Preakness Quick Sheet: Get to Know the 2021 Preakness Horses
A Closer Look at 2022 Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Hopeful Blazing Sevens
RacingThe fields for the 14 races that comprise the Breeders’ Cup World Championships really begin to come into focus in summer and fall and this regular feature will offer a snapshot profile of one of the previous weekend’s standout stars.
Blazing Sevens punched his ticket to the $2 million FanDuel Breeders’ Cup Juvenile with a win in the $500,000 Champagne Stakes Oct. 1 at the Belmont at the Big A meeting. The Champagne has produced four 2-year-olds that went on to win the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile in the last 15 editions: War Pass (2007), Uncle Mo (2020), Shanghai Bobby (2012), and Good Magic (2017). The first three listed both races while Good Magic used a runner-up finish in the Champagne as a springboard to Breeders’ Cup success.
Like his sire, Good Magic, Blazing Sevens is on target for the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile for trainer Chad Brown off an impressive effort in the Grade 1 Champagne Stakes. Unlike his sire, who ran second in the Champagne in 2017 before winning the Juvenile, Blazing Sevens heads to the World Championships off a win by 3 ¼ lengths as the co-longest shot in the field at 8.50-1.
Blazing Sevens made a terrific first impression when winning his debut July 24, 2022, at Saratoga Race Course by 6 ¼ lengths to earn an 85 Equibase Speed Figure and a 78 Beyer Speed Figure. He then finished a distant third, beaten by 12 lengths, in the Grade 1 Hopeful Stakes on a sloppy track at Saratoga Sept. 5. That uninspired effort on a sloppy track at Saratoga no doubt led betters to look elsewhere in the Champagne on Aqueduct’s main track, but Blazing Sevens provided a compelling reminder that every dirt main track plays differently when rain turns it muddy or sloppy.
The dark bay or brown colt appeared much more comfortable on the sealed-sloppy main track at Aqueduct despite trailing the six-horse Champagne field early. He moved up between horses in the final half-mile of the one-turn-mile race, angled to the outside under jockey Flavien Prat, and finished with a powerful rush to surge well clear.
While the other runners were slowing down significantly after a moderate pace, Blazing Sevens had plenty left in the stretch with a final eighth of a mile in 12.41 seconds, which was about half a second faster than runner-up Verifying. Blazing Sevens earned a career-best 95 Equibase Speed Figure and 91 Beyer Speed Figure in the victory and cemented his credentials as a top contender for the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile while earning an expenses-paid starting spot via the “Win and You’re In” Challenge Series. He looks like a serious win candidate for several reasons:
- With five weeks between his final prep race and the Breeders’ Cup, Blazing Sevens should have plenty of time to recover from a career-best race.
- Blazing Sevens’ speed figures are competitive with the rest of the 2-year-old male division, although like most hopefuls he would very likely need to improve to win Nov. 4 at Keeneland.
- He’s bred to handle stretching out to two turns as his sire, the aforementioned Good Magic, won the 2017 Juvenile en route to an Eclipse Award as champion 2-year-old male and then ran second in the 2018 Kentucky Derby Presented by Woodford Reserve. His dam (mother), Trophy Girl, by Warrior’s Reward, also was a winner around two turns.
- While many might assume that tactical speed is extraordinarily important in the 1 1/16-mile Breeders’ Cup Juvenile – and it certainly doesn’t hurt – closers, stalkers/closers, and stalkers have won 11 of the last 20 editions of the Juvenile. It’s a race often won by 2-year-olds who prefer to rally from off the pace.
- Thirteen of the last 20 winners entered off of victories, nine were Grade 1 winners, and 11 entered off of open-length wins … so Blazing Sevens checks quite a few boxes.
“He’s been a wonderful horse to get along with. He’s all class,” Brown said of Blazing Sevens. “I want to thank Pete Bradley for picking him out and John and Carla Capek, the owners. This is their second year in owning horses and they’re lovely people, very deserving. If he comes out healthy, it’s on to the Breeders’ Cup.”