Santa Anita: Kent Desormeaux Taking Advantage Of Longshot Stakes Opportunities While Several Jockeys Out Of Town

Having been without a Santa Anita stakes mount since the Blue Norther on Dec. 30, Hall of Fame jockey Kent Desormeaux will get a pair of added money opportunities with long shots on Saturday.

In the Grade 2, $200,000 San Pasqual going 1 1/8 miles, Desormeaux has the call on Messier for Bob Baffert. Earlier on the card in the Grade 3, $200,000 Las Virgenes, Desormeaux will ride the maiden Sweet Trouble for trainer Phil D'Amato. Messier is the 6-1 fourth choice in the San Pasqual while Sweet Trouble is installed as the longest shot on Jon White's morning line at 12-1 in the Las Virgenes.

On Thursday at Clocker's Corner, Desormeaux duly noted Saturday's opportunities are partially the result of some Santa Anita-based jockeys, including Flavien Prat, John Velazquez, and Frankie Dettori, riding elsewhere on Saturday.

“It's my first start (this meet) for Baffert and I get to ride for Phil – maybe I should get the guys to leave more often,” Desormeaux said.

Desormeaux's only previous stakes ride this season at Santa Anita was a sixth-place finish aboard Naughty Lottie for his brother, trainer Keith Desormeaux, in the Blue Norther on Dec. 30.

Through the first 12 racing days of the Classic Meet, Desormeaux ranks 16th in the Santa Anita jockey's standings with three wins from 21 mounts, a 14 percent success rate. He has one mount on Friday and five on Saturday.

“While the big guys are gone it's good to give the little guy a chance,” joked Desormeaux, himself a three-time winner of the Kentucky Derby who was enshrined in the Racing Hall of Fame in 2004. “I'm going to take advantage of every opportunity I get.”

Desormeaux's three Kentucky Derby wins came aboard Real Quiet in 1998 for Baffert, Fusaichi Pegasus in 2000 and Big Brown in 2008.

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‘Weight Off The Shoulders’: Riley Mott Off The Duck At Oaklawn

Trainer Riley Mott recorded his first career Oaklawn victory in last Sunday's second race with House Wrecker ($5.40) under leading rider Cristian Torres. Mott, 31, went out on his own Nov. 1 after assisting his father, Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott, for eight years.

House Wrecker, who captured the $6,250 claiming sprint for older fillies and mares by a half-length, marked Riley Mott's 15th starter of the 2022-2023 Oaklawn meeting. He had three seconds and three thirds before the breakthrough victory, his second overall.

“That felt like a weight off the shoulders, that's for sure,” Mott said Thursday morning.

Mott was already in Arkansas overseeing his Oaklawn stable when he recorded his first career victory Nov. 10 at Churchill Downs. Mott's first winner, Unifying, marked his third and final starter of the Churchill Downs Fall meeting. Mott's other 18 career starts have come at Oaklawn.

“The one in Churchill was, obviously, pretty meaningful, but it's a little different when you're not there in person,” Mott said.

House Wrecker was making her first start since Mott claimed the 5-year-old daughter of Congrats for $20,000 out of an eighth-place finish Dec. 18 at Oaklawn. A forward factor from the start last Sunday, House Wrecker led by two lengths in midstretch and held off a hard-charging Proud Victoria approaching the wire.

“We were in an aggressive spot,” Mott said. “It looked like the right spot because at the end of the day we won by a diminishing neck or head or whatever. But I felt that if we were going to win one that day that she was probably the one.”

Mott enters Friday with a 1-3-3 record from 18 starts and purse earnings of $118,168 at the 2022-2023 Oaklawn meeting that began Dec. 9.

Bill Mott recorded his first career Oaklawn victory Feb. 12, 1975, with Colorado Bay ($17) in an $11,000 claiming race for older horses. Mott was Oaklawn's leading trainer in 1986 with 35 victories.

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‘We Can’t Do It Without The Team’: Saffie Joseph, Jr. Grateful For Opportunity With Three Pegasus Entrants

Evidence of Saffie Joseph Jr.'s rapid rise into the upper echelon of thoroughbred trainers in the U.S. will be on display Saturday at Gulfstream Park, where the Barbados native is scheduled to saddle three starters in the $3 million Pegasus World Cup Invitational (G1) presented by Baccarat.

“I'm just blessed to be in the position. Six years ago, if you told me I'd have one, I would have been very happy,” Joseph said. “I don't think we're bringing anyone that isn't a contender. We're bringing three legit horses. Things have gone well for them training up to the race. They're three live horses. I thank the owners for the opportunity.”

Joseph will be represented in the first multi-million-dollar stakes of the 2023 racing season by C2 Racing Stable LLC and La Milagrosa Stable LLC's White Abarrio, who captured last season's $1 million Curlin Florida Derby (G1) at Gulfstream; Daniel Alonso's Skippylongstocking, the third-place finisher in the 2022 Belmont Stakes (G1) who is coming off a career-best effort in a Harlan's Holiday (G3) triumph at Gulfstream; and Fernando Vine Ode and Michael and Jules Iavarone's O'Connor, a Group 1 winner in Chile.

Six years ago, Joseph was coming off a career-best 19 wins with just over $400,000 in purses-won in 2016. In 2022, he saddled the winners of 174 races and $10.1 million in purses, a year after his stable banked $9 million and won 201 races.

“To be honest with you, I'm probably the smallest piece of the puzzle. The staff we've been able to acquire and the horses the owners have given us, if you took me out of the equation, I think the show would still run pretty good,” Joseph said. “I get a lot of the credit, but I'm probably the least important factor. We're strong in having a great team. There are not two ways about it, we can't do it without the team. Everybody has to do their part. I always tell the team, 'Not one person can make us, but one person can break us.' We need people with a positive attitude and try harder rather than doing their own thing.”

His growing success has been accompanied with mounting 'jealousy,' said Joseph, who credits his faith in allowing him to block out the outside noise and concentrate on building his stable.

“All glory to God, being my protector,” he said. “Seeing how things have happened in my career, and seeing the jealousy, he's the protector.”

Joseph deflects both credit and criticism, maintaining that Thoroughbred owners hold the key to any trainer's success.

“There's no superhero trainer out there. People may want to portray that's the reality,” said Joseph, who is currently at the top of the Gulfstream standings in his quest to defend his 2021-2022 Championship Meet title. “There's obviously good trainers out there, but when you get to the Top 10, Top 15 trainers, there's not much difference between them. What separates them is the horses.”

Joseph, who had regularly maintained a 20-percent strike rate while racing almost exclusively in South Florida since venturing from Barbados to the U. S. prior to the 2011 racing season, saw a significant boost in quality in his stable after saddling Math Wizard for a 31-1 upset victory in the 2019 Pennsylvania Derby (G1).

“It was our first Grade 1 winner and, obviously, being nationally televised on NBC, it was definitely a coming-out victory for us,” Joseph said. “When you win those kind of races, people have more confidence to give you higher quality horses. He took us to our first Breeders' Cup Classic. Being claiming for $25,000, he definitely started it all.”

Since Math Wizard's triumph, Joseph has saddled the winners of 22 graded stakes while balancing his career with his family, wife Morgan, daughter Sienna (8) and son Rocco (6). His wife's involvement in the business aspects of his stable has allowed him to concentrate on his racing operation.

“It's true, every successful man has a strong wife, woman, behind him,” Joseph said. “To see my wife raise our kids, being a mother has to be the hardest job in the world. All mothers out there, full respect to them. You can just see how hard it is. It's just pure love.

“She's a big part. Morgan deals with all the bills, billing for the owners,” he added. “If I had to do the billing and the bills, that's the part I dread. I get to concentrate on the horses, and she gets to concentrate on all the hard work.”

Joseph will be able to stay busy Saturday while waiting to saddle his three starters in the Pegasus World Cup, His stable will be represented in eight of the 13 races, including the $1 million Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational (G1) presented by Qatar Racing in Race 12 (Master Piece) and the $500,000 TAA Pegasus World Cup Filly & Mare Turf Invitational (G3) presented by Pepsi in Race 11 (Artie's Princess).

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Recovering From Shoulder Surgery, Pegasus Turf Contender Good Governance A Healing Influence For Trainer Anna Meah

From competing on the rodeo circuit to riding one of the most famous Thoroughbreds in the world, Anna Meah's racing career has been quite a ride, one that will continue Saturday at Gulfstream Park.

The 30-year-old Meah trains Foxbrook Farm's Good Governance, who will make the biggest start of his – and her – career in the $1 million Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational (G1), one of the richest and most prestigious grass events in the U.S.

In its fifth year, the 1 1/8-mile Pegasus Turf is part of a blockbuster 13-race program featuring nine stakes, seven graded, worth $5.4 million in purses that includes the $3 million Pegasus World Cup Invitational (G1) and $500,000 TAA Pegasus Filly & Mare Turf Invitational (G3).

Good Governance is a multiple graded-stakes placed 7-year-old seeking his first stakes win in the Pegasus Turf. It will be just his 11th career start and second for Meah since she and her husband, David, purchased the 7-year-old for Foxbrook's Jason Tackitt for $55,000 at Keeneland's horses of racing age sale last November. Originally on the reserve list, he drew into the 12-horse field following the Jan. 19 retirement of two-time defending champion Colonel Liam.

In the first start for his new connections, Good Governance ran fourth – beaten less than two lengths – in the Dec. 31 Fort Lauderdale (G2), Gulfstream's local prep for the Pegasus Turf.

“It's so cool. It's a once in a lifetime thing,” Meah said. “You just never know when you're actually going to get the chance to be back in there. We secretly were kind of dreaming of it after the Fort Lauderdale but we weren't going to get our hopes up. I've had a good feeling about this horse. It's just pretty amazing how it all worked out.”

Meah was born in Portland, Ore. and raised just across the border in Battle Ground, Wash., getting her introduction to racing at age 7 on a trip with her father to Portland Meadows. For Meah, it was love at first sight.

“I've been a 100 percent horse girl since I was born,” said Meah, who traveled and competed all over the Northwest with the equestrian drill team, Latigo N' Lace, for seven years as well as the Washington National Barrel Horse Association. She ran track competitively for 13 years, graduating from Battle Ground High School in 2010. Meah went on to study animal science with an equine option at Montana State University.

Still unsure where she wanted her career with horses to go she worked for veterinarian Solomon Benneroch, which later led to a grooming job and breaking babies before beginning to exercise racehorses in 2011 at Portland Meadows, Kennewick, Grants Pass and Emerald Downs.

“I grew up doing rodeo,” Meah said. “I didn't really know anybody in the racehorse industry but I was shadowing and kind of interning [Benneroch who] worked on the track, so he kind of got my foot in the door at Portland Meadows and it hooked me right there.”

When the future of Portland Meadows became cloudy before it eventually closed in 2019, Meah was faced with a decision of where to take her burgeoning career. She got in her car and drove to southern California in December 2012 and by the next spring had secured a job riding horses for trainer Art Sherman.

Around the same time, a California-bred of modest lineage came to Sherman's barn – one that would change Meah's life: California Chrome.

“I thought, 'Heck, you know what? The big leagues are in California and if I want to pursue it then I'm going to go south. And it's warmer. I was riding in the rain and snow every day, so I was really happy to go to California,” Meah said. “How lucky am I to be there such a short amount of time and get to be a part of Chrome's whole career? It was pretty fairy tale-like, to be honest.”

Meah worked her way up in the barn to become Sherman's assistant and the exercise rider for Chrome, the 2014 and 2016 Horse of the Year that still has a rabid following six years after he last raced. He won 16 races including the 2014 Kentucky Derby (G1) and Preakness (G1) and 2016 Dubai World Cup (G1) and earned more than $14 million in purses.

When California Chrome made his career finale in the inaugural Pegasus World Cup in 2017 – he'd finish ninth behind Arrogate's track-record performance and ultimately exit the race with a knee injury – Meah stayed behind in California to run Sherman's barn.

“The whole experience with Chrome was amazing,” Meah said. “At the time I was a little disappointed to miss out on that, especially because it was going to be his retirement at that point. I had to really be at the barn to keep things going. I look back at it and it's one of those things that I'm thankful for now because it's taught me a lot about how to run my own barn and handle situations that arise every day.”

Meah spent six years with Sherman and then worked for Richard Baltas, exposing her to such notable stakes horses as Gas Station Sushi, Goodyearforroses, Madam Dancealot, Midnight Crossing, Queen Blossom, Gato Del Oro, Insta Erma, Tapped, A Red Tie Day, Secret Spice, Kathy's Song, Next Shares, Lucy De, Princess Princess, Ms. Bad Behavior, Miss Boom Boom, Pantsonfire, Navajo Dreamer, Okinawa, Del Mar May, Lady Prancealot, Quebec and Rijeka.

Grade 1-winning millionaire Next Shares is the only horse to run in the Pegasus Turf three times, from 2019 to 2021, his best finish being a sixth in his final appearance.

“I was with Richard Baltas for a year. That was a stable that really prepared me to go on my own, just because I traveled alone a lot,” Meah said. “[Art] Sherman's was, too, because I got left behind a lot so I was given the whole entire run of the barn and [able] figure it out. They both were really good stepping stones for me. I learned a lot there.”

Meah took out her trainer's license in October 2018, her first runner being Sekhmet's Revenge owned by William Marasa and her husband, David. The horse ran second and was claimed for $20,000 out of the Oct. 25, 2018 race at Santa Anita in a 10-way shake.

In November 2018, Meah-trained Excellent Sunset finished first in the Kathryn Crosby at Del Mar but was disqualified to second for interference in the stretch. She recorded her first training win with Stringent Jan. 19, 2019 at Santa Anita. Meah's first stakes win came with Abby Hatcher in the 2021 Chicago (G3) at Arlington Park.

By the spring of 2020, Meah and her husband relocated to Kentucky, where they are based year-round. This is their first winter in South Florida, with a nine-horse string at Palm Meadows, Gulfstream's satellite training facility in Palm Beach County.

“Training wasn't really what I was aiming for, to be honest with you. I don't really know what I was aiming for, but the opportunity arose and with my husband being in bloodstock we had a lot of mutual friends and clients,” Meah said. “They were like, 'Hey, if you want to go out on your own we'll support you.' We decided we might as well take this leap of faith. We've got people to back us up so let's give it a try. We've hit a lot of rough patches, but we've had a lot of fun and success along the way too. We've been very pleased to have good owners and some fun horses.”

Good Governance is the latest of those horses. Originally purchased as a yearling for $167,290 at Tattersalls in England, he won four of nine races for Klaravich Stables and trainer Chad Brown and ran second by a neck in the 2019 Saranac (G3) and third by 1 ½ lengths in the 2020 Bernard Baruch (G2), both at Saratoga.

“We didn't even have him very long before we brought him to Florida,” Meah said. “I really liked him. Sometimes when you're around certain horses they just have a sort of class about them that makes them feel different than others. When we got to Florida, I didn't have an exercise rider for about a week so I was getting on the horse myself. He just gives you a different feel that a lot of horses don't give you. [He has] so much class. There's something really, really special about this horse.”

In the Fort Lauderdale, also run at 1 1/8 miles, Good Governance was bumped early and raced along the rail before making a seven-wide rally to finish in a dead-heat for fourth, 1 ¾ lengths behind City Man. Both the winner and runner-up, Grade 1 winner Decorated Invader, return in the Pegaus Turf for trainer Christophe Clement.

“We knew he was going to run good in the Fort Lauderdale, but, man,” Meah said. “We were only beaten a length and three-quarters, which is amazing. It was unreal.

“Once that race happened we were like, 'Oh my gosh, how cool would it be to actually get the opportunity to run in the Pegasus?'”she added. “We had nominated to a couple other stakes just because we weren't getting our hopes up. We weren't real high up there on the list; however, we were going to train and be prepared for it in case the opportunity did arise and, thankfully for us, it did.”

Good Governance has continued to flourish since the Fort Lauderdale with two sharp half-mile breezes at Palm Meadows, going in 49.80 Jan. 13, fourth-fastest of 22 horses, and 48.10 Jan. 20, ranking eighth of 39. Shaun Bridgmohan, up in the Fort Lauderdale, is set to ride back from Post 2 at morning-line odds of 15-1.

“Honestly, he couldn't be doing any better,” Meah said. “I wouldn't trade this horse for any other horse right now. I really wouldn't. I'm just so happy with the way he's training and eating, his appetite and energy. He looks so happy. He just is such a dude, really. For being an older colt, he's friendly, happy and there's not a mean bone in his body. He's really a cool horse.”

For now, Meah is in Kentucky recovering from Jan. 20 shoulder surgery to repair an injury suffered in a horse accident a few years back. Unlike California Chrome, she is hoping to be at Gulfstream this time to see her horse run.

“That was the first thing I asked my surgeon when he came in before my surgery. He was like, 'Do you have any questions?' and I said, 'Yeah, what about traveling next weekend?' He kind of thought I was a little bit crazy,” Meah said. “He said, 'You're probably going to be in a lot of pain but I'm not going to tell you no as long as you've got your compression socks and you keep up on your medication.' He said, 'Don't be going to the barn with your open wounds, because you're not going to have your stitches out yet.' I said, 'That's fine. I just really want to be there for my race.'

“I just have this feeling there's something telling me I need to be there,” she added. “It's just so cool. It's not a race that comes up every day. It's something we were kind of dreaming of secretly but not getting too excited about, but it's turned into the reality so I kind of feel like I need to act on it.”

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