2017 Belmont Stakes Contenders
Posted : admin On 4/9/2022The 2017 Belmont Stakes (G1) was the 149th Run for the Carnations, and was considered by many experts in the horse racing industry as a wide-open competition with both Kentucky Derby winner (G1) Always Dreaming and Preakness Stakes (G1) winner Cloud Computing skipping out on the third and final leg of the Triple Crown series.
- 2017 Belmont Stakes Video
- 2017 Belmont Stakes Contenders
- Belmont Stakes Contenders And Odds
- 2017 Preakness Stakes
Belmont Stakes Contender News & Notes: June 5, 2017 By US Racing Team Japanese invader Epicharis was released from quarantine shortly after 11:30 a.m. On June 3 and went straight to the training track at Belmont Park for a private training session in advance of the Grad. 2017 Belmont Stakes (G1) race results, race date, entries, field, video, contenders, probables.
On top of both Always Dreaming and Cloud Computing not competing at Belmont, presumed favorite Classic Empire was scratched prior to Wednesday’s post position draw due to a foot abscess issue in his right front hoof, which he has seemingly been dealing with all year long. If the race wasn’t already lacking for star power, pre-race second-favorite Epicharis (4-1 morning line odds) was scratched due to lameness, cutting the race down to a field of 11.
By default, Irish War Cry was tabbed by most prognosticators as the favorite and for a majority of the race it looked like he was going to fulfill the potential many believed in him going back to the Kentucky Derby. Irish War Cry and jockey Rajiv Maragh set the pace from the start, with fractions of 23.88, 48.66, 1:14,01, and 1:38.95 through the first mile. He even led at the top of stretch during the Belmont, but Tapwrit was stalking him in second place and handled the last half mile better en route to surpassing Irish War Cry and winning by two lengths in a time of 2:30.92. Fan favourite Patch finished third.
Tapwrit was ridden by Jose Ortiz, who won his first career Triple Crown race. His brother Irad Ortiz Jr., who rode Lookin At Lee to a seventh-place finish this year, won the Belmont Stakes last year on top of Creator. Todd Pletcher trained Tapwrit, and it was his third career Belmont Stakes win. He previously won with Palace Malice in 2013 and Rags to Riches in 2007. Third-place finisher Patch was also trained by Pletcher. The Belmont Stakes-winning Tapwrit previously finished sixth in the Kentucky Derby and skipped the Preakness.
Tapwrit paid $12.60, $6.50, and $5.00 for the win, runner-up Irish War Cry returned $4.70 to place and $3.90 to show, while Patch paid $6.50 for his third-place show result. Tapwrit now has four wins in eight career starts.
2017 Belmont Stakes Video
Below are the full results of the 2017 Belmont Stakes:
1. Tapwrit
2. Irish War Cry
3. Patch
4. Gormley
5. Senior Investment
6. Twisted Tom
7. Lookin At Lee
8. Meantime
9. J Boys Echo
10. Multiplier
*Hollywood Handsome – Did Not Finish
*Hollywood Handsome was vanned off post-race due to a small laceration behind his left knee. Post-race officials said it was a precautionary move and that he would be fine.
Listed in Post Position Order
1) Twisted Tom
Twisted Tom is a new shooter to the Triple Crown trail who makes his graded stakes debut in the Belmont. He’ll be one of the long shots near 20-1 despite winning four of six starts including three straight in 2017. His last two minor stakes wins were stalking and press the pace victories at Laurel Park.
Twisted Tom is a New York-bred with a top Equibase Speed Figure of 93. That won’t have him competing for the cash against this field, but last year’s Eclipse Award-winning trainer Chad Brown says this Creative Cause colt is rapidly improving and training beautifully with a pair of strong 5 furlong breezes over the Belmont track. Brown says this is a huge class test for Twisted Tom, but says he can stay the mile and a half distance and is sitting on the top of his game. Javier Castellano, who road Cloud Computing to a Preakness win last month, will ride Twisted Tom seeking his first Belmont win after finishing 2nd three times in 10 starts. Twisted Tom is trying to become just the third gelding to win the Belmont Stakes, but his lack of class and any fast pressing pace likely leaves him lagging behind down the long Belmont stretch.
2) Tapwrit
Tapwrit has a stalking style and is trained by Todd Pletcher. Tapwrit has three wins and a 2nd place finish in seven starts with his last race a troubled trip 6th place finish in the Kentucky Derby. He managed to close from 15th place at the three quarter pole after a poor break and being steadied off heels in the opening furlong. The Belmont will be Tapwrit’s fifth-straight graded stakes start and he won the Tampa Bay Derby but faced no Belmont runners in that race. Tapwrit did not take a liking to the Keeneland track as a 2-1 choice when finishing a well-beaten 5th in the Blue Grass Stakes in April, but was more than four lengths behind 4th place finisher J Boys Echo.
Belmont-based Pletcher has won the Belmont Stakes twice and also has five runner-up finishes in 22 starts including last year when Destin was nosed-out by Creator. Pletcher got three solid maintenance works out of Tapwrit leading into the Triple Crown race, and regular rider Jose Ortiz will need to get the high-priced, striking gray colt to settle into a comfortable stride conserving his best for the big sweeping far turn and long stretch run. Tapwrit has the pedigree to get the 1.5 mile distance as a son of Tapit, who produced recent Belmont winners Tonalist (2014) and Creator (2016). Tapwrit will be in a group of contenders at less than 10-1 odds, but worth a bet to win and finish in the money as an exacta and trifecta inclusion.
3) Gormley
Gormley has four wins in seven starts highlighted by a win in the Santa Anita Derby. He finished 9th in the Kentucky Derby, and as a 2-year-old Gormley finished 16 lengths behind Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Champion Classic Empire. Triple Crown-winning Jockey Victor Espinoza will ride for trainer John Shirreffs, who along with the owners decided to run Gormley in the Belmont as the 13th and final entry to go after the grueling 1 ½ mile ‘Test of the Champion’.
Gormley will be stalking the pacesetters in the Belmont, and he has the breeding to get the distance. But his long shot price near 20-1 comes with concerns from his slow closing 3/8 mile in the Santa Anita Derby and when he came up empty at the top of the lane in the Kentucky Derby.
4) J Boys Echo
J Boys Echo is a son of 2003 Horse of the Year Mineshaft, who jockey Robby Albarado rode to three Grade 1 wins. Trainer Dale Roman’s has this bay colt training very well at Churchill Downs leading into the Belmont Stakes. His last race was a poor 15th place finish in the Kentucky Derby when he fell way back and failed to menace. J Boys Echo has two wins in seven starts with a lone stakes victory in the Gotham when he had one of the fastest runs by a 3-year-old this year on a soft but fast track and beat subsequent Preakness winner Cloud Computing by 3 ½ lengths.
Jockey Robby Albarado missed the Derby due to a leg fracture but is back aboard J Boys Echo in the Belmont, and Albarado has twice finished runner-up in the Belmont in five starts. While horses near the lead turning for home have won a majority of the recent Belmont’s, J Boys Echo is a closer and greater than 20-1 Belmont long shot that could surprise like Creator last year and one to consider in your exotic wagers.
5) Hollywood Handsome
Hollywood Handsome has run in only two stakes races in his nine starts, with a best finish of 4th in the Louisiana Derby as a huge long shot. Trainer Dallas Stewart is noted for hitting the board with big long shots on the Triple Crown trail, but his horses have never finished in the money in seven Belmont starts.
Jockey Florent Geroux will likely have Hollywood Handsome well off the pace in the Belmont, and don’t expect this bay colt to be making a move at the leaders down the long stretch. Hollywood Handsome’s pedigree suggests a mile is his best distance, and this is not a big long shot to include in your exotics as Hollywood Handsome does not possess enough speed, closing kick or stamina to challenge the Belmont contenders.
6) Lookin at Lee
Lookin At Lee joins Classic Empire as one of two horses pointed to the Belmont Stakes. Lookin At Lee was overlooked in the Kentucky Derby but finished 2nd at 33-1 odds despite a hard-charging and close 3rd place finish in the Arkansas Derby behind winner Classic Empire. Lookin At Lee also finished 4th in the Preakness.
Lookin At Lee is a deep closer and will take some action near 8-1 odds over the long 1 1/2 mile race. That despite having failed to win any of his eight graded stakes races with an overall record of 2-3-2 in 11 starts. Jockey Irad Ortiz, Jr. ran his first race at Belmont Park in 2011, and he guided long shot Creator to a victory in the 2016 Belmont Stakes. He'll partner with trainer Steve Asmussen again looking for back-to-back Belmont wins.
7) Irish War Cry
Irish War Cry added his name to the Belmont Stakes less than a week before the big $1.5 million race. He was nearly the co-favorite in his last race in the Kentucky Derby, but faded to 10th after stalking the leaders through the first mile. He’s won four of six starts and entering the Derby, Irish War Cry was the only horse in the field with three 100+ Brisnet Speed Figures.
Trainer Graham Motion has his Curlin colt training well and says Irish War Cry is a very relaxed colt. He will instruct jockey Rajiv Maragh to settle Irish War Cry off the pacesetters as he did in the Wood Memorial before kicking away in the stretch to win by 3 ½ lengths without having to give his best in the final furlong with no closers coming. He is a son of two-time Horse of the Year Curlin, who finished 2nd in the 2007 Belmont Stakes. Irish War Cry has the ability to wear down his opponents with a steady and powerful grind, which is often what it takes to win down the long stretch at Belmont.
8) Senior Investment
Senior Investment has three wins in nine starts with his best win in the Lexington Stakes in April. He had a 4th win in his 2017 debut at the Fair Grounds but was disqualified for interference after crossing the finish line in front. He beat no Belmont runners in the Lexington Stakes, and followed with a 3rd place finish in the Preakness Stakes at 31-1 odds, when he closed from 8th in the stretch to produce a big trifecta payoff. In his stakes debut in April, Senior Investment finished 6th in the Louisiana Derby behind runner-up Patch and 4th place finisher Hollywood Handsome, who are both running in the Belmont Stakes.
Trainer Kenny McPeek saddles his sixth Belmont runner and trained 2002 Belmont winner Sarava, who pulled off a monumental upset as a 70-1 long shot. The sire of Senior Investment was more of a sprinter, but also the grandson of A.P. Indy, who won the 1992 Belmont Stakes. Channing Hill makes his first start in the Belmont, but likely won’t have enough horse to make up ground and cash in against the stronger contenders.
2017 Belmont Stakes Contenders
9) Meantime
Meantime is a lightly-raced chestnut colt by Shackleford, who won the 2011 Preakness but could not stay the distance in the Belmont where he finished fifth. Meantime is 1-2-1 in four career starts all as a 3-year-old. He finished 2nd to highly-regarded Timeline in the Peter Pan last out in his stakes debut on a sloppy track at Belmont Park.
Trainer Brian Lynch has his first Belmont horse and jockey Mike Smith is a 2-time Belmont Stakes winner who will have Meantime as one of the pacesetters in the Belmont. But most would see it as a big surprise if this long shot is able to show the necessary stamina and sustain his position against this group of stronger more established contenders. Meantime has worked well the past 10 days at Belmont and has the potential to improve. But less than two months removed from his maiden win, Meantime is going to miss the board for the first time in the Belmont.
10) Multiplier
Multiplier began racing as a 3-year-old, and the bay colt by The Factor broke his maiden in his third try at the Fair Grounds in March. Multiplier was sent to Hawthorne and he won the 1 1/8 mile Illinois Derby sitting just out of striking distance with his closing style and producing a solid closing response to win by a head with his career-best 107 Equibase Speed Rating. Multiplier was then purchased by an ownership group and assigned to trainer Brendan Walsh. They entered Multiplier in the Preakness Stakes and he failed to fire sitting well back under first time rider Joel Rosario. He did make up two lengths in the stretch to finish sixth; his first finish out of the money in five starts.
Rosario retains the mount in the Belmont, and he’s a top rider in New York’s loaded colony and won the Belmont with Tonalist in 2014 and was runner-up in 2015. But Rosario doesn’t have enough horse to get the grueling 1.5 mile distance. He comes from a pedigree of sprinters, and even if a number of horses are tiring in the long Belmont stretch, Multiplier won’t be able to catch the stronger contenders with more speed and stamina.
11) Epicharis (JPN)
Epicharis is the Japanese invader who enters the Belmont Stakes with four wins from five starts and nearly $1 million in earnings. His only loss came in his last start in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) Derby in March where he led for nearly the entire race before yielding to Thunder Snow in the final yards. Epicharis qualified for the Kentucky Derby, but his connections chose to target the Belmont Stakes for his U.S. debut.
Epicharis will be the pacesetter or pressing the pace in the Belmont, but his fluid stride and natural cruising speed combined with his tactical speed and ability to rate should be a valuable asset in the Belmont. Epicharis also has solid breeding and stamina which make him one to watch at a price near 8-1. Epicharis’ sire, Gold Allure, is a son of 1989 Kentucky Derby winner and Horse of the Year Sunday Silence, who went on to become the most accomplished sire in Japanese breeding.
12) Patch
Patch is a pace-presser who was unable to get towards the front in the Kentucky Derby breaking from the far outside No. 20 post. He finished 14th with a troubled trip, but Patch placed 2nd in the Louisiana Derby following his maiden win at Gulfstream. Patch is trained by Todd Pletcher and makes the fifth start of his career with a 1-2-0 log. John Velazquez, who won the Kentucky Derby aboard Always Dreaming, will ride Patch in the Belmont Stakes.
The Pedigree for Patch suggests he’s one of the best-suited colts in the race to get the 1.5 mile distance. Along with his sire Union Rags, who Velazquez rode to victory in the 2012 Belmont Stakes as the favorite, his dam sire is A.P. Indy, who won the 1992 Belmont. Patch lost his left eye due to an infection, but he’ll see down the long Belmont stretch clearly after making a move on the big sweeping second turn. Patch was over-bet as a feel-good story in the Derby, where he had a horrible post and wasn’t quite ready in his fourth career start. But he’ll perform better in the Belmont as a long shot that could produce a big payday in the exotics.
The Belmont Stakes is the final race of the three that comprise the Triple Crown. It takes place every June at Belmont Park in Elmont, New York. For the second year in a row history could be made at the 2015 Belmont Stakes. American Pharoah has already won the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness and is one win away from becoming only the 12th Triple Crown winner in history. There hasn’t been a Triple Crown winner in the sport of horse racing since Affirmed in 1978. California Chrome gave it a good run last year, winning the Kentucky Derby and Preakness before finishing fourth behind Tonalist in the Belmont.
The Belmont is a Grade 1 stakes race contested over a 1 ½ mile dirt track for three-year-olds. During the Triple Crown campaign, a horse must not only deal with the longest distance of their career but the grueling schedule. The Belmont takes place three weeks after the Preakness and five weeks after the Kentucky Derby. Since most high-level thoroughbreds usually race every three or four weeks, the scheduling of the Triple Crown races is as big of a challenge as the competitions themselves. The scheduling is so demanding that many horsemen have called for the racing schedule to be changed to provide horses with more time between races.
Belmont Stakes Contenders And Odds
First held in 1866, the Belmont is the oldest of the Triple Crown races by nearly a decade. The race is the namesake of 19th-century financier August Belmont, Sr. and was originally run at the Jerome Park Racetrack in the Bronx. The Jerome Park track got its name from a Wall Street colleague of Belmont’s, Leonard Jerome. August Belmont died in 1890 and Jerome in 1891 and following their passing the event was moved to the nearby Morris Park Race Course until the opening of Belmont Park. The race has been held annually since then with the exception of 1911 and 1912. Between 1963 and 1967 the race was held at nearby Aqueduct Racetrack due to a major renovation project at Belmont Park.
While the Kentucky Derby has the nickname ‘the run for the roses’, the Belmont winner traditionally receives a blanket of carnations. Despite the floral tradition of the Belmont the moniker “the run for the carnations” hasn’t exactly become part of the American lexicon. The race’s catch phrase may not have gained traction with the American public, but the Belmont does boast what many consider the greatest performance in the history of thoroughbred racing. In 1973, Secretariat clinched the Triple Crown in the Belmont with a downright dominant performance—“Big Red” set a course record of 2:24 in winning the race by an astounding 31 lengths. One of the most enduring images of Secretariat’s victory is the shot of jockey Ron Turcotte easing up his mount near the finish line as he looks back over his shoulder in amazement that the rest of the field is nearly out of sight.
The 2016 Belmont winner was Creator who emerged victorious by a nose over runner up Destin. Creator was trained by Steve Asmussen with jockey Irad Ortiz, Jr. aboard and an ownership group including WinStar Farm and celebrity chef turned horseman Bobby Flay. , trained by Christophe Clement with jockey Joel Rosario aboard. Tonalist was 10/1 on the morning line and closed at just over 16/1. Creator paid $34.80 to win, $14.60 to place and $9.40 to show. Runner up Destin returned $9.40 and $6.20 with third place Lani paying $6.60 to show.
2017 Preakness Stakes
The 2017 Belmont Stakes will take place on Saturday, June 10th. For those looking to attend the race live, gates open at 8:30 AM. In addition to the highly sought after reserved seating, Belmont Park admits thousands of fans via general admission on a first come, first served basis. Reserved seats should be purchased well in advance–in 2014, they sold out long before race day.