Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Desormeaux scores first win of comeback

- By Steve Andersen

ARCADIA, Calif. – The 6,059th North American career win for Hall of Fame jockey Kent Desormeaux occurred in Thursday’s eighth race at Santa Anita aboard the $18,000 claimer Satchel de Ritches. For the 50-year-old Desormeaux, the win was his first since July 26.

“It felt like the Breeders’ Cup,” a visibly relieved Desormeaux said after Thursday’s races.

Desormeaux’s career and life were in turmoil in the second half of 2020.

Days after the late July win, Desormeaux was involved in a dispute in an RV park on Del Mar property in which he used a racial slur in an altercatio­n with a Black cameraman. In early September, Del Mar stewards Grant Baker, Luis Jauregui, and Kim Sawyer suspended Desormeaux for 15 days and denied him access to California racetracks on the grounds of aggressive behavior and disorderly conduct related to the racial slur.

In the fall, Desormeaux attended an in-patient rehabilita­tion program in Pasadena, Calif., to address issues related to alcoholism. He resumed riding on Dec. 26 at Santa Anita, opening day of the current meeting.

Satchel de Ritches was the third mount of his comeback.

“What a way to end the year, going out with a bang,” he said.

In a brief conversati­on, Desormeaux spoke candidly of his issues with alcohol, which has disrupted his career.

“I’d like to blame the COVID,” he said. “The blame is pointing back at me.

“My family has been begging me to do the sobriety thing right. We took care of it. My mother doesn’t have to worry about burying her son, in a worst-case scenario. They’re happy, and secondly they’re proud.”

Desormeaux will continue with counseling, and is under the guidance of the Winner’s Foundation, which aids people in California racing with substance-abuse issues.

At the same time, Desormeaux is attempting to rebuild his career. He is booked to ride two of the nine races Sunday, including the fifth race on Equal Measure, who is trained by Bob Hess Jr. Desormeaux and Hess have a relationsh­ip that is now in its fourth decade. Hess trains Satchel de Ritches.

Desormeaux has won three Eclipse Awards – as the nation’s outstandin­g apprentice jockey in 1987 and as overall outstandin­g jockey in 1989 and 1992. Desormeaux won the first of his three Kentucky Derbies on Real Quiet in 1998 and won the 2016 Preakness Stakes on Exaggerato­r, who was trained by his brother Keith. Desormeaux has ridden more than 100 winners overseas, primarily in Japan.

Desormeaux has won six Breeders’ Cup races, the most recent of which was the 2017 Sprint at Del Mar aboard Roy H. While Desormeaux won 11 stakes in 2018 and seven in 2019, he had one such win in 2020 – the All-American Stakes at Golden Gate Fields in May.

Even with those past successes, there is an acknowledg­ement of opportunit­ies lost because of personal issues.

“I can’t count the accolades,” he said. “It’s hard to imagine what it could have been.”

Quattroell­e’s win special

Quattroell­e won her first stakes in Thursday’s $80,150 Blue Norther Stakes for 2-yearold fillies at Santa Anita. Jockey Tyler Baze and trainer Jeff Mullins believe it should have been her second.

Quattroell­e was soundly bumped with a quarter-mile remaining in the Grade 3 Jimmy Durante Stakes on Nov. 28 at Del Mar. Quattroell­e recovered to finish a fast-closing third.

“She should have won at Del Mar,” Mullins said Friday. “I don’t know how anyone who saw the race didn’t think she was compromise­d at the head of the stretch.”

After Thursday’s race, Baze was full of praise for Quattroell­e, but still angered at the loss on Thanksgivi­ng weekend. “It cost me the race,” Baze said.

Quattroell­e ($8.20) had a favorable trip to win the Blue Norther Stakes by three-quarters of a length over 9-5 favorite Javanica, who was second in the Durante. Quattroell­e rallied on the inside through the final three furlongs to take the lead with more than a furlong remaining.

Owned by Red Barons Barn and Rancho Temescal, Quattroell­e was timed in 1:35.72.

“I don’t know how good she is,” Baze said after leaving the winner’s circle. “She’s very nice. She made the lead in two strides.”

Mullins said Friday that he does not have any immediate race goals for Quattroell­e, who was imported from Ireland in late summer. The next stakes for 3-year-old fillies on turf is the Grade 3 Sweet Life Stakes, a $100,000 race at six furlongs on Feb. 14. The $75,000 China Doll Stakes at a mile on turf March 6 and the Grade 3 Providenci­a Stakes at 1 1/8 miles on April 3 could be long-range goals.

Last January, Baze was preparing to leave Southern California to ride at Oaklawn. Baze, 38, won 29 races at Oaklawn and later won six races at the Ellis summer meeting. He returned to Southern California in September and has since worked with former trainer Jack Carava, who became his agent at that time.

There are no plans to relocate this year.

“My family is here,” Baze said. “I have three kids and it’s hard to miss them growing up.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States