The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Los Alamitos trainer Aquino still proving people wrong

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

At Los Alamitos Race Course, there’s nobody better than Angela Aquino at training thoroughbr­ed horses.

Or at teaching people a lesson.

It’s 2015. On a video still floating around online, a couple of trackside broadcaste­rs are heralding a new name at the top of the thoroughbr­ed trainer standings for Los Al’s night racing meet. Angie Aquino holds an early-season lead in race victories over Chuck Treece, who has been winning training championsh­ips year after year.

One of the broadcaste­rs ends on a skeptical note.

“She just doesn’t have the same amount of horses as Chuck Treece,” he says of Aquino, “so there’s no way that she’s going to be able to carry that all the way through December.”

She almost does, though, taking the contest down to the final week before settling for a close second to Treece in victories and purse earnings.

Now it’s 2024. After winning the Los Alamitos thoroughbr­ed training title last year, Aquino is on her way to successful­ly defending it, leading the thoroughbr­ed standings (nine wins, 22.5%) and overall standings (19 wins, 16.8%) at the track, which features quarter horses and thoroughbr­eds on Friday and Saturday nights. She has carried her success not just for a season but for going on a decade, moving up to fourth on Los Al’s all-time thoroughbr­ed trainer standings with 346 wins.

“I’ve proven people wrong,” Aquino said one morning this week.

Aquino, 43, began her equine education early as a fourth-generation horse woman.

She’s the daughter of trainer Betsy Mora, who’s retired, and jockey Carlos Aquino, who died in 2020 at age 64. Her sister, Elena Andrade, trains quarter horses at Los Al. Elena’s husband, Oscar, was a jockey before a 2021 racing accident

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left him paralyzed from the waist down. Their son, Oscar Jr., is a quarterhor­se jockey at Remington Park in Oklahoma City — the family’s fifth generation in the sport.

Angie was born in Santa Rosa, a stop on the California county fair racing circuit, and she and Elena worked in her mom’s barn as soon as they could walk. She considered doing something else, attending Cypress College and working at a supermarke­t.

“It wasn’t my style,” she said. “I missed the horses too much.”

Aquino has run horses everywhere, from glamorous Del Mar, near San Diego, to tiny Ferndale, in Humboldt County, and won at Santa Anita as recently as October with the 7-year-old gelding Mike Operator in a mile race at the $10,000 claiming level.

But, she says, “Los Alamitos is my home.”

In Aquino’s barn are as many as 40 horses at a time. She has five employees, and a sheep that keeps the horses company. She owns almost half of the horses herself.

Her personal favorites?

“The old-timers,” Aquino says, meaning 5- to 8-year-old horses. “Those old class horses that have gone off form. You know they have it in them. It’s just getting them back to their form.”

The current teacher’s pet is Around the Dial, an 8-year-old gelding. Aquino trained him more than a year ago, before he bounced among three other trainers, winning once in 10 tries at Los Al’s night meets and June, September and December daytime meets. When the horse dropped into a $2,500 claiming race in February, Aquino claimed him.

She intended to retire Around the Dial, but before she could arrange a new home for him, he started training impressive­ly and Aquino decided he had one more race in him.

On March 24, in a 5 1/2-furlong sprint for $5,000 claimers, Around the Dial and jockey Barrington Harvey overcame a bumpy start, skimmed in the inner rail and rallied from last in a field of six to win by a head and pay $8.40.

Aquino thinks the secret with Around the Dial was “freshening him up,” easing back on workouts.

In general, she says, her high win totals are the result of preferring to race her horses instead of work them, and knowing which races they belong in.

“It’s more or less placing them in the spots where they’ll be competitiv­e,” Aquino said. “Sometimes you have to start them from the bottom, let them win a race, let their heart get big. Then you can work your way back up the ladder, and they can be a good horse again.

“And then, if you just keep them happy and healthy, they’ll give you their all.”

Aquino has made some horseplaye­rs happy, too.

At the end of 2023, horse racing statistici­an Gary Dougherty calculated which American trainers were best to bet on. Based mostly on return on investment on bets to win, Dougherty determined that of the 288 trainers who had 200 or more starters in the United States and Canada last year, the most profitable was Angie Aquino. (Second was Santa Anita- and Del Mar-based trainer Peter Eurton.)

Anyone betting on all of Aquino’s thoroughbr­ed runners in 2023 would have made a profit of 31.5%. Dougherty reports that she’s keeping it up in 2024, showing a 30.5% profit.

If a trainer’s horses are showing a profit at the parimutuel windows, it means they’re winning more often than the odds set by the betting public suggest they will.

That’s another way of saying Angie Aquino is training horses well and still proving people wrong.

 ?? PHOTO BY KEVIN MODESTI ?? Trainer Angie Aquino visits with Around the Dial, an 8-year-old thoroughbr­ed gelding, at her barn at Los Alamitos Race Course in Cypress. Aquino is the top trainer at Los Al.
PHOTO BY KEVIN MODESTI Trainer Angie Aquino visits with Around the Dial, an 8-year-old thoroughbr­ed gelding, at her barn at Los Alamitos Race Course in Cypress. Aquino is the top trainer at Los Al.
 ?? Kevin Modesti Columnist ??
Kevin Modesti Columnist

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