‘He’s What Ellis Park Was About’: James ‘Pops’ Schmitt Passes At Age 85

James E. Schmitt, known by everyone as Pops, became as much a fixture in trainer John Hancock's barn as soybeans in the Ellis Park infield.

When Pops died Aug. 19 at age 85 at his Evansville home, it left a hole in Hancock's stable and all their hearts.

Pops, a Marine veteran who served in the Korea, had a hello and a smile for everyone — also a few bucks if you were down on your luck. He put you in a good mood just seeing him walking or holding a horse, getting coffee in the track kitchen, up at the races or in Ellis Park's gaming area. He loved all that is good about horse racing, the beauty and nobleness of the Thoroughbred, the basic premise of seeing who has the fastest horse to the wire and the camaraderie in a barn working together to get a horse to the starting gate.

Pops retired in 1994 after 30 years with Alcoa. After his beloved wife of 50 years, Nancy Gay, passed away in 2006, Pops headed to the racetrack full-time to keep busy.

“He's what Ellis Park was about,” said John Hancock, who also referred to Pops as Jim. “When I was a kid growing up, he had three boys and my mom had three boys. His boys were the same age as me and my brothers. We all grew up together. Jim would go to the races everywhere. When his wife died of cancer, he said, 'I'm coming to the barn.' He was with me ever since. Everywhere I went, he was with me. I never saw anybody enjoy racing and the people like he did. We'd be pulling in the back gate at Presque Isle and he'd see somebody he knew and holler.

“It sounds corny, but he's probably the most-liked person I've seen ever. Never had a bad day. Never left mad. Other than my mom, he was my biggest fan. When times were tough and things weren't going right, he'd always walk up and say, 'Hey, the Man Upstairs won't give us more than we can handle. We'll bounce back.'”

Dana Hancock, John's assistant and niece, knew something was wrong when Pops wasn't at the barn by 5:30 in the morning of Aug. 19. He subsequently was discovered in his bed, as if he'd laid down for nap and never woke up.

“Pops always was the first one there every morning, turning on lights at the barn,” John Hancock said. “He'd go on and feed. I don't care if there was a foot of snow on the ground at Riverside Downs. He'd make his way across the bridge” from Evansville.

Pops sporadically had a horse he trained but never made it into the winner's circle until 2015. “He always wanted to win a race,” Hancock said.

So Hancock set him up with a horse who happened to be named Uncle Jimmy, a coincidence that delighted Pops. Uncle Jimmy won a 2-year-old maiden race at Mountaineer to give Pops the only victory of his limited training career.

“That was a big deal for him,” Hancock said. “Here's a horse named Uncle Jimmy, and Jimmy Schmitt saddled him.

“He did everything for me. He'd keep up with the feed. When it was time to order feed, he'd order it and go get it. I went to make the order the other day and didn't know what I was doing because he'd done it for some many years. He walked horses in the barn. You name it, he did it. Like this morning, we needed to get a load of hay. I told Dana, 'Get Pops and Sammy,' and I caught myself. Wherever I went, you'd see him right beside me. He loved going to the sales. He loved running horses at Beulah Park in the winter. He just loved the people. When Beulah Park closed, that really bothered him.

“I bought an old horse one time called Smoking Kay. Pops, one of my owners and I split her up three ways. We won five in a row before they claimed her. Pops really liked that old mare. At the time Beulah Park was giving away their horse of the meet award. She got the award. They called and wanted to know if I could come up. I said no, and Pops said, 'Do you mind if I go get it?' They gave him a leather halter, a blanket and a bag of carrots. He still has that blanket and that halter. It never went on another horse.

“You won't ever find another one like him.”

Schmitt is survived by his sons, Jimmy Schmitt (Sandy) and Duwayne Schmitt (Lisa); sisters, June Folz (Al) and Clara Lilly (Dave); grandchildren, Charish Draper (Joshua), Cody Schmitt, Jason Schmitt, Brian Schmitt, Jamie Schulte (Chris), Taylor Madison (Donavon), Austin Schmitt, Lindsay Brodasky (Tom), and Kyndel Dollison; 10 great grandchildren; and many nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his parents; loving wife of 50 years, Nancy Gay (Kneir) Schmitt; and son Jeffrey Schmitt, who passed away in 2020.

A Mass of Christian Burial will be held at 12:00 p.m. Central, Tuesday, Aug. 25 at St. Joseph Catholic Church, 618 East Virginia Street, Evansville. Burial will be in Park Lawn Cemetery where the American Legion Kapperman Post 44 will render full military rites.

Friends may visit from 9:00 a.m. until 11:00 a.m., Tuesday, Aug. 25 at Boone Funeral Home East Chapel, 5330 Washington Ave., Evansville.

Memorial contributions can be made to the American Diabetes Association at 3700 Bellemeade Avenue, Evansville, IN 47714 or Arthritis Foundation at 615 North Alabama Street, Indianapolis, IN 46204.

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Preakness Added To Breeders’ Cup Challenge Series

Officials at Breeders’ Cup Limited and The Stronach Group have announced that the Oct. 3 GI Preakness S., the final leg of this year’s reconstituted Triple Crown, has been added to the Breeders’ Cup Challenge series and will offer the winner an all-expenses-paid berth in the starting gate for the GI Longines Breeders’ Cup Classic at Keeneland Nov. 7. It will mark the first time that a Triple Crown races is part of the series.

Owing to the COVID-19 pandemic, the traditional first leg of the Triple Crown was postponed from its customary position on the first Saturday in May and was rescheduled for Sept. 5. The New York Racing Association staged the GI Belmont S. as the first of this year’s Triple Crown races June 20. Tiz the Law (Constitution) was the convincing winner of the Belmont, shortened to nine furlongs for this running.

The Preakness and Breeders’ Cup Classic will both air on NBC.

“We are delighted to join The Stronach Group and the Maryland Jockey Club in welcoming the Preakness to this year’s Breeders’ Cup Challenge Series, and that we will be able to provide the winning connections with an added incentive to run in the Longines Breeders’ Cup Classic,” said Drew Fleming, Breeders’ Cup President and CEO. “As a foundation race of the Triple Crown and the premier event in the proud history of Maryland racing, we look forward to working together with The Stronach Group, and our partners at NBC Sports, to promote an exciting fall season for Thoroughbred racing.”

Added Craig Fravel, Chief Executive Officer, Racing Operations, 1/ST: “The events of 2020 have for all of us been about responding to unforeseen challenges and making the best of them. Many of those challenges–including the changes to the Triple Crown–have been unwelcome, but becoming part of the Breeders’ Cup Challenge Series is most welcome and a fitting finale to the 3-year-old season as the horses and their connections make their way to Baltimore for the last leg of the Triple Crown. We look forward to hosting the best of America’s three-year-old horses on Oct. 3 at the Preakness and to enjoying their success thereafter in the Breeders’ Cup Classic.”

“With terrific racing ahead, we’re excited that the two biggest events of the fall months will be further connected with the Preakness Stakes winner earning a coveted berth in the  Breeders’ Cup Classic,” said Jon Miller, President of Programming for NBC and NBCSN.

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Desert Party Sold To Stand In Saudi Arabia

Desert Party (Street Cry – Sage Cat by Tabasco Cat), a top 2-year-old and a proven stakes-producing sire, has been sold to continue his stud career in Saudi Arabia in a deal brokered by Chad Schumer of Schumer Bloodstock.

A $2.1-million 2-year-old purchase by John Ferguson on behalf of Godolphin, Desert Party wasted little time in living up to his lofty reputation with a commanding win the Grade 2 Sanford Stakes at Saratoga. At three, he was the impressive winner of the G3 UAE 2,000 Guineas and second in the G2 UAE Derby, and returned at four to win the G3 Mahab Al Shimaal.

One of the best sired by Street Cry, Desert Party retired to stud as the winner of six races and close to $1 million in earnings.

Desert Party, who stood the past season at Godstone Farm in Pennsylvania, is the sire of seven stakes winners including G3 winner Salama and multiple stakes scorers Heart's Song and Aunt Babe.

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Catalog Online For CTHS Alberta Thoroughbred Sale

The catalog is now online for the 2020 Canadian Thoroughbred Horse Society (Alberta Division) Thoroughbred Sale, featuring 66 horses on offer.

The auction will take place Friday, Sept. 18 at Westerner Park – Agri Centre East in Red Deer, Alberta, beginning at 3 p.m.

All but one of this year's offerings are yearlings, with the lone exception being a 2-year-old by Girolamo. The catalog consists almost entirely of Alberta-breds, save for six yearlings born in Kentucky and two Ontario-breds.

Graduates of the CTHS Alberta sale are eligible for a variety of stakes races, including the CTHS Alberta Yearling Sales Stakes, which offers a series of $50,000 (Canadian) races at Century Mile for horses from two to four years old. The Canadian Sales Stakes Series is open to all Canadian-bred yearling graduates of CTHS provincial sales, offering races in Alberta, British Columbia, Manitoba, and Ontario, ranging from $30,000 to $250,000. Horses seeking to enter Canadian Sales Stakes Series races outside of the province where they sold are eligible after paying additional nomination and starting fees.

Stallions whose first crops of yearlings are represented in this year's catalog include Ready Intaglio and War Correspondent.

To view the online catalog, click here.

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