C.R. Trout Could Make History In Friday’s Oklahoma Classics Cup

Oklahoma-bred millionaire Shotgun Kowboy won the Oklahoma Classics Cup four times for breeder-owner-trainer C.R. Trout, including the last three years in a row.

The 8-year-old gelded son of Kodiak Kowboy, out of the Siphon (BRZ) mare Shotgun Jane, still comes to the track just about every morning at Remington Park and is the best looking horse in Trout's barn. However, Shotgun Kowboy will not be running in Friday's $175,000 Oklahoma Classics Cup, a race he won in 2015 and then 2017-19. Shotgun Kowboy is now retired, after incurring an injury during training earlier this year at Oaklawn Park in Hot Springs, Ark.

“We let him (Shotgun Kowboy), with my assistant Dan Ortiz up on him, accompany the horses I'm working in the mornings and he looks fantastic,” said Trout, who earned $1,548,684 by racing this horse from 2014-19. “I don't think I've ever seen him look better. It is tempting to bring him back to training and racing, but that injury was pretty bad.”

Trout of Edmond, Okla., is one win away from being the all-time winningest owner and trainer of the Classics Cup. He has taken the trophy home six times as an owner, tying him with John and Barbara Smicklas, and six times as a trainer, placing him in a tie with Donnie Von Hemel.

It would mean a great deal to Trout to be the top owner and trainer in Cup history by winning this race on Friday: “It certainly would be exciting. Anyone would like to reach that goal.”

This year, Trout's Cup hopes lie with Fast Breakin Cash, one of eight horses entered for the 2020 edition. A 4-year-old gelded son of Yes It's True, out of the Forestry mare Fast N Fine Lookin, Fast Breakin Cash will pick up the baton for the Trout barn. Trout also won the Classics Cup with Imahit in 2013-14.

“Imahit's first win in the Cup was probably the most exciting for me,” Trout said. “We were stretching him out from sprints to a route and he responded in kind. It's great when you do that and it works. As far as this year's race goes, I like my chances. We're not scared of anybody in there.”

Trout is trying to do a similar thing that he did with Imahit. Fast Breakin Cash has run 13 times and 12 of those races were sprints. He could have gone into the Oklahoma Classics Sprint except for one thing.

“Oh, we've tried him against Welder already,” Trout said.

That is good enough reason to stretch him out around two turns to the 1-1/16th miles for the Cup. He was a respectable third to Welder in last year's Oklahoma Classics Sprint, beaten only 4-1/4 lengths by the two-time Oklahoma Horse of the Year. The one race where he did negotiate a route of ground was the $70,000 Jim Thorpe Stakes here last year at one mile, and he ran second, beaten only 1-3/4 lengths by Cowboy Mischief.

“Oh, he's bred to go as far as you want him to go,” said Trout.

To win another Classics Cup and establish a record for most wins in the race would be satisfying but also bittersweet for Trout, who is competing on this night for the first time without his wife Arletta, who passed away Nov. 24, 2019.

“When you live with someone more than 50 years, it's just not going to be the same,” he said. “She was not only my wife, but she was also my best friend. I will have my whole family here, but it still won't be like having your best buddy that's always been here.”

Here's a look at the field with post position, jockey, trainer and odds:

1) Dont Tell Noobody: Sophie Doyle, Federico Villafranco, 15-1

2) Georgia Deputy: Ezequiel Lara, Joe Petalino, 20-1

3) United Patriot: Lori Biehler, Michael Biehler, 10-1

4) Rowdy Yates: Stewart Elliott, Steve Asmussen, 2-1 (morning-line favorite)

5) Fast Breakin Cash: Luis Quinonez, C.R. Trout, 5-1

6) Dak Da Man: Lane Luzzi, Kari Craddock, 6-1

7) Kwik: David Cabrera, Karl Broberg, 10-1

8) Deal Driven: Ramon Vazquez, Robert Mosco, 5-2

Remington Park racing continues Thursday-Saturday, Oct. 15-17, this week with Friday being Oklahoma Classics Night featuring the top Oklahoma-breds in divisional stakes competition worth $1 million. The first race nightly is at 7:07pm-Central.

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Jockey Juan Gutierrez Becomes All-Time Leading Rider At Emerald Downs

Juan Gutierrez made riding history Wednesday afternoon at Emerald Downs, supplanting Gallyn Mitchell as the track's all-time leading rider.

With a 1¼-length victory on Stay in Grace in the featured $17,000 Muckleshoot Casino Purse, Gutierrez moved one ahead of Mitchell—1,420 to 1,419—to become No. 1 all-time at Emerald Downs. He had tied Mitchell's mark with a victory aboard Mike Operator earlier on the card.

“You know, I was excited the last eighth of a mile when I was pretty sure we would get there,” Gutierrez said in the winner's circle after the victory on Stay in Grace. “This is a great record because it has taken a long time to get there.”

Gutierrez, 51, notched his first Emerald Downs' win April 29, 2000 and has been a mainstay here ever since. He recorded 15 consecutive top-five finishes in the riders' standings during one stretch, including a riding title in 2012 with 117 wins. He also ranks No. 1 in track earnings with over $15 million and No. 3 in stakes victories with 68, including three wins in the Longacres Mile. He ranks second at the current meet with 47 victories through Wednesday.

A 2018 inductee into the Washington Racing Hall of Fame, Gutierrez has 2,031 overall wins, hitting the 2,000 mark aboard Semi Sweet in July.

Gutierrez will be honored with a winner's circle ceremony before Thursday's first race.

Mitchell, the leading rider at Emerald Downs since 2002, retired four years ago and now resides in southern California.

Stay in Grace, a 5-year-old Oregon-bred mare by Understatement, has three wins in her last four starts and improved to 10 for 22 lifetime with earnings of $78,347. Rigoberto Velasquez is the trainer for owners Jerry Carmody and John Sneesby.

In Wednesday's victory, Stay in Grace ($3.20) gained command into the turn and held off B C Z Middleton in the drive, running six furlongs in 1:09.79

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‘It Puts A Smile On My Face Every Day:’ Richard Simons’ Technicolor Life

The following article by Chris Lomon originally appeared at OntarioRacing.com and is republished here with permission.

The man known as “Si” makes sure everything runs as smooth as silk at Fort Erie Race Track in Fort Erie, Ontario.

For the past seven years, Richard Simons has been the “colors man” at the Thoroughbred border oval, responsible for more than 2,500 “silks” – the long-sleeved shirts worn by jockeys – that hang from large racks in the space that's connected to the jockeys' room.

His little corner of the world is a literal kaleidoscope of color.

Four washers and four dryers – each of them heavy-duty machines – are in constant use on race days at Fort Erie. Simons will also put them to work on the days prior to and the days after live racing, depending on what he's able to get done.

It is, despite the odd challenge, a labor of love for the 74-year-old.

“I was at the racetrack here in Fort Erie starting when I was about 10, selling newspapers in the jocks' room,” recalled Simons. “From there, I worked in the administration building. I was involved with horses for a long time when I was a kid. But I left the sport for 35 years before I came back to the track. I worked in the railroad industry for 12 years and I had my own business for 19 years. But I came back and I'm sure glad I did. I worked in the backside walking horses, but Harry Eder [Horsepeople's Relations at Fort Erie] asked me if I'd be interested in being a valet. I felt I was too old, so he asked if I wanted to do the colors.”

Accompanied by a somewhat self-deprecating laugh, Simons initially had little understanding of what the role was about.

An affinity for the Thoroughbred world, and the opportunity to learn his craft from one of the best in the business, convinced Simons to give it a try.

“I had no idea what Harry was talking about, but the guy who was doing it, Des McMahon… nobody is as good as Des, who does the same job at Woodbine. The guy's got a memory like a copy machine. You could call him at Woodbine and ask him for anybody's colors, and he'd know the whole bit. He's really good and he taught me. He's unreal.”

It took Simons less than a six-furlong race to appreciate the colors job was anything but black and white.

“Looking back, I'd say this job took me five years to feel really comfortable. But no one day is like the next. You have to be really focused and organized.”

Not surprisingly, the more horses entered for a race card means more work and longer hours.

“If we have eight races with nine horses in each race – after each race I wash the silks and I do the saddlecloths. Say if in the third race that you have a comeback [set of silks] that was used in the first race, you have to make sure that you have done it and it's ready for that third race.”

Preparation is paramount, offered Simons.

“We race Monday and Tuesday. I start my job on Sunday. I work Sunday, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. Sunday, I'll go in and get all my silks ready, and all the saddlecloths ready. We race Monday and Tuesday, and whatever I didn't get done Tuesday, I'll take care of it Wednesday morning.”

In a sport dominated by numbers, Simons has an important one of his own: eight.

It's the amount of time the washer takes to clean each load of silks.

“Eight minutes, that's it. Then I throw them in the dryer. There have been a couple of times when the same silks are being used soon after the first time in a day when they haven't been ready. But that's rare. You just do what everybody else in this sport – work hard, take pride in what you do, and always do the best you can.”

Not even a sloppy Fort Erie main track can diminish Simons' love for racing.

Rain and mud are, however, an unwelcome coupled entry for the man at the control of the washers and dryers.

“What happens is after you wash the silks and the saddlecloths, there's always sand in the bottom of the washing machine, and it's tough. What happens is that sometimes I have to take them out, throw a rinse in them, and put them back in the machine. When it's muddy, that's the hardest part.”

The best part?

“The guys and girls in the jocks' room. They're all good. It's just like a family. They all call me 'Papa.' I get along with everybody.”

Among the countless color combinations, some traditional pairings, others bolder in appearance, Simons does have a particular set of silks that he counts as his favorite.

They belong to owner-trainer Layne Giliforte.

Richard Simons in the silks room (photo courtesy of Fort Erie)

“They're Miami Dolphins colors,” noted Simons. “And I'm a Dolphins fan.”

He's also a stickler for organization.

“I have my silks all alphabetically arranged. You get to know where they are. For example, Julie Mathes, she's the leading trainer this year. I can tell you exactly where hers are, and her husband's are right beside hers.”

Don't expect Simons to be calling it a career any time soon. He's too busy enjoying his time at Fort Erie.

“I love the job. My bosses are great and they treat me very well. I always keep busy. And I love the racing.”

After the Fort Erie racing season ended on Oct. 13, Simons doesn't plan to kick back and wait for the new campaign to begin.

He's still attached to colors, albeit in this instance just two, specifically, green grass and white snow.

“I do lawns. I have six lawns that I do for elderly people and in the wintertime, I do their driveways with a snow blower. I just keep on trying to go.”

Simons, who lives three blocks from the racetrack, is encouraging his wife to have the same approach.

“My wife is sick, but the [health] benefits we receive are very good. She's battling lung cancer. But if you ever saw her, you'd never know she had it. It's her second bout with it. She tries to keep busy. All you can do is hope and pray.”

And, with a little good fortune, Simons can keep on doing what he loves to do.

“I would like to do my job as long as I can. Why wouldn't I want to? It puts a smile on my face every day.”

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Bocachica Named Jockey Of The Week After Winning Half His Races

With more wins than any other jockey last week, Arnaldo Bocachica was voted Jockey of the Week for Oct. 5 thru Oct. 11. The award, which is voted on by a panel of racing industry experts, is for jockeys who are members of the Jockeys' Guild, the organization which represents more than 950 active riders in the United States as well as retired and permanently disabled jockeys. 

Bocachica led all North American jockeys with 10 wins from 20 mounts.

The Puerto Rican native started his winning week on Thursday with five victories at Hollywood Casino at Charles Town, his home track. He continued his winning hand on Friday with two victories. Bocachica topped off his week on Saturday night by winning three stakes races during the West Virginia Breeders' Classics, the biggest night for West Virginia-bred horses. He won the West Virginia Tourism Stakes with Star of the Night ($2.40), the West Virginia Triple Crown Stakes aboard That Kenney Kid ($6.40) and the West Virginia Thoroughbred Breeders Association Breeders' Classic Stakes with Penguin Power ($2.40).  He also finished third in the West Virginia Vincent Moscarelli Memorial Breeders' Classic with Pilot in Command all for leading trainer Jeff Runco. 

 

In addition to a 50% win percentage, fan favorite Bocachica also hit the board with 65% of his mounts and accumulated $190,380 in purse earnings. He currently sits atop the jockey standings at Charles Town by a wide margin with 136 victories and more than $2.3 million in purses.

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