplechase horses are big, strong, and sound,” said Jacobson. “Stamina is not an issue. Speed is what tends to hurt horses’ legs. These horses run longer distances, and distance horses stay sound longer.”