Del Mar Stable Notes August 31, 2020
By Mac McBride —-
BEHIND THE MASKS: RIDERS REFLECT ON A DIFFERENT DEL MAR IN 2020
The summer of racing at Del Mar in 2020 has been, to put it mildly, unlike any other.
Jockeys, for example, have done their jobs wearing the mandatory accessory of a face mask in addition to the customary helmet, goggles and safety vest. That said, they’re still working at Del Mar, a place unlike any other.
So, out of curiosity, a number of the members of Del Mar’s colony were asked two questions: 1.) What has been the toughest part of being at Del Mar this summer? And 2.) What has been your favorite part of being at Del Mar this summer?
The answers, in alphabetical order.
BRICE BLANC – Toughest: “The first two weeks around here, when we were dealing with some of our riders and the COVID, was worrying. But since then, things are better. But you’ve got to deal with all the things surrounding our situation. You’ve got to be adapting all the time. What’s difficult for me is to ride with the mask. I had broken my nose years back and have some sinus issues, so I do my share of breathing through my mouth. It’s hard to breathe through your mouth with a mask. But we adapt. Most of the stuff is minor.”
Favorite: “The usual here at Del Mar. It’s just a great place to be. It is one of my favorite summertime places to go racing. Deauville (in France) and Saratoga (in New York) and Del Mar. They’re the big three of summer locations. It’s very different at Del Mar this year without people; sort of like we’re naked. But it’s still Del Mar and that’s a good thing.”
ABEL CEDILLO – Toughest: “The whole coronavirus situation. Dealing with all the things we have to deal with. We all do it, though, so you do it. Tougher might be dealing with the horses. Some of them run, some of them don’t. Sometimes they have a bad day. But I try my best every time and hope for the best.”
Favorite: “I think my favorite down here is the beach. My little boy loves the ocean and I love taking him down there for walks. We really enjoy Del Mar for that.”
VICTOR ESPINOZA – Toughest: “Dealing with the coronavirus business. I missed opening day at Del Mar because of it. I missed opening day! I never thought it would happen, but it did this year. That was hard.”
Favorite: “Everything about Del Mar. It’s where I want to be. It’s why I come to the races. Everything I want is here. It is just great to win races at Del Mar.”
RUBEN FUENTES – Toughest: “For me, it was not being able to work horses in the morning. That was very tough, not being able to get to know them and get to understand them a little before they raced, especially with the 2-year-olds.”
Favorite: “We got to run. We’re very lucky to have a job and be working. A lot of people don’t right now.”
RICKY GONZALEZ – Toughest: “Not being able to work horses.”
Favorite: “Winning and meeting new people.”
MARIO GUTIERREZ — Toughest: “I don’t think there’s anything tough about riding here. Same racetrack; same gate; same horses to ride. It’s all good. I’m happy to be here and racing.”
Favorite: “I’m glad to be racing and having the chance to compete and make some money. I’m very happy that the people on the backside are able to work and take care of their families. Racing at Del Mar is a good thing.”
JUAN HERNANDEZ — Toughest: “The toughest part for me has been keeping up with the competition. It’s tough here. I was here in 2012 and it’s a much different room. Very competitive. And, of course, the whole business of 2020. Everyone feels that. But what are you going to do? You follow the rules and hope for better times.”
Favorite: “My favorite part of being here is the incredible horses. I’ve been riding some very good horses. And I’m enjoying being around these other riders. They’re friendly and they’re very good, so it’s giving me a chance to learn from them.”
TIAGO PEREIRA – Toughest: “Dealing with all the virus issues. Being careful about everything. I take showers before and after everything. I have a 4-year-old daughter and I must be very careful around her. We all have to do it; the masks, all of it. But that’s how it is.”
Favorite: “I like being at Del Mar and riding here. One of my favorite places. I like the beach for my daughter. We go down there during the week and play. She likes the ocean. We go up to the quite section, up above Dog Beach. Not many people up there and we can just have fun.”
FLAVIEN PRAT – Toughest: “I definitely miss the fans. Del Mar has always been all about having people around having fun. It’s kind of sad not to see anybody.”
Favorite: “Just being able to ride, have a job and do something we love to do. There’s a lot of people who can’t right now.”
UMBERTO RISPOLI – Toughest: “I can’t share all the winners and the good meeting with owners, fans and family.”
“Enjoying the summer, the beach and good times with my family and friends and having the chance to win a lot of races.”
MIKE SMITH – Toughest: “I think the toughest overall has not been seeing any fans here. Del Mar is a social place. A place where people come to party and have fun. Not this year. It’s sad. It kind of takes the gas out of your balloon. For me personally, the protocols (travel restrictions for riders) have been tough. I’m a ‘traveling’ jock. I’d have been at Saratoga several times already. I think the protocols have probably cost me three Grade Is.”
Favorite: “My favorite part is just being here. I love Del Mar. I want to end my career here. I love California and I especially love Del Mar.”
DRAYDEN VAN DYKE – Toughest: “Having to be part of 2020 and the whole coronavirus thing. Plus all the other stuff going on in the country right now. The Black Lives Matter thing. It’s a very unsettled time for the country. It’s hard for a lot of people.”
Favorite: “My favorite part of being at Del Mar is being at Del Mar. Right here ‘where the turf meets the surf.’ I’ve been riding some good horses and winning some big races. What’s not to like about it all. How can you have a frown on your face when you’re in San Diego?”
JOCKEYS, PART II: A WORKING BIRTHDAY (NO. 32) FOR RISPOLI
On July 10, opening day of his first season of riding at Del Mar, it looked like Monday, August 31, would be an off day in which Umberto Rispoli could enjoy and celebrate his 32nd birthday.
Then, due to some positive tests for COVID-19 in the jockey colony, the scheduled second weekend of the meeting was cancelled and two of the three lost days were rescheduled for Mondays. One of those being today.
So, before any full-on celebrating, Rispoli will resume his full-out battle with defending champion Flavien Prat for the riding title of the 81st summer season.
They enter the day tied at the top of the standings with 39 wins each. Prat knotted things up with a Favorite:win on Rantanen ($3.00) in Sunday’s first race and neither could score during the rest of the 11-race program.
The pattern throughout the season has been that one of them, most often Rispoli, would have a multi-win day and take a small advantage, only to have the other respond to keep it close, tie or reverse the order at the top. They’re both busy, as usual, for today’s bonus day of racing.
Prat is scheduled to ride eight of the nine races, Rispoli seven. Neither has a mount in the third race and Rispoli is off in the seventh. Of the seven races in which they both have mounts, by coincidence, they will be next to each other in the gate in the first four – races 1, 2, 4 and 5.
Prat’s 12 stakes wins have him on the threshold of tying the one-season record set by Rafael Bejarano in 2012. There’s no stakes race on today’s program, but he’ll have up to seven chances (depending on the number of assignments) at the mark in the four final days of the meeting over the upcoming Labor Day weekend.
He’s in excellent company at 12, the total achieved by Laffit Pincay, Jr., in 1976, and matched by Chris McCarron (1995), Gary Stevens (1997), Corey Nakatani (1998) and Joe Talamo (2012).
Rispoli has seven stakes victories, not only commendable but possibly a record for a first-year rider at Del Mar.
When the dust settles on the track after today’s races Rispoli said, via text, that he has no definite plans, just to “celebrate with family and friends.”
BY ANY NAME, DOUBLE STAKES WINNING FILLY IS SPECIAL TO BERNARD
The 2-year-old California-bred daughter of Govenor Charlie out of the Time to Get Even mare Linda Goteven is officially named Governor Goteven.
To trainer Lisa Bernard, however, she’s just Linda.
“That’s her barn name,” Bernard said, after using it in post-race interviews following the victory in Sunday’s $100,000 Generous Portion Stakes for California-bred juvenile fillies. By either name, the 4 ½-length victory in the 6-furlong Generous Portion was a nice follow-up to her 3 ½-length score in the 5 ½-furlong CTBA Stakes here on August 1.
Two stakes races at Del Mar, two wins for undefeated (3-for-3) Governor Goteven/Linda. Two entries, two stakes wins at the meeting – the first and second of her career – and a clean 2-for-2 Del Mar 2020 record for Bernard.
“It definitely is a dream come true, there are no words to describe it,” Bernard said. Ones to describe the unbeaten filly, however, came much easier.
“I trust this filly, she has been training awesome,” Bernard said. “She’s a very smart filly and in her daily training – she wants to run, it’s in her blood. That’s what she wants to do.”
Bernard has five horses at San Luis Rey Downs, one being a possibility to race here before the end of the meeting.
“Nothing as special as Linda, but I treat them all like they’re stakes horses,” Bernard said. A stablemate for Linda, a 2-year-old also sired by Govenor Charlie, could show up in a maiden special weight if the circumstances are right.
CLOSERS – Princess Noor went five furlongs in 1:01.00 this morning in preparation for Sunday’s Grade I, $250,000 Del Mar Debutante. Clocker Toby Turrell had interim splits of :24.80, :37.40 and a gallop-out to seven furlongs in 1:27.60 for the Bob Baffert trainee who was a $1.35 million auction purchase in April and debuted with a 2 ½-length win here on August 22 … The racing office will be busy Thursday morning putting together the penultimate card of the meeting for next Sunday. It will include three stakes, the Del Mar Debutante, $100,000, Grade II Del Mar Derby and the $75,000 Del Mar Juvenile Fillies Turf … Milestone Watch: Trainers Craig Lewis and Mark Glatt are both closing in on 1,000 career victories. Lewis, at 996, will saddle Dancing Dana in today’s fifth race; Glatt, at 990, has Teddy’s Barino in the fourth and Apache Pass in the ninth … Former Del Mar stalwarts Joe Talamo and Rafael Bejarano, who left Southern California for Kentucky in the past year, finished first and tied for second in the standings at the just-completed Ellis Park meeting. Talamo notched 20 wins, while Bejarano had 18 to tie with another Del Mar alum, James Graham … Reminder: We’ve got a 1 p.m. post next Saturday, Sunday and Monday.
Del Mar Statistics
Presented by Torrey Hollistics
Jockey Standings
(Current Through August 30, 2020 Inclusive)
Jockey Mts 1st 2nd 3rd Win% In-money% Money Won
Flavien Prat 171 39 39 20 23% 57% $2,393,598
Umberto Rispoli 161 39 21 22 24% 51% $1,802,942
Abel Cedillo 201 24 30 36 12% 45% $1,845,357
Juan Hernandez 172 24 24 23 14% 41% $1,230,474
Tiago Pereira 106 18 7 6 17% 29% $693,152
Drayden Van Dyke 102 14 18 11 14% 42% $1,038,662
Ricardo Gonzalez 94 13 9 11 14% 35% $609,840
Mario Gutierrez 77 11 10 11 14% 42% $596,620
Mike Smith 59 7 9 11 12% 46% $506,012
Ruben Fuentes 73 6 8 10 8% 33% $293,542
Trainer Standings
(Current Through August 30, 2020 Inclusive)
Trainer Sts 1st 2nd 3rd Win% In-money% Money Won
Peter Miller 89 23 19 4 26% 52% $1,181,752
Philip D’Amato 66 16 12 7 24% 53% $799,760
Bob Baffert 47 13 12 7 28% 68% $1,116,222
John W. Sadler 59 10 9 6 17% 42% $608,370
Simon Callaghan 27 10 3 1 37% 52% $398,840
Doug F. O’Neill 99 9 18 15 9% 42% $635,105
Richard Baltas 73 8 11 10 11% 40% $569,070
Peter Eurton 36 7 6 6 19% 53% $289,020
Mark Glatt 62 6 12 11 10% 47% $647,392
William Spawr 21 6 2 2 29% 48% $114,820
Winning Favorites Report
(Current Through August 30, 2020 Inclusive)
Winning favorites — 75 out of 231 — 32.47%
Winning favorites on dirt — 45 out of 127 — 35.43%
Winning favorites on turf — 30 out of 104 — 28.85%
Winning odds-on favorites — 23 out of 43 — 53.49%
In-the-Money favorites — 149 out of 231 — 64.50%
In-the-Money odds-on favorites — 40 out of 43 — 93.02%