Brad Cox, whose horses' 2023 purse earnings of $15.28 million lead North America, shoots for his second victory in the Grade 3, $300,000 Indiana Derby with Verifying at Horseshoe Indianapolis on Saturday, July 8.
The two-time Eclipse Award winner as North America's outstanding trainer won the 2020 Indiana Derby with Shared Sense, was third in 2021 with Fulsome and second by a half-length with Best Actor last year.
Horseshoe Indianapolis - Saturday, July 8
Race 12 - Post 6:40 PM
Entry | Horse | ML Odds | Jockey | Trainer |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Transect | 15-1 | Gerardo Corrales 118 Lbs |
Paulo Lobo |
2 | Raise Cain | 10-1 | Luan Machado 124 Lbs |
Ben Colebrook |
3 | Act a Fool | 6-1 | Orlando Mojica 124 Lbs |
Larry Rivelli |
4 | Onthestage | 10-1 | Luis Fuentes 118 Lbs |
Steven Asmussen |
5 | Verifying | 8-5 | Marcelino Pedroza, Jr. 124 Lbs |
Brad Cox |
6 | Stayinyourlane | 30-1 | Eduardo Perez 118 Lbs |
Tomas Medina |
7 | Hayes Strike | 3-1 | Brian Hernandez, Jr. 124 Lbs |
Kenneth McPeek |
8 | Cagliostro | 8-1 | Edgar Morales 118 Lbs |
Cherie DeVaux |
9 | Georgie W | 12-1 | Alex Achard 118 Lbs |
William Walden |
Verifying seeks his first stakes win in the 1 1/16-mile Indiana Derby after finishing second in last year's Champagne (G1), second by a neck to Tampa Bay Derby (G2) winner Tapit Trice in this spring's Blue Grass (G1) at Keeneland and second again by a half-length to Disarm in Churchill Downs's Matt Winn (G3). Between the Blue Grass and Matt Winn, Verifying faded to 16th in the Kentucky Derby after setting a wilting pace. Disarm was a beneficiary of that hot pace, coming on to finish fourth.
"He's doing really well," Cox, who has maintained a large division at Horseshoe Indianapolis for a long time, said of Verifying. "I love how he came out of the Matt Winn. It will be back in 27 days, but he's a horse we felt we needed to get a race under his belt. He's just got the two wins. He's run really well, just was narrowly defeated in the Matt Winn, the Blue Grass. His Derby was a throw-out with the pace, going too quick too early. But he's a nice horse, he's doing well physically, looks amazing."
Verifying worked five-eighths of a mile Saturday at Churchill Downs in 1:00.60, third fastest of 19 workouts at the distance that morning. Marcelino Pedroza, who is second in the Horseshoe Indy standings with 34 victories heading into Monday's card, gains the mount.
"We have a lot of luck with Marcelino," Cox said.
A son of the 2018 Triple Crown winner Justify, Verifying was purchased for $775,000 as a yearling by the international Coolmore racing and breeding conglomerate that stands Justify at its Ashford Stud in Central Kentucky. Verifying won his debut at Saratoga last summer. Off his Champagne second in his second start, he ran in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile at Keeneland, checking in sixth after a difficult trip. He started off his 3-year-old season with an Oaklawn allowance victory before taking fourth in the Rebel Stakes (G2).
Cox demonstrated as recently as this past Sunday that horses can rebound after getting shellacked in the Kentucky Derby. Zozos won his fourth race in five starts since he was 10th in last year's Derby by taking Ellis Park's $275,000 Hanshin. Cyberknife, 18th in the same Derby, won the Haskell (G1) and finished his career losing the Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile by a mere head. Tawny Port won the Ohio Derby (G3) in his next start after his seventh in the 2022 Kentucky Derby.
"We ran three horses in the Kentucky Derby last year," Cox said after Zozos' Hanshin victory Sunday. "This horse (Zozos) has responded well. Cyberknife was a Grade 1 winner after and before the Derby and barely got defeated in the Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile and went off to stud. Tawny Port rebounded and won the Ohio Derby. We had four running in it this year. Maybe those can redeem themselves. And they have, with Verifying coming back and running well.
"There's totally life after the Kentucky Derby. You have to watch the horse. If they need a break, they need a break. They all need breaks at some point. It's just when they're asking for it, you've got to give it to them."
Cox's 2023 purse earnings are about $1 million more than second-place Steve Asmussen. At $15,285,222 in earnings heading into Monday's racing, he has accrued the fifth-highest season earnings in his career with half of the year to go, putting him on course to break his North American record of $31,715,312 set in 2021. With a career that began in 2005, Cox already ranks No. 15 in all-time purse earnings. Of the 14 trainers ahead of him on the all-time list, 10 are in the Hall of Fame.
West Will Power's victory in Saturday's $1 million Stephen Foster at Ellis Park gave Cox his 20th Grade 1-winning horse and his 39th Grade 1 win overall, all dating to 2018 with Monomoy Girl. That two-time champion earned her first of 14 victories out of 17 career starts at Horseshoe Indianapolis in 2017. The $100,000 yearling purchase went on to earn almost $4.8 million, including winning the Breeders' Cup Distaff twice, and then sold for $9.5 million to Spendthrift Farm in 2020.
"Monomoy Girl was very special; she's the one who really got this thing rolling for us," Cox said after the Stephen Foster. "I think about her a lot. She means a tremendous amount to us, probably our all-time favorite. Today has a lot to do with her."
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The New York Racing Association, Inc. (NYRA) will host a Cross Country Pick 5 on Saturday, July 8 featuring an all-stakes sequence from Belmont Park and Horseshoe Indianapolis which you can watch and wager on at OffTrackBetting.com (OTB).
The Cross Country Pick 5 requires bettors to pick the winner of five select races from tracks across the country. The minimum bet for the multi-track, multi-race wager is 50 cents. Wagering on the Cross Country Pick 5 is available on ADW platforms and at simulcast facilities across the country with each week featuring a mandatory payout of the net pool. The Cross Country Pick 5, boasting a low 15 percent takeout, offers sequences with races from Belmont Park and partner tracks across the country.
The sequence kicks off at 5:28 p.m. Eastern in Race 10 from Horseshoe Indianapolis, the $100,000 Indiana General Assembly Distaff Handicap at 1 1/16-miles on turf for older fillies and mares. Henrietta Topham arrives off a narrow triumph in the Grade 3 Mint Julep on June 4 at Churchill Downs for trainer Geoff Mulcahy, looking to notch both her third consecutive victory and third career stakes conquest. The Carlo Vaccarezza-trained Sweet Dani Girl looks to improve from two placings in graded events in her last two outings, while the Brad Cox-trained Juncture makes her third state-side outing on the heels of a win in the Ouija Board Distaff on May 29 at Lone Star Park.
Action switches to Belmont Park to commence the first of four graded events to close out the sequence, beginning with the Grade 1, $750,000 Belmont Derby Invitational in Race 10 [5:49 p.m.]. The Andrew Balding-trained The Foxes makes his American debut off a fifth in the Group 1 Epsom Derby, which followed a determined neck victory in the Group 2 Dante at York. A talented field includes the pair of graded stakes-winners Webslinger and Boppy O for Hall of Fame trainer Mark Casse; dual graded stakes-placed Far Bridge for Hall of Famer Todd Pletcher; and last-out Grade 2 Pennine Ridge-winner Kalik for four-time Eclipse Award-winning trainer Chad Brown.
The sequence heads back to Indiana for Race 11 [6:03 p.m.], the 1 1/16-mile Grade 3 Indiana Oaks for sophomore fillies. Graded stakes-winner Taxed makes her first appearance since a breakout win in the Grade 2 Black-Eyed Susan for conditioner Randy Morse. She'll face steep opposition from Grade 1 Ashland-winner Defining Purpose for trainer Ken McPeek and the graded stakes-placed Lily Poo for trainer Michael McCarthy in a competitive field of eight.
The penultimate leg features sophomore fillies sprinting 6 1/2 furlongs in the Grade 3 Victory Ride [Race 11, 6:21 p.m.] at Belmont, led by undefeated starlets Maple Leaf Mel and Dazzling Blue. The former enters from a strong win in the Grade 3 Miss Preakness on May 19 to make her first start for conditioner Melanie Giddings while the latter steps up to the graded ranks for the first time off an 8 3/4-length optional claiming romp on the same day at Churchill for Cox. They will have their perfect records challenged by last-out Grade 2 Eight Belles-winner Red Carpet Ready for trainer Rusty Arnold and the Brown-trained Interpolate, who was a close second last out in the Grade 2 Beaumont in April at Keeneland.
The sequence closes out in the Hoosier State with the Grade 3 Indiana Derby [Race 12, 6:40 p.m.], a 1 1/16-mile test for sophomores. Dual Grade 1-placed Verifying was last seen finishing a game second in the Grade 3 Matt Winn on June 11 at Ellis Park where he earned a 101 Beyer Speed Figure for Cox. Act a Fool has won his last four starts for conditioner Larry Rivelli, including the Hawthorne Derby on turf last out for his first stakes coup. The field also includes Grade 3 Gotham victor Raise Cain for trainer Ben Colebrook; multiple graded stakes-placed Hayes Strike for McPeek; and Georgie W, who is undefeated in two starts and won a local allowance by 9 3/4 lengths last out for trainer Will Walden.