Incoming Claiborne Stallion Performer Dies Of Ruptured Stomach

Claiborne Farm announced Monday that multiple graded stakes winner Performer has passed away at age five.

He was sent to the clinic Friday night, and died early Saturday morning from a ruptured stomach.

The son of Speightstown, from the family of champions Storm Flag Flying and Personal Ensign, was slated to begin his first year at stud in 2022 at the historic Claiborne Farm.

Bred by the Phipps Stable, Performer was never off the board in nine starts and earned over $420,000 racing in the colors of the Phipps and Claiborne Farm. He won the Grade 3 Discovery Stakes at age three, and took the G3 Fred W. Hooper Stakes at age five.

He will be buried in the Marchmont cemetery at Claiborne Farm.

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The Week in Review: Remembering Bob Neumeier and Sam Spear

The sport not only lost two great people on Saturday, but also two thoroughly professional and highly entertaining media personalities whose genuine zeal for racetrack life shone through in ways that neither could have scripted.

Almost within minutes over the weekend, news began filtering out that both Bob Neumeier and Sam Spear had died Oct. 22.

Over the course of a broadcasting career that spanned parts of five decades, the Boston-based Neumeier, 70, parlayed stints as a hockey announcer and popular TV sports anchor into a mainstay role as an expert handicapper on big-event Thoroughbred racing broadcasts for NBC. The Boston Globe reported that he suffered from congestive heart failure and had been in hospice care for the past eight weeks.

Spear, 72, didn't have quite as high a national profile. But his outgoing, effusive charisma radiated like a beacon to anyone who encountered him in the press boxes of Northern California tracks or tuned in to watch him host one of the country's first regular nightly TV replay shows, which he founded in 1978. According to the San Francisco Chronicle, he died from complications of the rare inflammatory disease sarcoidosis.

 

Neumy Goes to Vegas

Neumeier—called “Neumy” by almost everybody who knew him—grew up not far from the Weymouth fairgrounds racetrack in Massachusetts and spent many an afternoon as a kid in the 1960s with his father, Ed, at Suffolk Downs. Upon graduating from Syracuse University with a degree in broadcasting, his first prominent gig involved calling play-by-play for the old New England Whalers of the World Hockey Association, and he later was the radio voice for the Boston Bruins of the National Hockey League.

In 1981, Neumeier landed a coveted gig as a sportscaster, and later an anchor, at Boston's WBZ-TV. For the next 20 years, he was the affable but highly knowledgeable host who delivered sports highlights in five-minute bursts to millions in an era when that market had three ultra-competitive TV stations covering a ravenously sports-centric city.

In the pre-simulcasting era, Neumy was often at Suffolk Downs playing the local ponies. In fact, if you called his answering machine circa 1989, the message said, “I'm probably at the track.”

Although he often hunkered down in the Turf Club to fine-tune his hand-crafted speed figures, Neumeier was approachable and receptive to fans who wanted his opinion on the daily double or just felt like shooting the breeze about the Red Sox.

You've probably heard the story about how Neumeier suffered a stroke prior to the 2014 Breeders' Cup, then, after 5-plus hours of surgery and only a few months after an astounding recovery, appeared at the 2015 National Handicapping Championship (NHC) to win the inaugural Charity Challenge in Las Vegas.

But another “Neumy goes to Vegas” story that goes back more than 30 years might be more emblematic of Neumeier's resiliency.

In the summer of 1990, long before there was any NHC and well before widespread access to race replays from national tracks, Neumy was confident enough in his figure-making for top-tier circuits to take a crack at the World Cup of Thoroughbred Handicapping at Caesars Palace. He had entered that tournament two previous times with no luck, but on this third occasion he travelled to Vegas with his father so they could enjoy some time together while chasing big prize money in the mythical bankroll contest.

But before father and son had even made it past the baggage carousel at the Las Vegas airport, a pickpocket had lifted his dad's wallet containing $1,800.

They had flown in early, two days before the tourney began, and luckily Neumy had prepaid his entry. According to Neumeier's retelling of this tale in a 1990 Boston Globe story, he spent the next two days paranoically patting his sport coat pocket every few minutes to make sure he still had his own fat envelope containing their remaining $3,800 of spending money.

All of a sudden, on one of those patdowns, the envelope was gone.

“Maybe a pickpocket got it or maybe it just fell out of my pocket,” Neumeier told the Globe. I went over to my father and said, 'Dad, you're not going to believe this.' We were down to our last $200. I said, 'I guess I've just got to press on.'”

The field for the three-day tourney had 350 entrants.

“The first day I lost four photos by a nose and didn't win a penny. Out of the 350 contestants, there I was in 350th place,' Neumeier reminisced. “I was a little bit numbed after what happened already, but you just have to suck it up and move on.”

Prior to day two of the contest, he stayed up until 3 a.m. studying the races, then got up at the crack of dawn to handicap some more.

Neumy's luck reversed: He clawed his way up the standings with two long-shot nose winners from Belmont Park. Then he took a stand against a 2-5 shot in an Arlington Park sprint to come up with a horse who won by four lengths “in a gallop” and paid $65.

When the new leaderboard was posted, Neumy was standing behind the player who had led the first day, and he overheard the horseplayer say, “Who's this guy that went from last to first? He's not going to last.” At that point, Neumeier admitted,  he was just happy to have won the $4,800 second-day leader prize to make up for the vanished cash.

But his run of luck wasn't finished: Neumeier ended up running up the score on day three and took home the grand prize of $52,000.

Best of all, Neumy said, “was that my father was there to see it. He had to work weekends as a mutuel clerk at Suffolk to make ends meet. He'd throw the Form at me, and I learned the love of racing from him.”

 

Dancing on Tables, Revered in the Stables

According to a remembrance quote in his Chronicle obituary, Sam Spear was like the guardian angel Clarence in the movie It's a Wonderful Life—“a PR angel sent down to Northern California to bring people together.”

Spear was a true storyteller and sports nut who thrived on personal contact and old-school people skills. A native of Oakland who graduated from St. Joseph's-Alameda and San Francisco State with a major in speech, he was re-creating race calls on a Bay Area radio show in the late 1970s when he pitched the idea for a nightly TV horse race replay show to a new independent station, KTSF.

The show ended up having a run of nearly 40 years until Spear gave it up in 2017. He not only hosted the program (often seven days a week when the NorCal fairs were running) but also sold the show's advertising and managed all the broadcasting logistics.

Spear juggled all of that while producing and hosting a weekly racing radio show and working as the longtime public relations director for Golden Gate Fields. Spear also umpired and refereed high school and college baseball and basketball games. He even had a heart attack while on the TV job in 1991 but insisted on quickly returning to his 12-hour daily workload.

Larry Collmus, who now announces the Triple Crown and Breeders' Cup races for NBC, recalled in a phone interview Sunday morning how he first met Spear when Sam picked him up at the airport for the job interview that got Collmus the Golden Gate announcing gig in 1988.

“The one thing that stands out is just the kindness of the guy,” Collmus said. “He literally was taking me everywhere, showing me where everything was. I was 21 years old. He helped me open up a bank account. He cosigned for my apartment because I had no credit, and he didn't even hesitate.

“My first night in the Bay Area, Sam took me to a restaurant—I forget the name, but it was one of his favorite spots in San Francisco. We go in, and everybody knows him. We start drinking good red wine—which he loved—and all of sudden, Sam just starts dancing on the table. I quickly found out that that was like a normal thing when Sam was enjoying himself.”

Collmus continued, “But Sam had an on/off switch for that stuff. When he was in the mood to have fun, he would just let loose and do it. And then he would take things seriously when his work needed to be taken seriously.”

Collmus recalled how, for some unknown reason, Spear delighted in calling everybody in the press box “Harry.” He also was a never-ending fountain of one-liners and wisecracks.

As Collmus recalled, “He would always say, 'I've got a million of 'em!' And we would say, 'Well, Sam, then how come we keep hearing the same ones over and over and over?'”

Had the Bay Area racing industry not been so fortunate as to have Spear as its promoter, he almost certainly would have ended up doing front-office work for a major-league baseball club.

Spear knew many ballplayers, managers and executives of the San Francisco Giants (for whom he briefly worked in the mid-1970s) and Oakland A's. One of his close friends was the legendary Joe DiMaggio, for whom Sam made sure there was always a seat in the Golden Gate press box.

When a devastating earthquake rocked San Francisco in October 1989, Spear and DiMaggio were sitting together at Candlestick Park before the scheduled Game 3 of the World Series between the Giants and A's. They had to evacuate the ballpark, and they spent most of the night waiting together for the all-clear so DiMaggio could return to his neighborhood after a fire there had been put out.

In the early 1990s, Spear was friendly with an A's batboy named Stanley Burrell—long before the world would know him as the rap music star MC Hammer.

“In fact, Sam was the person Hammer first talked to about getting into horse racing,” Collmus said, alluding to Hammer's eventual ownership of a stable that included the MGSW filly Lite Light.

“Sam had Hammer and Jerry Hollendorfer meet at Golden Gate,” Collmus recalled. “As the story goes, Hollendorfer said to Hammer, 'How much money do you want to spend?' And Hammer says, 'Whatever it costs to win that Kentucky Derby race.'”

As Spear once told columnist Mike Brunker in an undated news clip that was making the rounds as a social media remembrance over the weekend, “I've never considered my work to be a 'job.' Racing and my show is me. That's my life.”

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Sportscaster Bob Neumeier Passes Away

Bob Neumeier, whose career as a sportscaster included a long stint with NBC's horse racing team, died Saturday. He was 70.
In 2014, Neumeier, known as “Neumy,” suffered a stroke and had battled health ailments ever since. Boston radio host Tony Massarotti reported that Neumeier died from heart disease/congestive heart failure.

A graduate of Syracuse University, Neumeier broke into broadcasting 1975 as the radio play-by-play man for the Hartford Whalers. In 1981, he was hired by WBZ-TV in Boston, where his duties included working as the weekend sports anchor. He was there for 20 years.

“We are saddened to offer our condolences to the friends and family of Bob Neumeier, who passed away last night,” an NBC spokesperson said in a statement. “In the midst of a prominent career in Boston, Neumy joined NBC Sports and for more than two decades was a beloved member of our family working on horse racing, football and Olympics, among other events. Our thoughts are with Bob's wife Michele, and the many sports fans to whom he meant so much.”

While at WBZ, he also served as the play-by-play commentator for the Boston Bruins.

After leaving WBZ, Neumeier went to work at WEEI, an all-sports radio station in Boston. From 2002-2005, Neumeier served as co-host with Dale Arnold on the station's midday “Dale & Neumy” show. After leaving WEEI, Neumeier covered such events as the Tour de France and the Turin Olympics, as well as racing's biggest events. He also hosted a show on Comcast SportsNet New England.

“It saddens me to report that my friend and former partner, Bob Neumeier, passed away yesterday,” Arnold tweeted Sunday. “Neumy was one of a kind, and all who knew him were better for it.”

“The Boston Bruins are saddened by the passing of our former radio play-by-play voice and longtime Boston sports media personality Bob Neumeier,” read a tweet from the Bruins. “We send our thoughts and condolences to Bob's family, friends, and colleagues.”

“We were very saddened to learn today of the passing of Bob Neumeier,” said the Breeders' Cup in a statement. “Bob was a big part of the NBC Breeders' Cup World Championships broadcasts for many years as a handicapper, reporter and analyst. Bob brought his expertise of Thoroughbred racing and a great sense of humor to every show. We extend our sincere condolences to Bob's wife Michele and to his extended family.”

In 2009, he collapsed while covering the GI Kentucky Oaks for NBC and was briefly hospitalized.

The 2014 stroke, which occurred shortly before he was to leave to California to cover the Breeders' Cup, required 5 1/2 hours of surgery and involved a stay in an intensive care unit. He went back to work seven months later.

“I was really nervous,” Neumeier told the Boston Globe about his return to the airwaves. “I didn't think there would be [butterflies], but there were. There's a lot of people involved here, colleagues and cohorts. They have an eye out, to see how I'm doing. Viewers have an eye out. People are saying, 'What is he doing? What does he sound like? What does he look like?' I didn't want it to be a freak show, not that it would have been. I just wanted it to be seamless. Maybe they missed me, maybe they didn't, but I wanted [viewers to think] my work would be the same. Maybe even better. That was how I thought about it.”

Just three months after the stroke, Neumeier won the inaugural NTRA National Handicapping Championship Charity Challenge.

An enthusiastic racing fan, handicapper and horseplayer, Neumeier was a staple of NBC's horse racing coverage for several years as he covered the Triple Crown, the Breeders' Cup and other major events. Along with Mike Battaglia, he was one of the network's go-to analysts for handicapping insights and betting advice. He had a smooth but dry delivery and an ability to relate to the $2 bettor.

The National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences Boston and New England Chapter honored Neumeier with its Silver Circle Award in 2017.

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Champion Caressing, Dam Of Champion West Coast, Dies At Age 23

Champion Caressing passed on Sept. 14 at Hermitage Farm due to laminitic conditions.

She is buried at Hermitage between the paddocks next to the foaling barn, where she devoted so much time to watching future champions grow.

Caressing, a dark bay mare foaled in 1998, was purchased as a yearling for $180,000 on behalf of Carl F. Pollard. Sent into training with veteran trainer David R. Vance, Caressing was a winner in her second start as a 2-year-old and advanced in her third career race to the Bassinet Stakes, winning by seven lengths.

A 47-1 longshot in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies, Caressing's victory solidified her as the recipient of the 2000 Eclipse Award as champion 2-year-old filly. She retired in 2002 with earnings of $955,998.

The highlight of Caressing's career as a broodmare came in 2014 with foaling season coming to a close with a bay colt by Flatter born on May 14.

Upon visit from Keeneland prior to the sale, Frankie Brothers remarked, “He's either going to blossom or he's going to go the other way.”

The son of Flatter flourished at the right time and caught the eye of Ben Glass, agent for Gary and Mary West, at the sale, despite his late foaling date.

“But I just loved this colt,” said Glass. “He was so charismatic and carried himself so well. He had such a fluid walk he would slink along like a panther. He had good size and a great big overstep on him.”

The price limit for Glass was set at $350,000, but he stretched to $425,000 to bring home Caressing's eighth foal from Hermitage Farm's consignment.

Appropriately named West Coast, the Flatter colt moved to Santa Anita Park under the care of Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert. He did not race at two and finally debuted in February of 2017, taking two starts to win.

West Coast skipped the Kentucky Derby and Triple Crown races entirely. However, he made a scene at Belmont Park on Belmont Stakes day in the Easer Goer Stakes, winning by 3 3/4 lengths. West Coast returned to California for the Los Alamitos Derby to score by 2 3/4 lengths.

The 3-year-old then traversed the U.S. again for the “Midsummer Derby,” the prestigious Grade 1 Travers Stakes, at Saratoga, where he soundly defeated all three classic winners: Always Dreaming (Kentucky Derby), Cloud Computing (Preakness Stakes), and Tapwrit (Belmont Stakes). Now considered one of the top colts in the three-year old division, West Coast made his next start in the G1 Pennsylvania Derby to win by 7 1/4 lengths.

Piloted by Mike Smith in his subsequent stakes victories, Smith admired, “He's just better than they are. As a matter of fact, he was getting bored.”

Closing out his 3-year-old campaign, West Coast faced older horses for the first time in the Breeders' Cup Classic and finished a strong third. He was then voted 2017 Eclipse Award champion 3-year old male.

West Coast's 4-year-old season ended winless in 2018, but his presence was still felt with runner-up finishes in the Grade/Group 1 Pegasus World Cup Invitational, Dubai World Cup, and Awesome Again Stakes. He retired following the 2018 Breeders' Cup Classic to Lane's End Farm. His first foals are yearlings of 2021.

Caressing's first foal, My Goodness by Storm Cat, has since become a prominent broodmare in the Japanese breeding Industry, producing colts Danon Kingly (Earnings: $4,469,755), Danon Legend (Earnings: $3,324,208), and Danon Good (Earnings: $1,231,688). Caressing's other black-type earners include Gold Hawk and Juan and Bina.

She has a 2-year-old son of Honor Code, named Touch Code, in training at Saratoga with Trainer Bill Mott for Carl F. Pollard, and a yearling colt by Horse of the Year Gun Runner who will be retained.

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