Accelerate Set for Rematch With Arrogate

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Photo: Benoit Photo
Accelerate finishes 15 1/4 lengths ahead of Arrogate in the San Diego Handicap

Trainer John Sadler wasn't present when Accelerate was purchased for $380,000 at the Keeneland September sale in 2014 for his major client, Hronis Racing. But he had an idea that it might prove to be a good buy.

It's a family thing.

"I saw the first foal (to race) out of the mare (Issues) was a good early 2-year-old," Sadler said. "I didn't train him, but I bought the second foal (to race) out of the mare and that was Daddy D T, who won a (stakes) here at Del Mar at 2 (2014 Oak Tree Juvenile Turf) and was third in the (grade 1) Breeders' Cup Juvenile (Turf), so we liked him.

"Then the next one was Accelerate. The point being that I liked the family and (bloodstock agent) David Ingordo liked the physical look of him. I wasn't there at the part of the sale that he was in, but they told me he looked good and I said I liked him."

There's been quite a lot to like since the son of Lookin At Lucky  started racing in the spring of his 3-year-old year, especially when the races have been at Del Mar.

Accelerate is undefeated in three starts at the seaside track. He notched his first win, in the fourth start of his career, at Del Mar in July of 2016, when he romped by 8 3/4 lengths ahead of Curlin Road in a maiden special weight mile. A month later Accelerate took the Shared Belief Stakes at Del Mar, also at a mile, and he went on to win the Los Alamitos Derby Stakes (G2) a month after that.

Nearly a year, and five winless starts later, Accelerate was sent out in the TVG San Diego Handicap (G2) against the world's top-rated Thoroughbred, Arrogate—and stunned the world with a wire-to-wire, 8 1/2-length victory. Arrogate was an inexplicable fourth of five, but will get a rematch with Accelerate in the $1 million TVG Pacific Classic (G1) Aug. 19.

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What's the connection? Is there an explanation for Accelerate's affinity for the seaside oval?

"I think it's more like timing," Sadler said. "I think when he really started getting good was when we ran him around two turns down here. He had two or three sprints before we stretched him out, and his first route race was here and he won easily and impressively.

"We skipped his allowance condition and went straight to the Shared Belief and won that, which was the start of his rise.

"Then we got real ambitious and put him in the Breeders' Cup Mile as a 3-year-old and he was third. Tyler (jockey Tyler Baze) thought he could have been second except for some bumping and Gun Runner ran third, so that's a pretty good line (in the past performances) there.

"This year, for his 4-year-old campaign, he was second and third with some bad trips. He got away slowly and things like that. So we knew he was capable of running in (top-level races) and he showed that (in the San Diego)."

There were three significant changes made before the San Diego. Blinkers were added, Victor Espinoza replaced Baze in the saddle, and Accelerate was hustled straight to the lead out of the gate for the first time in a year.

"We'd been thinking about blinkers for a couple of races, and when he ran an off race, we decided now's the time," Sadler said. "The rider change was more or less coincidence. Tyler had ridden him all along, and I just decided I wanted to try something different.

"As far as the style, he'd laid up close when he broke his maiden and I think that, combined with the blinkers, put him right into the race more than in most of his races. He has been a notoriously bad gate horse—two or three of his races he really got out poorly. The blinkers seemed to help him focus."

It was not the first time Accelerate bested Arrogate. In the first start for both, in April of 2016, Accelerate finished second, beaten a half-length by Westbrook and a neck in front of Arrogate.

Arrogate went on to win seven straight races and more than $17 million before Accelerate snapped the streak in the San Diego. Now comes the rematch.

"When they run as big a race as he did in the San Diego, there's a little hesitation when you run them back in essentially three weeks," Sadler said. "We just decided to watch him closely and make sure he's doing well and basically right on his game when he goes back in there. Obviously we think he is."