Tomcito Using Peter Pan as Springboard for Belmont Stakes

  By Jenny Kellner | May 8, 2008
 


Tomcito
 
photo by Adam Coglianese  
   

When buyers at Keeneland’s September 2006 yearling sale looked at Tomcito, all they saw was an awkward, barrel-chested colt who, frankly, walked like a duck. When trainer Dante Zanelli Jr. looked at the son of Street Cry, he saw something more.

“I saw a Derby horse,” said Zanelli, who paid $7,500 for the colt and sent him to Peru, where he won four of five starts including the final two legs of the country’s Triple Crown, both Group 1 races. “His walk was not the prettiest, but he had such a nice stride.”

Tomcito was one of four who did not make the cut for the Kentucky Derby, but the final leg of racing’s Triple Crown is definitely on his schedule. Saturday, the big brown colt heads a field of nine 3-year-olds in the 55th edition of the $200,000 Grade 2 Peter Pan Stakes at nine furlongs, a traditional prep for the $1 million Belmont Stakes on Saturday June 7. Also Saturday is the 33rd running of the $100,000-added Bold Ruler Handicap for three-year-olds and up.

“He’s been special since Day 1,” said Zanelli of Tomcito, who finished third in the Florida Derby behind Big Brown in his American debut, but then failed to earn enough money to enter the Derby when he finished sixth as the favorite in the Lexington Stakes at Keeneland. “The Lexington wasn’t that bad, considering he gave six pounds to everyone and the Polytrack was not to his liking. The ride wasn’t what we expected, either. He didn’t run a terrible race but he didn’t make any money.

“It’s too bad, because I think he would have run a heck of a race in the Derby.”

Bypassing the Preakness because of Pimlico’s reputation for tight turns, Zanelli next targeted the 1 ½-mile Belmont, a distance at which Tomcito has already won. Sent by Zanelli to his uncle in Peru after failing to find a taker, Tomcito began his career beating older horses at the age of two and then wrapped up his 2007 campaign with the Group 1 victories at a mile and a quarter and then a mile and a half at Monterico Racetrack in Peru.

“The bigger the track, the better,” said Zanelli. “We are hoping to have a good showing on Saturday that will set us up for the Belmont. That’s the goal.”

The Belmont Stakes is on the radar of several of the horses in the Peter Pan, notably Casino Drive, the Japanese sibling of the past two Belmont Stakes winners, Rags to Riches (2007) and Jazil (2006), and his stablemate, Spark Candle. Also going are Illinois Derby runner-up Golden Spikes and Cosmic, winner of two straight for Shug McGaughey, who trained last year’s Peter Pan winner, Sightseeing.

“His last three races have been pretty good,” said McGaughey of Cosmic, who broke his maiden going nine furlongs in Florida and then took an allowance at the same distance April 16 at Aqueduct. “We’ll see how he sizes up with these. At the point we are not aiming for the Belmont but it’s certainly up for discussion.”

Executive Fleet, who was second to Bustin Stones in the Grade 1 Carter Handicap, heads a field of seven for the Bold Ruler at six furlongs. Trained by Linda Rice, the five-year-old son of Northern Afleet has won two of his four starts this year, both optional claimers over the inner track at Aqueduct.

Also expected to attract support are Forefathers, fourth in the Grade 2 Commonwealth at Keeneland in his last start; Man of Danger, second to Sir Greeley in the Grade 3 Toboggan Handicap on March 8, and Callmetony, no worse than third in his last six starts.