‘Nothing Left To Prove’: Champion Sprinter Whitmore Retired

Fan favorite and 2020 sprint champion Whitmore pulled up after the Grade 1 Forego and was vanned off as a precaution after jockey Joel Rosario noted that the 8-year-old gelding felt off during his gallop out. Later Saturday, trainer Ron Moquett released a statement that Whitmore had been retired from racing.

“Joel said, 'He didn't feel right pulling up, boss' after the race. He felt something different,” Moquett told the Paulick Report Sunday.

Out of an abundance of caution, Whitmore was put on the on-track equine ambulance and returned to Moquett's barn at Saratoga Race Course, where he was examined by a track veterinarian. An x-ray showed “a shadow of something in the left foreleg,” so Whitmore will be sent to Dr. Larry Bramlage at Rood and Riddle for further examination once the gelding has been cleared to ship to Kentucky. After that, he will be turned out at Rebecca Maker's farm while Moquett and co-owners Robert La Penta and Head of Plains Racing decide what's next. Whitmore's long-term prognosis is good, but Moquett believes that given his long list of accomplishments, retirement is the best route for the fan favorite.

“He's acting fine. We're just being overly cautious,” Moquett said about his star gelding. “Now is when we retire. He owes us nothing. He has nothing to prove. He's been to the mountaintop. What does he have left to do?”

Moquett's candor about Whitmore's status and his steps are indicative of the trainer's philosophy about racing in general and racing his horses specifically.

“One of the things we need to do in this sport is be transparent,” he said. “I felt I owed it to people to say this is what we're dealing with, this is what we're doing with him.”

That transparency will continue as Moquett pledges to update fans on Whitmore's next career after the announcement on Saturday.

“We're just tickled to death that we have a village. I get a lot of comments where a guy will tell me that his wife is not a racing fan, but she loves Whitmore,” the trainer reflected. “When someone respects a horse so much, that's what it's all about.”

By multiple Grade 1 winner Pleasantly Perfect, out of the Scat Daddy mare Melody's Spirit, Whitmore's resume includes three wins in the Grade 3 Count Fleet at Oaklawn Park, the Grade 1 Forego at Saratoga in 2018, and the Grade 2 Phoenix Stakes at Keeneland Race Course in 2017. In a career that has spanned 43 starts with 15 wins, what does Moquett see as the ultimate Whitmore performance?

“His win in last year's Breeders'Cup Sprint for sure,” he said. “But his last win in the Count Fleet [in 2020] tied the record as the winningest stakes horse at Oaklawn Park. That one stands out as well.”

Moquett hinted in a statement released late Saturday that Whitmore may move on to a second career, which could see him contest the Thoroughbred Makeover, depending on his medical prognosis.

 

“I hope that he teaches people that the Kentucky Derby is not the end-all, be-all, that everything he [Whitmore] accomplished came after that. Every animal is different. We focus on the individual's potential and acclimate what we do to get the most out of our horses.”

“The main thing is that Whitmore tried every time. He was as gutsy as hell.”

 

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Kirkpatrick & Co Presents In Their Care: The Assistant Trainer With His Own Eclipse Award

Not many assistant trainers have an Eclipse Award to show for their efforts. Darren Fleming does.

Steve Asmussen, his boss and an Eclipse winner in 2008 and 2009, ordered replicas made for Fleming and fellow assistant Scott Blasi to emphasize how much each means to the success of his powerhouse barn.

The bronze statuette took on added meaning for Fleming, Asmussen's longest-tenured assistant, on Aug. 6. Fleming saddled Shanghai Dream for the sixth race at Ellis Park and watched him make a stirring last-to-first charge in the six-furlong, $19,500 race that allowed Asmussen to tie Dale Baird for the all-time lead in North American victories with 9,445. When the mark fell to Asmussen at Saratoga Race Course the next day, it fulfilled a seemingly outrageous goal the trainer had outlined to Fleming decades before.

The two young men were having lunch in the late 1980's when Asmussen expressed his ambition. “I want to be the best. I want to win more races than anybody,” Asmussen told Fleming. “I want to be the leading trainer ever.”

Fleming could not quite believe what he was hearing. “I took it in jest a little bit,” he said. “But he wasn't kidding.”

Fleming began galloping horses for Asmussen, who was then still finding his way as a trainer, before joining him full-time approximately 20 years ago as an assistant. With each passing season, he came to appreciate how serious Asmussen was about making an indelible mark on the game.

Darren Fleming's Eclipse. Photo courtesy of Fleming

Fleming said of the record they now build on almost daily with a far-flung stable: “That was the goal the whole time. It's always been mentioned. In the last year, year and a half, it just kept coming closer and closer.”

The more Fleming got to know Asmussen, the more he realized that anything and everything was possible for him.

“He has an intensity level that is second to none,” Fleming said. “Like he says, 'Everything matters.' He goes to work every day with the same intensity as the day before. And that is what he expects from everybody, from the top to the bottom.”

Fleming also brings tremendous passion to racing. His father, William, was a jockey. Kerry, his wife of 30 years, received an inkling of what she was getting into on Thanksgiving Day, 1985. Soon after the meal ended, her future husband excused himself.

“I have to leave,” he told her. “I have to go water the horses.”

“It's Thanksgiving,” she reminded him.

“Well, the horses don't know it's Thanksgiving,” he responded. And he was off.

Fleming and Asmussen get along so well because of the drive they share. Fleming acknowledged that he is “probably a workaholic.” On a recent day, he and Asmussen already had spoken four times before 10 a.m. Fleming currently oversees 40 horses at Ellis Park and another 40 at Remington Park as part of an operation that numbers approximately 300 horses. Asmussen receives updates and provides instructions on every horse every day.

Fleming admits that it can be challenging to keep to Asmussen's torrid pace.

“Everybody has a tired day or a tired weekend,” he said. “But the rewards you get from racing outweigh everything. It's fun winning.”

Although loyalty can be fleeting in racing, Fleming never seriously considered leaving.

“It just feels natural by now. It's like walking,” he said of his position. “I don't think I could ever work for anybody else. Everything he does makes sense. If I was working for other people, some of the things they do just don't make sense for me.”

There are times when Asmussen makes the game look easy. Fleming knows better.

“I see what a tough game it is. I see how quick the tide can turn,” he said. “I get to be around most of the top horses at one point or another. It's just a great experience.” They produced the Horse of the Year on four occasions. Two-time honoree Curlin (2007-08) was immediately followed by the magnificent filly Rachel Alexandra in 2009 and later by Gun Runner (2017). Other than the Kentucky Derby, there are few major races the barn has not won.

Asmussen and his wife, Julie, foster a family atmosphere that contributes to success. Kerry and Julie shared babysitting duties when they were starting their families. Fleming had each of Asmussen's three sons work under his tutelage at one time or another.

“We are family,” Kerry said.

In another nod to Fleming and Blasi, Asmussen named his middle son Darren Scott.

“Everything we've gone through together, we got here collectively. What we've learned, we've learned together, from each other,” Asmussen said. “It's a beautiful feeling to have everybody pulling on the same end of the rope all the time.”

Perhaps some corporations could learn from Asmussen's business model.

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“Steve treats them right, pays them right, appreciates them,” Kerry said. “It's such a fair deal all the way around.”

Asmussen has always understood that a trainer can only be as good as those he employs. “It makes everything we've done possible,” he said. “It's improved the small things and made the biggest thing possible.”

Even when the biggest thing of all was once hard to fathom.

Tom Pedulla wrote for USA Today from 1995-2012 and has been a contributor to the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Blood-Horse, America's Best Racing and other publications.

If you wish to suggest someone as a potential subject for In Their Care, please send an email to info@paulickreport.com that includes the person's name and contact information in addition to a brief description of the individual's background.

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Del Mar Announces Stakes Calendar For November Bing Crosby Meeting

Del Mar Thoroughbred Club will present its eighth fall race meeting – officially titled the Bing Crosby Season in a salute to the seaside track's founder – with 18 major stakes and a pair of overnights worth a record $3,550,000 planned during a 15-day session starting on Wednesday, November 3.

Del Mar will be hosting the 38th edition of the Breeders' Cup Championships during its fall stand with 14 major races worth more than $31 million slated on Friday, November 5 and Saturday, November 6. The track had previously been home to the Breeders' Cup in 2017.

A highlight of the session will be its two Grade 1 offerings on closing weekend, the Hollywood Derby and the Matriarch Stakes. Each will carry a value of $400,000, the highest sum ever for a stakes race at the shore oval outside of the $1-million TVG Pacific Classic.

Twelve of the major stakes are Graded – two Grade 1s, four Grade 2s and six Grade 3s. The track has put an emphasis on grass racing during its previous fall stands and that holds true once more with 11 of the stakes, including the last seven, all contested on the deep Jimmy Durante Turf Course. Those seven turf tests will be conducted during Del Mar's final weekend, starting on Thanksgiving Thursday, November 25 and continuing through closing day on Sunday, November 28.

“This is the best fall stakes schedule we've ever presented,” said DMTC vice president and racing secretary David Jerkens. “The success of Del Mar racing over the past two years has allowed us to partner with our horsemen and horsewomen in this robust schedule. We think it will be an attraction to good horses from across the country.”

The track's two premier stakes will be presented on its closing weekend – the $400,000 Grade 1 Hollywood Derby for 3-year-olds at nine furlongs on grass Saturday, November 27 and the $400,000 Grade 1 Matriarch Stakes for fillies and mares at a mile on the green on Sunday, November 28.

Additionally, closing weekend also will offer the $250,000 Grade 2 Seabiscuit Handicap for 3-year-olds and up at a mile and one-sixteenth on turf Saturday, November 27 and the $250,000 Grade 2 Hollywood Turf Cup for 3-year-olds and up at a mile and one-half on the lawn on Friday, November 26. Both of those races have had their values increased by $50,000 from previous runnings.

Racing will be conducted Wednesday through Sunday in Week 1, then Friday through Sunday in Weeks 2 and 3 before finishing with a Thursday through Sunday session in the final Week 4.

First post daily will be 12:30 on all racing days with the exceptions of the Breeders' Cup Days and Thanksgiving. The first race on Breeders' Cup Friday goes off at 11:55 a.m., while the first on Breeders' Cup Saturday begins at 10:15 a.m. The Thanksgiving Day card will have a first post of 11 a.m.

As in past years, Del Mar's racing office plans to card eight races during its weekday cards and nine for the weekend programs.

The complete list of stakes follows:

DATE RACE / CONDITIONS PURSE / DISTANCE

Wed. Nov 03 Seashell Stakes* Fillies & Mares, Three-year-olds & up, N/W S/S of $60,000 at 1 M o/o since April 1 $100,000 Added 1 Mile

Thu. Nov 04 Let It Ride Stakes* Three-year-olds, N/W S/S of $60,000 at 1 M o/o since April 1 $100,000 Added 1 Mile (Turf)

Fri. Nov 05 QATAR GOLDEN MILE STAKES Two-year-olds $150,000 Guaranteed 1 Mile (Turf)

Fri. Nov 05 GOLDEN STATE JUVENILE FILLIES STAKES Fillies, Two-year-olds, Cal-Bred $175,000 Guaranteed 7 Furlongs

Fri. Nov 05 GOLDEN STATE JUVENILE STAKES Two-year-olds, Cal-Bred $175,000 Guaranteed 7 Furlongs

Fri. Nov 05 SENATOR KEN MADDY STAKES (Grade 3) Fillies & Mares, Two-year-olds & up $200,000 Guaranteed 5 Furlongs (Turf)

Sat. Nov 06 TAA STAKES (Grade 2) Three-year-olds & up $250,000 Guaranteed 1 5/8 Miles

Sat. Nov 06 GOLDIKOVA STAKES (Grade 2) Fillies & Mares, Three-year-olds & up $300,000 Guaranteed 1 Mile (Turf)

Sun. Nov 07 BETTY GRABLE STAKES Fillies & Mares, Three-year-olds & up, Cal-Bred $100,000 Guaranteed 7 Furlongs

Sat. Nov 13 DESI ARNAZ STAKES Fillies, Two-year-olds $100,000 Guaranteed 7 Furlongs

Sun. Nov 14 BOB HOPE STAKES (Grade 3) Two-year-olds $100,000 Guaranteed 7 Furlongs

Sat. Nov 20 NATIVE DIVER STAKES (Grade 3) Three-year-olds & up $100,000 Guaranteed 1 1/8 Miles

Sun. Nov 21 CARY GRANT STAKES Three-year-olds & up, Cal-Bred $100,000 Guaranteed 7 Furlongs

Thu. Nov 25 RED CARPET STAKES (Grade 3) Fillies & Mares, Three-year-olds & up $100,000 Guaranteed 1 3/8 Miles (Turf)

Fri. Nov 26 HOLLYWOOD TURF CUP (Grade 2) Three-year-olds & up $250,000 Guaranteed 1 1/2 Miles (Turf)

Sat. Nov 27 JIMMY DURANTE STAKES (Grade 3) Fillies, Two-year-olds $100,000 Guaranteed 1 Mile (Turf)

Sat. Nov 27 SEABISCUIT HANDICAP (Grade 2) Three-year-olds & up $250,000 Guaranteed 1 1/16 Miles (Turf)

Sat. Nov 27 HOLLYWOOD DERBY (Grade 1) Three-year-olds $400,000 Guaranteed 1 1/8 Miles (Turf)

Sun. Nov 28 CECIL B. DEMILLE STAKES (Grade 3) Two-year-olds $100,000 Guaranteed 1 Mile (Turf)

Sun. Nov 28 MATRIARCH STAKES (Grade 1) Fillies & Mares, Three-year-olds & up $400,000 Guaranteed 1 Mile (Turf)

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