Nyquist overcomes wide trip, cements championship in Juvenile victory
Trained by Doug O’Neill and ridden by Mario Gutierrez, Nyquist is from the first crop of 2010 champion 2-year-old and Breeders’ Cup Juvenile winner Uncle Mo. The bay Kentucky-bred raced within striking range in midpack during the early stages as Riker flashed to the front and established opening splits of :23.49 and :47.62 while being chased by Unbridled Outlaw, Conquest Big E and Cocked and Loaded.
Nyquist was still biding his time in sixth, a little more than three lengths back after three-quarters in 1:12.14, before beginning to advance toward the front rounding the far turn. Traveling wide the entire way, he was given his cue by Gutierrez nearing the conclusion of the bend and accelerated to the lead as the field straightened for home, passing the mile mark in 1:37.26 with a one-length advantage.
Swipe offered a nice run from the back of the pack to reduce the winning margin in the final sixteenth of a mile, but Nyquist was never seriously threatened as he completed the 1 1/16-mile distance in 1:43.79 over the fast track.
“The race didn’t unfold like I expected,” O’Neill said. “We thought, being on the outside there, with kind of a short run to the first turn, we’d be up on the lead, saving ground. I have to watch the replay, but from my recollection we were five or six wide.
“But Mario did his Mario thing where he never panicked.”
Gutierrez proved cool as a cucumber despite breaking from post 12.
“I had a little trouble getting over from my outside post, but except for the first turn I had good position,” said Gutierrez, who won the 2012 Kentucky Derby and Preakness aboard I’ll Have Another for owner Paul Reddam and O’Neill. “Being wide wasn’t a problem. I didn’t want to get to the rail and get covered up. He was running fine on the outside and so we stayed there.
“I’ve always had confidence in this horse. He’s a good one.”
Out of the Foresty mare Seeking Gabrielle, Nyquist was bred by Summerhill Farm and sold for $400,000 at the Fasig-Tipton Florida March 2-year-old sale.
He captured his career debut, a June 3 maiden special weight at Santa Anita, by a head before posting a 5 ¼-length victory in the Best Pal (G2) at Del Mar on August 8. Nyquist followed with a facile 3 ¾-length tally in the September 7 Del Mar Futurity (G1) and made his two-turn bow in the FrontRunner (G1) at Santa Anita on September 26, scoring by nearly a length after repulsing a couple of stretch challengers.
O’Neill is looking forward to the Kentucky Derby trail next year.
“From Day one, before this horse ever debuted, he had the mind and the stride of a two-turn horse,” the trainer said. “When he debuted, like ‘wow.’ The other day (the FrontRunner), maybe he wasn’t that impressive, maybe because we came back quickly (from the Del Mar Futurity). He was pressured early (last time), and I think with that race under his belt, he turned it around today.”
Nyquist was off as the 9-2 co-second choice among 14 runners. Swipe, who finished second in the FrontRunner, was overlooked at 29-1 and finished 2 ¼ lengths clear of the 6-1 Brody’s Cause in third.
Next came Exaggerator, Cocked and Loaded, Riker, 7-2 favorite Greenpointcrusader, Conquest Big E, Waterloo Bridge, Siding Spring, Rated R Superstar, Unbridled Outlaw, Isotherm and Ralis.
Tale of S’avall was scratched and Tom’s Ready didn’t draw in from the also-eligible list.
With the $1.1 million payday, Nyquist has now earned $1,613,600.
Click for Breeders' Cup Juvenile quotes and transcript.
Nyquist photo courtesy of Wendy Wooley/EquiSport Photos
ADVERTISEMENT