Stonewall Star returned to the New York-bred ranks, overcame a hesitant start and bounced back from a graded stakes try 20 days earlier with a victory in Friday’s $100,000 Bay Ridge Stakes at Aqueduct.
Barry K. Schwartz’s homebred 4-year-old daughter of Flatter picked up her second win of 2024 with a 2 1/4-length score over odds-on favorite Sterling Silver and seven others in the 1-mile stakes.
Dylan Davis rode the winner for trainer Horacio De Paz, adding more highlights to the respective career best seasons for the jockey and conditioner. Stonewall Star, the 9-2 third choice coming off a distant seventh in the Grade 3 Go For Wand Stakes December 7 at Aqueduct, won in 1:35.02.
“She had been breezing so good – 47 and change last weekend,” said De Paz, who inched closer to the $4 million mark for purses earned by his stable in 2024. “She’s really been doing good all year. I told Barry that she was really thriving and her coat looked really good. It was just a matter of the break situation. When the overnight came out and we drew the one and it was 12 horses, I was like, ‘really?’ You know you have a gate issue horse but the guys at the gate do as good a job as they could do with her.
“She still wants to be competitive. Honestly, we were just trying to run in this spot to see where she fits now. I’ll talk to Barry and see what he decides to do. But if she’s doing well, I’d imagine he’ll keep her running. We’ll see.”
Bon Adieu came away with the lead shortly after the break and before the field made their way to the main track out of the chute, just ahead of 4-5 favorite Sterling Silver and Sweetest Princess. Stonewall Star, who came away last, ran up the inside over the first quarter-mile and took command just after the opening split of :23.55.
“Horacio has been trying to work with her in the morning and they thought that grabbing the tail in the gate was giving her issues there – the stumblings and the misbreaks,” said Davis, the winner of 208 races and more than $16.1 million in purses in 2024. “We tried no tail today, and she was standing well for me, but she just got antsy there when the last one went in, and she tried to push back on the back doors and then she charged the front. It just finally adjusted there, and we were able to break the best we could, but she has a little bit of an attitude there. When she came out of there, that’s the first time for me a horse ever double-barreled or tried to kick the gate coming out at about the second or third jump. Once she was able to get her feet under her, I was able to ride my race from there.
“With not the best break, I was just trying to get as forwardly as possible and stay on the rail at the same time – just breaking and getting that position, and I just kept finding better position and found myself on the lead. I was happy with where I was.”
Stonewall Star, who came into the Bay Ridge on a five-race losing streak, continued on the lead up the backstretch and to the half in :46.15 with Bon Adieu still giving chase and Lisa’s Vision inching into contention.
Davis let Stonewall Star lengthen her stride around the far turn and she gave the field the slip, opening up by 3 lengths at the quarter-pole and past 6 furlongs in 1:09.98. Stonewall Star continued on in the lane as Sterling Silver, the runner-up last time out in the Empire Distaff Stakes on Empire Showcase Day, launched her rally from the outside under Junior Alvarado.
Stonewall Star held sway in deep stretch and held off Sterling Silver at the finish. Midtown Lights, a daughter of Redesdale and a 35-1 longshot under Sofia Vives, rallied up the inside to finish third with 13-1 Golden Rocket fourth.
“We wanted to just let her run where she’s comfortable and she’s usually pretty comfortable on the front end or close to the pace,” De Paz said. “The way the track has been playing, the rail seemed pretty live, so that was a great spot for her.
“I expected the break to be better, but that’s been her trouble all year – bad breaks. In the morning she doesn’t get unsettled in there, but in the afternoon, Dylan said she was really good right up to the last horse that loaded and then she got a little unsettled in there which cost her the break. We got lucky that it stayed open, and he was able to come up the rail like that.”
Bred and foaled at Schwartz’s Stonewall Farm in Granite Springs, Stonewall Star improved to 6-for-18 with two seconds and four thirds in the Bay Ridge. A stakes winner at 2, 3 and 4, Stonewall Star picked up $55,000 to boost her bankroll to $467,398.
Stonewall Star is the fourth foal and one of three stakes winners along with Whatlovelookslike and La Fuerza out of the Proud Citizen mare Jonata.
Whatlovelookslike, a 5-year-old daughter of English Channel, is 5-4-3 in 18 starts with earnings of $485,350 for Schwartz and trainer Todd Pletcher. Fifth last time out in the Grade 3 Long Island Stakes at Aqueduct and scratched from Thursday’s Via Borghese Stakes at Gulfstream Park, Whatlovelookslike won last year’s Port Washington Stakes at Belmont Park and has placed in three other stakes.
La Fuerza, a full brother to Stonewall Star, won three stakes carrying his owner and breeder’s black and white colors in 2018. He won four of eight and earned $261,610. Jonata is also the dam of New York-bred winner Citizen K, a gelding by Mizzen Mast with a record of 4-2-3 in 25 starts and a bankroll of $208,522.
A $100,000 purchase by Schwartz at the 2011 Keeneland September yearling sale, Jonata won two of 17 starts with five placings and $140,800.