Tohill, 57, Eyes 4,000-Win Milestone With Detour To Oaklawn

Ken Tohill enters 2021 chasing a career milestone. That chase begins at Oaklawn in Hot Springs, Ark., where the veteran jockey will be riding regularly for the second time after winning 22 races from 172 mounts in 2014 to tie for seventh in the standings.

According to Equibase, racing's official data gathering organization, Tohill, 57, entered Saturday with 3,928 career victories to rank 84th in North American history. Only 77 riders in North American history, through Friday, had reached 4,000, according to Equibase.

“That's something I didn't think 15 years ago was even a possibility,” Tohill said. “Now, I always said I'm not quitting until after 4,000.”

Tohill rode his first winner in 1979 and has been a fixture in New Mexico, Iowa and Northern California (the back yard of all-time North American kingpin Russell Baze), consistently ranking among the top 100 riders nationally in victories since 2004. He won a career-high 221 races in 2005 to finish 20th nationally.

“I really kind of ruined the first two-thirds of my career,” Tohill said. “Just drinking and scared to leave Northern California. You had Russell Baze there. Think it was more fear than anything.”

Tohill said his return to Oaklawn coincides with COVID-19 restrictions, which continues to shutter racing in New Mexico. He rode nine winners at the recently concluded Remington Park meeting.

“It changed all of our patterns,” Tohill said of the virus. “They're shut down in New Mexico. There wasn't an option. Then, my business had started picking up at Remington and a couple of offers from people that would ride me.”

Tohill is named on two horses Jan. 22 (opening day) – All Shacked Up in the first race for 2015 Oaklawn leading trainer Chris Hartman and Five Star Moon in the fourth race for trainer Tim Martin. Tohill rode 15 of his winners at the 2014 Oaklawn meeting for Hartman.

“I'm going to pester everybody, but hopefully I'll have a little business with Hartman again,” Tohill said. “That's my main push.”

Tohill said he doesn't know where he'll ride after the Oaklawn meet ends May 1, adding there are no thoughts of retirement, especially since he's poised to reach a career milestone in 2021.

“I'm going to go until the body … or I don't belong,” Tohill said. “Right now, I feel really good. I probably feel as good as I did years ago. Knock on wood, I hope it stays like this.”

Tohill is represented at Oaklawn by agent Joe Santos. Tohill's only other Oaklawn mount came in 2009 aboard Kick On, who finished 11th in the $250,000 Southwest Stakes (G3) for 3-year-olds. Alsvid, the Hartman-trained millionaire sprinter, and multiple stakes winner Mr. Trieste are among Tohill's top career mounts.

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Longtime Racing Executive Nat Wess, 81, Succumbs In Minnesota

Nat Wess, one of the premier publicists in horse racing in the 1970s and '80s when he served as director of publicity at Hollywood Park in Inglewood, Calif., died on Thursday in Minnesota. He was 81.

Wess had been hospitalized since Dec. 31 after suffering a hip fracture and requiring surgery. While hospitalized, he tested positive for COVID-19, according to an email distributed to members of the Minnesota Racing Commission shared with the Paulick Report.

While he began his career as a publicist, working first at Santa Anita and then moving to cross-town rival Hollywood Park, Wess would go on to other racetrack and association management positions, including assistant general manager at Canterbury Park in Minnesota and general manager of the California Thoroughbred Breeders Association.

But it was promoting racing that Wess was best known for, especially during his years at Hollywood Park, when “giveaways” and the launch of the Pick 6 routinely brought weekend crowds of 50,000-plus (the first giveaway, when all paid attendees received a free tote bag, brought out a record 80,348). During his tenure at Hollywood Park, daily average attendance hit a highwater mark of 31,150 in 1980.

Wess left his mark on two other big events. In the early days of the Claiming Crown, when it was held at Philadelphia Park (now Parx Racing) and Canterbury, he  promoted it tirelessly on behalf of the Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association and National Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association. During his time at the California Thoroughbred Breeders Association, Wess was part of the braintrust that created the California Cup, an event that had its 31st running two days after his death.

Wess, who always appeared to be a bundle of nervous energy, is remembered by racing writers for the patience, helpfulness and kindness he showed to those who were just beginning their careers. He was an old-school promoter, learning the ropes from the late Bob Benoit and employing props and publicity photos to promote big races and star horses

He is survived, by Ellen, his wife of 58 years, daughter Deborah and son David. A private memorial service for family will be held, and a public memorial is being planned for summer.

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‘Pure Horseman Through And Through,’ Bruce Headley, 86, Passes; Trained Champion Kona Gold

Veteran California-based trainer Bruce Headley, the developer of 2000 Eclipse Champion Sprinter Kona Gold and many other stakes winners, died Friday morning at Arcadia Methodist Hospital in Arcadia, Calif.,  from the effects of a stroke at age 86.

Born Feb. 17, 1934, in nearby Baldwin Park, Headley was first introduced to racing at Santa Anita by an aunt at age six.  At age 14, he was mucking stalls and walking hots alongside a diminutive 16-year-old from El Monte named Willie Shoemaker at the Suzy Q Ranch in La Puente and from there, it was all racetrack – Santa Anita, Hollywood Park, Del Mar, the LA County Fairgrounds, Bay Meadows, Tanforan, Golden Gate Fields and more.

“I started out with nothing and grew up learning under great horsemen,” said Headley in an interview with Dan Ross of Thoroughbred Racing Commentary in April 2015.  “I grew up watching trainers like Charlie Whittingham, Buster Millerick, Les Holt and Ralph West. … But the only difference between me and other great trainers is that they train for other people and I've always trained for myself.”

Headley, whose barn was always replete with chickens, country music and plenty of Headley-bred and raised California-breds, may have “started out with nothing,” but his street smart instincts and the 59-year marriage to his wife Aase (Oh-sah) resulted in considerable wealth that included local real estate holdings and a sizable art and automobile collection.

Headley, who never graduated high school, met Aase at Golden Gate Fields in 1959, married in 1962, and was always quick to credit her for any success he may have had.

“If I didn't marry this beautiful genius, I wouldn't have managed what I did,” he said in the same interview.  “She always would save money for us to buy horses at the sales. … I think I married a wife who loved racing even more than I did.

“I've always invested my own money since I've started and owned the majority of my horses, which gives you the purse as well as everything you make when you sell them,” continued Headley in his interview with Ross.  “No other trainer today has done what I've done.”

One resounding hallmark of Headley's training career was that he was never in a hurry with any horse.  Derby Fever was not an affliction from which he suffered and due to his patience and tremendous instincts, he developed stakes winners from pedigrees that many “experts” scoffed at.  Another hallmark was that Headley believed in the power of Mother Nature when it came to developing a Thoroughbred.

“I did it completely on hay, oats and water,” he told Ross.  “I don't have sore horses.  If I do, I turn them out … I rest them.  That's why I've had stakes winners aged five, six, seven, eight and nine.  That's why there's only four horses that have won graded stakes races at nine years of age at Santa Anita, and I've trained two of them—Kona Gold (2003 Grade 3 El Conejo Handicap) and Softshoe Sure Shot (1995 Grade 2 San Carlos Handicap).  My horses last, you see.”

Bruce Headley rode many of his own horses during training hours

A natural athlete, Headley got on as many as 10 to 15 of his own horses each morning at Santa Anita until about 10 years ago when health issues relegated him to being afoot.  Slowed the past couple of years by cardiac issues, Headley's stable had been greatly reduced in number as daughter Karen and son Gus are now training horses at both Santa Anita and Los Alamitos.

A licensed trainer at age 25, Headley's first winner came at the LA County Fair's half mile bullring in  Pomona, as his very first horse, Thorium, purchased for $500, broke her maiden on Sept. 29, 1959.

Hall of Fame retired jockey Chris McCarron, who enjoyed tremendous success when paired with Headley over the course of more than 20 years, encapsulated the feelings of many in the racetrack community via this afternoon.

“He's a throwback to the old days, a pure horseman through and through,” McCarron said.  “An excellent caretaker, a great family man, and a heck of a human being.”

With 123 career stakes victories, the highlight of Headley's career came when Kona Gold, who he owned in partnership with Irwin and Andrew Molasky, won the 2000 Breeders' Cup Sprint at Churchill Downs.  Kona Gold debuted at age four and amassed a career mark of 30-14-7-2, earning $2,293,384.  The Java Gold gelding, purchased by Headley at the Keeneland September Yearling Sale for $35,000, ran in a record five consecutive Breeders' Cup Sprints, his final Sprint appearance being a fourth-place finish at Arlington Park at age eight in 2002.

Third with his only starter this year, Equibase lists Headey with 902 wins from 6,121 career starters that amassed earnings of $38,682,030.

Headley's many stakes winners included California-bred stars such as Silveyville, Softshoe Sure Shot, Variety Road, Variety Baby, Variety Queen, Her Royalty, Stylish Winner, Bertrando, Halo Folks and others.

A racetracker to his core, Bruce Headley could be coarse, funny and disarming.  A poet, songwriter and blue-collar philosopher, anyone who knew Bruce knew he believed in all things natural, including practicing backstretch chiropractic for countless exercise riders and grooms for decades.  A man who was well ahead of the national movement to normalize the use of hemp, he often referred to it with a wry smile as “Dry whiskey.”

Survived by his wife Aase, daughter Karen and son Gus, Headley leaves a rich legacy that will never be replicated.  Memorial services are pending.

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‘A Huge Blessing’: Peterson Wastes Little Time Recording Initial Laurel Win

Jockey Ferrin Peterson got off to a winning start on her first day in Maryland, booting home Spanish d'Oro to a 9-1 upset victory in Friday's ninth race finale at Laurel Park in Laurel, Md.

Trained by Hamilton Smith and owned by his older brother, Franklin 'Goree”' Smith, Spanish d'Oro ($20.20) ran seven furlongs in 1:27.40 over a fast main track to capture the maiden claiming event for 3-year-olds by a length over fellow long shot Goldie's Boy.

Peterson, 28, had two mounts on Friday's card, also finishing seventh on Lisbeth Dodd, John Cocce, Peter Donnely and Reginald Hyde's One More Nightcap in Race 5 for trainer Pat McBurney. Peterson broke One More Nightcap's maiden last summer at Monmouth Park.

“I'm still in a bit of shock. I was just excited to be riding two horses today,” Peterson said. “I'm thrilled. Just coming down the stretch and feeling my horse really take hold of the bit and want to go on with it. It wasn't exactly what I was expecting and so that was a great feeling. After that, it was pretty smooth sailing. Especially to win for someone that just gave me the opportunity … Hammy hadn't seen me ride before naming me on the horse, so that meant a lot.”

Laurel is the latest stop for Peterson, a native of California and part-time veterinarian who launched her professional riding career in 2018 at Golden Gate Fields while still in school, winning 10 of 144 starts.

Peterson had five wins from 96 mounts in 2019 and began 2020 as an apprentice, moving East and losing the bug over the summer at Monmouth Park where she finished second to perennial leading rider Paco Lopez with 42 wins. She also ranked second during the subsequent Meadowlands at Monmouth meet with eight wins and finished the year with 50 wins from 335 mounts and more than $1.6 million in purse earnings.

“I already came in feeling confident. All the trainers and agents I've been talking to around here have been giving me really positive reinforcement about people giving new jockeys opportunities,” Peterson said. “But, to have that happen on my opening day, that was a huge blessing and unexpected surprise. And to be able to do it on a horse with long odds, he showed something he hadn't yet.”

Peterson was able to hustle Spanish d'Oro, making his fourth career start, into a stalking position from post 9 behind Goldie's Boy through fractions of 24.08 and 48.15 seconds before forging a short lead at the top of the stretch and powering down the center of the track.

“He broke really well from the gate and he hadn't before, and being on the outside I knew I was going to need to break sharp and get over,” Peterson said. “We had a lot of horses to clear and so having that kind of break allowed us to do that and get in the position I wanted so we could save as much ground as we could.”

Before Friday, Peterson hadn't ridden since Dec. 12 at Aqueduct during a short stint in New York. She began galloping horses again Jan. 9, both at Laurel and Pimlico Race Course, and is named on R Awesum Betty Sunday and Petes Pride on Monday's special Martin Luther King Jr. holiday program.

“Sunday I'm riding one for a trainer I won with at Monmouth, Michael Moore. The horse is shipping in from Parx. I haven't ridden this horse before but I won for the trainer and these owners before. That was really neat to see that connections coming back,” she said. “And then on Monday I have one for [trainer] Mario Serey. I've met him a couple times I've been out to Pimlico this week. It's great to see these new trainers who have never worked with me already giving me an opportunity.”

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