

Picking a Chad Brown-trained horse on turf is usually a sound strategy. But sometimes it's not always the Brown trainee that one might expect to cross the wire first.
Royalty Interest , the longest shot in the field at 10-1, held off a furious rally to take the $194,000 Sheepshead Bay Stakes (G3T) in a photo finish May 3 at Belmont at the Big A.
Star Fortress came from the back of the field of five and narrowly missed spoiling a gate-to-wire victory by a head.
"I did my job, the pace was slow; nobody really came to push the button on me," jockey Eric Cancel said. "I tried to ride a smooth race. Once I started getting close to the quarter pole I took a peek back to check and see who I had, and I still felt I was full of horse."
Royalty Interest's stablemate, McKulick , was favored at 3-5 but was flat and finished fourth. Star Fortress and La Mehana finished second and third. Parnac was fifth.
A $2 win ticket paid $23.
After taking the 1 3/8-mile Sheepshead Bay in 2:18.05 with fractions of :25.99, :52.08, 1:18.20, and 2:06.82, Cancel doesn't think the 4-year-old filly will struggle with longer distances. The Sheepshead Bay was her first shot going more than 1 1/16 miles.
"She's very smooth, she relaxes very well, she knows what to do," he said. "I don't think the distance will be a problem for her just by the way she ran today."
Sometimes the best things come from plans falling through.
Just ask trainer Rick Dutrow.
His initial plan being spoiled resulted in his trainee, Messier , running—and winning the one-mile, $175,000 Westchester Stakes (G3). He stopped the clock in 1:34.50.
"I really didn't want to run him in this race, I had a different one picked out. That didn't work, but this did. I wanted to send him out to California and run him there; he loves Santa Anita. But they had that race that was just too staked with the owners. It was a good decision, he ran big today."
Messier got a solid jump out of the gate as he dueled with Adero , who led the first quarter-mile in :23.26 and half-mile in :46.16 with favored Charge It in his shadow. Two wide with Adero on the rail, Messier overtook the lead around the turn and grew the lead as Charge It passed a fading Adero.
Five lengths back, Post Time began his attack.
Turning down the stretch, Post Time made up significant ground weaving between rivals and catching Charge It ahead of the final half furlong. Coming to the wire like a fastball, Post Time had run out of ground. Messier's final fractions were 1:09.80 and 1:21.80.
After the three-quarter-length win over Post Time, who had his four-race win streak snapped, Dutrow suggested the Metropolitan Handicap (G1) might be next for Messier.
The race was a bit of redemption for Messier, who was disqualified in his last race, the Excelsior Stakes, for interference that cost him the win.
"He showed up and we were very happy with his last race and we're even more thrilled with this one," said Dutrow.
A $2 win bet paid $8.20. Messier was followed by Post Time and Charge It.