Hernandez, D’Amato, Reddam Among Hollywood Meet Leaders

Juan Hernandez, Phil D'Amato and Paul and Zillah Reddam's Reddam Racing emerged as the leaders in the jockey, trainer and owner divisions, respectively, during Santa Anita's Hollywood Meet, which concluded a 28-day run at the Los Angeles area oval Sunday, June 18.

With a Sunday three-timer, emerging talent Hernandez continued his stranglehold on the Southern California jockeys' premiership, as he booted home 42 winners during the meeting. Hernandez, whose closing-day victories included the ride aboard new 'TDN Rising Star' Muth (Good Magic), saluted in 10 added-money events, five more than Hector Berrios.

D'Amato sent out 17 winners at the Hollywood Meet, besting Doug O'Neill (15) and Mark Glatt (14). D'Amato was also the leading conditioner during the Classic meeting at the track and is now the owner of five Santa Anita training titles overall. His five stakes victories were one better than Richard Mandella and Bob Baffert.

Reddam Racing runners posted seven wins from 38 starters–two better than Hronis Racing LLC.

“We certainly want to thank our horseplayers, owners, trainers, jockeys, backstretch workers and the thousands of people that help us put on the show that is live racing,” said Santa Anita Senior Vice President and General Manager Nate Newby. “We are extremely proud of our safety record this year and we want to acknowledge this progress is the result of a true team effort from all stakeholders.”

With the winter and spring meetings in the books, officials at Santa Anita turn their attention to the fall and the Breeders' Cup World Championships, which pay another visit to Arcadia this coming November.

“Looking ahead to the fall, it is indeed a great honor to be able to host the Breeders' Cup for an 11th time and preparations will begin tomorrow,” said Newby. “We'll be offering our on-track fans a number of improvements, including a pair of brand new high resolution big screen televisions in the paddock which among many other things, will help to ensure the Great Race Place continues to look spectacular.”

Racing returns to Santa Anita Friday, Sept. 29.

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Matthew Dohman Looking to Shake Up ‘Old Boys’ Club’

Point him at a fork in the road and Matthew Dohman will likely take the one consecrated by Robert Frost.

When he founded his mortgage lending company, he did so in the middle of the global financial meltdown when homebuying was as popular as volcano surfing.

When he purchased his first horses at the sales, he eschewed sage counsel from agent and trainer and picked 'em largely himself. Didn't do too bad, either. The Cal-bred Guy Code, who he snagged for $63,000, ended up winning nearly a quarter-million.

And when he announced his bid earlier this year for a seat on the Thoroughbred Owners of California (TOC) board of directors, he did so as the only non-incumbent running and after a last-place finish in the prior elections–oh, and after a bit of a rocky road through the whole electoral process, which closed this past Thursday (more on this in a bit).

As befits someone who disdains silly little things called obstacles, Dohman, 41, appears high on his chances.

“This time, I've tried to be a little bit more vocal in the things that I'd like to see changed in California racing,” said Dohman, about his electoral approach. “Last year, I felt maybe I didn't say enough.”

Dohman's campaign trail included an email blast to TOC subscribers outlining his wish list, including increased minimum participation purses and a minimum per-start payment for trainers.

It also listed a proposal to increase female participation in the saddle by giving female jockeys a weight break, as well as a proposition to publish trainer contact information and training day-rates in the horsemen section of a racetrack's website.

Dohman knows some of his ideas can appear out of left field. But the way he describes the racing industry makes it resemble a time capsule that needs dusting off and opening up to let in needed sunlight and fresh air.

The TOC, “They've developed a bit of a good old boys' club and they don't want people from the outside in,” Dohman said, with the sort of dismissive laugh that cautions the listener not to take it entirely as jest.

If, as Dohman suspects, he'll be made a TOC board member when the election results come in (perhaps as soon as the start of the week), what exactly will he bring to the board table?

For one, an origins story ripped from the pages of Horatio Alger–one told from the spotless, sleek and modern trimmings of a pad perched on the lapping waters of Huntington Beach. The kind of place you'd expect the Property Brothers to suddenly jump out of.

No nepo baby talk here. His father was a custodian, mother a bartender. He grew up across town in a one-bedroom apartment. “I slept on the couch bed in the living room.”

How did Dohman hopscotch his way from a sofa-bed to a stable of 22 horses? The journey included stepping-stone stints for grocery chain Pavillions and for electronics store Fry's.

“But my goal was to open my own mortgage company,” he said. “I turned 20, got my real estate license and I went and worked for my cousin in the mortgage business.”

In 2009, amid the wreckage of a global financial collapse and with the whole mortgage industry doing its best to emulate the Hindenburg, Dohman decided to go all in, open his own company. Optimum First Mortgage. “I had one employee, someone who had done loans with me before.”

Soon after, his business partner Robert Drenk joined the fold. Bit by bit the company grew, until 14 years later, “we have like 50 people that work for us,” he said. “And I also have 25 people that have worked for me for over 10 years.”

The racing connection began with Dohman's father, who took his son to the races–Santa Anita, Del Mar, Hollywood Park–when junior was still knee high to an outrider's pony. “He taught me how to read the Racing Form, would put in little bets for me.”

A little more than 10 years ago, when the livin' was getting decidedly easier, Dohman made the move into the owners' ranks. “I didn't really know how you go about getting into horse racing, so I started looking up trainers online. I reached out to a few trainers, but nobody contacted me back.”

In a roundabout fashion, Dohman ended up at the door of trainer Hector Palma, who claimed two horses for him and Drenk out of a nondescript allowance optional claiming at Santa Anita in October of 2012.

Both horses finished down the field that day. But one of them, Unstopper Topper, won next time out at Hollywood Park. The other, Floating Feather, finished second in his next start. “I was like, 'Holy shit, this stuff's easy,'” Dohman said, with the ironic wonder of someone well and truly disabused of such notions in the intervening years.

It's this experience–the lack of a useful roadmap for new recruits at a time when many trainers complain of the difficulty of finding owners–that partly guides Dohman's proposal to publish trainer contact information and training rates through the TOC or the horsemen's section of a racetrack website.

“I feel like half of these trainers don't have websites,” he said. “They're not modern in terms of communication. How do people contact them?”

The more Dohman ponders the idea, the more he sees other avenues for initiating the uninitiated. On these same websites, for example, he sees the need for a variety of tutorials. How do you claim a horse? How do you get involved in partnerships?

“If you want to try to buy a horse at the sales, here's a list of bloodstock agents to help you,” he added, riffing on the idea. “I mean, it should be like shopping for a store or something on Google.”

His own syndicate, California Racing Partners–which he manages in partnership with Joe Ciaglia–has more than 32 partners. Twenty-two horses, 12 of them 2-year-olds, are spread between the likes of Ryan Hanson, Leonard Powell, George Papaprodromou, Matthew Troy and Doug O'Neill.

Asked if the reason for casting a wide net was in part to help field sizes at a time of encroaching impacts from big-numbered barns, Dohman demurred. It's more that some of the “recognizable names” among the training ranks help bring new partners to the fold.

“Doug O'Neill has a lot of owners,” Dohman added. “He might put new owners in with us too and broaden my owner base.”

That's not to say Dohman appears blind to some of the effects from more numerically dominant stables. He doesn't agree with the reinstitution of a stall cap for a single trainer at a facility–what was once 32 in California. “It doesn't make sense,” he said, calling the concept anti-capitalist. Rather, he raised the idea of tacking a fee onto stables that exceed a certain threshold.

It was a topic that led to the punishing economics of the game, hindered by rising costs for both owner and trainer. Blame inflation. Blame, too, the more stringent safety protocols put in place in California, and now roundly adopted by the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) across the country.

“I agree with HISA and everything it's doing for the image of the sport and helping improve and clean it up. But it does make it harder for horses to stay on the track. [That's why] I think the participation purses should be higher,” he said.

“I think if we brought up the participation purses where if your horse ran fifth or sixth, it would help some owners out, help them stay in the game,” he said.

Optics are part of the reason Dohman believes the industry needs to incentivize greater female participation, especially in the jockey ranks–something that could help cultivate what he deems a “softer image” for the sport.

“When people go to the races and they see a woman's name in the program, it's different. Women have a different image than men,” he said. “It's a good one.”

And the way to do it, he said, is to give female jockeys a weight allowance.

“Just look at Jessica Pyfer and Emily Ellingwood,” he said. “After they lost their weight break, they've been relegated to only a few mounts a month. A weight break would help, maybe make it a little bit fairer for them, give them more opportunities.”

Increased female participation, he said, would be one way to help reshape the sport's broad narrative, which has taken more slings and arrows in recent years than the French did at Agincourt.

“We have the aftercare programs. We have the injury jockey fund. But besides things like that, what are we contributing to the rest of society through the money that's generated through horses racing?”

What's missing right now, he said, is a clearer philanthropic approach that extends beyond the four shrinking walls of the sport.

“We should be able to say we've raised this much money towards cancer research. We've raised this much money for animal shelters or the ASPCA,” he added. “We could let the owners elect to give money to a charity out their purses. Or give free advertising space, maybe on track or in the program, to a major charity or two.”

Dohman knows some of his views will land in some quarters of the sport with all the subtlety of an anvil dropped from the top of the Chrysler Building. Not that he seems to care. Racing neophyte is a role he seems to relish.

“Michelle tries to correct me all the time,” he said, of Michelle Hanson, TV personality and wife of trainer Ryan, who is apparently quick with the scold every time he calls a horse sale “an auction.”

He also seems to relish the idea of giving the establishment cage a bit of a rattle. Mailers he sent out as part of his campaign, for example, included information about his partnership, like minimum share percentages. “The TOC said it was advertising and I shouldn't have done that,” Dohman said.

“I defended myself by just saying people can research my stable and what I've contributed to horse racing. Plus, you know, the wording on the email was pre-approved by the TOC.”

A bigger kerfuffle concerned the fact that the TOC mailed out ballots failing to identify which of the individuals running were incumbents, as was standard protocol. Nor was it apparently a simple deal to remail corrected ballots. As Dohman describes it, for that to happen, the whole electoral process needed to start anew, setting the whole costly process back months.

Instead, TOC leadership asked Dohman to step down from the race, he said, arguing that it was unfair to the other nominees as they hadn't sent out similar campaign mailers under the expectation of being identified on the ballot as an incumbent.

As Dohman sees it, the overwhelming rate at which incumbent board members are reappointed nullifies any sense of unfairness to this whole affair. “My reply to them was, 'if the people vote me in, they vote me in,'” he said. “It's still a fair election.”

[Note: TOC President Bill Nader confirmed to the TDN the ballot errors. He added, however, that there were a “number of things” that led to the TOC asking Dohman to step down from the race, including fairness to the other nominees.

For one, Nader said the TOC offered Dohman a seat on a committee in lieu of running. Furthermore, Nader said the mailer Dohman sent out included information not okayed by the TOC, and that it went well over a designated word-count. Nader added that these irregularities potentially raise questions about the validity of the election results.]

Still, if Dohman indeed proves successful in claiming a spot on the board–and then holds onto it–what can industry stakeholders in California expect from his contribution?

“I might not be as smart as that guy. I might not be as good as that guy. But there's one thing I can always do–I can always outwork that person. That helps bring me to the top of what I need to do and accomplish,” he said. “One thing I am always willing to do is work hard enough to make a valuable contribution to horse racing.”

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Longshot Tranche Upsets Fasig-Tipton Futurity

Chilly on the board at 20-1, Tranche missed the memo, and never looked back from the lead to upset the Fasig-Tipton Futurity in his third start.

Seventh on debut in April at Keeneland and then third beneath the Twin Spires May 4, he broke like a shot and quickly cleared his competition to claim his spot on the inside. Showing the way as :22.15 and :45.36 splits sailed by, he cut the corner coming into the homeward trail and continued to extend his lead under right-hand urging. It would be 7 1/4 lengths back to Mirahmadi who got up in time to grab second from Refocus.

“To be honest, I wasn't really (confident going into this race), in this business when you think you're going to win, it can sometimes go the other way,” said Luis Mendez, who won the 2021 Fasig Tipton Futurity with Big City Lights…”[Owner] Bill Peeples, I mean everybody on the team loved him, but I was not convinced. That beautiful field of horses was against him, so I was a little worried.”

The second of Theory of Change's offspring to get his picture taken, Tranche is her first black-type winner. He has a yearling half-brother by Street Sense and the mare came up barren from her 2023 cover to Maxfield. This is the female family of GSP America America (Mister Baileys {GB}), who is responsible for MGSP Bluegrass Princess (Dynaformer) and MSW Partisan Politics (More Than Ready) through her branch of the family. GISP My Gal Betty (Point of Entry) also makes an appearance as well as GSW So Long George (Arch). Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.

FASIG-TIPTON FUTURITY, $100,000, Santa Anita, 6-17, 2yo, 5f, :57.68, ft.
1–TRANCHE, 119, c, 2, by Collected
           1st Dam: Theory of Change, by Archarcharch
           2nd Dam: Gal of Mine, by Mining
           3rd Dam: Dansait Dame, by Dance Bid
($210,000 Ylg '22 KEESEP). 1ST BLACK TYPE WIN. O-William R. Peeples; B-Hidden Brook Farm (KY); T-Luis Mendez; J-Edwin A. Maldonado. $60,000. Lifetime Record: 3-1-0-1, $81,000.
2–Mirahmadi, 119, c, 2, Into Mischief–More Chocolate, by Malibu Moon. ($1,050,000 Ylg '22 KEESEP). 1ST BLACK TYPE. O-SF Racing LLC, Starlight Racing, Madaket Stables LLC, Dianne Bashor, Robert E. Masterson, Waves Edge Capital LLC, Catherine Donovan, and Tom Ryan; B-Gainesway Thoroughbreds Ltd. (KY); T-Bob Baffert. $20,000.
3–Refocus, 123, c, 2, Pavel–Redo It, by Square Eddie. 1ST BLACK TYPE. O/B-Reddam Racing, LLC (CA); T-Doug F. O'Neill. $12,000.
Margins: 7 1/4, 1 1/4, 1HF. Odds: 20.00, 0.60, 1.80.
Also Ran: Going Mobile, Next Level. Scratched: Harry Houdini.

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$2M Good Magic Colt Ready To Take The Stage

2nd-SA, $61K, Msw, 2yo, 5f, 3:30 p.m.
When the hammer fell at OBS back in March, MUTH (Good Magic) was not only the session topper, but the 2-year-old tied the sale record with a final price of $2 million. Purchased by Amr Zedan and trained by Bob Baffert, the bay colt breezed during the under tack show by going 1/8 in :9 3/5. Muth debuts for these connections from the outside post with Juan Hernandez aboard. TJCIS PPS

1st-BEL, $90K, Msw, 2yo, f, 5f, 1:05 p.m.
On Belmont's Sunday card, a juvenile named Wine On Tap (Tapit) makes her debut for Todd Pletcher. The gray filly, who cost $600,000 at the Keeneland September sale last fall, is the first offspring to make the races for GSW Princess La Quinta. Out of a female family which includes multi-million dollar Japanese earner Washington Color (Black Tie Affair), Wine On Tap gets the services of Irad Ortiz Jr. from post four. TJCIS PPS

8th-SA, $61K, Msw, 3yo-5yo, 6f, 6:30 p.m.
Another Bob Baffert trainee, this one a 3-year-old, makes his first start Sunday at Santa Anita. Fifth Street (Quality Road) fetched $950,000 at the Keeneland September Yearling sale. The bay colt's dam is a half-sister to Champion turf female and GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf heroine Rushing Fall (More Than Ready). Also drawn in is stablemate Extortion (Into Mischief), who was purchased for $1 million at the '22 Keeneland November sale by Gandharvi LLC. He will be making his second start after a fourth-place debut May 29 at Santa Anita. TJCIS PPS

 

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