Photo:
Casey Laughter / Eclipse Sportswire
Louisville, Ky.
The faces of the trainers and jockeys may change. So may the
weather, which turned snowy Saturday night at Churchill Downs. But those Godolphin
blue silks keep showing up in the winner’s circle.
First Resort (6-1), a maiden winner who has raced at four
different tracks with four different riders on two different surfaces, lived up
to the lofty expectations of his owner-breeder when he successfully stalked the
slow, early pace on his way to a 2 1/4-length triumph in the 98th edition of
the Grade 2, $400,000 Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes for 2-year-olds.
Click here for Churchill Downs entries and results.
“We targeted this race since the summertime,” Godolphin
bloodstock director Michael Banahan said. “We wanted to see if we had a horse
that we could look at getting on the Derby trail, and I think he showed that today.”
Last Resort is on the #KentuckyDerby trail now! ??
He wins the G2 Kentucky Jockey Club at 6/1 for trainer Eoin Harty with @luissaezpty aboard! Another impressive win for @godolphin.
?? #TwinSpiresReplay pic.twitter.com/SNImN2wixi
— TwinSpires Racing ?? (@TwinSpires) November 30, 2024
The victory was worth 10 points toward qualifying for Kentucky
Derby 2025. An hour earlier, Good Cheer got the same reward toward the Kentucky
Oaks (G1) when she won the Golden Rod (G2) for 2-year-old fillies. Banahan is a
common denominator for both Godolphin homebreds.
“Having a great day, yeah,” he said. “Having a super day.”
Make that a super five years, all of which have ended with
Eclipse Awards as the top owner. That is presuming it happens again after 10 Grade
1 victories in 2024 that included a couple Breeders’ Cups.
First Resort was different, because he is not trained by the
more prominent Brad Cox or Brendan Walsh but, instead, by Eoin Harty. The
native of Ireland who turned 62 last week and works mostly in the Midwest these
days had not won a graded stakes since Fair Maiden scored in the 2020 La Brea
Stakes (G1) at Santa Anita. His most recent of three Derby starters was nearly
15 years ago with Colonel John, the best of them, finishing sixth in 2008.
His original plan for this Uncle Mo colt who was the first
foal out of Street Boss maiden Fair Maiden was to go in the one-mile Iroquois (G3)
over the same main track in September. Instead, Harty switched First Resort to
the turf for a fourth-place finish in the Summer Stakes (G1) at Woodbine.
“I drew the rail (for the Iroquois), and I didn’t want to
run from the rail the first time in a race like that,” Harty said. “It wasn’t
going to teach him anything. I was going to teach him to settle, so the race in
Canada was plan B. He actually ran very well there.”
A debut winner in the mud at Ellis Park who then was second
in the Saratoga Special (G2), First Resort got a 2 1/2-month break from racing
after his venture at Woodbine. Drawn into post 8 in the field of nine Saturday,
he broke alertly and carried leading Churchill Downs rider Luis Sáez within a length of the early lead established
by Dapper Moon (21-1) through slow early fractions of 24.56 and 49.30 seconds.
Lurking wide going into the second turn of the 1 1/16-mile
race, Sáez called on First Resort to move to the lead, getting his head in
front of fellow stalker Tiztastic (11-1) through three-quarters of a mile in
1:13.63.
“We have a lot of speed, but we were in a great spot,” said
Sáez, who earlier rode Good Cheer’s win for Cox. “We didn’t want to go to the
lead and get them chasing, so we were in a perfect spot. … It was pretty
slow. We know we went pretty slow. We were waiting for the moment when
everybody made their move to get going, and everything came perfect.”
First Resort drew away to a three-length lead through a mile
in 1:36.91. Post-time favorite Jonathan’s Way (4-5), who won the Iroquois and
finished seventh nearly a month ago in the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile, made a late
charge from mid-pack, but as track announcer Travis Stone said, he ran out of
racetrack and finished second.
“We didn’t come out of there right away like I would have
wanted,” jockey Joel Rosario said about Jonathan’s Way, who keenly raced into
traffic up the backstretch. “But he ran a good race. The horse in front, he got
away. Maybe it was a little slow, but he tried his best.”
The snow flurries were not sticking to the track, so it
truly was fast as First Resort won with a time of 1:43.01. Despite the slow
pace, it was the quickest time for a Kentucky Jockey Club since the 1:42.83 in
2009 for Super Saver, the last graduate of this race to win the Derby.
Jonathan’s Way added five points to bring his Derby qualifying
total to 15. Third-place Tiztastic, who was another 1 3/4 lengths back, earned
three points. Dapper Moon finished fourth and got two points. Render Judgment
(8-1), got one point for coming in fifth.
Harty and Banahan did not say where First Resort might go
next to try and earn more Derby points.
“I’m not going to make that decision on the spur of the moment,”
Harty said. “I’ll speak with Michael over the next few days, and we’ll come up
with a game plan.”
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Photo: Jessica Morgan / Eclipse Sportswire Godolphin’s promising homebred 2-year-old filly Good Cheer remained unbeaten in four st