DELRAY BEACH, Fla. – Trainer Todd Pletcher won four races at Gulfstream Park on Saturday and yet still had a bad day. The two horses Pletcher had entered in Saturday’s Grade 2, $400,000 Fountain of Youth Stakes were both scratched – about 10 hours apart – and for different reasons. Locked, the morning-line second choice was scratched by Pletcher who didn’t like the way the horse galloped Saturday morning. “I didn’t think he was perfect yesterday,” Pletcher said Sunday morning in his Palm Beach Downs office. “We galloped him the morning of the race which we do sometimes with him, he just didn’t look right. He galloped this morning and this morning I would have been comfortable running.” Locked, who won the Grade 1 Breeders’ Futurity last fall, has now missed two races this year. He was scheduled to run in the Sam F. Davis at Tampa Bay on Feb. 10 but had a fever. Pletcher said he has no immediate plan for Locked except to rule out running in next Saturday’s Tampa Bay Derby. :: Access morning workout reports straight from the tracks and get an edge with DRF Clocker Reports Speak Easy, the impressive maiden winner on Jan. 27, was scratched during the post parade of the Fountain of Youth when he ran off under Irad Ortiz Jr. and crashed into the rail in upper stretch. Pletcher said Speak Easy suffered lacerations on the inside of his right forearm and the inside of his left hind leg just above the stifle area. Those cuts required stitches. Pletcher said Speak Easy will be out of training for at least a week. He said he would talk to Elliott Walden of WinStar Farm, which co-owns Speak Easy, about the possibility of sending him to WinStar where there is a hyperbaric chamber which could accelerate the healing process. “Best-case scenario we miss a week of training,” Pletcher said. “Where that puts us, not sure yet.” Pletcher said he second-guessed himself for instructing Ortiz to leave the pony in the post parade. “We were focused on getting a good start, we wanted to make sure he loosened up well and be ready to break sharp,” Pletcher said. “We run 1,000 horses a year and I’d say 850 we take away from the pony and haven’t had an issue like that. It happens.” Another disappointment for Pletcher on Saturday was Leslie’s Rose, who finished third as the 1-5 favorite in the Grade 2 Davona Dale for 3-year-old fillies. Leslie’s Rose was stuck on the inside and jockey Irad Ortiz Jr. indicated she wasn’t too comfortable being there. “She got an education,” said Pletcher, who mentioned the Grade 2 Gulfstream Park Oaks on March 30 or the Grade 1 Ashland at Keeneland on April 5 as possible next starts. Among Pletcher’s four winners Saturday was the 3-year-old Be You, who won a seven-furlong maiden race by 2 1/2 lengths. He ran seven furlongs in 1:22.31 and earned a 94 Beyer Speed Figure. At 2, Be You finished fourth in the Grade 1 Hopeful at Saratoga and third in the Grade 1 American Pharoah at Santa Anita.  “He’s a colt, by the way we’ve managed him, we’ve always thought a lot of,” said Pletcher, who trains Be You for Mike Repole. “Trying to decide if the cutback to seven furlongs was part of the reason for success or if he’s just improving, which is possible.” Pletcher said Be You could be a candidate for the Grade 2, $750,000 Wood Memorial at Aqueduct on April 6. “Give him one final chance to see if he wants two turns or not,” Pletcher said. “There’s always plenty of opportunities to sprint him if that’s what he ends up being.” Pletcher also won the Grade 3 Canadian Turf with Emmanuel, who won the same race last year. Emmanuel will likely be considered for the Grade 1 Maker’s Mark Mile on April 12 at Keeneland. Kingsbarns, the 2023 Louisiana Derby winner, returned from a nine-month layoff to win a seven-furlong allowance race. Pletcher prefers Kingsbarns around two turns and mentioned the Grade 3, $300,000 Ben Ali at Keeneland on April 20 as a potential next start. Pletcher also ran first and second in a turf allowance with Quality G and Surprisingly, who finished noses apart. As for his rollercoaster afternoon, Pletcher called it “a day in the life of a horse trainer. You come in every morning prepared for the unexpected, we got a good dose of that yesterday.” Mott hopeful to make Oaks with Just F Y I Though he had to scratch Just F Y I from Saturday’s Grade 2 Davona Dale Stakes due to a fever, trainer Bill Mott said Sunday he remains hopeful he can still get the 2-year-old filly champion to the Kentucky Oaks on May 3. Mott said he was considering whether to run Just F Y I once or twice before the Oaks. “Right now, that’s taken care of,” Mott said Sunday. “The only reason I was going to start her here was I said I need to get a race in her and if something happens in between – like a fever – and I don’t get the second race then at least I had this race. There are certain things that are out of your control and sometimes they work out to your benefit sometimes they don’t.” Just F Y I had shipped back to Payson Park Saturday and she still had a fever Sunday morning, according to Mott. “She’s eating and acts okay, maybe a little quiet,” Mott said. Mott said once Just F Y I gets over the fever, he will train her towards one of three races – the Grade 2, $250,000 Gulfstream Park Oaks on March 30, the Grade 3, $750,000 Fantasy at Oaklawn on the same day, or the Grade 1 Ashland at Keeneland on April 5. The Davona Dale was won by Fiona’s Magic, who held off Into Champagne by a half-length. Fiona’s Magic, a daughter of St. Patrick’s Day trained by Michael Yates, has won three of her last four starts, from 6 1/2 furlongs to a mile. Yates said Fiona’s Magic came out of the race well and will be given a two-turn opportunity, likely in the Gulfstream Park Oaks going 1 1/16 miles. “I would think she would benefit from that, it would also give us a definitive answer around two turns,” Yates said. “We do want to go to the Kentucky Oaks, but we got to make sure she wants to go.” :: Want to learn more about handicapping and wagering? Check out DRF's Handicapping 101 and Wagering 101 pages.