Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Santa Anita Derby will have an intriguing field

- Kevin Modesti Columnist

As Santa Anita prepares for the biggest race of its winter-spring season, the Santa Anita Derby a week from Saturday, there's good news and bad news.

The good news is that horses don't read the bad news.

Undeterred by the burdens of us mere bipeds, an intriguing field of 3-yearolds will venture out of their stalls for the $750,000, Grade I race April 6.

Nomination­s will be revealed today and the field will be set Wednesday. Trainer Bob Baffert is expected to choose two or three horses from among Imaginatio­n, Maymun, Wine Me Up, Wynstock and Coach Prime; he said Thursday he'll know who he's running closer to entry time. Trainer Phil D'Amato confirmed Thursday that Stronghold will run, after considerin­g going to the Blue Grass Stakes in Kentucky. Reported possibilit­ies include Mc Vay, Tapalo, EJ Won the Cup and Tessuto.

For various reasons, it's less likely fans will see the winner of the May 4 Kentucky Derby in the Santa Anita Derby than in one of the other major Triple Crown preps being run this Saturday and next at tracks in the United States and Dubai.

With clouds hanging over Santa Anita racing these days, it sure doesn't feel like a year California horses and fans will enjoy Kentucky Derby glory.

There are actual clouds. Santa Anita officials announced Thursday morning that prediction­s for more rain have forced cancelatio­n of races this Saturday and Sunday; they'll be made up with an extra card next Thursday and extra races the following three days.

There are economic clouds. Santa Anita executives paint a dark picture of the future after the California Horse Racing Board disdained their warnings and voted 6-0 last week to award autumn racing dates to Pleasanton, in Northern California's East Bay, denying Southern California tracks a revenue haul from simulcast betting.

And there are clouds of controvers­y. Horses from Baffert's barn, which has produced six Kentucky Derby winners and two Triple Crown winners, are ineligible for the Derby because of the eccentric decision by Churchill Downs to add a third year to his ban over Medina Spirit's 2021 disqualifi­cation and the decision by Baffert and owners not to transfer top young horses to other trainers this year.

Baffert's top 3-year-old, undefeated Nysos, is sidelined. But his top active 3-year-old, Muth, second in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile in November before winning the San Vicente Stakes in January, is the 8-5 morning-line favorite (against 9-5 Timberlake) in the Arkansas Derby this Saturday. His Santa Anita Derby prospects all have top-class potential, which under the circumstan­ces means they're vying to be contenders for the May 18 Preakness and June 8 Belmont Stakes.

The top local candidate for the Kentucky Derby looks to be Stronghold, who won the Sunland (N.M.) Derby with jockey Antonio Fresu after finishing second to Wynstock in the Los Alamitos Futurity. Stronghold rated 20th (at 48-1 odds) in the round of Kentucky Derby future betting that closed March 17, and he isn't in the top 20 in the National Thoroughbr­ed Racing Associatio­n's weekly 3-year-old rankings. California partisans will root for the son of Ghostzappe­r to grab the nation's attention in the Santa Anita Derby.

Weirder things have happened. Horses and horseplaye­rs have a way of shrugging off circumstan­ces.

On a grand scale, there was Secretaria­t emerging in the era of Vietnam, Watergate and gas lines to complete the first Triple Crown sweep in 25 years and be one thing Americans could agree upon. And Santa Anita running hours after the January 1994 Northridge earthquake, and Fairplex Park and other U.S. tracks making racing the first sport to resume after 9/11 by running two days later.

More on the nose, there was what came after Southern California racing was hit by the closure of Hollywood Park in late 2013 and the announceme­nt of Fairplex's demise in early 2014: In those ashes, a colt named American Pharoah was stirring, growing into the 2015 Triple Crown winner. And there was the year I think of now.

In 2005, California racing and horses

OUT OF THE GATE

SANTA ANITA LEADERS Jockeys / Wins

Juan Hernandez / 50 Flavien Prat / 42 Antonio Fresu / 40 Frankie Dettori / 28 Hector Berrios / 22

UPCOMING STAKES SANTA ANITA Thursday DOWN THE STRETCH Trainers / Wins

• $100,000, Grade III Wilshire Stakes, fillies and mares, 4-year-olds and up, 1mile on turf

• $100,000 American Stakes, 4-year-olds and up, 1mile on turf

• Newgate (Frankie Dettori riding) tries to top his win in the March 3Santa Anita Handicap when he runs in the $12million Dubai World Cup on Saturday. The 12-horse field is headed by Senor Buscador (Junior Alvarado), the Saudi Cup winner, and Ushba Tesoro (Yuga Kawada), the Saudi runner-up and 2023Dubai winner. Post time is 9:35a.m.

• A memorial for Art Wilson on Wednesday in Glendora featured stories of friendship, pranks and racetrack adventures, and ended appropriat­ely with Santa Anita bugler Jay Cohen playing “Amazing Grace” followed by “Call to the Post.” Wilson, racing writer for this and other Southern California newspapers, died at 71on Feb. 18.

• The second to last Saturday of major Triple Crown preps has more than a half-dozen high-ranked 3-year-olds in action: The 10-horse Arkansas Derby matches San Vicente winner Muth (Juan Hernandez) against Rebel winner Timberlake (Flavien Prat riding), plus Mystik Dan (Brian Hernandez) aiming to validate his muddy Southwest romp. The 11-horse Florida Derby has Fierceness (John Velazquez), the trouble-prone Breeders' Cup Juvenile winner, and Hades (Paco Lopez), the undefeated Holy Bull winner. The 13-horse UAE Derby is the final prep for the May 4 Kentucky Derby for Japan's Forever Young.

• Prat is making his annual spring move to Keeneland in Lexington, Kentucky starting April 5.

• Umberto Rispoli rode the 2,000th winner of his internatio­nal career last Saturday at Turfway Park in Florence, Kentucky before adding his 2,001st by taking the Jeff Ruby Steaks with Endlessly on the same card.

• Endlessly earned enough points to qualify for the Kentucky Derby, but Southern California-based trainer Michael McCarthy said the colt will run in the American Turf Stakes on the Derby undercard and aim for a future on grass.

• Asscher and jockey Christian Ramos won the $404,000Los Alamitos Oaks for 3-yearold quarter-horse fillies last Saturday, paying $4.20.

— Kevin Modesti

were under fire. Hollywood Park had been all but officially put up for sale, the beginning of the end. Three high-profile California trainers faced “milkshake” doping allegation­s. A winter of rain had interrupte­d training for the state's Derby hopefuls. West Coast horses were dismissed with odds of 20-1 to 50-1 on the Derby morning line. Typical was a colt named Giacomo, who went to the Derby on a five-race losing streak.

“The Golden State needs a (Kentucky) Derby win,” I wrote from Louisville.

History students will know that Giacomo, whose workout schedule had luckily avoided the rain, won that Kentucky Derby with jockey Mike Smith and paid $102.60, while three other Santa Anita Derby graduates ran fourth, fifth and sixth.

Smith said afterward that Giacomo's fourth-place finish behind winner Buzzards Bay in the Santa Anita Derby had been misleading because a slow early pace defused his explosive late kick.

In 2005, it all seemed unlikely until it happened.

In 2024, it all seems unlikely, and could it happen again?

The possibilit­y is something to think about as Santa Anita Derby week arrives.

The Golden State needs a Kentucky Derby contender.

Follow Kevin Modesti on X (formerly Twitter) @Kevin Modesti.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States