Calumet Farms English Bee Leads Nine Entered For Saturday’s Virginia Derby at Colonial Downs

NEW KENT, Va. (August 27, 2019) — Calumet Farm’s English Channel colt English Bee and their Street Sense colt Tracksmith lead a field of nine 3-year-olds that will compete over 1 1/8 miles Saturday in the 17th running of the $250,000 New Kent County Virginia Derby (Gr. 3) at Colonial Downs. The Virginia Derby along with the $150,000 Fasig-Tipton Virginia Oaks headline a stakes laden card of racing that begins at 5 PM ET. The undercard features the Exacta Systems Rosie’s Stakes and the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance Kitten’s Joy Stakes, each of which carry a purse of $100,000. All four stakes will be contested over the Secretariat Turf Course. 

Racing fans around the country can enjoy Derby Day action from Colonial Downs on TVG and via the Horse Racing Radio Network (HRRN). Gabby Gaudet will broadcast on site from the New Kent track for TVG on the 30th and 31st. HRRN will be broadcasting live from Colonial 8-10 AM on Derby morning and again Virginia Derby night.    

Through the investment of the Colonial Downs Group, a subsidiary of Peninsula Pacific Entertainment, Colonial Downs has experienced a racing revival for the 2019 season, and Saturday’s program will feature the return of the Derby and the Oaks after a six-year hiatus.

Trainer Graham Motion has entered a trio that includes 5-2 morning line favorite English Bee, who raced against his stablemate and Derby entrant Shootin the Breeze in the James Murphy Stakes May 18 at Pimlico. English Bee won the black-type stakes while Shootin the Breeze was third. Most recently, he was fourth in the Grade 2 National Museum of Racing Hall of Fame Stakes August 2 at Saratoga and 10th in the Belmont Derby Invitational Stakes July 6. For the year, he has two wins from five starts and a bankroll of $100,650. Overall, the Kentucky-bred has $132,150 in earnings from eight starts. English Bee is out of the Kitten’s Joy mare, Evil Kitten.  

Tracksmith, a perfect 2-for-2 this year with earnings of $101,008, is fresh off a half-length win in the Frisk Me Now Stakes at Monmouth on July 27. The Joe Sharp trainee, who is 3-1 in the morning line, was best by a head in a Churchill Downs allowance one month prior. Last summer, he won a maiden special weight at Ellis Park and missed by a head in the $400,000 Kentucky Downs Juvenile Stakes. Overall, Tracksmith has won 3 of 6 starts for earnings of $204,033. All but one of his starts has come on turf. The lone dirt effort was a sixth-place finish in the Grade 2 Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes over a sloppy track at Churchill. 

Credit Swap is the third choice in the early line at 4-1 and is fresh off a four pack of in-the-money finishes. The 3-year-old Exchange Rate gelding started the streak at Fair Grounds last November and after a seven-month layoff, followed with runner-up efforts in the Stanton Stakes at Delaware Park and the My Frenchmen Stakes at Monmouth Park. Credit Swap is owned by Marc Winston, George Schifano and Rob Auerbach and is trained by Mike Stidham.

The Motion-trained Shootin The Breeze has eight starts with earnings of $67,692. Since breaking his maiden at Tampa Bay Downs in January, the Hard Spun colt has collected a pair of seconds and thirds in allowance company at Belmont, Keeneland and Gulfstream until a sixth-place finish most recently at Saratoga. The Kentucky-bred is out of Prof. McGonagall by Storm Cat and is owned by Alex Campbell. 

Jais’s Solitude is coming to New Kent off a string of four solid turf outings. The Eddie Kenneally trainee captured an allowance optional claimer at Arlington July 27 and before that came up a nose shy at Keeneland in an $81,000 turf allowance. The Afleet Alex gelding had respective third-and-second place finishes at Tampa in the Sophomore Turf Stakes and in an allowance. Jais’s Solitude is out of the Notebook mare, Privacy, and is owned by Mike Anderson Racing. 

Completing Motion’s trio is Solidify who was sixth most recently in the Grade 3 Kent Stakes at Delaware Park. The Tapizar colt won a pair of races last fall at Woodbine including the Grade 3 Grey Stakes. He has bankrolled $93,197 from four starts.

Chilly in Charge is coming off a fifth-place finish in the Grade 3 West Virginia Derby but prior to that, was dominant in the $100,000 Crowd Pleaser Stakes at Parx. The Take Charge Indy colt won by 12 lengths in a race that was taken off the turf. Interestingly, Crowd Pleaser won the inaugural Virginia Derby in 1998. Chilly in Charge is a Pennsylvania-bred out of the Harlan’s Holiday mare, Holiday Chills. He is trained by Miguel Vera for the Newtown Anner Stud.

Rounding out the field are a pair with more experience than any others in the field. Critical Data has 13 starts and Changi has 12. The former is an Irish-bred trained by Richard Valentine. The Battle of Marengo colt has had three outings in the U.S. including a fourth in the Grade 3 Kent Stakes July 6. The latter is owned and trained by Jeanne Dolan and comes into the race off a fourth-place run in the Jersey Derby Stakes at Monmouth. He is by Giant Oak out of Our Miss Brookside by The Cliff’s Edge.

The New Kent County Virginia Derby has been carded as the ninth of 10 races and will go to post at 9:00 PM. New Kent County has an English history that dates back 400 years. It is the second fastest growing locality in Virginia and is home to four golf courses, three wineries, three rivers and historic landmarks like St. Peter’s Parish Church, known as “The First Church of the First First-Lady.”

A field of nine will compete in $150,000 Fasig-Tipton Virginia Oaks, highlighted by Virginia-bred Tasting the Stars who is the early 5-2 choice. The Bodemeister filly is a perfect 3-for-3 in her young career and won the $75,000 Just Jenda Stakes July 28 at Monmouth. The Mike Stidham trainee will be ridden by Horacio Karamanos. Out of the Awesome Again mare, Pink Champagne, Tasting the Stars was bred by Audley Farm Equine.

Lael Stables’ Gardenista is the second choice in the morning line at 9-2. The Curlin filly has finished third or better in seven of eight starts including an allowance win at Laurel last out.  

The Graham Motion-trained Mercilla captured her first two wins on turf in France last November and at Pimlico on May 23. She most recently finished a distant fifth in Delaware Park’s Christiana Stakes June 19 but the race was taken off the grass and held on dirt. “I wanted to kick myself afterwards for running the horse on dirt,” said Motion. “Since that race, I decided to wait for the Virginia Oaks at this distance.” Mercilla is by Arch out of Junkinthetrunk by Top Account.   

Ionic and Zonda follow next at early odds of 6-1. The former, trained by Arnaud Delacour is 2-for-3. Her only blemish was a runner-up effort at Laurel April 27 where she lost by a nose. The latter is conditioned by James Lawrence and prevailed opening night at Colonial Downs. The Scat Daddy filly won by a neck with Trevor McCarthy up but Feargal Lynch gets the call Saturday.

Rounding out the field (with trainers listed) are Solar Kitten (Ian Wilkes), Sweeter Than Wine (Anthony Margotta), Carnival Colors (Mike Stidham) and Agi’s Cait (Mike Campbell).  The Oaks is the eighth race on the card and will go to post at 8:15 PM.  

Fasig-Tipton conducts three auctions annually in the Midlantic region and has a long history with the Virginia Thoroughbred industry. Overall, the company operates twelve sales annually in four locations — Lexington (KY), Timonium (MD), Saratoga Springs (NY) and at Gulfstream Park (FL).  

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About Colonial Downs

Colonial Downs’ bright future features the return of live thoroughbred racing and full card simulcasting with the excitement of innovative historic horse racing (HHR) gaming technology. In collaboration with the Virginia Racing Commission (VRC) and Virginia Equine Alliance (VEA), Colonial Downs is set to bring competitive horse racing back to New Kent County and the Commonwealth with the re-opening of the best turf track in the country and a future network of satellite HHR facilities branded as “Rosie’s”. Colonial Downs Group is making a $300 million investment in the Commonwealth of Virginia creating 900 new jobs by the end of 2019. This effort will generate $25 million annually in state tax revenues, $17 million annually in local tax revenues and $25 million annually to Virginia’s horse industry. The project is not receiving any tax credits or government incentives.