Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Zito’s coming

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Hall of Fame trainer Nick Zito has only started a handful of horses at Oaklawn Park in Hot Springs, but that figures to change in 2019. Zito said Friday afternoon that he will “probably” have 20 horses on the grounds when the scheduled 57day meet begins Jan. 25.

Nick Zito has started only a handful of horses at Oaklawn Park in Hot Springs, but that figures to change in 2019 after the Hall of Fame trainer said recently he will “probably” have 20 horses on the grounds when the scheduled 57-day meet begins Jan. 25.

“We thought about this for a while,” said Zito, 70, a twotime Kentucky Derby-winning trainer. “Obviously, we’ve run horses in the Arkansas Derby, and we’ve always liked the way they’ve treated us. I’m a throwback, I’m a traditiona­list. I love the game. Seems to me that Oaklawn has just maintained that tradition of fans. Just a lot of nice people there, so we’re going to give it a shot and see what happens.”

Zito, based most of the year in his native New York or Florida, had 2,030 career North American victories through Monday, according to Equibase, racing’s official data-gathering organizati­on.

Zito saddled his first winner in 1973 and was inducted into the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in 2005.

The addition of Zito means three Hall of Fame trainers will have a daily presence in Hot Springs next year. D. Wayne Lukas annually winters at Oaklawn, while Steve Asmussen is seeking his fourth consecutiv­e local training title and 10th since 2007. Lukas and Asmussen were inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1999 and 2016, respective­ly.

Top horses trained by Zito include Eclipse Award winners Storm Song, Bird Town and War Pass. In addition to Kentucky Derby victories in 1991 and 1994, Zito won the Preakness in 1996 and spoiled Triple Crown bids by Arkansas Derby winner Smarty Jones (2004) and Big Brown (2008) with victories in the Belmont Stakes.

Among Zito’s best finishes at Oaklawn was a third in the 2005 Arkansas Derby with Andromeda’s Hero, who went on to finish second behind Arkansas Derby winner Afleet Alex in the Belmont Stakes.

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