The only thing that stopped World of Trouble during his 2019 campaign was a troublesome foot injury.
The morning of Sept. 29, the connections of Mo Forza had a fairly promising turf prospect on their hands. A five-race maiden, yes, but a promising prospect.
What a difference three months can make. Mo Forza finally won a race the afternoon of Sept. 29, and that was just the start of things. Mo Forza followed up his maiden win with a victory in the Grade 2 Twilight Derby. For an encore, he won the Grade 1 Hollywood Derby, and to put an exclamation point on his rapid rise, Mo Forza ended his campaign with a sharp score in the Grade 2 Mathis Brothers Mile.
Those who watched the races from Churchill Downs on Sept. 14 were probably not surprised that an Eclipse Award finalist in the 2-year-old male division competed that day. They may be surprised that the finalist is Maxfield and not Dennis’ Moment.
Though the Eclipse Award in the 2-year-old male division has always gone to a dirt horse, Structor stated his case for change in 2019.
Structor was one of eight 2-year-olds to win a Grade 1 stakes in 2019, his coming in the $1 million Breeders Cup’ Juvenile Turf at Santa Anita on Nov. 1. That capped a perfect 3 for 3 campaign for Structor which included a maiden win at Saratoga in August and the Grade 3 Pilgrim Stakes at Belmont Park in September.
Julio Correa established himself as the top apprentice rider in the United States last year when he won 126 races. For the accomplishment, he is a 2019 Eclipse Award finalist for outstanding apprentice jockey in North America, alongside Angel Diaz, who is based in Puerto Rico, and Kazushi Kimura, who competes in Canada.
Maximum Security’s story seems almost made up – debuts for $16,000, for which anyone could have claimed him, goes on to finish first in the Kentucky Derby (only to earn the dubious distinction of being the first horse disqualified for an infraction in the race), has a severe medical emergency that keeps him out of a major race, yet returns in the fall to win twice.
That’s not a campaign. It’s a soap opera.
Owing to a promising 2-year-old campaign in which he finished second in the Grade 1 Champagne Stakes in his second and final start, much was expected from Code of Honor coming into his 3-year-old year. So when he belly flopped in his 2019 debut in the Mucho Macho Man, finishing fourth of six at 4-5, questions understandably were raised about whether he had progressed from 2 to 3.
Omaha Beach was one of the best 3-year-olds in the land in the spring, when he won the Arkansas Derby and wound up as the morning-line favorite for the Kentucky Derby, and in the fall, when he returned from a layoff of nearly six months to win a Grade 1 sprint, and in the winter, when he won yet another Grade 1 race. He began the racing year in January and ended it in December, overcoming several twists and turns along the way, with his talent and the skill of his Hall of Fame trainer, Richard Mandella, winning out more often than not.