Longtime Turf Writer, Publicist Schuelein Passes at 77

Former sports journalist and Turf publicist Steve Schuelein passed away Tuesday at his Playa Del Rey, Calif. home, his family reports, though no cause of death was given. He was 77.

Originally a New Yorker, Schuelein earned a degree from the State University of New York in Buffalo, then a masters in journalism from Syracuse University. In 1982 he moved to Southern California and began publicity work for both Santa Anita and Del Mar, jobs he would hold over the next several decades. He also worked for the Breeders' Cup Notes Team and wrote for various racing publications, including now-defunct Thoroughbred Times for which he was the longtime Southern California correspondent.

Funeral services will be held on Tuesday, Sept. 5 at 2 p.m. (PT) at Hillside Memorial Park and Mortuary on Centinela Ave in Los Angeles. For those unable to attend the service, an interactive Zoom link starts at 1:45 p.m. for the service and thereafter the gravesite service and burial will be live-streamed. Hillside can be contacted for the links (310-641-0707).

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Rispoli To Sit Out Pacific Classic Day; Apprentice Suspended 10 Days For Role In Spill

Jockey Umberto Rispoli, currently tied for third in the Del Mar jockey standings, took off his mounts on the seaside track's biggest day of the year on Saturday due to injuries sustained in a spill during the first race Aug. 31.

Rispoli was aboard Single Track Mind in the one-mile turf race and just behind the leaders when his mount was bumped from the inside at the top of the stretch by Tom and Jazzy, ridden by apprentice Armando Aguilar. Single Track Mind clipped heels and stumbled, throwing Rispoli, who appeared to be stepped on or kicked by a trailing horse. Single Track Mind kept running with his rider and did not appear to be injured when caught by an outrider.

Rispoli was placed on a backboard and taken to a local hospital for evaluation. X-rays and scans showed no broken bones or serious injuries, but the rider had significant scrapes and bruises from the incident that led him to take off mounts on both Friday and Saturday, Sept. 1-2.

Rispoli was named to ride in all 11 races on Del Mar's FanDuel Racing Pacific Classic day card, including Piroli for trainer Michael McCarthy in the Grade 1, $1-million Pacific Classic.

Agent Matt Naktani and Rispoli posted the following note on Twitter late Saturday morning:
“Umberto is at home resting up and taking it day by day. He is still feeling minor effects from his spill on Thursday. Our decision came down to a couple things. His health and safety is of utmost importance. We do not want to risk further injury. Also, Umberto felt it was in the best interest of the owner and trainers to not ride if he doesn't feel 100 percent. While it is an extreme disappointment to miss one of the biggest days of the year in California, our #1 priority right now is to make sure Umberto gets back to full health. Please keep him in your thoughts and prayers as he makes his full recovery.

“With that being said, good luck to all the connections today! Happy Pacific Classic Day! Pray for a fantastic, safe day of racing!”

One day after the incident, stewards issued a 10-day suspension to Aguilar “for altering course without sufficient clearance, causing interference and an accident entering the stretch.” Tom and Jazzy finished second but was disqualified and placed last. The suspension runs 10 racing days: Sept. 8, 9, 10, 15, 16, 17, 22, 23, 24 and 29.

Rispoli, who turned 35 years old on the day of the accident, has won 20 races from 101 mounts during the Del Mar summer, including three graded stakes. Juan Hernandez sits atop the jockey standings with 30 wins from 128 mounts. Rispoli had just returned from Japan where he participated in a jockey competition.

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Jockey Umberto Rispoli ‘Doing Fine’ After Del Mar Spill

Jockey Umberto Rispoli posted a video on Twitter late Thursday night to reassure fans that he was doing well after an incident in the opening race at Del Mar.

Riding the favorite Single Track Mind for trainer Mark Glatt in the one-mile turf race, Rispoli was unseated when eventual second-place finisher Tom and Jazzy (ridden by Armando Aguilar) shifted out and caused Single Track Mind to clip heels. Single Track Mind was corralled by an outrider and walked off the track under his own power.

Following an inquiry, stewards disqualified Tom and Jazzy for interference.

Rispoli, currently tied for third in the rider standings, was hospitalized after the incident. In the social media video, Rispoli explained that scans and x-rays showed no issues, and that he would try to return to the saddle as soon as possible.

Agent Matt Nakatani told the Daily Racing Form's Steve Anderson that Rispoli was “a little banged up” in the fall.

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Dueling Grounds Oaks: Callie’s Grit Running In Honor Of Late Exercise Rider

There is only one place Tim Witt wants to be on Sunday. He has to be at Kentucky Downs.

Callie's Grit is running.

The 3-year-old filly is named for Callie Witt, the 20-year-old daughter of Tim and Jennifer Witt of Rogers, Nebraska. Callie died last year doing what she loved, riding horses. The exercise rider lost her life during an accident at Keeneland while working for trainer Joe Sharp.

Callie's Grit is entered in Sunday's $1 million Dueling Grounds Oaks at 1 5/16 miles.

Tim Witt said he will make the 11 ½-hour drive alone from Nebraska, driving straight through to Franklin, Ky. He wants to see Callie's Grit run. He wants to honor his daughter's memory. Always.

“It means everything to us,” Tim Witt said by phone from Nebraska. “We never want to forget who she was.”

After Callie's accident, Sharp talked to Brad Grady, one of his owners, about naming some of the fillies he owns with Carl Moore after Callie.

“It was the right thing to do,” Grady said by phone from his home in Texas. “Let Callie live on through some horses because she loved them so much.”

Grady, who campaigns horses with his wife, Misty, is close friends with his partner, Moore. They were all in on doing this, and Grady got in touch with Callie's parents.

“I said, 'throw me some names,'” Grady said.

And here she is: Callie's Grit.

“Callie had grit and determination in whatever she did,” Tim Witt said in explaining the name. “Nothing scared her. Nothing bothered her.”

Grady felt horrible about the news of Callie's passing. He did not know her, but he is very close with Sharp. He got stories about Callie through the trainer. He told her, Grady said, that Callie reminded him of his wife, former standout jockey Rosie Napravnik.

Callie's Grit is a bay filly by Maclean's Music. She broke her maiden in her sixth try on July 29 at Saratoga. The race was run at 1 1/4 miles on the main track after being taken off the grass. Callie's Grit, who was ridden by Luis Saez that day, won the race by a neck.

Tim Witt was there to see the emotional win.

In Callie's Grit's first five starts, she had hit the board in four of them. The only time she didn't was in the $500,000 Aristocrat Gaming Juvenile Fillies Stakes at Kentucky Downs last year.

“She went off the favorite,” Sharp said. “That was the day it monsooned so hard when we were in the paddock that they canceled after the race. I don't think it was Kentucky Downs that beat her; it was Kentucky Downs on that day. She did not handle it. We will find out this year.”

Sharp, like everyone else associated with his barn, struggled mightily when Callie died. They are still not fully recovered, probably never will.

Callie Witt was a woman with ability and Sharp said she had an attitude that dared anyone to say she could not do something.

“She was a fiery little redhead,” Sharp said with a smile.”She was tough, she was gritty. She did not want to hear you say there was a horse you didn't think she could ride. The word no was not in her vocabulary.”

There have been other horses that Grady and Moore have named after Callie. The first was Callie's Passion, who was claimed after her third start. There will be more to come.

Tim Witt will have a heavy heart as he gets to Kentucky Downs. He loves talking about his daughter, who had excelled as a wrestler in high school in Nebraska. She was the 113-pound state champ as a senior.

“She worked so hard,” Tim Witt said. “Whenever she set her mind to do something, she was going to do it.”

Sharp will saddle Callie's Grit on Sunday and he'll give a leg up to jockey Joel Rosario. No doubt, there will be plenty in the house rooting for Callie's Grit to get all the way home.

“Callie was a humble girl, so she would probably not love the attention to be honest with you,” Sharp said. “You want to name a good one after her and I think (Callie's Grit) falls into that category. Anything she can do to help us honor Callie makes it very special for us.”

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