Between running their own breeding business together, along with their own separate real estate companies, Marvin Katz and Al Libfeld don’t really have time to work themselves into frenzied anticipation for the season debut of their prized female trotter.
That being said, Katz has not completely pushed Ariana G’s three-year-old season opener Friday at the Meadowlands to the recesses of his mind.
“Both Al and I are very busy in our own business,” Katz said. “We’ve experienced it enough to not think about it too much, and we haven’t. We’re very involved at this time of the year on the breeding side of things with foals; matings are going on, we’re making preparations for the yearling sale. That really takes a lot of our time and attention in addition to our professional careers, which are demanding.”
However. . .
“I can’t help but say I’ve been thinking about her returning and looking forward to it for sure,” Katz continued. “She’s a very special horse so we’re excited and looking forward to that. She has unlimited potential. She’s a very exciting horse. I think in the eyes of many she’s a very special horse as well.”
She was special enough to win the 2016 Dan Patch and O'Brien Award for best two-year-old filly trotter after winning nine of 11 races and earning $804,245 in purses. Trained by Jimmy Takter and driven by Yannick Gingras, Ariana G won the Breeders Crown for two-year-old filly trotters, the Jim Doherty Memorial, the Peaceful Way Stakes and New Jersey Sire Stakes championship.
In March, Takter told Hoof Beats magazine “I don’t think I ever had a better two-year-old trotting filly.” He echoed those sentiments to Trot Insider, calling her "the best two-year-old trotting filly I've ever had."
Bred and owned by Katz and Libfeld, Ariana G opens her campaign in a division of the New Jersey Sire Stakes with Gingras back in the sulky. She will start from post No. 3 and is the even-money favourite on the morning line after prepping with two qualifiers. In the first she went 1:56 with a last quarter-mile of :27.1 in finishing second to Magic Presto, and in the second on May 6, she won in 1:55.1 with a :27.2 last quarter.
“She was well in hand doing that,” said Katz, a Toronto resident who watched replays of both races. “Yannick didn’t pop the earplugs or anything like that. So she’s still got very good speed.
“She also sat in the pocket around the top of the turn and she really accelerated. Her ability to turn on her speed when she starts accelerating is very dramatic. Yannick has commented about that in the past and that was certainly evident in her qualifier.”
So far, everything looks good to go with the filly.
“From what Jimmy Takter said, he’s totally pleased with the way she’s come back,” Katz said. “He’s very excited and we’re looking forward to her performance.”
What is interesting to note, is that the last three female trotters to be named the Dan Patch Award winner at age two -- Broadway Donna in 2015, Mission Brief in 2014 and Shake It Cerry in 2013 -- and four of the last five (Check Me Out in 2011) all came back to win the award at age three. Takter has had three trotting fillies -- Shake It Cerry, Pampered Princess (2006-07) and Passionate Glide (2005-06) -- win Dan Patch awards as two- and three-year-olds.
Katz feels it’s not just a coincidence, noting that when outstanding horses have such a head start in ability early in life, it is tough for the next level to close that gap in just one year.
“In the case of trotters in general, particularly if you have horses at the level that are winning Dan Patch Awards and so forth, all things being equal there’s going to be improvement between the two-year-old and the three-year-old year, just because of the maturity, strength and experience,” Katz said. “When a horse is really at the top of their class it’s very difficult for an inexperienced horse to make up that much ground that quickly.
“There’s exception to every rule, of course, but typically, the horses that were the dominant two-year-olds will be among the dominant three-year-olds. Horses like Ariana G and horses that had very high speeds as two-year-olds, if there’s improvement they’re up near record performances at that point if the normal maturity process takes hold.”
And while Ariana G’s connections are certainly hoping for big things and have her staked in everything, they aren’t making any bold plans or predictions past this weekend.
“We’ll go one race at a time, see how she goes on Friday night,” said Katz, who with Libfeld was named 2016 Dan Patch Breeders of the Year. “Hopefully it’s a good first outing for her and we’ll go from there. I would hope we go through the New Jersey Sire Stakes program and get through the two races and the final, and then see what happens.”
This story courtesy of Harness Racing Communications, a division of the U.S. Trotting Association. For more information, visit www.ustrotting.com.