Diciassette Brings Impressive Resume into Hutcheson
At 0h03, on March 14, 2026 • By Gulfstream Park
If Green With MV Stable’s Diciassette can be judged by the company he’s kept, the son of Mitole should be regarded as a strong contender in Saturday’s $125,000 Hutcheson at Gulfstream Park.
The Patrick Biancone trainee has the distinction of having faced some of the country’s top colts of his generation, including last year’s undefeated juvenile Eclipse Award winner Ted Noffey, heading into the six-furlong sprint for 3-year-olds that will be featured on Saturday’s 12-race program along with the $125,000 Any Limit, a six-furlong sprint for 3-year-old fillies, and $125,000 Captiva Island, a five-furlong turf dash for fillies and mares.
Diciassette kicked off his career at Gulfstream Park with a debut win in a five-furlong maiden special weight for Florida-breds July 20 and came right back to capture the six-furlong Proud Man less than three weeks later. The son of Mitole sustained his first loss two months later at Keeneland in the 1 1/16-mile Breeders’ Futurity (G1), in which he finished a troubled fourth behind Ted Noffey.
“The race at Keeneland, the race was too long. He’s a sprinter,” Biancone said. “We tried him at Keeneland, but he ran really good.”
Following a break of almost four months, Diciassette made his 3-year-old debut in the Swale Jan. 31 at Gulfstream, finishing a weakening fourth in the six-furlong stakes won by a then-undefeated Solitude Dude, who returned to finish third in his two-turn debut in the Coolmore Fountain of Youth (G2). Swale runner-up Class President went on the capture the Rebel (G2) at Oaklawn.
“He was a little fresh and a little too forward and very wide,” Biancone said. “But he ran a very good race for a comeback.”
Diciassette has breezed impressively at Palm Meadows, Gulfstream’s satellite training facility in Palm Beach County, producing a pair of sharp ‘bullet’ workouts since the Swale.
Biancone views the Hutcheson as a key race for Diciassette.
“We’ll know more after the race,” he said. “We know the horse has talent. We need the horse to show his talent.”
Junior Alvarado has the return call on Diciassette.
