Kirkpatrick & Co Presents In Their Care: As She Logs Miles Assisting Pletcher, Horses Are Home For DePasquale

Ginny DePasquale never imagined that experience as a well-traveled first-grader would prepare her to play an integral role in trainer Todd Pletcher's Hall of Fame career. Yet that is what happened.

Although DePasquale was born in Philadelphia, she did not remain there long since her father served in the Navy. Her first real introduction to horses occurred when she was three years old and there was a stable across the street from the base in Corpus Christi, Texas. She barely met her first-grade classmates at Corpus Christi before it was back to Philadelphia and on to Jacksonville.

“We traveled all around the country and halfway across the world with him,” DePasquale said.

Wherever they ventured, horses became something to cling to during a childhood in which change was the lone constant. She felt particularly fortunate after the family journeyed to Morocco because there was a stable on the base.

“I used to go to the riding stable all the time when we were in Morocco. I used to spend my days there,” she said. “If my mom was looking for me, she knew where to find me.”

There was never much doubt that DePasquale's career path would lead to horses. She began working with them after high school while raising two children, Kimberly and Darin. She maintained a farm in Pennsylvania for a time before making her way to Florida. A friend told her that Pletcher was looking for a foreman to oversee 25 to 30 horses at Hialeah Race Track.

Pletcher, after graduating from the University of Arizona and working for six years as an assistant to legendary D. Wayne Lukas, had struck out on his own at the end of 1995. DePasquale knew little about him; he knew less about her. They took a chance on each other.

“At the time, you don't know,” she said. “I was so lucky.”

Pletcher got so lucky, too. As his financial backing strengthened and he began to oversee high-caliber stock, the need increased to send them far and wide in pursuit of black type and lucrative purses. Who could he trust to accompany them, to make sure their needs were met and they were made to feel at home in strange surroundings?

DePasquale became the woman for the job – and relished every minute. New people, new places, new things? Old hat for her.

“I always liked to travel. There were times I was gone every single weekend. I'd fly home, unpack, re-pack and was gone again,” DePasquale said of the intense schedule she followed for her first 15 years or so with Pletcher.

With DePasquale returning home with one victory after another, Pletcher rattled off four consecutive Eclipse Awards as the leading trainer in North America from 2004-07. He has an unmatched seven Eclipse Awards overall in addition to two Kentucky Derbies, three Belmont Stakes and 11 Breeders' Cup wins. He smashed the record for purse earnings with more than $413 million – and counting.

Pletcher, 54, emerged as an obvious choice for voters in his first year of eligibility for the National Museum of Racing's Hall of Fame. He constantly emphasizes the importance of DePasquale and others. He knows he had so many helping hands in receiving the sport's greatest accolade.

“You can't even quantify how much a bunch of people have contributed, especially the assistants,” Pletcher said. “I've been blessed to have some really good ones, some great ones that have been with me for a long time and some others who have branched out on their own and done very well.”

DePasquale, who declined to reveal her age, currently oversees horses that were left behind after the summer meet at Saratoga Race Course so they could continue to train there. She will move to Florida in November. Pletcher typically maintains a robust operation in South Florida at Palm Beach Downs as he perennially vies for honors as the leading trainer at Gulfstream Park's Championship Meet.

Communication among assistants is critical to the sustained success of what has become a massive operation. Tristan Barry remained with DePasquale in Saratoga. Byron Hughes is at Belmont Park. Anthony Sciametta reports in from Florida.

“If everybody is trying to work independently of each other,” DePasquale said, “nothing would get done.”

Every assistant reviews every horse with Pletcher every day.

“He has an unbelievable memory,” DePasquale said. “He knows the horse, the sire, the dam, what race they were in, what horses were in the race against them. Just amazing.”

She never considered moving on.

“He's so easy to get along with,” she said of Pletcher. “In all the years, I've never heard him raise his voice to anyone.”

DePasquale has considered retirement, but it is hard to break away from such a strong team, so many good horses and so much success. She begins each year by saying she would like to work one more season. She has said that for some years now.

Tom Pedulla wrote for USA Today from 1995-2012 and has been a contributor to the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Blood-Horse, America's Best Racing and other publications.

If you wish to suggest someone as a potential subject for In Their Care, please send an email to info@paulickreport.com that includes the person's name and contact information in addition to a brief description of the individual's background.

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Cedillo, Miller Win Jockey, Trainer Titles For LA County Fair Meet At Los Alamitos

Jockey Abel Cedillo earned his second Los Alamitos riding title while trainer Peter Miller topped the trainer standings as the Los Angeles County Fair meet concluded Sunday.

The nine-day season was highlighted by stakes victories by talented 2-year-old Enbarr, a first off the claim score by Manhattan Up, and a gate-to-wire victory by Livingmybestlife, a $50,000 claim earlier in the year at Oaklawn Park.

The 32-year-old Cedillo finished the LACF meet with 18 victories, eight more than closest pursuer Kyle Frey. Cedillo also led the standings during the 2020 LACF Winter season.

Cedillo became the first jockey to win four races in a day twice at Los Alamitos. He first accomplished the feat Sept. 15, 2019, then matched it with a quadruple Sept. 25.

The other riders who have won four races in a day since daytime thoroughbred racing returned to Los Alamitos in 2014 are Drayden Van Dyke (July 6, 2014), Edwin Maldonado (Dec. 13, 2015), Kent Desormeaux (April 23, 2016), Assael Espinoza (Sept. 15, 2018), and Jorge I. Velez (Sept. 22, 2019).

Miller finished the LACF season with seven wins, one more than Steve Miyadi. Hall of Famer Bob Baffert was third with five. The title was the sixth Miller has either shared or won outright at Los Alamitos since daytime thoroughbred racing returned in 2014.

A son of Brody's Cause owned by Baoma Corporation, Enbarr rallied past stablemate Montebello in the final sixteenth of a mile to win the $75,000 Capote Sept. 18 under Van Dyke, giving Baffert a 1-2 finish.

Taken for $80,000 by trainer Jonathan Wong for Brent Malmstrom's KAM Racing Stable, Manhattan Up, a 5-year-old Street Boss gelding, responded to the addition of blinkers in capturing the $100,000 Los Alamitos Special Sept. 19. He was ridden by Tiago Pereira.

Livingmybestlife, a 3-year-old daughter of The Big Beast, has now won three of five since being claimed by John Sadler for Hronis Racing out of her April 8 debut, when she finished second. She was never seriously challenged in her local debut, defeating Stella Noir and three others in the $75,000 Lucky Spell Sept. 24.

The meet's other stakes winners were Loud Mouth – via disqualification – in the E.B. Johnston, and Samurai Charm, who earned her fifth consecutive victory leading throughout in the Dark Mirage.

In terms of business, all-sources handle for the LACF season showed a gain of 18% over comparable days in 2019. There was no September meet at Los Alamitos in 2020.

“While participation as the entry box could have been better, we very much appreciate those owners and trainers who did participate,'' said F. Jack Liebau, vice president of the Los Alamitos Racing Association. “The (handle) increase was more than 10% of what we had aggressively estimated and was attributable to an incredible 65% increase in advance deposit wagering in Southern California.

“We're looking forward to our upcoming Winter meet where purses will be substantially higher.''

Daytime thoroughbred racing will return to Los Alamitos for the seven-day Winter season Friday, Dec. 3.

Racing will be conducted through Sunday, Dec. 12. The Winter meet will be highlighted by a pair of graded races for 2-year-olds – the $300,000 Grade 1 Starlet for fillies Saturday, Dec. 4, and the $200,000 Grade 2 Los Alamitos Futurity Saturday, Dec. 11. Both will be run at 1 1/16 miles.

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Zayas, Joseph Jr. Take Leading Rider, Trainer Titles For Gulfstream Sprint/Summer Meet

Jockey Edgard Zayas and trainer Saffie Joseph Jr. successfully defended their Spring/Summer Meet titles Sunday at Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach, Fla.

Zayas, who clinched his third-straight Spring/Summer Meet title outright with a victory aboard the Joseph-trained Baby Lion in Race 3, finished five wins ahead of Emisael Jaramillo, who took the Spring/Summer Meet title in 2018. Zayas, who went on to ride Joseph-trained La Chica Lateral in Race 9, finished with 124 wins, while Jaramillo (119) and Miguel Vasquez (101) also exceeded the 100-win mark.

“I have to thank all the owners, all the trainers for all their support all the time,” said Zayas, whose stellar meet was punctuated by his victory aboard Bill Mott-trained Outfoxed in Saturday's $400,000 My Dear Girl, the FTBOA Florida Sire Stakes finale for 2-year-old fillies sired by accredited Florida stallions. “I also want to thank my agent (Tito Fuentes) and my family. It's the whole team, not just the jockey and the horse. It's the whole team behind them.”

Joseph, who won the 2020 Spring/Summer Meet title with 59 wins, saddled a pair of winners on Sunday's program to push his meet-topping total to 71 victories, 36 more than runner-up Carlos David and eight more than Antonio Sano.

Arindel led all owners during the Spring/Summer Meet with 17 winners, most notably Octane, a homebred son of Brethren who captured Saturday's $400,000 FSS In Reality, as well as the $200,000 FSS Affirmed in his previous start. Moshe Mark finished second in the owner's standings with 10 winners.

The Fall Meet gets underway on Thursday, when the 20-cent Rainbow 6 jackpot pool will be guaranteed at $350,000.

The popular multi-race wager went unsolved Sunday for the 10th racing day since a Sept. 10 mandatory payout produced multiple payoffs of $313,299.84

The Rainbow 6 jackpot is paid out when there is a single unique ticket sold with all six winners. On days when there is no unique ticket, 70 percent of that day's pool goes back to those bettors holding tickets with the most winners, while 30 percent is carried over to the jackpot pool.

Thursday's Rainbow 6 sequence will span Races 3-8, including three races on the newly constructed Tapeta course. Race 3, a maiden claiming race for juvenile fillies at 5 ½ furlongs on the all-weather surface, will kick off the sequence. Race 5, a 5 ½-furlong maiden special weight race for 2-year-old fillies, and Race 7, a mile-and-70-yard starter allowance for 3-year-olds and up, will also be run over the all-weather surface.

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Cedillo Wins Four Saturday To Clinch Los Alamitos Riding Title

Jockey Abel Cedillo capped a four-victory Saturday with a gate-to-wire score aboard favored Risk and Reward in the $54,116 feature at Los Alamitos Race Course in Cypress, Calif.

The quadruple by Cedillo, 32, clinched his second local riding title. The Guatemalan-born jockey, who led the 2020 Los Angeles County Fair Winter meet, has 15 victories through the first eight days, six more than closest pursuer Kyle Frey, who has only five scheduled mounts Sunday, the final day of the LACF season.

Making his first start beyond seven furlongs, Risk and Reward, a 3-year-old Frosted colt out of the Indian Charlie mare Shayjolie, took charge early and improved his position from there, eventually prevailing by five lengths over 2-1 second choice Margot's Boy. He completed the mile in 1:35:02 and paid $5.60, $3.20, and $2.40 as the 9-5 choice.

Owned by breeder Speedway Stables LLC and trained by Hall of Famer Bob Baffert, Risk and Reward is now 2-for-4 with earnings of $75,200. He broke his maiden July 25 at Del Mar, upsetting well-regarded stablemate – and next out graduate – Bobby Bo before showing speed and tiring in his first race vs. winners 27 days later.

Margot's Boy, who was seeking his first win since May 23, 2020, finished 13 lengths clear of 5-2 third choice Willy the Cobbler. The runner-up returned $3.20 and $2.60 while the show price on Willy the Cobbler was $2.40.

Cedillo's other victories Saturday came with Full of Luck in the first, Borkan in the second, and Sauls Call in the sixth.

Sauls Call was one of three wins for trainer Steve Miyadi, doubling his total for the meet and moving him into a tie with Peter Miller for the top spot. Miyadi also tallied with the aforementioned Full of Luck and debuter Tizlightning, who was an impressive winner of the seventh.

Miller is scheduled to run four Sunday – I'm the Boss of Me in the second, Taming the Tigress in the sixth, Gates of Heaven in the ninth, and Sir Flatter in the 10th while Miyadi's representatives are Aristeia in the fifth and first time starters Mary Margaret and Mo Connelly in the eighth.

Racing resumes Sunday. Post time for the start of the 10-race program is 1 p.m.

The main event is the $75,000 Royal Owl Stakes for California bred 2-year-olds at 5 ½ furlongs. Rock N Rye is the even-money favorite on Ed Burgart's morning line. The Royal Owl will go as the seventh race and has a scheduled post time of 4:03 p.m.

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