"If they don't (switch back to a dirt main track), they'll see the quality of racing continue to decline," Baffert said. ". . . I'm probably going to go somewhere else next year. . . A lot of my clients, they don't want to come back."
Starting in 1997, Baffert won seven straight training titles at Del Mar. Not since Farrell Jones, in the 1960s, had a single trainer dominated the turf by the surf for such a long haul. But since 2007, when Del Mar marched to the ill-advised synthetic-track mandate by the California Horse Racing Board, Baffert's owners and the trainer himself have frequently groused about the hand they were dealt. One of Baffert's clients, Ahmed Zayat, had a public shout down with Joe Harper, the CEO of Del Mar, after which Zayat ordered Baffert to move all of his Del Mar horses to Saratoga.
Before this season, Baffert had saddled 86 stakes winners at Del Mar, more than anyone. Immediately and well behind him in the standings were four Hall of Fame trainers--Charlie Whittingham, Ron McAnally, Bobby Frankel and Wayne Lukas. But before Richard's Kid and El Brujo, Baffert was on the schneid in stakes wins this summer, had won but seven races and was winning at only an 11 per cent rate. He complained that the Del Mar surface played different virtually every day. "I'm sitting on good horses here, but I can't risk this surface," he told the San Diego newspaper.
But with the Pacific Classic being run for the 20th time, it would have been criminal for even Baffert to leave Richard's Kid in the barn. The son of Lemon Drop Kid and Tough Broad (and if that isn't a mating made in Damon Runyon heaven, I don't know what is) won the stake last year, a 24-1 shot waking up on the big day while the favorites Rail Trip and Colonel John failed to fire. Richard's Kid had won only one of six starts since then, but was still the second choice in a Pacific Classic that was vanilla, from top to bottom. The Usual Q.T., the favorite even though all of his wins had come on grass, led until mid-stretch before finishing fifth.
An hour later, Baffert had entered three horses in the Pat O'Brien, but scratched everyone but the right one. His entire career, El Brujo has been running on synthetic surfaces one place or the other, and he was fourth, absent the cleanest of trips, in the Bing Crosby Stakes at Del Mar a month ago. Among others, he beat Smiling Tiger, winner of the Crosby, in the O'Brien. Won't you come home, Bob Baffert, won't you come home? Del Mar is moaning, the whole day long. . .



30 Aug 2010 at 06:21 pm | #
Now, for this week’s installment of Beyer Speed Figure Shenanigans:
In the Travers, Afleet Express runs 10 furlongs over the dirt at Saratoga in 2:03.28, and gets 105 Beyer Speed Figure.
In the Pacific Classic, Richard’s Kid runs 10 furlongs over the polytrack at Del Mar in 2:03.27, and gets a 95 Beyer Speed Figure.
So Richard’s Kid ran a faster final time over an inherently slower surface, yet according to Beyer was 7 lengths worse than Afleet Express.
No, there is no East Coast Bias at the DRF.
30 Aug 2010 at 07:13 pm | #
The late Jimmy Kilroe once said: “Figures lie and liars figure.”
02 Sep 2010 at 03:08 am | #
Ah, yes. Ahmed Zayat and Bob Baffert. The duo who got into a shouting match with Del Mar’s Joe Harper because of their dislike for the “slow” Polytrack back in 2007. Their 2YO colt Maimonides, a $4.6 million yearling, was promptly scratched from Del Mar’s opening day on Polytrack after the public argument that year and shipped to New York—where he made exactly two starts on the dirt at Saratoga before he was retired due to injury after never making it past his 2YO season.
Baffert can bluster all he wants, but he ain’t going anywhere. And neither is Del Mar’s Polytrack. Thank God.
The reported 5 Polytrack deaths at Del Mar this season is MUCH better than the reported 16 dirt deaths at Del Mar in 2006, wouldn’t you agree? Saratoga’s dirt has claimed several lives this year (Timber Reserve on 9/1 being the latest), and led to the premature retirement of the exciting 2YO colt Kantharos (owned by Jess “plastics-hater” Jackson), who shattered his sesamoids while working on the dirt on 8/30. Another horse broke its shoulder and was euthanized on the Monmouth Park dirt last week—the same track where Miss Woodford Stakes contender Whoopi Kitten broke down badly and was euthanized on 8/28.
Where is the outrage about the dirt deaths in this country? They are conveniently ignored, while every hiccup on Del Mar’s surface (of which there are, thankfully, few) is reported ad nauseam.
Synthetics are saving lives. NOTHING is more important than that. No, not even the great Bob Baffert.