Baffert Back To Business In Juvenile Stakes At Del Mar

It may be easier for Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert to decompress and recover from last week's Breeders' Cup World Championships than the majority of Del Mar racing fans.

Last Saturday, Baffert was busy with five horses to saddle in four Breeders' Cup races. It began with Gamine finishing third as the 2/5 favorite in the Filly & Mare Sprint and continued with Eight Rings (4th) in the Dirt Mile, As Time Goes By (8th), and Private Mission (11th) in the Distaff and concluded with Medina Spirit (2nd) in the Classic at Del Mar Thoroughbred Club in Del Mar, Calif.

A day earlier his Corniche had triumphed in the Juvenile with Del Mar Futurity winner Pinehurst (5th) and Barossa (9th).

A lot to get the adrenaline flowing in a 68-year-old, even one of his experience and accomplishments. But, Baffert said, recovery time from the rigors of the Breeders' Cup was minimal for him.

“As soon as it goes official, I'm thinking about the next one (race or event),” Baffert said. “I'm proud of all my horses other than Gamine and I blame myself for that. I should have given her a prep race.”

Gamine came in with five straight graded stakes victories by a combined 23 ½ lengths, but hadn't raced since late August.

He considered Private Mission, winner of the Torrey Pines Stakes here during the summer meeting, and As Time Goes By to be victims of circumstance.

Private Mission, As Time Goes By and favored Letruska blazed early before occupying three of the last four finishing positions as longshot Marche Lorraine ($101.80) rallied to win.

“We thought nobody would go with Private Mission, and then they all did,” Baffert said.

The Breeders' Cup ended on something of a high note for Baffert when Kentucky Derby winner (pending a Kentucky Racing Commission ruling) Medina Spirit finished second to runaway winner Knicks Go, polishing off a strong case for an Eclipse Award as the top 3-year-old.

This weekend, it will be back to business as usual for Baffert. That is, looming large over and being positioned to dominate Juvenile stakes races. Baffert will saddle 6/5 morning line favorite Eda and Under the Stars in a field of five for Saturday's $100,000 Desi Arnaz Stakes, a 6 ½-furlong sprint for 2-year-old fillies. Sunday, he has three of the five entered, not coincidentally the top three choices on the morning line, in the seven furlong Grade 3 Bob Hope Stakes – Winning Map (7/5), Messier (8/5), and Kamui (5/2).

First the fillies:

“Under the Stars is a maiden (0-for-1) but she ran well the first time out and we feel she fits in there,” Baffert said. “It's a short field and an opportunity to get black type (stakes placing) on her record.

“Eda we think will like that distance.”

Eda, runner-up by a head to Elm Drive in the six-furlong G2 Sorrento Stakes in August, was the 6/5 favorite in the $300,000 G1 Del Mar Debutante on September 5. But Eda was cooked in a speed duel with Elm Drive which saw them put up fractions of :21.78 and :44.37 for the first half-mile of the seven-furlong test and fade to fifth.

“They went so fast (in the Debutante) that everything fell apart, which happens,” Baffert said with a chuckle and nod to Gamine as well as the $2 million Longines Breeders' Cup Distaff.

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Now the colts in the Bob Hope:

“I hate to run them all together, but they're all doing well and deserve a shot,” the trainer offered.

Winning Map debuted with a 4 1/4-length victory in 1:10.20 for six furlongs at Santa Anita on October 3. Messier, is named after NHL Hall of Famer Mark Messier. Messier was a teammate of the Empire Maker colt's co-owner Tom Ryan's father-in-law, Pat Hughes, along with the likes of Wayne Gretzky, Jari Kurri, Paul Coffey, and Grant Fuhr on those legendary Edmonton Oilers teams of the 1980s.

Messier finished second in his first start on June 27 at Los Alamitos and came back on October 22 to win by 6 ½ lengths, matching the time over the same distance that Winning Map had produced three weeks earlier.

“We're taking the blinkers off Messier,” Baffert said. “He's not as quick as the others, but we think it's a good spot for him at a distance he'll like.”

Kamui was beaten a half-length by fellow Hope entrant Forbidden Kingdom at Del Mar on August 21 and came back to score by six lengths in a 5 ½-furlong sprint at Los Alamitos Race Course in Cypress, Calif., on September 11.

The field for the Bob Hope from the rail with jockeys and morning line odds in parentheses: Messier (Flavien Prat, 8/5); Kamui (Abel Cedillo, 5/2); Winning Map (Mike Smith, 7/5); Rock N Rye (Umberto Rispoli, 15-1), and Forbidden Kingdom (Juan Hernandez, 9/2).

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Jockey Kyle Frey Nearing 1,000-Win Milestone At Del Mar

Jockey Kyle Frey enters Friday's program at Del Mar with 998 wins from 5,903 career starts according to Equibase statistics. He's scheduled aboard three mounts in the eight-race program and is booked for three more on Saturday and six on Sunday.

The 29-year-old from Tracy, Calif., said he has been aware of his proximity to the milestone 1,000th victory for “a week or two,” but is approaching it philosophically.

“I embrace it, but I'm not thinking about it or paying attention to it that much,” Frey said. “I've noticed that sometimes when guys near a milestone they slow down – I don't if it's because they're too aware or nervous or what. I'm not nervous, I'm just trying to go out and do my best to win every race.”

Frey has 157 wins from 759 mounts with purse earnings of $4.1 million and ranks 50th among jockeys nationally for money won this year. He came to the summer meeting with plans to ride a few days at Del Mar and then return to Golden Gate Fields in San Francisco, where he was among the top riders.

He won two races the second day of the local meeting, then the Fleet Treat Stakes on I'm So Anna for trainer Steve Sherman on the second weekend and tabled the notion of returning to Northern California. He notched 14 wins from 145 mounts with purse earnings of nearly $1 million and finished eighth in the rider standings for the 31-day session, a breakthrough time in what has become the best season of his career, topping $4 million in purse earnings for the first time since 2011.

“That (summer meeting) meant everything,” Frey said. “I owe it to the trainers who gave me a chance on good horses. I was able to execute to their plans early and things worked out well.”

With 12 mounts over the next three days, Frey estimated chances are “pretty good” he'll be able to put 1,000 wins in the rearview mirror.

“Anytime you're in a race, you've got a chance,” Frey said.

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Benoit Photo: Straight Shooters At Del Mar For 25 Years

The estimate, possibly conservative, is that the family group – Rayetta Burr, Tom and T.J. Abahaze – have chronicled 10,000 races at Del Mar since Benoit Photo became the official track photographers in 1996.

The father, son and stepmother are positioned trackside at the start of each race, snapping shots as the fields go by the finish line the first time and again when they complete the circuit in longer races. In one-turn events, circumstances dictate that their focus be only on the finish.

Then they're tasked with recording, always for the victorious horse's connections and sometimes for posterity, the winner's circle ceremonies. To capture, in year's past on film and now digitally, the joy of the humans and the majesty of the equine in the moments immediately after a triumph.

It's not as easy as it might seem.

Think about the last time you tried to pull a celebratory segment from a reunion or holiday family gathering and get them all to stop for a minute and turn their attention to a camera. Now think about having to do it eight or nine times a day, with just a few minutes to get it done and, oh yes, include a 1,100 pound animal not long removed from a minute or two of all-out exertion.

But the Benoit trio nearly always make it seem easy.

With the owner groups, which could range from a handful to hundreds in place, the horse and rider are brought in one side of the area. Rayetta and T.J. flank Tom as he takes control of the proceedings. “Cell phones down,” he'll say. “We're going to take two pictures. Everybody look here.”

Tom is an ex-Marine and Vietnam veteran.

“You learn how to control a crowd in the service if you've got rank,” he said. “You have to. If you don't, everything runs amok. I try not to yell at an individual, but if I have to, yell at the whole group.”

They aim their 35-millimeter Canon cameras, fire away very briefly, then repeat the procedure with just the immediate connections – and the rider who has just weighed in – in the pictures.

Then comes their favorite part of the job.

“The people,” T.J. offered instantly as Rayetta and Tom nod in agreement. “The look on their faces, especially when it's their first win. You show them the picture and their faces light up and they lose their (composure). It's priceless.”

With modern systems the photos can be ready for purchase in a half hour or so. What once were darkrooms for film development are now computer stations where Burr and the Abahazes process photos for sale to interested parties, distribution to the media or other purposes.

Since its opening in 1937, Del Mar has had contracts with five individuals or groups to do its photography – Joe Haase, Bill Scherlis, Vic Stein and Associates, Dick and Elna Boardman and Benoit and Associates.

The stories of all five were capsulized, and some of their photos displayed, as part of the 2006 Del Mar Media Guide.

Haase, only the second man in the U.S. Navy to carry the title Photographers Mate and the first to take a picture of Washington's Capitol building from the air — in 1913 – was hired when the track open, served for more than two decades and is credited with virtually all the iconic shots of track founder Bing Crosby.

Scherlis moved from Philadelphia to San Diego as a youngster, got into photography as a teenager and hired on as Haase's “society photographer.” He catalogued the track's many celebrity patrons throughout the 1940s and '50s, took over when Haase died in 1959 and held the track photographer position through 1975.

Vic Stein, who was the official photographer for Hollywood Park, Santa Anita, Los Alamitos and the Los Angeles Rams for many years, took over at Del Mar from 1976 to 1980.

Dick and Elna Boardman, who started as portrait photographers in their native Nebraska, got racetrack experience at Centennial Park in Denver, where they were the first in the west to print color racing photos, before contracting with Del Mar in 1981. Nebraska was the main residence for the Boardmans, and Del Mar their summer home from 1981 to 1995 when they returned to the Cornhusker State and Benoit Photo took over at Del Mar.

Burr started as a switchboard operator at Hollywood Park then moved to the publicity department headed by Bob Benoit.

Tom Abahazy was born in Germany, the son of a master photographer in Hungary and Germany, and was brought to America at the age of two. He learned from the master when his Marine time was over and was working with his father at Oaklawn Park in 1974 when photos they took of Miss Musket winning the Apple Blossom Handicap were brought to the attention of Hollywood Park owner Marge Everett.

A couple years later, Tom and his first wife were summoned to shoot for the Inglewood track and worked closely with Burr and Benoit, before moving back to the Midwest.

Later Benoit, no longer in administration at Hollywood Park, and Burr founded the photography business that bears his name. It got started only after they convinced Abahazy to relocate with his family, which now included T.J. and a sister, in Southern California.

Photography school is not on the resume of any of the three. Tom learned from his father, T.J. and Rayetta from Tom.

“Tom was the best color man anywhere, now he and T.J. are the best color men anywhere,” Burr said. “The degree of perfection with these two makes me marvel.”

T.J. was been a fixture at track photographer offices since he was a baby in a bassinette. He became a Benoit full time employee in 2004, working at Arlington Park in Chicago.

Tom and Rayetta now count 50 years in the racing business. Benoit photo has been the official winner's circle photographers for 16 Breeders' Cup World Championships, starting with the inaugural in 1984 and going all the way through to last weekend's at Del Mar.

The estimated 10,000 photos at Del Mar represent only a fraction of the ones they've taken at Hollywood Park, torn down and replaced by the NFL's SoFi Stadium, Santa Anita, Los Alamitos, Pomona and several other tracks across the country. Like all racetrackers, they've learned to deal with the highs and the lows.

“It's really tough on us when things go bad, if you know what I mean,” T.J. said. He related as how, several years ago, his close friend, jockey Michael Baze, was injured in a spill not far from where he stood and how he had to fight the urge to rush to his aid and let the professionals, at the ready, do their job.

“We have to keep a professional demeanor no matter what,” Burr said. “I can come back to the office and bawl my eyes out, but out there on the track, I have to stay under control. That's what we've been trained to do, and no matter what we want to do, we have to stay out of the way or clear a path for others.”

Del Mar, the backdrop for so many of their pictures, has aspects they have come to appreciate.

“I would say Del Mar is the most exciting place for people to come and experience racing,” Burr said. “More people ask us about Del Mar than any other track. It's like jockeys always asked about the Kentucky Derby, when people learn that we're track photographers, they ask about Del Mar.”

“If a person has never been to a racetrack in their life, they should come to Del Mar on opening day,” T.J. said. “This would sell them and (provide) everything they need to know about racing.”

Words that have been worth 10,000 pictures.

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Bella Vita Gets Easy Win In Betty Grable At Del Mar

Wins don't come much prettier than this one for the aptly named Bella Vita, who took advantage of a fast track and an easy pace to take the Betty Grable Stakes at Del Mar Thoroughbred Club in Del Mar, Calif.

In the Cal-bred only stakes, Big Sweep got out to an early lead, with Fi Fi Pharoah and favorite Bella Vita pressing the pace. Through early fractions of :23.20 for the first quarter and :46.17 for the half-mile, Big Sweep maintained a short lead, as Bella Vita moved up to second approaching the far turn.

Bella Vita and jockey Flavien Prat pulled even with Big Sweep on the turn, taking over the lead as the field entered the stretch. At the wire, Bella Vita was 1 1/2 lengths to the good, with Warren's Showtime making her bad late to take second over Big Sweep.

The final time for the seven furlongs was 1:22.23. Find this race's chart here.

Bella Vita paid $3.20, $2.20, and $2.10. Warren's Showtime paid $3.00 and $2.20. Big Sweep paid $2.40.

“We had a good trip. I got a good spot and we were able to move when it was right. She ran well and we finished up well,” Prat said after the race.

“Nice bookends to the weekend. (Callaghan-trained Astronomer was a $62.60 winner in Friday's $150,000 Qatar Golden Mile). The two horses ran well. This looked like a good opportunity (for Bella Vita) back on dirt. She's definitely a dirt filly. We tried turf last time because it was a restricted Cal-bred race but she shows she's a decent dirt filly and this was a good spot for her,” Simon Callaghan told the Del Mar press office after the Betty Grable.

Bred in California by Hill 'n' Dale Equine Holdings Inc., Bella Vita is by Bayern out of the Storm Cat mare Queenie Cat. Trained by Simon Callaghan, the 4-year-old filly is owned by Kaleem Shah Inc. Bella Vita was consigned by Harris Training Center and sold to KSI for $400,000 at the April 2019 Ocala Breeders' Sale Spring Sale of Two-Year-Olds In Training. With her win in the Betty Grable, the filly has three wins in nine starts in 2021, for a lifetime record of 13-4-5-1 and career earnings of $346,722.

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