It’s race time

It’s time to dust off the ratty tennis shoes, break out my scuffed up jeans and crappy T-shirts because this weekend Mom leaves for the track, which means racing season officially begins ­– for us anyway.

Sorry, I’ve been a little lax in this whole blog business. It’s been a busy month and I totally missed out on rattling off my take on the Kentucky Derby or the sad Preakness effort. I was rooting for Animal Kingdom, and pretty disappointed he missed a shot at the Triple Crown by just a length. I’ll circle back to that eventually.

In the meantime, I’m trying to wrap my head around this already an anomaly of a race season for the Rocking Diamond Ranch (that’s my parents, by the way). It’s a little different this year because it’s the first time in a long time I’m not in The Cities to meet Mom at the track when she gets there. Of course, I wasn’t around at all when I lived in California or as a kid when it was my job to stay home and take care of the horses …but still.

What is the same is what my mom will be up to. Every year, she packs up feed, tack, supplies, our race horses, horses she is training for other people, and a couple of pony horses.  She loads up the trailer and heads off to Canterbury Park in Shakopee, Minn.  She eventually moves them all to Iowa for the Prairie Meadows season where she will be until nearly October. Each year, the number of horses she has at the track varies. It can be anywhere from three to 15, which for one person, is quite a lot.

On the backside, there are dorm rooms built above the barns. The dorms are basically 10X10-foot cement block rooms. No air conditioning and communal showers. Mom makes it a home with a refrigerator, a twin bed and a little television. She always makes sure her room is close to her barn and she can see the horses from the single small window.

While there, she is up at 4 a.m. each day. She heads down to the barns to feed, clean stalls and ride once the training track opens up. She’s busy with all of that until mid-afternoon when it’s time to feed and pick stalls once again. On race days, she is busy working: either ponying, racing or helping other trainers, until after midnight. I wouldn’t call it glamorous but I’ve always admired my mom for what she does. She basically eats, sleeps, and breathes her horses for five months out of the year. She doesn’t just know about her horses, she knows everything about them, sometimes even better than they know themselves. Yet, she is always willing to learn, to hear other ideas and try something new. At the same time, her horses are her priority, her passion.  It’s a lot of hard work and it can be heartbreaking when it comes down to simply bad luck. Other times, entering that winning circle is a reminder of what dreams are supposed to be made of.

Of course, it’s no picnic for my dad either. He remains at home and cares for the horses and cattle left behind. They’re both pretty strong willed to do what they do, but it works.

For me, well, I just fill in somewhere in the middle. I help on race days and learn on training days when I’m there. If I go home, I either give my dad a break so he can visit Mom at the track, or I’m forced out of bed in the wee morning hours to go check cattle with him. I complain, but it’s almost always fun.

It’s our family’s official start to summer, even if this weather doesn’t want to agree.

Keeping an eye on the roses

I don’t like to watch the front of a race. I never do. Tomorrow, when everyone is watching the leaders round the Churchill turn, that’s when I’ll be looking to see who might be making their move from the back.

I don’t have a personal favorite in Saturday’s Kentucky Derby. I like to simply wish for a safe race for all and a good race to watch.

I like when a closer takes the win. It’s hard not to. That feeling of an underdog coming from behind; defying the odds to take the title; its horse racing’s biggest draw.

My style of race watching especially paid off in the 2009 Derby. I was watching the horses looking for a hole (a way to move up on the inside past the other horses), and I saw jockey Calvin Borel’s genius ride as he shot up a twig of space between horses for the win. I was watching the Derby with a few friends, and I remember yelling in spite of myself and pointing to the only gelding on the inside, telling them to “watch this one!”  

It was a risky move for sure, and one not many jockeys would have had the guts to make. I have to say, it is one of the reasons I like Borel and always have. Borel won the 2010 Derby on Super Saver and this year, he will be on the No. 3 horse, Twice the Appeal.

Here’s a link to the video of the 2009 Derby and Mine That Bird’s breathtaking run:

http://youtu.be/AjY-rrAoTl8

I don’t offer a lot of suggestions when it comes to betting in this blog, but I do recommend that come Saturday, your best bet is keeping an eye off the pack.

I need a Mucho Macho Man…

Well, maybe. But I’m actually talking about one of this year’s Derby contenders. You’ve got to love some of the names, and this one is one of my favorites. This year especially has some cute ones like Watch Me Go and Pants on Fire.

I liked Secretariat, Seattle Slew, and even the 2009 Homeboy Kris (why, I’m not sure why -  just did). Just for fun, here’s a couple of cutest or funniest names that have graced through the National Thoroughbred Association. Many of these I drew from EzineArticles.com.

  • Nutzapper
  • Tabasco Cat
  • Ghostzapper
  • Ready for Battle
  • Afternoon Deelites
  • I’m Feeling Tipsy
  • Lil E.Tee
  • Thunder Gulch
  • Funny Cide
  • Wrecked Em (1983)
  • Golden Shower (1955)
  • Bodacious Tatas (1985)
  • Date More Minors 
  • Lagnaf.
    I’ll give you a hint: it’s an acronym.

Derby draw tonight

Tonight’s draw in Kentucky made most of the trainers in Saturday’s Kentucky Derby fairly happy. According to reports, most walked away with the post, or close to the post, that they wanted. At any rate, it’s finally here.

Barring any late scratches, here is a look at the horses in this year’s Derby and their post position:

  • No. 1: Archarcharch
    No. 2: Brilliant Speed
    No. 3: Twice The Appeal
    No. 4: Stay Thirsty
    No. 5: Decisive Moment
    No. 6: Comma To The Top
    No. 7: Pants On Fire
    No. 8: Dialed In
    No. 9: Derby Kitten
    No. 10: Twinspired
    No. 11: Master Of Hounds
    No. 12: Santiva
    No. 13: Mucho Macho Man
    No. 14: Shackleford
    No. 15: Midnight Interlude
    No. 16: Animal Kingdom
    No. 17: Soldat
    No. 18: Uncle Mo
    No. 19: Nehro
    No. 20: Watch Me Go

The Derby post time is at 5:24 p.m. Central Standard time,