Posts Tagged ‘pick six’
Thursday, July 9th, 2009
By Ray Paulick
How appropriate that just a few days before the Hollywood Gold Cup, the signature event of the Southern California racetrack of lakes and flowers, the Inglewood city council has driven the last nail into the track’s proverbial coffin. The once-proud Hollywood, a place where tens of thousands of people would come out for an ordinary day of racing, where champions like Citation and Swaps and Affirmed would make headlines, where people like Cary Grant and Elizabeth Taylor could be seen reading the Daily Racing Form and rubbing elbows with the fans…that track will soon be nothing but a memory as the Bay Meadows Land Co. prepares to bring in the wrecking ball and develop it into something called Hollywood Park Tomorrow.
I yearn for Hollywood Park yesterday.
Times change, though I often wish they didn’t. The death knell for Hollywood Park came when Churchill Downs Inc. sold the track, three years ago last Tuesday to the Bay Meadows Land Co. Then CDI president Tom Meeker said California “has forsaken racing and its needs.†If things were grim for the sport in California then, how do you think it looks now, with Bay Meadows also bought and closed for development by the same Bay Meadows Land Co., and Golden Gate Fields and Santa Anita Park in the middle of owner Magna Entertainment’s bankruptcy proceedings.
But Hollywood Park yesterday was the place that solidified my love of the sport. My first racetrack experiences were in Chicago in the mid-1970s, but it wasn’t until I moved to Southern California in the spring of 1979 that I got to see the best of what racing offered.
That was the year Affirmed carried 132 pounds to victory in the Gold Cup, covering the mile and a quarter in an incredible 1:58 2/5 while pushed the whole way by the Italian champion Sirlad. It was the year a hotshot California-bred named Flying Paster, winner of the Hollywood Derby, would carry the hopes of West Coast racing fans to the Kentucky Derby, where he would be crushed by Spectacular Bid, a colt who would come West a year later and continue to dominate that same rival.
Legends like Shoemaker, Pincay, McCarron, Hawley, and McHargue populated the jockeys room, Trainer Charlie Whittingham dominated the big races, and the stands were packed to the gills every weekend. Little did I know then that the 24,930 average daily attendance from the 77-day meeting of 1979 was down considerably from just a few years earlier, when Hollywood averaged over 30,000. Santa Anita Park was getting the upper hand under the marketing innovations of Alan Balch.
Not to be outdone, track owner Marje Everett pulled out all the stops in 1980 to reverse the “sagging†business figures. On Sunday, May 4, 1980, the day after Genuine Risk beat the California-bred Rumbo in the Kentucky Derby, Hollywood Park tried something new–a “giveaway†for every paid admission, of a canvas tote bag.Â
I was one of the 80,348 on hand that day, though I didn’t even know about the tote bag giveaway. I had come to see the ongoing rivalry between ex-claimer Wishing Well (who went on to produce Horse of the Year Sunday Silence) and Country Queen in the Gamely Handicap. I’ll never forget the traffic jam on Century Boulevard trying to get into Hollywood Park that day, or the lines for concessions and betting. I managed to snag one of the tote bags, and, somehow, 29 years later I still have it. Though it’s a bit the worse for wear, the bag is a reminder for me of the glory days of the sport.
That same year, Hollywood Park introduced Pick Six wagering (they even gave away a Pick Six beach towel in the image of a $100 bill….signed by “Secretary of the Treasury Vernon O. Underwood”) , and the racing was highlighted by incredible performances from Spectacular Bid in the Mervyn LeRoy and Californian Stakes (I kept my free “Bid and The Shoe†T-shirt for years until it mysteriously shrunk and no longer fit me). Average attendance soared to 31,150 in 1980.
Hollywood Park is where I stood in awe alongside my friend and former Daily Racing Form colleague Jay Hovdey, watching a 2-year-old daughter of Seattle Slew, named Landaluce, power her way to victory in the 1982 Lassie Stakes, a race since renamed in her honor. She drew off down the stretch of the six-furlong event to win by an implausible 21 lengths, covering the distance in 1:08 flat for an up-and-coming trainer named D. Wayne Lukas. It’s the track where the first Breeders’ Cup was held in 1984, when Everett pulled a few favors with her Hollywood pals and made it a star-studded event for people and horses. It’s been a huge part of racing history since its opening in 1938. Click here for a trip through Hollywood Park’s history in the introduction to the track’s media guide.
I could go on with the memories of this track, just as I could listen all day long to the deadly accurate and gravelly voiced race calls of the late Harry Henson. It’s not the same as it used to be—few places are—and since moving to Kentucky in 1988 I don’t get there as often as I’d like to.
I loved Hollywood Park, its horses, its people and its energy, but mostly for how it made me feel about racing.
Copyright © 2009, The Paulick Report
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Tags: affirmed, alan balch, bay meadows land company, charlie whittingham, churchill downs, country queen, d. wayne lukas, Harry Henson, hollywood gold cup, Hollywood Park, hollywood park tomorrow, inglewood city council, jay hovdey, landaluce, marje everett, Paulick Report, pick six, racing innovations, Ray Paulick, seattle slew, sirlad, spectacular bid, sunday silence, tom meeker, tote bag giveaway, wishing well Posted in California, Hollywood Park, Racing Greats | 24 Comments »
Monday, October 20th, 2008
By Ray Paulick
Santa Anita Park will be the focal point of the racing world on Friday and Saturday with the 25th running of the Breeders’ Cup world championships, but that doesn’t mean the rest of the nation’s tracks have gone into hibernation for the week.
Take Suffolk Downs … please! But, seriously, the East Boston racetrack was packed to the gills on Sunday, and it was all for a good cause. Thousands of walkers took to the sandy loam racing surface to help fund scientific research and to increase autism awareness at the eighth annual Greater Boston Walk Now For Autism.
It was the second time the event was held at Suffolk Downs following the successful debut last year when more than $1.3 million was raised and 15,000 turned out to take a couple of laps around the one-mile track. All proceeds from the event benefit Autism Speaks, the nation’s leading autism advocacy organization. A growing health crisis, autism is a complex brain disorder now affecting one in every 150 children by inhibiting their ability to commmunicate and develop social relationshiops, and is often accompanied by extreme behavioral challenges. A child is diagnosed with autism every 20 minutes.
Since becoming principal owner of Suffolk Downs last March, Richard Fields has elevated the profile of the track in both the racing and local communities through his support of events like Walk Now for Autism and the creation of a policy to prevent racehorses that compete at his track from being sent to slaughter. Fields has been a welcome and positive addition to the industry.
IT MIGHT BE A STRETCH TO SAY THAT BELMONT PARK WILL BE JUMPING ON WEDNESDAY, since the term “weekday crowds” there is an oxymoron. But a $1-million pick six carryover is going to put Belmont in the spotlight among the nation’s horseplayers, who figure to pump as much as $3 million more into the pool. That’s what happened back on June 11 during the spring-summer meeting when a $1-million-plus carryover resulted in a final pool of $4.4 million. There were 29 winning tickets that day (each worth $103,754), none of them purchased on-track at Belmont Park.
The good news for the New York Racing Association during Belmont Park’s final week follows the bad news for local horsemen, who learned of 10% purse cuts at the upcoming Aqueduct meeting, and for a number of full-time employees, who were laid off. The carryover is not good news for Breeders’ Cup officials who would rather see horseplayers hold onto their bankrolls until Friday, when the two-day world championships begin at Santa Anita.
A GOOD HORSEKEEPING SEAL OF APPROVAL … is that really all the enforcement strength the National Thoroughbred Racing Association can muster with its Safety and Integrity Alliance? If so, last week’s announcement of proposed wide-ranging reforms by the NTRA only reinforces the need for some form of federal intervention to create national standards for the racing industry.
In a press teleconference that included former Wisconsin Gov. Tommy Thompson, whose Washington law firm has been hired to independently monitor the reform movement’s progress, NTRA president and CEO Alex Waldrop called the Alliance a “voluntary” organization. He suggested tracks that don’t conform to the Alliance’s Code of Conduct may be considered pariahs by horseplayers, who will bet their money at tracks that do comply. Waldrop also failed to substantively answer any questions about how the industry will pay for the reforms, even going so far as to say the NTRA has no idea how much the reforms will cost. Click here to read the teleconference transcripts.
Good work was done by the Alliance and the many people who worked on the sensible and much needed reforms, but the fundamental flaw that has derailed so many prior industry initiatives still remains: the lack of a central authority with real enforcement powers. Oaklawn Park and Tampa Bay Downs, two tracks that did not join the Alliance, can’t be forced into the Alliance, and I seriously doubt their future success or failure will be a byproduct of their membership status.
Structure remains an impediment to serious progress in this industry. Until there is a structure that includes a national office with real enforcement and decision-making capabilities, volunteer organizations are doomed to fail.
HALSEY MINOR IS NOT GIVING UP ON HIALEAH PARK. Just because the technology entrepreneur has shifted his attention to MI Developments, the controlling shareholder of the near-bankrupt racetrack company Magna Entertainment, doesn’t mean he’s taken his eye off Hialeah Park, the dormant South Florida track he wants to buy.
Minor told the Paulick Report he intends to legally challenge the city of Hialeah’s right to turn over the deed for Hialeah Park to John Brunetti four years ago at the end of a 30-year lease agreement between Hialeah and Brunetti. Minor contends that Brunetti failed to live up to the terms of the lease by failing to offer live racing, not holding a pari-mutuel license and falling behind in his payments to the city. Minor thinks the city of Hialeah should enforce an eminent domain claim on the land. If not, he said he has a team of lawyers ready to strike.
BREEDERS’ CUP OFFICIALS COULDN’T FORESEE THE FINANCIAL CRISIS that has many people cutting their discretionary spending, and there is no doubt the troubled economy will lower expectations for business this weekend. But long before the Wall Street meltdown, it was obvious to many people the inflated ticket prices and insistence on a two-day ticket package was a mistake. Now they are scrambling to sell reserved seats for the world championships. A quick check of online ticket brokers shows seats are available for Friday’s program at prices less than half of face value. The Breeders’ Cup should go back to the drawing board on their ticket pricing for 2009. It may the “Super Bowl of Horse Racing,” but it’s not the Super Bowl.
Copyright © 2008, The Paulick Report
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Tags: autism, belmont park, Breeders' Cup, breeders' cup tickets, Breeders' Cup World Championships, greater boston walk now for autism, Halsey Minor, hialeah, Hialeah Park, Magna Entertainment, mi developments, National Thoroughbred Racing Association, New York Racing Association, NTRA, ntra safety and integrity pledge, oaklawn park, Paulick Report, pick six, pick six carryover, Ray Paulick, richard fields, santa anita, suffolk downs, super bowl, tampa bay downs, wall street meltdown Posted in Breeders' Cup, Halsey Minor, Hialeah Park, Horse Racing, Horse Slaughter, Industry Reform, National Thoroughbred Racing Association, New York Racing Association, Thoroughbred Business | 1 Comment »
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