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Acorn Stakes 2019: Contenders & Odds

Horse Betting Online

NYRA Press Release | OTB Writer

Saturday, June 8: The Grade 1, $700,000 Acorn Stakes

A wide-ranging field of nine 3-year-old fillies, led by Grade 1 Kentucky Oaks heroine and millionaire Serengeti Empress, will be making their first-ever appearances at Belmont Park Saturday in the $700,000 Acorn Stakes, one of seven Grade 1 races on the undercard for the 151st running of the Grade 1, $1.5 million Belmont Stakes.

First race post time for the 13-race card is 11:35 a.m., with gates opening at 9 a.m.

2019 Acorn Stakes Odds & Entries

Race 7 at Belmont Park on Saturday, June 08 - Post 3:22 PM

Entry Horse ML Odds Jockey Trainer
1 Serengeti Empress 5-2 Irad Ortiz, Jr.
123 Lbs
Thomas Amoss
2 Jeltrin 12-1 Leonel Reyes
121 Lbs
Alexis Delgado
3 Cookie Dough 6-1 Javier Castellano
117 Lbs
Kiaran McLaughlin
4 Bell's the One 20-1 Corey Lanerie
117 Lbs
Neil Pessin
5 Fancy Dress Party 10-1 Joel Rosario
121 Lbs
Ben Colebrook
6 Proud Emma 20-1 Flavien Prat
115 Lbs
Peter Miller
7 Guarana 2-1 Jose Ortiz
115 Lbs
Chad Brown
8 Queen of Beas 12-1 Manuel Franco
117 Lbs
Jorge Abreu
9 Ce Ce 9-2 Victor Espinoza
115 Lbs
Michael McCarthy

Serengeti Empress, a dark bay daughter of Alternation, is 2-for-3 this year, taking the Grade 2 Rachel Alexandra to kick off her sophomore season before faltering in the Grade 2 Fair Grounds Oaks, in which she bled and was vanned off.

"After the race at the Fair Grounds, we took her back to the barn, sat down and mapped out a game plan - not for racing - but for her to show us she was she was recovering," said trainer Tom Amoss. "She got to Churchill at start of April, and we had devised a plan where she was scoped constantly and watched all the time. That's when she showed up again.

"When we decided to go in the Oaks, I was confident she wouldn't bleed, but it was still in the back of my mind. We did all we could do, and we rolled the dice."

The gamble paid off as Serengeti Empress posted a front-running victory at 13-1 odds in the Oaks, never looking back as she won the 1 1/8-mile race by 1 3/4 lengths

"Winning the Oaks was pure joy," said Amoss. "The focus now is to see if we can make her a more consistent athlete. We know she's a great athlete because she showed us that in the Kentucky Oaks."

Owned by Joel Politi, who purchased her for $70,000 at the Keeneland September yearling sales, Serengeti Empress has won five of her eight starts overall, including a victory in the Grade 2 Pocahontas last September at Churchill Downs.

"She's going to shorten up from two turns to one turn which is obviously inviting speed into the race," said Amoss, who will give Irad Ortiz, Jr. a leg up as the pair leaves from the inside post. "Her form says she wins races on the lead, but we'll see how it works in the Acorn. If she makes the lead, great. If she doesn't, I'm confident she'll be the just off the pace."

The undefeated Fancy Dress Party, who scored her fourth straight win in the Grade 3 Beaumont in April at Keeneland, is one of two other graded stakes winners in the field. Trained by Ben Colebrook, the L N J Foxwoods color-bearer came from off the pace to break her maiden last October at Keeneland, and subsequently posted front-running victories in an optional claimer at Churchill Downs and in the Glitter Woman at Gulfstream park to kick off her 3-year-old campaign.

The Munnings filly drew post 5 and will be ridden by Joel Rosario.

At the other end of the racing spectrum is the Chad Brown-trained Guarana, who enters the Acorn off just one start, albeit an impressive one. The Three Chimneys Farm homebred made a dazzling debut in April at Keeneland Race Course, drawing off to win a 6 1/2-furlong race by 14 3/4 lengths in 1:16.43.

Jose Ortiz rides from post 7.

Another stepping up into graded stakes company is Bo Hirsch's homebred Ce Ce, a chestnut daughter of Elusive Quality who has sparkled in two starts at Santa Anita Park. She broke her maiden in a professional manner on April 19 at six furlongs, and, when stretched out an extra half-furlong on May 11, finished second by a neck facing older fillies.

"She was run down in the closing yards," said trainer Michael McCarthy. "Coming back to facing straight three-year-olds will be to her benefit, and I think the one-turn mile will suit her as well. I'd like to see her sitting second with a target."

Victor Espinoza will be aboard when she leaves from post 9.

No worse than third in three straight graded stakes appearances, Arindel's Cookie Dough will be cutting back in distancer after finishing third going 1 1/8 miles in the Grade 2 Black-Eyed Susan. Prior to that, the homebred daughter of Brethren was third in the Grade 2 Gulfstream Park Oaks at 1 1/16 miles and second by a head in the Grade 2 Davona Dale at a flat mile.

"She's done everything right since she's been here," said Kiaran McLaughlin, who took over training from Stanley Gold when she was sent to New York. "She worked a good half-mile on Saturday [49.44 seconds on the Belmont training track]. The race looked like it has a lot of speed, so we almost have to hope and lay off it."

McLaughlin, who won the 2011 Acorn with It's Tricky, will give a leg up to Hall of Famer Javier Castellano. The pair will leave from post 3.

The Acorn, which will be run for the 89th time, also attracted the second, third and fourth-place finishers from the Grade 2 Eight Belles on May 3 at Churchill Downs.

Bell's the One, who won four straight races to launch her career, rebounded from a distant seventh-place finish in her first graded stakes outing, the Grade 1 Ashland to finish second by 5 1/2 lengths in the seven-furlong race over a sloppy track. Corey Lanerie will ride from post 4.

Also exiting the Eight Belles is Queen of Beas, who persevered to finish third, 1 1/2 lengths behind Bell's the One and a head in front of Proud Emma, the only filly to have made a New York appearance, having finished fourth in the Grade 2 Gazelle in April at Aqueduct.

Rounding out the entrants is Jeltrin, who was 51-1 when she won Gulfstream Park's Grade 2 Davona Dale at a mile in March.

Pre-Draw News

Probable: Bell's the One, Ce Ce, Cookie Dough, Fancy Dress Party, Guarana, Jeltrin, Proud Emma, Queen of Beas, Serengeti Empress.

Well-rounded Bell's the One seeks to make the grade in G1 Acorn

In only six career starts, Bell's the One has proven herself capable of winning over just about any surface, but in Saturday's Grade 1, $700,000 Acorn, the daughter of Majesticperfection will get another shot at a graded stakes victory.

Trained by Neil Pessin, Lothenbach Stables' Bell's the One owns victories over dirt, turf and synthetic and won her first four career starts. She graduated first time out at 32-1 odds over the all-weather surface at Arlington Park in September, where she defeated eventual stakes winner Sunset Wish.

She defeated winners over the main track at Keeneland before scoring her stakes debut in the Letellier Memorial at Fair Grounds in December. Bell's the One switched to turf next out, where she won the Allen 'Black Cat' Lacombe Memorial over Fair Grounds' Stall-Wilson Turf Course.

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Bell's the One enters the one-mile test for sophomore fillies over the Belmont Park main track off of a runner-up effort in the Grade 2 Eight Belles at Churchill Downs, where she earned a career best 83 Beyer Speed Figure, which followed a seventh-place finish in the Grade 1 Ashland.

"She was the only one to close in the Eight Belles," Pessin said. "The track that day was speed favoring. We were the only horse in the first seven or eight races that made up any ground."

A victory in the Acorn would give Pessin his first Grade 1 win.

"To me, it would mean more for the filly, she tries every time she runs," Pessin said. "I don't look at that kind of stuff for me personally, but it would mean a lot to Mr. Lothenbach and it would mean a lot for the filly. Whether she's good enough, I don't know, but she's as good as she has been, so now is the time to try."

Her victory in the Letellier was her only start on turf. Pessin did not rule out a return to the grass at some point in the future.

"I'm sure at some point we'll try it again," Pessin said. "She always breezes well over the synthetic, but she just runs on anything. Track conditions don't matter to her. I don't think the distance will hurt her. It looks like there's enough speed so hopefully it sets up for her."

Jockey Corey Lanerie, who was aboard Bell's the One for her win in the Letellier as well as her last out runner-up effort, will have the mount in the Acorn.

Bred in Kentucky by Bret Jones, Bell's the One is out of the Street Cry broodmare Street Mate. She was purchased for $155,000 from the 2017 Fasig-Tipton July Yearling Sale.

Cookie Dough Eyes Grade 1 Acorn Stakes

A recent addition to the trainer Kiaran McLaughlin's barn, Cookie Dough took to the Belmont training track to register a four-furlong work in 49.44 seconds in advance of the Grade 1, $700,000 Acorn for 3-year-old fillies at a mile on the main track.

"It was a good work, exactly what we were looking for," McLaughlin said of Cookie Dough, who was logging her first published work since being transferred to the trainer following a third-place finish in the Grade 2, 1-mile Black-Eyed Susan on May 17 at Pimlico. "She does everything right. It's a tough spot, but the turnback should be a plus."

The front-running filly notched a pair of wins in Florida-bred company last year and has finished second in the Grade 2 Davona Dale and third in the Grade 2 Gulfstream Park Oaks in her sophomore season, but she may have to adapt to a different pace scenario in the Acorn.

"There seems to be a lot of speed in the race, so she might not be able to be on the lead," McLaughlin said. "We'll see when the gates open. She's a quality filly, though."

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