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The Long & Winding Road to the Roses

By: Lynda Collins

Article Word Count: 554 words  [Comments (0)]
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It's a long and winding road to Churchill Downs and the first


Saturday in May, but the Thoroughbred set is atwitter about


Breeders' Cup Juvenile champion Stevie Wonderboy, who is slated


to make his 3-year-old debut Saturday in the $150,000 San Rafael


Stakes at Santa Anita.





No Juvenile champion has ever gone on to capture the Kentucky


Derby.





The thoroughfare to Louisville is as wrought with hazards as a


championship golf course, from ill-timed injuries to missteps on


the track.





Some folks forget the fact that fillies and colts go through a


great many major physical changes between their two and


three-year-old seasons; it's simply the maturation process.





Many among the horsey set, however, contend Wonderboy is their


best hope yet.





"He's certainly one of the ones to watch," said John Avello, who


oversees racing operations at Wynn Las Vegas.





"Bluegrass Cat and First Samurai are two others."





Wonderboy came from behind to knock off favored First Samurai in


the Juvenile, one of his four triumphs in five outings.





"To me it's any one of the first three Juvenile finishers:


Stevie Wonderboy, First Samurai and Henny Hughes," added Gordon


Jones, a former turf editor at the Los Angeles Herald-Examiner


who now gives racing seminars ar Sam's Town.





"I haven't seen anyone out there even close. Nobody who has


caught my attention, anyway."





Wonderboy, who is owned by TV impressario Merv Grffin and named


after his sire, Stephen Got Even as well as singer/songwriter


Stevie Wonder, is considered racing royalty when it comes to


bloodlines.





"We've had three interesting storylines with the Triple Crown


races the last three years and this could be a blockbuster


fourth," Jones said.





"Funny Cide was a good story, Smarty Jones was a good story and


Afleet Alex was a good story.





"If Stevie Wonderboy wins, the media will go nuts with all that


horse's Hollywood connections."





Stephen Got Even is a son of A.P. Indy and Summer Squall is his


grandsire.





Wonderboy banked more than $1 million in his two-year campaign


and is a favorite to capture an Eclipse Award later this month.





Early winter racing will be concentrated at Santa Anita in


Southern California and Gulfstream Park in Florida, with other


tracks gradually moving into the picture.





"All roads to Churchill will go through Oaklawn Park this year,"


Jones forecast. "With Hurricane Katrina shutting down the


Fairgrounds (in New Orleans) , Oaklawn will have better jockeys,


trainers and horses than it has ever had," Jones said.





The San Rafael, one of the first stepping stones to the Run for


the Roses, will be contested at one mile, two furlongs shorter


than the Derby distance of one and one-fourth miles.


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