Sacred Wish Pulls Out Late Victory in the Matriarch

Selected and trained by Cary Frommer
Courtesy of the BloodHorse

Sacred Wish wins the Matriarch Stakes at Del Mar
Sacred Wish wins the Matriarch Stakes at Del Mar

Benoit Photo

Sacred Wish Pulls Out Late Victory in the Matriarch

Sacred Wish rallied down the stretch to outlast favored Gina Romantica

Sacred Wish  ended trainer Chad Brown’s stranglehold on the Matriarch Stakes (G1T) by defeating favored Gina Romantica  at Del Mar Dec. 1. Runners from the powerful Brown barn had four consecutive victories in the one-mile turf race for distaffers, but trainer George Weaver sprung a mild upset with Sacred Wish, getting the first graded win of her career.

Hall of Fame jockey John Velazquez, who hadn’t ridden Sacred Wish in a race in more than a year, came to California to pilot her for Weaver. The filly, going off as the 12-1 fifth choice, drew the rail, which allowed Velazquez to save ground in third early as part of a dream trip.

Ag Bullet , the 3-1 second choice behind the Brown-trained favorite Gina Romantica, was coming off a third in the Breeders’ Cup Turf Sprint (G1T). She set the early pace while getting the first quarter-mile in :23.32. Second-place Aussie Girl  tightened it up to a head margin after a half-mile in :47.57, while Velazquez was content to bide his time in third.

“I was hoping that she would break well,” said Velazquez, who added he felt the field only had a couple of speed horses. “If I can beat the 3 or the 4, then I am in a great position.”

That great position paid off as the leaders headed into the stretch. Velazquez was able to angle Sacred Wish outside of Ag Bullet, giving his filly a clear shot. She took it eagerly, passing Ag Bullet and then holding off a late rally by Gina Romantica on her outside and defeating the favorite by a neck in 1:34.76. Ag Bullet saved the show spot, three-quarters of a length behind Gina Romantica and a similar margin ahead of fourth-place Tax Implications, one of four trained by Brown.

“She pulled out and she had a nice kick to fight down the lane,” Velazquez said.

Blair Golen, an assistant to Weaver, was pleased with the way Ag Bullet’s early pace set the race up for Sacred Wish.

“She wasn’t going too fast, was comfortable behind horses, and was able to go up the rail and get it done this time,” Golen said. “Johnny already had it in his head that instead of waiting for her, he was going to ask her to go, and where she put herself is where she was going to be. He’s ridden her so well in the past. He gets along with her good, and I’m just so happy he was able to come out and ride her.”

Sacred Wish and jockey John Velazquez, right, outleg Gina Romantica (Jose Ortiz), outside, and Ag Bullet (Umberto Rispoli), left, to win the Grade I $300,000 Matriarch Stakes Sunday, December 1, 2024 at Del Mar Thoroughbred Club, Del Mar, CA.<br>
Benoit Photo
Photo: Benoit Photo

The connections of Sacred Wish celebrate winning the Matriarch Stakes at Del Mar

Until the Matriarch, Sacred Wish had spent her entire career east of the Mississippi, winning the 2023 Winter Memories Stakes at Aqueduct. A graded victory had eluded her, though she had come close several times, running second in five graded stakes, including the 2023 Coaching Club American Oaks (G1) at Saratoga Race Course. Two starts after the CCA Oaks, Sacred Wish switched to turf, and in nine races on that surface she had two wins, three seconds, two thirds, and two fourths.

Weaver, who missed winning the 2019 Matriarch by just three-quarters of a length with Daddy Is a Legend , trains Sacred Wish for Black Type Thoroughbreds, Swinbank Stables, Steve Adkisson, Christoper Dunn, and Anthony Spinazzola. Spinazzola bought the 4-year-old filly from consignor Cary Frommer for $50,000 at the 2022 Fasig-Tipton Midlantic 2-year-old sale.

John R. Penn bred Sacred Wish in Kentucky from the Indian Charlie mare Indian Wish , who did not win but placed four times in 17 starts. Indian Wish is a half sister to graded winner Mint Lane  and to grade 1-placed Sister Girl Blues . Another half sister, unraced So Sharp , produced millionaire and sire Sharp Azteca .

Not This Time   sired both graded winners on the Dec. 1 Del Mar card: Sacred Wish as well as Cecil B. DeMille Stakes (G3T) winner Clock Tower . The stallion’s other 2024 graded winners include Cogburn  Next Arzak Shareholder Abientot Time to Dazzle , and No More Time . A son of Giant’s Causeway, Not This Time is slated to stand the 2025 season for an advertised fee of $175,000 at Taylor Made Stallions near Nicholasville, Ky.

Video: Matriarch S. (G1T)

Post Time Named 2024 Aiken Trained Horse Of The Year

Post Time won the 2024 Carter Handicap (G2) and General George Stakes (G3). The 4-year-old horse raced nine times in 2024 with four wins, three seconds and two thirds. He has $975,000 in earnings for the year and $1,227,910 career earnings. He also finished second in the 2024 Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile (G1).

Post Time is owned by Ellen Charles of Hillwood Stable, who named the horse Post Time because of a connection to her grandmother, the former owner of General Foods Marjorie Merriweather Post (1887-1973).

He is a foal of 2020 who was bred in Maryland by Dr. & Mrs. Thomas Bowman, Dr. Brooke Bowman and Milton P. Higgins III. The grey/roan horse is by Frosted and Vielsalm by Fairbanks.

Post Time was purchased by Cary Frommer at the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Fall Yearling Sale 2021 for $85,000. Mrs. Charles fell in love with the horse and her Hillwood Stable, LLC purchased him from Frommer shortly after the sale. He was trained at the historic Aiken Training Track under the tutelage of Frommer.

Once ready, he was sent to trainer Brittany Russell at Fair Hill Training Center, Elkton, Md., who is his trainer to this day. Assistant trainer Emma Wolfe has been a very important part of his training as his exercise rider and travels with him when he is on the road. Eric Camacho was his original jockey and rode him until he was injured in January 2023. In April of 2023, Post Time went to Fox Hall Equine Rehabilitation Center in Fallston, Md. for Physical Therapy and Aquatread therapy. He spent two months rehabbing there and then went back to Brittany Russell at Fair Hill. His first race back was in September 2023, missing quite a bit of racing as a 3-year-old. Luis Barajas and Emeterio Rodrigues are his grooms.

The Aiken Trained Horse of the Year award, created in 2002, honors local Thoroughbreds who have had an excellent racing season. Nominees must have trained in Aiken County AND must have won at least one graded stakes race during the year OR exceeded $500,000 in career earnings. The Hall of Fame Advisory Board approves the winner.

An induction ceremony will be held on Sunday, March 16, 2025 at 1:30 pm at the Aiken Thoroughbred Racing Hall of Fame. An exhibit about Post Time will be on display. The public is invited to attend the ceremony. The Hall of Fame is located at 135 Dupree Place, Aiken, SC 29801 inside historic Hopelands Gardens.

Past winners include Congaree (2002), Wando (2003), Limehouse (2005), Bob and John (2006), Country Star (2007), Midshipman (2008), Quality Road (2009 & 2010), It’s Tricky (2011), Alpha (2012) Palace Malice (2013 & 2014), Curalina (2015 & 2016), Dickinson (2017), Still Having Fun (2018), Concrete Rose (2019), Madone (2021) and Private Creed (2022 & 2023).

‘He So Deserves It’: Post Time Could Target Pegasus After Cigar Mile

Hillwood Stable’s multiple graded-stakes winning millionaire Post Time, most recently second in the Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile (G1) Nov. 2, will race again as a 5-year-old in 2025 with the $3 million Pegasus World Cup (G1) Jan. 25 at Gulfstream Park as a potential season opener.

Bred and based in Maryland and trained by Brittany Russell, Post Time is entered in Saturday’s Cigar Mile (G2) at Aqueduct, where the 4-year-old Frosted colt drew outermost Post 11 in a field that includes Grade 1 winners Senior Buscador, Book’em Danno, Locked and Mullikin.

“He’ll run next year. I’m going to try to figure out what it’s going to look like,” Russell said. “It’s probably a little early to be like, ‘We’re going back to the Breeders’ Cup,’ but looking at the year I’ll probably pause on him somehow at the beginning of the year, back off of him a little bit and then we’ll gear him up for the second part of the year.”

The 1 1/8-mile Pegasus for 4-year-olds and up headlines a spectacular World Cup Day program of eight stakes, seven graded, and two overnight handicaps worth $5.55 million in purses.

“It’s on our radar. We’ll see how he runs this weekend. If he runs really big, I wouldn’t want to stop on him just yet,” Russell said. “We’re definitely going to entertain the idea. I just want to get through this weekend. It would make sense if we do the Pegasus in January, then we’d have February and March [for a break]. I think Saturday will tell us what we need to know.”

Post Time has never been worse than third in 14 career starts with nine wins and $1,167,910 in purse earnings. Winner of Aqueduct’s Carter (G2) and Laurel Park’s General George (G3) over the winter, he has placed in three Grade 1 stakes including a second in the Metropolitan Handicap June 8 and a third in the 1 1/8-mile Whitney – his two-turn debut – Aug. 3, both at Saratoga.

Post Time trailed the 13-horse field through four furlongs of the Dirt Mile before making his familiar late run, weaving through traffic under regular rider and Russell’s husband, Sheldon Russell, to come within 1 ½ lengths of winner Full Serrano as the sixth betting choice at odds of nearly 8-1. It marked the Breeders’ Cup debut for the Russells as well as Hillwood’s Ellen Charles, the granddaughter of famed businesswoman and philanthropist Marjorie Merriweather Post.

“It was so much fun and we were so proud of him and so excited. I don’t know what would have happened if he won. I think we might have lost it,” Russell said. “I’d love to see him get a Grade 1. He so deserves it.”

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