Posts Tagged ‘zia park’

WEEKEND STAKES: WHERE TO WATCH brought to you by KBC Horse Supplies

Friday, January 29th, 2010

With the Sunshine Millions series taking place on Saturday at Gulfstream Park and Santa Anita, graded stakes racing is light this weekend, but there are still a couple of interesting contests in the works.

On Saturday, Sam Houston Race Park will host the G3 John B. Connally Turf Handicap. The only graded stakes on the Sam Houston calendar for 2010, the 1 1/8-mile event has attracted a contentious field of 14 starters. The tepid favorite at 4-1 on the morning line is Orientate Express who exits the Zia Park Distance Championship with a runner-up performance. Going Ballistic would appear to be a formidable opponent here; he also last ran in the Zia Park Championship, finishing fourth, about seven lengths behind Orientate Express. His race previous to that, however, he put in a strong rally from the back of the pack to finish third in the G2 Hawthorne Gold Cup. And what would a stakes race in Texas be without an entry from the Steve Asmussen barn? He has a coupled entry here—Ablaze with Spirit and Red Rock Creek.

America’s first Grade 1 race of 2010 takes place on Sunday at Santa Anita when older fillies and mares will be going seven furlongs in the Santa Monica Handicap. Evita Argentina will be tough in this spot. The 4-year-old daughter of Candy Ride won three stakes races in 2009 at this distance, the G2 A Gleam Handicap, the G2 San Vicente, and most recently, the G1 La Brea on Santa Anita’s opening day. Also entered is Proviso, making her 2010 debut for Bill Mott. She was previously trained by Bobby Frankel and ended her 2009 campaign with a fourth-place finish in the Breeders’ Cup Ladies’ Classic. If she handles the Pro-Ride surface, Tuscan Evening could be a factor; all of her previous 22 starts have been on turf.

Also on Sunday, the G2 Forward Gal, for 3-year-old fillies, will be run at Gulfstream Park. Eclipse Champion She Be Wild will take on a dozen rivals in the seven furlong race. Trained by Wayne Catalano, She Be Wild will test the dirt track for the first time in her career. Her 5-race juvenile campaign took place on synthetic surfaces, with one defeat which was in the G1 Alcibiades. Undefeated Richiegirlgonewild will see what she’s made of. The Wildcat Heir daughter is three-for-three, including the Old Hat on Jan. 9 where she made every pole a winning one over this same strip. Other entries include Sister Resistor, from Ken McPeek’s barn, and Ailalea, entered by Todd Pletcher.

BREEDERS’ CUP OR BUST: ZIA LATER

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009
By Ray Paulick

Please click here to donate to Breeders’ Cup Charities benefiting the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund and V Foundation for Cancer Research. Give a minimum of one penny per mile and you will be eligible for a drawing to win one of 10 Breeders’ Cup caps to be signed by the winning jockeys of all 14 Breeders’ Cup races this Friday and Saturday.

Mischief Man was a handful as his groom led him out of the Zia Park walking ring and toward the racetrack for Monday’s 10th race, a $12,500 claiming event for 3-year-olds and upward. He was the last one out of the paddock because of his temperamental behavior, and stopped suddenly by a metal fence that lined the pathway to the track, digging his feet into the ground.

Jockey Rico Flores tried to coax the son of Awesome Sword to join the others in the post parade, but the gelding would have none of it. Instead, he reared up high in the air and then flipped over backwards, transforming Flores into a projectile heading toward that hard metal fence and a potentially crippling injury. Luckily, he hit it with only a glancing blow to his body, tumbling to the ground on the other side.

Mischief Man’s foot got caught in the fence and he thrashed around for a few seconds before freeing himself and getting back to his feet. Flores got up, too, shaken, but not seriously injured. He was examined immediately by emergency medical personnel on the scene.

The outrider scheduled to accompany Mischief Man to the gate rode into the paddock and asked if the horse was going to be scratched. “No!” Flores shouted, not wanting to give up the mount that had been acting so crazily just a few moments earlier.

The track veterinarian overruled Flores, and he walked sadly back into the jockeys’ room after Mischief Man was taken out of the race.

The incident demonstrated how quickly things can go wrong for jockeys or handlers of these high-strung Thoroughbreds—even before a race is run. Flores escaped injury this time, though his head came dangerously close to smacking the fence as he fell toward the ground. It also showed the courage (some might craziness) of these athletes who risk their lives every time they get on a horse’s back.

I was at Zia Park with my Paulick Report partner, Brad Cummings, on the fourth stop of our 10-day BREEDERS’ CUP OR BUST fundraising drive, held in partnership with Breeders’ Cup Charities to benefit the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund and V Foundation for Cancer Research. We were at the Hobbs, N.M., track to enjoy a day of Quarter horse and Thoroughbred racing and participate in a handicapping contest with a  couple of local sharpshooters, KRUI radio talk-show host and handicapper Tim Keithley, and trainer Todd Fincher, a former leading at Ruidoso Downs and other tracks in the Southwest.

It was our first trip to Zia Park and Black Gold Casino, a racetrack and casino in eastern New Mexico about 100 miles southwest of Lubbock, Texas. R.D. Hubbard built the track for $50 million in 2004 and sold it three years later for $200 million to Penn National Gaming—a pretty good pinhook. The slot machines support the purses for what is a pretty good racing product Those $12,500 claimers were racing for a $13,500 purse; New Mexico-bred 2-year-old maidens competed for a $27,700 purse earlier in the card.

Hobbs is a working-class town of about 28,000 people, and their median household income is $28,100. Cowboy hats, Wranglers and big belt buckles are the order of the day for this horse-loving part of the country.

Rick Baugh, the assistant general manager who hosted us for the day, gave Keithley and Fincher a $1,000 bankroll to build up for the two charities. Brad and I also had $1,000 to wager. Whatever was left at the end of the day would go to Breeders’ Cup Charities, and the team with the biggest bankroll after the final race would bragging rights.

The Kentucky invaders didn’t embarrass themselves, hitting several winners on the card, including a maiden winner that had gone 0-for-32 prior to the day, and a couple of exotic bets. We managed to wind up with about $1,600 and looked like we would cruise to victory over the local hotshots, but Keithley and Fincher (a pretty sharp trainer, with 11 wins from 31 starts going into the day) hit the exacta and trifecta on the final race, nearly doubling their bankroll. We were more than happy to finish second, since it meant that more than $3,000 would go to the charities.

The $3,000-plus from Zia Park brings our total to nearly $65,000. Many thanks to this segment’s sponsors, Robert and Blythe Clay’s Three Chimneys Farm; Cot Campbell’s Dogwood Stable; numerous affiliates of the Horsemen’s Benevolent and Protective Association; and Zia Park/Penn National Gaming. 

Sponsors for our previous segments were Global Gaming Solutions and Remington Park; Terry Finley and his West Point Thoroughbred partners; Tommy Simon’s Vinery; Rick Porter’s Fox Hill Farm; TVG; Bill Casner and WinStar Farm; Barry Irwin of Team Valor International; Kate Lantaff of Tahoma Stud; William S. Farish’s Lane’s End, Sheikh Mohammed’s Darley, Brereton C. Jones’ Airdrie Stud and the Young family’s Overbrook Farm. A special thanks to our media partner TVG and the TVG’s online community for playing such a big part in promoting the drive.

It was all ion good fun, and that seems to be what Zia Park is all about. It’s a friendly track, well designed, and about the right size for what racing needs to be in a town like Hobbs. One bit of advice from locals that’s worth passing on: if you stop in, be sure to have the green chile cheeseburger. You won’t find anything like it in Kentucky.

It’s a 10-hour drive from Hobbs to Turf Paradise in Phoenix, Ariz., where we’re scheduled to be on Tuesday afternoon. Another track I’ve never had the chance to visit, and another opportunity to raise money and awareness for two worthy charities. Zia later, Hobbs. It’s been fun.

 

PAULICK REPORT PRESENTS BREEDERS’ CUP OR BUST: A CHARITY FUNDRAISING ‘DRIVE’

Monday, October 26th, 2009
By Ray Paulick
Some people think I’d do just about anything to not get on an airplane. One of those folks is Brad Cummings, my partner in the Paulick Report. A couple of weeks ago, knowing that I’ve had  my fill of bad experiences with commercial airlines, he asked if I’d be driving out to the Breeders’ Cup from my home in Lexington, Ky., to Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, Calif.

“Are you nuts?” I asked. I told Brad I was in the process of booking a flight but then, for some reason, said, “Why don’t you drive out there with me.” We had just been discussing our disappointment in not being able to get a group of people together from Central Kentucky to fill a chartered bus and attend a Chicago-area fundraiser Oct. 25 for apprentice jockey Michael Straight, who was seriously injured in a riding mishap at Arlington Park this summer. Brad had really been hoping to show that people in Kentucky had the young jockey in their thoughts and prayers, but understood that giving up a Sunday and Monday to attend the event was a tall order for many folks.

“Maybe we can put together our own fundraiser,” I told Brad, stopping at tracks along the way, and somehow raising awareness and money for not just Michael Straight but for all the injured riders who depend on the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund. It’s an organization that provides sorely needed financial assistance to more than 60 jockeys who have suffered some form of paralysis, head trauma or other debilitating injury.

From that lunchtime meeting in Lexington came the idea for BREEDERS’ CUP OR BUST: A FUNDRAISING ‘DRIVE’ that gets under way at Keeneland this Wednesday (Oct. 28), continues at Hawthorne in Chicago on Thursday (Oct. 29), Remington Park in Oklahoma City on Sunday (Nov. 1), Zia Park in Hobbs, N.M., next Monday (Nov. 2)  and Turf Paradise in Phoenix, Ariz., next Tuesday (Nov. 3). We’ll stop at a Las Vegas racebook next Wednesday (Nov. 4) and then arrive at Santa Anita Park on the eve of the Breeders’ Cup.

Click here to read the full details about the BREEDERS’ CUP OR BUST FUNDRAISING ‘DRIVE’.

We made a few phone calls after our initial discussion, including one to someone at the Breeders’ Cup to see if the organization was interested in partnering with us on this crazy idea. To my astonishment, they were immediately supportive. So was TVG, the racing network and account wagering company, which will help promote this fundraising effort on both their telecasts and online through the TVG community as our exclusive media partner.

Breeders’ Cup Charities officials suggested we branch out and consider a second charity to benefit from this drive, specifically The V Foundation for Cancer Research, founded by ESPN and the late North Carolina State basketball coach and television commentator Jim Valvano. Coach V, who died from brain cancer in 2003, gave the foundation its motto, “Don’t give up…Don’t ever give up,” during an unforgettable speech at the inaugural ESPY awards when he received the Arthur Ashe Courage & Humanitarian Award, just eight weeks before his death.

We’ve all lost friends or loved ones to this disease, and the absence of stricken Hall of Fame trainer Bobby Frankel from this year’s Breeders’ Cup will serve as a sad reminder of how devastating cancer can be. The V Foundation has funded vital research into unraveling the mysteries of cancer over the past 15 years. It ranks among the top 2% of all charities ranked by the independent organization, Charity Navigator, for maintaining extremely low administration and fundraising expenses.

While these two organizations deal with serious medical issues, we plan to have some fun while raising money on behalf of Breeders’ Cup Charities and the two organizations.  We’ll be raising awareness for them, too, chronicling each stop on the zig-zagging, 2,835-mile road trip with live blogs detailing our experiences.

We hope you’ll stop by the Paulick Report, beginning Wednesday when BREEDERS’ CUP OR BUST starts at Keeneland, where the jockey colony will be autographing Breeders’ Cup caps and I’ll be participating in a one-on-one handicapping challenge with local radio personality Tom Leach, the voice of the Kentucky Wildcats. Breeders’ Cup is staking us to a bankroll that we hope to increase throughout the trip with help from the TVG community and handicappers and horseplayers at each track.

Other promotions along the way include a race pitting the two traveling partners of the Paulick Report against members of the Remington Park jockey colony riding big, bouncing rubber balls. I think I’m at least 50-1 to win that contest.

You’ll have an opportunity to support the ‘drive,’ too, by pledging a specific amount per mile at the Breeders’ Cup Charities secured web site and making a tax-deductible online donation. Please click here to donate now.

In addition, for each of the six segments of the drive, we are soliciting individuals, businesses or charitable foundations as sponsors willing to donate a minimum of $2,000 to the charities. Please email us at  info@paulickreport.com if you are interested in sponsoring a segment, which will be acknowledged throughout the trip in our daily blogs.

It’s been less than 18 months since the Paulick Report launched as an independent source of news and commentary for the Thoroughbred industry. As many of you know, in our early days we were sustained by the support of readers like you who contributed during National Public Radio-style fundraising drives. Since then, we’ve been blessed with overwhelming growth in both readership and advertising support from businesses throughout the racing and breeding communities.

Because of that support, we feel privileged to be able to put our energies toward something that truly is a worthy cause. We are asking you to give again. Please join us in supporting Breeders’ Cup Charities to benefit the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund and The V Foundation for Cancer Research.

Copyright © 2009, The Paulick Report

Savvy businesses recognize value. Advertise in the Paulick Report.

Sign up for our
Email Flashes to get the latest news, analysis and commentary from Ray Paulick