
Roger Cimbora Jr.’s homebred Twenty Six Black cruises to first stakes win Sunday in the Disco Partner at Saratoga. Coglianese Photo.
Roger Cimbora Jr.’s homebred Twenty Six Black continued to show his affinity for the turf courses at Saratoga Race Course Sunday with a victory over open company in the $135,000 Disco Partner Stakes.
The 5-year-old gelding by New York-based sire War Dancer secured his first stakes win in dominating fashion in the 5 ½-furlong Disco Partner, scoring by 2 1/4 lengths over fellow New York-bred Bold Journey and Outlaw Kid. Flavien Prat rode Twenty Six Black for trainer Horacio De Paz.
“His disposition has always been a horse that wants to try,” De Paz said. “He’s built like a tank. … He’s always had a good mind on him and the mare has thrown nothing but runners, and they continue to get better as they get older.”
Twenty Six Black improved to 6-for-15 in the Disco Partner and gave his dam, the First Dude mare Brazo de Oro, her first stakes victory.
Brazo de Oro is the dam of three-time winner and $116,978-earner Happy Hill Lil, stakes-placed $298,505-earner and the De Paz-trained New York-bred Can’t Fool Me. Brazo do Oro is also the dam of the 2-year-old New York-bred and Cimbora homebred and De Paz-trained A Little At First, a full sister to Twenty Six Black who finished fifth in her debut Sunday at Saratoga.
Twenty Six Black, the 7-5 favorite in the field of seven, came into the Disco Partner off a second behind Bring Theband Home in the Grade 2 Troy Stakes Aug. 3 at Saratoga. He finished fourth in his prior start against fellow New York-breds in the 6-furlong Ashley T. Cole Stakes, an effort De Paz chalked up to the gelding not handling the warm weather in late June at Aqueduct.
“He gave us a flat effort in the New York-bred stakes,” De Paz said. “His energy wasn’t great. I don’t know if the week before when that heatwave came through, it knocked him out a little bit. He just wasn’t himself. He’s normally a very forward, happy horse. In the paddock, he can be forward. He was just a little bit quiet.”
De Paz ran blood work on Twenty Six Black after the effort and everything checked out. He conceded it just “wasn’t his day” and moved on.
Shipped to Saratoga – where he went 1-2-1 in five starts before the Troy – Twenty Six Black bounced back.
Flavien Prat rode Twenty Six Black in the Troy and again the Disco Partner. He rated the gelding in fourth early before taking command at the top of the stretch. He led by a half-length in midstretch and widened from there, drawing off to win in 1:01.43 over the firm turf.
“I was worried about the pace scenario,” Prat said. “He broke running and I was able to get him into the race. I tipped him out and he made a good run. I really thought he ran a good race last time and was second to a very good horse. Obviously, we didn’t have to run against him today. I thought this was a race I could possibly win, and he did.”
Twenty Six Black picked up $74,250 for the Disco Partner win and boosted his bankroll to $493,310.
De Paz said he’d look at the Grade 3 Belmont Turf Sprint Sept. 27 at Aqueduct as a next start for Twenty Six Black.
“That would be the logical spot,” he said. “I always thought 6 furlongs would probably be a little bit better for him – 6-to-7– we’ll keep him local.”