Terry Lovingier: Keeping California Horse Racing In Good Hands

When you love a sport as much as Terry Lovingier loves horse racing, the time and effort you put into it is irrelevant. That is why when you ask Lovingier where he finds the time and energy to be chairperson of the board for the California Thoroughbred Breeders Association, secretary for the Thoroughbred Owners of California, owner of a successful Thoroughbred breeding operation and be the Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association's Breeder of the Year, he just smiles and says he wouldn't do it if he didn't enjoy it.

Terry Lovingier is a major proponent of California horse racing, one of many people spearheading efforts to keep horseracing alive in California. His passion begins as a breeder and the owner of a large Thoroughbred ranch in Warner Springs called Lovacres.

“I enjoy breeding, I enjoy birthing babies,” Lovingier says. “I enjoy watching them grow up. I don't think there's any more gratification than to breed, birth and raise a baby and have it go well. They're like your kids. “

From there he branches out, proactively getting people involved in the sport through investment partnerships. He estimates he has about 30 or more current active partners.

“I have a lot of friends that like horse racing,” Lovingier says, “but they don't want to own the whole horse so they just buy parts to participate. They like to spread so they have more opportunities and more chance to win and I encourage them to do that. And on top of that it's more fun for me to have the friendship and the comradery.”

Lovingier has no problem with the giant partnerships that offer fans micro shares of horses.

“I think it's probably great for horseracing,” he says. “It gives people a chance to have a piece of something and participate in it. It think it's a good thing as long as you don't go into it thinking you're going to make any money. I mean, you can. It's all gambling, it's just on what scale do you want to play.”

Then there's Lovingier's involvement in the administration end of the horse racing industry. He's been with the California Thoroughbred Breeders Association for 12 years.

“The CTBA's charter is to promote breeding,” Lovingier says. “I think our forefathers got it right with the 'breed back' rule. You buy mares in Kentucky, bring them out here, foal the babies and then breed back to a California sire and then you have a Cal-bred.”

Lovingier believes the Cal-bred program is essential to keeping horse racing operating in California.

“At each level there's a spot for every horse,” Lovingier reasons. “You just have to find the right spots for them. Cal-bred levels give you the ability to compete and not necessarily have to do it against all the million dollar horses; but if your horse does get that good, then you can.”

Lovingier knows a good horse when he sees one. His family is from Oklahoma though Terry was raised Lakewood, California where he developed his love for horses at an early age.

“Around the age of five, in Lakewood,” Lovingier recollects, “my dad had Quarter horses in our backyard on union land my dad took care of. I helped him take care of the horses.”

Fast forward to 1990, when he and his father and brother purchased a ranch outside of Waco, Texas. It was at the ranch they raised Streakin Flyer, a horse that won the 1996 All-American Futurity, the Kentucky Derby of Quarter horse racing. But by then, Lovingier was working and raising his family in California and the trips back to Texas began to wear him.

“It became a bit too much for me to fly there and then drive to it because the last hour was on dirt roads at the time,” he remembers. “So we moved everything back to Murrietta only to have the government eminent domain my property. We had really good well water in the valley and prior to 2005 the building of houses was going nuts and they eminent domained my ranch because they needed the water. I get it, it's for the betterment of society, so from there they moved us up to our current location in Warner Springs.”

That's where he started Lovacres, a beautiful, sprawling 600-acre property where he started investing in and breeding Thoroughbreds.

“There's probably 50-to-60 productive mares and then I built a retirement pasture so I probably have another 20-or-30 out there,” he notes. “It's really a pretty piece of property; the horses aren't stressed and they just do well”

He's brought some excellent stallions to Lovacres: Phantom Boss, Smokem and Oscar Nominated. But none as successful, so quickly, as Stay Thirsty.

“He did something this year that you don't ever see,” Lovingier said. “He's a 2008 model and he's already surpassed all of the stallions who have ever been to California in progeny earnings for 2-year-olds and he's still got more crops coming behind him.”

In 2021, Stay Thirsty's first crop in California, he led in Cal-bred 2-year-old purse earnings, in the number of 2-year-old winners and number of races won. In all, Stay Thirsty's purse earnings in 2021 exceeded $5 million, one of the reasons Lovingier was named Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association California Breeder of the Year.

“It means a lot because there are a lot of good breeders here in California,” Lovingier notes. “You have to put in a lot to get there. We breed them, we birth them and then we spend two more years just to get there. So it means a lot.”

Breeding horses isn't Lovingier's only source of income. He's also in the oil business.

“I have a company that does maintenance in refineries,” Lovingier says, “and I have five recycling units that recycle asphalt and concrete. I have a civil and environmental engineering degree at UC Irvine and I put that to use in the environmental business, but also in the oil company.”

Lovingier hit the exacta last year when his Cal-bred Finneus was named the 2021 champion Cal-bred 2-year-old male and his At the Spa was named the 2021 champion Cal-bred filly. He won the Graduation Stakes at Del Mar in 2021 with his colt Rock N Rye. When he's not watching his 'babies' race, he's the acting secretary for the Thoroughbred Owners of California.

“The TOC charter is to represent owners in horse racing, whether they are Cal-bred or not,” Lovinger says. “I've been fortunate to work under Mike Pegram, Nick Alexander, and now under Gary Fenton. The TOC board is loaded with really, really good people. Intelligent people who really care about their horses and I think we got a lot of good things happening.”

Lovingier doesn't buy into all the doomsday scenarios about horse racing, especially in California.

“We're going good here,” Lovingier points out. “If you look at the fields here, there is a higher percentage of Cal-breds that stick on the circuit now than ever before. Probably because there are higher caliber mares out here now. Maybe not as many as there were 10 years ago, but certainly a higher caliber.”

Lovingier credits the breeders themselves for raising the quality of racehorses in the Golden State.

“I think the breeders associations and the breeders themselves, the Tommy Towns and myself, George Krikorian, Nick Alexander, Harris Farms and Legacy Ranch…all are committed to racing,” Lovingier says. “They are trying to compete at a higher level and they've raised the level at which we are competing. All you have to do is look at the maiden special weight bonus program. Cal-breds are winning more of those in open company.”

Lovingier is just as proud of the efforts being made in California to help Thoroughbreds after they retire from racing.

“You can always improve things,” Lovingier says, “but the truth is if you sit somewhere and talk horse racing to somebody, they don't realize there's a penny or two out of every dollar bet that goes toward re-careering racehorses. That word needs to get out there. Let people know that we do love our horses; that we do take care of them. That message is good but we can always do a little better job at it.”

So what is Lovingier's vision of California horse racing moving forward?

“If you look at Del Mar and how well they're doing, people still love horse racing. Now that we're making more of an effort to protect our horses it's going to continue forward in a great manner. All we have to do is keep getting after it and protecting our horses.”

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Tyler Baze Unable To Return Thursday At Del Mar Due To Blood Pressure Medication

Jockey Tyler Baze, who missed mounts last week at Del Mar due to what stewards described as “personal matters,” was unable to make his planned return on Thursday when a test revealed traces of a temporarily-prescribed blood pressure medication, according to the Daily Racing Form.

Agent Jack Carava told DRF that Baze sought treatment on Monday this week when his blood pressure spiked.

Though Carava said Baze only took the medication on Monday, the agent added: “the stewards said he can't ride until he's clean, even if the medication was prescribed by a doctor.”

Baze rides under an agreement with the California Horse Racing Board which requires regular testing, and he did pass a test last Friday after failing to appear for his mounts at Del Mar on Thursday.

Read more at the Daily Racing Form.

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‘It’s Not Just Me, It’s Everybody’: Rudy Sanchez-Salomon Chasing First Training Title At Laurel Park

When he looks at the standings for Laurel Park's summer meet, which wraps up its 37-day stand this weekend, Rudy Sanchez-Salomon finds himself in excellent company.

Sanchez-Salomon's 18 wins have him tied for first with Claudio Gonzalez, who owns 19 career meet titles in Maryland since 2014 – 17 of them coming at Laurel – and has been the state's annual leader in victories since 2017.

Sitting right behind them with 16 wins is Dale Capuano, winner of 3,629 career races, 13 meet championships at Laurel and another 18 at historic Pimlico Race Course between 1988 and 2010.

“Thank God, we've been blessed. We've been having a really, really blessed meet this summer,” Sanchez-Salomon said. “We've got the right horses for the right races, and they've been doing very well. And, I have the help. Without all my help, we're nothing. The help is getting the horses ready and right.”

Sanchez-Salomon is currently third overall in Maryland with 41 wins heading into the weekend, trailing Gonzalez (55) and Jamie Ness (44) with Jerry Robb is right behind (40). He has three multi-win days during the summer meet including a triple July 23 and a career-high four winners June 24.

Not bad for a 50-year-old native of Mexico who got his introduction to horses growing up on his family's farm.

“We raised sheep, cows, horses and all that. They were not racehorses, but we had horses,” he said. “There were all kinds of animals.”

Ultimately Sanchez-Salomon made his way to the United States and gravitated toward the racetrack. He started at old Garden State Park in New Jersey, which closed in 2001 and later demolished to become a high-end development of stores, restaurants and housing, and later at Monmouth Park working for trainers Scott Lake and Dane Kobiskie before striking out on his own in 2017.

Equibase statistics show Sanchez-Salomon's first winner coming May 28, 2017 at Pimlico with Nairet, a 4-year-old filly he had claimed one start earlier for $5,000. Sent off at 36-1 and ridden by Angel Cruz, Nairet paid $74.40 and earned the $12,450 winner's share of the purse.

“I never imagined I could be at this level right now. I just thought I'd train a couple horses and make a living and have fun with it,” Sanchez-Salomon said. “That's the most important thing, that you love the horses and you have fun. If you don't have fun, there's no point to be in the business.”

Equibase shows Sanchez-Salomon with 152 wins and more than $4.4 million in purse earnings from 883 lifetime starters. He is 44-for-251 this year with $1,424,727 in purses earned – all career highs.

“It makes me feel proud of what everybody is doing back at the barn,” Sanchez-Salomon said. “It makes me feel good and makes me feel that we're doing a really good job, everybody. It's not just me, it's everybody.”

Sanchez-Salomon's horses are routinely selected as being the Best Turned Out, awards given out each race on every live racing day sponsored by the Maryland Jockey Club and Maryland Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association to recognize the care and preparation grooms put into their horses.

“That's a good compliment,” Sanchez-Salomon said, “and it keeps us motivated to do a better job every day.”

Sanchez-Salomon has trained 11 six-figure earners including multiple stakes winners Clubman, Shake Em Loose and Can the Queen and multiple stakes-placed Click to Confirm. It was Shake Em Loose that brought the trainer into the spotlight earlier this year, a horse he claimed for $16,000 last fall that won the Heft and Private Terms, was third in the Federico Tesio and briefly under consideration for the 147th Preakness Stakes (G1) after Sanchez-Salomon – who also owns the horse – made him a late nominee to the Triple Crown.

Instead, the 3-year-old gelding raced on grass the James W. Murphy on the Preakness undercard, finishing sixth, and has been on break since. Can the Queen won the $100,000 The Very One during the Black-Eyed Susan (G2) undercard on Preakness eve, adding to her victory in last summer's Sensible Lady Turf Dash at Pimlico.

Sanchez-Salomon entered Click to Confirm on Friday's live 10-race program at Laurel along with fellow 3-year-old filly No More Mask, who is tied for the most wins by a horse in Maryland this year with five, and Hashtag Lucky for main track only in the finale. Gonzalez and Capuano each have horses entered in five races.

On Saturday's 10-race card, Sanchez-Salomon has two horses – Camp Pendleton and Dr. Ferber – entered in the opener as well as Bardolino in Race 6, while Gonzalez entered three horses and Capuano one.

Laurel's summer meet ends Sunday before racing shifts to the Maryland State Fairgrounds in Timonium through Labor Day. Pimlico will host its first full fall meet since 2004 Sept. 9-25.

“It would mean a lot [to win the title]. We haven't been around and on our own for too long,” Sanchez-Salomon said. “We started with one horse and we're up to 33, 34 horses and I have a couple more to bring in, so it's nice.

“It's nice to be able to have horses to run almost every single week. That's how you win the meet. If you compete and have horses that are well-prepared, you're fine,” he added. “Our horses are very competitive right now and that's the key to be on top of the leading trainers – when you have sound, competitive horses.”

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Chad Brown Arrested In Saratoga, Charged With ‘Criminal Obstruction Of Breathing’

Trainer Chad Brown was arrested by the Saratoga Springs Police Department on Wednesday, and has been charged with “criminal obstruction of breathing,” according to cbs6albany.com.

Brown is scheduled to face a judge on Thursday morning.

The four-time Eclipse Award-winning trainer has two entries at Saratoga Race Course on Thursday: Nabokov in the eighth race, and Robyn and Eli in the ninth race, a New York Stallion Series Stakes contest.

Read more at cbs6albany.com.

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