Alphie’s Bet wins Sham, puts trainer on Derby trail
Mar 6th, 2010 | By admin | Category: Race ResultsALEXIS BARBA MAY HAVE TWO LOOKING AT FIRST SATURDAY IN MAY
(Edited Santa Anita Park report)
ARCADIA, Calif. – No one is more surprised to find herself on the Triple Crown trail than Alexis Barba.
The veteran trainer is there courtesy of Alphie’s Bet, who won the $150,000 Sham Stakes by 2ΒΌ lengths Saturday, helping him establish his credentials for the Kentucky Derby.
“Isn’t that amazing?” Barba asked.
What’s even more amazing is that Barba had another three-year-old, Make Music for Me, win the Pasadena Stakes one race earlier and that one could also be looking at the first Saturday in May.
“I’ve got to find a way to keep these two apart until Kentucky,” Barba said after Alphie’s Bet won.
Ridden by Alex Solis, Alphie’s Bet ran 1 1-8 miles in 1:48.72 on Santa Anita’s synthetic Pro-Ride surface.
Setsuko was second as the 5-2 wagering favorite and The Program, trained by Hall of Famer Bob Baffert, was another head back in third in the field of 10 colts.
“My horse made good move, but he doesn’t have a quick turn of foot in the stretch,” said Rafael Bejarano, who rode Setsuko. “That’s why that other horse beat me.”
Alphie’s Bet was sixth in the early going, moved up to fifth, then third before gaining the lead past the eighth pole while running in the middle of the track.
“He was a little bit closer than I’d thought he’d be and I was pleased to see it,” Barba said. “He got into the race a little earlier than his last race, in which he was kind of pinched back a little bit.”
Alphie’s Bet is nominated to the Triple Crown races, but he needs to increase his graded stakes earnings in the coming weeks to have a shot at making the Kentucky Derby field, capped at 20 starters. The Sham victory, worth $90,000, increased his career earnings to $141,320.
Barba isn’t sure of Alphie’s Bet’s next start, noting he’s nominated to the Blue Grass and Lane’s End stakes, both at Keeneland.
Alphie’s Bet was coming off the turf in his last start, which he won in January at Santa Anita. He now has two wins and a second in five starts.
“He can run all day long,” Solis said. “He’s such a big horse.”
Alphie’s Bet paid $19, $8.40 and $4.80 at 8-1 odds. Trained by Hall of Famer Richard Mandella, Setsuko returned $4.40 and $3.20, while The Program paid $4 to show.
A year ago, Solis won the Sham aboard The Pamplemousse, who then became the early favorite for the $750,000 Santa Anita Derby. But the colt was scratched the morning of the race because of an ailing leg, dashing the Kentucky Derby hopes of Solis and his son, Alex II, who co-owned the horse.
Solis, who turns 46 later this month, doesn’t yet dare to dream about the first Saturday in May.
“This game is so fragile,” he said. “This horse has the talent to go a long ways. You just have to pray to God he stays healthy.”


You would think that the connections of Make Music for Me would have figured out by now that he belongs on turf. Keep him there.
Alphie Bet’s time was faster than Eskendereya’s at Gulfstream. The wet ProRide plays fast for sure. Will be interesting to see the Beyer figure.
Was anyone else surprised to see Nextdoorneighbor set such a fast pace in a 9 furlong race?