Lothenbach Dominates With Four Stakes Winners On Canterbury’s Minnesota Festival of Champions Card

Horses owned by Robert Lothenbach of Wayzata, Minn. won four of the six $100,000 Thoroughbred stakes Saturday during Canterbury Park's 12-race Minnesota Festival of Champions for state-breds.

Joel Berndt trained all Lothenbach winners, including an allowance winner earlier on the card.

The first stakes victory came in the Princess Elaine with Midnight Current, a 4-year-old Midnight Lute filly who has won five consecutive races this season at Canterbury. She paid $3.20 as the favorite with leading rider Harry Hernandez aboard.

Lothenbach next won the Northern Lights Futurity with favorite It's Bobs Business. The 2-year-old Bolt d'Oro gelding missed the break but was able to navigate through traffic, circling the field and drawing off to win by 7 1/4 lengths under Constantino Roman. He paid $2.80.

Love the Nest, a 3-year-old Blame filly, won the Crocrock Sprint for Lothenbach and Berndt with rider Ry Eikleberry. The Minnesota Derby winner, facing older horses for the first time, raced behind a pace battle between The Alligatorhunter and Doctor Oscar before passing both to win by 2 3/4 lengths. Love the Nest returned $7.00.

Eikleberry was aboard the fourth Lothenbach winner as well. Charlie's Penny, a 4-year-old daughter of Race Day, prevailed in the Bella Notte Distaff Sprint by 5 1/4 lengths over Ready to Runaway and defending champion Clickbait, returning $3.80.

Eikleberry has now won 11 Festival Thoroughbred stakes in his career, tying Scott Stevens for the third most in the 29-year history of the event. Eikleberry also has five additional Festival wins aboard quarter horses.

Lothenbach's allowance victory that came earlier on the card when Loring Park, a 4-year-old Orb gelding, won as the favorite with Eikleberry riding. Lothenbach is also the breeder of Loring Park, Midnight Current, Its Bobs Business, and Charlie's Penny.

Lover Girl, trained by Matt Williams and ridden by Karlo Lopez, secured the Northern Lights Debutante as a longshot. The 2-year-old Congrats filly paid $28.80, defeating odds-on favorite Thunders Rocknroll by two lengths. The winning filly was bred and is owned by Gary and Brenda Bergsrud

Stitzy won the Blair's Cove Minnesota Turf Championship with jockey Ezequiel Lara aboard. The gate-to-wire winner is trained by Jose Silva Jr. and owned by 5th Street Stables. The 6-year-old English Channel gelding paid $17.80.

Wagering reached a Minnesota Festival of Champions high of $2,446,940, the fourth largest handle total of the season. The previous Festival handle record was the 2020 total of $2,048,915.

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Del Mar Turf Course Superintendent: ‘We’re All About Safety’

Everybody loves having a nice green lawn but very few like putting the work into maintaining one. Those grumblings you hear on the weekends generally belong to homeowners moments before going out to mow that nice green lawn.

So, if it makes you feel any better, the next time you have to break out the mower and trimmer to take on the front or backyard, think about John Beggin and the lawn he's in charge of keeping nice and green.

Beggin, 41, is the turf and landscape superintendent for Del Mar's Jimmy Durante Turf Course, 10 1/2 acres of lush green grass that not only has to look good but must be kept in optimum condition for the horses that run on it every day during the summer and fall meets.

“I typically get here around 5:30 or six (in the morning),” Beggin said. “I take a walk out (on the course) at 7:15 to do my readings. That's walking the whole thing.”

During his walk, Beggin measures the moisture in the soil and checks the penetration depth and the sheer strength of the grass.

“Once I do that,” Beggin said, “I go to the computer and upload it to the Racing Surface Laboratory and then I do it again after the racing.”

Overseeing the meticulous care of the turf course is an around-the-clock job, seven days a week, 52-weeks out of the year.

“On Thursday's and Sunday's we have turf works, horses training for upcoming races,” Beggin said. “I have three teams of five people set up at different gaps around the track and once the training is done, we have to repair the divots the horses leave in the grass.

“The crews just walk where the horses were, about fifty feet toward the outside rail, that's where they train. We usually tamp and then we double check the other team's tamps.”

The protection of the turf course goes beyond watering and tamping. His crew is also in charge of laying out the boards under the wheels of the starting gate when the gate is moved into position on the turf course before a race. Without the boards, the wheels of the gate would leave side-by-side trenches in the grass.

“We can't have boards underneath the starting gate,” Beggin said. “So as the tractor moves the starting gate back, since we don't have enough guys, we leapfrog the boards out.”

They do the whole exercise again once the race goes off.

“Boom, the race goes,” Beggin said. “Now we have to hustle to get that starting gate out, typically 30-40 seconds. The first time I did it I thought, 'This is crazy. This 15-ton starting gate is flying right by us, tires are just missing us.' I usually do training runs before the season starts because you can explain it all you want but they actually have to do it.”

Beggin has been working at Del Mar for almost two years now. He started under former Del Mar turf superintendent Leif Dickenson, known as one of the best in the industry at taking fine care of Del Mar's turf course. But before arriving at Del Mar, Beggin worked golf courses.

“I was a golf course superintendent at age 26,” he says. “I ran Red Hot Golf Course in Temecula for nine years then left to take on a 36-hole golf course in Menefee Lakes where I worked for five years. And I also oversaw another golf course in Hemet. Then the pandemic hit, crazy budget cuts and I got laid off.

“One of my old teachers, and a friend of Leif's, reached out to me and told me to talk to the folks at Del Mar. We hit it off and I came in the following day. Then, just before the 2021 Breeders' Cup, I had one of my old golf courses reach out to me and push for me to come back. So I left here in January of 2022.”

But not for long. Months later, Leif Dickenson contacted Beggin again.

“He said he was taking a job in Florida and Del Mar needed me to come back,” Beggin said.

That was on June 20, one month before the start of the summer meet. Nonetheless, he signed on.

Beggin is quickly becoming a respected track superintendent in his own right. He applies the knowledge he learned working golf courses to maintaining the racing surface at Del Mar though, he says, there are some big differences between two.

“Golf you want everything fast and firm,” Beggin said. “Out here with horse racing we're all about safety. We need consistent conditions. We need the grass to be nice and soft. You want the grass to take the impact, not the horse.

“On a golf course all the heights and cuts are super small and everything's tight. On this (racetrack), we try to get the grass close to four inches. We want the soils to be super soft so there's a different mix. This is a 70-30 blend of sand with fibers in it that were engineered for horse racing.”

Beggin said it's not lost on him the huge responsibility that comes with this job.

“I think about it every day,” he said. “Every time those horses get on the track, I'm nervous.”

That being said, the safety record at Del Mar has been second to none over the past few years. Something Beggin takes a lot of pride in.

“Yes, we work so hard to keep those numbers consistent,” Beggin said. “It's not that easy. I get pretty stressed.”

And when the meet ends on Sunday, Beggin's job is just beginning.

“Then it's a matter of rebuilding the Bermuda base for the fall meet,” he says. “That's why we're constantly moving the rail, to spread the wear.”

After the Bing Crosby meet, the work continues into the winter and spring, when they literally blanket the turf course.

“We do something pretty unique here,” Beggin said. “We use UV turf blankets and cover all 10 and a half acres. Two weeks on…two weeks off. It's like a greenhouse effect. We're the only place that will be mowing in January.”

The blankets stay on until May when the soil temperatures and air temperatures get back up. Then the cycle begins again to get the track ready for the summer meet.

As if that's not enough, Beggin is also in charge of all of the many plants, bushes and flowers you see in the paddock and around the facility.

It helps to have a green thumb.

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Kyprios Clinches Irish St Leger Success To Crown Memorable Season

Aidan O'Brien and Ryan Moore sugarcoated a wonderful Longines Irish Champions Weekend by bagging the G1 Irish St Leger with the Moyglare Stud-owned Kyprios (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}).

Sent to post a warm favourite at odds of 8-11, Kyprios found generously on the front end to hold off the determined challenge of Hamish (GB) (Motivator {GB}) and win by less than a length.

Kyprios has gone from strength to strength this season, with his Irish St Leger success coming off the back of top level triumphs in the Gold Cup at Ascot and the Goodwood Cup.

Search For A Song (Ire), a sister of the winner and a former dual Irish St Leger winner herself, ran a gallant race in third to lead home a one-three for Moyglare on an afternoon that the stud celebrated the 50th running of the Moyglare Stud S.

But the day belonged to Kyprios. He may not do anything fancy but his win on Sunday stretched his unbeaten record this season to five and O'Brien hailed him as everything you want in a stayer.

The champion trainer said, “He's very tough. He's very relaxed. He's always only in the gear that you want. Ryan gave him a great ride. 

“He's a horse that gets a trip but he's a lot of class and he's very relaxed, which is a massive help. It helps him to get the trip. He's very brave, very clear-winded, good mover and a great mind. It's a pleasure to have him.”

On future plans, O'Brien added, “It'll depend on what everyone will want to do with him and it was great Eva was here to see him today. He's very easy to deal with and it leaves him with a lot of options.

“He was extra lazy today. Maybe it was the soft ground that made him a little bit more laboured. He could go back to a mile and a half but obviously we would love to have him around for the Gold Cup for the coming years. He is a unique horse really.

“We'll see what everybody thinks and what way the ground is going to be (in ParisLongchamp for the Arc). He is only four and for a stayer he's very young. As we saw today, he only does the minimum so it's very hard to know what's in there really.”

Pedigree Notes

Kyprios hails from an outstanding Moyglare family. Polished Gem (Ire) (Danehill), the dam of Kyprios and Search For A Song, has also produced a G1 Prince Of Wales's S. winner in Free Eagle (Ire) as well as five other black-type horses.

 

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