‘God Wanted Me Here For Some Reason’: Baze Loving Life After Brush With Death

Two weeks into the Bing Crosby Season and jockey Tyler Baze has three wins from 11 mounts. Not bad for a guy who was on death's doorstep just a few months ago.

Baze has been riding at Del Mar since he captured the 2000 Eclipse Award for outstanding apprentice jockey. His career has been a mix of peaks and valleys. Peaks that included rides in the Kentucky Derby (G1) and the Breeders' Cup to valleys filled with substance abuse and suspensions. But none of that mattered when he began suffering stomach pains earlier this year.

“Right after Christmas last year I started having problems,” Baze said. “I couldn't eat; I couldn't use the bathroom. I was in Arkansas and went to Urgent Care. Went there a couple two or three times. I went to the hospital a couple two or three times. They didn't know what was wrong with me. I finally landed in the hospital with a bowel obstruction. I pretty much colicked like a horse.”

The 41-year-old rider was told if he didn't have immediate surgery, he would die.

“I got admitted to the hospital on the 18th of April and they couldn't find it until May 1st,” Baze said. “I've broken a lot of bones, but I've never felt a pain like that one. That guy came in after they finally found it and said you're going to die if we don't do the surgery right now.”

Surgeons cut through the muscles in his stomach to get to the problem.

“In the hospital I lost 20 pounds,” Baze said. “Got down to 96 pounds. I was very brittle and very ugly to look at, that's for sure.”

Fast forward six months later and Baze is back on horses, doing what he loves.

“I feel good, probably stronger than I've ever been,” Baze said. “I've never worked out this hard and never been this healthy.”

He insists there's no “load management' ” involved in his comeback.

“I'd like to be on more horses, but that'll come around. If I'm driving down there (to Del Mar) I want to ride every race.”

Baze got back up on a horse a little over a month after the surgery.

“I'm a little cocky when it comes to my body,” Baze said. “I like to push things. I got up on a horse just before everybody left for Del Mar in July. I just wanted to get on a horse and test my body out. See where it's at. It was a little painful, but I was OK. It actually didn't hurt as much as I was expecting.”

He rode his first race at the end of the summer meet at Del Mar for Michelle Hanson.

“It was kind of another test for my body to see where I was at,” Baze said. “I was fine. I had a bunch of people ask me to ride Los Al but I already had plans with my kids. They had a school camping trip. So I didn't ride Los Al and started back at Santa Anita.”

Baze will tell you he's had a pretty good career. His highlight came in 2014 when he notched his 2,000th win at Del Mar the day before his daughter was born.

“After you go through what I did, I tell you, when you get that close to death you take every moment,” he said. “I'm just blessed to be here because horses die from colic all the time. I could have got sepsis, that thing that poisons your blood. A lot of things could have gone wrong.

“All I can say is God wanted me here for some reason,” Baze continued. “Every time I get to go out on the racetrack I think about it a lot more now. A lot of people don't get to do what I do. I love my job and I love my horses.”

Baze has 2,893 wins from 21,829 mounts that have amassed more than $132 million in purse earnings.

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‘Bit Of A Struggle’: Field Size Down Just Past Midway Point Of Del Mar Fall Meet

Past the midway point of the Bing Crosby Season at Del Mar, the effects of the rain and the closing of the track to training last weekend are showing up in the numbers used to gauge the success of the meet.

It affected field sizes, which are down a bit this year compared with 2022.

After six days there have been 52 races with 366 horses for an average of 7.04 per race, down from 7.55 per race at this point last year.

“Overall, it's been a little bit of struggle,” Racing Secretary David Jerkens said. “The training disruptions last week certainly didn't help. It's not up to the standard we typically have in the fall thus far, but six days is a small sample size.”

Just the threat of rain and the closing of the main track to training on Saturday and Sunday threw a wrench into things. Many trainers missed works for their horses and chose not to enter in the races. There were 176 starters in 26 races last week for a field average of 6.77, down from 7.15 in the second week of the fall meet a year ago.

“Trainers are very patterned,” Jerkens notes. “They have their regiments and when that gets disrupted, not only here but also at Santa Anita, certain trainers won't enter because they didn't get to work.”

“Hopefully we're clear the rest of the way,” Jerkens said. “So much of this fall meet is dependent on Mother Nature.”

The hope is those trainers who passed on the races last week will re-enter in races scheduled in the final two weeks of the meet.

The turf racing at Del Mar remains strong. There have been 27 races run on the Jimmy Durante Turf Course with a total of 206 runners for a 7.63 average field size. Those numbers are expected to increase this week during the Turf Festival.

“We're expecting probably about a dozen or so shippers,” Jerkens said. “That definitely helps add to the intrigue of those races. I know they're off the turf now in New York. In Kentucky, they're just trying to get through the Churchill meet, so we're hoping for a strong contingent of shippers.”

The number of shippers racing during the first two weeks of the meet are down sharply in 2023. This year there have been seven horses qualifying for the 'Ship & Win' program compared to 21 in the first two weeks last year.

“In years past we've had quite a bit of contributions from all over,” Jerkens recalls. “Locally, we have some participants that will be very strong. Phil D'Amato's all over every race so I think we'll have a good local contingent.”

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Japan Road To KY Derby: Striking White Colt Amante Bianco Wins Cattleya Stakes At Tokyo

Silk Racing Co. Ltd.'s Amante Bianco kicked off the Japan Road to the Kentucky Derby by defeating 15 rivals in Saturday's Cattleya Stakes at Tokyo Racecourse.

Trained by Keisuke Miyata and ridden by Christophe Lemaire, Amante Bianco rallied from just off the pace in the far turn and gamely dug in down the stretch to get by George Tesoro just before the wire, winning by three-quarters of a length while covering 1,600 meters (about one mile) in 1:37.5 on dirt rated as fine.

Unquenchable rallied on the outside to finish third followed by Star Turn in fourth and filly More Than Once in fifth. Favorite Rata Forest was seventh.

The top five finishers in the Cattleya eared 10-5-3-2-1 points in the stand-alone series on the Road to Kentucky Derby 150.

Amante Bianco is a rare white Thoroughbred who was bred by Northern Farm. The talented 2-year-old is by Henny Hughes out of the Japan-bred white mare Yukichan, by Kurofune. Second dam Shirayukihime, by Sunday Silence, also is registered as white.

The Cattleya was Amante Bianco's second victory from three career starts, all at Toyko

The Japan Road to the Kentucky Derby will continue Dec. 13 for the Zen-Nippon Nisai Yushun at Kawasaki Racecourse. For more information about the Japan Road to the Kentucky Derby, visit www.kentuckyderby.com.

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Clark Winner Trademark Possible For Pegasus World Cup

BBN Racing's Trademark tied his career best Brisnet Speed Rating of 103 with his nose victory over favorite First Mission in Friday's 149th running of the Clark (G2) at Churchill Downs.

“I've always wanted to win the Clark, but we always had fillies in our barn,” trainer Vicki Oliver said. “Now, we have a lot of colts and it's really fun to win a race like this.”

Trademark, who collected his first graded stakes win and became racing's newest millionaire, clocked 1 1/8 miles on a fast track in 1:49.95 under jockey Fernando De La Cruz and earned his second win from nine starts this year.

Oliver said the $3-million Pegasus World Cup (G1) Jan. 27 at Gulfstream Park is a possible target for Trademark's next start.

A 4-year-old Upstart gelding, Trademark has run some of his best efforts at Churchill Downs. Three starts ago in the Lukas Classic (G2), Trademark also earned a 103 Brisnet Speed Rating for his runner-up finish to Clapton. He closed his 2022 season with a four-length win in the Commonwealth Turf when the race was moved from the turf to a sloppy (sealed) main track at the Louisville oval.

Trademark has 6-3-1 record from 22 career starts and $1,055,865 in purse earnings.

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