Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Ben’s Cat retired from racing

- By Jim Dunleavy

Nothing lasts forever, but for a number of years it seemed as if Ben’s Cat, the pride of Maryland, just might. Now 11 and a step or two slower than he used to be, the horse has been retired by his breeder, trainer, and owner, King Leatherbur­y.

Leatherbur­y trained the Maryland-bred gelding through eight seasons on the racetrack. A son of Parker’s Storm Cat out of the Thirty Eight Paces mare Twofox, Ben’s Cat concludes his career with 32 wins from 63 starts. He won 26 stakes, more than $2.6 million, and leaves behind a legion of fans whom he thrilled time and again. (For lifetime PPs, go to static.drf. com/benscat.pdf)

“I feel bad about stopping on him because he still likes what he does and I still like sending him out there,” Leatherbur­y said Tuesday. “It’s a shame, but as a trainer, you only have so many excuses. The bottom line is he’s just not getting anything anymore.”

Ben’s Cat finished ninth, beaten 4 1/2 lengths, last Saturday at Laurel Park in the Mister Diz Stakes, a race he won six consecutiv­e years from 2010-15. In three starts this year, Ben’s Cat didn’t race terribly but was lacking the late run that had become his hallmark.

Ben’s Cat didn’t make his first start until he was 4 in 2010. He would race in the Mid-Atlantic each year from spring until fall and then spend his winters recouping on a Maryland farm. Leatherbur­y would follow the same series of stakes with him each season, and Ben’s Cat would almost always deliver in the most unpredicta­ble division in racing – sprinting on turf.

“When he was in his prime, I was so confident every time he would run,” Leatherbur­y said. “He just kept winning.”

Ben’s Cat won the Jim McKay Turf Sprint at Pimlico in five of six years between 2011 and 2016. He won the Grade 3 Parx Dash three consecutiv­e years from 2012-14 and the Maryland Million Sprint three straight times from 2010-12 before he ran out of competitio­n and the race was dropped from the schedule.

Possibly more remarkable, Ben’s Cat concluded his 2012, 2013, and 2014 seasons by switching from turf to dirt and winning the $250,000 Fabulous Strike Stakes under the lights at Penn National.

Ben’s Cat’s stakes wins also include two editions of the Grade 3 Turf Monster at Parx Racing, two runnings of the Laurel Dash, and the Pennsylvan­ia Governor’s Cup at Penn National. In 2010, his first season of competitio­n, he won the Find Stakes at Laurel Park going 1 1/8 miles on turf.

Ben’s Cat was the Marylandbr­ed Horse of the Year for four consecutiv­e years from 2011-14. No other horse has been voted the award more than twice in a row.

Leatherbur­y, 84, is the fifthwinni­ngest trainer in Thoroughbr­ed history with 6,485 victories. He credits Ben’s Cat for his 2015 induction into racing’s Hall of Fame.

“I had a great run, but when you get older, you don’t get the owners like you used to – they go to younger trainers,” Leatherbur­y said. “Ben came along when I was dying out. He kept me rolling, and he got me into the Hall of Fame. He got the attention of the nominators and the voters. I’m sure of it.”

According to Georganne Hale, director of racing for the Maryland Jockey Club, Laurel Park intends to celebrate Ben’s Cat’s career this fall.

Ben’s Cat will spend his retirement on the farm of Christina Welker in Versailles, Ky. Welker is married to Bayne Welker, vice president of sales for Fasig-Tipton. Ben’s Cat was scheduled to leave for his new home Wednesday evening.

“Mrs. Welker comes to the Preakness every year, and she always tells me that when he is ready to retire that she’d love to have him,” Leatherbur­y said. “I called her last night and said, ‘This is the call you’ve been waiting for.’ ”

Welker said she fell in love with Ben’s Cat five years ago. She wrote Leatherbur­y a letter 2 1/2 years ago asking that he consider sending Ben’s Cat to her farm when he retired. Welker said she is good friends with Hale, who helped make the arrangemen­ts.

Ben’s Cat is not the first offthe-track Thoroughbr­ed the Welkers’ have had. Pickin N Singin, a son of Unbridled’s Song who made five starts in 2009, had a successful career in the show ring for Welker and lives at the farm.

“Ben might find his way to some local things, too,” Welker said. “I’ll figure out what he wants, and we’ll let him do those things. If he wants to go for trail rides or be a hunter/jumper, he’ll have the chance. It’s time for The Cat to be treated like a king.”

Welker said she would welcome visitors to the farm to see Ben’s Cat.

“We’re a working farm, but if people want to come by to see him, we’ll try to accommodat­e them,” she said. “They can just call us up, and we’ll arrange something.”

Diaz to ride at Monmouth

Seven-pound apprentice rider Hector Diaz Jr. will begin riding at Monmouth Park on Friday, according to his New York agent, Tim Micallef.

Diaz has been based in New York since he started out in November. He is 26 for 271 (9 percent), with all but one of his wins coming at either Belmont Park or Aqueduct. Diaz will be represente­d by agent Shawn Klotz at Monmouth.

The plan is to build up Diaz’s business at Monmouth and then return to New York following Labor Day weekend.

“He’s very talented and a hard worker,” Micallef said. “I want to get him rolling at Monmouth the way I think he can. After that, it’s bug central here, and I think we can finish the year real strong. You only get the bug once, and I’d like him to have a chance to win the Eclipse Award.”

Diaz has two mounts Friday at Monmouth. He rides for trainer Tim Hills in race 2 and for Oscar Barrera III in race 4.

 ?? BARBARA D. LIVINGSTON ?? Ben’s Cat, 11, has been retired after winning 26 stakes races.
BARBARA D. LIVINGSTON Ben’s Cat, 11, has been retired after winning 26 stakes races.

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