TVG Pacific Classic: A Singular Event That’s Never Gone Solo

If the bars in Del Mar were fully open and heavily patronized as usual this TVG Pacific Classic Week (oh, would that they were!) there might be money to be made with one trivial question:

How many times has the Pacific Classic, the signature event of the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club's summer meeting, been the only stakes race on that day's program?

The answer, given away by the headline on this piece, is never.

From its start the race that DMTC founding father John C. Mabee envisioned, championed, prodded and pushed to existence – and then won the 1991 inaugural with his Best Pal – has always had stakes company on the card.

But if, as the saying goes, 'Two's company, three's a crowd,' the 30th running on Saturday goes beyond a crowd to a throng. In addition to the $500,000 Classic there are four other stakes, with purses totaling $650,000, on an 11-race program.

How did it come to this?

For the first 16 years, officials carded one other stakes race on Classic Day. Then, in 2007-2009, three besides the Classic were included on the program. A cutback to Classic-plus-two was the formula from 2010 to 2018. Then, last year, the envelope was pushed to the plus-four that will be continued on Saturday.

The stakes escalation, DMTC executive vice president, racing and industry relations, Tom Robbins points out, is both practical and in keeping with a nationwide trend.

“The thing I like about it, and I think David (racing secretary David Jerkens) would agree, is that if you're going after a horse or horses on the East Coast, it's sometimes easier to sell them on the idea of coming out here if they can send more than one out and all travel at the same time on the same day. It has that advantage.

“And from the financial/business side it certainly attracts the players. We want to be attractive to our customers, to have quality programs, and this is our signature race surrounded by others that will also attract national attention.”

Craig Dado, executive vice president and chief marketing officer, not only echoes those sentiments but turns up the volume.

“I'm a big fan of it (stakes stacking),” Dado said. “In an era where you're trying to not only compete with other tracks but stand out, it makes sense. We're hoping to get a lot of eyeballs from around the country on the program Saturday. I'm not standing at home plate and pointing to the centerfield fence, but we're hoping to break the handle record.”

The highest single-day handle total in track history, except for the two days the Breeders' Cup was hosted in 2017, is $25,870,431 on Pacific Classic Day in 2018.

With Del Mar, like nearly every track in the country, racing sans all but a limited number of on-track spectators and relying on internet wagering to provide the lifeblood handle money totals, the notion that 'less is more' becomes an absurdity.

“We look at how those (other stakes) would fit on our schedule, but also how they would fit on the national calendar as well,” Robbins said. “We really want to highlight the Pacific Classic but we want to have a really big day. A lot of tracks do the same thing.”

There were five graded stakes, three of them Grade Is, of 12 races on the Travers Day program at Saratoga on August 8. Churchill Downs' adaption to the Covid-19 circumstances was a basic relocation of the multiple undercard stakes on the Kentucky Oaks and Kentucky Derby day programs, many of them Grade Is and Grade IIs, along with the marquee events to the first weekend of September instead of May.

“We could feel the heat (of lured-away horses) in some ways, but the good news is there were not a lot of conflicts there,” Robbins said. “No question the Pacific Classic is going to be the strongest day of the year, and that's what it's designed to be.”

The San Clemente Stakes for 3-year-old fillies was on the inaugural Pacific Classic card, and hasn't been a big day invitee since.

In the next 15 years when one additional stakes was included on the menu, the most frequent Classic partner was the Rancho Bernardo Handicap, a 6 ½-furlong sprint for older fillies and mares (7 times). The Pat O'Brien, a 7-furlong sprint, was co-featured four times, the Del Mar Oaks three times and the Del Mar Debutante once.

The O'Brien, Oaks and Debutante all were, or eventually became, Grade I events.

Robbins on the Rancho Bernardo as Classic companion: “It was a race that we wanted to give a little strength to at that time and it fit well on the calendar.

“This year we're running it this Friday because it still fits on the calendar. It came up strong this year, so with that on Friday and the Del Mar Mile on Sunday, we have a good feature Friday, good feature on Sunday and a lot of strength on Saturday with what many consider the best horse in the country (Maximum Security) running in the Classic.”

The Rancho Bernardo has K M N Racing's Sneaking Out, a 4-year-old filly fresh from victory in the Grade II Great Lady M Stakes on the 4th of July as the 8-5 morning line favorite in a competitive field of eight.

The O'Brien and the Oaks have been Classic complements, though never as a duo, every year since 2005. The Del Mar Mile or the Del Mar Handicap have, separately, served to provide a major event on the turf every year since 2010.

Interest of racing fans nationally figures to be piqued by Saturday's Grade I Oaks and Grade II Handicap. The Oaks, at 1 1/8-miles on the turf, features Gary Barber's Laura's Light, trained by Peter Miller, who seeks to take the final step up the graded stakes ladder after winning the Grade III Honeymoon at Hollywood Park on May 30 and the Grade II San Clemente here on July 25.

The Del Mar Handicap is alluring due to the presence of United. The 5-year-old son of Giant's Causeway was narrowly beaten by 2019 Horse of the Year Bricks and Mortar in last year's Breeders' Cup Turf and has won three straight graded stakes, most recently the Eddie Read at Del Mar on July 26.

“We're always aware of the schedule at the tracks before and after us on the calendar,” Robbins said. “It used to be Hollywood Park, now Santa Anita. The Bing Crosby and the Pat O'Brien have moved around to (align) with the Triple Bend at those places.

“We try to figure out what works best starting with Southern California and then looking at the other parts of the country.”

When it comes to the day of the Pacific Classic, Sunday holds a 16-13 lead over Saturday. That's mainly attributable to a streak of nine straight Sunday presentations from 2001-2009 and four in a row starting in 2011. Saturday, however, is on a six-year streak.

“That's not just a racing department decision,” Robbins said. “We do analysis and we work together. Every department has input on something like that. We bounced around with it on those years we had it on Sunday. I think it was even held the day after Travers Day (at Saratoga) one year.

“But now, we've kind of found this niche. You've got to factor in things from a racing and also from a business standpoint. We've found that Saturdays are typically stronger than Sundays.”

The numbers for the past decade don't lie. Over the span when the Classic was staged on Sunday from 2011-2014, the handle averaged $19.5 million. On Saturdays the last five year the average is $23.9 million.

“All the big race days have moved to Saturday,” Dado noted. “You get more eyeballs on the races and bigger handles.”

Procrastination is not an option when it comes to pinpointing the spot on the calendar for the Pacific Classic.

“That decision is usually made early,” Robbins said. “At the end of one calendar year or early the next. It's a day that people want to know about well in advance. The switchboard will start getting calls about it early in the year.

“We work hand-in-hand with the Thoroughbred Owners of California and we try to give them a stakes schedule in March. So we'll know well before that, but we don't generally announce anything until we have their approval.”

In the year of COVID-19, the squandering of a potential bar bet is but a speck of loss in the overall picture. Consider this, racing fans:

“We had a Breeders' Cup 2021 hat giveaway planned for Pacific Classic Day this year,” Dado said, a reference to Del Mar's second time to host the two-day fall championship event.

It'll keep until next year.

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‘Timing’ Is Right For Beau Recall To Repeat In Yellow Ribbon Handicap

Nick Cosato, a former jockey agent who is now head of the Slam Dunk Racing partnership organization, was introduced to the sport at a young age via weekend trips to Santa Anita with his father.

His father was good friends with Eduardo Inda, the right-hand man for Hall of Fame trainer Ron McAnally and an integral part of the team that campaigned John Henry to the Hall of Fame as well.

“So I was able to be around John Henry quite a bit,” Cosato said. “I've got pictures with me and John Henry before and after he won the Santa Anita Handicap in 1982. John Henry was my lifelong favorite – until Beau Recall came along. For her to be at that level, in my mind, speaks volumes.”

Beau Recall, a 6-year-old Irish-bred mare, is the defending champion in Saturday's $150,000, Grade II Yellow Ribbon Handicap at Del Mar, a 1 1/16-mile turf test for older fillies and mares which will be run for the 68th time.

In the 2019 Yellow Ribbon, Beau Recall rallied along the rail to win a by a margin so narrow it took several minutes to verify the photo, then several more for stewards to deny an objection for interference by the rider whose horse had finished last.

“It was a lengthy inquiry for something I didn't think merited being brought up in the first place,” Cosato recalled. “But in the end, the stewards' decision was the one we were hoping for.”

The Yellow Ribbon was one of three victories and three runner-up efforts in a six-race 2019 campaign for Beau Recall that accounted for $605,600 of her `more than $1.1 million in career earnings. The Yellow Ribbon was her second Grade II victory of the year, coming three months after a 10-1 upset in the Distaff Turf Mile, which gave Cosato and partners the thrill and prestige of going to the winner's circle before 150,729 spectators at Churchill Downs on Kentucky Derby Day.

Cosato doesn't favor one over the other. He savors both.

“Any time you win one of those big races it's just a complete blessing,” Cosato, who grew up in Temple City and now lives in Sierra Madre, said. “Nothing beats winning at home, and I'm a Californian who has been coming to Del Mar since I was a kid.”

Beau Recall has raced twice in 2020. She finished ninth of 14, albeit beaten only 2 ¼ lengths, in the Mint Julep at Churchill Downs on May 30 and second in the Grade I Just a Game Stakes at Belmont Park on June 27.

“Her comeback race (Mint Julep) turned out to be nothing more than a workout,” Cosato said. “She never had room to run, never got to unleash the late kick that makes her so good.”

In the Just a Game, Beau Recall's late charge came up three lengths short against front-running Newspaperofrecord but a half length ahead of Uni, winner of the 2018 Matriarch Stakes at Del Mar and an Eclipse Award as the top female turf runner last year.

Beau Recall prevailed over five rivals, among them multiple stakes-winning Vasilika, in the 2019 Yellow Ribbon. There are seven others entered Saturday, among them Jolie Olimpica, winner of two graded turf sprints at Santa Anita this year and Keeper Ofthe Stars, who took the Grade I Gamely in May.

Beau Recall may carry the colors of Slam Dunk – a name Cosato chose because of the many friends/clients he has with NBA or college basketball backgrounds – but a victory Saturday is nowhere near such a high percentage opportunity.

“It's a tough race,” Cosato conceded. “We're trying to get her a Grade I win, but for that at a mile, you'd almost have to run against the boys. Timing-wise, the Yellow Ribbon is right and we're hoping it works out for her again.”

The field from the rail: Summering (Drayden Van Dyke, 12-1); Bodhicitta (Flavien Prat, 6-1); Tonahutu (Victor Espinoza, 15-1); Lady Prancelot (Juan Hernandez, 5-1); Harmless (Ricardo Gonzalez, 15-1); Keeper Ofthe Stars (Abel Cedillo, 7-2); Beau Recall (Umberto Rispoli, 3-1), and Jolie Olimpica (Mike Smith, 5-2).

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Dan Smith: A Del Mar Man, A Racing Man, A Special Man

Dan Smith has left the building. Quietly.

In a way, that's not surprising. He spent a career – at the racetrack and at Del Mar – doing what a good turf publicist does, which is not calling attention to himself but rather helping others do their jobs.

But in another way, the man had done such a marvelous job for so long both at Del Mar and in the industry that there probably should have been a parade, along with an all-night party and an armful of gold watches at the end of 2019. You'd be hard pressed to come up with a more sparkling resume than the one Dan Smith compiled.

True enough, he's 83 years of age, which is retirement territory and then some for most folks. But don't be fooled: he comes from a family of long genes and there are no walkers or canes in his future. And that mind of his – that unbelievably sharp tool that can recall instantly everything from a 50-year-old bloodline to the name of the third lead in a 1940s noir film – is still clicking along double fast. You've heard about people with photographic memories? Hello Dan Smith.

Dan has spent more than 60 years in the Thoroughbred world and a full 56 of them at Del Mar. His first season at the seaside oval was 1964; let that long-range thought marinate in your brain a bit.

He was born in Chicago (South Side) in 1936, but his Mom and Dad loaded up the family in a car in 1948 when he was 11 and motored to the West Coast in search of better opportunities for their business, which was making music. They settled in Alhambra – a midway point between downtown L.A. and, more importantly, Arcadia and Santa Anita – and young Smith went about the business of becoming a Californian.

Like his folks, he had an affinity for music and learned to play a pretty fair trumpet during his high school years, which would prove handy when – after a taste of college – he instead listened to Uncle Sam's call and did a couple of years in the U.S. Army.

Reveille finished, Smith returned to L.A. in 1957 and landed a gig as a copy boy in the sports department of the L.A. Times. He worked his way up to the role of writing features and spun several about a passion he'd realized as a youngster in the Windy City – Thoroughbred horse racing. Bob Benoit, the long-time racing publicist/photographer/executive, was then the assistant publicity director at Hollywood Park and saw promise in young Smith and his writings. He encouraged him to join in the fun and, in 1963, Smith did, signing on for what then was “the circuit” for a publicity type – Hollywood Park, Santa Anita, Del Mar and Pomona.

He found he loved it, long hours and short pay notwithstanding. He learned the biz from the bottom up and got real good at it real fast. By 1972 he was considered sharp enough to be offered the job of publicity director at Santa Anita. He took it, of course, and settled in nicely as he and his wife, Erin, went about the business of raising their two sons, David and Marty.

Though Santa Anita was his main gig, he continued to work summers at Del Mar and in 1973 came up with a fun seaside event. He created racing's answer to baseball's “Old Timers' Game” by luring eight retired riders, including the legendary John Longden, to compete in a betless exhibition race called the “Rocking Chair Derby.” The race winner actually got to sit in an antique rocking chair in the winner's circle and it proved to be such a rousing success that it went on for several years, then was renewed again in the 1990s with a fresh crop of retirees.

So between Santa Anita and Del Mar, Smith was in a good groove. But circumstances and longings would change things for him and his family when Del Mar's longtime publicity director Eddie Read died. Liking the more leisurely pace of the growing San Diego area, Dan called then Del Mar president Don Smith (no relation) and told him he knew of a good replacement for Read. Don said “Who?” Dan said “Me.” And Don said “You've got it.”

So in 1975 Smith moved the family south and took over the publicity reins at the shore oval. And in the process, Del Mar got themselves a good thing – a hard-working, clear-minded, clever and resourceful thinker who'd help to shape the track's rise from the red-headed stepchild of the two big L.A. tracks to an entity that evolved into one of the sport's major players.

When things got really popping at Del Mar in the late '80s and early '90s, Smith added another title to his resume, that of director of marketing. He helped the blooming horse heaven to add some pizazz to its menu. He was there for the birth of “Four O'Clock Fridays” and the popular weekend concerts that drew the young troops to the track in droves. He ran a saluted jazz series (his other great passion) that drew many of the top names in the field and had a hard-core following of hip racetrackers. He took a popular day – Del Mar's opening day – and made it into a monster, with its “Hats Contest” and dress-up theme reshaping it into the biggest summer party in San Diego. He even had input in the building of the $80-million grandstand between '91 and '93 that replaced the track's original structure from 1937. Further, he was there in 1991 for the realization of Del Mar's signature race – the Pacific Classic. Guess who named it? Uh, huh.

And while he was doing all this and raising a family (David is now an L.A.-based musician and photographer; Marty is a professor at Duke), he was finding time to put his supple mind and extensive skills into other racing projects that he both relished and enhanced.

He formed a close relationship with champion rider Bill Shoemaker and together they crafted the definitive autobiography about his Hall of Fame career called “The Shoe.” Starting in 1971, he began an annual trip to Kentucky each year at Derby time to chronicle the horses and people seeking America's greatest race as a member of Churchill Downs' Derby Notes Team, an assignment he continued for 36 years. Then in 1984 when the Breeders' Cup was born and the NBC network dressed it up royally by bringing in the already legendary Dick Enberg as its lead announcer, Smith's value and expertise took another step forward.

Enberg, who had dabbled in horse racing and knew Smith from earlier in their careers, recognized his Breeders' Cup role might put him in over his head in an esoteric sport and told the network the only way he'd do it is if they also hired Smith to be his behind-the-scenes guru. They did and Smith was the man behind Enberg's wise and pithy commentary for the next six years.

Smith would stay up many a long night during Breeders' Cup week and write up 3 X 5 cards on every horse, owner, trainer, jockey and potential scenario involved in the races. When something would happen on the racetrack, Smith would slide Enberg a card and the announcer would smoothly tell his national audience all about it. When something was about to happen on the racetrack, Smith had a card for that, too. Pre-race, race time, post-race – there were cards for them all. Enberg did “We'll be right back” all on his own. Otherwise, there was a Smith card in his hand and some truth to be told.

When Enberg moved on to other assignments, NBC brought in a more knowledgeable announcer in Tom Hammond but – in a further tribute to Smith – they kept him and his many 3 X 5 cards on board. NBC additionally was covering the Kentucky Derby and then the complete Triple Crown at that time and once again Smith was the man – from Kentucky to Maryland to New York – in what was a case of “Have Racing Knowledge, Will Travel.”

Smith also birthed various racing careers when he used his discerning eye to give employment to a number of young racing enthusiasts, among them Jeff Tufts, Jay Hovdey, Bill Kolberg, John DeSantis, Julie Sarno, Josh Rubinstein and Matt Dinerman. The writer of this piece considers himself lucky that he answered Smith's call and joined the Del Mar team back in 1981.

Perhaps his greatest ability, one you can't teach, is his ability to be friendly. He just has a way about him that lets people know he'd like to be your friend. From coast to coast – and especially in and around Del Mar – Dan Smith has friends – many, many friends. You can probably count on one finger the number of people in the highly competitive and far-flung world of horse racing who have met him and aren't his friend. He's just that kind of guy.

In the last decade or so, Smith has cut back on his travels and was only working Del Mar seasonally as its senior media coordinator, mostly writing and working out of the Press Box. Even there, though, he was making it a point to mentor future racing folks, notably the four to six college interns each year who would spend a summer at Del Mar seeing how it worked. Smith would make sure they got a view of the show from all different angles, going out of his way to open doors for them that they might not have gone through otherwise.

To not see Smith in the Press Box this year has left a void. Del Mar is aiming to lure him back next year, though, when things – hopefully – return to some sort of normalcy. We'd just want him to come and hang out regularly, bet his case deuce on each race and serve as our on-call racing encyclopedia (you never have to look it up when he's around). We'd also like to see him delight in a well-earned reward for all the very special dedication and effort he put into the place “where the turf meets the surf.”

Next year the Press Box – the one he helped design for the rebuild – will be named The Dan Smith Press Box. There will be appropriate signage, photos and maybe even a proper ceremony. There will be many Media cheers, you can count on that.

And then we'll want Dan Smith – The Dan Smith – to take a bow and throw out the first press release.

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Beau Recall Back To Defend Her Title In Del Mar’s Yellow Ribbon Handicap

Slam Dunk Racing or Medallion Racing's Beau Recall, who was up by a whisker to win last year's Yellow Ribbon Handicap, has come back to Del Mar to try to make it two-for-two in the Grade II, $150,000 headliner for fillies and mares that will be run this Saturday.

The now 6-year-old mare by the Irish stallion Sir Prancealot brings a record of seven wins and eight seconds from 27 starts to the mile and one-sixteenth grass test, as well as a bankroll that reads $1,101,512. Trainer Brad Cox has shipped his well-traveled charge in from New York to defend her title and has assigned Umberto Rispoli to ride.

In all, eight runners have been entered for the 68th edition of the Yellow Ribbon, but one of them – Fox Hill Farms' Jolie Olimpica – won't make the fray. Trainer Richard Mandella told racing officials that he'll wait for another day to bring out his stakes winning filly.

In any event, here's the entered lineup for the 68th edition of the Yellow Ribbon from the rail out with riders, weights and morning line odds:

Glen Hill Farm's Summering (Drayden Van Dyke, 118, 12-1); Calvin Nguyen's Bodhicitta (Flavien Prat, 120, 6-1); DRJ Racing, Kenney or Strauss' Tonahutu (Victor Espinoza, 15-1); Iavarone, McClanahan or Arntz, et al's Lady Prancealot (Juan Hernandez, 121, 5-1); Agave Racing Stable's Harmless (Ricky Gonzalez, 118, 15-1); Tommy Town Thoroughbreds' Keeper Of the Stars (Abel Cedillo, 123, 7/2); Beau Recall (123, 3-1), and Jolie Olimpica (Mike Smith, 122, 5/2).

Keeper Ofthe Stars, a gray 4-year-old by Midnight Lute, has won seven of her 16 starts, including a smart score this past May 25 in the Grade I Gamely Stakes at Santa Anita. The Jonathan Wong trainee has won more than half a million dollars and has done well with rider Cedillo, her partner Saturday. They've rung up three stakes victories together, including that Gamely tally.

Lady Prancealot has chased home Keeper Of the Stars in her last two outings, but was a double stakes winner in her two starts before that. The Irish-bred filly runs out of the barn of trainer Richard Baltas and can brag of $565,841 in winnings so far. Like most in this field, she's shown a real affinity for the turf.

Bodhicitta rallied to take second in the aforementioned Gamely behind Keeper Ofthe Stars in her best effort to date. The rising 4-year-old by the British stallion Showcasing also comes out of the Baltas barn. She has put in a series of good works at Del Mar for her go in the distaff feature.

The Yellow Ribbon will be Race 9 on the 11-race Saturday program. Also on the card will be the Grade II, $150,000 Best Pal Stakes for 2-year-olds. First post on the afternoon will be 2 p.m.

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