Preakness Quick Sheet: Get to Know the 2021 Preakness Horses
2019 Travers Stakes Cheat Sheet
RacingThe $1.25-million, Grade 1 Runhappy Travers Stakes at Saratoga Race Course on Saturday is shaping up to be a very important race in determining how the 3-year-old division plays out for the rest of 2019, since, with the arguable exception of Maximum Security, no horse has separated from the rest of the upper echelon through the first eight months of racing. Furthermore, the 150th Travers should also be a horseplayers’ delight as it features a large, competitive field.
The 1 ¼-mile Travers will be the featured race in a one-hour national broadcast on FOX from 5 to 6 p.m. ET. The Travers is not an automatic qualifying race for the Breeders’ Cup Classic, but three other stakes races on Saratoga’s loaded Saturday card are Challenge Series “Win and You’re In” races, and will be televised by Fox Sports either during the national broadcast window or earlier on a 5 ½-hour broadcast of “Saratoga Live” Presented by Runhappy, Claiborne Farm, and America’s Best Racing. For more information, click here.
Whether you are interested in making a couple of bucks on the race or just want to know a little bit about this year’s runners, we’ve got you covered with our 2019 Travers Stakes Cheat Sheet.
1. Owendale (6-1)
Jockey: Florent Geroux
Trainer: Brad Cox
Owner: Rupp Racing
Career record: 10 starts – 4 wins – 1 second – 2 thirds
Career earnings: $668,725
Earnings per start: $66,873
Top Equibase Speed Figure: 114
Pedigree: Into Mischief – Aspen Light, by Bernardini
Color: Bay
Running style: Stalker/closer
Notable achievements and interesting facts: This colt enters the Travers Stakes in career-best form and sporting the highest career Equibase Speed Figure in the 12-horse field. Owendale earned that in a hard-fought, half-length win over Math Wizard in the Grade 3 Ohio Derby at Thistledown June 22, his most recent start. Prior to that, he tallied two triple-digit figures when running a rallying third in the Preakness Stakes in May and then when winning his first graded stakes, the Grade 3 Stonestreet Lexington at Keeneland in April. Other than an inexplicably dull eighth-place effort in the Risen Star Stakes Presented by Lamarque Ford back in February, this son of top sire Into Mischief has never run a bad race since breaking his maiden in his third start last fall. Based on form, he should be a leading win candidate in the Travers, although it should be noted that Ohio Derby runner-up Math Wizard came back to run a well-beaten sixth in the West Virginia Derby, more than five lengths behind that race’s runner-up and Travers longshot Chess Chief. The big question with Owendale is distance: Into Mischief, while currently leading the North American sire list for 2019, has yet sire to a classic-distance horse of distinction, and several other Travers starters, including probable favorites Tacitus and Tax, both have more suitable pedigrees for the Travers’ 1 ¼ miles as well as more experience competing in route races. But Owendale is a legitimate contender in the Travers and should be sitting in an advantageous stalking spot under Florent Geroux after saving ground early as the field makes its way through the backstretch. Geroux finished third on Gun Runner in the 2016 Travers. Owendale is the first Travers starter for up-and-coming trainer Brad Cox.
2. Code of Honor (4-1)
Jockey: John Velazquez
Trainer: Shug McGaughey
Owner: William S. Farish
Career record: 7 starts – 3 wins – 2 seconds – 1 third
Career earnings: $1,215,820
Earnings per start: $173,689
Top Equibase Speed Figure: 111
Pedigree: Noble Mission – Reunited, by Dixie Union
Color: Chestnut
Running style: Stalker
Notable achievements and interesting facts: Code of Honor figures to be one of the post-time favorites in Saturday’s 150th Travers, and he will carry a lot of support on track as a local hero. He broke his maiden first out at Saratoga last summer and was in the top echelon of 2019 Kentucky Derby Presented by Woodford Reserve contenders through the winter and into early spring until he finished a dull third in the Xpressbet Florida Derby. The Kentucky Derby provided some measure of redemption for Code of Honor, as he reached contention at the top of the stretch with a very good trip under John Velazquez but could not seal the deal and finished third (elevated to second after Maximum Security was disqualified). Following the Derby, Code of Honor was patiently handled by Hall of Famer Shug McGaughey and bypassed the remaining Triple Crown races, returning with a visually impressive win in the one-mile, Grade 3 Dwyer Stakes at Belmont Park on July 6. He’s been training steadily at Saratoga ever since, and McGaughey is renowned for getting his horses to excel in races that he’s targeted on the calendar. Code of Honor has a good stalking running style for the Travers, although getting the 1 ¼-mile distance is still a concern given how he tired late in the Kentucky Derby. Still, this professional colt is a logical win candidate and a horse to build exacta and trifecta tickets around. Hall of Fame rider Velazquez won the 2005 Travers aboard Flower Alley and he also finished second twice. McGaughey has three Travers wins: back to back in 1989 and 1990 with champions Easy Goer and Rhythm and in 1998 with Coronado’s Quest. Will Farish of Lane’s End Farm also campaigns Travers starter Highest Honor; he co-owned both 2007 Travers runner-up Grasshopper and 2008 runner-up (by a nose) Mambo in Seattle.
3. Highest Honors (10-1)
Jockey: Luis Saez
Trainer: Chad Brown
Owner: William S. Farish
Career record: 3 starts – 2 wins – 1 second – 0 thirds
Career earnings: $114,800
Earnings per start: $38,267
Top Equibase Speed Figure: 102
Pedigree: Tapit – Tap Your Feet, by Dixieland Band
Color: Gray or roan
Running style: Stalker
Notable achievements and interesting facts: Highest Honors won the local prep for the Travers, the July 26 Curlin Stakes, by 1 ½ lengths on a muddy track over fellow Travers starters Endorsed and Looking At Bikinis. After trailing the field early, he made a sustained rally heading into the far turn and was kept to task by jockey Jose Ortiz while three wide in the stretch of the 1 1/8-mile Curlin. He continued on stoutly to the finish and appeared to be well-suited to handling added distance in his future races. Ortiz will ride Tacitus in the Travers as he has for all of that colt’s starts, but Highest Honors picks up Luis Saez, who currently ranks fourth by wins at Saratoga’s elite meet and third by purse earnings. This son of top sire Tapit is obviously very talented but has only been competing since late April, finishing second by a neck in his career debut at Keeneland and then winning a 1 1/16-mile, one-turn maiden race at Belmont Park before his two-turn score in the Curlin. He has posted Equibase Speed Figures of 102, 96, and 101 in those three starts and, if he is ready to take another step on the marquee Travers stage, Highest Honors has an outsider’s chance to grab what his name proclaims. Look for Saez to position his mount in midpack on Saturday, perhaps a bit closer to the lead than in this colt’s stakes debut. Saez won his Travers debut on Will Take Charge in 2013 and finished third last year aboard Bravazo. Chad Brown’s best Travers finish to date from eight starters is fourth with Gift Box in 2016. Will Farish also campaigns Travers starter Code of Honor; he co-owned both 2007 Travers runner-up Grasshopper and 2008 runner-up (by a nose) Mambo in Seattle.
4. Laughing Fox (30-1)
Jockey: Ricardo Santana Jr.
Trainer: Steve Asmussen
Owners: Alex and JoAnn Lieblong
Career record: 9 starts – 3 wins – 0 seconds – 0 thirds
Career earnings: $421,018
Earnings per start: $47,113
Top Equibase Speed Figure: 101
Pedigree: Union Rags – Saskawea, by Stormy Atlantic
Color: Chestnut
Running style: Closer
Notable achievements and interesting facts: This horse was an under-the-radar contender on the Road to the Kentucky Derby based on back-to-back wins at Oaklawn Park in late winter, but disappointed in his two Derby points races at his home track and thus was relegated to starting in the inaugural Oaklawn Invitational Stakes on Kentucky Derby day. Laughing Fox won that 1 1/8-mile race with a visually impressive closing rally, and since then has finished fifth in the Preakness Stakes and fourth in the Jim Dandy Stakes Presented by NYRA Bets. In all of his nine career starts, he’s come running from off the pace, either from a stalking position or from farther back. As such, he’ll be dependent on a swift early pace in Saturday’s Travers, which he may well not get. Still, this colt has untapped potential and is a more appealing candidate to fill out exactas and trifectas than the other deep closers lined up in the Travers. Ricardo Santana Jr. has ridden Laughing Fox in all but two of his starts (one of those he missed was the Oaklawn Invitational) and will need to keep his mount out of traffic trouble through the first mile or so in order to get Laughing Fox cranked up for a stretch run. Santana, the first-call jockey for Steve Asmussen, has been riding well during the current Saratoga meet and will be making his second consecutive start in the Travers. Asmussen has finished third twice from five Travers starters.
5. Everfast (30-1)
Jockey: Martin Chuan
Trainer: Dale Romans
Owner: Calumet Farm
Career record: 13 starts – 1 win – 2 seconds – 1 third
Career earnings: $549,805
Earnings per start: $42,293
Top Equibase Speed Figure: 105
Pedigree: Take Charge Indy – Awesome Surprise, by Awesome Again
Color: Bay
Running style: Closer
Notable achievements and interesting facts: In 2015, Dale Romans trained one of the biggest upset winners in the storied history of the Mid-summer Derby, when Keen Ice rallied past Triple Crown winner and eventual Breeders’ Cup Classic winner and Horse of the Year American Pharoah in the final strides. A win by Everfast in Saturday’s Travers would go down in the books as arguably an even greater upset, although there is no horse in the 2019 Travers field that comes anywhere close to American Pharoah in terms of accomplishments. But then, Everfast is no Keen Ice, either. This horse has competed in many of the top-level races among his age group ever since last fall, and has been a factor exactly twice, posting two runner-up efforts at gargantuan odds in the Fasig-Tipton Holy Bull Stakes back in February and then in the May 18 Preakness Stakes behind War of Will. One could argue that his Belmont Stakes Presented by NYRA Bets seventh-place effort wasn’t bad, either, as he was defeated by only three lengths. But in each of his seven other graded stakes appearances to date, he’s finished 6 ¼ lengths back or more – often much more. Everfast will probably vie with Chess Chief for the longest odds at post time, and he should be positioned near the back of the field with that fellow grinder until early stretch, when he’ll try to pick off some straggling horses and secure a spot in the superfecta. Young jockey Martin Chuan will make his Travers debut after recently moving from his native Peru, where he was a leading rider, to Ellis Park for its current summer meet. In addition to his win with Keen Ice, Louisville-based Romans finished third with First Dude in his 2010 Travers debut. Calumet Farm has three Travers wins, but all during its 20th-century era of dominance when owned by the Wright family. Calumet under Brad Kelley's ownership finished third last year in the Travers with Bravazo.
6. Tacitus (5-2)
Jockey: Jose Ortiz
Trainer: Bill Mott
Owner: Juddmonte Farms
Career record: 7 starts – 3 wins – 2 seconds – 1 third
Career earnings: $1,353,000
Earnings per start: $193,286
Top Equibase Speed Figure: 107
Pedigree: Tapit – Close Hatches, by First Defence
Color: Gray or roan
Running style: Closer
Notable achievements and interesting facts: Still regarded as one of the best horses in his age group, Tacitus enters Saturday’s 150th Travers Stakes in search of a career-defining, elite-level win after good, but not good enough, efforts in his most recent trio of starts. He was rolling late in the Kentucky Derby Presented by Woodford Reserve but had too much ground to make up on Maximum Security and finished fourth (elevated to third after Maximum Security was disqualified). He paid the price late for a wide trip traveling a mile and a half in the Belmont Stakes Presented by NYRA Bets, gaining on winner Sir Winston in the final strides but still losing by a length. And in his most recent start in the Jim Dandy Stakes Presented by NYRA Bets, Tacitus nearly fell at the start, recovered to trail the field, and then valiantly closed the gap on Tax through the stretch, only to come up three-quarters of a length short. He arguably should have won both the Belmont Stakes and Jim Dandy, and therefore will probably be the post-time favorite in the Travers, but a change in riding tactics may be in order on Saturday to give this physically imposing, superbly-bred son of Tapit the best chance of winning. Tacitus has a sustained, powerful running style similar to recent Travers winners Will Take Charge and Keen Ice, but like those horses he also doesn’t possess an electric turn of foot. Thus, it will be incumbent upon jockey Jose Ortiz, who’s been aboard Tacitus for all of his starts, to judge the early pace by the time the Travers field settles in the backstretch and, if necessary, call for Tacitus to move into contention earlier than usual if the fractions are slow. The addition of blinkers, announced at the Travers draw, could help in this regard. Ortiz, currently the leading rider at Saratoga’s meet by a wide margin in wins and earnings, will be making his sixth Travers start; he finished second in his 2012 debut aboard Moreno. Hall of Famer Bill Mott has trained two Travers runners-up among eight starters. Khalid Abdullah’s Juddmonte Farms owned 2016 Travers winner and track-record setter Arrogate.
7. Mucho Gusto (6-1)
Jockey: Joe Talamo
Trainer: Bob Baffert
Owner: Michael Petersen
Career record: 8 starts – 5 wins – 2 seconds – 1 third
Career earnings: $630,800
Earnings per start: $78,850
Top Equibase Speed Figure: 107
Pedigree: Mucho Macho Man – Itsagiantcauseway, by Giant’s Causeway
Color: Chestnut
Running style: Pacesetter/press the pace
Notable achievements and interesting facts: This West Coast shipper adds even more class to what was already a high-quality Travers field. Bob Baffert decided earlier this week to start Mucho Gusto in the Mid-summer Derby after the colt posted three impressive workouts at Del Mar following his good runner-up finish behind Maximum Security in the July 20 TVG.com Haskell Invitational Stakes. He enters the Travers with one of the best race records in the field, having won four Grade 3 stakes to date and with two second-place finishes in Grade 1 stakes. He has never finished worse than third through eight career starts, although it’s notable that two of his defeats came in starts at 1 1/8 miles. Mucho Gusto does not need to control the pace to win, but he has had success doing so, and it would not be a surprise to see jockey Joe Talamo be aggressive in getting his mount secured in a prominent early position as the field moves into the first turn. This talented, consistent colt is stuck at the Grade 3 level and certainly has a chance to attain Grade 1 status in the prestigious Travers, but Mucho Gusto more realistically profiles as a horse to use in all exacta and trifecta bets rather than as a leading win candidate. Talamo has been aboard Mucho Gusto throughout the colt’s career and will be making his Travers debut. Hall of Famer Baffert, on the other hand, has won the Travers three times from eight starters: Point Given (2001), Arrogate (2016), and West Coast (2017). And he also finished second in the 2015 renewal with a colt that was arguably better than his Travers winners, each of them champions: Horse of the Year and Triple Crown winner American Pharoah.
8. Chess Chief (30-1)
Jockey: Mike Smith
Trainer: Dallas Stewart
Owner: Estate of James Coleman Jr.
Career record: 10 starts – 1 win – 1 second – 1 third
Career earnings: $195,530
Earnings per start: $19,553
Top Equibase Speed Figure: 102
Pedigree: Into Mischief – Un Blessed, by Mineshaft
Color: Bay
Running style: Closer
Notable achievements and interesting facts: Rarely can it be said that Hall of Fame jockey Mike Smith goes to the post on the longest shot in a marquee stakes race, but that could be the case on Saturday in the 150th Travers. Chess Chief has only one win in 10 career starts, a maiden score back in March at Fair Grounds. He has put forth better efforts in his most recent two starts – both stakes tries, in which he was fourth in the Indiana Derby and second, defeated by six lengths, in the West Virginia Derby (both won easily by Mr. Money). He’s also been training well at Churchill Downs for Dallas Stewart, who has a well-deserved reputation for getting huge runs out of longshots in prestigious races, and as mentioned above, he gets arguably the best big-race rider the sport to take the reins. But this horse is a one-dimensional closer who will need most, if not all, of the rest of the Travers field to fall apart in the stretch allowing him to meander to the lead. He may pass a few tired horses late, but hitting the board in any slot would be a major surprise. Smith has four Travers wins: Holy Bull (1994), Coronado’s Quest (1998), Arrogate (2016) and West Coast (2017). Chess Chief is Dallas Stewart’s first Travers starter.
9. Looking At Bikinis (10-1)
Jockey: Javier Castellano
Trainer: Chad Brown
Owners: Long Lake Stable, Madaket Stables, Thomas Coleman, and Doheny Racing Stable
Career record: 3 starts – 2 wins – 0 seconds – 1 third
Career earnings: $98,350
Earnings per start: $32,783
Top Equibase Speed Figure: 102
Pedigree: Lookin At Lucky – Bikini Beauty, by Bernardini
Color: Bay
Running style: Press the pace/stalker
Notable achievements and interesting facts: This intriguing contender joins Highest Honors to represent leading Saratoga trainer Chad Brown in the Travers. After winning his first start impressively in a 6 ½-furlong race last fall at Belmont Park, Looking At Bikinis was sidelined for more than nine months before returning in a one-mile allowance at the same track. He outfinished stakes winner Not That Brady in an impressive off-the-bench effort, and that set him up for his two-turn debut in the July 26 Curlin Stakes at Saratoga, where he was sent off as the post-time favorite. He set a contested pace in the Curlin and appeared to be out of energy at the top of the stretch, but showed determination in the final furlong to hold third behind stablemate Highest Honors and Endorsed, another Travers starter. This son of champion Lookin At Lucky has a solid, though not spectacular, pedigree in terms of stamina, and he’ll need to move forward in a major way off of his Curlin performance to have a shot at winning on Saturday. In a Travers with no pure front-running horse entered, expect jockey Javier Castellano to put Looking At Bikinis into the race early from his outside post position, perhaps even at the head of the field by the time they hit the backstretch, and then try to set a modest pace through the middle stages of the race before asking his mount for full effort at the top of the homestretch. An off track in the Travers may help this colt's chances, as he romped in his career debut on a sloppy track and then ran decent in the Curlin Stakes on a main track rated as muddy. Hall of Famer Castellano is the all-time winningest jockey in Travers history; his six winners are Bernardini (2006), Afleet Express (2010), Stay Thirsty (2011), V.E. Day (2014), Keen Ice (2015), and Catholic Boy (2018). He also finished second in 2005 aboard Bellamy Road. Chad Brown’s best Travers finish to date from eight starters is fourth with Gift Box in 2016.
10. Scars Are Cool (30-1)
Jockey: Tyler Gaffalione
Trainer: Stanley Hough
Owner: Sagamore Farm
Career record: 3 starts – 1 win – 0 seconds – 1 third
Career earnings: $58,020
Earnings per start: $19,340
Top Equibase Speed Figure: 99
Pedigree: Malibu Moon – Ready Signal, by More Than Ready
Color: Chestnut
Running style: Stalker
Notable achievements and interesting facts: A major class test awaits this inexperienced but promising colt in the Travers, but he’s shown improvement in each of his three starts since debuting in May and is a worthy longshot contender to consider using in exotic tickets. The son of Malibu Moon finished fourth in his debut at Churchill Downs going 6 ½ furlongs and then third as the favorite in a one-turn mile at the same track in June. After a five-week break, he surfaced at Saratoga and was stretched out to two turns in a 1 1/8-mile maiden on July 21. Scars Are Cool stalked a moderate pace and swept seven wide in the stretch for an impressive closing rally made even more so by the fact that jockey Tyler Gaffalione lost his riding crop just as his horse straightened out. The colt earned a 99 Equibase Speed Figure in that victory and will need to boost that significantly on Saturday to have a shot at hitting the board. He has shown a patient, stalking style in his young career and has responded well to Gaffalione in the saddle for all of his starts. Gaffalione will be making his second Travers start on Saturday. Stanley Hough, who returned to the sport after an absence of several years in 2018 as Sagamore Farm’s personal trainer, will make his Travers debut.
11. Endorsed (15-1)
Jockey: Joel Rosario
Trainer: Kiaran McLaughlin
Owner: Godolphin
Career record: 4 starts – 2 wins – 1 second – 0 thirds
Career earnings: $114,850
Earnings per start: $28,713
Top Equibase Speed Figure: 103
Pedigree: Medaglia d’Oro – Dance Card, by Tapit
Color: Bay
Running style: Stalker
Notable achievements and interesting facts: Endorsed exits the local Travers prep at Saratoga, the 1 1/8-mile Curlin Stakes July 26, when he ran a solid second to Highest Honors in his first try around two turns. Prior to that, he’d won his career debut during Saratoga’s 2018 meet, ran sixth in October’s Grade 1 Champagne Stakes, and then returned this June after a break of more than eight months to score in a six-furlong Belmont Park allowance race. This son of 2002 Travers winner Medaglia d’Oro has a nice pedigree but concedes a big experience edge to several foes in Saturday’s race. He’ll have to extend his stamina another eighth of a mile to get the Travers’ classic mile-and-a-quarter distance, but he has the right rider to help him kick home in Joel Rosario, one of the sport’s best closers. This will be Rosario’s fourth Travers start; he finished third in his 2014 debut aboard Tonalist. New York-based Kiaran McLaughlin won the 2012 Travers in a dead heat with Godolphin-owned Alpha, and he also finished second in 2011. Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al Maktoum’s Godolphin also owned 2001 Travers runner-up E Dubai.
12. Tax (6-1)
Jockey: Irad Ortiz Jr.
Trainer: Danny Gargan
Owners: R. A. Hill Stable, Reeves Thoroughbred Racing, Hugh Lynch and Corms Racing Stable
Career record: 8 starts – 3 wins – 2 seconds – 1 third
Career earnings: $756,300
Earnings per start: $94,538
Top Equibase Speed Figure: 106
Pedigree: Arch – Toll, by Giant’s Causeway
Color: Dark bay or brown
Running style: Press the pace/stalker
Notable achievements and interesting facts: This gelding could be in the early stages of putting together a lengthy and accomplished career in the mold of throwback types from the previous decade such as Perfect Drift and Lava Man. His backstory is already one of the most appealing among current horses in training, as he was astutely claimed by Danny Gargan for his current owners last fall at Keeneland, and then made his mark on the Kentucky Derby trail over the winter with a win in the Withers Stakes and a runner-up finish to Tacitus in the Wood Memorial Stakes Presented by NYRA Bets. After a disappointing 14th-place finish in the Kentucky Derby Presented by Woodford Reserve and a solid fourth in the Belmont Stakes Presented by NYRA Bets, Tax put it all together with a breakthrough score over tough-luck Tacitus in the Jim Dandy Stakes Presented by NYRA Bets at Saratoga on July 27. He displayed his usual forwardly-placed, stalking running style in the Jim Dandy, took the lead under Irad Ortiz Jr. coming out of the far turn, and had enough stamina in reserve to hold off Tacitus’ late challenge. Aside from his Kentucky Derby aberration, Tax has given a good account of himself in all of his races, and there’s no reason to expect any different on Saturday, although Irad Ortiz will have to make the right decisions early on about when to angle Tax inward from his far outside post in order to save ground and secure a good stalking spot. His one timed workout at Saratoga since the Jim Dandy was excellent, and he’s bred to handle the 1 ¼-mile distance. All in all, there’s little to question here – Tax is a serious threat to win the Travers and is the most logical horse to use as a key in exotic wagers, especially if his attractive 6-1 odds on the morning line hold steady. Ortiz’s best Travers finish among seven prior starters was fourth in 2014. This will be Danny Gargan’s first Travers appearance.