Papaprodromou Becoming A Household Name At Del Mar

Trainer George Papaprodromou is having a meet to remember this summer at Del Mar. The native of Cyprus, an island country in the Mediterranean Sea, currently sits fourth in the trainers standings with eight victories, two of which are graded stakes wins.

“It's just my horses right now are doing well,” Papaprodromou said. “They're on top of their form and pretty much ready to go.”

It could also be the result of years of hard work, early wake-up calls and plenty of sacrifice. A lifestyle Papaprodromou knows all too well. He's been involved in horse racing since he was a kid.

“My whole family was into horse racing,” Papaprodromou says. “My father, my grandpa. It was a family thing; I just grew up with it.”

Papaprodromou has a string of 55 horses at Del Mar this summer but training was not his objective when he first came to the United States back in 1996.

“I was a jockey back there (in Cyprus) when I was a teen,” Papaprodromou says. “I had just finished the Army, it's mandatory you have to go in the Army when you're 18. So I finished the Army and my dad was coming to the states to look at a couple of horses to buy, sires to take back home. I ended up coming with him and I decided to stay.”

Papaprodromou says it was a struggle and he had to call a few audibles to stay afloat.

“I tried to ride but I was too big,” he said. “I had the equipment so I galloped horses for some trainers here…(Bob) Baffert and (David) Hofmans.”

Finally, he came up with a plan that would kick start his training career.

“I talked my dad into coming over here to train and then one day I would take over,” Papaprodromou said. “We met with a few owners, got a couple horses and it went from there.”

His father, Andreas Papaprodromou, raced horses on the Southern California circuit from 1997 to 2003. Then it was time for George to take over. There were some lean years for Papaprodromou. He won just nine races in his first four years. But he kept at it and in 2014 struck gold when he claimed a son of Bernardini for $50,000. Imperative promptly won the 2014 G2 Charles Town Classic, giving Papaprodromou his first graded stakes victory. The conditioner would go on to enjoy his best year ever in terms of earnings, until this year.

Papaprodromou surpassed his personal all-time earnings mark with his victory in the G3 La Jolla with Cabo Spirit last Sunday at Del Mar. He now has compiled $1,990,891 in purses in 2022 with at least two horses in the barn that have the potential to add significantly to the sum at the current Del Mar meet. With his win in the G1 Bing Crosby, Kretz Racing's American Theorem earned an all-expenses-paid trip to the Breeders' Cup Sprint at Keeneland in November. In the meantime the son of American Pharoah is being pointed to the G2 Pat O'Brien at Del Mar August 27. Kretz Racing's Cabo Spirit will be pointed to the Caesars Sportsbook Del Mar Derby September 3.

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Team Baaeed ‘Looking Forward’ To Step Up In Trip In Wednesday’s Juddmonte International

William Haggas is itching to step the brilliant Baaeed up to a mile and a quarter for the first time in Wednesday's £1 million Juddmonte International Stakes, a “Win and You're In” race for the Breeders' Cup Classic, but he does not underestimate the task the colt faces as he continues to follow in the footsteps of Frankel.

“I'm looking forward to it,” Haggas said. “We've always felt he'd be better over further, but we've got a few people emailing us and casting doubt on whether we should be doing it. But Sheikha Hissa is up for the challenge and I think it would be remiss of us not to give it a go.

“There's nothing I can do about the competition on the day, and if the Mishriff of last year comes to York in the same form he'll be incredibly difficult to beat, as he was unbelievably impressive that day. Mishriff ran a very, very good race in the Eclipse and a little bit of a lack-luster race in the King George, so who knows which one will turn up. But he'll be a danger, as will lots of others.”

Baaeed is a red-hot favorite for this first of four races at York this week in the QIPCO British Champions Series, but Haggas understandably prefers to resist comparisons between the 4-year-old and Frankel. They are inevitable however so long as the path taken by the current world number one mirrors so closely that taken by racing's all-time-great a decade ago.

Just like Baaeed, Frankel came here unbeaten, including in the previous autumn's Queen Elizabeth II Stakes (sponsored by QIPCO) and then the Lockinge, Queen Anne and Sussex Stakes. The Juddmonte was also Frankel's first opportunity over further than a mile, and of course he won in devastating style.

Baaeed has won nine races to Frankel's 12, and his winning margins have been less extravagant, but that's simply his style. This year's three wins, in particular, have been gained in the smoothest fashion, and his style of racing – more akin to that of his sire Sea The Stars than the exuberant Frankel – should lend itself admirably to this distance. His pedigree, like Frankel's, suggests the new trip ought to be well within range.

Haggas tries to ignore talk of Baaeed also being recognized as the world's best racehorse, pointing out that it is simply an opinion and that in any case how can one compare a British turf miler with an American dirt horse and an Australian sprinter. He admits such talk is “very flattering” and says that he is “honored to train such a good horse”, but adds: “We don't think of it like that – we just carry on.”

That said, Baaeed has been the apple of his eye for more than a year now, having given a first major clue to his potential when running away with a Listed race at Newmarket on his third start.

Recalling the early days, he said: “Most of ours run green first time and do much better on their second start, so the fact that Baaeed won first time out at Leicester made me think he could be all right. In his work afterwards he shaped up quite well, and when we ran him in a novice at Newmarket he hosed up.

“He then won a Listed race at Newmarket with authority, and afterwards the BHA senior handicapper Dominic Gardiner-Hill told me he could have put him ahead of the Guineas winner on what he'd achieved there.”

Since then, it has been Group races all the way for Baaeed, the last five of them Group 1s, and over a mile nothing has been able to lay a glove on him this year. That might change on Wednesday, but Haggas will try not to get too anxious about it.

He said: “I said to Jim (Crowley) at Goodwood that we had him for two more races and so let's try to enjoy it. He'll be off to stud afterwards, and that will be the end of it. We'll be searching for another one for the rest of my career, and probably for the rest of his.

“So long as we are happy with the horse's condition, happy with the way he's trained, and everything has gone right up until the time Jim gets on board, then what is there to worry about.”

Sheikha Hissa is firmly embracing the long tradition begun by her late father Sheikh Hamdan and has taken a far closer interest in Baaeed than some might have guessed. She can clearly recall his “babyish” debut at Leicester, which she said ”gave me a thrill, especially at a grieving time”, and she remembers the first time she saw him up close at the Haggas stables, after his Prix du Moulin win, when she immediately picked up on “his strut.”

She said: “When a horse likes to do his job it makes life so much easier, and Baaeed has his ears pricked even on the gallops. It's amazing and satisfying to see a horse enjoy his job.

“Sea The Stars leaves a mark on his foals and Baaeed takes a lot of his temperament and how he is from him, but I'm glad he looks like his mum Aghareed. My father would have loved him, as homebreds always gave him special pride, especially from the Nashwan family.”

Like Baaeed's trainer, she “can't wait” for Wednesday. She added: “Last year I was very afraid every time he went to the racecourse, but I don't know when I'll next see a horse like him, so I'm trying just to enjoy the process. He proved he is a great horse at a mile and he's bred for stepping up, so he should be fine technically.

“I hope he ends on a good note and stays undefeated, but it's just a pleasure to have him. No matter what happens, he's a great horse for us.”

Neither John nor Thady Gosden would dream of underestimating Baaeed, but if there is a chink in his armor then last year's six-length winner Mishriff looks the one most likely to exploit it, and they had first-hand experience in 2015 of the turn-ups that can happen in the Juddmonte when Golden Horn lost his unbeaten record to a 50-1 chance.

Thady Gosden said: “Mishriff has come back from Ascot in very good form and the one mile and two furlongs Juddmonte trip suits him well. Giving away ground at the start of a race of the King George's quality is a serious hindrance, but he's got plenty of speed and the shorter distance is what he's best at.

“It's interesting, and Baaeed is obviously brilliantly talented. He relaxes well and you would be shocked if he didn't get the trip, but he's taking on top-class mile and a quarter horses and I think it's fair to say that it's a stronger division than the miling division at the moment.

“Mishriff seems to be in similar form now as he was when he went to York last year. He ran a huge race in the Eclipse and was perhaps unlucky there. His work gives us a pretty good measure of where he's at, and he's in very good form.

“The Juddmonte is the summer's premier mile and a quarter race and it's great to see these horses take each other on. Whatever happens, it's going to be an exceptional race.”

The Irish 2000 Guineas winner Native Trail did not take the anticipated step forward when stepped up in trip in the Coral-Eclipse, losing second close home to the unlucky-in-running Mishriff, so he was initially headed for yesterday's Prix Jacques Le Marois. Plans changed however when Coroebus missed the Qatar Sussex Stakes with an abscess and was switched, unsuccessfully, to the Deauville race.

Weighing up options for his colts after the Sussex, Charlie Appleby said: “Native Trail is in great order. He's walking around on two legs! The Jacques Le Marois was going to be Native Trail's race, but I see no reason why he couldn't run in the Juddmonte. He didn't not stay in the Eclipse. He was outstayed by good horses who will probably go on at a mile and a half.”

A field of seven also includes last year's runner-up Alenquer, who is a stable-mate of Baaeed and gained a first Group 1 win in the Tattersalls Gold Cup, and Aidan O'Brien's High Definition, who was the neck runner-up there. The line-up is completed by William Knight's Sir Busker and Dubai Honour, a third Haggas runner, who were separated by just a nose in the Group 2 Sky Bet York Stakes over course and distance last month.

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Colonials Downs Daily All-Sources Wagering Up 30% Through First Five Weeks

Spearheaded by competitive fields on both of its racing surfaces and continued high interest in its Pick 5 wager, officials at Colonial Downs revealed Monday that the average all-sources wagering through the first five weeks of the 27-day Colonial Downs presented by Woodford Reserve race meeting is up 30.7% over the same corresponding time period of the 2021 meet; the $2,625,248 through the first 15 days of the meeting, compared to $2,008,092 through the first 15 days last year.

A total of $1,113,614 was bet into the sixth race Aug. 9 at Colonial Downs, which is the highest non-Virginia Derby single race pool in the history of the track and contributed to a meet-high daily handle of $4,158,874.

“We are delighted with the response thus far from fans from around the country who are enthusiastically wagering on our high-quality racing product, featuring horses from some of racing's most familiar trainers and competition among top jockeys,” said Jill Byrne, Colonial Downs Vice President of Racing Operations. “Our Pick 5 has been wildly successful since we reduced takeout to 12% on the bet this year. We look forward to continued success for the second half of the meet resuming on August 15.”

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