May 17, 2024

Customer Base outduels Lucy to take Robert J. Frankel

Last updated: 12/29/13 8:47 PM











Customer Base (left) just nipped Stormy Lucy in a photo that reminded Mike Smith of his Zenyatta days
(Benoit Photos)





Customer Base and Stormy Lucy served up a rousing a stretch duel in Sunday’s
Grade 3, $101,000
Robert J.
Frankel Stakes
at Santa Anita, with the former just getting the nod to earn
her first graded victory.

Glen Hill Farm’s Customer Base, whose only prior stakes win came in the 1
1/4-mile Lucie Manet at Hollywood in July, had been performing creditably over
shorter, with placings in the one-mile Swingtime and Goldikova. The added ground
of the 1 1/8-mile Frankel figured to help her chances, and she was listed as the
3-1 favorite on the morning line. But the Tom Proctor filly drifted up to the
4-1 third choice at post time. Bettors preferred the other Glen Hill/Proctor
runner, Gulsary, and sent her off as the 2-1 choice with Hall of Famer Gary
Stevens.

After losing Stevens to her stablemate, Customer Base reunited with Hall of
Famer Mike Smith, her rider from the Lucie Manet. The daughter of Lemon Drop Kid
soon settled into her customary spot well off the pace, trailed only by Gulsary
and Playful Humor in the early going.

Meanwhile, Appealing strode to the fore and established splits of :23 2/5,
:47 and 1:10 4/5 on the firm turf. The stalking Nickels Wild moved up to engage
the pacesetter turning for home, and put her head in front briefly in upper
stretch. Stormy Lucy then rallied from midpack to accost Nickels Wild and took
over.

By that point, Customer Base was gaining purposefully on the outside, and she
drew alongside Stormy Lucy. The duo matched strides to the wire, neither giving
an inch. Whenever Customer Base appeared on the verge of getting the upper hand,
Stormy Lucy parried the thrust and kept the margin razor-thin. The photo proved
that Customer Base prevailed by a nose in a final time of 1:46 2/5.

“I knew the two outside horses would have speed,” Smith said, referring to
Appealing and Nickels Wild, “so I could work out a good trip from that point
unless I got buried, which could have happened. I thought the main horse to
follow was Stormy Lucy, or our other horse (Gulsary) who was behind me so I
parked in behind Stormy Lucy and didn’t move until I had to.

“I don’t want to sound cocky or anything but it felt like a Zenyatta-like
photo finish where everyone thought it was so close, but yet I was confident.
She was just hanging there, just waiting. She knew she had done enough, she was
locked on. The only thing I could do from that point was not to mess it up, so I
just stayed with her.”

Stormy Lucy’s rider, Isaias Enriquez, knew that she was giving her all.

“She had a perfect trip,” Enriquez said. “I put her in a good spot, she was
comfortable. It was a perfect, perfect trip. Down the lane, she took off. She
was trying her eyeballs out. I just got beat by a better horse.”










Customer Base (orange saddlecloth) and Gulsary
(far left) capped a big weekend for Glen Hill Farm and trainer Tom Proctor with their one-three finish

(Benoit Photos)





Another 2 1/4 lengths back came Gulsary, who kept on to edge Nickels Wild for
third and rounded out a solid one-three result for her connections. Moone’s My
Name, Champagneandcaviar, Becky Lou, Appealing and Playful Humor concluded the
order under the wire.

Customer Base, who returned $10 to win, has now bankrolled $322,182 from her
18-5-3-2 line. The winner of her first two starts as a juvenile on Polytrack,
she was a wide-trip 11th in the 2011 Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf at
Churchill Downs in her stakes, and turf, debut. Customer Base took time to find
her best form at three, but improved back on turf and ended 2012 on a positive
note when missing by a scant neck in the Autumn Miss. She developed into a
reliable and consistent performer this season as a four-year-old, racing
exclusively on turf.

Resuming with a rallying third in the six-furlong Great Lady M. at Hollywood
on May 26, Customer Base got up for second in the one-mile Redondo Beach over
the same course June 9, and profited from the step up in trip for the July 5
Lucie Manet. She was not suited by the early crawl on the cutback to 1 1/8 miles
in the August 11 John C. Mabee, which turned into a sit-and-sprint, and she was
outkicked in fourth. Fifth in the 1 1/16-mile Yellow Ribbon in her next attempt
at Del Mar September 2, Customer Base fared better at Santa Anita in the fall.
She came up a half-length short in the October 5 Swingtime, and a game third in
the November 3 Goldikova, before her graded breakthrough on Sunday.



“She’s run good all year,” Proctor summed up. “This was probably the right
spot. You’ve got to give the filly that ran second (credit). That was the horse
I was scared of. Stormy Lucy’s a nice filly. I thought maybe Gary (Stevens on
Gulsary) was kind of watching Customer Base a little bit and tried not to get in
the way. But they both ran good.”

Proctor was delighted to win this race in honor of the late Hall of Fame
trainer Bobby Frankel, especially on the heels of winning Saturday’s Eddie Logan
Stakes, named after Santa Anita’s legendary shoe shine attendant, with
Glen Hill Farm’s Enterprising.

“I tell you what — it’s a pleasure winning this race (and) seeing Humberto (Ascanio,
Frankel’s longtime assistant who presented the winning trophy).

“You can say I enjoyed it. I kind of had it made yesterday and today with
Eddie Logan and then this race. I always thought the most of Bobby Frankel.

“We started out, we didn’t like each other too much, then I got where I
really thought a lot of him. He about put me out of the business, claiming
everything I had my first year training, ’cause I was running them where they
could win.”

Ascanio, who suffered a stroke almost exactly two years ago to the day, is
still on the mend.

“I’m doing all right,” Ascanio said. “My family and my kids are keeping me
alive. I miss seeing you all here. I miss everyone here on the backside. I talk
to a lot of people still. I don’t come out a lot, but I’m still watching. I’m
not dead yet, I’m still kickin’!”

Customer Base was bred by Edward Seltzer and Beverly Anderson in Kentucky and
sold for $170,000 as a Fasig-Tipton Kentucky July yearling. She is out of the
winning Tale of the Cat mare Little Cat Feet, making her a half-sister to stakes
victress Hyperlink.

Little Cat Feet is herself a half-sister to Arch Rebel, a Group 2-placed
multiple stakes hero on the Flat and a stakes winner over the hurdles in
Ireland. They are also half-siblings to stakes scorer and Turf Paradise
record-setter On My Dime and to multiple stakes-placed Livin for Love, the dam
of stakes winner Livinonlovanadime.

Customer Base’s third dam is Grade 1 victress Pattern Step, whose descendants
include 2011 Arkansas Derby star Archarcharch, multiple Group 3 winner and
classic-placed Arch Swing and current Killavullan hero Craftsman, fifth in his
U.S. debut in Saturday’s Eddie Logan.



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