Scheinman: Remembering Hall Of Famer Xtra Heat, Horse Of A Lifetime

Xtra Heat was one of the most fun stories of my racing writing career. “Big, old, dumb hillbilly” trainer John Salzman, African American businessman owner Kenny Taylor and partner Harry Deitchman – she was the horse of their lifetimes and one of the greatest sprinters who ever lived. None of them would ever admit they fell in love with her, and they readily sold her when it came time, when they saw fit. Sentimentality did not fit their profiles.

All three men were into fast and cheap horses, and the one that made them more than $2 million didn't turn their minds on how they did business.

They got her for a nickel ($5,000) after a vet told her owner she'd probably never make it to the races, the lesions in her stifles were so bad. She looked runty and was named cheap, after a gas company – not exactly Princequillo, Round Table or Secretariat – but it proved apt. Xtra Heat ran like she was lit by rocket fuel.

Bargain-hunter Taylor dropped that $5,000 on her at a 2-year-old sale in Timonium, Md., and, holy mother of God, she beat pretty much every top sprinter in the country from there on out.

At the start, only the locals knew how good she was. She won her first five races at the lesser precincts – Laurel, Philly and Delaware – like a laser beam, and when she got to the big stage, Belmont Park, for a Grade 2 baby race called the Astarita, the know-it-alls in New York let her go at nearly 8-1 and she beat Gold Mover, who went on to win over $1.5 million.

Next, the G1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies and a route of ground were asking too much for her, and she finished 10th, but that was a mere aberration; they had put her in the wrong game. Once Salzman got that definitive proof she was “just” a sprinter, he never stretched her beyond her limits again. How the hell Cat Chat beat her by a nose at 3 in Belmont's G2 Nassau County Stakes is beyond me, but losing to Victory Ride in Saratoga's G1 Test (at seven furlongs) was legit. Victory Ride was excellent, but even she needed that extra furlong. At six panels, against Xtra Heat, everyone else ate her dust.

Xtra Heat won 26 of her 35 starts, 25 of them stakes races. That's flat-out obscene, so many stakes races, and a modern record for distaff runners. She was named Eclipse Award-winning champion 3-year-old filly of 2001, and taking a cursory glance back through history, she may have been the only sprinter ever to do that. Definitely the only one going back to 1971. The $5,000 bargain earned nearly $2.4 million on the track.

Xtra Heat only won one Grade 1 race, the highest class, and when she became eligible for the Hall of Fame, there was a little too much chatter for my taste about her having mostly built her gaudy record in Maryland, Delaware and Pennsylvania, not New York, Kentucky and California. I vote and I would vote for her until I croaked, but turns out I didn't have to, thankfully. She was one of my three objectives when I was proudly brought into the Hall of Fame voting circle: Xtra Heat, King Leatherbury (who turns 90 on March 26) and Safely Kept. All three are in.

The rider Xtra Heat was most identified with, Rick Wilson, lost the mount on her when he was severely injured in a terrible turf race accident in 2001 at Pimlico. He broke a leg and a bunch of ribs, and it took him 54 weeks to get back. At his lengthy peak, he was one of the bedrock riders of the Mid-Atlantic ovals, good on all surfaces and at all distances, and ranked among the all-time leaders in some categories despite never having the big horses of the more famous jocks.

Xtra Heat was his big horse, and he lost her.

Wilson was replaced by another journeyman, Harry Vega, and, for one race, in the Breeders' Cup, Jorge Chavez. Even Chavez was second tier in New York. Salzman never got jumpy and went after some big hot shot to look like he knew what he was doing. He stuck with the riders he trusted.

I have vivid memories of both Wilson and Vega openly weeping as they guided Xtra Heat into the winner's circle following victories at Laurel and Pimlico. You ride thousands of races and sweat pounds off until you can barely stand up, skip foods you love, and work seven days a week, early morning into the setting sun. You fall off and get back on, and fall off and get back on again, and you do it far, far from the bright lights mostly because you love it down in your core, and then you climb atop that piston hurricane?

You're damn right they wept.

In May 2004, 15 months after Xtra Heat had been retired, Wilson had been back riding, and I was there at Pimlico the day he fell off one coming out of the gate and got kicked straight in the face by his own horse's left hind hoof as he attempted to roll out of harm's way.

I stood up there in the press box looking down – could barely move – with a cup of clam chowder in my hands, watching him lay motionless, face down, as blood pooled around his head.

I snapped awake, in horror, and had to get to work.

Wilson, such a good guy, his head forever ringing, never rode again.

All of this floods back after learning this wonderful, fast and fierce little animal Xtra Heat has died.

If you ever saw the remake of the movie “True Grit” with Jeff Bridges, well, Xtra Heat is kind of like Little Blackie in my mind. She'd run like the wind for you as far as she could, carrying whoever is necessarily strapped to her back. Both put a lump in your throat, and for cynical racetrackers, that's saying something.

Nearing the end, in a stakes race called the Endine in September 2002 at Delaware Park, Xtra Heat rang the bell again, and Salzman, who when riding high couldn't hide his Cheshire cat grin, turned to me and beamed, “She's just like a cash register.”

Being businessmen, he and Taylor and Deitchman sold Xtra Heat in a private deal after she finished sixth a month later in the Breeders' Cup at Arlington Park, which is now gone to the wrecker and the Chicago Bears for a new stadium.

New owners Classic Star Stable campaigned her three more times under Salzman before sending her off to breed, and Xtra Heat went out of top with back-to-back stakes wins, the finale at home, in the G2 Barbara Fritchie Handicap at Laurel.

Who was back aboard the last three? Rick Wilson.

Toward the end of her run, because it was part of my job, I kept pestering Salzman and Taylor about whether they'd sell her. I was going to make sure it didn't happen without me writing it first.

As I put it in one piece, they wanted to “get out while the getting is good.”

First and foremost, Salzman was practical, and a damn smart hillbilly, but through his rascally veneer, I could see – even if I was projecting a little – he was amazed to be tied to this almost mystical animal.

“How long. do you think she can last?” he wondered aloud to me one day.

Turns out she made it to 24, John.

RIP, Xtra Heat.

John Scheinman is a two-time Eclipse Award-winning writer and former Turf writer for the Washington Post

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Paul Calia Wins NTRA National Horseplayers Championship, Lands Eclipse Award As Horseplayer Of Year

After a weekend of nail-biting handicapping prowess, Paul Calia, of Kansas City, Missouri, toppled a field of 779 entries to take home the grand prize of $800,000, in addition to finishing in 4th place, and an Eclipse Award crowning him Horseplayer of the Year. This is the first contest that Calia has ever won.

Calia amassed a winning score of $362.50 on his first entry, and $305.50 on his second entry, over the three-day tournament from 53 mythical $2 Win and Place bets – 18 on Friday, 18 on Saturday, 10 in Sunday morning's Semifinal round, and 7 at the exciting Final Table which ultimately yielded his victory. He is the first winner to also finish in the top ten with a second entry.

“I started a little slow on Friday, thought I handicapped okay with some seconds and thirds. But Saturday I was pretty hot, and pretty much hit every long shot. It's hard to put into words how many winners I picked on Saturday,” said Calia, a retired disability advisor for Social Security.

When asked his approach to playing two cards in the final table he said, “I don't know how to describe it. I didn't switch a lot of picks, I don't let the odds affect me. I only switched about 10-15% of my picks between cards, one or two a day that's it.”

His strategy obviously paid off. Calia will take home $800,000 for his first-place finish in addition to taking home $150,000 for his fourth-place finish. With this victory, Calia also earns an exemption into next year's NHC and a berth to the 2023 Breeders' Cup Betting Challenge worth $10,000. In lieu of winning a second BCBC entry, which he won from finishing first on day two (Saturday), he will instead take home $10,000 cash. That makes his full earnings from the weekend a whopping $960,000 and a 2024 BCBC seat valued at $10,000.

“There are three pillars to the sport of Thoroughbred racing – you have the horse and its connections, the racetracks, and the horseplayer,” said NTRA President and CEO Tom Rooney.  “So, if horse racing is a three-legged stool, we aren't anything without the horseplayer. My family's relationship with this sport and with football all traces back to playing horses. The excitement at the NHC is vital to everything we do as an industry. This year's NHC is bigger than ever before and I'm proud that the NTRA has this unique opportunity to showcase the best of the best in handicapping and celebrate what it means to be a horseplayer.”

The official Top 10 finishers of the 2023 NHC are:

1.    Paul Calia (first entry), $362.50, Kansas City, MO, 2nd NHC Appearance

2.    Francis Boustany, $330.30, Lafayette, LA, 7th NHC Appearance

3.    Gary Fenton, $309.60, Sherman Oaks, CA, 4th NHC Appearance

4.    Paul Calia (second entry), $305.50, Kansas City, MO, 2nd NHC Appearance

5.    David Browning, $302.80, Lexington, KY, 3rd NHC Appearance

6.    George Novick, $290, Pocono Pines, PA, 2nd NHC Appearance

7.    Steven Wells (second entry), $289.40, Fordville, ND, 5th NHC Appearance

8.    Joseph Paese, $288.50, Middletown, PA, 2nd NHC Appearance

9.    Steven Wells (first entry), $281.60, Fordville, ND, 5th NHC Appearance

10. Steve Nemetz, $281.50, Vancouver, BC, 11th NHC Appearance

The 2022 NHC paid out the top 68 finishers. This year, the top 78 finishers will take home prize money. Total cash prizes to be offered over the three days was a record $3,115,350, a 33% increase over last year. The full prize structure can be found by clicking here.

In a separate Consolation Tournament on Sunday for players that did not reach the Semifinals round, Karen Richards of Pembroke Pines, FL, won the $10,000 top prize with a bankroll of $130.40 from 10 optional races. The Consolation Tournament started with bankrolls reset to zero. Cash prizes totaling $50,000 were awarded, from the $10,000 first prize down to $1,000 for 20th.

NHC weekend concludes this evening with the annual Champions' Dinner, featuring the presentation of prizes and the induction of the 2022 NHC Hall of Fame class: Jose Arias, Dennis Decauwer, Jim Goodman, and Bill Shurman.

The NHC, the world's richest and most prestigious handicapping contest, featured 779 entrants competing for more than $3.1 million in cash and prizes. All qualifiers received a complimentary four night stay at the Horseshoe Las Vegas and travel reimbursements which totaled more than $1 million.

The tournament format for the NHC is meant to be the best possible test of overall handicapping ability by picking winners. Players attempt to earn the highest possible bankroll based on mythical $2 Win and Place wagers. Assigned “mandatory” races – eight per day on Day 1 and Day 2, and seven at the Final Table – are announced at least 36 hours prior to each contest day via direct e-mail to players and publicly on Twitter (@NTRA) and NTRA.com.

In addition to its three presenting sponsors ― Caesars Entertainment, Horseshoe Las Vegas and RTN ― the NHC is supported by official partners Daily Racing Form, EquinEdge, Four Roses Bourbon and Race Lens.

For the complete Caesar's Race and Sports Book NHC Leaderboard and other contest information, please visit NTRA.com. To sign up for the NHC Tour, go to www.ntra.com/membership.

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‘This Was Certainly The Distance We’ve Been Waiting For’: Ballet Dancing Stretches Out, Scores Comfortable Santa Ana Victory

In her first try at 1 1/4 miles on turf and ridden for the first time by Flavien Prat, trainer Simon Callaghan's Ballet Dancing stalked longshot Annaghlasa to the quarter pole, then took control from there before scoring a dominant 3½-length tally in Sunday's $100,000 Santa Ana (G3) at Santa Anita

Ballet Dancing finished the distance in 2:01.25 on a turf course rated as good.

Breaking alertly from the far outside, Ballet Dancing was quickly into stride as Annaghlasa and Ramon Vazquez set about carving out realistic early fractions of :24.01, :47.22 and 1:12.07 for six furlongs. (The one-mile fraction, set by the winner, was 1:36.70).

With 3-2 favorite Australia Mia in deep water midway around the far turn, there were no “dangers” among the remaining six older fillies and mares, and Prat and Ballet Dancing were able to put the Santa Ana away at the top of the lane.

“I watched some videos of her and talked to Simon,” said Prat, who rung up his second stakes win of the weekend and his eighth overall at the Classic Meet. “She (broke) well, got ourselves in the race and I was traveling really well all the way around. She responded really well when I asked her.”

When asked about the softer turf today, Prat responded “The turf has a little cut to it, but I thought it was really good.”

A first condition allowance winner going 1 1/8 miles on turf at Santa Anita two starts back on Dec. 26, Ballet Dancing was most recently fourth as the favorite in a second condition allowance at the same distance Feb. 3, Ballet Dancing was off  at 9-2 Sunday and paid $11.40 for the win.

“This was certainly the distance we've been waiting for,” said Callaghan. “…I think now as an older mare, she's just gonna flourish and I think these longer distances, a mile and a quarter and a mile and a half, they are going to be right in her wheelhouse.

“That's very much what the pedigree suggests and her (physical) frame. I think we should have a fun older year with her.”

A 4-year-old filly by Medaglia d'Oro out of the Unbridled's Song mare Fully Living, Ballet Dancing was purchased from co-breeder Ashview Farm for $800,000 at the 2020 Keeneland September yearling sale. M. V. Magnier signed the ticket. She is owned by Westerberg, Mrs. John Magnier, Michael Tabor, and Derrick Smith.

Third in the Honeymoon Stakes (G3) versus 3-year-old fillies in her third career start, Ballet Dancing notched her first stakes win Sunday and improved her overall mark to 3-1-2 from nine career starts. With the winner's share of $60,000, she increased her earnings to $191,060.

Sixth, about 4 ½ lengths off the lead at the half-mile pole, Queen Ofthe Temple rallied well for the place while not threatening the winner. She finished a head better than third-place finisher Duvet Day.

An upset winner of the 1 1/2-mile Astra Stakes on turf at Santa Anita Jan. 21, Duvet Day lacked a similar closing kick at the Santa Ana distance and finished a nose better than fellow Irish-bred Buzz of New York.

The 3-2 favorite with Frankie Dettori, Australia Mia finished a distant last.

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Resilience And Willingness: 37-Year-Old Sofia Barandela Not Your Average Apprentice

By Geoff Riggs

Having a successful first meet at Fair Grounds, Sofia Barnadela is proving it's never too late to follow your dreams.

With 12 wins on the meet, Barandela has won with 11% of her mounts, piloting difference-making rides and outrunning her mounts' odds. The same can be said for the story of how she got here. Sunday is her 37th birthday, not the typical age for an apprentice jockey. Likewise, her story is a testament to her resilience and willingness to blaze her own path.

Barandela began dreaming of becoming a jockey while growing up in Mexico.

“I was always in touch with horses, but never with the racetrack,” she said. “I did dressage and show jumping, but my grandpa had Quarter Horses and Thoroughbreds. My only contact with racing was through him and a painting he had of horses at Royal Ascot. So, my night stories were about jockeys and racing, but I was always told I would be a tall, strong woman, and jockeys were not that.”

Deciding to put her jockey aspirations on the back burner, Barandela pivoted to pursue a career in veterinary medicine. However, it did not take long to find her way back to racing.

“When I was doing my vet practice in Mexico, I went to the racetrack and started getting in contact with people from the backside,” Barandela recalled. “I met some trainers and decided I wanted to gallop one horse.”

At the age of 25, Barandela galloped her first racehorse. When asked how her family reacted, she said, “My dad used to race motorbikes, so I think I got the need for adrenaline from him. My mom used to raise horses. When they saw I was serious about learning, they supported me from day one.”

Quickly falling in love with the racetrack, Barandela found herself juggling many activities until an opportunity arose.

“I would go to the racetrack early, then to my vet practice, then ride my two show jumpers,” she said. “One day somebody asked me if I wanted to be a jockey. I was almost ashamed to say yes because I thought people would make fun of me.”

One of only three female riders on the grounds, things were not easy early on.

“Everyone thought we just liked horses or were 'playing pony' but we were serious,” she said. “I only rode a couple months and won one race while in Mexico.”

A dual citizen of Mexico and Spain, Barandela decided to seek a new opportunity and move to Europe.

“I thought I could be both a vet and a jockey, but Mexico was very insecure,” she said. “The risk was too high and the pay too low for both vets and jockeys, and many vets got robbed. You save all this money to get equipment, only to get robbed because you have Ketamine and other drugs.”

Fluent in three languages, Barandela is an avid traveler and photographer. She spent the next three years between Spain, France, Germany, and England, but found racing opportunities few and far between.

“I finally said 'OK, to really start riding, I need to go back to America where I know people.' I also like the (American) riding style. In Europe, they say I look like a monkey on a horse,” Barandela said with a laugh. “But for me, how they ride doesn't feel comfortable. It is just a different style.”

In April 2017, Barandela moved to California and began galloping horses for top trainers such as John Sadler, Keith Desormeaux, George Papaprodromou, and Michael McCarthy. She worked with some top horses, as well.

“I was lucky enough to gallop Rombauer, Ce Ce, Rushie, Smooth Like Strait,” Barandela reflected. “I then started promoting myself as a work rider. I got a good education there.”

Referencing the experienced riders who helped her during this time, Barandela said, “All the jockeys in the room were always good. Mike Smith, (Corey) Nakatani, and (Edwin) Maldanado were always helpful. Mike Smith is very patient. They all have different styles.”

In 2021, Barandela had a friend attempt to convince her to ride races in Wyoming and Colorado.

“I'm like 'I'm galloping at Del Mar, why would I ride races in Rock Springs, Wyoming?' Barandela said, recalling her initial skepticism. “But I sat down one day and thought 'OK, if it's not now, then never. I will try.' So, I finished at Del Mar and drove to Wyoming.”

Barandela rode seven races in Wyoming and won twice at Arapahoe Park in Colorado, before moving her tack to Turf Paradise in Phoenix, Arizona.

“In Phoenix I had no agent, so it was tough,” she said. “People recommended different agents and most of them said no. They either had somebody else, didn't want an apprentice, or didn't want a woman. One was very offended and said, 'This is a young man's business, and you are an old woman. You have no business here.'”

Not easily discouraged, Barandela continued knocking on doors. Eventually one led to her current agent, Chuck Costanzo.

“I called him and called him,” she recalled. “Finally, Chuck got back to me. I told him I needed his help and wanted to go to Minnesota. He asked, 'how many races have you won?' I said 'Two!' and he was laughing so hard. I sent him my replays and I think he saw something in me.”

To Barandela's surprise, Costanzo proposed a plan to ride at Canterbury Park and then Fair Grounds.

“I was like 'Me? Fair Grounds?' I had begun to doubt myself a little because it had been so long,” she said.

Continuing to practice her craft in Minnesota, Barandela's year of apprenticeship unexpectedly began on June 9, 2022 (at five career wins) when she guided home a 13-1 longshot named Big Boy McCoy.

“The horse was the longest shot in the field and had never done anything, but that day he just wanted to win,” she remembered with a smile.

After an unplanned stint in Chicago, it was off to New Orleans for the Fair Grounds winter meet. Joining such a decorated jockey colony can be intimidating, but Barandela beamed about how welcoming it has been.

“James Graham always teaches me, I don't even have to ask, he comes and tells me.” Barandela said. “Corey Lanerie also helps me. Of course, Johnny Velazquez when he was here. Everybody is very supportive.”

With 12 wins on the meet and guiding many other runners to outperform their odds, Barandela has a special connection with the horses she rides.

“That's the one thing I have,” she adamantly said. “The connection with them. I think they want to run for me. I have been with horses all of my life, but my racing experience has only been a year.”

Grabbing a lock of her hair she continued.

“I feel like I am like Avatar and connect my hair with them,” she explained. “With a lot of horses in the post parade, I will talk to them, and they move their ears. That lets me know 'OK, they are connecting right now.'”

Barandela is not yet sure where she will head when the current meet ends, but will likely return to Chicago, Minnesota, or Texas. She sees the unknown as an opportunity.

“I've lived a long life with many stories,” she said. “I think I have lived many lives in one. When I studied animal medicine, people were like 'you cannot do anything else, you spent six years doing that.' Well, it was six great years learning and traveling. I have a lot of stories in my life that were tragic, which is why I finally decided to try race riding.

“If it's my time, I don't want to die before I fulfill my dreams. I won't change the world by race riding, but it is my dream. I always try to encourage people to do what they love.”

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