Animal Kingdom eyes road to Dubai World Cup
Gulfstream Park has always been fertile ground on which to prepare a horse for a long trip to Dubai in successful pursuit of great reward in the tiny, petro-rich nation that offers the largest purse for a horse race anywhere on the planet. Cigar, Roses in May and Invasor traveled this route to the United Arab Emirates and the prize, now $10-million, that awaits the horse successful in the dessert.
After an impressive return to competition in an otherwise nondescript scrimmage last weekend at Gulfstream, Animal Kingdom, winner at age three of the Kentucky Derby but absent from the public eye since early last June, appears poised and ready for the Dubai World Cup.
While winning the fifth race on a Saturday at Gulfstream is unlikely to make the Animal Kingdom career highlight reel — though it did make ESPN’s Top 10 plays of the day to the delight of trainer Graham Motion — it was nevertheless important.
It has been a very long time since a Derby winner returned at age four and mounted a meaningful campaign, and in a year in which the reigning Horse of the Year, Havre de Grace, remains in training, Animal Kingdom’s success bodes well for the season at hand. Not since Giacomo, the longshot Derby winner of 2005, has a winner of America’s race managed even a single victory in the following season. Animal Kingdom with this victory has interrupted a negative trend and awakened the interest of those who saw him last spring as a potential, if ultimately unproven, dominant 3-year-old.
“I think when you have a Derby winner everybody owns a little piece of him,” Motion said on Saturday. “It may sound a little corny, but when you have a Derby winner, he’s a little bit the people’s horse and you have a responsibility. I think the reception he got was neat, and I’m glad we got to run him here.”
There is a singular mystique in winning the Kentucky Derby, a starring role in the unfolding American drama that is every year. Recent winners, however, have been exposed as horses of the moment not the ages, and even the best of recent decades have either disappeared into the breeding shed or for various reasons left legacies wanting futilely for substantiation. The tragedy and unrealized stardom of Barbaro overshadowed every other story that developed during 2006 and he may have been the one. We will never truly know. But the last Derby winner whose stardom endured at age four is arguably Alysheba, a 3-year-old of 1987.
While racing waits impatiently for the ascension of a breakthrough 3-year-old, its own Jeremy Lin, it may well be the returning stars that carry the day in 2012. Envision Animal Kingdom and Havre de Grace in the same field at Saratoga this summer — a returning Horse of the Year and champion 3-year-old — a distinct possibility if all goes well in both camps in the coming months. The hind-leg injury suffered in the last Belmont Stakes that ended prematurely Animal Kingdom’s 3-year-old campaign may in time be considered a blessing in disguise if not for the horse and his connections, then for the fans and the sport at large in 2012. Smooth sailing last year may well have added Animal Kingdom to the roster of Kentucky Stallions, eliminating many potentially compelling propositions, the first of which is the March 31 Dubai World Cup. The misfortune of 2011 may be the good fortune of 2012.
A year that produced little in the way of definitive dominance may bear fruit in the still nascent season with the unfolding of 2012. Horses often improve markedly with maturity and others prominent last year remain in competition — Game On Dude, Acclamation, Royal Delta, Awesome Feather, Mucho Macho Man, Caleb’s Posse among them. Hymn Book has emerged as a force and likely will not be the year’s last surprise.
At this point, the focus is fixed as it should be upon 3-year-olds who have demonstrated the traits of a potential Kentucky Derby winner. So far, none has ignited a spark of genuine excitement. But regardless of what develops on the Triple Crown trail this is a year of compelling possibilities with the principal players of both sexes older than age three, a group of horses battle tested, proven and probably yet to realize their best days.
Several of those aforementioned have launched new campaigns with victories that promise more. Now, Dubai awaits Animal Kingdom. Stay tuned.
Originally Posted on ESPN
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About
Paul Moran has covered thoroughbred racing on its highest level for over 30 years, including 22 years at Newsday, in New York.
During that time, he has covered 30 Triple Crown series, every running of the Breeders' Cup Championships and 23 race meetings at Saratoga.
Paul has won two Eclipse Awards, a Red Smith Award for coverage of the Kentucky Derby and other writing awards from the National Society of Newspaper Editors, Long Island Press Club, Society of Silurians (the oldest press club in New York), Long Island Veterinary Medical Association, Florida Magazine Publishers Association.
In 2002, he was named New York's best thoroughbred handicapper by the New York Press in its annual "Best of Manhattan" edition.
His work has appeared in virtually every racing publication published in the United States and most major American newspapers.
- Website - paulmoranattheraces.blogspot.com