Stakes Winner Justwaveandsmile Taking Streak On the Road

Stakes Winner Justwaveandsmile Taking Streak On the Road

5YO Gelding Chasing Seventh Straight Turf Win in Parx Dash
Star de Naskra Winner Alottahope Sharp in Saturday Breeze
Mandatory Payouts Sunday as Laurel Closes Summer Meet

BALTIMORE – Steve Newby’s Justwaveandsmile, dramatic winner of the Ben’s Cat July 30 at Laurel Park in his stakes debut, will be taking his show on the road for the first time with the chance for a seventh consecutive turf victory.

Based at Laurel with trainer Dale Capuano, Maryland-bred Justwaveandsmile will face open company breaking from the rail in a field of eight in the $200,000 Parx Dash sprinting five furlongs Aug. 23. The 5-year-old Secret Circle gelding has made each of his 17 career starts at either Laurel or historic Pimlico Race Course.

“He’s doing well. He’s ready to run and that looks like a decent spot,” Capuano said. “I would have liked a little better post than the one post for him, but that’s what we’ve got so hopefully the weather will be good and we get a chance to run.”

Justwaveandsmile breezed three furlongs in 36.60 seconds Aug. 18 in his lone tune-up between the Parx Dash, run as a Grade 3 from 2003-2021, and the 5 ½-furlong Ben’s Cat, where he came with a furious late run on the far outside to catch favored Grateful Bred in the final strides and win by a neck.

Grateful Bred won the Maryland Million Turf Sprint and Meadow Stable last year and has also run second in three other stakes. Third in the Ben’s Cat was Jaxon Traveler, whose four stakes wins include the May 21 Maryland Sprint (G3) at Pimlico.

“His last race was pretty good. The two horses that were behind him, second and third, are pretty nice horses and I don’t think there’s anything in this race coming up any tougher than those two, so now we’ll see if he can duplicate his race on the road.

“He seems to do everything right. He’s an easy-going type of horse,” he added. “He’s not a big horse. He just kind of does what you need him to do, so I assume that he’ll handle it well. We’ll see. There’s only one way to find out.”

Justwaveandsmile is third choice on the morning line at 4-1, behind 2021 Parx Dash (G3) winner The Critical Way (2-1) and April 30 Elusive Quality winner Scuttlebuzz (5-2), who exits back-to-back graded-stakes.

Bred by Mr. and Mrs. Charles McGuinnes and Colleen Torsney, Justwaveandsmile is out of the Officer mare Anofficerandalady, who won six of 20 starts including the 2007 P.G. Johnson and 2008 Mom’s Command sprinting on the turf, and earned more than $200,000.

Justwaveandsmile debuted at Pimlico in November 2019 and made his first eight starts on dirt before finishing third in back-to-back turf starts last summer. He hasn’t lost on the grass since, winning six consecutive races including each of the last three following a fourth in an off-the-turf starter optional claimer May 15 at Pimlico, his season opener off a six-month layoff.

“We knew he was bred for the turf. His mother was a pretty good turf horse. A lot of times it’s circumstances, when they’re ready to run [or if] turf season’s over and you don’t get a chance,” Capuano said. “It just took a little longer than I had hoped, but last summer we finally got him on there. I think he was rained out a couple of times as well.

“He kind of disappointed me when he didn’t [win] off the bat. I think his first couple races he was third and then he started winning,” he added. “Why, I don’t know, but once he started winning on the turf he hasn’t lost. We’ll just see how long we can keep going. It looks nice with all those ‘1’s’ there.”

Capuano plans to breeze Newby’s Vance Scholars Sunday on the Laurel turf. The Holy Boss gelding, bred in Maryland by Anchor & Hope Farm, opened his 3-year-old season by winning the 1 3/16-mile Bald Eagle Derby Aug. 6 at Laurel.

Among the spots under consideration are the $300,000 Virginia Derby (G3) for 3-year-olds going 1 1/8 miles Sept. 6 at Colonial Downs and the $150,000 Cape Henlopen for 3-year-olds and up going 1 ½ miles Sept. 8 at Delaware Park.

“He’s doing well. I’m not sure what I’m going to do with him. He’ll work tomorrow and then we’ll decide,” Capuano said. “We’ll leave our options open. But, he’s doing well and came out of the race feeling good and strong. He wasn’t tired. We’ll see what happens.”

Star de Naskra Winner Alottahope Sharp in Saturday Breeze

Alottahope returned to the work tab Saturday morning at Laurel Park for the first time since becoming a stakes winner with his dominating victory in Laurel’s seven-furlong Star de Naskra for 3-year-olds July 30.

Bred in Maryland Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Bowman and Dr. Brooke Bowman and owned by trainer Jerry Robb’s No Guts No Glory Farm, Alottahope went five furlongs in 1:00.40 over the main track, ranking fourth of 16 horses.

“He worked good today,” Robb said. “We’re very happy how he’s doing.”

By Editorial out of the Midnight Lute mare Alottalute, Alottahope is the younger half-brother of eight-time stakes-winning filly Street Lute. He raced twice at 2, winning his debut before finishing second behind Joe in the Maryland Juvenile.

Alottahope won his sophomore debut Jan. 1 at Laurel and ran fourth in both the Spectacular Bid and Chick Lang (G3), the latter May 21 at historic Pimlico Race Course on the undercard of the 147th Preakness (G1). He finished off the board twice more, including a fifth in the July 2 Concern, prior to his breakthrough performance.

“I always knew he had a big race in him,” Robb said, “but he never showed it because he kept getting himself in trouble in his races.”

Alottahope had no such trouble in the Star de Naskra, sitting off the pace set by stablemate Al Loves Josie before sweeping to the lead on the far turn and effortlessly drawing away through the lane to win by 15 lengths. Also in the field were stakes winners Buff Hello, the distant runner-up, and Cynergy’s Star as well as Super Love, undefeated in three starts and making his stakes debut.

“I still haven’t figured it out. I don’t know if the horses were that bad behind him or if he really improved that much,” Robb said. “You don’t see them win like that very often.”

Robb is considering the $250,000 Robert Hilton Memorial Aug. 26 at Charles Town for Alottahope’s next start. Like the Star de Naskra, the Hilton is a seven-furlong sprint restricted to 3-year-olds.

“He’s doing well. I’m looking at the race at Charles Town next weekend,” Robb said. “We’ll keep him with straight 3-year-olds as long as we can. I think if he can run anywhere near the way he did last time he’d be awfully tough to beat.”

Notes: Trainer Kieron Magee swept the early daily double with Assembly Point ($3.80) in Race 1 and Wicked Mad ($6) in Race 2 … Jockey Jorge Ruiz doubled aboard Ribaldry ($3.40) in Race 4 and Putin Online ($9.40) in Race 6 … Michael Eiserman, Earl Silver and Kenneth Fishbein’s Miss Georgie ($7.60), a bay daughter of multiple graded-stakes winner Girvin purchased for $110,000 as a 2-year-old in training in March, went gate to wire to capture her career debut in Race 5, the first division of a five-furlong maiden special weight for juvenile fillies. Ridden by Victor Carrasco for trainer Lacey Gaudet, she completed the distance in 59.20 seconds over a fast main track … In Race 7’s second division, Michael Dubb and Morris Bailey’s O Shaughesey ($7.20) came with a steady drive on the outside under jockey Sheldon Russell to edge Free Admission for a popular neck triumph in 59.77 seconds. It was the third start and first without blinkers for the Good Samaritan daughter, a $155,000 2-year-old in training purchase racing first time for trainer Brittany Russell … Husband and wife also teamed up to win featured Race 8, a 1 1/16-mile allowance over the Fort Marcy turf course, with 5-year-old gelding Call Me Plucky ($11.40) … Gaudet added a second winner with Fortune’s Fool ($6.40) in Race 9 … Laurel will wrap up its 37-day summer meet with an eight-race program Sunday starting at 12:40 p.m. Jevian Toledo holds a 30-29 edge in the race for the riding title, while trainers Claudio Gonzalez and Rudy Sanchez-Salomon are tied at 18 wins apiece. There will be mandatory payouts in the Rainbow 6, Late Pick 5 and Super Hi-5 wagers.