The 2026 edition of the Grade 1, $500,000 Jaipur Stakes is slated as Race 9 and will feature the nation's swiftest grass dashers over 5 1/2-furlongs on Saratoga Race Course's Mellon turf, all competing for an automatic berth into the $1 million Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint on October 31, at Keeneland.
The Jaipur Stakes is one of seven graded stakes races on Saturday's card for the featured Day Four of the Belmont Stakes Racing Festival, which is highlighted by the Grade 1, $2 million Belmont Stakes in Race 13. First post is 11 a.m. Eastern, with gates opening to the public at 9 a.m.
Ag Bullet scored a much sought-after Grade 1 victory in last year's Jaipur versus males at Saratoga Race Course. She will look to defend her title in her seasonal bow under Hall of Famer John Velazquez in the $500,000 affair for 3-year-olds and up sprinting 5 1/2 furlongs over the Spa's Mellon turf on Saturday, June 6.
Race 9 at Saratoga Race Course
Saturday, June 6 - Post 4:13 PM
| Entry | Horse | ML Odds | Jockey | Trainer |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Governor Sam | 15-1 | Paco Lopez 124 Lbs |
George Weaver |
| 2 | Bold Journey | 30-1 | Junior Alvarado 124 Lbs |
William Mott |
| 3 | Litigation | 7-2 | Florent Geroux 124 Lbs |
Brian Lynch |
| 4 | Works for Me | 6-1 | Flavien Prat 124 Lbs |
Joseph Lee |
| 5 | Reef Runner | 4-1 | Irad Ortiz, Jr. 126 Lbs |
David Fawkes |
| 6 | Ag Bullet | 3-1 | John Velazquez 121 Lbs |
Richard Baltas |
| 7 | Clock Tower | 20-1 | Dylan Davis 124 Lbs |
Wesley Ward |
| 8 | John the Beer Man | 10-1 | Kendrick Carmouche 124 Lbs |
Rob Atras |
| 9 | Twenty Six Black | 12-1 | Manuel Franco 124 Lbs |
Horacio De Paz |
| 10 | My Boy Prince | 5-1 | Jose Ortiz 126 Lbs |
Mark Casse |
"We're going to try it again," trainer Richard Baltas said. "It's going to be a tough race, but she's tough and Johnny will be back on her, so that's good. They're ready [to run] when they're ready, and she runs really well fresh. She's always ran good off the layoff, it's just a matter of getting her there. So far, so good. I think she's plenty fit enough with several five-eighths works."
Ag Bullet looks to build upon an impressive 5-2-1-1 record last year that was highlighted by back-to-back graded wins in the Jaipur in June and a repeat score in the Grade 2 Ladies Turf Sprint in August at Kentucky Downs. The 6-year-old Twirling Candy gray went on to finish a game second to Shisospicy in the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint on November 1 at Del Mar, and returned just 29 days later to finish a three-length third when stretched out to one-mile for the Grade 1 Matriarch there in her most recent effort.
In last year's Jaipur, Ag Bullet entered from an off-the-board finish in the Grade 3 Unbridled Sydney in May at Churchill Downs, but bounced back with vigor to win emphatically after stalking the pace set by Coppola. Expertly handled by Velazquez - who climbs aboard again on Saturday from post 6 - Ag Bullet pounced at the quarter pole and kept on strongly in the lane to post the two-length score over returning rival My Boy Prince in a final time of 1:03.62, earning a 101 Beyer Speed Figure.
"I was up in the stands and all of a sudden she was up by two or three lengths in the stretch and I was like, 'oh, wow, this is really happening,'" Baltas recalled, with a laugh. "We went out there trying to win a Grade 1 against boys and it happened. She's a lovely horse and she's been great to us."
Ag Bullet has been a model of consistency, boasting a 17-8-1-3 overall ledger with additional graded victories in 2024 in the Grade 3 Monrovia at Santa Anita Park and the Ladies Turf Sprint en route to a neck third in her first Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint try. She is a stakes-winner at distances ranging from 5 1/2 furlongs to one-mile, and has shown adaptability in running style with wins both on and off the pace.
"She has enough natural speed to place herself where she wants to be," Baltas said. "If they don't go fast, she'll be up there, it just depends how she breaks. It's really up to the jockey, and she can be where you want to be. Her best distance is probably six-and-a-half, but she's won several times going five and five-and-a-half, and a mile."
Steep opposition will be provided by Alex and JoAnn Lieblong's millionaire Florida homebred Reef Runner [post 5, Irad Ortiz, Jr.], who enters off two strong performances in the Middle East for conditioner David Fawkes.
The 5-year-old The Big Beast gelding put together a solid 10-start campaign last year that was topped by a Grade 2 win in the Eddie D at Santa Anita Park, and a gutsy effort in the Grade 3 Green Flash Handicap that saw him cross the wire a nose in front of Motorious, but disqualified and placed second for early interference. He concluded his year with a four-length fourth in the Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint, and a win in the Listed Janus at Gulfstream Park in December ahead of his overseas endeavors.
Reef Runner was freshened between May and August last year, and was gelded ahead of a successful return in the Warrior's Pride Overnight in August at Gulfstream Park.
"He's doing great, his works have been phenomenal, and everything about him is better," Fawkes said of Reef Runner's development since last summer. "Obviously gelding him was a huge factor, and he turned around. He lost weight up in his neck and chest where these colts carry weight, and it really evened him out. He's nice and level, and he's more balanced."
In his lone start under Irad Ortiz, Jr., Reef Runner posted a determined neck victory over dual Group 1-winner Lazzat in the about-6 3/4-furlong Group 2 1351 Turf Sprint in February at King Abdulaziz Racecourse. He followed with a respectable 1 1/2-length fourth under William Buick in the about six-furlong Group 1 Al Quoz Sprint on March 28 over good footing on the straight at Meydan Racecourse in his most recent outing.
Fawkes said the cut in the ground that night in Dubai likely hindered Reef Runner.
"That's all I can attribute to the way he ran," he said. "[Buick] said he was looking for a turn, but he was looking for a harder surface to be honest. He doesn't have the biggest feet in the world. Some of these turf horses have a little bit bigger foot, but he doesn't. He's got to have his surface."
Fawkes said Reef Runner, an earner of just shy of $2 million, has the class and talent to handle the cutback in distance on Saturday.
"I wouldn't mind a little further distance in this race, but he's won from six and three-quarters [furlongs] and below - he's pretty versatile," the trainer said.
Dual Hall of Famer Mark Casse shared similar sentiments about the Jaipur distance for Canada's 2023 Champion 2-Year-Old Colt My Boy Prince [post 10, Jose Ortiz], who has made his last two outings over this distance, including a 1 1/4-length win in the Grade 2 Shakertown in April at Keeneland and a half-length fourth in the Grade 2 Twin Spires Turf Sprint last out on May 2 at Churchill Downs, landing a nose back of third-place returning rival Litigation.
"He's one that would enjoy a little more ground, so at five-and-a-half-furlongs he's going to need a great trip," Casse said.
Campaigned by Gary Barber, the 5-year-old son of Cairo Prince looks to finish one better than last year's Jaipur when second to Ag Bullet with a similar trip to his victorious rival. Since that effort - which came on the heels of a win in the Listed Elusive Quality at Belmont at the Big A in his first start as a gelding - My Boy Prince has hit the board in 5-of-8 attempts, led by his Shakertown score and near misses in the Grade 2 Highlander at Woodbine Racetrack [second by a neck] and the Grade 1 Woodbine Mile [second by 1 3/4 lengths].
Casse praised the gray gelding's versatility, noting his three-quarter-length second in the 10-furlong King's Plate as a sophomore at Woodbine, and his valiant second to Notable Speech in the Woodbine Mile in September.
"His Woodbine Mile was good," Casse said, "He's just a good horse that tries hard every time. He's versatile enough. He ran well in the King's Plate going a mile and a quarter, but he's also fast enough to win going 5 1/2-furlongs."
Casse added that My Boy Prince has also benefitted physically from being gelded.
"The problem with colts is they start becoming massive if you're not careful," he said. "He's responded well since becoming a gelding and I think he's running better and seems to be getting better."
My Boy Prince, whose other two starts this year came at five furlongs with a third in the Listed Gulfstream Park Turf Sprint and a win in the Turf Dash at Tampa Bay Downs, holds a 24-9-6-2 record with $1,478,400 in total purse earnings.
A specialist at the five and 5 1/2-furlong distances is Stone Farm's Kentucky homebred Litigation [post 3, Florent Geroux], who has made each of his last 10 starts at those distances, including a neck third in the Twin Spires Turf Sprint as part of the blanket finish that involved My Boy Prince.
Trained by Brian Lynch, the 4-year-old Twirling Candy colt makes his fifth start this campaign, which kicked off with back-to-back five-furlong wins at Gulfstream in the aforementioned Gulfstream Park Turf Sprint and the Listed Silks Run, where his 1 3/4-length score garnered a lifetime best 102 Beyer.
A six-time winner from 12 starts, Litigation finished a 2 1/2-length sixth to Reef Runner in the Janus in December, his only finish outside of the superfecta since last March. The Jaipur will be his sixth consecutive stakes start dating to December.
Bregman Family Racing and Swinbank Stables' dual Grade 1-placed Governor Sam [post 1, Paco Lopez] gets back to turf after his seasonal bow was rained off and switched to the Gulfstream Park Tapeta on May 3. The 4-year-old Improbable gelding landed a 1 1/2-length fourth under Paco Lopez with an off-the-pace trip sprinting five furlongs.
"He's kind of a heavy horse and we just used that race to get a race under his belt," said trainer George Weaver. "They took it off the turf and put it on the synthetic and we didn't know how he'd handle that. Paco rode him that day and was happy with him, said it should set him up good for his next start."
A three-time turf sprint stakes-winner as a juvenile, Governor Sam was a pacesetting third in the 2024 Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint at Del Mar, and has had success over this course and distance, including a second-out graduation in July 2024, and a win in the Grade 3 Quick Call presented by Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation last summer ahead of a second to Spiced Up in the Grade 3 Mahony. He is in search of his first win since the Quick Call.
Pantofel Stable, Wachtel Stable and Gary Barber's evergreen gelding Bold Journey [post 2, Junior Alvarado] switches back to turf after running on dirt over the winter for Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott.
The 7-year-old New York-bred son of Hard Spun, who previously made all but two of his starts on dirt, had a six-race stint on turf last year that included second-place finishes in four stakes in New York, including a neck defeat to Alogon in the six-furlong Grade 3 Belmont Turf Sprint in September at Belmont at the Big A.
This year, Bold Journey has hit the board in each of his three outings, led by a nose win in the Grade 3 Tom Fool sprinting six furlongs over the Aqueduct Racetrack main track in February.
"He's doing good," Mott said. "Five and a half is a little short, and six and a half is a little long. But he's done well."
Bred in the Empire State by Fred W. Hertrich, III and John D. Fielding, Bold Journey, who finished ninth in last year's Jaipur, has banked more than $1 million through a 35-8-11-4 record.
Completing the competitive field are Grade 3-winner Clock Tower [post 7, Dylan Davis] for trainer Wesley Ward; dual graded stakes-placed New York-bred Twenty Six Black [post 9, Manny Franco] for conditioner Horacio De Paz; dual stakes-winning New York-bred Works for Me [post 4, Flavien Prat], who is cross-entered in the Mighty Beau on Saturday at Churchill Downs for trainer Joe Lee; and the Rob Atras-trained John the Beer Man [post 8, Kendrick Carmouche], who notched back-to-back wins in allowance-level turf sprints this spring off a nearly two-year layoff.
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May 16 - John the Beer Man (Michael Caruso and Michael Dubb) is under consideration for a start in the Grade 1, $500,000 Jaipur on Saturday, June 6, Belmont Stakes Day, at Saratoga Race Course.
The 5 1/2-furlong test for 3-year-olds and up offers a 'Win and You're In' berth to the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint in October at Keeneland.
Trained by Rob Atras, the 5-year-old More Than Ready gelding breezed three-eighths in 38.60 seconds May 10 over the Belmont Park dirt training track.
"He had an easy three-eighths last week and might do something tomorrow. We nominated to the Jaipur and will take a look at that and see," Atras said.
John the Beer Man made three starts for trainer Chad Brown as a sophomore, including a maiden win traveling 1 1/16-miles on firm turf in May 2024 at Belmont at the Big A that earned an 84 Beyer Speed Figure.
John the Beer Man missed his entire 4-year-old season but is undefeated in two turf sprint starts this year, earning a 100 Beyer for a frontrunning score over next-out allowance winner Murdock in March at Fair Grounds Race Course ahead of a prominent 2 1/4-length optional-claiming win on April 25 here.
Atras said they backed into turf sprinting with the chestnut after a route race at Fair Grounds came off the turf.
"There was only one other turf race for him before the meet was over at Fair Grounds and it was a sprint. I wasn't convinced he was going to be a sprinter," Atras said. "He worked good in the morning, and you could tell he was a nice horse, but turf horses can be deceiving sometimes in the morning on the dirt.
"I didn't know he was going to go the front in 21 and keep rolling along," Atras continued, with a laugh. "It was obviously a pleasant surprise."
Last out, John the Beer Man exited post 3-of-10 over yielding going to validate his strong seasonal debut, while earning a 97 Beyer.
"That race was a deep, tough field. There was speed in there too and we drew inside and the soft turf, so I wasn't sure how he was going to handle all that," Atras said. "They gave him another big number which was nice to see, and he handled the other speed and the soft turf - he overcame a lot and I thought it was just as good a performance as the first time."
The $160,000 purchase from the 2022 Keeneland September Yearling Sale is out of the winning Giant's Causeway mare Trophy Wife. His third dam is Pleasant Home, winner of the 2005 Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Distaff at Belmont Park.
May 16 - Ag Bullet, Calvin Nguyen and Joey Tran's multiple graded stakes-winning millionaire is training towards a possible title defense in what would be her seasonal debut in the Grade 1, $500,000 Jaipur on Saturday, June 6, Belmont Stakes Day, at Saratoga Race Course.
Trained by Richard Baltas, the 6-year-old Twirling Candy grey worked five-eighths in 1:02.40 handily over the Santa Anita Park all-weather track in company with multiple graded stakes-placed Scipio - a possible contender for the Grade 3, $300,000 Poker, a one-mile turf test for older horses on Sunday, June 7, Closing Day of the Belmont Stakes Racing Festival.
"They went five-eighths together super-easy on the synthetic track and finished up nice. She knows how to run, she doesn't need to work fast," Baltas said. "Everything with her is just keeping her happy. She's had a rest, now it's time to get her ready.
"I'll give her one more good five-eighths and if she comes back fine, she might be ready to go there," Baltas added. "We'll nominate to the Intercontinental too, but we'll see how it goes. I don't like to push horses, but she's really close."
The Grade 2, $250,000 Intercontinental, a 5 1/2-furlong turf sprint for older fillies and mares, is slated for Thursday, June 4 at the Belmont Stakes Racing Festival - a race that Baltas has circled as a potential target for the appropriately named Saratoga Special.
Ag Bullet, who has banked $2,977,228 via a 17-8-1-3 ledger, was acquired for $220,000 at the 2021 Keeneland September Yearling Sale. She secured her first Grade 1 win last year with a prominent score against the boys in the Jaipur, tracking from third position early before taking over at the stretch call and powering clear to a two-length score over My Boy Prince. The winning effort earned a 101 Beyer Speed Figure which equaled her rating from a neck third in the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint in November 2024 at Del Mar.
"The Jaipur was a great day. The year before we were trying to win a Grade 1 with her the whole time and just couldn't get that Grade 1-win," Baltas recalled. "We gave her a rest and brought her back and we never thought we'd run her against the boys and beat them - but we did. I had a wonderful time last year. It was my first time back in Saratoga in umpteen years, and it was a wonderful experience."
The talented Kentucky-bred, out of the winning Forestry mare Noble Grey, followed the Jaipur with a successful title defense in the Grade 2 Ladies Turf Sprint in August at Kentucky Downs. She completed her campaign with a pair of Grade 1 starts in November at Del Mar with a second in the Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint and third when stretched out to one-mile in the Matriarch.
"She has a lot of heart and grit. She's talented and fast - she can carry her speed," Baltas said. "She's got a lot of quirks. She can be a handful to saddle sometimes, but usually the times she's a handful to saddle, looking back, is oddly the times she runs her best race.
"We'll try one more year with her and then probably end up breeding her," he added. "We've been very fortunate with her. We bought her as a yearling, and she's given us a lot of great moments."
May 10 - Reef Runner, Alex and JoAnn Lieblong's millionaire Florida-homebred, will point to the Grade 1, $500,000 Jaipur on Saturday, June 6, Belmont Stakes Day, at Saratoga Race Course. The 5 1/2-furlong test for 3-year-olds and up offers a 'Win and You're In' berth to the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint in October at Keeneland.
Trained by David Fawkes, the 5-year-old son of The Big Beast returned to the work tab on Saturday at Gulfstream Park for the first time since a successful trip to the Middle East where he captured the Group 2 1351 Turf Sprint in February at King Abdulaziz Racecourse and landed a 1 1/2-length fourth in the Group 1 Al Quoz Sprint on March 28 at Meydan.
On Saturday, Reef Runner breezed a half-mile on the Tapeta in 46.90 seconds working to the outside of Send Cash, a maiden winner, who is entered on Friday at Gulfstream.
"He looks fantastic. I nominated him for the Jaipur. We're coming," Fawkes said. "He traveled unbelievable from Dubai. He got off the plane like I vanned him from Ocala to Miami. I gave him 3 1/2-weeks with Nick Esler in Ocala, who took great care of him for me. Nick called me and said, 'Dave, you need to bring him back to work. He's a wild man.'
Reef Runner posted a record of 10-3-2-3 last year for purse earnings of $378,065 but really turned a corner after a freshening and being gelded ahead of an August return in the Warrior's Pride Overnight.
"He came back to the track and looked like a different animal. I didn't recognize him," Fawkes said.
In the Warrior's Pride Overnight traveling five furlongs over firm Gulfstream turf, Reef Runner stalked from fifth position as El Apagon zipped through a half-mile in 43.53 seconds. Reylu Gutierrez tipped Reef Runner three-wide for the stretch run to take command inside the final sixteenth and score by one length in a final time of 55.10.
The winning effort earned an 88 Beyer Speed Figure, but the way he did it impressed Fawkes.
"When he won the little race here at Gulfstream, I knew we were going somewhere. I called Mr. Lieblong the minute he crossed the wire and said, 'we're going to California for the 'Win and You're In,'" Fawkes said. "I told him that this was a different animal than the one I sent to the farm and gelded. That was a really good race in fast fractions. That's where we could see he had a bright future."
Reef Runner promptly shipped to Del Mar for the five-furlong Green Flash Handicap on August 30 which offered a berth in the Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint. There, he exited post 11-of-12 under Paco Lopez but came over soon after the start into Queen Maxima with Motorious being pinched back and steadied in the process. Reef Runner made a brave run up the rail and crossed the wire first by a nose over the closing Motorious, but a stewards' inquiry saw Reef Runner disqualified and placed second.
The talented bay made amends next out in the 6 1/2-furlong Grade 2 Eddie D on September 27 at Santa Anita Park, rallying from last-of-8 to score by a half-length over possible Jaipur rival Yellow Card.
Reef Runner registered a career-best 100 Beyer in the Eddie D and followed with a fourth-place finish in the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint in November at Del Mar before returning victoriously to Gulfstream in December to complete a productive campaign in the five-furlong Listed Janus over firm footing.
Reef Runner, with Irad Ortiz, Jr. up, put together a sensational run in the 1351 Turf Sprint to best the favored Lazzat by a neck, stopping the clock in 1:18.24 for 6 3/4-furlongs with a closer trip than usual over the good/firm course.
However, his last out run on the straight under William Buick in the six-furlong Al Quoz Sprint saw Reef Runner looking for a lane to run in over the good going. He dove to the rail late on and surged to finish fourth to the victorious Native Approach while a neck back of third-place familiar foe Lazzat.
"Irad couldn't have ridden him any better. That's why he's the leading rider in the nation. In Dubai, we were in the middle of a desert, and it rained for five day's straight. One thing I don't like about horse racing is sometimes it's just too much luck," Fawkes said, with a laugh. "The kid [Buick] said he was looking for a turn, but I think he was looking for a good spot to run. What they call good [going] and what we call good are two worlds apart."
Fawkes will be hoping for sunshine and firm ground in June at Saratoga, which is something Reef Runner failed to find in his lone previous outing at the Spa when a troubled eighth in the Listed Mahony over good ground in August 2024.
"We were at John Kimmel's yard, and it rained so hard his entire courtyard was flooded. I knew we were screwed," Fawkes said. "This time, he should be very strong as long as the weather is good. He doesn't like it soft."
Good weather and a good result would see the ultra-consistent Reef Runner [24-8-5-5, $1,902,580] surpass $2 million in career earnings.
"He's a cool dude. He's not a real big horse, but he's easy on himself. He's doing everything right so far," said Fawkes, who sent out Sheer Drama to win the 2015 Grade 1 Personal Ensign at the Spa.
Reef Runner, a full-brother to stakes-winner Big Paradise, is out of the winning Blame mare Paradise Bay - a half-sister to dual Grade 1-winning millionaire Paradise Woods. His third dam, Uforia, is a half-sister to multiple graded stakes-winner Mr. Greeley, who ran a neck second to Desert Stormer in the 1995 Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Sprint at Belmont Park.
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