Morning Matcha aiming to give Reid rare Oaks-Delcap double
LC Racing, Cash is King and Gary Barber’s Morning Matcha could give Robert “Butch,” Reid, Jr. a rare training double by winning the Delaware Oaks and the Delaware Handicap in the same year when she goes postward in Saturday’s 86th running of the Grade 2, $500,000 Delaware Handicap.
Todd Pletcher and Jerry Hollendorfer are the only trainers to win both races in the same year. Pletcher won both with Adieu (Oaks) and Fleet Indian (DelCap) in 2006 and Hollendorfer won both with It Tiz Well (Oaks) and Songbird (DelCap) in 2017.
Reid won his second Delaware Oaks last Saturday, with Foggy Night, who returned $30.40 to win. The 66-year-old from Woodbury, New Jersey won his first Delaware Oaks with Project Whiskey in 2020, who was 38-1 at post time.
Reid has never had a starter in the Delaware Handicap.
“For me personally, it is fantastic to have this opportunity especially because Delaware Park is a racetrack I group up within a half-hour of, so we were always watching those big races,” said Reid. “As a kid, we were always coming to Delaware Park and those were races we always looked forward to coming to watch so this is really exciting. We have been fortunate to be very lucky at Delaware over the last few years.”
In her most recent, Morning Matcha, finished second beaten a nose in the local prep, the 1 1/16-mile $160,000 Obeah Stakes, on May 27. In her only other outing this year, the Pennsylvania-bred daughter of Central Banker posted a 2-length triumph in the seven-furlong state-bred $103,000 Unique Bella Stakes at Parx on April 24.
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Last year, the 4-year-old had a record of two wins, two seconds and three thirds from ten starts including a third in the Delaware Oaks, a second in the Grade 1 Cotillion at Parx, and a third in the Grade 3 Comely at Aqueduct. She has a career record of five wins, six seconds and five thirds from 19 starts with earnings of $743,390. She was bred by Crane Thoroughbred Services located approximately 74 miles from Delaware Park in Lebanon County, Pennsylvania.
“I am pretty excited about Morning Matcha, especially after looking at the past performances of the race,” Reid said. “It looks like there is a fair amount of speed in the race, so it should set up really nice for her.”
Morning Matcha will make her third start off the layoff in the DelCap and also her third start over the strip.
“The reason we ran her in the Obeah was to give her a race over the track this season,” Reid explained. “As a trainer who has been running horses at Delaware Park for a long time, I really appreciate giving a horse a race over the track. Hopefully that will work to our advantage. It seems like she handled it last time, but she just had a little bad luck. A little bit longer distance should help her as well because she is the kind that can run all day. The distance should be right up her alley.”
Her jockey, Paco Lopez, will also be shooting for the Delaware Oaks/Delaware Handicap double as he was the rider aboard Foggy Night in the Delaware Oaks last Saturday. The last time a jockey won both races in the same year was 1977 when Jorge Velasquez accomplished the feat aboard Cum Laude Laurie (Oaks) and Our Mims (DelCap).
Three other jockeys have also completed the Oaks-DelCap double. They were Eddie Maple with Pacific Princess (Oaks) and Optimistic Gal (DelCap) in 1976, John Rotz with Gallant Bloom (Oaks) and Obeah (DelCap) in 1969, and William Hartack with Bayou (Oaks) and Princess Turia (DelCap) in 1957.
Since the Obeah Stakes was inaugurated in 1996, four fillies or mares have won the race and followed with a victory in the Delaware Handicap. They were the 2006 older female champion Fleet Indian, I’m a Chatterbox in 2016, Miss Marissa in 2021 and Miss Leslie last year. Two fillies have finished second in the Obeah and won the Delaware Handicap. They were Power Play in 1997 and Unbridled Belle in 2007. Three winners of the Obeah Stakes have followed by running second in the Delaware Handicap. They were Under the Rug in 2001, Your Out in 2002 and the 2011 Horse of the Year Havre de Grace.
Morning Matcha is 5-2 on the morning line, the second choice, and will leave from post number six.
This will be the first year the filly-and-mare classic will be contested at the distance of mile and three sixteenths after being run at the distance of a mile and a quarter every year since 1951 (except 2020 when race was run at mile and an eighth as a result of the pandemic). The Delaware Handicap has been carded as the ninth race with an approximate post time of 4:46 p.m.
The morning line favorite at 7-5 is Idiomatic for trainer Brad Cox.
In her most recent, Idiomatic, a homebred for Juddmonte, notched a 2 ½-length victory in the 1 1/16-mile, Grade 3 Shawnee Stakes at Churchill Downs on June 3. Previously, the 4-year-old daughter of Curlin ran second in the one-mile Grade II Ruffian at Belmont Park on May 6. The Kentucky-bred has a career record of five wins, a second and two thirds from eight starts with earnings of $474,490.
Florent Geroux is named.
The third choice on the morning line is Robert and Lawana Low’s Classy Edition (7-2). Trained by Todd Pletcher, the four-year-old Classic Empire filly arrives off a win in the Critical Eye Stakes at Belmont Park and is three starts removed from her first graded win, in the Grade 3 Royal Delta at Gulfstream Park. Kendrick Carmouche will ride.
Rounding out the field are Royal Take Charge (8-1), a winner of three of four in her brief career for trainer Al Stall, Jr.; Grade 3 winner Battle Bling (6-1), second in this race a year ago for Rob Atras; and longshot Gamestonks (12-1), who, were she to pull the upset, would give trainer Rodolfo Sanchez-Salomon his first graded win as a trainer.
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