Los Angeles Times

Futurity doesn’t have encouragin­g future

Baffert has dominated the race, and he’s not happy that it will be lowered to a Grade 2 event next year.

- By John Cherwa sports@latimes.com

There is little doubt that trainer Bob Baffert owns the Los Alamitos Futurity, even when it was run across town as the Hollywood Futurity. He has won it 10 times, including all four times it has been at Los Alamitos.

And, given his success with 2year-olds this year, it’s no surprise he has the first and second favorites in Saturday’s running of the Grade 1 $300,000 race.

But, he’s not happy that the national committee that determines a race’s prestige status is downgradin­g it to Grade 2 next year. The implicatio­ns are that the winner won’t get the coveted Grade 1 victory so essential for breeding and there will be a smaller purse, making it less attractive to horsemen.

“It was really disappoint­ing when they did that,” Baffert said. “That’s what happened when Brad McKinzie died. It lost its protector. That’s what it came down to.”

McKinzie was the longtime Los Alamitos executive, and close friend of Baffert’s, who died last year. He was instrument­al is converting the track to allow thoroughbr­ed racing after Hollywood Park closed.

McKinzie, the horse named after the executive, won last year’s Futurity after a disqualifi­cation and was on the Kentucky Derby trail until he was injured. He came back to win the Pennsylvan­ia Derby and will run as a 4-year-old.

The recent winners of the race include Mastery, a presumptiv­e Derby favorite until an injury; Mor Spirit, a multiple graded stakes winner; Dortmund, winner of almost $2 million; and the Eclipse Award-winning Shared Belief. If you go back to the Hollywood Park days, you have seven Kentucky Derby winners.

It seems one of the strikes against the race are the small fields. Only six are entered Saturday.

“It’s always been a short-field race,” Baffert said. “One problem with the business is the analytics are taking over. It can still be a great race with five horses. In California, unfortunat­ely, we’re on an island and it’s hard to get people to come out here and run. And gone are the days when owners would run horses just to run them.”

Baffert sees California at a real disadvanta­ge.

“The only track that has big fields is Churchill Downs,” Baffert said. “And the owners would rather just run in Kentucky because that’s where the horses are from. It’s easier just to stay home. Or, they would rather run at Gulfstream [in Florida], because they’ve got [a strong breeding area in] Ocala nearby.

“California is not putting out the numbers. We’ve got good horses, good trainers, good jockeys and it’s very competitiv­e. But we don’t have the gamblers’ money behind us because our tracks don’t have the [slot] machines.”

Saturday’s two Grade 1s, to include the Starlet Stakes for 2-yearold fillies, probably will be run in front of only a couple of thousand people, which doesn’t help.

Baffert has had tremendous success with his 2-year-olds this year. Going into this meeting, 19 of his 29 maidens making their debut have won.

The morning-line favorite, at 6-5, is Improbable, winner of both his races, including a 71⁄4-length win in the Street Sense Stakes at Churchill Downs.

“Everybody is going to be watching Improbable because he’s the favorite, and he should be,” Baffert said. “Improbable has always drawn poorly, but [jockey] Drayden [Van Dyke] has ridden him with confidence. Down the backside in his last race, I wasn’t liking his chances, but then he got it done.”

Baffert’s other colt is Mucho Gusto, at 3-1, who is also undefeated in two starts. He won the five-horse Bob Hope Stakes at Del Mar after breaking his maiden at Los Alamitos.

One thing that makes this 11⁄16-mile race so interestin­g is it’s the first time around two turns, an indication if the colt will have the distance to go for the Derby.

“I think you find out if they like two turns even if you think you already know,” Baffert said. “But with every horse there is usually this kernel of doubt for a few seconds where you wonder if they will hit the imaginary wall or keep going.

“But you find the real distance limitation­s at 11⁄8 [miles].”

Baffert also has the top two fillies in the six-horse Starlet.

Chasing Yesterday is the favorite at 9-5 followed by Mother Mother at 2-1. Chasing Yesterday has won three of four, including the three-horse Desi Arnaz Stakes. Mother Mother has won two of three, with a second to Bellafina in the Grade 1 Del Mar Debutante.

The Futurity is the fifth race, with post time around 2:30 p.m., with the Starlet as the seventh race about 3:30 p.m.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States