SARATOGA
SPRINGS, N.Y. - Will a Breeders' Cup race finally be in Vineyard
Haven's future this year? The first step toward answering that question
comes Friday at Saratoga when the three-time Grade 1 winner makes his
long-awaited 2010 debut in the $75,000 James Marvin Stakes, a
seven-furlong overnight event that drew a very talented field of older
horses.
Also lined up for the race are multiple graded stakes
winners such as Friesan Fire and Le Grand Cru, Grade 2 winner You and I
Forever, Discreet Treasure, Cool Coal Man, Flat Bold, Silver Edition,
and Half Metal Jacket.
Vineyard Haven has not started since
finishing third after setting a contested pace in the Grade 1 Cigar Mile
Handicap on Nov. 28. Five weeks earlier, Vineyard Haven added the Grade
1 De Francis Memorial at Laurel to a pair of Grade 1 wins at 2 in the
Hopeful and Champagne. He was also disqualified from first and placed
second here last summer in the Grade 1 King's Bishop.
Despite all
his success, Vineyard Haven has yet to participate in the Breeders'
Cup. Trainer Bobby Frankel opted to pass the 2008 Breeders' Cup Juvenile
with Vineyard Haven because the race was run over the Pro-Ride surface
at Santa Anita. His present connections, Godolphin Stable and trainer
Saeed bin Suroor, echoed those same sentiments when they opted for the
Cigar Mile instead of the Breeders' Cup Mile at Santa Anita last fall.
"With the Breeders' Cup on dirt this year at Churchill Downs, it
changes things," said bin Suroor's New York-based assistant, Rick
Mettee. "We'd have liked to have started him back a little earlier, but
there are only so many races and we didn't want to run him at six
furlongs. Seven is a good distance, and while he probably won't be as
fit as he was for the King's Bishop, he's done enough work and has
trained well enough to be ready."
Several of Vineyard Haven's main rivals in the James Marvin are coming off layoffs of their own.
Friesan Fire, who swept Fair Grounds's trio of Kentucky Derby preps
last year, has not started since finishing a distant eighth in Churchill
Downs's Grade 3 Alysheba on April 30 and has not run at any distance
less than a mile since finishing third in Belmont's Grade 2 Futurity at
2.
Discreet Treasure will make his first start since being
transferred to trainer Bruce Brown's barn and first since winning a
high-priced optional claiming race at Belmont in July of 2009.
Cool Coal Man, who won an overnight stakes by a dozen lengths here last
summer, exits his best race of the season, a two-length victory in
Monmouth Park's Skip Away.