Charlsie Cantey: A Pioneer in Horse Racing Media
Sovereignty Targeting April 18 Oaklawn Handicap for Seasonal Debut
RacingContent provided by BloodHorseReigning Horse of the Year Sovereignty continues to progress in his training this winter at Payson Park in South Florida and is under consideration for the April 18 Oaklawn Handicap for his 4-year-old debut, Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott told FanDuel Racing March 4. The 1 1/8-mile dirt race at Oaklawn Park carries a $1.25 million purse.
Godolphin’s star homebred American colt, who missed a start against older horses in the fall after running a temperature ahead of a scheduled start in the Nov. 1 Longines Breeders’ Cup Classic at Del Mar, returned to Mott’s Florida stable this winter after receiving light training in Kentucky. Unraced since winning the DraftKings Travers Stakes last summer at Saratoga Race Course, the son of Into Mischief has breezed three times at Payson Park over the past several weeks, topped by a half-mile workout in :49.40 March 1.
“He’s acclimated well, and he’s starting to shine. He’s moving well,” Mott told FanDuel Racing. “His works have been good. His works are usually just workmanlike until we ask him for more. But until then, we’ll just get a series of nice, useful works in him. And you know when he gets ready, he gets ready.
“We’re looking at the possibility of the Oakland Handicap right now. That comes up like (the) 18th of April, and gives us plenty of time if we don’t have any bumps in the road, you know, before then. But that should give us plenty of time to have enough work in him to get started.”
Mott told BloodHorse earlier this winter that the $12 million Dubai World Cup in the United Arab Emirates was not being considered for Sovereignty’s first start of the year, noting the race is March 28 and the colt’s layoff.
Sovereignty, whose nine-race career has not included a start at Oaklawn Park, went 5-1-0 in six starts last year, running away with the champion 3-year-old male title at the Eclipse Awards and out-polling Japanese star Forever Young and star 2-year-old Ted Noffey for Horse of the Year.
In addition to his top-line wins in the Travers, Kentucky Derby Presented by Woodford Reserve, and Belmont Stakes Presented by NYRA Bets in 2025, he won the Coolmore Fountain of Youth Stakes at Gulfstream Park and Jim Dandy Stakes Presented by Mohegan Sun at Saratoga. His only loss at 3 came when he was second in the Curlin Florida Derby at Gulfstream. Godolphin’s homebred is 6-2-0 in nine starts overall with earnings of $5,835,300.
The Oaklawn Handicap could attract additional runners if the connections of some American horses choose not to send their horses to the Dubai World Cup due to the armed conflict in the Middle East involving Iran, the United States, and Israel.
Mott has already shipped horses from Florida to Oaklawn Park in Arkansas this winter, most recently winning the Pig Trail Overnight Stakes March 1 with Juddmonte’s homebred Grade 3 winner Batten Down.
Godolphin won the Oaklawn Handicap last year with its homebred First Mission, who is trained by Brad Cox.
