Bernie Dickman

Late bloomer Here Comes Bullet on a roll at Gulfstream

Here Comes Bullet was a slow learner for Handsome Mike, and, after his first three races produced just one third-place finish, he went to the sidelines for 13 months.

The 4-year-old gelding bred by Thomas L. Croley returned this year and he’s proven to be a different horse. With his victory in a one-mile race at Gulfstream Park yesterday, Here Comes Bullet has won three of his last five.

With talented Edwin Gonzalez contributing a picture-perfect ride, Here Comes Bullet earned a check for $11,600 and raised Handsome Mike’s progeny earnings for 2021 to $979,707; it won’t be long before he celebrates his third straight million-dollar season. He’s currently in eighth place among active stallions on Florida’s general sire list.

Here Comes Bullet broke well from the No. 8 post and Gonzalez moved him up to third down the backstretch, battling the two leaders while three wide every step of the way. The gelding moved up to second coming to the final turn, then put away the leader under confident handling as they straightened out in the lane. He was never threatened in the final eighth and won by two lengths, clocked in 1:38.92. He paid a generous $20 and raised his earnings to $49,760.

Suddenly, My Little Rosy became the favorite

While the decision-makers of racing contemplate whether Medina Spirit’s positive resulted from an injection or an application on a knee, or if it was a “heinous” crime when Linda Rice asked racing secretaries to let her know who has entered a race, My Little Rosy was the victim of one of the real problems in racing – monster drops in odds while the races are in progress.

It happened in the fifth race at Delaware Park yesterday, a one-mile and 70-yard test on the grass. The 5-year-old Handsome Mike mare was sitting on the tote board at odds of 4-1 as the field of 10 approached the gate. Leaving from the outside post, Erasmo Martinez hustled My Little Rosy to the front, and she opened up daylight in a :22.88 quarter. But as she was increasing her margin to 10 lengths heading to the half, the tote board read 8/5 – she was now the favorite .

Around the final turn, the second and third choices made a run at My Little Rosy, and caught her as they straightened out in the lane. From there to the wire any one of the three could have pulled it out, but My Little Rosy dug in gamely and prevailed in a head bob – by a head.

It marked her second victory in a row, and third in her last four starts after she had won just once in her first 23 races. She earned a check for $10,800, raising her career total to $58,732, and My Little Rosy received an Equibase ‘E’ speed figure of 82, second best of her 27-race career.

Handsome Mike mare does what it takes – again

Handsome Mike moved closer to the $1 million mark in 2021 progeny earnings with the victory of Do What It Takes at Finger Lakes yesterday.

The 5-year-old mare won for the third time this year, and second in her last three tries, uncorking a monster run through the stretch in the six-furlong race. Do What It Takes was off fourth down the backstretch, and began moving up coming to the turn. She swung to mid-track entering the stretch, but still had five lengths to make up passing the eighth pole, where she dug in and roared to the wire in front by 6 1/4 lengths.

The mare bred in New York by Joe and Helen Barbazon paid $3.70 as favorite, and raised her record to 7-6-8 in 36 starts; the $7,560 winner’s check boosting her earnings to $86,768. Handsome Mike’s progeny earnings jumped to $965,757, and he’s currently the eighth leading sire among active Florida stallions.

Cancel wins again for Handsome Mike filly’s faithful

On September 6, Happy Hill Lil broke her maiden at Saratoga under Eric Cancel and paid $35.40. When the 4-year-old Handsome Mike New York-bred filly returned at Belmont Park yesterday and made it two in a row with Cancel, she must have attracted all the same backers, because this time she paid $35.20.

Happy Hill Lil left from the No. 12 post in the six-furlong race over the inner turf course, and the filly owned and bred by Roger Cimbora Jr. broke in stride and took up a position in fourth place off the rail. Cancel sent her after the leaders coming to the turn, and she took the lead heading down the lane with only 3-1 Theodora Grace chasing her. It was a two-way battle to the wire, and Happy Hill Lil won it in a head-bob.

Happy Hill Lil completed the six furlongs in 1:09.28 and increased her earnings to $64,598. The two victories resulted in Equibase ‘E’ speed figures of 85 and 81, two best of her 11-race career.

Toretto gets serious in Gulfstream Park maiden-breaker

After finishing third in a 7 1/2-furlong turf race at Gulfstream Park back on Dec. 13, Circle 8’s Toretto was laid up by trainer Michell Nihei for more than nine months. Yesterday, he made a successful return at Gulfstream in a $52,000 maiden special weight test at a flat mile on the grass with Luca Panici.

The 3-year-old son of Handsome Mike had been doing well in the morning at the Palm Meadows training center – including a pair of bullet works on the grass on Aug, 1 and Aug. 10 – and was sent off at odds of 7/2 despite the layoff. Panici settled Toretto into a comfortable sixth on the first turn, six lengths behind the leaders, then began moving him closer down the backstretch. Panici swung him wide on the turn and Toretto ate up the pack, and from there on it was no contest. Announcer Pete Aiello brought him home with, “Toretto now gets serious and puts ’em away,” as the gelding reached the wire 1 1/4 lengths in front.

Toretto, bred by Tropical Racing, collected a check for $31,900, breaking his maiden in his fifth start. He paid $9.20 after getting the mile in 1:36. 99, and earned an excellent personal best ’81’ speed figure from Equibase.

Cattin Finishes Third in $400,000 In Reality

In just his third start, Cattin became the first stakes-placed runner for freshman sire Neolithic, finishing third in the $400,000 In Reality Stakes at Gulfstream Park.

The 2-year-old colt bred by Curtis Mikkelsen and Patricia Horth had broken his maiden in his career debut, then finished fourth in the $200,000 Affirmed. second leg of the Florida Stallion Stakes series. In the third leg, the mile-and-one-sixteenth In Reality, Cattin came up against Dr. Fager winner Cajun’s Magic and Affirmed winner Octane and gamely fought the pair for three-quarters of a mile. In the stretch the two stakes-winners proved best, but Cattin gamely held on for third, 7 1/2 lengths ahead of the third-place finisher.

Cattin earned $44,000, and increased his three-race total to $84,550.

Where U B be in the winner’s circle again

It was easy to find where Where U B was hanging out after the fourth race at Delaware Park yesterday – he was prancing around in the winner’s circle.

The 3-year-old gelding by Ride On Curlin boosted his record to 2-2-0 in five starts with an ‘almost’ wire-to-wire performance, adding $9,000 to his earnings. Jaime Rodriguez, Delaware’s leading rider, put Where U B on the lead at the outset of the six-furlong race, briefly gave it up starting down the backstretch, then regained it for good passing the quarter in :22.90. The gelding went by the half in :45.91 and held on gamely down the lane, winning by half a length in 1:11.56.

The $5,000 OBS July 2-year-old, who had previously won at Parx and added seconds at Delaware and Pimlico, paid $9.40 and raised his bank account to $26,725.

Everything came up roses for Handsome Mike mare at Delaware

Everything was coming up roses for My Little Rosy at Delaware Park yesterday, as the 5-year-old daughter of Handsome Mike picked up her second victory in her last three starts with a powerful wire-to-wire performance.

Erasmo Martinez was aboard My Little Rosy, who broke on top from the rail in the race at about a mile and 70 yards on the turf and never gave it up. She turned away a brief challenge on the first turn, then skipped away down the backstretch and was in front by 10 on the final turn. At one point in the backstretch, it was 20 lengths from front to back.

The mare bred by Ponder Hill coasted home by 2 1/2 lengths in 1:43.28 and earned a check for $10,800.

Handsome Mike filly in a rush to nail down 2nd victory

Caffeine Rush closed with a rush in the eighth race at Gulfstream Park yesterday, leaving the field in her wake and giving Handsome Mike his 24th winner of 2021.

The 4-year-old filly bred by Just For Fun Stable was coming off an excellent work of :48.35 for four furlongs at Palm Meadows and went off as the 2-1 favorite in the 5 1/2-furlong race contested over a sloppy track. Leonel Reyes broke her quickly from the rail and she settled in second behind pace-setter Foolish Heart.

After a :22.39 first quarter, Reyes drove Caffeine Rush through inside Foolish Heart and easily took the lead into the stretch. From there, it was all but over as she cruised away to a 6 1/2-length score, raising her record to 2-6-1 in 14 starts.

Caffeine Rush paid $6.80 and collected a check for $20,900, raising her total to $70,840. She earned her best ‘E’ speed figure from Equibase – an 86.

The light switched on, and Happy Hill Lil became a different filly

The “light bulb effect” is a theory that a great many sharp racing analysts have long embraced, and Happy Hill Lil joined the club yesterday at Saratoga.

The theory goes that some horses who have raced poorly for a time, have a light bulb click on over their heads (as in so many of the old cartoons) and they suddenly realize why they’re in the race. Happy Hill Lil fits the profile perfectly.

In her first eight career starts, the best the 4-year-old daughter of Handsome Mike could muster up was a third-place finish at Belmont Park back in June of 2020. In every race, she trailed near the rear of the pack, sometimes making up an insignificant bit of ground in deep stretch. In start No. 9, the light apparently came on somewhat and Happy Hill Lil came from way back to finish fourth, only four lengths behind the winner.

Yesterday, Happy Hill Lil completed her racing transformation. With Eric Cancel aboard in a race at 5 1/2 furlongs on the grass, she broke slowly from the 12 post, trailed by some 9 or 10 lengths down the backstretch, then uncorked a monster wide run on the turn and ran down the leaders as announcer John Imbriale bellowed, “Happy Hill Lil is putting in a furious run . . . here is Happy Hill Lil to win the finale . . . at a price.”

That price for the first career victory for the New York-bred filly was $35.40, and she earned $27,500 for owner/breeder Roger Cimboya Jr., enough to buy a truckload of light bulbs.