Published Saturday, August 29th, 2015   ( 8 years ago )

Stable Notes
August 29 2015

By Hank Wesch
 

 
IN A TRANSITION YEAR, BUSINESS AS USUAL FOR RAFAEL BEJARANO
 
With two wins Friday, the second aboard Patriotic Diamond in the  $150,000 Generous Portion Stakes, Rafael Bejarano enters the final eight days of the meeting with an eight-victory margin over Joe Talamo atop the rider standings and tied with Gary Stevens with five stakes scores.
 
A fourth straight Del Mar riding title may not be in hand but it is looming on the horizon. And if it happens, it would be another in a long string of meeting championships since the 33-year-old became a regular on the Southern California circuit.
 
Bejarano swept the riding titles at all five major Southern California race meets in 2008, his first full year in California. Subsequently, he won the jockey championship at the Santa Anita winter/spring meeting seven consecutive times through 2015 and has secured the Del Mar championship each year since 2012 with win totals of 52, 46 and 42 and margins over the runner-up of nine, 18 and 10.
 
In light of those facts, you might ask “So what else is new?” The answer: his agent, Tora Yamaguchi.
 
Yamaguchi, 38,  worked for the past 14 years in the racing office and was the assistant racing secretary at Del Mar through the 2014 season and said he thought it might be a lifetime career. But when Bejarano’s longtime agent, Joe Ferrer, decided to retire, Yamaguchi decided to make a career change.
 
“(Ferrer) had been talking about retiring for awhile, we’d developed a relationship over the years, and it sort of all came together when he did,” Yamaguchi said. “I knew it was an opportunity that if I let pass one time it wouldn’t come back.”
 
Yamaguchi reports that Ferrer is “playing tennis every morning and watching over his grandchildren,” while Tora walks the backstretch beat.
 
Yamaguchi took over Bejarano’s book near the end of the Santa Anita meeting, after completing commitments in the racing office there. The summer here,  his first  full-time major meeting as an agent, was a litmus test for him.
 
“It’s a very competitive business and I didn’t want to take anything for granted,” Yamaguchi said. “I knew I’d have to work hard every day to keep things going. It was tough for us the first couple weeks, but we kept at it and we’re thankful for the support of the horsemen that got us through.”
 
Asked how he’s managed to win so many meet titles, Bejarano cites the hard work of his old and new agents and the support of the horsemen. A better assessment might be that of former jockey and Jockeys’ Guild representative Darrell Haire.   
 
“I think it’s his discipline,” Haire said. “He works hard. He loves to interact with the fans. He’s very motivated all the time. He’s got a good way about him and he’s got a positive attitude all the time.
 
“He gets his sleep and takes his job seriously and he’s a good example of what a rider should be. He enjoys life but he’s disciplined when it comes to his job.
 
“He’s had great people behind him. Joe Ferrer was a great agent and they worked well together. Now with Tora taking over – Joe planned it that way – and they’ve just continued and carried on the same way.”
 
After Patriotic Diamond’s Generous Portion victory, trainer Patrick Biancone referred to Bejarano as “the best rider in town.” Again.
 

 
BIG BOOK FACES BIG CHALLENGE IN SUNDAY’S TORREY PINES
 
Undefeated (3-for-3) Big Book, winner of the $200,000 Fleet Treat Stakes on July 25, faces the biggest challenge of her young career in multiple graded stakes winning Stellar Wind in Sunday’s 38th running of the Grade III $100,000 Torrey Pines Stakes for 3-year-old fillies.
 
Stellar Wind has victories in the Grade I Santa Anita Oaks, Grade II Summer Oaks and Grade III Santa Ysabel Stakes while earning $493,200 from six lifetime starts. Big Book has earned $178,400 from three starts for owner George Krikorian.
 
“You certainly have to give all kinds of respect for (Stellar Wind),” said Tim Yakteen, trainer of Big Book. “But our filly is training very well and we expect she’ll run a good race.”
 
The field from the rail: Stellar Wind (Victor Espinoza, 6-5), Big Book (Rafael Bejarano, 5-2), Roksana (Felipe Valdez, 8-1), Rattataptap (Tyler Baze, 3-1), Hone In (Mike Smith, 12-1) and Ultimate Holiday (James Graham, 10-1).
 

 
HEY CLONES: JIM ROME MAY HAVE ANOTHER HIGH PROFILE RUNNER
 
Radio and TV sports  talk show host Jim Rome, whose racing endeavors have included a partnership in 2014 TVG Pacific Classic winner Shared Belief, was in the stable area Saturday morning with his 10-year-old son.
 
“I now have a piece of the filly Stays In Vegas, who’s going to run in the (Grade I $300,000) Del Mar Debutante,” Rome said. “She worked this morning and I wanted to come out and meet her and watch her move.”
 
Stays In Vegas worked five furlongs in 1:01.60 for trainer Jerry Hollendorfer, who is looking to saddle three runners in the Debutante – Songbird, Surfside Tiara and Stays In Vegas. Songbird worked 6 furlongs in 1:13.20 on Tuesday, Surfside Tiara went five furlongs in 1:01.20 Saturday morning.
 
Rome was asked for his thoughts about American Pharoah in Saturday’s $1.6 million Travers Stakes at Saratoga.
 
“I don’t know how you beat him right now,” Rome said. “Other than the big mare (Beholder) I don’t see anybody who can do it.”
 

 
TWO SCRATCHES TRIM EL CAJON FIELD TO FIVE
 
The Saturday morning scratches of  Iron Fist and Verraco reduced the field for today’s 41st running of the El Cajon Stakes to five.
 
Iron Fist, a Kentucky-bred son of Tapit trained by Jerry Hollendorfer, last raced on August 1, finishing fourth in the West Virginia Derby at Mountaineer Park. He was the 3-1 second choice on the morning line to 4-5 favorite Gimme Da Lute.
 
Verraco, a Kentucky-bred son of Old Fashioned trained by James Cassidy, has two wins from seven starts but has been off since May when a well-beaten fifth to El Cajon rival Fame and Power. Verraco was 15-1 on the morning line.
 

 
WHAT’S IN A NAME – EL CAJON STAKES
 
The El Cajon Stakes, a nod to the city bordering San Diego to the east, has been since 1973 the major main track stakes for 3-year-olds of the meeting. In 1986, Tasso added an El Cajon victory to the 1985 Del Mar Futurity and Breeders’ Cup Juvenile on his stakes resume.
 

 
CLOSERS – Back-to-back wins by Gangnam Guy ($13.00) and Minster’sadventure ($4.60) in Friday’s fourth and fifth races boosted trainer Jerry Hollendorfer’s total to 18 for the meeting, opening a four-win advantage over Peter Miller atop the trainer standing. Hollendorfer, who will saddle four on Saturday’s program, and Miller, who has five, were co-champions of the 2014 meeting with 20 wins each … Selected works from 165 officially timed Saturday morning: Tara’s Tango (5f, 1:00.60), Swipe (5f, 1:01.00), Surfside Tiara (5f, 1:01.20), Stays in Vegas (5f, 1:01.60), Ralis (5f, 1:02.00), Uzziel (4f, :49.20), Taris (4f, :48.00), Sammy Mandeville (4f, :48.40) and Gomo (4f, :49.80).
 

 
DEL MAR STATISTICS
 
Jockey Standings
(Current Through Friday, August 28, 2015 Inclusive)
Jockey Mts 1st 2nd 3rd Win% Money Won
Rafael Bejarano 172 32 34 23 19% $2,095,974
Joseph Talamo 152 24 13 13 16% $1,382,928
Tyler Baze 172 22 24 26 13% $1,352,980
Flavien Prat 145 20 22 22 14% $1,680,094
Santiago Gonzalez 137 19 13 17 14% $1,095,996
Mario Gutierrez 104 18 10 10 17% $1,051,086
Martin Garcia 116 16 12 14 14% $1,055,810
Corey Nakatani 72 15 9 4 21% $679,026
Kent Desormeaux 81 14 10 11 17% $733,874
Tiago Pereira 85 11 7 6 13% $475,560
 
Trainer Standings
(Current Through Friday, August 28, 2015 Inclusive)
Trainer Sts 1st 2nd 3rd Win% Money Won
Jerry Hollendorfer 73 18 8 9 25% $1,121,622
Peter Miller 106 14 17 14 13% $1,040,560
Doug F. O'Neill 88 13 17 11 15% $1,054,640
Philip D'Amato 66 12 9 9 18% $870,732
Richard Baltas 59 12 6 12 20% $608,388
Bob Baffert 52 10 8 8 19% $804,320
John W. Sadler 44 10 4 5 23% $521,084
Robert B. Hess, Jr. 47 10 1 6 21% $292,972
Mike Puype 64 9 4 8 14% $526,160
Mark Glatt 51 8 4 7 16% $394,590
 
Winning Favorites Report
(Current Through Friday, August 28, 2015 Inclusive)
Winning favorites 82 279 29.39%
Winning favorites on dirt 61 192 31.77%
Winning favorites on turf 21 87 24.14%
Winning odds-on favorites 16 33 48.48%
In-the-Money favorites 164 279 58.78%
In-the-Money odds-on favorites 30 33 90.91%
 

 
Contact: Dan Smith 858-792-4226/Hank Wesch 858-755-1141 ext. 3793