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The first 2-day Breeders' Cup starts Friday
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The first 2-day Breeders' Cup starts Friday

OCEANPORT, N.J. (AP) -The Breeders' Cup kicks off Friday at Monmouth Park with three $1 million races that give the season-ending championships a second day of racing for the first time in the event's 24 years.

The new races expand the Breeders' Cup to 11 races worth more than $24 million. The eight traditional races will be contested Saturday, including the richest race in North America - the $5 million Classic.

Discreet Cat is the glamour horse Friday in the Dirt Mile, which will actually be run at one mile, 70 yards to accommodate Monmouth's short run from the start to the first turn.

The 4-year-old trained by Saeed bin Suroor for Godolphin Racing has abundant international experience. Purchased following a victory in his debut at Saratoga in 2005, Discreet Cat reeled off five consecutive wins for the new owners including Grade 1 victories in 2006 in the UAE Derby in Dubai and the Cigar Mile at Aqueduct.

He is winless in two starts this year, a campaign compromised by a severe throat abscess. Most recently, Discreet Cat was third in the Vosburgh Stakes at Belmont Park, his first start in six months

``He's really come on since the Vosburgh,'' assistant trainer Rick Mettee said. ``The race has really helped him.''

Discreet Cat has the rail with Garrett Gomez set to ride.

In the other Breeders' Cup stakes on Friday, Dream Rush, winner of six of eight races, is the 2-1 favorite in the Filly & Mare Sprint, while Prussian, unbeaten in two starts, is the 3-1 favorite in the Juvenile Turf.

A fan favorite in the Filly & Mare Sprint will be Oprah Winney, a 6-1 choice.


TWO SCRATCHES: Attila's Storm and Dixie Chatter were scratched Thursday.

Attila's Storm was slated to make a third-straight appearance in the $2 million Sprint before injuring a left front ankle.

``He has some filling in there and he was a little sore this morning,'' trainer Rich Schosberg said. ``It's nothing major, but he's not 100 percent. We are the protectors of these horses and there is no way I could even consider running him.''

In two prior Sprint appearances, Attila's Storm was fourth in 2005 and fifth last year.

Dixie Chatter was flown in from California on Monday for the $2 million Juvenile before spiking a fever Wednesday that persisted into Thursday.

``We've got to err on the side of caution,'' trainer Richard Mandella said.

The colt has won two of four starts, including the Norfolk Stakes at Santa Anita on Sept. 30.


TOUGH TURF: Much of the focus of this Breeders' Cup has centered on the deep and talented field in the Classic, which features Street Sense, Curlin, Hard Spun, Lawyer Ron and Any Given Saturday.

However, the $3 million Turf also sports a stellar lineup that includes two previous winners, Better Talk Now (2004) and Red Rocks (2006), as well as leading U.S. grass horse English Channel, who has done well at Monmouth, having won the last two runnings of the United Nations Stakes over this course.

In this strong group, Dylan Thomas is the horse to beat. At 7-5, the 4-year-old is the shortest-priced favorite in the 11 Breeders' Cup races. He has won four Group 1 stakes in Europe this season, including the prestigious Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe.

Dylan Thomas arrived at Monmouth on Tuesday night following a flight from Aidan O'Brien's training center in Ireland.

John Murtagh will ride the winner of 10 of 18 career starts from post No. 7 in the eight-horse field.

This will be Dylan Thomas' ninth start of the season, creating hope among rivals that fatigue might catch up with him.

``You don't know until he runs,'' Murtagh said. ``Aiden is great at getting them ready. He's got great faith in the horse and I have great faith in him to have a horse ready for the day.''

O'Brien sees a horse with remarkable recuperative powers.

``Every race, he's bounced back better than the one before,'' O'Brien said. ``He seems to be in good form. He just keeps getting stronger and stronger, physically and mentally. He's been an amazing horse.''

This will likely be Dylan Thomas' final race. He is slated for retirement at the end of this season.


ALL WET: Check out the mudders during Breeders' Cup weekend.

Rain is predicted for Friday and Saturday, with the chance of precipitation Saturday very high. Temperatures are expected to range from the upper 50s on Friday to the upper 60s Saturday.


The Associated Press
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Re: The first 2-day Breeders' Cup starts Friday
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Nation's top trainer Pletcher has another strong lineup for Breeders' Cup

OCEANPORT, N.J. (AP) -Todd Pletcher is hoping for a better Breeders' Cup than last year.

After failing to reach the winner's circle with a record 17 horses in the 2006 Breeders' Cup at Churchill Downs, the nation's leading trainer is back for another try, this time with 11 horses in six of the 11 Breeders' Cup races at Monmouth Park this weekend.

``I feel very good about the collection of horses we have, and I think they are going to run well,'' he said. ``Sometimes, you run well and you have three seconds.''

Like last year. The 40-year-old Pletcher sent out two favorites and several more top contenders, and came away with three runner-up finishes and three thirds for total earnings of close to $3.5 million.

Still, that was not good enough for perfectionist Pletcher.

``I would have preferred to win them all,'' he said.

Pletcher has favorites in two races Saturday - Whitney and Woodward winner Lawyer Ron in the $5 million Classic and Indian Vale in the $2 million Distaff. He had two favorites last year, too.

For good measure, he also sends out Haskell Invitational winner Any Given Saturday in the Classic and Grade 1-winning fillies Octave and Unbridled Belle in the Distaff.

On the turf, Pletcher has English Channel in the $3 million Turf for the third year in a row, where he will take on 7-5 favorite Dylan Thomas, and Honey Ryder and Wait a While are among the top choices in the $2 million Filly & Mare Turf.

Pletcher's other runners are long shots, Icy Atlantic and Host are both 30-1 in the $2 million Mile and The Leopard is 8-1 in the new $1 million Juvenile Turf on Friday.

``Just because you bring a big group doesn't mean you're going to win a bunch of races,'' he said.

Pletcher is 2-for-41 in the Breeders' Cup, his victories coming in 2004 with Speightstown in the Sprint and Ashado in the Distaff.

Elliott Walden of WinStar Farm, which co-owns Any Given Saturday, feels Pletcher's Class of '07 is ready for final exams.

``As always, he does a great job and works hard at it,'' Walden said. ``I've been around his barn, and it looks like a lot of his horses will be coming up to it the right way, including Any Given Saturday.''

Pletcher is having another Eclipse Award-winning season, with 245 wins from 1,056 starters and leads all trainers with $23.5 million in earnings through Oct. 23.

He also ended his Triple Crown drought at 0-for-28 when the filly Rags to Riches won the Belmont Stakes. And along the way, he's grown to appreciate his older horses, especially 5-year-old English Channel and 6-year-old Honey Ryder, who will run the final races of their careers Saturday.

``It's sort of the cream of the crop that has provided us will a lot of the success we've had not only this year but the last two, three years,'' Pletcher said. ``You get a little bit sad that they and a couple of others might not be coming back.''

Lawyer Ron and Any Given Saturday are in that group. Legal wrangling among owners could lead to early retirement for the 4-year-old Lawyer Ron, who could be voted Horse of the Year if he wins the Classic.

Sheik Mohammed's Darley Stable takes ownership of 3-year-old Any Given Saturday after the Classic and Walden says it's ``50-50'' that the colt will run again. The feeling is a victory in the Classic and the colt would be retired after his fourth straight win, but if he runs well in defeat he could remain in training for next year's $6 million Dubai World Cup.

English Channel and Honey Ryder have provided wins galore for Pletcher. English Channel, a two-time winner of the Joe Hirsch Turf Classic and the United Nations Stakes, has won 12 of 22 races and earned $3.7 million for owner Jim Scatuorchio; Honey Ryder has won 13 of 32 starts and earned $2.3 million for Glencrest Farm.

A year ago, Pletcher had to deal with a Breeders' Cup day in which one of his two favorites, Fleet Indian, broke down during the Distaff. His other favorite, Circular Quay, finished second to Street Sense in the Juvenile.

The Associated Press
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Street Sense poised for Classic finish

OCEANPORT, N.J. (AP) -Street Sense has been called the perfect racehorse, a 3-year-old thoroughbred who doesn't win every race, only the really big ones.

There's one more to go before Street Sense rides off into retirement: the $5 million Breeders' Cup Classic at Monmouth Park on Saturday.

``I've got high hopes he'll pull it off,'' trainer Carl Nafzger said. ``It's going to be exciting. These are the races you want to be in.''

Street Sense has taken racing fans on a thrilling, unprecedented yearlong ride.

The bay colt became the first Juvenile winner to capture the Kentucky Derby in the 23-year history of the Breeders' Cup. After a narrow loss in the Preakness, the son of Street Cry became the 10th horse to win the Derby and the Travers, and the first since Thunder Gulch in 1995.

If Street Sense prevails against one of the deepest Classic fields, he will be voted Horse of the Year and become the first 3-year-old to claim the title since Point Given in 2001.

``He always rises to the occasion, always gives his best effort,'' regular rider Calvin Borel said. ``He's moving very forward right now, he's more mature. I don't think he can be beat.''

Nafzger won't go that far, but he sounded confident after Street Sense put in a solid final workout Tuesday at Monmouth.

``I have no excuses. It's the best situation you can be in,'' he said. ``Hopefully on Saturday, I won't have any excuses, either.''

Nafzger hasn't had to use many, simply because the plan he devised to have Street Sense in peak condition for the biggest events has worked just about every time.

``He is the perfect horse,'' Nafzger said. ``A horse like this happens every once in a while. He meets all the qualifications of a great horse - good immunity, soundness, ability, lots of class and a great mind.''

Street Sense will take on familiar foes in the nine-horse Classic, the final of 11 Breeders' Cup races to be run over two days beginning Friday. Among them are fellow 3-year-olds Any Given Saturday, Curlin, Hard Spun and Tiago, as well as leading older horse and favorite Lawyer Ron.

Nearly one year ago, Street Sense soared into the spotlight when he shot through along the rail at Churchill Downs and won the Juvenile by 10 lengths, the second largest margin in a Breeders' Cup race behind Inside Information's 13 1/2-length romp in the 1995 Distaff.

Nafzger then devised an unconventional plan to get Street Sense to the Derby, using just two preps before the Run for the Roses.

``If he can't make it in two preps, he can't make it in three,'' Nafzger said.

It worked. Street Sense won the Tampa Bay Derby by a nose over Any Given Saturday, then lost by a neck to Dominican in the Blue Grass at Keeneland, a race run on the synthetic surface Polytrack.

In the Derby, Street Sense accelerated around the final turn and pulled away for a 2 1/4-length win over Hard Spun, with Curlin third. The last Derby winner off two 3-year-old preps was Sunny Halo in 1983.

Two weeks later came a defeat Nafzger called the low point of Street Sense's campaign - a head loss to Curlin in the Preakness.

``When I saw him go to the lead then get beat, that was the low,'' Nafzger said.

With a Triple Crown chance eliminated, Nafzger chose to bypass the Belmont Stakes and prepare for a summer in Saratoga. The results? Victories in the Jim Dandy and the Travers, also known as the Mid-Summer Derby.

The next goal was the Classic, and Nafzger needed a prep for Street Sense. He considered five options, but knowing his colt ran on synthetic surfaces before winning the Juvenile and the Derby, he chose the Kentucky Cup Classic at Turfway Park. Plus, it was a short van ride from his home base at Churchill Downs.

Street Sense was beaten by Hard Spun over Polytrack, but the loss told Nafzger all he needed to know.

``He ran over a track he probably doesn't do his best on, but he gave it everything he had and he dogged it all the way,'' Nafzger said. ``It told me he was right there.''

Borel hasn't doubted Nafzger yet, and he's not about to now.

``Carl has been at this for a long time, and he knows how to get a horse to these big races,'' Borel said. ``We didn't win that one, but we finished strong.''

Not even the prospect of a muddy track Saturday could deter Borel.

``The more it rains, the better he'll like it,'' Borel said.

Breeding rights to Street Sense were purchased by Sheik Mohammed's Darley Stable for an undisclosed amount. There was no official decision when Street Sense would join his sire at Darley near Lexington, Ky.

Nafzger won't allow himself to think about the end of a great run.

``You don't want a great play to close before you get tired of watching it,'' he said.

The Associated Press
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