Be Bullish claimed, retired following Sunday victory

Daily Racing Form

ELMONT, N.Y. – Be Bullish went out a winner.

Be Bullish, the popular 10-year-old stakes-winning New York-bred gelding won a $16,000 claiming race Sunday at Belmont Park by three lengths, his fourth consecutive victory and 19th overall from 87 starts.

He was claimed from David Jacobson and Drawing Away Stable by owner Mike Repole, who said he will retire Be Bullish to Old Friends Cabin Creek in Saratoga Springs, N.Y.

“All great athletes have to retire some time, and not too many great athletes get to retire at the top of their game,” Repole said. “That he won four in a row makes for a cooler story, but he’s got close to 90 starts, 50 percent first or second, churned out over a million bucks.”

Be Bullish, a gelding by Pure Prize, had 19 wins, 26 seconds, and 14 thirds from 87 starts. He won six stakes, including two runnings of the Hollie Hughes, and earned $1,106,288.

“I won the race with him that put him over a million dollars, and if he didn’t get claimed that day, I probably would have done it then,” said Repole, referring to a $20,000 claiming race last December at Aqueduct, from which he was claimed by Jacobson and Drawing Away.

Repole only raced Be Bullish six times, having claimed him once for $75,000 in June 2011 and for $16,000 last September.

Though Be Bullish has won four straight races, Repole said he only had to hearken back to Jan. 4, 2014, when Caixa Eletronica, a multiple graded stakes winner he owned who was 9-years-old, died in a freak training accident at Belmont Park.

“These mostly are freak circumstances – they can happen,” Repole said. “

[Be Bullish] has put in his time. He’s going out on top. He’s going out in the winner’s circle. If every horse could have an ending like this, the sport would be in a much better place.”

David Jacobson, who had trained Be Bullish for 23 of his career starts – the gelding winning seven times – including 13 of the last 14 for Drawing Away Stable, said he was surprised to hear Repole would retire him.

“If Mike Repole claimed this horse to retire him, I don’t see it,” Jacobson said. “I think it’s foolish. He shouldn’t be taking this horse away from the public. This horse is a real professional. He knows how to win. I guess that’s one less good horse I have to run against.”

Repole believes Be Bullish should be in New York, which is one reason why he selected Old Friends in Saratoga. However, Repole said he could move the horse somewhere else if Be Bullish doesn’t settle into farm life well.

“I want to get him there through the Saratoga meet; hopefully, he’ll get a bunch of visitors, and after that if he’s not settling well and he still wants to do things, we’ll either go to New Vocations or Rerun, a program that’s authorized by Thoroughbred aftercare, and get him a great home where he’ll either be a jumping horse or something that he would want to do,” Repole said.

“He may not be as fast as American Pharoah, but there are a lot more Be Bullish’s in the world than American Pharoahs,” Repole added. “This is a really special horse, so he deserved this.”

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