Breeders’ Cup Diaries: Leonard Looks Back At His Racing Start In Louisiana Backcountry

This is our third edition in a daily diary series following trainer George Leonard's first trip to the Breeders' Cup with California Angel. Find Part 1 here and Part 2 here.

It may be the first time George Leonard has brought a horse to Del Mar, but he managed to find a familiar face on the West Coast. Leonard left his regular exercise riders back home with his Indiana Grand string, and picked up the services of jockey Chester Bonnet to help him work California Angel ahead of her run in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf.

Bonnet and Leonard go way back, to the days when both were still in their home states of Louisiana. Leonard transferred to Indiana and Kentucky, and Bonnet came to California to be nearer to his son.

“I like the weather better [in California],” Bonnet said. “And the view, the beaches. But there's nothing like home.”

Neither Bonnet or Leonard could remember whether they won a race together in those days, but in a way it doesn't much matter.

Bonnet has had a light year in the starting gates, working back from one injury when he ended up with a back spasm and had to take more time off. He has been back in the tack for about two weeks after a four-month layoff and is still pressing on to resume race riding. California Angel is giving him a workout – the farther she goes, the tougher she gets, wanting to pull forward.

Like Leonard, Bonnet said his experience aboard the California Chrome daughter suggested a mentally mature 2-year-old filly who is professional and eager to go to work. Keen observers of the pair's Tuesday gallop may have noticed her propensity for swapping leads, not just at the usual place in the stretch, but here and there throughout her canter around the Del Mar oval. That's totally normal for her, Leonard said. If anything, it's a sign of how well she's feeling.

“In trying to get away, she'll start switching leads,” he said. “She throws her head and switches leads, then tries to put her head down so [the rider] will turn her loose. Throw the head up, then try to take off in stride. She's a little different. And that's ok.”

California Angel and Bonnet on their gallop Nov. 3

California Angel will get even more to look at when she schools in the paddock in the coming weeks. Leonard knows that with the fan base California Chrome has, he'll need to have her ready to deal with a crowd of people jockeying for a look at the bright chestnut with the flashy white markings.

California Angel is situated in one of Del Mar's long, low barns reserved mostly for the out of state shippers. Bill Mott's runners are down the way, and Chad Brown's horses cool out in the row throughout morning training. Of all the horsemen, riders, and reporters gathered outside the open aisle-ways, Leonard's trademark cowboy hat makes him easy to pick out. Where he came from, that was part of the uniform.

Leonard was born near Chicago but his parents hailed from Louisiana and returned there with him when he was young. Most of his Thoroughbred education comes from tracks you may have heard of – Delta Downs, Evangeline, etc. – but some of his earliest afternoons at the races were at the bush tracks you probably haven't heard of, little spots known only to the locals that used to be common in rural Louisiana.

“There'd be a grove of trees, horses tied to trees,” he said. “There were no barns. People had horses tied to trucks and trailers.

“Half the people were poor. They had no shoes on, pants rolled up, cowboy hats folded in half. The whole family's out with the horse. It was just a lot of fun.”

A bush track was very often not a track but a straight chute, sometimes emptying into a corn field. Leonard said he was a child when his father, who was a trainer, used to take the family to the bush tracks on the weekend. It was a social event as much as it was a friendly competition, with parents, children, and extended families gathering, sharing food, standing around talking horses.

Many of the country's top jockeys, including Calvin Borel, Shane Sellers, Eddie Delahoussaye, and others got their start on bush tracks, often riding as children before they could be licensed at a parimutuel facility.

When there wasn't a foolhardy kid interested in hopping on a horse for a quick jaunt down the chute (or when the trainer had other ideas), they sent the horses with no riders. Leonard said it was called “catch weight racing,” where the horse carried whatever weight it carried, and they weren't supposed to all be equal.

Sometimes that meant the horses carried chickens on their backs instead of people, the idea being that the chicken could be secured onto the horse with its wings could be held still until the start of the race when it would be released and it would flap its feathers, chasing the horse forward down the shoot. (In case you also wondered, there does not seem to have evolved a chicken ranking system whereby particular poultry became sought-after pilots. Previous experience was not required for chicken jockeys.) Leonard said he never met a horse who acclimated to being ridden by a chicken, so previous experience was also immaterial to the outcome for the horse.

In other cases, Leonard recalled that horsemen would tie beer cans with little bits of gravel in them onto horses' stirrups, so the rattling would prompt them to run forward. A pony rider would sit at the end of the chute, ready to free the chicken or secure the stirrups and pull up the horse. The ponies, predictably, were absolutely dead broke to any of the shenanigans you could throw at them.

“You had to see it to believe it,” he said. “I'd seen some things. They'd get to drinking a little bit and it'd be man against man, foot racing. They'd get in the gates and off they'd go. It was hilarious. I've got pictures – these guys would stand up to take a picture like a horse after the foot race. The family would stand all around and the guy would get down on one knee.”

Though the bush tracks were a very different kind of scene from the sanctioned racing where Leonard has made his career, they were, in a way, a return to racing's origins. Louisianans told the New York Daily News in 2009 that the most famous of the bush tracks dated back before the Great Depression.

“People would get together and say, 'My horse can beat your horse,' and run at two or three o'clock,” he said. “It wasn't about the money. They'd run for $5 or $20 was big money for them.”

Leonard said those horses were not Thoroughbreds. Most were Quarter Horses, but some were of less clear-cut origin. A few backyard riding horses may have snuck in from time to time. But it wasn't about where they came from – it was about which man thought his horse was fastest, and was willing to prove it. Leonard said he didn't glean many of his lessons in horsemanship from the bush tracks, but he does believe he has come to Del Mar with the best horse, and he's eager for Friday to come so he can show her off.

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Delacour Hopes ‘Very Clever’ Koala Princess Can Step Up In BC Juvenile Fillies Turf

Trainer Arnaud Delacour has finished fourth, third and second with his first three Breeders' Cup starters.

The Tampa Bay Downs conditioner believes he has a good chance of continuing that upward trend in Friday's $1-million Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf at Del Mar with his 2-year-old Koala Princess.

“She is very fast and she is very clever. She's smart about everything,” said Delacour, who will send Koala Princess out against 13 rivals in the 1-mile race. “If the rider doesn't ask her, she doesn't go, and if he asks her, she goes. She listens to the rider all the time.”

Koala Princess, who is 2-for-2, will be ridden by Joel Rosario, who was aboard for her Sept. 12 victory in the Ainsworth Stakes at Kentucky Downs. She came from far back in the 6 ½-furlong race to win going away from 10 rivals. Koala Princess had broken her maiden on Aug. 21 at Monmouth Park in a commanding gate-to-wire performance, resulting in an 8 ¼-length victory under Hector Diaz, Jr.

Koala Princess is the 6-1 co-second choice in a race that may be the most wide-open of any among the 14 Breeders' Cup World Championships races scheduled Friday and Saturday in southern California.

“At this time of year, you never really know which horse is going to make that step forward, who is going to peak that day,” Delacour said. “And with 14 2-year-old fillies in the race, you need to get a good break from the post and have a clean trip to have a good chance of winning.”

Koala Princess and Rosario will break from the No. 9 post. The daughter of More Than Ready is owned by her breeders – Runnymede Farm, Inc., Peter Callahan and Frederick C. Zinkhan – in partnership with John C. Oxley.

The first of Del Mar's 10 races Friday begins at 2:55 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time, with each of the day's five Breeders' Cup races featuring 2-year-olds. The Juvenile Fillies Turf, at a distance of a mile, is the eighth race on the card.

Saturday's 12-race card, which includes nine Breeders' Cup races, starts at 1:15 p.m. Eastern. Saturday's showcase is the $6-million Longines Breeders' Cup Classic, with Knicks Go, Essential Quality, Hot Rod Charlie, Medina Spirit and Art Collector among the contenders.

Koala Princess is one of three Breeders' Cup entrants from the barns of Tampa Bay Downs trainers. H. Graham Motion will be represented on Saturday in the fifth race, the $1-million, 5-furlong Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint, by 4-year-old filly Caravel. Jose Ortiz will ride the 20-1 shot for owners Bobby Flay and Elizabeth M. Merryman, who is also Caravel's breeder. Caravel drew the No. 8 post in the 12-horse field.

While the 8-year-old Florida-bred gelding Extravagant Kid – who won the 2019 Florida Cup Zaxby's Sprint Stakes at Tampa Bay Downs – is also part of the Turf Sprint field, another Oldsmar fan favorite, 7-year-old gelding The Critical Way, is on the also-eligible list, needing a couple of late scratches to draw into the race.

Trained by 2020-2021 Oldsmar runner-up conditioner Jose H. Delgado for owner Monster Racing Stables, The Critical Way won the $100,000 Turf Dash Stakes here on Feb. 24 and has won his last two starts, including the Grade 3 Parx Dash Stakes on Aug. 31 at Parx Racing.

Back to Delacour, who has had a couple of close calls in his previous Breeders' Cup attempts. In 2014 at Santa Anita, his then-5-year-old mare Ageless finished fourth in the Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint, less than a length behind winner Bobby's Kitten and Rosario.

Two years later, Delacour brought 6-year-old gelding A. P. Indian, a multiple-Grade 1 winner, to Santa Anita for a third-place finish in the TwinSpires Breeders' Cup Sprint, won by Drefong. His third try, at Churchill Downs in 2018, was almost the charm, as his 4-year-old filly Chalon fell victim by a head to Shamrock Rose's whirlwind rally in the Breeders' Cup Filly and Mare Sprint.

While assistance from the racing gods is always welcome, Delacour is mainly relying on Koala Princess's speed and desire to land her in the winner's circle. He and his wife Leigh, who exercised the filly when she first arrived in their Tampa Bay Downs barn last spring, had high hopes from the beginning.

“She was doing everything right,” said Delacour, who trained the filly's mother, Koala Queen, to three career victories. “We had in mind starting her at Belmont Park in the spring, but she had a minor shin issue so we backed off. She ran very impressively in both of her races. When you have a filly who wins sprinting and shows that much speed, you always worry about their ability to settle in longer races. But she has been so easy in the mornings and in her races, I don't think it will be a problem.”

While Delacour seeks his first taste of Breeders' Cup nectar, Motion – best known as the trainer of 2011 Kentucky Derby winner Animal Kingdom – has won four Breeders' Cup races. He won the 2004 John Deere Breeders' Cup Turf with Better Talk Now; the 2010 Emirates Airline Filly and Mare Turf with Shared Account; the 2014 Longines Turf with Main Sequence; and the 2019 Juvenile Fillies Turf with Sharing.

Motion took over the training of Caravel from the filly's breeder and owner Elizabeth Merryman – a good friend who, like Motion, conditions horses at the Fair Hill Training Center in Maryland – after her victory on July 24 in the Grade 3 Caress Stakes at Saratoga. That result came after celebrity chef Bobby Flay bought a majority interest in Caravel.

”Graham has so much experience going that (Breeders' Cup) route,” Merryman said at the time of the trainer change. “It seemed like a really smart thing to do from my perspective as well. Not that I don't think I could handle it, but with the change in the ownership, Graham has a system that works great and he's been through all that.”

The daughter of Mizzen Mast, whose 7-for-11 record includes five stakes triumphs, was the only female competitor in both of her races under Motion. She finished third on Aug. 22 in the Grade 1 Highlander Stakes at Woodbine, then finished in a dead-heat for sixth on Sept. 25 in the Grade 3 Turf Monster Stakes at Parx Racing.

The 12-horse Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint field includes four fillies and mares to go with eight colts and geldings.

“I thought the (Highlander) was an excellent performance with it being her first Grade 1 race and her first time running against males,” Motion said. “Plus she wound up being on the lead early, which is something she is not accustomed to. I drew a line through the (Turf Monster) because the turf was in terrible condition and we probably should have scratched her.”

“She is coming into the race in good form and the fact that Jose is able to stay with her is a bonus,” Motion added.

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As for Delgado, he can only take a wait-and-see approach toward the possibility of The Critical Way getting into the race. “He is a very consistent horse who gives 100 percent no matter where I take him,” said Delgado, who has campaigned The Critical Way at six different tracks this year. “He's been eating good and looking happy, but now we have to see what happens.”

Another Tampa Bay Downs trainer, Juan Arriagada, hoped to have his first Breeders' Cup starter in Saturday's $1-million Breeders' Cup Filly and Mare Sprint. But the connections were forced to scratch the 4-year-old daughter of Maclean's Music due to an issue with her right foreleg.

It was a tough break for Estilo Talentoso and Arriagada, who had sold her to a partnership before her June 4 victory in the Grade 3 Bed o'Roses Stakes at Belmont Park while continuing to train her.

“It's not easy to come from so far away (Delaware Park) and get scratched,” Arriagada said.

Estilo Talentoso is slated to be sold at Tuesday's Fasig-Tipton auction in Lexington.

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Breeders’ Cup Diaries: Leonard Awaiting The Arrival Of His Golden Girl

Today, we're launching a daily diary following the journey of trainer George Leonard III to his first Breeders' Cup with California Angel. The 2-year-old daughter of fan favorite California Chrome will contest the Juvenile Fillies Turf on Friday and has brought the longtime trainer to California for the very first time. 

Before this week, George Leonard had only seen Del Mar in photos and video. Like many of us who go racing in California for the first time, he said it's more beautiful in person. The palm trees are taller, the surf bluer, and the stage somehow bigger than you imagine until you see it.

Leonard has been on quite the media tour in the past two weeks since California Angel was the surprise winner of the Grade 2 “Win And You're In” Jessamine Stakes at Keeneland with a come-from-the clouds effort. Reporters from nearly every major trade publication sought out the soft-spoken man in the cowboy hat at the post position draw Monday afternoon, leaning close to hear his polite, patient answers to every question.

In a sport dominated by super stables, Leonard is a breath of fresh air for fans and turfwriters. He took out his trainer's license in 1991 but has stayed mostly off the radar to those of us who focus our attention on graded stakes company. He followed in the footsteps of his father, who was a horse trainer mostly as a side job. The whole family raced on weekends in Louisiana, first at the bush tracks and later at Delta Downs. It has to be jarring, suddenly finding cameras and recorders in your face like this. If it is, Leonard hides it well.

“It's an honor,” he said. “I don't look at it as nothing but I'm blessed to get the attention that I'm getting. I'm blessed people are looking at my story. For me, it's a great thing.

“It's a dream come true to get the horse of a lifetime. That's what she's been for me — the horse of a lifetime. I'm just hoping we get bigger and better things from here.”

Leonard said he's not worried about drawing the outside post position in the field of 14. California Angel's win in the Jessamine brought her eight wide with a just-in-time late flight. Staying outside of all the traffic she won't be chasing gives her more options, he figures.

“She'll go outside and she'll control her own fate from there,” he said. “She's got speed. That'll suit her just fine. It's all up to her.

“She shouldn't get squeezed and she'll have dead aim from the outside. I'll take that with a smile on my face.”

The only thing he is worried about at the moment is finding out when his horse will make it to Del Mar. The flight scheduled to take her from her Indiana base to California was delayed several times on Monday, which was supposed to be her arrival day. At the time of the draw, she was supposed to be in the barn already, but still hadn't departed yet. Leonard knew he may be staring down a long night hanging around the barn, waiting for his prized chestnut to make her appearance. It's impossible to know which horses will find long distance flights or travel delays stressful until they actually try it, and California Angel hasn't had to contend with a long haul yet in her career.

As far as he can make out from the FedEx staff on the ground though, Leonard is pretty sure the logistical snafus are making him more anxious than his horse.

“When she gets here and gets in the stall, then I can relax,” he said. “Then we can start looking forward to the race. I'll be a lot easier when she's here.

“She's a big fan of her hay. As long as she's got a big hay bag in front of her, and right now, I talked to the owner earlier, she's eating her hay and is pretty content. As long as you keep hay in front of her, she's golden.”

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‘Older, Wiser And Hopefully A Little Better’: Desormeaux, Hess Back Together For Breeders’ Cup

In 1991, Robert B. Hess, Jr., won the first of back-to-back Del Mar training titles. In 1992, Hess' championship cohort was jockey Kent Desormeaux, who would score his first of back-to-back riding titles and rack up 135 wins in the two-year span.

A lot has happened in the 30 years since.

Desormeaux, 51, has notched victories in three Kentucky Derbies, three Preakness and a Belmont Stakes. He has six Breeders' Cup wins, three Eclipse Awards and has held membership in racing's Hall of Fame since 2004. With two wins Sunday at Santa Anita, Equibase statistics show him with 6,101 career victories from 32,413 mounts in a 35-year career.

Hess, 56, has gone nationwide with strings in Kentucky and Florida. But the native of Chula Vista has remained headquartered in Southern California and unabashedly citing Del Mar as holding a special place in his heart.

“Del Mar is my paradise,” Hess said Sunday. It is, after all, the place that provided him with his first winner (Palapiano, July 31, 1987), first training title in 1991 and first graded stakes winner (River Special, 1992 Del Mar Futurity).

And as they have over the years, Desormeaux and Hess are hoping to make headlines again when they team up with Cairo Memories in the Juvenile Fillies Turf and Chaos Theory in the Turf Sprint during Breeders' Cup weekend.

“I've got gray hair and he's got a couple of wrinkles, but hopefully we're older, wiser and hopefully a little better,” Hess said. “But we have the A-team back together and we're looking forward to it.”

Cairo Memories, a daughter of Cairo Prince, was pre-entered in the Juvenile Fillies and Juvenile Fillies Turf and will go in the $1 million, one mile grass event. She is 2-for-2 in a career begun at Del Mar on Sept. 5 and comes in off a win in the Surfer Girl Stakes at Santa Anita on Oct. 3.

“Cairo is splendid, a wonderful, gifted filly and just a pleasure to be around,” Hess said. “Unless the jock screws it up (with a wink toward Desormeaux), I think we'll get the money.”

Chaos Theory, like Cairo Memories owned by David Bernsen and partners, is a 6-year-old gelded son of Curlin. He has six wins in 18 starts with earnings of $359,454. Chaos Theory is 0-for-5 in 2021 but won both his career starts at Del Mar – the Green Flash in August and an optional claimer in November of 2020. Desormeaux was aboard for the first time in a third-place finish in the Eddie D Stakes at Santa Anita on Oct. 1.

Chaos Theory is one of 19 pre-entered in the $1 million, five-furlong event.

“Chaos, if he gets in, will run fantastic,” Hess said. “I've tweaked a few things, Kent knows him even better and it will be at his favorite distance on his favorite turf course.”

Desormeaux has one other Breeders' Cup mount lined up, Oviatt Class in the $2 million TVG Breeders' Cup Juvenile for his trainer/brother Keith.

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