Leading Maryland Trainer Claudio Gonzalez Dipping Toes Into South Florida Waters

Claudio Gonzalez, Maryland's overall leading trainer by wins the past five years, is overseeing a string of horses in South Florida for the first time during Gulfstream Park's 2021-'22 Championship Meet in Hallandale Beach, Fla.

Gonzalez, a 45-year-old native of Chile and cancer survivor, currently has eight horses at Palm Meadows, Gulfstream's satellite training facility in Palm Beach County. He brought his first group down Jan. 13 and saddled his first starter of the winter, Magic Stable's I'm Listening, in Saturday's third race.

An 8-year-old New Jersey-bred mare, I'm Listening finished third in the 1 1/16-mile claiming event over Gulfstream's Tapeta surface. Gonzalez said the addition of the all-weather surface was a major factor in coming to Florida.

“I have some horses that I believe will like it, that's why I wanted to be here. The weather is great. The winter is tough in the north because of the weather,” he said. “It gives you good options. In the winter, if you have horses for grass or you can try the Tapeta, it will be good.”

In addition to Palm Meadows, Gonzalez continues to maintain a full barn at Laurel Park with an additional string at historic Pimlico Race Course. He owns or shares 18 individual meet titles at the two tracks, sweeping all three full meets in 2021 and leading the state with 110 wins and more than $3.6 million in purse earnings.

“This was my first week here and I wanted to see how I can make it work better, to see what days I can be here and what days I can stay there,” Gonzalez said. “The good thing is I have good assistants in all three places, so I am confident in them.”

Gonzalez has led Maryland in annual wins since 2017, averaging 106.4 per season. He earned his 1,000th career victory with He's a Shooter Oct. 14 at Laurel and ended 2021 with a lifetime-best $5,323,750 in purse earnings to go along with 161 wins.

“Like I say all the time, if you don't have good help you're done,” he said. “When you have the right help and you're confident in everybody, everything is going to be good.”

Gonzalez's next runner at Gulfstream is Magic Stable's Sloe Gin Biz in a five-furlong claiming sprint over the Tapeta Thursday, Jan. 27. The 3-year-old gelding drew far outside Post 8 and is third choice on the morning line at 4-1.

“We're going little by little, step by step. We'll come and take a look at the condition book and see what we have here,” Gonzalez said. “It's not easy here. It's tough to win races anywhere, but here they come from everywhere. But, we're very excited to try.”

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Kirkpatrick & Co. Presents In Their Care: Groom Paulina Cano ‘Just Has A Way Of Making Them Happy’

Say the Word arrived at Phil D'Amato's barn in the autumn of 2020 as an accomplished 5-year-old, but the trainer sensed the gelded son of More Than Ready had more to offer. He appeared to be a timid horse that lacked confidence, and was not deriving as much as possible from his training each morning.

What to do? D'Amato assigned Say the Word to Paulina Cano, a groom with almost three decades of experience.

Burgoo Alley had gone winless through three starts in Ireland and D'Amato was downcast when he first laid eyes on her early last year. The unsettling overseas journey to the United States had taken a toll on the 3-year-old. She had dropped so much weight her ribs were visible.

What to do? He again turned to his go-to caretaker, the 59-year-old Cano.

“In terms of being a groom, Paulina is like the horse whisperer,” D'Amato said. “You can give her any kind of horse, ones with more cantankerous attitudes or quiet ones. She just has a way of making them happy. She finds a way to their heart.”

The once-antsy Say the Word responded last season with two wins and a pair of second-place finishes in seven starts. He set career highs for earnings with $353,500 and for earnings per start with 50,500 on behalf of Mark Martinez's Agave Racing Stable and breeder-owner Sam-Son Farm. Say The Word was plenty good in the spring, winning the Elkhorn Stakes (G2) at Keeneland last April and placing second in the Shoemaker Mile (G1) at his Santa Anita home base in his next start. He retained his form until the end of the season, rallying from last to bring home the Hollywood Turf Cup (G2) and help D'Amato to his first training title at Del Mar's fall meet.

Burgoo Alley also quickly thrived under Cano's care.

“Within a week or two flat, you'd be amazed at how much weight she put on and how good her coat was,” D'Amato said. “It was all that hard work that she put into the filly to feed her and take care of her and make sure she was happy.”

Owned by CYBT, Michael Nentwig and Ray Pagano, Burgoo Alley emerged as a turf standout. She broke her maiden going six furlongs on June 20 at Santa Anita in her second U.S. start. She easily handled the move to a mile on grass, prevailing in an allowance optional claiming race during Del Mar's salty summer meet in mid-August. She emerged as a graded-stakes winner on turf when a late rush allowed her to edge Spanish Loveaffair by half a length in the one-mile Autumn Miss Stakes on Oct. 30 at Santa Anita.

Cano points to Echo Eddie as her greatest success. He debuted by running for a $12,500 claiming tag at Bay Meadows on Oct. 3, 1999. By the time his career was over at the end of the 2003 season, the former claimer turned multiple stakes winner had banked more than $1 million in purses for trainer Darrell Vienna.

Not surprisingly, Vienna did everything possible to retain Cano. They were together for 24 years before Vienna retired in the spring of 2016.

D'Amato was ecstatic when he was able to hire her.

“Good grooms are extremely hard to come by. It's starting to become a lost art,” the trainer said. “It's a very skilled profession and it takes someone who can extend TLC to them and try to find all of the little things without them talking to you. It's just all about body language and taking care of their needs.”

Cano grew up with horses and cows at her family's farm in Santa Rosa, Guatemala. Her husband, Jose Dolares, ventured to the U.S. in 1993 to begin a career as a groom that is ongoing. He works at a nearby barn at Santa Anita for trainer Richard Baltas. At Dolares' urging, Cano followed a year later.

“It was a better life. I could make more money. I loved the United States since the first day I got here,” Cano said during a phone interview, with assistant trainer Rudy Cruz acting as interpreter.

Cano's work ethic and attitude have everything to do with her success. She is one of the first to arrive at the barn from her home in Duarte, Calif. She always comes bearing treats of all kinds.

“I try to never bring problems here,” she said. “I try to always be nice to horses. I love them and am kind to them and they are nice to me.”

According to Cano, in a career that has also taken her to Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana and even Singapore, she has never encountered a Thoroughbred she could not manage.

“Maybe the first day it's kind of difficult to get along with one, but I find a way,” she said. “By being nice and being patient, it gets better and better.”

She and her husband have one son, Luis Alfonso Salazar Cano, 44. He built a career as a surgeon's assistant at a California hospital.

Cano became a U.S. citizen 15 years ago and said: “I am very happy and thankful to be an American citizen.”

She feels relatively secure financially.

“I don't need that much money,” she said. “I saved my money, so it's good.”

As physically demanding as her job can be, she has no plans to retire. When that time comes, she intends to maintain her emotional ties to the barn.

“If that happens one day, and I know it's going to happen, I'd ask Phil about coming back and feeding the horses when I can,” she said.

D'Amato, another participant in the call, assured her she would always be welcome.

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‘Everything Looks Good’ As Irad Ortiz, Jr. Eases Back Into The Saddle

Sidelined by a knee injury since Jan. 7, defending two-time Championship Meet titlist Irad Ortiz Jr. returned to action Saturday at Gulfstream Park.

The 29-year-old jockey accepted two mounts for his first day back, finishing fourth in the $75,000 Sunshine Turf aboard Max K. O. in Race 4 and fifth aboard Ideal Breeze in Race 5.

“This is the way we wanted to come back. I haven't been riding for [15] days and we wanted to start getting back slowly and pick it up,” Ortiz said. “I've been coming out in the morning to get on some horses, but it's great to be back in the afternoon and be able to do what I love. It didn't take too long, and I feel great, thank God.”

Earlier in the day, Ortiz was aboard defending Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational (G1) champion Colonel Liam during a morning breeze at Palm Beach Downs. The three-time Eclipse Award-winning jockey is scheduled to ride Colonel Liam $1 million Pegasus Turf, as well as Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile (G1) winner Life Is Good in the $3 Million Pegasus World Cup Invitational (G1) at Gulfstream next Saturday.

“We'll see what happens, but everything looks good,” said Ortiz, who sustained a knee injury when a mount reared up in the starting gate Jan. 7. “I'm excited.”

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Evan Shipman Jackson, Successful Trainer Who Gave Up A Career At The Track For Life In Florida Keys, Dies At 88

His biggest horse was named Mr. Right, who defeated Damascus by a nose in the 1968 Woodward Stakes, but training Thoroughbred racehorses in the modern era turned out to be the wrong profession for Evan Shipman Jackson, who quit the game in the early 1990s and spent the last 25 years of his life operating dive boats in the Florida Keys.

Jackson died in Key Largo, Fla., on Jan. 7, failing to wake up after taking an afternoon nap. Active until the end, gardening and riding his bike around town, he was 88 years old.

Born Aug. 13, 1933, in Keswick, Va., Jackson was named for his uncle, the esteemed horse racing writer Evan Shipman. He grew up around  horses in the Charlottesville, Va., area where his trail-blazing mother, Mary, operated a riding school on her farm. Mary Jackson did a lot of buying and selling of show horses and was referred to in one article as “Saratoga's most unique buyer” at yearling sales in upstate New York.

Evan Jackson would become a steeplechase rider in his teens and rode at various meets throughout the Midatlantic region into the early 1960s – his riding career interrupted while serving in the U.S. Army during the Korean War.

Jackson transitioned to trainer when his riding career ended and within a few years was winning big races on both coasts.

Mr. Right, owned by the wife of bandleader and pianist Peter Duchin, was his first major horse, winning the 1968 Santa Anita Handicap. The victory made the son of Auditing the first New York-bred to win a $100,000 race and a stakes in California.

Mr. Right went on to beat 1-10 favorite Damascus by a nose in the 1968 Woodward Stakes and shortly thereafter was sold for $400,000 to a partnership that included singer Frank Sinatra. For Sinatra and his partners, Jackson sent Mr. Right out to win the Trenton Handicap and Suburban Handicap in 1969 before the horse went to stud.

Other major stakes winners followed, including Acorn winner Cathy Honey and Haskell Handicap winner Gladwin – both for Californian Hastings Harcourt in 1970. Others included El Cajon Stakes winner Quick Bluff in 1973; G2 Del Mar Handicap winner Redtop III in 1974; G1 Century Handicap winner Winds of Thought in 1976; Grade 1 Flower Bowl Handicap winner Rossard (Den) in 1984; and Grade 3 Affectionately Handicap winner Descent in 1985.

Jackson's two daughters, Tara and Kelle, remember their father training for celebrities both in New York and later when he moved his stable to California.

“I remember the time a limo came to our house in New York to pick my dad up for dinner and it was Frank Sinatra,” said Tara Jackson.

Summers in Del Mar were special for the trainer's children, who lived with their mother most of the year on the East Coast after their parents divorced. “We would rent a beach house for six or eight weeks and it was so much fun,” Tara Jackson said of their Del Mar summers. “That was when you could take horses from the track over to the beach. My dad loved loved his horses and loved doing that.”

“Those summers were exciting,” remembered Tara Jackson. “Dad was playing tennis with Farrah Fawcett and Lee Majors and he trained for Burt Bacharach and Angie Dickinson. He got his pilot's license and I remember he would train in the morning and fly to Mammoth Mountain to ski in the afternoons.”

But everything wasn't rosy with Evan Jackson.

“He had a very strong will, was an old-school horseman and a big animal advocate,” said Tara Jackson. “He butted heads with owners and didn't like the direction the game was going. I remember listening to him and (the late Hall of Fame trainer) Allen Jerkens lamenting the lack of long-distance races. He hated it when he started seeing horses brought into the paddock with lip chains. Racing simply didn't fit him any more and he said he'd rather be with any animals over most humans.”

Jackson quit training and went to work at a ski resort in Taos, N.M., then landed in the Florida Keys, where he worked air traffic control at a small airport and eventually began operating dive boats.

“My Dad walked away from the only thing he knew as an occupation and way of life – because anyone that works in Thoroughbred horse racing knows it's a way of life not just a job – because he couldn't fall in line with what he saw happening,” Kelle Jackson said.

“He was a quintessential horseman – which worked well when horse training was a craft and a sport – when the horse mattered and intuition, observation and personal judgment were more important than the business, more than the person with the heaviest pocketbook. But times started changing and the quintessential horseman became not as important as the business. He knew his horses personally and he treated them as such. He admittedly had some regrets in life but he was a man that was driven by 'to thine own self be true.'

“My dad was not an easy man to deal with when he was sure he was right about something,” Kelle Jackson continued. “And I'm not so sure owners appreciated that or that he could find the right balance to allow for some change in the industry while doing what he thought was best for his horses. He chose his own personal integrity over the work that was so near and dear to him for decades and that he was born into.”

In addition to daughters Tara and Kelle, he is survived by a son, Evan Jackson Jr., by Kim Welchel, his daughter from a previous marriage, and by nine grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren.

An animal lover throughout his life, Jackson is also survived by his beloved cat, “Trim,” who he adopted as a stray many years ago in Key Largo. Trim has been taken in by a group of people that lived in the same community as Jackson for the last 17 years.

Kelle Jackson said her father's wishes were to be cremated and have the ashes spread at his childhood home in Keswick, Va. That will be done this spring.

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