| Starting the season as he did last year, Leipers Fork Steeplechasers’ 2021 timber champion Tomgarrow overpowered duel Maryland Hunt Cup star Vintage Vinnie in the feature race of the weekend to kick off the Maryland Timber Triple with an exclamation point.
With Freddie Procter in the irons for leading trainer Leslie Young, Tomgarrow was content to patiently sit behind the Armata Stable’s juggernaut, who spurted off to a lead of as much as a dozen lengths in the field of four. Approaching the 14th fence in the three-mile contest, Tomgarrow assumed command and extended his margin to 19 lengths under a vigorous hand ride. Vintage Vinnie, ridden by trainer Joe Davies’ son, Teddy, was another 19 lengths clear of Upland Partners’ veteran stakes winner Mystic Strike.
Both the winner and runner up came into the Manor off of layoffs dating back to last spring, but with lofty records. Since coming stateside in 2018, Vintage Vinnie had made eight starts, with five victories, two seconds and a third. He captured the My Lady’s Manor stakes in 2021 as a prelude to his first of two record-setting Hunt Cup scores. Prior to Saturday’s race, the 14-year-old hadn’t lost since November 2020. Meanwhile, Tomgarrow had taken three of his previous four efforts, including the International Gold Cup at Great Meadow and the 2022 My Lady’s Manor.
The My Lady’s Manor was the first of three timber races at increasing distances. The second leg, the Grand National, will be contested on April 22 in Butler, at 3 1/4 miles. The crown jewel is the 126th running of the Maryland Hunt Cup on April 29 in Glyndon, at 4 miles worth $100,000.
Tomgarrow’s performance aside, there was plenty of congratulations to go around following Saturday’s action. Jockeys Procter, Barry Foley, and Graham Watters each won two of the nine events over both courses, as did trainers Young and Hall of Famer Jack Fisher. Fisher’s former longtime assistant, Sandra Webb, who struck out on her own with a two-horse stable, won with both of those runners as well. Owner Riverdee Stable won a pair, too.
Here’s a rundown of the results, starting with The Manor:
The four-race card included two $20,000 maiden contests and a $15,000 allowance event for apprentice riders, all at three miles. In the John Rush Streett maiden, new Irish rider Conor Tierney picked up his first victory in his fourth mount, aboard Armata Stable’s Fashion Line for trainer Kathy Neilson. The seven-year-old son of Morning Line showed the way over the first 14 fences before losing the lead to Irvin Crawford’s To Be Or Not To Be, under Teddy Davies, two jumps from home. But Fashion Line fought back in a spirited battle to the wire, prevailing by 1 1/4 lengths.
While the Streett was a nailbiter, the Thomas H. Voss maiden was a blowout as Tuscany Racing’s Stolen Shoes gave Leslie Young her seventh score of the spring, romping by 25 lengths, under Procter. The British-bred led from the flag drop and fended off a challenge by Armata Stable’s Mr. Fine Threads (Teddy Davies up), before drawing clear before the last fence.
South Branch Equine’s Master Seville, trained by Mark Beecher, made it two straight over Nancy Reed’s Awesome Adrian, only this time without the intervention of the stewards. Sitting in third from the break of the John D. Schapiro allowance, Master Seville waited patiently until hitting the stretch to make his move, then unleashed a strong drive to surge past his foe, under Brett Owings, to get up for the three-quarter length tally. At the Cheshire races in Pennsylvania last month, Awesome Adrian was the winner by the same margin only to be disqualified for going off course. |