‘Oath’ No Secret, But Measuring Her Talent a Pleasant Conundrum

The Week in Review by T.D. Thornton

Secret Oath (Arrogate)'s big winning move despite trip trouble in Saturday's GIII Honeybee S. at Oaklawn Park launched the 3-year-old filly to the forefront of conversation just at the precise time the sport needs a little diversion from anything having to do with lawsuits, trainer banishments, and the GI Kentucky Derby.

There is no question that the D. Wayne Lukas trainee looms large atop the leaderboard for the GI Kentucky Oaks and that her 86-year-old conditioner isn't crazy for at least considering running her against males next time out in the GI Arkansas Derby.

But if you want to drill down for a more precise prognostication as to where Secret Oath truly ranks in the always-intriguing fillies vs. colts debate and if she might be good enough to run in the Derby instead of the Oaks, you're going to have to come up with a measuring stick that doesn't appear to be available at the moment.

Comparing her 7 1/4-length Honeybee romp against the performance of males in the GII Rebel S. three hours later on the same Oaklawn card is a non-starter. The Rebel rates as the “chaos race” of the season so far among Derby preps because the 4-5 favorite was a no-show in an otherwise so-so field, and the slowly-run race was won by an improbable one-eyed gelding who paid $152.80.

Likening Secret Oath to Althea, the champion filly for Lukas four decades ago who also raced at Oaklawn (and beat the boys in the Arkansas Derby) should also be a no-go, at least for the time being. Obviously, Althea is from a much different generation. But even then, she was such an anomaly that her past-performance block reads like that of a racehorse from an entirely different planet when you consider how often Lukas raced her and how early in her career she lined up in the starting gate against males.

We'll have to let the next few weeks be the chief determinant in how Secret Oath's story arc plays out, knowing that whichever path Lukas sends her down, her next start is going to have a “circle the date” aura surrounding it.

Secret Oath entered the Honeybee with a 3-for-5 record, having won a Dec. 31 allowance race and the Jan. 29 Martha Washington S., both at Oaklawn, by a combined 15 1/2 lengths. She got pounded to 3-10 favoritism Saturday and appeared content to be last away in the Honeybee, given her natural running style as a stalker/closer.

Jockey Luis Contreras allowed the Briland Farm homebred to creep closer down the backstretch through opening quarters of :23.15 and :23.92, a brisk pace that seemed to be working to Secret Oath's off-the-pace advantage. But by the far turn, Contreras's patience contributed to his filly getting pocketed behind the two caving speedsters while an advancing rival to the outside kept the favorite locked and blocked, forcing Contreras to snatch up the reins in a ride-the-brakes type of maneuver.

Five sixteenths out, Contreras realized he had no choice but to dive inside of the tiring leaders. And when Secret Oath saw a glimmer of daylight through that narrow gap, she kicked on like a pro at the head of the lane. Never seriously threatened through the stretch, she won while kept to task but never fully extended.

Secret Oath's final time of 1:44.74 for 1 1/16 miles translated to a Beyer Speed Figure of 92, one point shy of her career-best effort. It's worth noting she carried five pounds more than the second- and third-place fillies.

Lukas indicated post-race that Secret Oath is nominated to both the Arkansas and Kentucky Derbies. The GIII Fantasy S. on the Apr. 2 Arkansas Derby undercard would be the conservative against-fillies option if he opts not to take on the boys.

Advocates for running in the Arkansas Derby will point out that Secret Oath's clocking and speed number trumped what was to follow six races later in the companion stakes for 3-year-old males. Oaklawn's third race in its quartet of Kentucky Derby points-earning preps is usually a pretty intriguing affair. But this year it might go down as the aberrational “Rebel without a cause,” which is why it's best to hold off on any claims that Secret Oath would have crushed that field had she been entered in that spot instead.

Rain had moved into Hot Springs by the time the feature race arrived, and although the track was still listed as “fast” for the Rebel, it would soon require sealing and a downgrade to “sloppy” for the final race. The un-California-like conditions would be eventually cited as a possible excuse for trainer Bob Baffert's ship-in fave Newgrange (Violence), who appeared primed to pounce after a trouble-free stalking trip but instead retreated to sixth.

The 75-1 Un Ojo (Laoban) saved ground every step of the way, rallied briefly at the quarter pole, then appeared to regress. But Un Ojo re-awakened late with an out-of-nowhere spurt of energy to snatch victory from the 15-1 Ethereal Road (Quality Road), who had been ambitiously entered by Lukas off a 19-1 maiden win in career start number four. The final time was 1:45.69, nearly a full second slower than Secret Oath's clocking; the Beyer (84) was also eight points lower.

Ethereal Road gave up serious real estate while hooked four wide on both turns, yet led from the quarter pole until 50 yards from the wire. He certainly punched his ticket to the Arkansas Derby, leaving Lukas to ponder over the next month whether he wants both his top filly and top colt aiming for the same race.

In the meantime, expect those comparisons to Althea to percolate–even if they're still off the mark.

Althea broke her maiden on June 22, 1983 at Hollywood Park. She ran second 17 days later in the GII Landaluce S., then wheeled back two weeks after that, beating the boys by 10 lengths in the GII Hollywood Juvenile Championship. When the racing switched to Del Mar, Lukas continued the pattern of aiming Althea against both fillies and colts, and she responded by winning both the GII Del Mar Debutante (by 15 lengths) and the GII Del Mar Futurity, just 10 days apart.

After a mix of firsts and seconds against fillies at Santa Anita in the fall, Althea closed out her 2-year-old season by attempting the mixed-sex Grade I double of the Hollywood Starlet (first) and Juvenile (sixth). Althea started 1984 with Santa Anita stakes victories against fillies, then shipped to Oaklawn for the Fantasy, where she finished a fast second despite encountering significant trip trouble.

Back then, the Fantasy was run the week before the Arkansas Derby. Lukas spent most of that week saying he wouldn't enter Althea against the boys. He did anyway.

Althea toyed with the Arkansas Derby field, drawing off to win by seven lengths while equaling the track record at the time. Afterward, Lukas admitted he had planned all week to run his star filly in that spot, but that he had chosen not to tell anyone until the day the race was drawn.

Thirty-eight years later, on the day after Secret Oath's win, Lukas remained uncommitted to a plan beyond saying he'd take it one race at a time.

Sunday, Lukas at first told the Oaklawn notes team that “I don't know what we're going to do,” before later adding, “Right now, she would be in the Fantasy and Ethereal Road would be in the [Arkansas] Derby.”

But you never know. The man is entitled to change his mind.

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Do 2021 Handle Figures Tell the Whole Story?

The Week in Review, by Bill Finley

The announcement from Equibase that handle on U.S. racing in 2021 set a nine-year high with over $12 billion bet was understandably well received. During a year where an awful lot went wrong for the sport, at least the wagering numbers were healthy.

But, and sorry to rain on the parade, we need more information before we can celebrate.

How much was bet is only part of the story. We need to know where the bets were made and by whom. If the increase was the result of such things as added TV exposure for the NYRA races on Fox Sports or sports bettors gravitating to racing or an overall increase in the sport's popularity, then this is a very positive story. But if the added handle was the result of high-volume players who use computer programs to make their bets increasing their level of wagering in 2021, then the picture is an entirely different one. We just don't know.

“It's better that the numbers go up rather than down, but what is the context on this realistically?” said Pat Cummings, the executive director of the Thoroughbred Idea Foundation, who estimates that computer-assisted wagering (CAW) players account for 35% of the total handle in the U.S. “These numbers get put out there in this broad context and that's all it is. So anyone that wants to take a victory lap on them can take a victory lap on them. But they are totally lacking an understanding of the greater detail of the business. It would be like saying you lost 20 pounds during the year, but ignoring the fact that your cholesterol went up 100 points. It's impossible to quantify how good or, potentially, how bad this is.”

This is pari-mutuel wagering, where the successful bettors feast off of the unsuccessful ones. It's their money that they are winning, not the house's money. With the CAW phenomenon, betting on the horses has turned into a matter of the whales vs. minnows or the CAW bettors vs. everyone else. The whales have been gobbling up the minnows, and after a while all the minnows will be gone. This is a serious threat to the long-term viability of the sport. If the CAW players bet more than ever in 2021, well, that's a big problem.

In a perfect world, there would be transparency and we would know exactly where the handle is coming from. How much was bet on-track or at brick-and-mortar OTBs or simulcasting outlets, with ADWs like NYRA Bets and TwinSpires, and how much was bet by the CAW players?

We're never going to find out. Based on the estimate that 35% of all bets made in the U.S. were made by CAW players, that means the computer players wager at least $4 billion a year. With a few exceptions, tracks and other wagering outlets will never turn away their business and neither will they divulge any pertinent information. That's understandable. The CAW customers want to maintain their privacy and the tracks and betting outlets don't want competitors to know their business.

Perhaps the gains made in betting in 2021 had nothing to do with CAW players. We just don't know. It would be nice if we did.

Field Size Shrinks Again

The Equibase year-end release of racing's economic indicators also included the nugget that average field size in 2021 was 7.3 starters per race. That was a 7.2% decline from 2020 and a 2.08% drop from 2019. While those drops alone aren't alarming, it was the smallest average field size since the Jockey Club started keeping records in 1950. As recently as 2011, the average field size was 8.04. This isn't good and there is nothing to suggest it will get better any time soon.

Peruvian Trainers Hits 10,000 Milestone

Trainer Juan Suarez won five races on Saturday at Hipodromo de Monterrico in Lima, Peru to become the first trainer worldwide to have 10,000 career winners. Entering Sunday, Steve Asmussen had 9,592 winners.

Over the last five years, Suarez is averaging 315 wins a year, while Asmussen is averaging 390. That means Asmussen will likely chip away at Suarez's lead but could spend years trying to catch him. The main advantage Asmussen has is his age. He is 16 years younger than Suarez and will surely outlast him.

The Flightline Watch

Trainer John Sadler has yet to decide where budding superstar Flightline (Tapit) will run next after his ultra-impressive win in the GI Runhappy Malibu at Santa Anita. But he has ruled out a start in either the G1 Saudi Cup or G1 Dubai World Cup. Sadler has mentioned the GI Metropolitan H. and the GI Pacific Classic as possible starts for Flightline.

Kristian Rhein and the “Assloads” of SGF-1000

Kristian Rhein, a suspended veterinarian formerly based at Belmont Park, was sentenced last week to three years in prison for his role in the conspiracy to dope horses that also involves Jason Servis and Jorge Navarro. Rhein was caught on a wiretap bragging that he sold “assloads” of the prohibited medication SGF-1000 not just to Servis but to other trainers.

Rhein isn't the first drug distributor or manufacturer to plead guilty and, surely, every one of them were peddling their drugs to a lot more than just Servis and Navarro and the other trainers who have been indicted. A check of Rhein's records alone could yield dozens of names of trainers who were using SGF-1000 and, therefore, cheating.

Will there be more indictments, maybe many more, to come? I'm beginning to think that it's not going to happen, that the FBI and the Department of Justice are ready to move on to matters more important to them than horse racing. But that shouldn't mean the story ends there. Will any state racing commissions investigate, ask the FBI to share their information, interview Rhein and the others? It's horse racing. Probably not.

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Derby Prep Season is Upon Us; Get Tied On for Litigation

The Week in Review by T.D. Thornton

Oaklawn Park readjusted its series of prep races for the GI Kentucky Derby this year by moving back the date of its premier stakes, the GI Arkansas Derby, so it now sits five weeks out from the first Saturday in May instead of the traditional three. That changed the overall complexion of the prep-race picture so that the final three nine-furlong stakes that award 100 coveted Derby qualifying points to the winner will all take place Apr. 9.

This means that for the first time, there will now be a full four-week gap between the last significant prep races and the May 7 Derby.

The Apr. 16 GIII Lexington S. at Keeneland will technically be the final Derby qualifying race. But with only 20 points to the winner, that 1 1/16-mile stakes historically lures few A-list sophomores.

Taking the longer view, it's hard to believe we are only 40 years removed from when Churchill Downs used to card the Derby Trial S. on the Tuesday (four days!) before the Derby itself, and it served as a legitimate prep race.

Although the new four-week minimum spacing is in line with the current less-is-more approach to racing top-level contenders, the nearly full month without any meaningful (to the general public) events in the lead-up to America's most important horse race could prove problematic.

In theory, that gap should be filled with even more beauty shots of Thoroughbreds being bathed, and trainers will be increasingly challenged to come up with newly creative ways to say “I'm just trying to keep this colt happy and healthy” when repeatedly asked about the minutiae of their training methodologies.

But in all likelihood, there won't be any vacuum in the news cycle. That's because this spring, it's a solid bet that any expected void will be overtaken by litigation headlines related to whether or not Bob Baffert's trainees will truly end up excluded from the Derby.

Back in June, Churchill Downs, Inc. (CDI), barred the seven-time Derby-winning trainer from its portfolio of racetracks in the wake of now-deceased Medina Spirit testing positive for a betamethasone overage while winning the 2021 Derby.

Citing private property rights and Baffert's “repeated failures” regarding equine drug infractions (four other Baffert trainees also tested positive for medication overages roughly within the previous year of the ban, two of them in Grade I stakes), CDI said the Hall of Famer wouldn't be eligible to race in the 2022 or '23 Derbies; nor would his trainees be allowed to accrue qualifying points.

The purpose of this column isn't to debate whether or not Baffert's ban should be lifted or not. Rather, the intent is to provide a heads up about the barrage of non-horse-related court news that is odds-on to overshadow most pre-Derby talk about the equine athletes themselves.

Baffert currently trains 'TDN Rising Star' Corniche (Quality Road), the presumptive 2-year-old champion, plus his usual stacked stable includes a handful of other 'Rising Star' sophomores and graded stakes-winning colts. Had those horses been allowed to collect Derby points for their wins and placings so far, Baffert would be in his customary top-heavy position of dominance on the qualifying totem pole.

There appear to be three paths to Baffert-trained horses being allowed to run in the Derby: 1) CDI relents; 2) Owners of Derby aspirants currently conditioned by Baffert start sending those horses to other trainers, and 3) The issue winds up in court, taking the form of lawsuits in which obtaining a temporary restraining order (TRO) to allow participation in the Derby is more important than winning the overall case.

CDI relenting is the least likely outcome. Why would it? Its position seems legally defendable from the private property perspective, and the ban had to have been implemented only after the gaming corporation's layers of attorneys crafted, tweaked, and signed off on it.

The second option–essentially a high-stakes game of chicken–is a more likely outcome, but it too is not etched in stone. As the reality of a once-in-a-lifetime chance to own a Derby winner comes more clearly into focus and qualifying points grow more imperative, it remains to be seen how many of Baffert's clients reframe their reasoning from “we're loyal to Bob” to “circumstances have forced our hand.”

Litigation permeates all aspects of society and our sport is no different, so having Baffert's banishment hashed out in front of a judge seems like the most inevitable outcome.

In a separate case just last week, a federal court dismissed an anti-trust and anti-competition lawsuit filed by eight Standardbred owners who faced private-property exclusions from tracks in New Jersey and New York because of their ties with a banned trainer. But even though that case got tossed, the judge dismissed it “without prejudice,” signaling that those plaintiffs could initiate a subsequent suit with re-filed charges or take the matter to another court.

So along the same lines, just because CDI appears to have a strong case, that doesn't preclude anyone who perceives they're being harmed by that ruling from challenging it. Courts in our country are generally reluctant to stand by and do nothing when “my livelihood is being yanked away from me” types of arguments are presented, and when corporate entities try to assert broad control over individuals, judges are usually receptive to at least hearing out the so-called little guy.

Given that framework, you can understand why Baffert has yet to challenge CDI's banishment in court. Why try to litigate relatively early in the process when it would be to Baffert's advantage to wait until we're right on the cusp of the Derby, when he could claim that the alleged harm from the ban is at its most imminent? Again, he doesn't even have to argue well enough to win the overall case–just well enough to convince some judge somewhere to grant a TRO that puts CDI's exclusion on hold while the parties duke out a final verdict.

Conceivably, that application for a TRO could even include a request for the judge to order CDI to retroactively tally up the non-awarded qualifying points as if Baffert's horses had earned them all along. The argument could be made that such an order would cost CDI nothing in terms of money–they're just qualifying points after all. There's no hard-and-fast legal rule of what a petitioner can and cannot ask for in a TRO.

Then again, that angle might open yet another Pandora's Box. What if Baffert has three colts who suddenly get ruled eligible to run in the Derby based on a recalculation of points, but other owners whose horses get nudged out of the starting gate separately sue because they were deprived of Derby berths by the very same order? The waiting during that four-week period in April and May will be tough enough on the connections of Derby horses without a constantly simmering debate over which horses legally “deserve” to start.

Right now, most of the discussion on this topic tends to focus on whether Baffert takes the matter to court. But he might not have to. If the individual owners of Derby-worthy colts ask for TROs on their own instead of having their trainer do so, it leaves the door open for them to try an angle of persuasion along the lines of, “Hey, we're just collateral victims caught in the legal crossfire between Baffert and CDI, and we're being robbed of our one and only opportunity to run in the Derby with our otherwise-eligible horse.” That might end up being more of a convincing tactic than forcing a judge to side with either Baffert or CDI.

The looming wild card in this entire scenario has to do with the inaction so far by the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission (KHRC) in issuing any sort of ruling pertaining to the event that triggered CDI's ban.

Medina Spirit's betamethasone positive has long since been confirmed by two KHRC accredited labs, and we're now nearly 250 days out from the race date when the alleged infraction occurred. No hearing has taken place (at least none that has been publicly disclosed), and in the months-long interim, the KHRC has already tested for, held hearings, and ruled upon other drug positives that have subsequently occurred at other race meets in the state.

Remember back in 2019, when Maximum Security got disqualified from winning the Derby for in-race interference? At that time, KHRC representatives repeatedly underscored how they officiate the Derby just like any other race. Clearly, based on how long the process has been stalled and dragged out, that is not what's happening with Medina Spirit's in-limbo drug positive.

It's not out of the realm of possibility that the 2021 Derby won't get fully adjudicated before the 2022 Derby is run. And that lack of a KHRC ruling could factor in favor of Baffert or any ownership entity that decides to challenge CDI's Derby exclusion in court.

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The Week in Review: Remembering Bob Neumeier and Sam Spear

The sport not only lost two great people on Saturday, but also two thoroughly professional and highly entertaining media personalities whose genuine zeal for racetrack life shone through in ways that neither could have scripted.

Almost within minutes over the weekend, news began filtering out that both Bob Neumeier and Sam Spear had died Oct. 22.

Over the course of a broadcasting career that spanned parts of five decades, the Boston-based Neumeier, 70, parlayed stints as a hockey announcer and popular TV sports anchor into a mainstay role as an expert handicapper on big-event Thoroughbred racing broadcasts for NBC. The Boston Globe reported that he suffered from congestive heart failure and had been in hospice care for the past eight weeks.

Spear, 72, didn't have quite as high a national profile. But his outgoing, effusive charisma radiated like a beacon to anyone who encountered him in the press boxes of Northern California tracks or tuned in to watch him host one of the country's first regular nightly TV replay shows, which he founded in 1978. According to the San Francisco Chronicle, he died from complications of the rare inflammatory disease sarcoidosis.

 

Neumy Goes to Vegas

Neumeier—called “Neumy” by almost everybody who knew him—grew up not far from the Weymouth fairgrounds racetrack in Massachusetts and spent many an afternoon as a kid in the 1960s with his father, Ed, at Suffolk Downs. Upon graduating from Syracuse University with a degree in broadcasting, his first prominent gig involved calling play-by-play for the old New England Whalers of the World Hockey Association, and he later was the radio voice for the Boston Bruins of the National Hockey League.

In 1981, Neumeier landed a coveted gig as a sportscaster, and later an anchor, at Boston's WBZ-TV. For the next 20 years, he was the affable but highly knowledgeable host who delivered sports highlights in five-minute bursts to millions in an era when that market had three ultra-competitive TV stations covering a ravenously sports-centric city.

In the pre-simulcasting era, Neumy was often at Suffolk Downs playing the local ponies. In fact, if you called his answering machine circa 1989, the message said, “I'm probably at the track.”

Although he often hunkered down in the Turf Club to fine-tune his hand-crafted speed figures, Neumeier was approachable and receptive to fans who wanted his opinion on the daily double or just felt like shooting the breeze about the Red Sox.

You've probably heard the story about how Neumeier suffered a stroke prior to the 2014 Breeders' Cup, then, after 5-plus hours of surgery and only a few months after an astounding recovery, appeared at the 2015 National Handicapping Championship (NHC) to win the inaugural Charity Challenge in Las Vegas.

But another “Neumy goes to Vegas” story that goes back more than 30 years might be more emblematic of Neumeier's resiliency.

In the summer of 1990, long before there was any NHC and well before widespread access to race replays from national tracks, Neumy was confident enough in his figure-making for top-tier circuits to take a crack at the World Cup of Thoroughbred Handicapping at Caesars Palace. He had entered that tournament two previous times with no luck, but on this third occasion he travelled to Vegas with his father so they could enjoy some time together while chasing big prize money in the mythical bankroll contest.

But before father and son had even made it past the baggage carousel at the Las Vegas airport, a pickpocket had lifted his dad's wallet containing $1,800.

They had flown in early, two days before the tourney began, and luckily Neumy had prepaid his entry. According to Neumeier's retelling of this tale in a 1990 Boston Globe story, he spent the next two days paranoically patting his sport coat pocket every few minutes to make sure he still had his own fat envelope containing their remaining $3,800 of spending money.

All of a sudden, on one of those patdowns, the envelope was gone.

“Maybe a pickpocket got it or maybe it just fell out of my pocket,” Neumeier told the Globe. I went over to my father and said, 'Dad, you're not going to believe this.' We were down to our last $200. I said, 'I guess I've just got to press on.'”

The field for the three-day tourney had 350 entrants.

“The first day I lost four photos by a nose and didn't win a penny. Out of the 350 contestants, there I was in 350th place,' Neumeier reminisced. “I was a little bit numbed after what happened already, but you just have to suck it up and move on.”

Prior to day two of the contest, he stayed up until 3 a.m. studying the races, then got up at the crack of dawn to handicap some more.

Neumy's luck reversed: He clawed his way up the standings with two long-shot nose winners from Belmont Park. Then he took a stand against a 2-5 shot in an Arlington Park sprint to come up with a horse who won by four lengths “in a gallop” and paid $65.

When the new leaderboard was posted, Neumy was standing behind the player who had led the first day, and he overheard the horseplayer say, “Who's this guy that went from last to first? He's not going to last.” At that point, Neumeier admitted,  he was just happy to have won the $4,800 second-day leader prize to make up for the vanished cash.

But his run of luck wasn't finished: Neumeier ended up running up the score on day three and took home the grand prize of $52,000.

Best of all, Neumy said, “was that my father was there to see it. He had to work weekends as a mutuel clerk at Suffolk to make ends meet. He'd throw the Form at me, and I learned the love of racing from him.”

 

Dancing on Tables, Revered in the Stables

According to a remembrance quote in his Chronicle obituary, Sam Spear was like the guardian angel Clarence in the movie It's a Wonderful Life—“a PR angel sent down to Northern California to bring people together.”

Spear was a true storyteller and sports nut who thrived on personal contact and old-school people skills. A native of Oakland who graduated from St. Joseph's-Alameda and San Francisco State with a major in speech, he was re-creating race calls on a Bay Area radio show in the late 1970s when he pitched the idea for a nightly TV horse race replay show to a new independent station, KTSF.

The show ended up having a run of nearly 40 years until Spear gave it up in 2017. He not only hosted the program (often seven days a week when the NorCal fairs were running) but also sold the show's advertising and managed all the broadcasting logistics.

Spear juggled all of that while producing and hosting a weekly racing radio show and working as the longtime public relations director for Golden Gate Fields. Spear also umpired and refereed high school and college baseball and basketball games. He even had a heart attack while on the TV job in 1991 but insisted on quickly returning to his 12-hour daily workload.

Larry Collmus, who now announces the Triple Crown and Breeders' Cup races for NBC, recalled in a phone interview Sunday morning how he first met Spear when Sam picked him up at the airport for the job interview that got Collmus the Golden Gate announcing gig in 1988.

“The one thing that stands out is just the kindness of the guy,” Collmus said. “He literally was taking me everywhere, showing me where everything was. I was 21 years old. He helped me open up a bank account. He cosigned for my apartment because I had no credit, and he didn't even hesitate.

“My first night in the Bay Area, Sam took me to a restaurant—I forget the name, but it was one of his favorite spots in San Francisco. We go in, and everybody knows him. We start drinking good red wine—which he loved—and all of sudden, Sam just starts dancing on the table. I quickly found out that that was like a normal thing when Sam was enjoying himself.”

Collmus continued, “But Sam had an on/off switch for that stuff. When he was in the mood to have fun, he would just let loose and do it. And then he would take things seriously when his work needed to be taken seriously.”

Collmus recalled how, for some unknown reason, Spear delighted in calling everybody in the press box “Harry.” He also was a never-ending fountain of one-liners and wisecracks.

As Collmus recalled, “He would always say, 'I've got a million of 'em!' And we would say, 'Well, Sam, then how come we keep hearing the same ones over and over and over?'”

Had the Bay Area racing industry not been so fortunate as to have Spear as its promoter, he almost certainly would have ended up doing front-office work for a major-league baseball club.

Spear knew many ballplayers, managers and executives of the San Francisco Giants (for whom he briefly worked in the mid-1970s) and Oakland A's. One of his close friends was the legendary Joe DiMaggio, for whom Sam made sure there was always a seat in the Golden Gate press box.

When a devastating earthquake rocked San Francisco in October 1989, Spear and DiMaggio were sitting together at Candlestick Park before the scheduled Game 3 of the World Series between the Giants and A's. They had to evacuate the ballpark, and they spent most of the night waiting together for the all-clear so DiMaggio could return to his neighborhood after a fire there had been put out.

In the early 1990s, Spear was friendly with an A's batboy named Stanley Burrell—long before the world would know him as the rap music star MC Hammer.

“In fact, Sam was the person Hammer first talked to about getting into horse racing,” Collmus said, alluding to Hammer's eventual ownership of a stable that included the MGSW filly Lite Light.

“Sam had Hammer and Jerry Hollendorfer meet at Golden Gate,” Collmus recalled. “As the story goes, Hollendorfer said to Hammer, 'How much money do you want to spend?' And Hammer says, 'Whatever it costs to win that Kentucky Derby race.'”

As Spear once told columnist Mike Brunker in an undated news clip that was making the rounds as a social media remembrance over the weekend, “I've never considered my work to be a 'job.' Racing and my show is me. That's my life.”

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