‘I Tend To Be A Sandbagger’: Miller Exceeds Low Expectations With Del Mar Summer Meet Title

If there was a trophy for the summer training title at Del Mar, Peter Miller's name could have been etched upon it well before the seaside track's meet drew to a close on Monday.  In fact, hyper engravers could have done so a week or two ago.

Miller, a resident of nearby Encinitas, entered the closing day program with 27 wins from 110 starters, an eight-win advantage over Phil D'Amato. Bob Baffert has saddled 14 winners and Doug O'Neill 13.

It's the fourth summer title at Del Mar, which matches the number of fall Bing Crosby Meeting championships he has accomplished since that session was inaugurated in 2014.

“I'm thrilled and feel blessed to have such a great team to work with and this is a reflection of them all as well,” Miller said Monday morning. “From the hot walkers to the assistant trainers, they all give a 100 percent effort every day. And I have owners that allow me to run their horses where I think they should be and where they have a chance to win.”

When asked before the meeting to assess his title chances, Miller was not wildly enthusiastic. “I've got half as many horses as (Richard) Baltas, (Bob) Baffert or Doug (O'Neill) and for me to win everything has to go close to perfect,” Miller said on the eve of the July 10 opener.

In retrospect, Miller said the projection may have been conservative.

“I tend to be a sandbagger,” Miller said with a laugh. “I set my expectations a little low and hope to exceed them. It's really a numbers game and if you can win a good enough percentage things (like titles) happen for you.”

The 25 percent win rate, from the second-highest number of starters at the meeting going into the last day, was sufficient to win the title by a comfortable margin.

“In my mind, 20 percent is a good win percentage,” Miller said. “Anything over that exceeds my expectations. Our horses ran well throughout the meeting. We didn't really have any bad slumps and that makes a big difference.

“I'd just like to thank the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club for putting on a pretty darn good show under the circumstances.”

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Mirahmadi Passing Mic To Griffin For Remainder Of Monmouth, Meadowlands Meets

Monmouth Park fans will hear a new voice calling races for the duration of the meet starting on Saturday, Sept. 12, when Chris Griffin takes over as the track announcer.

Griffin will be filling in for regular announcer Frank Mirahmadi through the remainder of the Monmouth Park meet that concludes Sept. 27 as well as the nine-day Meadowlands-at-Monmouth meet in October. Mirahmadi is returning to California to resume his role as the track announcer for Santa Anita, which kicks off its fall meet on Sept. 19.

Griffin, 39, most recently served as the track announcer at Sam Houston Race Park in Texas.

“It's a huge opportunity. I'm excited,” said Griffin. “I'm looking forward to getting back into the booth and calling races. This has been a strange year as everyone knows so when an opportunity like this comes along you take it.”

Griffin, who currently resides in Peoria, Ill., got his start as an announcer at the Humboldt County Fair in Ferndale, Calif. in 2015. The Santa Monica, Calif. native has called races at the various California fair meets, at Portland Meadows, Los Alamitos and Gulfstream Park West.

“Chris is a rising star in the industry,” said Mirahmadi. “He has a great voice and has earned this opportunity. I'm so happy to welcome him to the Monmouth Park announcer's booth. Our fans will love him.”

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Five Derby Riders Pledge Percentage Of Earnings To Help Injured Jock Bednar

Hall of Fame jockeys Javier Castellano, Mike Smith, John Velazquez, and the sport's rising stars Manuel Franco and Tyler Gaffalione have joined in solidarity to pledge a percentage of their earnings from the Kentucky Oaks and Kentucky Derby race cards to help rider Vinnie Bednar with continued expenses resulting from a catastrophic fall at Los Alamitos Racetrack on August 22nd.

Bednar, 28, is experiencing what his family hopes is a temporary lower-limb paralysis following initial surgery at USC Medical Center in Los Angeles.  He remains hospitalized while awaiting transfer to the Craig Hospital in Englewood, Colorado, a world-renowned, premier center for spinal and brain injury. The accident occurred in the seventh race when Peek It Up, the horse Bednar was riding, broke down 100 yards from the finish line in the 300-yard race.

“Vinnie was overcome with emotion when I told him that some of the country's top jockeys had reached out and wanted to help. He couldn't believe that they were thinking about him while they are amid their big race weekend at Churchill Downs,” said Karen Bednar, Vinnie's mother.

“The support our family has received is unbelievable and it's been so inspiring to Vinnie. He wants to use the attention and the generosity to help other paralyzed jockeys who don't have the exposure and need help,” Bednar continued.

Castellano who is third on the all-time North American earnings leaderboard will be aboard Money Moves for seven-time Eclipse Award winning trainer Todd Pletcher in the 146th running of the Derby today. Franco will ride the heavy favorite and sole Triple Crown contender Tiz the Law who won the Belmont Stakes and the Travers Stakes for trainer Barclay Tagg. Tyler Gaffalione who is third in earnings on the North American Leaderboard will have the mount on South Bend for Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott.  Mike Smith, who piloted Justify to a Triple Crown title in 2018 will be in the irons for trainer John Sherriffs on Honor A.P. who is the morning line second favorite in the race. Velazquez will ride Authentic for two-time Triple Crown winner Bob Baffert who is the third favorite in the year's 146th edition of the Run for the Roses.

“This could have been any one of us,” said North America's all-time leading money earner Velazquez.  “The injuries Vinnie sustained are going to require a tremendous amount of financial support for his medical bills and rehabilitation. We will be riding with Vinnie and his family in our thoughts and prayers today.”

Fellow Hall of Famer Mike Smith echoed the sentiment, adding, “I know Vinnie well. He's a great young rider and an even better person. He has a wonderful family and we will all help him get through this.”

Vinnie Bednar is a former motocross rider who began riding thoroughbred and quarter horses in 2011.  He has enjoyed a successful career and at the time of his last race ranked second in the jockey standings at Los Alamitos. Since mid-December, Bednar has won four major stakes – the Champion of Champions last December with 2019 World Champion He Looks Hot, the Vessels Maturity on Chocolatito on July 5, the Governor's Cup Derby with Nomadic on July 26, and the Golden State Derby on Aug. 16 aboard Circle City.  This season Bednar had 41 Quarter Horse victories from 201 starts with earnings of $635,959 and is ranked 23rd in the country. He also rode Thoroughbreds this year, garnering 18 wins from 94 mounts.

Close friends of the Bednar family have created a GoFundMe campaign for continued medical support: https://gf.me/u/yvsusr

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50 Years Later, Labor Day Brings Special Memories To Del Mar

September 7, 1970, Labor Day, was another working day for people whose jobs were on, or connected to, the Del Mar racetrack. But also a day that dawned with the promise of being special to them, and anyone interested in Thoroughbred racing.

Two days earlier, in the ninth race of the program, on a horse named Esquimal, Bill Shoemaker notched win No. 6,032 to tie John Longden's world record for career wins by a jockey.

There being no Sunday racing at that time, the racing world had a full day to savor the prospect of the man simply referred to as “The Shoe” ending a record quest they'd been following with enthusiasm since he hit the 6,000 mark a month earlier.

And, coincidentally, do it 14 years after another Labor Day at Del Mar when Longden notched record win No. 4,871, on a horse named Arrogate, to pass Sir Gordon Richards.

Dan Smith, 83, recently retired senior media coordinator for the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club, was on the job then as the whole thing unfolded.

“Shoe's first big splash was at Del Mar in 1949 when he led the meeting, as an apprentice, with 52 wins,” Smith said. “That was the time people started finding out who he was. He kept riding at Del Mar through 1954. Then left to ride in Chicago and New York, won the Kentucky Derby on Swaps in 1955 and really became a star.”

Then, 16 years after leaving, Del Mar's prodigal riding son returned home.

“He came back in 1970, the year the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club started running the track,” said Smith, who wrote the definitive biography, “The Shoe” about Shoemaker. “He was in hailing distance of the record. He knew he was going to break it. He wanted to do it at Del Mar. He took dead aim on it and he got it done.”

Shoemaker's words, from Smith's book: “I rode my 6,000th winner August 8 on a horse named Shining Count. And then the countdown began. As I got nearer the record …the drama and the tension built up. With all the newspaper guys and TV people following me around, there's always some tension involved. You handle it the best way you can.”

As Shoemaker drew closer to the record, the media coverage intensified. Sports Illustrated sent one of its top feature writers, Jack Olson, to follow the quest through the final week. On the holiday weekend, crews from major television stations in Los Angeles and San Diego were on hand to chronicle the crowning and word spread across the nation and the world.

“It was important not just to Shoe, but to Del Mar,” Smith said. “It is a very significant event in the track history and led to Del Mar becoming what it has, one of the leading racetracks in the country.”

And Shoemaker remained unfazed by all the fuss. Fellow jockey, and by many accounts Shoemaker's best friend, Hall of Famer Don Pierce, was by his side through much of the buildup. And in sixth place, 16 ½-lengths behind on a horse named Sister Kat Bird, when his pal became the winningest jockey in history.

Pierce, 83, and a longtime Del Mar resident, doesn't remember the race. Nor does he remember Shoemaker being anything but his usual self in the weeks and days leading up to it.

“He was never excited about anything,” Pierce said. “I don't know what was going on in his mind or how he felt about it (internally) but I played golf with him and was around him every day and he was the same as always. I never asked him about it and we never talked about it.

“He had a way about him that everybody around loved him. We wanted him to break (the record) and knew he would.”

Shoemaker from “The Shoe” – “I never anticipated being able to break that kind of record early in my career, so I'd never set it up as a goal. But as I got closer to it and knew I could do it, I really wanted it …In one of the early races on Labor Day, September 7, I was on Dares J, a filly trained by Ron McAnally, and I knew she had a real good shot at winning.”

Hall of Fame trainer McAnally, 88, has spent this summer, like decades before, at his secondary home in Del Mar. In fact, this is his 60th season at the shore, more than any other trainer in history. During that time he's saddled 447 winners, 77 of them in stakes.

“Dares J. was actually owned by a jockey agent, Camilo Marin,” McAnally said. “But a jockey agent couldn't own horses in those days, so they ran her in the name of the auto painter (Earl Scheib's Green Thumb Farm Stable).”

In a long and colorful career, Cuban-born Marin, who died in 1988, was known for introducing, and often representing, a stream of riders from Latin and South America to U.S. racing. Among them were Hall of Famers Braulio Baeza, Manny Ycaza, Ismael “Milo” Valenzuela and Laffit Pincay, Jr., as well as Kentucky native Don Brumfield.

Shoe's big moment was the fourth race on the program.

McAnally had no instructions for Shoemaker before giving him a leg up on Dares J. He'd abandoned the practice years before after seeing Shoemaker go counter to all the information offered on a filly McAnally thought he had figured out, then produce an astonishing victory.

“(Dares J.) broke in front, and all of a sudden it goes so quiet it was like you could hear a pin drop,” McAnally recalled. “Then, when she went under the finish line, the crowd let out a roar like I'd never heard before.”

Dares J. led by two lengths at the first quarter, four at both the half and top of the stretch, and won clear by 2 ½ over I Wanna Win under Robby Kilborn.

Shoemaker from The Shoe: “I knew she had a real good shot at winning.

She broke sharp, and I sent her right to the lead. I let her roll on the turn, and she opened up a pretty long lead. She got a little late in the stretch, but she was too far in front to catch – and that was it. I naturally was happy and relieved it was over.

“John Longden was there in the winner's circle waiting for me to come back, and he was one of the first to congratulate me. I felt a little bad breaking John's record. I'm sure it meant a lot to him. But records are there to be bettered, so I enjoyed doing it for that reason.”

The late San Diego sportscaster Ernie Myers conducted winner's circle interviews.

“Well it's a great day for Bill,” Longden told him. “I held it for 14 years and I know it is going to be a hell of a lot longer before they break it again. I think it took a good man to make this record and it took a damn good guy to break it.”

Shoemaker said: “I'm glad that I could win today's race in Longden's style, in front all the way.”

It was then the job of media department staffer Jeff Tufts, later to become Del Mar's morning linemaker for several decades, to escort Shoemaker through throngs of autograph seekers to the jockey's room. Shoemaker calmly obliged as many as he could.

“Can you imagine what that autograph would be worth today,” Smith wondered.

Tufts had been given strict instructions from publicity director Eddie Read about his assignment and took them seriously.

“It may be that the reason I don't remember anything special is that Shoe pretty much took it in stride and I was a slightly nervous escort,” Tufts said in an e-mail.

“Al Shelhamer, a former jockey and longtime steward, I think uttered the ultimate wisdom about Shoe when he said that aside from his obvious talent, the secret to Shoe's success was that there were never any real highs or lows.

“He took everything as it happened and didn't let disappointment or success affect him. Misjudging the finish line in the Kentucky Derby (in 1957 aboard Gallant Man to lose to Iron Liege) could have really hurt a lesser character, but Shoe dealt with it and went on winning.

“And could any other jock win 17 straight riding titles at Santa Anita and not be the object of envy and jealousy? He was one of a kind.”

Who, 50 years ago, was in the spotlight on one special, and memorable, Labor Day at Del Mar.

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