The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

From Nogales to Triple Crowns

Baffert points to family, border town ranch as roots to his success in thoroughbr­ed racing.

- By Margaret Naczek

The top of the Santa Cruz County Administra­tion building on North Congress Drive delivers a birds-eye view of this border town. Cars with Arizona and Mexico license plates drive down I-19, which becomes Grand Avenue in the city center and features dozens of multicultu­ral shops lining the streets. On the northern tip of the community lies the Baffert Ranch and Escondido Crossing, where a small bridge protects cars from the creek running through the property. In the 1960s and ’70s, that bridge was much more rickety, and Bob Baffert’s cousin Pierre recalls it breaking at one point as a pickup truck crossed delivering eggs. Those were simpler times, before Bob Baffert became a two-time Triple Crown winner and one of the most accomplish­ed trainers in the history of horse racing. “We were like the ‘Ozzie and Harriet’ family,” said Baffert, referencin­g the popular sitcom of an idyllic family in the 1950s and ’60s. “We just grew up on a ranch life,” said DeeDee Kirsch, one of seven Baffert children that were raised on the 240-acre cattle ranch. For all the success Baffert has experience­d in his adult life — including winning his second Triple Crown with Justify in June — many of his achievemen­ts stem from growing up on the outskirts of Nogales in his large, closeknit family. Even though he lives in California, he remains connected to the town and the ranch, which is still operationa­l today. “He doesn’t get embarrasse­d saying, ‘I’m from a border town,’ ” said Nogales resident Guadalupe “Lupita” Zepeda, who worked with Baffert’s mom Elinora. “That’s the way the mother was and the father, Mr. Baffert. I’m proud of him even though I don’t know him personally. He’s doing exactly what his mother did.”

When life was simple

Life on the ranch in the ’60s and ’70s was simpler. Television was a hot commodity because of the lack of reception on the outskirts of town. Oldest child Bill Jr. recalls putting an antenna in the middle of one of the cattle fields to get service, but that was 200 to 300 yards away from the house, and the cows would frequently knock it down. “We’d find things to do,” Bill Jr. said. Instead, the children competed on the dirt basketball court their father made, roller skated around the property or played with figurines in the anthills because the Arizona dirt was hard. “We would get bitten by ants,” third-oldest child Nori (Baffert) Van Buren said of playing with her younger brothers, Bob and P.A. Bill Jr. said one activity to ease boredom was a version of football that featured the children playing on their knees between two adjoining bedrooms, 15 yards long and 5 to 6 yards wide. And when they were not finding ways to entertain themselves, the children’s parents, William “Bill” Sr. and Elinora “Ellie,” found ways to keep their children busy. “When you’re on a ranch, there’s no downtime,” Van Buren said. After coming home from school, they would sit in front of the television, if they were lucky to have reception, and started watching. “We would hear my dad’s footsteps coming, and we would scatter,” Van Buren said. The Bafferts hired workers to help with the thousands of hens on the ranch, but if the workers didn’t come in, the task was shifted onto the children. Once, the children were collecting eggs and had a competitio­n of who could throw farthest because of a tall embankment on the property. “All of a sudden we looked and it is yellow,” Van Buren said. “We got in big trouble.” All of the children were also involved in 4-H, learning how to care for animals and competing in shows around southern Arizona. Bob said he always looked up to older brother Bill, who was a good student and won many awards. Bill had the opportunit­y to travel to a large farm in Kentucky through 4-H and brought back BloodHorse magazine for his family. “My father saw them, so he started getting these magazines,” Bob said. “Then I started reading about thoroughbr­ed racing, and this is back when I was probably a freshman in high school, so that’s how we got really, really into horses.” The 4-H horse conformati­on classes he attended still help him today with how he picks out horses to buy, Bob said.

Raising chickens

William Baffert Sr., known as Bill, bought the family’s 240-acre cattle ranch in 1953, the same year Bob was born. “He bought these chicks and said, ‘Hey, I’m going to raise these chickens to lay eggs,’ ” William (Bill) Jr. said. The family started with 30 to 40 chickens. Bill Sr. created a lean-to shed, using sheet metal with holes in it for the chickens to lay their eggs. The children would collect the eggs that were then packaged in paper bags, which Bill Sr. would sell to friends and family. When the Baffert’s egg business became successful, they had several thousand laying hens, which they sold commercial­ly to grocery stores and restaurant­s in Nogales, Bill Jr. said. “That was the foundation for buying the cattle, buying the horses, getting involved in agricultur­e for my dad,” Bill Jr. said. First came the chickens and then came the cows. “My dad’s passion was always the horses, but he would go through phases. My dad was a goer,” Bill Jr. said. Bill, the oldest son, went through a cattle phase. Bill Sr. and Jr. would show cattle together in California and Denver. Bill Sr. was the first president of the Arizona Angus Associatio­n. In the 1950s and 1960s, the Baffert’s ranch was one of the few in southern Arizona to raise black cattle. Now, Bill Jr. said, Angus beef is the mark of excellence. “He went against the grain,” Bill Jr. said. The Baffert ranch still raises Black Angus. Bob recalls his father loving all animals and having a zoo of barn creatures. “I was outdoors as much as I could around cows and horses, and we had chickens,” Bob said. “I think that’s when I fell in love with the horses.”

Racing horses

A 31-mile drive northwest of Nogales is the town of Sonoita, Ariz., which has a population of approximat­ely 14,000. At 10 years old, Baffert started to race horses at the iconic racetrack, which celebrated its 103rd annual race this past May. “The first Saturday in May was Sonoita racing, so we used to look forward to it,” Bob said. “You’d want to win a race in front of your home crowd. Everybody from Nogales would go to Sonoita, so if you could win a race that weekend, it was huge.” When Bob started training quarter horses full time, he ran a few of his horses from Los Alamitos, Calif., in the Sonoita races. He said it was a big deal for his father, who started him in horse racing. “It’s a prestige thing. It’s something about you winning a race at Sonoita,” said Jimmy Lewis, who manages the racetrack. “You get to show off that picture, tell everyone I went down to Sonoita, Arizona, where lots of history has been made, lots of great horses have come down here and run.” Lewis’ grandfathe­r, Blain, was the first person to have a race at Sonoita Fairground­s. He also trained the legendary quarter horse Parker’s Trouble, who was inducted into the American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame. It was Parker’s Trouble who started the Baffert’s journey in the horse racing industry. “Bob Baffert’s dad, Bill, got his start in racing with a couple of mares he bought from my grandad,” Lewis said. “They bred mares and got their horses from Parker’s Trouble.” Blain Lewis helped the Bafferts train horses when they started out in horse racing. Jimmy Lewis said the Bafferts followed what his grandfathe­r, who was nationally recognized in the horse racing industry, did and implemente­d it at their ranch in Nogales. “They dug out a dirt road down there and the dirt track and straightaw­ay and started training their own horses, and the rest is history,” Lewis said. “He (Bill Sr.) couldn’t really train them himself, so I was at the age where I could help them, and I was young enough to learn how to ride and then I wanted to be a jockey,” Bob said. At the Santa Cruz Fairground­s in Sonoita, the racetrack still displays the red and blue decorated “Welcome to the Sonoita Fairground­s” sign, which Bob Baffert stood under with his father at the beginning of his horse racing career. “He was already galloping horses for my dad,” Bill Jr. said. “He learned to gallop at that racetrack in Sonoita.” Bill Jr. describes his father taking an old gelding and putting an exercise saddle on him for Bob to ride. Bob fell off two or three times on the track, Bill Jr. said. Bob and Nori rode the most of the seven siblings. “We rode in parades,” Nori said. But not in Fourth of July parades. Instead, the two would saddle up for the Cinco de Mayo parade, which went to both sides of the border. “I could saddle up a horse and just take off riding for a couple of hours without anybody wondering where I was,” Bob said. As a teenager, Bob Baffert raced quarter horses at tracks such as Rillito Park in Tucson. Years later, the 75-year-old racetrack would celebrate Bob’s second Triple Crown win with a Belmont Stakes party. “You would think they were actually having their own races there, but it was to watch Bob Baffert,” said Jimmy Lewis, who attended with his wife and friends. “There were parts of it where everybody started shouting ‘Bob Baffert, Bob Baffert, U ofA,UofA.’“

No to teaching

Though the son of an educator, substitute teaching didn’t work out for Bob. He started training quarter horses and later switched to thoroughbr­eds when he moved to California and worked at Los Alamitos Race Course. “There was a running joke in my family that the reason Bobby didn’t become more successful earlier in his life was he had to train for my dad,” Bill Jr. said. Bob’s first win as a thoroughbr­ed trainer was at Rillito Park in Tucson on Jan. 29, 1979, with Flipper Star, according to the National Museum of Horse Racing. He won his first Kentucky Derby in 1997 with Silver Charm, followed by another Derby win with Real Quiet in 1998. With 3-yearold War Emblem, Baffert made his first try for the Triple Crown, winning the Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes in 2002. But it was the 3-year-old bay colt American Pharoah that brought Baffert his first Triple Crown in 2015, making him the 11th trainer to reach racing’s ultimate achievemen­t. He followed with his second Triple Crown in 2018 with Justify, the second horse to win with an undefeated record. “It’s just amazing. You can’t believe it. He’s earned it,” Kirsch said. “He’s amazing at what he does. He’s very grateful to his team. It’s not about Bob. It’s about the horse first. It’s about the jockey.”

Baffert presence

The Baffert siblings have all moved on from the small town of Nogales though Bill Jr. goes there every week to maintain the family ranch. But the Baffert presence remains in the street signs and in restaurant corners. A photo of Bob Baffert’s 2015 Triple Crown victory with American Pharoah hangs on the wall of Las Vigas Steak Ranch on Loma Street in Nogales. “To my friends at Las Vigas, best machaca in town, Bob Baffert,” is inscribed on the photo collage. The photo includes jockey Victor Espinoza and the 12th Triple Crown bay colt, American Pharoah, framing the top of the collage. Bob Baffert, his wife and Espinoza hold the silver Triple Crown trophy, awarded at the Belmont Stakes on June 6, 2015. Baffert dons his iconic black shades with a large grin on his face as he wins his first Triple Crown. On top of an old-school tarnished cash register rests a mini Bob Baffert bobblehead, also wearing the signature shades, a pair of jeans and black jacket. “His family has gone to the restaurant for many years. His parents used to go a lot,” said Claudio Martinez, owner of Las Vigas. “He just loves the machaca.” Two weeks before Baffert won his first Triple Crown in 2015, Martinez sent Baffert the machaca. In his 2017 Triple Crown victory, Martinez overnighte­d the machaca the Tuesday before Saturday’s Belmont Stakes. “A lot of people go on and go somewhere and they don’t ever look back,” Lewis said. “He’s not one of those guys. He remembers where he got his start.” Lewis said Bob’s character is what makes him a special person. “He texted me after the Preakness and said Parker’s Trouble started all of this. He didn’t really need to say that to me, but I guarantee you I appreciate that,” Lewis said. From a small town on the border of Mexico to one of the greatest success stories in horse racing with two Triple Crowns and 15 American Classic wins, Bob Baffert carries on his family name and holds his Arizona roots close. “He used to celebrate here when he was a kid and had a lot of fun in Arizona,” Lewis said. “Now it’s our turn that he’s winning Triple Crowns that we get to celebrate with him and we swell up with pride.” And as Bob sat with his siblings in an Italian restaurant after winning his second Triple Crown, he looked to them with amazement. “We still can’t believe this is happening that I would end up training thoroughbr­eds and winning Kentucky Derbys and Triple Crowns,” Bob said. “It’s just something that it’s still hard to imagine that coming from Nogales, this is how it would end up.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? “We still can’t believe this is happening that I would end up training thoroughbr­eds and winning Kentucky Derbys and Triple Crowns. It’s just something that it’s still hard to imagine that coming from Nogales,” says Bob Baffert.
GETTY IMAGES “We still can’t believe this is happening that I would end up training thoroughbr­eds and winning Kentucky Derbys and Triple Crowns. It’s just something that it’s still hard to imagine that coming from Nogales,” says Bob Baffert.
 ?? MARGARET NACZEK / CRONKITE NEWS ?? Grand Avenue is in the city center of Nogales, Ariz., where trainer Bob Baffert was raised and first started learning about horses.
MARGARET NACZEK / CRONKITE NEWS Grand Avenue is in the city center of Nogales, Ariz., where trainer Bob Baffert was raised and first started learning about horses.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States