stride2

41
MAGAZINE STRIDE MARCH 17, 2010 Issue No. 2 UNDEFEATED Zenyatta wins, keeps streak alive; Rachel loses, withdraws from Apple Blossom; Race for the Ages postponed

Upload: scott-serio

Post on 17-Mar-2016

219 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

DESCRIPTION

Stride Magazine is a new publication for the fans of horse racing. You can be a horse lover, an exercise rider, a gambler, an owner or anyone who loves the sports - this magazine is for you. We aim to provide you insight into the characters and character of the game. We aim to bring you the people, the venues and the events which are the fabric of thoroughbred racing.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Stride2

magazineStridemarch 17, 2010issue no. 2

UNDEFEATEDzenyatta wins, keeps streak alive;rachel loses, withdraws from apple Blossom;race for the ages postponed

Page 2: Stride2

http://www.hotsprings.org

America’s First Resort

Hot Springs is famous for

natural thermal spas and

historic Bathhouse Row – but

with America’s best racing,

the South’s newest gaming

center, fi ve amazing lakes

and more – you can call us

whatever you like.

Visit hotsprings.org or call

1-888-SPA-CITY to plan your

trip now.

Spa City.

Racing City.

Gaming City.SMA/10

Page 3: Stride2

http://www.hotsprings.org

America’s First Resort

Hot Springs is famous for

natural thermal spas and

historic Bathhouse Row – but

with America’s best racing,

the South’s newest gaming

center, fi ve amazing lakes

and more – you can call us

whatever you like.

Visit hotsprings.org or call

1-888-SPA-CITY to plan your

trip now.

Spa City.

Racing City.

Gaming City.SMA/10

Page 4: Stride2

eDiTOriaL STaFFPublisher: Henry HillDesign Director: dave ZeilerPhoto editor: Scott Serio

Stride magazineA subsidiary of eSW MediaP.O. Box 4Colora, Md 21917A bi-weekly publication

cOnTacT inFOrmaTiOne-mail: [email protected]: 443.693.3454

Contents

Main attractions

COVER STORY

4 STriDe magazine March 17, 2010

26

other Features

6 missed Date with history Rachel Alexandra’s withdrawal from the Apple Blossom means any showdown with Zenyatta will have to wait.

10 Focused on Success Anna Roberts fulfills her lifelong dream of being a jockey. By scott serio

22 The Voice of Oaklawn After 36 years of calling races, Terry Wallace has seen it all. By ryan Patterson

26 going Back to gulfstream Visiting the renovated track for the first time without Dad. By stewart winograd

36 a Taste of the Big easy Jockey Robby Albarado takes us on a tour of his favorite New Orleans eateries. By Michelle yu

March 17, 2010Issue No. 2

7 Scene at the Track Photos of Zenyatta’s victory March 13 and Rachel Alexandra’s stunning defeat.

8 3 Wild Derby Prep races Results from the San Felipe Stakes, the Rebel Stakes and the Tampa Bay Derby. By Brian ZiPse

18 On the Tarmac What to see and do in Hot Springs, AR.

20 Feeding the multitude Best places to eat in Hot Springs. By scott serio

30 Upcoming graded Stakes races

34 Kentucky Derby Power rankings

40 Lineage Lacey Gaudet writes about pursuing her goal of becoming a top trainer (Part Two of Two).

On The cOVer: Zenyatta takes her usual position at the back of the pack at the start of the Santa Margarita Invitational; the mare made a last-to-first move to remain undefeated. PhOTO:charLeS PraVaTa/ecLiPSe SPOrTSWire

10

8

22

Page 5: Stride2

http://www.simurl.com/harrahs

GAMBLING PROBLEM? CALL 1-800-522-4700.

Win Your Way to May!

Daily Satellites Now

May 7-19, 2010For Information on WSOP Events please call 504-533-6578

or visit www.harrahsneworleans.com

Be Our Friend On Follow Us On

Daily satellites run January 18, 2010 - April 25, 2010. Winners of the daily single satellites must play in the super satellite within the month they win their single seat to qualify for further advancement. The runner up in the single table satellite will receive a free seat into the next single satellite of their choice. Advancement entries must be used before April 25, 2010. Entries are non-transferable and have no cash value. Visit the poker room for more details. Facebook is a registered trademark of Facebook, Inc. Twitter is a registered trademark of Twitter, Inc. Must be 21 or older to gamble and to enter casino. Know When To Stop Before You Start.® Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-522-4700. ©2010, Harrah’s License Company, LLC.

Page 6: Stride2

6 STriDe magazine March 17, 2010

The debate about whether Rachel Alexandra or Zenyatta is the better horse will have to wait.

Zenyatta marched closer to history on Sat-urday, running her unbeaten streak to 15. Twenty minutes earlier, most of the horse racing world was left stunned at the defeat of Horse of the Year Rachel Alexandra as the 1-to-9 favorite at the Fair Grounds.

What had been billed as the “Race for the Ages” is off. The Rachel Alexandra camp is reeling after the loss, and connections have no idea when she will re-turn to the races. Zenyatta, on the other hand, will have the record of 16 straight unrestricted wins – held by Citation and Cigar – in her sights on April 9.

What Rachel’s performance lacked, Zenyatta de-livered. The 6-year-old mare left the gate slowly and trailed the field most of the way. At the head of the stretch, jockey Mike Smith roused Zenyatta into ac-tion, only to be faced with a wall of horses. Track announcer Trevor Denman made the call: “Where is Zenyatta gonna go? She’s got nowhere to go.”

The answer to the question came quickly. Ten seconds after lamenting Zenyatta’s traffic problem, Denman’s call was more upbeat: “Zenyatta is play-ing with them. Yes, another un-be-liev-a-ble win!” Next up: history.

Meanwhile on the bayou, the furor hasn’t quite

started … yet. There hasn’t been much finger-pointing af-

ter Rachel’s loss. Trainer Steve Asmussen is content to blame himself and blame the overall conditioning of the filly.

One question persists. The Rachel camp went out of their way to prepare everyone for the fact she needed a race to progress her reconditioning. In es-sence, they prepared the world for the possibility that their charge might lose. By all accounts, Rachel exited the race well and received the conditioning she needed. Sure, no one is happy she lost, but why are they skipping the Apple Blossom?

You can believe the quotes provided by Jess Jack-son about the fitness of the filly, as he put it. But the reasons for skipping a $5 million race might run deeper than that. It has been mentioned by quite a few people that there might be another motivation.

Not only does Jackson own Rachel Alexandra, he also owns the retired (and current career earnings leader) Curlin. The speculation is that Jackson is not exactly thrilled with the idea of going to Hot Springs to lose to Zenyatta, hand her $3 million and move her that much closer to eclipsing Curlin’s record.

In the end, you have to believe that everyone in-volved is making decisions based on what is best for the horses. But horse racing is big business, on and off the track.

For Hot Springs, the defection of Rachel Alexan-dra from the Apple Blossom is a disappointment. As one local commented before Saturday’s events, “I think people are writing checks based on some-thing that might not even happen.” Indeed.

The upside for Hot Springs and Oaklawn Park is that Arkansas Derby weekend usually draws be-tween 60,000-70,000, no matter who is running. Ze-nyatta is still coming and will be a huge draw for the town: Zenyatta remains on course for several dates with history.

Without Rachel, Zenyatta will be the star, the main attraction. She likes it that way. On April 9, all 17 hands of Zenyatta will be out there doing her sig-nature “war dance” during the post parade, letting another group of soon-to-be-vanquished foes know who is really the queen. h

Missed date with history

commentary Mike Smith celebrates after Zenyatta notched her 15th straight win in the Santa Margarita Invitational.

Ph

OTO

: JO

na

Tha

n B

ac

hm

an

/ec

LiP

Se S

PO

rTS

Wir

e

Ph

OTO

: c

yn

Thia

LU

m/e

cLi

PSe

SP

Or

TSW

ire

Another Z of trainer John Shirreff’s, Zardana, scores a monster upset over 1-9 favorite Rachel Alexandra in the New Orleans Ladies.

Page 7: Stride2

STriDe magazine March 17, 2010 7

at the track

scene

Top left: Mike Smith gives Zenyatta a hug before winning the Santa Margarita Invitational at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, CA.

Top Right: Zenyatta’s star power was in full force. She even drew out Dustin Hoffman, Academy Award Winner and star of HBO’s new horse racing-based pilot ‘Luck.’

Fans lined the track to show support for Rachel Alexandra.

BO

TTO

m P

hO

TOS:

JO

na

Tha

n B

ac

hm

an

/ec

LiP

Se S

PO

rTS

Wir

e

Right: Zardana’s

jockey David Flores breathes

a sigh of relief after scoring the

stunning upset over Rachel Alexandra.

TOP

Ph

OTO

S: c

ha

rLe

S P

ra

Va

Ta/e

cLi

PSe

SP

Or

TSW

ire

Page 8: Stride2

8 STriDe magazine March 17, 2010

DerBy PreP raceS maKe FOr a WiLD SaTUrDayThoroughbred racing owners, trainers and jockeys have now entered their own form of March Mad-

ness with hopes and dreams of Kentucky Derby glory. The 2010 edition is beginning to take shape, and a trio of Derby preps run last weekend have placed a greater focus on the big race. March 13’s three major derby preps – the Rebel Stakes at Oaklawn Park, the Tampa Bay Derby at Tampa Bay

Downs and the San Felipe Stakes at Santa Anita – answered many questions but raised several new ones.

By Brian Zipse

The Tampa Bay Derby was the most ex-citing race of the day, as the top three finished within a half a length of each

other at the wire. After the close finish, most people assumed that Schoolyard Dreams had won, but instead it was the very promising colt Odysseus, who looked hopelessly beaten on the turn – as pointed out by the track an-nouncer – but came on again for a miraculous victory over Schoolyard Dreams by a head-bobbing nose. Race favorite Super Saver set the pace and stayed on well to be third, beaten by half a length. For Odysseus it was sweet suc-cess in his first stakes try. The win, and his re-siliency, point him out as a horse getting good

The San Felipe might have left the most unanswered questions of any Derby prep to date. Not only was the race contested on a synthetic surface, but the running of the race proved little as far

as which will be legitimate horses on the first Saturday in May. The San Felipe proved the wisdom of the old adage “pace makes the race.” The winner was Sidney’s Candy, who got loose on the lead in slow fractions. It was the first race at a distance for the son of Candy Ride, and he looked good, but the Derby will be run with a much faster pace, which should prove a challenge for him. Interactif finished sec-ond a half-length back, and Caracortado was third. Interactif, coming off the turf, stalked the winner and was game the entire stretch to fin-ish closest at the wire. Race favorite Caracortado was farther back off the slow pace, made two moves and was forced wide on the far turn. All things considered, his third-place finish was no disgrace. Despite the Sidney’s Candy win, I believe that Caracortado and Interactif are still the most likely of the San Felipe starters to run well at Churchill Downs.

San Felipe StakesSanta Anita Park

Tampa Bay DerbyTampa Bay Downs

Joe Talamo celebrates a wire-to-wire winning performance by Sidney’s Candy in the San Felipe Stakes.

Ph

OTO

: c

yn

Thia

LU

m/e

cLi

PSe

SP

Or

TSW

ire

Ph

OTO

: D

an

ieL

Sam

PLe

/ec

LiP

Se S

PO

rTS

Wir

e

Page 9: Stride2

STriDe magazine March 17, 2010 9

DerBy PreP raceS maKe FOr a WiLD SaTUrDayThoroughbred racing owners, trainers and jockeys have now entered their own form of March Mad-

ness with hopes and dreams of Kentucky Derby glory. The 2010 edition is beginning to take shape, and a trio of Derby preps run last weekend have placed a greater focus on the big race. March 13’s three major derby preps – the Rebel Stakes at Oaklawn Park, the Tampa Bay Derby at Tampa Bay

Downs and the San Felipe Stakes at Santa Anita – answered many questions but raised several new ones.

at the right time. Schoolyard Dreams might have suffered a heartbreaking loss, but the grandson of A.P. Indy is improving with ev-ery start and is now officially ready for prime time. Third-place finisher Super Saver made a strong return, and we can expect him to be more primed for his next race. I believe all three colts ran well, and each still has enough room for improvement to make some serious noise in the Triple Crown.

In the Rebel, juvenile champion Lookin at Lucky came back better than ever. He was badly bothered on the backstretch, giving him little chance to come back and win the race. Little

chance, that is, before he uncoiled a sustained and impressive rally to get up over the classy Noble’s Promise under the shadow of the wire. It was Lucky’s first race on dirt and his first race with blinkers. Only a champion would have come back from that sort of trouble to win against the quality field. Noble’s Promise ran another huge race, but the big question of distance remains for this colt who is bred to be best at shorter distances. Meanwhile, D. Wayne Lukas’ best Derby threat in years, Dublin, made a prema-ture move and hung in the stretch to finish third, and Arizona-bred Uh Oh Bango could only muster a well-beaten fourth-place finish. Lookin at Lucky’s impressive run re-establishes him as the horse to beat for the Kentucky Derby, and he’ll have one more prep on his march to Louisville.

Lookin’ At Lucky makes a successful 2010 debut in the Rebel Stakes as he runs down Noble’s Promise at the wire.

Odysseus (right) fights through on the inside to nip Schoolyard Dreams by a nose in the Tampa Bay Derby.

Tampa Bay DerbyTampa Bay Downs

Rebel StakesOaklawn Park

Ph

OTO

: B

OB

ma

yB

eger

/ec

LiP

Se S

PO

rTS

Wir

e

Page 10: Stride2

10 STriDe magazine March 17, 2010

Focused on

10 STriDe magazine March 17, 2010

Ph

OTO

: a

Lex

Ba

rK

OFF

/ec

LiP

Se S

PO

rTS

Wir

e

Page 11: Stride2

STriDe magazine March 17, 2010 11

successon

When 9-year-oldAnna Robertsfirst encounteredthe racing world, something just clicked. Turns out it was her mother.

STriDe magazine March 17, 2010 11

A nna Roberts’ career as a jockey might have started with her first mount last year, but the story of how she became a jockey started more than a decade before.

That story, about a little girl’s journey from Belzoni, MS, to one of the top race meets in the country, is about per-

sonal determination as well as family pride.

By Scott Serio

Page 12: Stride2

12 STriDe magazine March 17, 2010

First stepsAs a little girl, Anna wasn’t very

girly. She played with the boys and preferred stuffed horses to Barbies. Her parents didn’t own any real hors-es, but relatives and friends did.

“I was a horse lover,” says Anna’s mother, Lynn Roberts. “I was always on a horse. It transferred down to Anna. She was very natural around them – no fear.”

When the family moved to New Orleans, Lynn took her 9-year-old daughter to the Fair Grounds to hang out around the horses. It was there that the girl’s mild interest was transformed into a lifelong ambition.

“The first time I went to the track I saw Julie Krone,” says Anna. “It was then that I knew exactly what I wanted to do: I wanted to be a jockey.”

But it wasn’t as if there was a handbook that gave directions to 9-year-olds who wanted to be jockeys in 1997. And, other than Krone, there weren’t very many female role models for aspiring jockeys. But Anna kept her eye on the goal. Her next step was riding lessons for her 11th birth-day. She was hooked, but she knew that hunters and jumpers could only take her so far. Anna loved horses and she was able to be with them on a reg-ular basis, refining her skills, but the dream of becoming a jockey was still foremost in her mind.

Meanwhile, her mother was also feeling the pull of horses at the Fair Grounds. Lynn obtained her groom’s license and ended up spending more time around horses than Anna did.

The family moved to Franklinton, LA, in 2003, which gave Anna access to the Folsom Thoroughbred Training Center. There, while she learned to gallop horses and move closer to ful-filling her dream, a door opened for Lynn as well.

When Anna competed in hunter

and jumper show rings, her mother did what many parents do: She took pictures of her daughter, document-ing the journey from childhood. Says Lynn, “I took tons of pictures of her growing up, but I was no good. If I had any talent, it didn’t show.”

But opportunity knocked for her at Folsom. “A friend told me the track photographer, Lou Hodges, was look-ing for an assistant, and they thought I should try and do it,” she said. So the self-proclaimed no-talent photog-rapher began learning the craft of race photography as her daughter learned the craft of galloping thoroughbreds.

As it turned out, one of her photo-graphs proved to be a key to Anna’s future.

Picture perfectAnna had begun looking for schools

where she could become a better rider.

Many of the choices were colleges that offered programs for jumping, dres-sage and the like. This seemed the next logical step, but Anna approached it with trepidation. “Some colleges had showing,” says Anna, “but I really didn’t want to go to college – I wanted to become a jockey.”

While Anna was searching for di-rection, Lynn kept her focus. That focus paid off in the form of a mag-nificent shot from the 2005 edition of the Colonel E.R. Bradley Stakes. The photo of a blanket finish, three across, horses extended in a final lunge, won the prestigious Eclipse Media Award.

Lynn once said in an interview that God set the image up for her, because she couldn’t have done it on her own. “It was a blessing,” she said. “I won the Eclipse Award in my second year shooting. It is a testament to how good Lou is.”

Above: Mother and daughter in the photo room at the Fair Grounds.

Right: A 9-year-old Anna poses with her role model and inspiration, Julie Krone.

Lynn Roberts is an assistant track photographer at the Fair Grounds.

Ph

OTO

: a

Lex

Ba

rK

OFF

/ec

LiP

Se S

PO

rTS

Wir

e

Ph

OTO

cO

Ur

TeSy

OF

Lyn

n r

OB

erTS

Ph

OTO

: a

Lex

Ba

rK

OFF

/ec

LiP

Se S

PO

rTS

Wir

e

Page 13: Stride2

STriDe magazine March 17, 2010 13

http://www.fantasylanestable.com

2010 Two-Year-Old Limited Partnership NOW FORMING!

For as little as $875, you, too, can experience all the privileges of ownershipincluding FREE season passes, parking, and unlimited visits to the barn.

FLS has developed FOUR stake horses in FOUR consecutive years.

SIGN UP TODAY!

732-241-6606FantasyLaneStable.com

Fantasy Lane Unleashes Its Newest StarUPTOWNCHARLYBROWN

Triple Crown Bound!

DO YOU THINK OUR PARTNERS ARE HAPPY?

Won by nine in December 26th debut.

Page 14: Stride2

14 STriDe magazine March 17, 2010

With that, the cake decorator turned Eclipse Award-winning photographer set off for the awards ceremony. Her aspiring-jockey daughter accompa-nied her. It was there that Lynn and Anna ran into Chris McCarron.

At the time of the meeting, McCa-rron’s vision of the North American Racing Academy had not fully taken shape. But the seed was planted, and it occurred to Anna that there might be another option beyond riding in shows and going to college: Maybe she could go to school and learn to do what she had dreamed about since she met Julie Krone at 9 years old.

Anna applied, interviewed and was accepted into the inaugural class of McCarron’s riding academy in Lex-ington, KY. There were practical ex-ercises and instruction. Top jockeys came in to offer inspiration and guid-ance to the class of fledgling riders. But, in the end, it was in the saddle where the most important learning was to be done. “More of the teaching is when you start riding,” Anna says. “Learning how to ride is more hands-on. You kind of have to figure it out yourself.”

The experience at NARA lead to an “internship” exercising horses for trainer Al Stall Jr. The on-the-job training continued until Anna gradu-ated from the academy in 2008.

Then, on the verge of moving one step closer to realizing her dream, Anna lost one of her most avid sup-porters. One week after her gradu-

ation, Anna’s father, Brady, died of leukemia. Suddenly, a parent who supported her decisions and backed her with pride was gone. Brady Rob-erts, a man who had never been hos-pitalized, was diagnosed with cancer on April 23, 2008, and lost his battle on May 24.

Mother and daughter found con-solation in the place where they had already found personal satisfaction: the Fair Grounds. Ever since the fam-ily had moved to New Orleans in 1997, the charming racetrack bordered by St. Louis Cemetery #3, which pushes up against City Park, had been a home away from home. Lynn had groomed horses on the backstretch before be-coming an assistant track photogra-

pher. Anna had grown up feeding mints to the horses stabled at the track.

Still mourning the loss of her father, Anna moved forward. She worked with Stall and continued to move closer to her first mount. She galloped horses at Keeneland and then Sarato-ga, only to return to the Fair Grounds for the 2008-2009 meet. She had her jockey’s license at this point, but had yet to ride in a race. In her own esti-mation, she didn’t feel she was quite ready. She remained with Stall and continued to work horses for him.

Realizing a dreamThen, on March 12, 2009, a horse

Anna had exercised for Stall was run-

Anna Roberts gets a leg up on her first mount on Code of Honour at the Fair Grounds.

‘The first time I went to the track i saw Julie Krone. it was then that i knew exactly what i wanted to do: i wanted to be a jockey.’ – Anna Roberts

Ph

OTO

: a

Lex

Ba

rK

OFF

/ec

LiP

Se S

PO

rTS

Wir

e

Page 15: Stride2

STriDe magazine March 17, 2010 15

http://www.foaltrack.com

Page 16: Stride2

16 STriDe magazine March 17, 2010

ning in the sixth race. It was a busy two days before the Louisiana Derby, and Anna was helping her mother (pho-tographer Lou Hodges was unable to work). Already at the track, Anna went to the paddock to visit Stall.

While she was in the paddock, an announcement came from the pub-lic address system, and it was clear a jockey would be needed for the sev-enth race. Stall turned to Anna and said, “You should go try and pick up that mount – you can get it.”

After a brief visit with the clerk, Anna Roberts was given the mount on Code of Honour. As word of the news spread, the apron started to fill. Pho-tographers from out of town scrambled to get photos of the race. Lynn was busy handling her duties as track photographer, but her fellow shooters helped out. Jockeys crowded around to watch the race as well.

The president of the Fair Grounds, noticing the com-motion, wondered if he was missing the Louisiana Derby. He was assured that he wasn’t missing anything – except Anna Roberts’ first mount.

Code of Honour led for a good part of the race, but faded to finish seventh. When she came off the track, Anna was met by her moth-er. They were there together, a dream realized.

Anna Roberts has record-ed 25 winners to date. Her rode her first winner in her fourth mount, aboard King of Mardi Gras at Louisi-ana Downs. She had a solid meet in Shreveport and faced the choice of finding the best track to further her riding career. She chose to pick up her tack and return to New Orleans, de-spite the tight competition.

“It is tough to get mounts here,” she admits. “Honestly, I had agents call-ing me to go to New York. But I kind of grew up here. It is kind of my home track.

“It is really tough, the toughest of

meets for journeyman riders, but I wanted to try it. I wanted to stick it out.”

Anna insists her decision wasn’t just a matter of wanting to keep close to home. “I just really love this track. It isn’t like I am staying at home – my mom is an hour and a half away.” But then she acknowledges: “The track is really home to me. I love it.”

Mother and daughter Anna does get to see her mom al-

most every day, even though they

might not get to sit down and talk. And Lynn and Anna share a profes-sional relationship most parents and children never experience.

Usually, when a child grows up and makes it to a professional sport-ing stage, the parents must be content to watch their children on TV or from the stands. Not so for Lynn Roberts. She stays so close to the action, she can feel the ground rumble as her daugh-ter rides by.

As to the question of whether to cheer or take photos, Lynn says, “It’s hard. Part of me is thinking ‘Get the shot!’ (the photographer in me), but occasionally I will yell and cheer her on while shooting the picture.” She adds, “Really, I am just thinking I am proud of her, and how proud her dad-dy would be.”

Last fall, the photographer-versus-mother conflict rose to a new level. “I was shooting on the turn, waiting for horses to clear the rail so I could shoot. Anna was coming around the outside,

about to pass,” says Lynn. “But the horse that was

in the lead bolted, and they clipped heels. Anna’s horse stumbled and fell.”

“I tried to shoot, but I just couldn’t. I ran out to her,” says Lynn. “It was a lot fur-ther than I thought it was. By the time I got there, she was standing up, she was looking for her whip, and she was really mad because she thought she was going to win.”

Anna confirms the ac-count. “If anything, I was more mad than hurt. My horse was cruising. I was go-ing to win.”

But Mom has the last word on the matter: “It is not an experience I want to go through again.”

Anna Roberts’ resilience is obvious. She is focused on becoming a successful race rider. Her inspiration was Julie Krone, but for girls who might look to Anna for that spark, she offer this advice: “Work very hard and stick

to it. Don’t give up, because it is hard. Get some thick skin. It is very tough and you might hear some things you don’t want to hear, but if you want it, you really have to stick with it and keep pushing.”

But for now, Anna admits, it doesn’t hurt being at home at the Fair Grounds. “Almost all of the jockeys here have seen me grow up. They have seen me since I was 9 or 10 years old. They all really try to help and support me.” h

Ph

OTO

: Ly

nn

rO

Ber

TS

Anna Roberts grins after a muddy finish in a race at Evangeline Downs.

Page 17: Stride2

STriDe magazine March 17, 2010 17 STriDe magazine March 17, 2010 17

Ph

OTO

: a

Lex

Ba

rK

OFF

/ec

LiP

Se S

PO

rTS

Wir

e

Page 18: Stride2

18 STriDe magazine March 17, 2010

LiTTLe rOcK airPOrT – Adams Field is a three-runway facility with a whopping 12 gates. it handles about 150 flights daily. Vehicle rentals are available from most major companies, and the rates are reasonable (enterprise offers a full-size rental, thursday-Sunday, for $91 total).

BaThhOUSe rOW – the eight bathhouses of Hot Springs that run along Central Avenue have been designated a National Historic Landmark. What you see now are third- and fourth-generation facilities, but the healing powers of the “Valley of the Vapors” have been known for more than 8,000 years.

gangSTer mUSeUm OF america, 113 central ave. 501-318-1717 – echoes of the city’s notorious past can still be heard inside this museum, which features old roulette tables, vintage slot machines, exhibits on gangsters Al Capone and Owney “the Killer” Madden, gangsters’ weapons and a documentary film, which is shown in the museum’s theater.

arKanSaS Jazz exPerience, 413 central ave. 501-767-0210 – After the big race, consider winding down at this event at the Quapaw Bath House and Spa. A live music jam starts at 7:30. Cash bar available. $10 admission.

The aPPLe BLOSSOm inViTaTiOnaL WeB SiTe – the city of Hot Springs has worked hard to get visitors as much information as possible. Here’s where you can find the fruit of their efforts: www.appleblossominvitational.com.

LaDieS nighT aT The OaKLaWn caSinO – the casino side of the Oaklawn facility hosts a ladies’ free-entry $600 Poker tournament at 7 p.m. Also included for the women is a $7.77 buffet special at Lagniappe’s and 77-cent daiquiris and margaritas.

garVan WOODLanD garDenS, 550 arkridge road. 800-366-4664 – this 210-acre botanical garden is located on Lake Hamilton. it will also be the scene of several festival events.

cOLTOn’S STeaKhOUSe, 120 crawford St. 501-623-2110 – Colton’s ranks at the top of places to go in Hot Springs for a rib eye or porterhouse.

arKanSaS Scenic 7 ByWay – expore Arkansas’ natural beauty with a drive on the state’s first designated scenic byway, which runs through Hot Springs. Head north, passing through Ouachita National Forest, ending in russellville.

rOD’S Pizza ceLLar, 3350 central ave. 501-624-7637 – the best pizza in Hot Springs, hands down, is found at rod’s.

On the Tarmactravel tiPs; things to see and do

hOT SPRiNgS, AR

Bathhouse Row

Ph

OTO

: D

aV

iD S

imm

On

S

Garvan Woodland Gardens

PhO

TO:

Da

nie

L Sa

mPL

e/ec

LiP

Se S

PO

rTS

Wir

e

Page 19: Stride2

STriDe magazine March 17, 2010 19

http://attheraceswithstevebyk.com

Page 20: Stride2

20 STriDe magazine March 17, 2010

Everyone knows the hottest spot in Hot Springs on April 9 will be Oaklawn Park. But with 70,000 invaders descend-

ing upon the city to see the unde-feated Zenyatta, that heat isn’t going to disappear overnight – and neither will the crowds.

On the morning after, those invad-ers and their Arkansan hosts will congregate to eat, to talk about Ze-nyatta and ponder what might have been if Rachel Alexandra had raced. The crowds – and the lines – will be breathtaking. But Hot Springs is working hard to make sure that res-taurants, bars, hotels and attractions can handle the unprecedented influx of visitors. The restaurants especially are bracing themselves, extending their hours and making arrangements to survive the onslaught.

One Hot Springs landmark, the 60-seat Colonial Pancake House, will be a likely destination for many of those 70,000, and owner Rick Gale says the family-run breakfast destination has emergency plans in place. The restau-rant makes everything from scratch (the results garner rave reviews), and the Colonial will have an extra truck of supplies on the premises through-out the weekend to feed demand. By all accounts from locals and from ev-ery Internet source, they’re going to need it.

For dinner, the options open up a little more. Several chain restaurants dot the landscape, but why not par-take in something a little more local and a whole lot more tasty? And you can’t get more Arkansas than barbe-cue and catfish.

Grampa’s Catfish House on Air-

Feeding the multitude

Colonial Pancake House owner Rick Gale says he is ready for the crowds coming to Hot Springs.

Ph

OTO

: D

an

ieL

Sam

PLe

/ec

LiP

Se S

PO

rTS

Wir

e

Hot Springs is gearing up to host tens

of thousands of visitors next

month. Here are some

places that should be up

to the task

By Scott Serio

Page 21: Stride2

STriDe magazine March 17, 2010 21

port Road is a spinoff of the popular original North Little Rock establishment of the same name. The $13.99 “All-U-Can-Eat” catfish plat-ter, with fries and slaw, is a ridiculously good deal for some very good food.

Then there is the barbe-cue. Arkansans take bar-becue about as seriously as they take their former presi-dents – which, by the way, is a topic of conversation to avoid in Hot Springs if you happen not to be a Bill Clin-ton fan. You might get away with telling someone that their alligator farm was a rip-off, but if you make an off comment about Ol’ Bill, you might get punched in the mouth.

But back to the barbecue. In the stock market world they refer to the best company for a certain area as “Best in Breed.” No matter what your research might tell you about some hot new barbecue place, stick with the favorite for Hot Springs natives. Their

Best in BBQ Breed is McClard’s. It has been around about as long as the Colo-nial, and its barbecue is held in as high regard as the Colonial’s pancakes.

The wildcard in the culinary equa-tion has nothing to do with barbe-cue, or catfish, or steak, or breakfast. A hidden gem that people agreed to reveal to Stride Magazine is Central Park Fusion. Their menu is decidedly

un-Arkansas. By offering entrees like coconut red cur-ried chicken and Hawaiian ribeye, Fusion distinguishes itself as a place to get some-thing a little different.

No matter where you end up eating, the people will be friendly. Hot Springs is kind of a cross between Saratoga and Radiator Springs. There is nothing fast-paced about it. Even with a gaggle Ze-nyatta gawkers, it will still maintain its small-town feel. It’s a pleasant place that boasts more bathhous-es built around hot springs

than it does movie houses. It’s clean, and it’s charming.

And you have to feel respect when a whole town opens its doors and its arms to interlopers from all over the world. The Racing Festival of the South will be a great weekend, sur-rounded by great food, great hospital-ity and great thoroughbred racing.

Just remember to be patient while standing in line. h

Hot Springs natives know that McClard’s barbecue is “Best in Breed.”

Ph

OTO

: B

iLL

mea

DO

r

To order go to www.OmahaSteaks.com/print87or call 1-866-680-2110

Limit of 2 packages. Free Gifts included per shipment. Offer expires 4/15/10. Standard shipping and handling will be applied per address.

SAVE 64%

3 FREE GiftsOrder now and we’ll send 6 FREE Omaha Steaks BurgersFREE 6-piece Cutlery SetFREE Cutting Board to every shipping address!

Family Value Combo 45069ZXJ2 (5 oz.) Filet Mignons2 (5 oz.) Top Sirloins4 (4 oz.) Omaha Steaks Burgers4 (3 oz.) Gourmet Franks4 (4 oz. approx.) Boneless Chicken Breasts4 (5 3⁄4 oz.) Stuffed Baked Potatoes

Reg. $13900. . . . .Now Only $4999

©2010 OCG Omaha Steaks.com, Inc. 11889 - 4

Save $8901

Page 22: Stride2

22 STriDe magazine March 17, 2010

There isn’t much that Terry Wallace hasn’t seen after 36 years in the booth as the track announcer at Oaklawn Park. The Ohio native has called every race at Oaklawn since 1975. He has been called “the Most Recognizable Voice in Arkansas” and has had the privilege of calling

horses such as Smarty Jones, Lady’s Secret, Cigar, and Azeri. It is possible that the best horse he will ever call will be Zenyatta in this year’s edition of the Apple Blossom Handicap.

humble beginningsWallace got his start in the thor-

oughbred racing industry working in the parking lot and running for the press box at River Downs in Cincin-nati, OH, while he was a student at nearby Xavier University. At River Downs, he met track announcer Jim Hines. Wallace enjoyed Hines’ calls and learned the craft by listening to him. After returning from studying in France, Wallace recorded a race in French and played the tape for Hines. The veteran race caller suggested that his young friend give it a try in Eng-lish.

“I got positive responses to my race

calls, so I decided to give it a shot as a career. At the time I was working as a teacher at McNicholas High School in Cincinnati. It was a gamble, but I decided to take a job as the track an-nouncer at Latonia Park [now known as Turfway Park]. Luckily, the gamble paid off and led to a successful career in the thoroughbred racing indus-try.” The rest, as they say, is history. Wallace is now a jack of all trades at Oaklawn. He serves as director of me-dia relations, simulcast host and as a member of the senior management team, in addition to his duties as track announcer.

Oaklawn has changed greatly since

Wallace arrived in 1975. At the time, the track was small, though flourish-ing; handle and attendance were on the rise. In 1983, Oaklawn handled just over $3 million in wagers per day on average. After years of expansion and success, the track suffered grow-ing pains in the 1980s, but the addition of “instant racing” and an on-track casino helped bolster revenues. The money coming in from the casino en-abled the track to boost purses – own-er Charles Cella was able to increase the purse of the Arkansas Derby to $1 million in 2004.

As Oaklawn matured, so did Wal-lace. The decades that he has spent

TheVoiceOF

OaKLaWnBy Ryan Patterson

Crediting his experience cramming for exams as a student at Xavier University, Terry Wallace can memorize the names of a field of horses just minutes before a race.

Ph

OTO

: D

an

ieL

Sam

PLe

/ec

LiP

Se S

PO

rTS

Wir

e

Page 23: Stride2

STriDe magazine March 17, 2010 23

calling races have honed his skills, but he’s also benefited from his natural abilities. For instance, he says, “learn-ing to memorize the names came easy for me. I was very good at cramming for exams in college, and the tech-niques are very similar. My days at Xavier University taught me that I had to learn – and fast. Doing so has paid dividends when calling races.”

But there are still challenges. He says the hardest part of calling a race is when the horses break from the starting gate. He calls it “the Moment of Truth.”

“You learn the names of the horses in numerical order, but they break in

different directions. After the start it gets easier,” he says.

Wallace’s work has brought him into contact with many interesting personalities. He said he’s met Bill Clinton a number of times. (Virginia Clinton Kelley, President Clinton’s mother, was a big fan of Oaklawn Park and a regular visitor to the track.) He said the 42nd president is unpreten-tious, and adds that Clinton remem-bers your name after the first time he meets you. That’s something even Wallace finds impressive, even though he can memorize the names of a field of horses just minutes before a race.

Wallace also brings a unique per-

spective to racing. He says that, while most people think the end of the meet is the best part, he enjoys the begin-ning the most. “The start of the meet is always enjoyable because I’ve gone so many months without calling rac-es. At the beginning I have so much to look forward to, such as the Apple Blossom and the Arkansas Derby. I know the next few months are going to be a blast at the start of the meet. I hate the end of the meet because the fun is over.”

Career highlightsDuring his career, Wallace has had

the honor of calling some stellar race-

Crediting his experience cramming for exams as a student at Xavier University, Terry Wallace can memorize the names of a field of horses just minutes before a race.

Page 24: Stride2

24 STriDe magazine March 17, 2010

http://www.derbymuseumstore.com

horses. “I called Cigar when he won the Oaklawn Handicap in 1995,” he says. That was the sixth win in the streak of 16 for Cigar. The colt earned his highest career Beyer Speed Figure of 121 in the Oaklawn Handicap. Wal-lace has also called races for the great fillies Azeri and Lady’s Secret, but he says the best horse he has ever called was Smarty Jones.

“Everyone loved Smarty Jones. I called his Arkansas Derby in 2004. He was a very tough horse,” Wallace says. Smarty Jones would go on to take the Kentucky Derby and Preakness before falling short in the Belmont Stakes.

When he’s not calling races, Wallace is active in the fight against cancer. He regularly volunteers for the American Cancer Society. “My sister is a breast cancer survivor, and I lost my father to lung cancer. Doing all that I can to fight cancer is very important to me.” For the past 10 years, Wallace has been chairman of his local Relay for Life, which raises money for cancer research.

He also keeps up with his alma mater’s basketball team, the Xavier Musketeers. “I hated to see Xavier give up football,” he laments, “but they’ve been a consistent power in basketball.”

On April 9, Terry Wallace will add another chapter to his storied race-calling career. Despite the defection

of Rachel Alexandra from this year’s Apple Blossom, Zenyatta will be there in an attempt to tie the great Cigar’s 16 for 16 record. Wallace’s voice will serve as the official narration of what is possibly one of the greatest mo-ments in racing.

Can there be a better man for the job? h

Terry Wallace says the best horse he has ever called was Smarty Jones.

Ph

OTO

: D

an

ieL

Sam

PLe

/ec

LiP

Se S

PO

rTS

Wir

e

Page 25: Stride2

STriDe magazine March 17, 2010 25

http://www.chapman-arts.com

Page 26: Stride2

26 STriDe magazine March 17, 2010

The idea of hopping on a plane and heading out to take in a big day of horse racing puts a buzz into the

head and heart any fan. Add in the bonus that you would be leaving the frozen tundra of Nebraska for Florida and an event that is appeal-ing enough in its name, The Sun-shine Millions, and visions of palm

trees and Pick 6’s should dance in your head. Unfortunately, this was never meant to be such a journey.

For as long as I can remember, my father and I were connected through horse racing. I am almost a horse handicapper by trade. My father was never really a great handicap-per, but he certainly was a shrewd gambler and he taught me well.

Somehow, after my father was diagnosed with cancer in 2002 and given a year to live, our connection to horse racing further strength-ened our bond. He was always in-terested in my picks. And because he lived in Florida, I would always make an effort to handicap Calder or Gulfstream and call him with my picks. Then I would add I was play-

The paddock at Gulfstream Park in Hallandale, FL.

Old traditions

By Stewart Winograd

meet the

new gulfstreamPhotos by Bob Mayberger/Eclipse Sportswire

Page 27: Stride2

STriDe magazine March 17, 2010 27

ing a little bit extra on my picks for him. It gave him something to root for and something to look forward to in the next day’s newspaper.

On Memorial Day of last year, my father finally lost his fight with cancer.

It was with this backdrop that I landed in Florida. The main pur-pose of my trip was to visit my mother and to take care of other personal and business connec-tions. My attendance at Gulfstream was planned, for sure. The idea of honoring my father wasn’t pres-ent when the plane hit the tarmac, but the feeling grew – especially after my failed attempt at getting my mother to come with me to the track. If nothing else, he was cer-tainly “present” with me on the visit.

It’s hard to be objective about a day at the racetrack when both my best bet of the year won at 10-1 and the excitement of that win was tem-pered by a $34,000 photo finish lost by a nose.

I got off I-95 and drove the mile or two toward the ocean through typically heavy traffic on Hallan-dale Beach Boulevard, past gas stations and fast food joints, some open, some boarded up. Not far from the track is Nick’s, an old-school diner with waitresses who have been there for decades and call everyone “hon.” A good place to grab a bite.

As you drive in to Gulfstream proper, the first thing you see are new dormitories for the grooms, not opulent but far newer and nicer than the living quarters at most racetracks. Since track owner Frank Stronach seems to have de-clared war on the middle class, this is a nice touch.

There are no gates to Gulfstream, no admission booths or turnstiles, just open access to the free areas. There are also no seats. Stronach in his infinite wisdom decided that people come to the racetrack to shop, or schmooze, or listen to

music, or eat, or gamble, but not to watch a horse race. There are as many seats facing the walking ring as there are facing the track.

There are restaurant tables in a glass-enclosed section with a de-cent view of the track, and there are four rows of stadium seats, mostly empty, facing the track below and in front of the restaurant. I remem-ber the first time I went to the new Gulfstream with my dad and step-mom, Fountain of Youth day a couple years back. The outside seats were virtually empty. I asked an usher how much the seats were, think-ing that I would pay the $10 and get us seats. “Today the seats are $50 each,” the usher said. We found some lawn chairs about a furlong away on the clubhouse turn and dragged them back to the finish line instead. I have not inquired about the outside seats since, although there is now a sign that says the seats are free on week-days.

But so much of racing and life involves playing the hand you’re dealt, so I have found my comfort spot at the new Gulf-stream, which is near a thatch-roof open-air hut up the stretch from the main body of the track. There is a bar, plenty of simulcast TVs, and both real-live tellers and automated betting machines.

I prefer betting with a live teller if I find one that is competent be-cause it is easier for me to call out the numbers and watch her fingers hit the keypad than it is for me to look constantly back and forth be-tween my bet sheet and the touch screen. At Gulfstream, though, any bet of a denomination less than a dollar, e.g. a 10 cent superfecta box, must be made on an automated ma-chine. So I usually get a voucher and have some flexibility.

The thatched hut area has some of the leftover painted plaques with

names of Florida Derby winners, jockeys and owners past – Judger in 1974 comes to mind (not a strong crop of 3-year-olds, save Little Cur-rent). There are little bar tables with wicker seats that remind me of my high chair as a child, as well as pic-nic tables in the sun. It’s not too far to the rail, and I have become a rail-bird.

A guy near the hut was play-ing the guitar in between races and

asking horse racing trivia questions covering famous horses and races of the past four decades. I think he said he was a former handicapper for a New York newspaper. Last year I won a Gulfstream calendar answering a question (Exceller). This year I was busy betting and did not get to answer a trivia ques-tion – truth be told I did not know the answers to the questions – but even so a Gulfstream employee came by handing out calendars be-fore the last race.

As a young adult wannabe pro-fessional gambler I liked sitting in stands with excellent binocu-lars so I could see as much of the race as possible. But now that my horse racing diet is 99% simulcast-ing or online, I want to get as close to the horses and the race as pos-sible when I do get to the track.

Page 28: Stride2

28 STriDe magazine March 17, 2010

Of course, Gulfstream aided this choice by limiting the alternatives.

Watching a simulcast from Tam-pa Bay, the five horse had the lead down the backstretch and the nine, a longshot, was pressing with the rest of the field several lengths back. One of the fans apparently had the five-nine exacta box and was root-ing it home all the way around the far turn, calling it “nine to five, the working man’s numbers, nine to five. Come on, working man.” Alas, the nine got caught at the wire. The working man got hosed again.

Maybe I noticed because I am an escapee from a bitterly cold and snowy Nebraska winter, but I can’t remember the last time I saw a woman in heels in Nebraska. Not so the shoe board at Gulfstream, which had women wearing high heels all over the place, both in the fancy restaurant and with the un-washed under the thatched roof. Even the Budweiser girls, who I would have pegged for flip-flops, wore heels.

How I got to this point is a long story, but suffice to say that my handicapping specialty is front-runners on the turf. In the fourth

race, It’s Not For Love had every-thing I look for in a turf front-run-ner. According to my disarmingly simple yet proprietary method, It’s Not For Love displayed consistent-ly good turf speed in losing efforts last summer in New Jersey, facing allowance horses several cuts above the competition that the rest of Sat-urday’s field had been facing. There were no other early speed horses of note in Saturday’s race, but losing efforts after a wide trip last time and a misspotted short sprint the previous race, had darkened her

form to the point that she was 15-1 in the morning line. I made her 5-2, and told my circle of handicappers that she was my best bet of the year so far.

It was cloudy and windy on Saturday with scattered showers forecast. There was no evidence from her form that It’s Not For Love could even stand up in the mud, which was confirmed by my pad-dock companion pointing out that she had a broad foot suited for the lawn. I deferred to his opinion, as my knowledge of what race horses should look like is limited to see-ing four legs, no temper tantrums,

and from a contrary perspective, viewing sweat as a positive sign. (Michael Jordan sweated when he played basketball. Benoit Benjamin did not.) The rains held off and the race stayed on the grass.

The fourth race itself had little drama until midstretch. It’s Not For Love was faster and better than that field, and led by four lengths turning for home with nobody com-ing. But in midstretch she brushed the rail once or twice and appeared to try to jump in response. Jockey Paco Lopez, who despite his 3 for 71

record at the meet had ridden her competently several times in New Jersey, managed to stay on board and It’s Not For Love stayed clear to the wire, paying $23.80 to win. Yay!

The third race had been a wide open maiden claiming race on the turf. I was not close to having a selection in the race and would not have given it a second thought oth-er than its proximity to the fourth race, so I went through the third race again and nar-rowed it down to five contend-ers. One of them, Dreamed to Dream, wandered home in front at the ridiculous price of 80-1.

After It’s Not For Love won, I was alive to five horses in the Bet 3 (called a Pick 3 ev-erywhere else except Florida).

The smallest payoff was $8,000. The largest payoff was $34,000. Yikes!

I had thought the fifth race, a five-furlong turf dash, was full of early speed types so my five con-tenders that I was alive to were the horses I considered to be the five best closers. After thinking about it for less than a minute I decided that a hedge was appropriate. Since it was a short sprint, the most likely winners that I didn’t have would be the front-runners, rather than the inferior closers I had not used. I decided that if none of my five horses ran well I didn’t have any-thing to hedge, so I wanted to pro-

Page 29: Stride2

STriDe magazine March 17, 2010 29

http://simurl.com/ctown

Page 30: Stride2

30 STriDe magazine March 17, 2010

Upcoming graded Stakes Races

DaTe race grD TracK DiSTance

Mar 20 Honeybee S. iii Oaklawn Park 8.5 Furlongs

Mar 20 Santa Margarita H. i Santa Anita Park 9 Furlongs

Mar 20 San Felipe S. ii Santa Anita Park 8.5 Furlongs

Mar 20 inside information S. ii Gulfstream 7 Furlongs

Mar 20 Florida derby i Gulfstream 9 Furlongs

Mar 20 Bonnie Miss S. ii Gulfstream 9 Furlongs

Mar 20 rampart S. iii Gulfstream 9 Furlongs

Mar 20 Swale S. ii Gulfstream 7 Furlongs

Mar 20 Appleton S. iii Gulfstream 7.5 Furlongs

Mar 27 San Luis rey H. ii Santa Anita Park 12 Furlongs (t)

Mar 27 Santa Ana H. ii Santa Anita Park 9 Furlongs (t)

Mar 27 Fair Grounds Oaks ii Fair Grounds 8.5 Furlongs

Mar 27 Pan American S. iii Gulfstream 12 Furlongs (t)

Mar 27 Lane’s end S. ii turfway Park 9 Furlongs

Mar 27 Louisiana derby ii Fair Grounds 9 Furlongs

Mar 27 Mervin H. Muniz Jr. H. ii Fair Grounds 9 Furlongs (t)

Mar 28 New Orleans H. ii Fair Grounds 9 Furlongs

Mar 28 tokyo City H. iii Santa Anita Park 12 Furlongs

Mar 28 Orchid S. iii Gulfstream 12 Furlongs (t)

Mar 28 Sunland derby iii Sunland Park 9 Furlongs

Mar 28 Santa Paula S. iii Santa Anita Park 6.5 Furlongs

Apr 02 Fantasy S. ii Oaklawn Park 8.5 Furlongs

Apr 03 Skip Away S. iii Gulfstream 9.5 Furlongs

Apr 03 Central Bank Ashland S. i Keeneland 8.5 Furlongs

Apr 03 Carter H. i Aqueduct 7 Furlongs

Apr 03 Bay Shore S. iii Aqueduct 7 Furlongs

Apr 03 excelsior H. iii Aqueduct 9 Furlongs

Apr 03 Wood Memorial i Aqueduct 9 Furlongs

Apr 03 Santa Anita Park derby i Santa Anita Park 9 Furlongs

Apr 03 Apple Blossom H. i Oaklawn Park 8.5 Furlongs

Apr 03 Oaklawn H. ii Oaklawn Park 9 Furlongs

Apr 03 Providencia S. ii Santa Anita Park 9 Furlongs (t)

Apr 03 Potrero Grande H. ii Santa Anita Park 6.5 Furlongs

Apr 03 Arcadia H. ii Santa Anita Park 1 Mile (t)

tect against a second-place finish. I bet three of the front-runners on top in the exacta to my five horses in sec-ond.

Chihulykee, one of my closers (the $34,000 one at that) came storming down the lane and reached the wire together with front-runner Holly-wood Left. Watching the race from the 1/16th pole I thought Chihulykee had won by a nose, but on the slo-mo replay he appeared to have lost by a nose, and unfortunately for me that was the result.

There are big noses and little noses and this was a little nose. I did col-lect $2,500 on my exacta hedge, which along with the win bet on It’s Not For Love made for a great day of racing, but I was still left with the elusive feel of what might have been. Remarkably, the thing that struck me was not the miss by a nose when I managed to hook up an 82-1 shot, a 10-1 shot and a 39-1 shot in a Bet 3.

I hadn’t anticipated this before, but I now that my father is gone I was still betting an extra $5 to win on horses for him, and a $1 exacta box with the two favorites. He also liked tying up the same jockey in the double so if my selection is in the first two or last two races and that jockey has a mount in the other race, I get that double for him. I guess I wound up paying trib-ute to my father anyway.

The rest of the day was a blur – the good races on the card looked like they belonged to the favorites so there was not much of betting interest. I chilled with a Heineken, bet very lightly, and got in another big traffic jam leaving the track and mixing with the beach crowd headed back to I-95.

Missing the Bet 3 is awkward, be-cause it is a Pick 3. Framed by the purpose of the rest of my trip, it did make what would usually have been a successful day a little bit more gray. Maybe the Pick 3 miss stung a little more than usual. You have to endure getting nosed out for big hits if you bet horses long enough.

Long after I got back on the plane, the unintended and unexpected trib-ute to my father will remain – an extra $5 to win and an extra $1 exacta box, thank you. h

Page 31: Stride2

STriDe magazine March 17, 2010 31

http://www.simurl.com/youbet

Page 32: Stride2

32 STriDe magazine March 17, 201032 STriDe magazine March 17, 2010

Ph

OTO

: a

Lex

Ba

rK

OFF

/ec

LiP

Se S

PO

rTW

ire

Page 33: Stride2

STriDe magazine March 17, 2010 33 STriDe magazine March 17, 2010 33

full stride

Zardana, left, pink cap, looms boldly at the top of the stretch to overtake Rachel Alexandra, to her right, yellow cap, in the first running of the $200,000 New Orleans Ladies at Fair Grounds on Saturday, March 13, in New Orleans.

Not today,Rachel

Page 34: Stride2

34 STriDe magazine March 17, 2010

2010 KentucKy DerbyPower ranKings

Presented by horseracingnation.com

the Kentucky derby Power rankings are based on fan rankings at the HorseracingNation.com Web site. to learn more about these rankings and every derby prospect, click on this page to go directly to HorseracingNation.com.

Page 35: Stride2

STriDe magazine March 17, 2010 35

http://www.horseracingnation.com

Page 36: Stride2

36 STriDe magazine March 17, 2010

A tasteful tourof the Big Easy

From fine cuisine to Bourbon Street bars, robby albarado knows his way around new Orleans’ restaurant scene

Jockey Robby Albarado has more than 4,000 wins and was the recipient of the 2004 George Woolf Memorial Jockey Award.

Page 37: Stride2

STriDe magazine March 17, 2010 37

When he was 10 years old, Robby Albarado knew what he was des-tined to be. He grew

up in Lafayette, LA, about an hour outside of New Orleans, and used to visit the horse farms down the street. But it wasn’t just horses and hayfields he was interested in – it was the bush races, unsanctioned head-to-head races, with or without saddles, no helmets, no vests.

“I mean, if your horse didn’t stop, you jumped off,” says Albarado in the drawling Creole accent the Cajun boys are known for. His idols were legendary bayou boys: Randy Rome-ro and Eddie Dela-houssaye. “They paved the way for guys like me and Calvin [Borel],” he remembers. By the time he was 12, Robby was riding in those bush races, and he was hooked. “I won some of those races. Maybe a hun-dred or so.”

Twenty years later Albarado is a heavy hitter in the business. A far cry from his bush track record, he has won more than 4,000 rac-es, including the Breeders’ Cup Clas-sic and the Dubai World Cup. The horses he gets on daily are no longer pasture nags or half-broken babies; they’re superstars and champions. He’s been the regular rider of Horses of the Year Mineshaft and Curlin. Topping out his bevy of riding titles are seven from the Fair Grounds, in his native New Orleans. He is the only jock to have that honor.

Even though he calls Kentucky his home base now, New Orleans will al-ways be “home.”

“When I come back to New Or-leans it’s fun. I have friends here, family, trainers that I’ve ridden for for years that are still here. They know me, support me – it’s … unique.”

For Robby, part of coming back

to the bayou is enjoying family and food. He and his wife, Kimber, and their children Kash, Kaden and Lar-kin can usually be seen several times a meet at certain spots.

Their favorite place to grab a bite in the Big Easy? “Drago’s,” he af-firms. “They do these charbroiled oysters. Not only is that my favorite joint, that’s my favorite food. Any-time someone comes to visit or asks me where they should go to eat – I mean there are hundreds of places to eat – I send them to Drago’s.”

Family-owned and operated since the doors opened in 1969, Drago’s

has that family-run feel. It’s kind of run-down, but clean. It’s crowded and loud but still manages to feel very intimate. The menu is extensive at Drago’s, but people go for the oysters, which are caught fresh by the same family of fishermen who have been bring-ing in their oysters since the begin-ning. Even though there are two Dra-go’s in the vicin-ity, don’t expect to get seated without

a wait, and don’t try and go on Sun-days – they’re closed.

While you’re waiting for your table at Drago’s, whether in the crowded main room or the upstairs dining area, you’re sure to see a star or two waiting with you. “Everyone goes there,” Robby says. “Jocks, trainers, agents, owners. You can see the Saints and the Hornets there, too. When there’s a Hornets home game you can see half the team eating in there!”

If you’re thinking you’d like to go a little fancier (think ‘no shorts al-lowed’), Robby recommends Com-mander’s Palace, a Zagat favorite housed in a bright-blue Victorian mansion in the Garden District. The menu boasts a souped-up version of Louisiana favorites, and includes the Jockey Robby Albarado has more than 4,000 wins and was the recipient of the 2004 George Woolf Memorial Jockey Award.

Ph

OTO

: a

Lex

Ba

rK

OFF

/ec

LiP

Se S

PO

rTS

Wir

e

By Michelle Yu

‘anytime someone comes to visit or asks me where they should go to eat – i mean there are hundreds of places to eat – i send them to Drago’s.’– Robby Albarado

Page 38: Stride2

38 STriDe magazine March 17, 2010

oyster and absinthe “dome,” foie gras “du monde,” turtle soup, and pecan-crusted gulf fish. If they’re available, try the “milk and cookies,” which are beignet-battered Oreos (go big or go home, right?). Commander’s Palace is also a brunch place for the history books, so if you’re in the neighbor-hood take a meander through the unique streets that make up the Gar-den District and pop in for a meal that is sure to be remembered.

Rounding out Robby’s Top Three hot spots is GW Fins. “It’s a newer place, but the food is great,” Albarado promises. With a city so steeped in tradition, it’s not easy to be the new kid on the block, but GW’s pulls it off well. Located in the French Quarter, GW Fins is not your typical Quarter dive restaurant. It’s upscale, clean and well-lit. The bar is smaller but not lacking for anything, and the crowd is a good mix of Bourbon Street tourists and racetrack winners, all looking for a good meal.

Like the name suggests, the menu is seafood-heavy, but you can always find a nice cut of meat on the list. GW Fins prides itself on freshness and prints its menus daily according to what is at its seasonal peak. (And a word of advice: “Save room for the biscuits.”)

Between the stakes-laden weekends

of riding, family and overseeing the Robby Albarado Foundation, Robby has little time left over for an insane nightlife. He does have some favorite haunts, however.

“I like to stick to my own path when I go out at nights. You can go to the Quarter. There’s got to be a thou-sand bars there. I like the House of Blues – the Foundation Room.” Rob-by says that on any given night you can see jocks or backstretch workers roaming the streets of New Orleans. The younger riders gravitate towards the Quarter and the older generation more towards Metairie.

“The good thing about the Quarter: It doesn’t matter where you go. It’s all fun.” (This writers favorite? The Bour-bon Cowboy.)

Robby does have one off-the-beat-en-path recommendation: Dana’s. A few miles away from downtown,

Drago’s is the restaurant of choice for many racing insiders and local sports stars. Drago’s is famous for its charbroiled oysters – a favorite of Robby Albarado’s.

‘The good thing about the Quarter: it doesn’t matter where you go. it’s all fun.’– Robby Albarado

in Metairie, is a little sports bar. This hole in the wall is exactly what you picture when you hear the words “dive bar.” There’s a bar and two tables, but the only other place to belly up is at a seat in front of the Derby owners game. Beer is beer, and the bar food is what you expect, but this is the only place in New Orleans where you can “ride” against your favorite riders. There’s always some-one from the track, in a hat, a little incognito, playing horse racing video games. Come to New Orleans for the races, then make your own horse and beat out the meet-lead-ing rider in a virtual battle. I don’t know anywhere else you can do that.

While the Albarados are gracious hosts, if you haven’t wrangled an in-vite, Robby says try your luck at the Hotel Monteleone. This charming ho-tel is a member of the Historic Hotels of America and is fully engrossed in its past. From the black-tailed door-men to the marble floors and chan-deliers in the lobby, you will feel like you’ve stepped into the French Quar-ter of the 1800s – complete with high-speed Internet.

And a final word: If you only do one thing in New Orleans, Robby in-sists, “Get down to the French Quar-ter, rent a mule and carriage, and hear them tell you the history of New Or-leans.” Before Katrina, “most people took New Orleans for granted. I know myself I did,” he says. “I didn’t ap-preciate the city, the history, until we were under sea level.”

Now the city has a more contem-porary feel to it, with so many new homes and new neighborhoods, but stepping into a beast-drawn buggy has nostalgia written all over it. The tours vary in length and price, but you won’t get a better insight into NOLA or learn more about the city than you will from a buggy driver.

New Orleans in a nutshell? Come for the racing, take in some history, and grab a bite. It’s what a trip to the Fair Grounds is all about. h

Ph

OTO

: JO

na

Tha

n B

ac

hm

an

Page 39: Stride2

STriDe magazine March 17, 2010 39

http://www.oldfriendsequine.org

Page 40: Stride2

40 STriDe magazine March 17, 2010

it Runs in the FamilyLacey Gaudet succumbs to the lure of the racetrack

Ph

OTO

: c

OU

rTe

Sy L

ac

ey g

aU

De

T

lineage

‘Feeling the energy of a racehorse as it speeds along at 35 mph you while you balance your weight on tiny stirrups attached to a feather-light saddle is unparalleled.’

By Lacey Gaudet Part Two of Two

Growing up in the horse industry, my original dream had been to become a jockey. As I grew older, I realized this dream was slightly

out of reach, so I decided to aim for the next best alternative and I became an amateur jockey at the age of 17.

An amateur jockey follows the same pro-cedures as a professional jockey, except the racing weights are higher. In America the weights are rare and consist of a few races at various racetracks over the summer. Ama-teur riders are not allowed to be paid or col-lect money from race purses or they would become professional jockeys and lose their amateur status.

Race riding is a unique experience, and I’ll never forget my first race at Delaware Park, settling into the first post position in the starting gate and looking out onto the bare turf course and the grandstand along the stretch run.

Feeling the energy of a racehorse as it speeds along at 35 mph you while you bal-ance your weight on tiny stirrups attached to a feather light saddle is unparalleled. Jockeys are by far among the most under-rated athletes. Not many other sports have an ambulance standing by whenever the athletes compete.

When I was 18, I completed a barn test and a three-hour written exam and passed my trainer’s test. That summer, I took a division of my parents’ stable to a month-and-a-half- long meet at Colonial Downs in Virginia.

I took the next step toward my life goal that summer and ran horses in my name as trainer for the first time. With help from my parents, I ran a 12-horse stable.

On July 9, 2007, I saddled my first winner, a horse by the name of Becauseilikeit, with my own name as trainer in the program. With smiles from ear to ear, my younger sister and I posed in the winners’ circle with our proud parents watching from simulcast back home

Page 41: Stride2

STriDe magazine March 17, 2010 41

in Maryland. That day, and the rest of that summer, set in stone my love for this sport. I knew I would dedicate my life to the racehorse.

As I grew older, I knew that to become a successful trainer I had to build my resume and work for other trainers. I pursued jobs around the country, but I settled on a warm winter at Gulfstream Park for trainer Helen Pitts and a glorious summer at the premiere meet at Saratoga in upstate New York for trainer Allen Iwinski.

My winter with the Pitts stable was my first time away from home not working for my family. I gal-loped horses and helped prepare them on race day. I learned many different views on training. One of the best parts of that winter was being fortunate enough to be around a horse named Einstein.

He was a massive, black Brazil-

ian breed colt who was predomi-nantly a turf horse. Einstein was the smartest, most elegant horse I have ever had the pleasure to be around. After that winter, he won races on dirt and synthetic sur-faces and was nominated for the older male Eclipse Award.

That following summer, I be-came assistant trainer to Allen Iwinski at one of the most fa-mous, historic race meetings in the world. Anyone who loves horses or horse racing should vis-it Saratoga Race Course. The town itself is dedicated to the racehorse. Nearly every café and restaurant has menu items named after fa-mous horses or trainers.

My job for Iwinski was intense, with long hours and hard work. He was hard on me and expected a lot but I loved every minute. I give him full credit for instilling my habits of working hard, being

able to hold the toughest horses, and learning how to speak Span-ish.

On the last Friday of the meet, I saddled a beautiful gray gelding to our first and only victory. Al-though it was the only winner, I’ll never forget how rewarding it felt to walk into that winners’ circle alongside Stormy Mirage and greet his happy trainer and owner.

Though my travels have not all been happy days, I would never trade them for an afternoon in a college classroom or behind an office desk. I am blessed to have spent time with these successful trainers and powerful horses.

With the knowledge from my travels, I hope to discover my own winning training methods and re-turn with my own stable of horses. I plan to be like Helen Pitts and Al-len Iwinski, and someday become as legendary as my idols. h

lineage

magazineStrideStridemagOnline.com

Stride on Facebook

Stride on Twitter

FiND US ONliNEmagazine

Stridemarch 3, 2010issue no. 1

No One Said It Would Be EasyUptowncharlybrownon the KentuckyDerby Trail

Horses,Hurricanes

& GumboRachel vs.Zenyatta

Win an iPod Shuffle from Stride magazine!

Click on the photo to enter!