HALLANDALE BEACH, FL – Wathnan Racing’s Commandment stamped himself as a major Kentucky Derby contender Saturday, edging Chief Wallabee by a neck in the $425,000 Fountain of Youth Stakes (G2) at Gulfstream Park.
The 2-1 favorite, trained by Brad Cox, successfully handled two turns for the first time in the 1 1/16-mile test, earning 50 Kentucky Derby qualifying points. The 80th running of the Fountain of Youth headlined a 14-race card featuring nine stakes, eight graded.
What Happened
Commandment, exiting a dominant win in the Mucho Macho Man at one mile, settled in fifth early as 50-1 longshot Rockies Balboa set fractions of 23.16 and 46.89 seconds. Solitude Dude took over on the far turn, but Irad Ortiz Jr. saved ground on Commandment along the inside while Junior Alvarado launched Chief Wallabee three-wide.
Commandment struck the front in mid-stretch, but Chief Wallabee quickly engaged. The pair battled to the wire, where Commandment proved just gamely enough, stopping the clock in 1:43.33.
The son of Into Mischief improved to 3-for-4 and now looms as a leading prospect for the $1 million Florida Derby (G1) March 28 at Gulfstream.
Cox: “He Passed the Two-Turn Test”
Winning trainer Brad Cox (Commandment):
“I thought he was getting a good trip. Turning for home, it looked like Irad obiviously put him in a great spot. He had the inside path and finished up well. He had to fight to win, and he galloped out well again. Irad said he had to ask him to gallop out past the second wire and he had plenty of horse. He passed the two-turn test. Now it’s a mile and a sixteenth to a mile and an eighth, whether it’s the Florida Derby or the Blue Grass. We’ll talk it over with the Wathnan team and come up with a game plan.”
“[The Florida Derby] is the logical spot. You just want to make sure he comes out of it in good order and we don’t need another week or something with him. You always put the trainer hat on. That’s where we are.”
“Turning for home I thought about it [being on the inside path] but I thought he was moving well enough and I thought we had Saffie’s colt measured. I also saw Bill’s horse on the outside on, as a rule, the better part of the track. It looked like we were getting to him and he had run, and he responded.”
“He was very similar behavior to the Mucho Macho Man, kind of pranced through the tunnel. Once he got into the saddling area he took a deep breath, chilled out, didn’t get hot. He was feeling good, but not over the top. Everything was positive. We actually left the halter and shank on him until we got to the track and he presented himself very, very well. Very classy.”
Winning jockey Irad Ortiz Jr. (Commandment):
“He’s been doing everything so good since day one, honest. I’m excited and happy to see him win today. It’s a good prep and the first step in going to the race we all dream about, so it’s pretty exciting. I love him. I was keeping his attention on the turn, but he was doing well. He never gave me a bad feeling. I trust him and when the space came he was ready to go.”
Runner-Up Impresses
Michael and Katherine Ball’s homebred Chief Wallabee, trained by Hall of Famer Bill Mott, was making just his second career start after a maiden win Jan. 10.
Trainer Bill Mott (Chief Wallabee, 2nd):
“Of course, when you get beat like that, I’m disappointed. But he ran really well. I mean, to run against horses that have much more experience, I think he showed up. We’re trying to get going late in the game. Now you’ve got four or five races to choose from, so you’ve got to decide which one of those.”
Jockey Junior Alvarado (Chief Wallabee, 2nd):
“I had an OK trip. It wasn’t probably the best. He broke OK, then I had to kind of had to hang wide the first turn. I had to make a little premature move just to get my position forward since it’s the first wire with a horse going that far for the first time. I hesitated a little to make that move but I had no choice. Then I saw Irad coming through at the three-eighths pole and I had to make a premature move once again. I have to say it might have cost me the race but this is something we’re building on for next time. I doubt if those horses will beat me again.”
Behind the Top Two
Saffie Joseph Jr.-trained Solitude Dude, unbeaten in three prior starts around one turn, finished third.
Trainer Saffie Joseph Jr. (Solitude Dude, 3rd, Bravaro, 4th, Bull by the Horns, 7th):
“Solitude Dude ran well. He got beat by two good horses at a trip that’s probably not going to be his best trip. But he ran good anyway, had no excuse, got a perfect trip. Bravaro didn’t really get a trip. He had to take up early in the race and then he was far back after that so he was kind of compromised.”
Jockey Flavien Prat (Solitude Dude, 3rd):
“I had a good trip. He really jumped well and from there got a good position. He rated nicely and I thought after that he ran a good race. He held his own. I think he’s going to have distance limitations regardless. But I thought it was a really good effort.”
Jockey Tyler Gaffalione (Bravaro 4th):
“Being drawn in the middle didn’t really help our case. He was fighting the kickback most of the way and didn’t really have the smoothest of trips, but I was very impressed with the way he finished up even after everything early on. He finished up good to the wire. I like this horse. I think he has a bright future. I wasn’t expecting to be buried inside. It’s not the best part of the track but that’s just where we were.”
Trainer Chad Summers (Napoleon Solo, 5th):
“It’s all good. Like we said, first step in a three-part plan.”
Jockey Micah Husbands (Bull by the Horns, 7th):
“I had a good trip. I was following Chief Wallabee and he left at the half-mile [pole] and I didn’t have the horse to go with him. But he tried. Unfortunately he couldn’t match the rest.”
With the victory, Commandment now sits squarely on the Road to the Kentucky Derby and appears poised for a major next step — most likely back at Gulfstream for the Florida Derby.
