Familiar Names Lead Early Del Mar Standings

Four days into the 82nd Del Mar summer meeting, one can find the usual suspects in the upper reaches of the jockey and trainer standings.

There's Flavien Prat, winner of four of the last five riding titles on top, despite missing a day while on assignment in New Jersey, with seven wins from 24 mounts.

There's eight-time (summer and fall) training champion Peter Miller having saddled three winners from 23 starters. Miller is deadlocked with defending fall champion Richard Baltas, who has gone 3-for-21.

But look just below, or in the trainers' case to the side, and one finds names that are not quite so familiar to the casual fan.

In a five-way tie for second behind Prat is Kyle Frey, a 29-year-old journeyman from Tracy, CA, who has three wins from 13 mounts. And level with Miller and Baltas is Victor Garcia, who has gone 3-for-3 to begin the meeting.

Frey notched his first Del Mar stakes victory on Friday aboard I'm So Anna in the $176,000 Fleet Treat Stakes for trainer Steve Sherman and owner/breeders KMN Racing of Kimberly and Kevin Nish of Orlando, FL.

Frey and I'm So Anna out-finished Prat on Teddy's Barino to the delight of Steve Sherman's father Art. The senior Sherman, who trained California Chrome to racing's highest honors, deputized for his son, who remained at their base in Northern California with four scheduled starters at Golden Gate Fields.

“I love it,” Art Sherman said. “Give the Northern California guys a chance.”

“Northern California guys” have made a summer migration to Del Mar with significant impact for the past three years. First Abel Cedillo in 2019, then Juan Hernandez and Ricky Gonzalez last year. Frey summered at Del Mar a few years ago but had settled on the Northern California circuit since.

Equibase statistics show Frey in the No. 39 spot for North American jockeys in 2021 with 129 wins from 514 mounts and purse earnings of more than $2.6 million. His career totals: 970 wins from 5,678 mounts and more than $20 million in purses. He's well on his way to his personal record of 153 wins in a calendar year.

“I was planning on heading back up to Northern California after a week here, but I'm doing so good I must admit I am seriously considering sticking around,” Frey said after the Fleet Treat. “We'll see.”

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Art Sherman said Saturday morning that I'm So Anna may race here again this summer with the Tranquility Lake Stakes at a mile on dirt on August 27 one possibility.

Garcia, 56, has been coming to Del Mar since the late 1980s. He saddled Little Juanito to victory in the seventh race on the opening day of the meeting, July 16, and followed that with a pair of wins last Sunday – Cute Impact in the fourth and Miss Alegria in the sixth. Little Juanito and Miss Alegria both paid  $6.00 as race favorites, Cute Impact was a  $63.80 upsetter.

“This is a good start and I hope the luck will keep going,” the conditioner said.

Garcia said he started with eight horses stabled here but lost Miss Alegria for the $20,000 claiming price. The 5-year-old mare was taken by Altamira Racing Stable and Tom Kagele and now is in Miller's barn.

“I'm looking to claim some, but it's tough to do here,” Garcia said.

Garcia was born in Tijuana and is a third-generation horseman. His father, Juan Garcia, was known as the “King of Caliente” (the now-closed Tijuana racetrack) after winning dozens of training titles there. He has been a Del Mar regular since the late 1980s and has five graded stakes victories in his career. He saddled Smooth Roller to a Grade 1 win in the 2015 Awesome Again at Santa Anita and registered Grade 2 or Grade 3 wins with Approved To Fly and Wait Til Monday in 1988 and '89.

Going on a winning streak is not new for the Garcia family. “I think my father won five straight in one day at Caliente,” he said.

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Big Runnuer Never Headed In Opening-Day Eddie D. Stakes At Santa Anita

Breaking sharply from the far outside in a field of seven, favored Big Runnuer made the lead and never looked back, as he took Friday's main event on opening day at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, Calif., the Grade 2, $200,000 Eddie D Stakes, winning by one length under upstart Juan Hernandez, thus providing the 28-year-old native of Veracruz, Mexico, with his first ever Santa Anita stakes win.  Trained by Victor Garcia and owned by his father “King” Juan Garcia, Big Runneur got 5 1/2 furlongs on turf in 1:01.15.

A winner of his last two races, most recently the 5 1/2-furlong Siren Lure Stakes at Santa Anita on June 21, Big Runnuer, a 5-year-old horse by Stormy Atlantic, had been ridden in his last two starts by Ruben Fuentes.

“I had never ridden him,so I asked Ruben (who is currently serving a riding suspension) what he knew about him,” said Hernandez.  “He told me he was a very nice horse with natural speed.  It looked like we had some speed inside of us, so I thought we'd stay where we were and stay comfortable.  But he broke sharp and when we cleared them and got to the rail, it was over.  I asked him to change leads and it was no problem.  He's a nice horse.”

Off at 3-2, Big Runneur, who is now four for five on the Santa Anita grass, paid $5.00, $3.20 and $2.60.

“He broke sharp (today), other times he was a jump or a jump and a half slow, but this time he broke sharp and he took the lead so easily,” said Garcia, whose father Juan was a legendary conditioner at Agua Caliente, just south of San Diego.  “I saw the first fraction at 21 (seconds) and is said, 'Well, he's not going too fast.  With the blinkers on, he is more focused on the race.”

Out of the Elusive Quality mare Elusive Luci, Big Runneur, with his first graded stakes victory in-hand, is now 7-4-1-2 overall and with the winner's share of $120,000, he has earnings of $253,660.

The second choice at 5-2, Doug O'Neill's Wildman Jack came rolling from off the pace to be second by 1 ¾ lengths over Grit and Curiosity.  With Abel Cedillo up. “Wildman” paid $3.60 and $2.80.

Ridden by Luis Saez, Grit and Curiosity was off at 7-1 and paid $3.60 to show.

Fractions on the race were 21.96, 43.98 and 55.23.

Named in honor of retired all-time great Hall of Fame jockey Eddie Delahoussaye, the Eddie D was run as the Morvich Stakees prior to being renamed in 2012.  Delahoussaye, America's leading rider by wins in 1978, won the 1984 Morvich aboard the Eddie Gregson-trained Tsunami Slew.

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