27/01/2018, GULF STREAM PARK (USA): Gun Runner Goes Out a Winner in Pegasus World Cup. Son of Candy Ride earned his fifth straight grade 1 victory // Gun Runner vince la Pegasus World Cup e si conferma il più forte.

Goncalo Torrealba (left) and Ron Winchell (right) lead Gun Runner into the winner’s circle at Gulfstream Park. (Photos by Z)

 

Midway on the final turn of the world’s richest race Jan. 27 at Gulfstream Park, jockey Javier Castellano made his move. 

He brought West Coast off the rail, moved outside of frontrunning favorite Gun Runner , and began to cut into the lead with strides that added even more electricity to the $16.3 million Pegasus World Cup Invitational Stakes (G1).

“I attacked (Gun Runner) to try and surprise him,” Castellano said.

Watching his horse challenge for the lead gave Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert a thought that maybe he could duplicate his 2017 feat of winning the inaugural Pegasus with Arrogate  last year.

“I thought we had a chance to get there and it looked like we were giving (Gun Runner) a run,” Baffert said.

And then, in the next moment, all of the greatness that carried Gun Runner to 2017 Horse of the Year honors and an enviable streak of grade 1 wins came to the fore.

Jockey Florent Geroux let out a notch and Gun Runner responded like a champion to fend off the bid of another champion.

In the final race of a spectacular career, Gun Runner held Gary and Mary West’s newly crowned 3-year-old champion at bay through the stretch and recorded a 2 1/2-length victory over West Coast in the second edition of the Pegasus before a crowd listed as 16,400.

“We’re not saying goodbye,” said Gun Runner’s trainer, Steve Asmussen. “What Gun Runner has given us will live in our memories forever.”

In his swan song Winchell Thoroughbreds and Three Chimneys Farm’s Gun Runner lived up to every bit of the expectations that made him a heavy 6-5 favorite ($4.20) over his 11 rivals.

With the $7 million winner’s share of the purse, Gun Runner moved past California Chrome  into second on the all-time earnings list with $15,988,500. He trails only Arrogate, who beat him in last year’s Dubai World Cup Sponsored By Emirates Airline (G1) and retired with $17,422,600 in earnings.

That Dubai World Cup was also Gun Runner’s last loss. He will now head to Three Chimneys for a life at stud off five straight wins, all in grade 1 stakes—the Stephen Foster Handicap, Whitney Stakes, Woodward Stakes Presented by NYRA Bets, and Breeders’ Cup Classic.

“It’s bittersweet. You can’t dream of a better ending, but you don’t want it to have an ending,” Winchell said. “I wanted to continue running him, but I got talked out of it. We came here to make him a grade 1 winner as a 5-year-old, and he ran away with it.”

As easy as it was at the end, there was some trepidation as the horses loaded into the gate. Gun Runner had post 10, a notoriously tough spot for winning at 1 1/8 miles on the main track at Gulfstream.

But Geroux took care of that. Once the son of Candy Ride  broke smoothly from the gate, Geroux was able to use Gun Runner’s natural quickness to glide over to an inside path and race just outside of the early leader, Speedway Stable’s Collected, the horse who finished second behind Gun Runner in the Breeders’ Cup Classic at Del Mar.

“The main thing was the break. We knew the break was going to be really important in the race. When he broke very sharply, like he’s very capable of, from there I was just following Collected,” said Geroux, who became a United States citizen earlier this week. “And when Collected went on and was able to be in front of Sharp Azteca, I just sat off his flank. By the three-eighths pole, when Collected was getting tired, I just took over from there. Gun Runner was just waiting for my signal to go.”

Looking on, Winchell let out a huge sigh of relief when he saw Gun Runner positioned just outside Collected on the potentially treacherous first turn.

“The stress left me when he broke nicely out of the gate and slid over to the two-path. I felt very comfortable after that,” Winchell said.

Collected tracked Gun Runner’s pace in the Breeders’ Cup, but when they swapped roles in the Pegasus, it did little to help Collected. After carving out early fractions of :23.41 and :46.61, with Gun Runner hounding him, Collected began to weaken at the three-eighths pole and faded to finish seventh.

That left Gun Runner on the lead, and the only horse doing any running behind him was West Coast. Third in the Breeders’ Cup Classic, the Travers Stakes Presented by NYRA Bets (G1) and Pennsylvania Derby (G1) winner launched a spirited challenge from fourth as he and Gun Runner separated themselves from the field.

Yet, after West Coast moved to within a length of Gun Runner at the eighth pole in a two-horse duel to the wire, Gun Runner edged clear to post a hard-fought victory for his 12th win in a 19-race career.

“It’s the cherry on the top,” Asmussen said. “He earned it. He wasn’t given it. Now we’ll get to watch his videos in the Hall of Fame for as long as we’re around.”

For Baffert, there was disappointment, but also some pride that it took a “great horse” to beat his 4-year-old colt.

“Turning for home I thought Gun Runner might be a little empty, but his tank is so big and he just kept going. He’s just a great horse. He just kept on running,” said Baffert, who also trains Collected. “I was proud of (West Coast). He just keeps getting better. I can’t really complain. We just got beat by a really good horse. He was tested the whole way around there. It was a good horse race. I just came up a little short.”

Gun Runner, bred by Besilu Stables, covered the nine furlongs in 1:47.41.

West Coast, the 7-2 second-choice, collected $1.6 million for a runner-up finish in which he was a decisive 10 3/4 lengths ahead of the next horse under the wire. Well behind the top two, 13-1 shot Gunnevera grabbed third by a half-length over 74-1 outsider Fear the Cowboy. They received $1.3 million and $1 million, respectively, in purse money in a race where entrants paid $1 million for a spot in the race but were guaranteed a return of at least $650,000.

The order of finish was completed by Seeking the Soul, Stellar Wind, Collected, Sharp Azteca, Giant ExpectationsWar StorySinging Bullet, and Toast of New York, who made just his second start since a runner-up finish in the 2014 Breeders’ Cup Classic.

By 

 

fonte : Bloodhorse.com

 
 
INTERNATIONAL USA WORLD’S RICHEST RACE
 

Superstar show from Gun Runner in Pegasus World Cup

Gun Runner: unassailable on final start of wonderful career in Pegasus World Cup
Gun Runner: unassailable on final start of wonderful career in Pegasus World Cup.
(Harry How/Getty Images)
 
 
Report: USA, Saturday

Gulfstream Park: Pegasus World Cup Invitational (Grade 1) 1m1f | dirt | 4yo+

The mighty Gun Runner (Steve Asmussen/Florent Geroux) dismissed all-comers with an incredible performance to win the second running of the Pegasus World Cup, the world’s richest race, at Gulfstream Park on Saturday.

In the end, it was an impossible dream after all for British visitor Toast Of New York, who faded out of contention on the far turn after hanging on to the coat-tails of the leaders in mid-division down the backstretch. He finished last of 12 under Frankie Dettori.


Pegasus result


At the other end of the $16 million affair, Gun Runner – an absolute model of consistency at the top level – demonstrated precisely why he had been voted America’s Horse of the Year ahead of world champion Arrogate almost unanimously at Thursday night’s Eclipse Awards.

With the Breeders’ Cup Classic hero breaking alertly from gate ten, jockey Florent Geroux shone as he effortlessly moved Gun Runner across towards the rail to sit just behind the Bob Baffert-trained Collected, who surprisingly got the lead as sprinter-miler Sharp Azteca slightly missed the kick.

Gun Runner was eased to the front three furlongs out on the far turn as Collected cried enough, only for West Coast to loom a serious threat on his flank.

However, despite his early exertions, Gun Runner dug deep to turn him away in the manner of a horse with a heart as big as his massive talent as the pair drew clear of the remainder. He scored by two and a half lengths in a time of 1min 47.41sec.

“It’s very emotional being his last race after everything he’s done for us,” said Asmussen. “For him to come through everything like he did today, to overcome that draw, we’re just so proud of the horse.

“What a dream come true he is,” added the trainer. “He’s improved with every opportunity that he got; even when he didn’t have success he moved forward. He’s just a special individual and we’re so blessed to be in his presence. This memory will be with us forever. What a special horse.”

Gun Runner, who now retires to stud at Three Chimneys, was barred from running in the inaugural Pegasus 12 months ago owing to quarantine restrictions at Fair Grounds racetrack where he was stationed after an outbreak of equine herpesvirus.

With his $7m prize-money for winning the Pegasus, the son of Candy Ride – owned by Winchell Thoroughbreds and Three Chimneys – moves into second place on the all-time US earnings list behind only Arrogate with a career total just short of $16m. He was returned an 11-10 shot on the Gulfstream pari-mutuel. “A fairytale ending to a beautiful story,” said Asmussen.

The five-year-old has won five straight races since being beaten at Meydan, all of them Grade 1 events; he has won six Grade 1s in all.

“There’s no other horse like him,” said Geroux, who was granted US citizenship on Friday after a decade in the States.

Pegasus runner-up West Coast, who wins $1.6m for his connections, was returned a 7-2 chance; a further 11 lengths back in third, but still winning $1.3m, was late-running 14-1 shot Gunnevera, while Coolmore’s runner Stellar Wind was sixth.

Somewhere a long way behind them was Toast Of New York, whose amazing fairytale did not find a happy ending. The seven-year-old used up his petrol to sit in midfield on the rail down the backstretch but was soon backpedalling once push came to shove and was allowed to come home in his own time.

“It just went horribly wrong,” reported Osborne. “He had to get out of his comfort zone early on just to lay up and he got an awful lot of kickback and realistically he lacked the pace to travel in a nine-furlong race of that nature. Maybe a tad of rustiness played its part as well.

“He swallowed a lot of sand and was coughing like a 60-a-day man after the race,” added Osborne. “The fundamental is we lacked pace and these horses over here are different gear out of the gate. The winner is a machine.”

Like the other 11 runners, Toast Of New York raced on Lasix, none taking advantage of a 7lb weight concession under race conditions for any horse racing clean of the anti-bleeding medication.

By Nicholas Godfrey

fonte : RacingPost