Zayas Runs Gulfstream Streak To 16 Programs With At Least One Win

Leading jockey Edgard Zayas notched a double-win day Saturday, running his streak to 16 consecutive programs with at least one win at Gulfstream Park.

Zayas scored aboard first-time starter Beastly Speed ($4.60), a Saffie Joseph Jr.-trained 3-year-old son of The Big Beast who drew away to a 4¼-length victory, in Race 4, before riding Dan Hurtak-trained Swoonatra ($10.80) to a front-running triumph in Race 7.

Zayas, who entered Saturday's 11-race program with a 31-percent strike rate during the Sunshine Meet, has enjoyed nine multi-win days during his streak.

“I've been having a lot of support, to be honest. I'm riding a lot of nice horses. I've had a lot of support from my family, my agent and the horsemen, including Saffie. He's been big in my career,” said Zayas, who has enjoyed success in out-of-town engagements on Joseph-trained horses as well. “As long as I get good horse, I've just got to do my job and get it done.”

The 30-year-old Puerto Rico native has ridden 2,171 winners since venturing to Gulfstream in 2012 directly out of Escuela Vocational Hipica, and has won numerous riding titles at Gulfstream Park, Gulfstream Park West, and Calder Race Course.

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‘I Literally Was Colicking Like A Horse’: Tyler Baze Scores First Win After Severe Health Scare

The return of jockey Tyler Baze from a near-fatal health scare this spring was made complete Monday at Santa Anita in Arcadia, Calif., when the veteran reinsman won his first race in nearly six months.

In the fourth race, a $50,000 maiden claimer going six furlongs on dirt, Baze guided longshot Lonesome Stew ($25.20) to a front-running victory for trainer Mark Glatt. It was Baze's first win since April 14 at Oaklawn Park in Arkansas.

“I needed it,” Baze said Friday morning at Clocker's Corner. “It took a lot for me to get to this point after being in the hospital and almost dying.”

Baze, 40, was riding at Oaklawn Park this winter when he first started to feel periods of discomfort. In response, he visited an urgent care facility in Hot Springs.

“The doctors couldn't find anything, so they prescribed me medication. But things didn't really get any better” Baze said.

Then one morning, a friend asked Baze if he was up for going fishing.

“I woke up and felt fine. So we went. When I got back to my house about noon, I had a sandwich, and it was just instant pain,” Baze said. “I can't even describe it. I've broken a lot of bones, but I've never felt pain like that.”

Baze managed to drive himself to a hospital despite the severe discomfort.

“As soon as I opened the door to get out of my car, I threw up the sandwich. I don't remember walking into the hospital or anything after that for five days,” he said.

Baze remained hospitalized for about two weeks. Doctors were still struggling to diagnose the problem.

“On May 1, I told my nurse I need to see a doctor now. They took me in for another CT scan and by the time I got back to my room the doctor was in there waiting for me. Two minutes later the surgeon walked in. They said, 'If we don't do surgery right now, you're going to die.'”

Doctors determined Baze had a bowel obstruction.

“It was my intestine. I literally was colicking like a horse,” Baze said. “They didn't have to cut any out. They untangled it basically. The doctor's words were 'We had to remold it.'”

Baze spent 10 days in the hospital post-surgery, then rode with his mother from Hot Springs back to his home in Monrovia near Santa Anita.

Doctors told Baze he would need eight to 10 months to recover.

“I was back in the gym in eight weeks,” he said.

Baze rode his first race back at Del Mar on Sept. 9. At the current Santa Anita Autumn Meet, he has the one win on Lonesome Stew from seven mounts.

Following the health scare, Baze said he's living with a new perspective.

“It's no longer going through the motions. You realize how precious life is,” Baze said. “Instead of just getting through your morning or through the day, you need to enjoy every minute of it. I get to be out here and look at these beautiful mountains and watch the sun come up every morning. It's an amazing gift from God.”

Baze, a native of Seattle, is scheduled to ride a combined seven races at Santa Anita Saturday and Sunday.

“Now with the winner, hopefully things will pick up and I'll get on better horses,” Baze said. “But this whole ordeal has given me a whole new perspective. I'm only here for a minute. I'm going to enjoy it.”

Baze won the 2000 Eclipse Award for outstanding apprentice jockey. He enters this week's action with 2,889 wins and more than $132 million in purse earnings.

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Larry Collmus Returns To Announcer’s Booth For Del Mar Fall Meet

For the fourth year in a row, top racing announcer Larry Collmus will be back in the booth at Del Mar to call the track's upcoming fall season. The 13-day session, which runs from November 10 to December 3, is dubbed the Bing Crosby Season in honor of the seaside oval's iconic founder.

Collmus, who has called races at virtually every major racetrack in the United States over the past 38 years, also has been NBC's caller for both the Triple Crown and Breeders' Cup races since 2011. The energetic veteran, who turns 57 today, added yet another feather to his cap when he took on the challenge of calling the Dubai World Cup card this past March at Meydan Racecourse in Dubai, tackling a day full of large fields filled with international runners. And as he has wherever he goes, he drew plaudits for his work on the star-filled program that included the $12-million Dubai World Cup.

The native of Baltimore has become quite comfortable with his call to duty at Del Mar. Besides his three earlier fall sojourns, he also was the man in the stand for the limited 2020 summer COVID season at the track.

“We really couldn't ask for anyone better than Larry to be filling our booth in the planned absence of our longstanding caller Trevor Denman,” said Josh Rubinstein, Del Mar's president and COO. “He brings terrific energy to his role here, both behind the mic and on the social media scene. To top it all off, he tells us he just loves calling races at Del Mar.”

Del Mar will race on a Friday, Saturday and Sunday schedule throughout the 10th Bing Crosby Season, with the exception of an additional day of sport on Thursday, November 23, Thanksgiving Day. First post daily will be at 12:30 p.m. (11 a.m. on Thanksgiving) with eight races planned for weekdays and nine for weekends.

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Continuing Family Legacy: Phillip Capuano Looking Forward To First Maryland Million Starter

For as long as Phillip Capuano can remember, Maryland Million has represented a special time in his family's life. As the son and nephew of successful trainers, eventually working for both, he was able to see it first-hand.

“Obviously growing up in racing and being around it, everybody talks about it,” Capuano said. “For the Maryland horsemen, it's their opportunity to really showcase Maryland stallions and Maryland racing. It's a tremendous privilege to take part in that. You hope to win any race that you're in, but to be able to win one or have the opportunity just to run in a race and maybe win on Maryland Million day is a great honor.”

Capuano will get his chance Saturday at Laurel Park, with four horses entered on the 38th Jim McKay Maryland Million program of eight stakes and four starter stakes worth $1.08 million, 'Maryland's Day at the Races' to celebrate stallions standing in the state.

It is the first Maryland Million on his own for the 29-year-old Capuano, who took over the racing stable of his uncle, Dale Capuano, upon his retirement effective Jan. 1. Dale Capuano holds the Maryland Million record with 15 wins including five in the Ladies, three in the Nursery and one each in the Classic, Sprint and Turf.

Phillip Capuano's father, Dale Capuano's younger brother, Gary, owns four Maryland Million wins, among them Cherokee's Boy in the 2002 Nursery and Lexington Street in the 2015 Lassie. He is best known for his work with millionaires Captain Bodgit and Cherokee's Boy, while Dale Capuano won 3,662 career races, eight graded-stakes and 31 training titles at Laurel and historic Pimlico Race Course.

“It's kind of funny. My father never seemed to have too many to run Maryland Million Day. He's got a lot of Maryland-breds, but it seemed like his horses were more Kentucky-sired that they would buy out in the sales or breed his own mares,” Phillip Capuano said. “And Dale being the leading trainer in terms of Maryland Million wins, following him is a great honor. If I could have even just one win on Maryland Million I'd be happy, let alone 15. That seems almost insurmountable.”

Capuano has a full day starting in the opener, the $50,000 Turf Distaff Starter Handicap, with Taking Risks Stable and Louis Ulman's Gennie Highway, a horse that his uncle trained to victory in the 2020 Ladies. Taking Risks Stable's 9-year-old Cannon's Roar will be making his fifth straight appearance in the $125,000 Turf, a race where he ran second in 2020 and fourth in 2021 by a length and a nose combined.

In the $100,000 Sprint Capuano will send out Charles J. Reed's Johnyz From Albany, homebred winner of the 2022 Nursery before finishing up in the day's feature, the $150,000 Classic, with Taking Risks and Ulman's Dolice Vita, making his Maryland Million and stakes debut.

“I'm not really sure how to pronounce it,” Capuano said. “I just hope to hear [track announcer] Dave Rodman calling his name across the wire first.”

Capuano shares the same name as his paternal grandfather, an owner and trainer who introduced his sons to the game. Initially, he leaned away from following in his father's and uncle's footsteps, until the lure became too great to resist.

“Growing up I really almost tried to stay as far away from the horses as I could, just because my sister was real involved in the horse shows, so you'd get dragged down there all day every Sunday, or be riding up to Charles Town or wherever with my father's horses,” Capuano said. “It was almost like, 'Well, this is enough for me.'

“But once I started working with them it definitely grabs you and feels like it's hard to get away from. There are not too many industries that I think are as rewarding as working with the horses,” he added. “I worked a couple other jobs before I started working with the horses, but this has, by far, been the most fun. It certainly has the highest of highs but on the flipside, when things aren't going your way and everything seems to be going against you, it's rough.”

Capuano first began working seriously with the horses in 2014 and in 2019 took over running his father's Delaware Park-based string during its late spring to early fall season, also taking in some of his uncle's horses, returning to Maryland to work the rest of the year.

“My father would send me up there and say, 'You just run it and do what you need to do. As long as everything's all right, I won't bother you.' He left it that way for a while,” he said. “It definitely gave me the experience and the self-confidence to know that this was something I can do. I have him to thank for that, and the owners who, at the time, were more than willing to let me train and be responsible for their horses.”

When the Delaware meet ended last November, Capuano returned to work for his uncle with the knowledge that he would be taking over the 35-horse stable in the new year. He got his first career winner with Thunderturtle Jan. 13 at Charles Town, and the next day registered his first two Maryland wins with Imagine a Cure and Vance Scholars at Laurel. Capuano's first stakes win came with Alwaysinahurry in Laurel's Frank Y. Whiteley April 15.

Overall, Capuano entered Maryland Million weekend with 30 wins and nearly $1.2 million in purse earnings from 171 starters. He has finished in the top three 77 times (45 percent).

“It's definitely gone OK. You always think things could be better, but it could be worse. I think if I'd have had to do it all over again, in terms of the last couple years, if I knew I was going to take over for Dale I probably would have tried to work for him for a few years just to try and figure out his routine with the horses I took over,” Capuano said. “It's different from what I'm used to working with my father.

“They're all horses and it's all horse racing, but they're at two different ends of the spectrum. My father is known for keeping the same horses for five, six, seven years and they've become mainstays on the circuit. Dale was more turning over horses, claiming them, getting them claimed and just constant turnover,” he added. “If I'd have known where I was going to be two or three years ago I'd have probably tried to at least spend more time with Dale. The real experience of working with the horses, you can't get enough.”

When it comes to Maryland Million, Capuano recalls Tappin Cat's heartbreaking neck loss as the favorite to Prendimi in the 2021 Classic but also Lexington Street's electrifying 5 ¾-length triumph in the Lassie. Lexington Street raced six more times before being retired in 2016 while Tappin Cat is still going strong at age of 7, a multiple stakes winner on dirt that is entered to make his 44th career start in the Turf. Both horses are trained by Gary Capuano.

“I can remember especially the last few years we had a couple near-misses. Tappin Cat, that was a tough one to swallow in the Classic,” Phillip Capuano said. “I think one of the ones that stands out the most is Lexington Street. My father trained her for Marathon Farms and she was one of those that wasn't a Maryland-stallioned horse but she was Maryland-bred. Just a very nice filly that won in dominant fashion.”

Gary Capuano has two horses entered in Saturday's Maryland Million, both in the $100,000 Distaff for fillies and mares sprinting seven furlongs – multiple stakes winner Malibu Beauty and Maryland-bred also-eligible Intrepid Daydream.

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