Can the Queen shoots for The Very One repeat
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BALTIMORE – Can the Queen has changed trainers but not barns since she won the The Very One Stakes a year ago at Pimlico.
A 6-1 wire-to-wire winner of the The Very One in 2022, Can the Queen was trained at the time by Rodolpho Sanchez-Salomon. Late last summer, she began racing for trainer Joanne Shankle. Shankle is Sanchez-Salomon’s assistant.
“His wife, too,” Shankle said, reached Tuesday by telephone.
Shankle has owned Can the Queen since her career began in a $16,000 maiden-claiming race in September 2022. Late last summer, horses in the Sanchez-Salomon stable owned by Shankle began racing under her banner. Horses for other clients continue to start for Sanchez-Salomon.
This is all parlor chatter as far as bettors are concerned. The more pressing question: Will Can the Queen come back from a 6 1/2-month layoff in the form that won her this five-furlong, filly-and-mare turf dash a year ago?
“Oh yeah. She’s ready to go,” Shankle confidently asserted. “And she loves Pimlico.”
True enough. With earnings of more than $320,000, Can the Queen has risen far above her initial modest maiden-claiming status, and the heart of that success has come on Pimlico grass. She’s won her last three starts over the local course, two renewals of the $100,000 Sensible Lady Turf Dash to go with the The Very One score last May. Following her Sensible Lady win last September, Can the Queen checked in a tame sixth Oct. 23 in an open turf-sprint allowance, but that came at Laurel Park. Bumped at the break, Can the Queen never found her best stride in her 2023 finale, and she comes into the The Very One without the prep race she had a year ago. Victor Carrasco, 2 for 2 riding the mare at Pimlico, is back aboard.
Seven-year-old Can the Queen’s speed is of the rateable type, a plus in a pace-packed field.
The field of 11 – Golden Effect starts only if the race is rained onto dirt – includes Wesley Ward trainees Her World, who is fast, and Spicy Marg, who is faster. Neither holds great appeal. Her World showed vast talent in her lone start during her 2-year-old season of 2021, but even getting back in the win column with a life-and-death victory last month in a Keeneland second-level allowance race, the filly did not look like she’d progressed much from her juvenile level. Spicy Marg set the pace and faded to fourth last September in Can the Queen’s Sensible Lady win.
Train to Artemus ran far below her best form last month at Keeneland, racing over a turf course that’s not for every horse. While she has a chance to bounce back, Thundering Creed rates a longer look.
Five-year-old Thundering Creed didn’t race on turf until last September in her 14th start. First time on grass, she won a Kentucky Downs allowance race, and the next month she rallied strongly for second behind subsequent Breeders’ Cup Turf Sprint winner Caravel in the $300,000 Franklin Stakes at Keeneland. Just behind her that afternoon came Star Devine and Twilight Gleaming, better horses than she faces Friday.
Can the Queen’s Pimlico fondness aside, Thundering Creed might be the right one for the The Very One.
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