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Among The Most Improved Horses In The Sport, Can Nu What’s New Spring The Mild Upset In The Razorback?


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When Nu What's New (Munnings) started his career last year a sixth-place finish in a maiden race at Churchill and followed that with a seventh-place run in a maiden on the turf, trainer James DiVito couldn't have been happy. He had paid $300,000 for the horse at the 2024 OBS April sale and Nu What's New just wasn't performing.

Fast forward several months later and Nu What's New is among the most improved horses in racing, and has a shot to defeat the favorite in Saturday's Razorback Handicap at Oaklawn in Magnitude (Not This Time).

“I think he can do it,” DiVito said. “He deserves a chance in this race. He's been running really well at Oaklawn and he obviously likes the racetrack. He's doing really good here at the barn. He's holding his weight really good and he's a pretty sound horses. I think he's going to run a really good race.

DiVito has reason to be confident. On Dec. 26, Nu What's New ran away from a field of maidens at Oaklawn to win by 7 1/2 lengths while earning a 101 Beyer figure. He was even better next time out when winning a first-level allowance race by 12 1/2 lengths, earning a 103 Beyer.

“I was vert impressed by that last race,” the trainer said. “He won pretty easily. (Luis) Saez wasn't using the horse and he told me he didn't use the horse much. He finishes up good. He gets out there on the pace and then really finishes up. When he can go in '12' for the last eighth going two turns you know you have a good horse.”

That wasn't always the case. DiVito gelded the horse after the poor showing in the grass at Churchill, and that helped, but only so much. He lost his next three races, all of them maidens, all of them sprints.

But DiVito sensed that Nu What's New was on the verge of a breakout.

“He seemed to be getting better and better,” he said. “He finally turned the corner so far as learning things. He's just maturing and coming around. He's waking up and learning more about what's going on. Sometimes horses don't come around as 2-year-olds. Obviously, I gave a lot of money for him. I like horses by Munnings. I have had a lot of success with them. They are pretty versatile horses. But they usually like to sprint and that's why I thought he was going to be a sprinter.”

A sprinter he was not. Nu What's New didn't turn into a top prospect until DiVito decided to send him long for the Dec. 26 race, which  was contested at one-mile. A horse that was coming from well off the pace in his sprint tries, he rocketed to the lead, and never looked back. It was much the same in the 12 1/2-length allowance win. He went right to the front in the mile-and-one-sixteenth event, opened up by two lengths down the backstretch and widened his margin from there.

“Stretching him out helped him a lot,” DiVito said. “He makes the lead easy and that's a big plus if you can carry your speed like that. Going two turns and getting an easy lead, that's a pretty good thing to happen to you. He's way better going long.”

DiVito is aware that the Razorback is a big test. Going from allowance competition into a Grade III stakes race with a $500,000 purse is a big step up. Then there's the Steve Asmussen-trained  Magnitude. He was headed to the GI Saudi Cup before being sidelined briefly with a fever and, in this easier spot, has been made the 9-5 favorite in the morning line. Magnitude has earned $1,291,865 and has won two graded stakes. In perhaps his best performance, he won the Iowa Derby by 9 1/4 lengths.

Nu What's New is 2-1 on the line.

“There's also a big difference in the competition compared to what he's been running against,” DiVito said. “He's going to run against better horses and now we'll see what kind of horse he is.”

There's also the matter of how the race will unfold. While it's no secret that DiVito's horse will go for the lead, Magnitude also has plenty of early speed. If Magnitude presses Nu What's New, that may take away what is his strength, his blazing early speed. With Saez booked to ride Saturday at Gulfstream, Rafael Bejarano will be aboard the 4-year-old son of Munnings.

“The jocks will have to play the break,” DiVito said. “Whoever comes out of there the fastest, then the rider can do what they want to do.  It's going to be a jocks' race because there are two or three horses that should be close to the pace. That's the way it looks on paper. We'll just have to see what happens when the gate opens.”

Should Nu What's New pass this test the April 18 GII Oaklawn Handicap will be next. DiVito knows that his horse still has something to prove on the racetrack, but he's not ruling out that the gelding won't turn out to be one of the better older horses in training.

“We'll see how it all plays out,” he said. “So far, he has trained well here and his last two races have been big. Visually, they were very impressive. We'll see what happens on Saturday. If he's good enough, that's the plan, to stay around here locally for the Oaklawn Handicap. Can he win a race like that? We'll find out.”

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The post Among The Most Improved Horses In The Sport, Can Nu What’s New Spring The Mild Upset In The Razorback? appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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