Horse Racing
Dominating stayer: Next repeats victory in Brooklyn Stakes
Next has reigned supreme in the dirt marathon division. He confirmed it yet again with an impressive title defense in Friday’s Grade 2, $200,000 Brooklyn Stakes, a 1 3/8-mile test for older horses at Belmont at the Big A.
Owned by Michael A. Foster and trained by Doug Cowans, the Not
This Time gray earned his fifth consecutive dirt marathon victory, a streak
that began in last year’s Brooklyn when contested one furlong longer in June at
Belmont Park. He went on to win the listed Birdstone by 11 3/4 lengths last
July at Saratoga, the Greenwood Cup (G3) by a widening 25 lengths in September
at Parx Racing, and the Isaac Murphy Marathon last-out by 11 1/4 lengths on May
1 at Churchill Downs.
Click here for Belmont at the Big A entries and results.
Cowans said that he knew Next, who has now hit the board in
9 of 10 starts since being claimed for $62,500 in April 2022 at Keeneland, was
a special prospect for longer races.
“Early on I told these guys this horse has a real unusual
way of having this stamina and we need to do something different with it and
try to capitalize on it,” Cowans said. “I always say that I don’t know if the
horse can do any better than he has, but he continues to come out and put on
performances like that. He just loves this, and we’re going to try and keep
doing it with him.”
With regular pilot Luan Machado aboard, Next broke alertly
from post 6 and was content to sit just off of dual stakes-winning New
York-bred Drake’s Passage, who was taken to the front by Manny Franco from post
5 before the field passed the wire for the first time through an opening
quarter-mile in 24.08 seconds over the fast main track.
Around the first turn, Next tracked in second position
within one length of Drake’s Passage with a half-length back to a close pack of
Lure Him In, Masqueparade, and Dai Vernon within striking distance of the front
pair as the half-mile elapsed in 49.29 seconds.
Up the backside, the complexion up front remained unchanged
but Irad Ortiz, Jr. began to advance from the back of the field with last-out
Grade 2 Suburban-winner Crupi after three-quarters in 1:14.07. As Drake’s
Passage entered the far turn, Next had drawn up alongside for the lead while
Masqueparade established a clear third over the retreating Lure Him In and Dai
Vernon.
At the top of the stretch, Next passed the last-out
nine-furlong state-bred Commentator-winner Drake’s Passage with Crupi being
urged into contention under Ortiz, Jr., coming with a wide-bid after one-mile
in 1:37.89.
With a hand-ride from Machado, Next spurted away from the
early pacesetter through ten furlongs in 2:01.79 to lead by 4 1/2 lengths at
the stretch call. Crupi continued to gain on Drake’s Passage with a world of
work in order to catch the reigning Brooklyn winner.
“When you get to the quarter pole when the horses are going
this long, you feel like they are kind of flattening out, but he doesn’t,” said
Machado. “He feels like he keeps kicking on in the last quarter-mile.”
Machado, nicknamed the Ax Man, would have no deficit to chop
Friday as Next drew off to a 9 1/4-length victory in a final time of 2:13.68.
The rider added that Next has the consistency to go along
with his talent.
“He’s been very, very consistent. He just did the same,”
Machado said, referencing Next’s previous races. “When it feels like everybody
starts to slow down, that’s when I’m kind of checking on him and he responds
that way. It’s just unbelievable.”
Crupi edged Drake’s Passage by a half-length for
place-honors, with another five lengths back to Masqueparade rounding out the
superfecta. Dai Vernon, Spencer’s Boy Luna and Lure Him In completed the order
of finish.
Cowans, who confirmed another title-defense attempt in the listed
$150,000 Birdstone, a 1 3/4-mile marathon for older horses Aug. 4 at Saratoga,
said he prefers the pace dynamics of marathon races over shorter distances.
“I don’t know about putting him into a 46 (-second) half.
That’s not his style,” Cowans said. “The problem is the pace is going to change
when you start shortening things down. I worry about that with him. Early on he
likes to be up close, and he has some natural speed but he likes to get into a
rhythm once he breaks out of there with that natural speed.”
Ortiz said Crupi, trained by Hall of Famer Todd Pletcher,
was game in defeat by a strong foe.
“(Next is) so good. They came home running, because my horse
was running and I couldn’t make up any ground on that one. Beautiful trip,”
Ortiz said.
Bred in Kentucky by Silverton Hill, Next, out of the
stakes-placed Awesome Again mare Bahia Beach, banked $110,000 in victory while
improving his record to 21: 11-0-1. He returned $2.90 for a $2 win bet.