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Hollywood closes its doors on 75 years of history
"Well, I made history. I won the last race and got the last set of days (he received a three-day suspension from the stewards earlier Sunday) at Hollywood Park. Kind of bittersweet," Nakatani said. "That was really emotional. It's hard to really say that much. This has always been such a great place to be. After winning a bunch of races here, it's hard to see it go. It's pretty sad."
Before the 11-race card was completed some 5 1/2 hours after it began, California Chrome, the 2-1 favorite, became the last stakes winner in Hollywood Park history, rolling to a 6 1/4-length victory in the $200,500 King Glorious, which was restricted to two-year-olds bred or sired in California. Owned by breeders Steve Coburn and Martin Perry, the son of Lucky Pulpit is trained by Art Sherman, who has spent nearly 60 years at Hollywood Park as an exercise rider, jockey and trainer.
It was the fourth stakes win of the autumn meet for Espinoza, tying him with Rafael Bejarano and Corey Nakatani for the lead among riders. "It's fun to win the last stakes here. One extra memory of Hollywood Park. I've had a lot of ups and downs here, but this is where I started," Espinoza said. "When I moved to California, this is where I won my first race. I've won a lot of big races at this track."
"With the conclusion of the final meet, we'd like to express our thanks and gratitude to all employees, horsemen, jockeys, owners -- past and present -- and, most of all, our loyal customers who have helped make Hollywood Park an extremely special place," Hollywood Park President Jack Liebau said. Shared Belief, a two-year-old gelded son of Candy Ride, was definitely the star of the climactic meet, rolling to impressive wins in the Grade 3 Hollywood Prevue on November 10 and the Grade 1 CashCall Futurity on December 14. Owned by a large partnership that includes radio and television personality Jim Rome's Jungle Racing LLC and his Hall of Fame trainer Hollendorfer, Shared Belief was a unanimous selection as Horse of the Meet in the annual media poll, was chosen top two-year-old and two-year-old male, and established himself as the early favorite for the 2014 Kentucky Derby. The other Grade 1 winners during the season, which began November 7, were Streaming, who was honored as the two-year-old filly of the meet after taking the Hollywood Starlet on December 7 at 10-1 for Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert; European shipper Seek Again, who rallied along the rail to capture the Hollywood Derby on December 1; and Egg Drop, who battled back gamely the same day to defeat Discreet Marq by a nose in the closest Matriarch in history. Owned by breeder Juddmonte Farms, Seek Again gave John Gosden his first Hollywood Derby success in 30 years. Long one of the best trainers in the world, the English-born Gosden won with the brilliant filly Royal Heroine in 1983. Other top horses at the meet include Broken Sword, who led throughout to take the December 7 Bayakoa Stakes and was honored as three-year-old filly; Blueskiesnrainbows as older male; and Majestic Stride, who won the Grade 3 Vernon O. Underwood Stakes Nov. 28, as sprinter. Seek Again and Egg Drop won double honors. Seek Again was three-year-old and three-year-old male while Egg Drop was older female and female turf horse. In a close vote, Julio's Gold was selected claimer after winning against $16,000 stock on November 24 before stepping up to the $25,000 level and winning on turf December 20. Glen Hill Farm and the partnership of Mike Pegram, Karl Watson and Paul Weitman shared the top spot in the owners' standings with four wins. The partnership headed by Jungle Racing LLC, Hollendorfer and George Todaro led with earnings of $375,000. Hall of Famer Bob Baffert won his second autumn training title in a row -- and fourth overall -- finishing with 16 wins, one more than John Sadler, who led the 2013 spring/summer meet. Although he had to settle for third in the King Glorious, Bejarano won four times Sunday, clinching his sixth local riding title and second at an autumn meet. He finished with 37 wins, three more than runner-up Joe Talamo, who doubled on the final day. Bejarano, who shared the 2013 spring/summer title with Edwin Maldonado, was also the earnings leader ($1,684,618). "It feels great to win the title," Bejarano said. "It means a lot to me. When I came back to the winner's circle (after winning the 9TH with Ashley's Bambino), I could hear everyone cheering and I was just so happy." Gonzalo Nicolas, who won nine races, was chosen apprentice. Bet Horseracing Free Online at TwinSpires.com
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