May 3, 2024

Awesome Gem upends Rail Trip in Gold Cup

Last updated: 7/10/10 9:59 PM








Awesome Gem edged past Rail
Trip in deep stretch

(Benoit Photos)

West Point Thoroughbreds’ AWESOME GEM (Awesome Again) had made a name for
himself finishing second or third in big races, but the seven-year-old gelding
was the surprising star of Saturday’s $750,000

Hollywood Gold Cup (G1)
, denying the heavily favored Rail Trip (Jump Start)
a repeat victory with a half-length upset. The Craig Dollase runner completed 1
1/4 miles over the Cushion Track in 2:03 1/5 beneath regular rider David Flores.

Compari (Redattore [Brz]) broke on top and slowed it down on the front end,
maintaining a one-length lead through tepid early fractions of :25 4/5, :50 4/5,
1:15 and 1:38 3/5. The rest of the six-horse field was tightly bunched behind
the pacesetter as they crawled down the backstretch, with 2-5 favorite Rail
Trip under a snug hold while wide and Awesome Gem drafting behind horses along the rail.

Rail Trip, who lost ground while taking the overland route through
the far turn, offered his bid in midstretch, grabbing a short lead between
calls, but wasn’t displaying the same acceleration that carried him to an
three-length victory last year. Instead, it was Awesome Gem who had all the
momentum. After being forced to steady and alter course in upper stretch, the
chestnut closed determinedly up the rail to overhaul the favorite in the final sixteenth of a mile.



“Everybody went at the half-mile and I tried not to lose my position and wait
for that pocket to come at the end,” Flores said. “Mike Smith (on Compari) was
about ready to shut off the hole, but he looked like he ran out of horse, so it
was very nice of him to leave me that spot.

“That was the most beautiful thing, when you have a horse that can accelerate
like that at any time. He’s just been unlucky before, but today he did the job.”

“Rough trip,” trainer Ron Ellis said of the defending champion. “It just
didn’t work out today. He was wide. I don’t know why. I don’t what it was. You
would have to ask him (jockey Rafael Bejarano).”

Bejarano thought things changed for Rail Trip when he was pushed wide on the
opening turn.

“I was traveling well and was in good position (entering) the first turn,”
Bejarano explained. “(Cigar Man [Drewman]) just pushed me out. I was trying to
follow the speed, but they were going so slow. I didn’t want to rush him, so I
waited for the half-mile. I don’t think he ran his race because he was so wide
on the first turn and the second turn.”

Off as the 8-1 fourth choice, the winner totaled $18, $4.40 and $2.40 for his
supporters. Rail Trip gave back $2.20 and $2.10, and Richard’s Kid (Lemon Drop
Kid) returned $2.20. Tres Borrachos (Ecton Park), Compari and Cigar Man
rounded out the order of finish. Tap It Light (General Meeting) was
scratched.

The $1 exotics paid $16.10 (exacta) and $32.80 (3-6-4 trifecta).

A 13-time runner-up whose highlights include a third in the 2007 Breeders’
Cup Classic (G1), Awesome Gem registered his first victory of 2010 and improved
his overall record to 36-7-13-4, $2,274,682. He entered the Gold Cup in typical
fashion, finishing third in the New Orleans H. (G2) prior to a pair of seconds
in the Charles Town Classic and Lone Star Park H. (G3), and has shown great
versatility while placing in graded stakes coast-to-coast on dirt, turf and
synthetic. His previous stakes victories came in the 2009 Hawthorne Gold Cup
(G2) and 2007 San Fernando (G2).

“This horse can run over anything — synthetic, grass, mud, you name it,”
said Dollase, who had been disqualified out of a Gold Cup victory in 2001 when
Futural crossed the wire first, but was placed third by the stewards, making
Aptitude the official winner. “He’s very versatile and a real pleasure to train.
This means a lot. A lot of work. My help and everybody have been real
supportive.

“The owners have been real patient and given this horse time when he has
needed it. He’s like fine wine. He’s just getting better with age. He’s in his
prime right now.”

Bred in Kentucky by Runnymede Farm, Catesby Clay and Peter Callahan, Awesome
Gem brought $150,000 as a Barretts March two-year-old in 2005. He was produced
from the unraced Piano (Pentelicus), a half-sister to multiple Grade 2 queen J
J’sdream (Glitterman). Piano has also produced a 2010 colt by Scat Daddy.
Awesome Gem’s third dam, Royal Ties (Distinctive), produced the Grade 2-winning
On to Glory full siblings Meritocrat and On to Royalty, the latter the dam of
1996 Preakness (G1) winner Louis Quatorze (Sovereign Dancer) and 1997 Gazelle H.
(G1) winner Royal Indy (A.P. Indy). This is also the family of Grade 1 winner
Wildcat Heir and his multiple Grade 3-winning full sister Forest Heiress, both
by Forest Wildcat.