Armando R Chasing Third Straight Stakes in $100,000 Manfuso

Armando R Chasing Third Straight Stakes in $100,000 Manfuso

Solid Field Awaits G2-Placed Hybrid Eclipse in $100,000 Carousel
Among Six $100,000 Stakes on Christmastide Day Monday, Dec. 26

BALTIMORE – Ronald Cuneo’s Armando R can put an exclamation point on what has been an outstanding fall meet for trainer Damon Dilodovico with a third consecutive stakes victory in the $100,000 Robert T. Manfuso Monday, Dec. 26 at Laurel Park.

The second running of the Manfuso for 3-year-olds and up going about 1 1/16 miles and 20th edition of the 1 1/8-mile Carousel for fillies and mares 3 and up are among six $100,000 stakes on an 11-race Christmastide Day program that marks the return of live racing following a week-long holiday break.

First race post time is 11:25 a.m.

Laurel-based Dilodovico ranks fourth with 18 wins from 61 starters during the calendar year-ending stand that began Sept. 30, a 30 percent success rate that is the best among leading trainers. Armando R owns two of those, in the Oct. 1 Japan Turf Cup and Nov. 26 Richard W. Small – his first stakes wins.

“It’s been a great meet. We’ve been very fortunate,” Dilodovico said. “This old guy, he doesn’t demand a lot. He just goes out there and does his job every day.”

Dilodovico claimed now 6-year-old Armando R for $16,000 out of a win last fall at Laurel, and the gelded son of Breeders’ Cup Classic (G1) winner Blame has won four of nine starts in 2022 including three of his last four, banking more than $213,000.

Armando R is five-for-10 lifetime at Laurel, having won three straight over his home track. He went to the sidelines following a 1 1/8-mile optional claiming win June 12, returning to be fourth in a similar spot going one mile Sept. 3 at Delaware Park.

With that race under his belt, Armando R stepped up in the Japan Turf Cup – rained off the grass and run at 1 ¼ miles – to nail Beacon Hill near the wire and win by a neck. He followed up with a near carbon copy effort in the 1 1/8-mile Small, rolling past Grade 3 winner Cordmaker and Oct. 22 Maryland Million Classic winner Ournationonparade to win by a half-length.

“He’s doing really well. Ever since before the Delaware race …we’ve been very fortunate we’ve been able to keep him going pretty steady,” Dilodovico said. “He got a little sick coming out of the June race. That first race back at Delaware, not that it was a poor race but it was just not his best race on the season. No complaints with this guy. He’s been very solid for us.”

Armando R drew Post 5 in an overflow field of 12 with regular rider Horacio Karamanos aboard.

“I definitely think the longer the better for him,” Dilodovico said. “Even though it’s only a sixteenth of a mile [shorter than] his last race, we’re not nervous or concerned but we realize it might not be his best distance. If the race holds together it looks like there could be an abundance of pace, so that could help out.”

Both Ournationonparade and Cordmaker are entered in the Manfuso. Morris Kernan, Yo Berbs and trainer Jagger Inc.’s Ournationonparade had a four-race win streak snapped when second in the Small, one where he took a one-length lead into the stretch. His Classic victory came in the first start for his new connections off a $50,000 claim.

Hillwood Stable’s Cordmaker is the defending champion, winless in two starts since ending a 259-day gap following his 10th stakes win and first graded triumph in the Feb. 19 General George (G3). He was eighth in a one-mile optional claimer Nov. 4 and became a millionaire finishing third in the Small, beaten 1 ½ lengths, but trainer Rodney Jenkins was unsure whether the 7-year-old Curlin gelding would run.

“He came out of the last race OK,” Jenkins said, “I don’t think he’ll be ready to go yet.”

Cash is King and LC Racing’s Ridin with Biden won the 1 1/8-mile Deputed Testamony by 6 ¼ lengths in front-running fashion July 30 at Laurel, capturing the 1 ½-mile Greenwood Cup (G3) two starts later. Trained by Robert E. ‘Butch’ Reid Jr., who also entered Nov. 27 Discovery winner Eloquist, Ridin With Biden exits a 1 ¼-length triumph in the one-mile, 70-yard Turkey Trot Nov. 23 over his home track of Parx.

Completing the field are 2021 Manfuso runner-up Workin On a Dream; Southern District, third in a one-mile optional claimer Dec. 17 at Laurel; American d’Oro, sixth in the Small following back-to-back wins; Plot the Dots, second in the Deputed Testamony; and Nimitz Class, winner of the six-furlong Danzig June 3. Ain’t Da Beer Cold and 2020 Maryland Million Classic winner Monday Morning Qb are also-eligibles.

A longtime owner and breeder and former owner of both Laurel and historic Pimlico Race Course who was instrumental in revitalizing Maryland racing, Robert T. Manfuso passed away in March 2020. Top-class runners bred and raised at Chanceland Farm with his life partner, trainer Katy Voss, include 2021 Breeders’ Cup Sprint (G1) winner Aloha West, 2016 Kentucky Oaks (G1) winner Cathryn Sophia and Cordmaker.

Solid Field Awaits G2-Placed Hybrid Eclipse in $100,000 Carousel

The Elkstone Group’s Grade 2-placed Hybrid Eclipse, already a two-time stakes winner at Laurel Park, will face a solid group of 10 rivals as she looks to make it two in a row in the $100,000 Carousel.

Hybrid Eclipse, trained by fall meet leader Brittany Russell, exits a three-length victory in the 1 1/16-mile Thirty Eight Go Go Nov. 12 at Laurel. The next three horses that finished behind her – Berate, Champagne Toast and Malibu Beauty – all return.

“It’s a tough field, but she’s raring to go,” Elkstone’s Stuart Grant said. “She put in a good race last time and she beat a number of those horses, but that’s not saying they’re not real good horses. I think it’s a wide-open race. I think whoever gets the best trip is going to win, because there’s a lot of capable mares in there.”

Hybrid Eclipse was able to overcome an awkward start last out where she lunged out of the gate and found herself further back than usual but came with a three-wide run under patient handling from jockey Sheldon Russell, who gets the return call from Post 8.

“You certainly always want to get good break and a good position; that one might have worked out well for her. She has one run at the end, and that one was just timed really well,” Grant said. “Sheldon had to kind of go in and out of traffic a little bit and it worked well for us.”

Hybrid Eclipse is 4-for-5 lifetime at Laurel with one second and has won three straight races over its main track, including the one-mile Caesar’s Wish July 2. Following that race Grant purchased her for $107,000 at Fasig-Tipton’s July Horses of Racing Age sale, and she ran fourth in the Timonium Distaff and third behind Nest in the Oct. 9 Beldame (G2) before her most recent start.

“She’s won a couple of stakes, she’s Grade 2-placed, so we’re sort of building up her pedigree. I’m really happy with the purchase. There’s some nice mares running over the winter at Laurel, and kudos to the racing office for being able to attract a good group,” Grant said. “We’ll see if she can put together back-to-back quality races. I sure hope she can.”

ZWP Stables’ Malibu Beauty is a three-time stakes winner including the 2021 Miss Disco at historic Pimlico Race Course. The Thirty Eight Go Go marked the first time in five starts she hadn’t been first or second, having won the Peach Blossom and George Rosenberger Memorial at Delaware Park this summer and fall.

Trainer Gary Capuano also entered Paul Fowler Jr.’s Intrepid Dream, a Maryland homebred daughter of Jess’s Dream. He had nominated the 4-year-old filly to the Thirty Eight Go Go but opted instead for a 1 1/16-mile optional claiming allowance the next day, which she won to extend her win streak to three races. She won an open allowance in the Delaware Park slop Oct. 26 – her first start in 14 months.

“She’s really, really big and she’s not real fast. At least, she never really shows it in the morning. She does show up in the afternoon,” Capuano said. “She’s one of those plodding horses. She’s huge and she’s just got one kind of pace. She doesn’t have a huge turn of foot, but she’ll just keep grinding and grinding and grinding and if you come back to her at all, she’s going to be there.”

Intrepid Dream will make her stakes debut under return rider Carlos Lopez from outermost Post 11.

“She’s steady and you’ve just got to keep working on her and she’ll just grind it out,” Capuano said. “We’ve run her two turns all the time because in the mornings and what have you, she’s never shown any kind of early speed, but she does break well and she has put herself in the races. We’ll see.”

John Fanelli’s Out of Sorts is familiar with Laurel, having begun her career with Brittany Russell and placed in two stakes before winning the 2021 Christiana at Delaware Park and being claimed for $30,000 out of a runner-up finish July 30. She was claimed again out of her next start, an Oct. 4 victory at Parx, for $25,000 and won the 1 1/16-mile Claiming Crown Tiara five weeks later in her most recent effort.

Jeff Gange’s 7-year-old mare Cover Version will be racing first time for trainer Cherie DeVaux after making seven West Coast starts since April, six of them in graded-stakes, including a third in the 6 ½-furlong Rancho Bernardo Handicap (G3) Aug. 28 at Del Mar.

Also entered are multiple stakes-placed Ninetypercentbrynn, Classic Colors, Runaway Monet and Go Big Blue Nation.

Inaugurated in 1985, the Carousel carried Grade 3 status from 1988 to 1997 and ran through 2002 before returning to the Maryland stakes calendar in 2021. Maryland-bred Squan Song, a three-time Grade 3 winner that was retired in 1987 with 18 victories and nearly $900,000 in purses from 36 starts, won the first two runnings.