December 22, 2024

Benes crowned Handicapper of the Year at NHC 14n

Last updated: 1/26/13 9:47 PM











Benes won the $750,000 first-place prize at NHC on Saturday

(Harold Roth/Horsephotos.com)

Jim Benes of Countryside, Illinois, topped a field of 455 to
win the $750,000 first-place prize and an Eclipse Award as Handicapper of the
Year at the 14th annual Daily Racing Form/NTRA National Handicapping
Championship (NHC) Saturday
afternoon.

The 50-year-old Benes, a professional horseplayer, amassed
a winning score of $268.40 from 28 mythical $2 win-and-place wagers and two
mythical $4 win-and-place “Best Bet” wagers over the two-day tournament held at
Treasure Island Las Vegas.

Benes, who qualified for the NHC at Hawthorne Race Course,
was in second place at the conclusion of Day 1, and stayed at or near the top of
the pack throughout Day 2. Going into the NHC’s final race — Race 10 at Santa
Anita — Benes trailed eventual runner up Roger Cettina by $2.40. His $2 win and
place bet in that final race was on favored Hidethegoodstuff, who finished
second to Hail Mary and returned $3.60 to place, enough to secure a final winning
margin of $1.20 over Cettina, a Rumson, New Jersey, native, who received $200,000 for
his second-place finish.



“My mother passed away a few years ago,” Benes said. “Her name was Mary, and
when they were coming down the stretch of that last race and I heard a horse
named Hail Mary on the lead, I wasn’t sure whether it was my mom trying to tell
me ‘I’m here for you’ or ‘You should have bet on me!’

“The only other thing I have been able to think of since then is my
nine-year-old daughter. She’s going to be really happy and really proud of me
when I get home.”

Total winnings this weekend for Benes, including a $4,000
Day 1 bonus he received for registering the second-best score on Friday, were
$754,000.

Jeff Hartz of Runnells, Iowa, finished third at $244.00 to
collect $100,000. Richard Grose of Wentzville, Missouri, was the Day 1 leader, and
faded somewhat to finish fourth with $242.60. He will take home $75,000. Dan
Comoro of Tigard, Oregon, rounded out the top five at $196.00. That score was good
for $50,000.

The NHC 14 finals paid out to the top 40 finishers from a
total purse of $1.5 million. Including $295,000 paid out to top finishers in the
year-long, $295,000 NHC Tour, the aggregate payouts this weekend to contestants
totaled $1.795 million, plus travel and hotel awards.

The highest finish among the eight previous NHC winners at
this year’s event was recorded by NHC VI champion, Jamie Michelson, who checked
in 78th. No one has ever won the NHC more than once in the event’s 14-year
history.

By virtue of his victory, Benes also automatically earns an
exemption into next year’s NHC finals.

Full standings and results for this weekend’s NHC may be found at
ntra.com and
drf.com.

In its 14th year, the DRF/NTRA NHC is the most important tournament of the year for
horseplayers. There are no “buy-in” entries at the NHC. It is the culmination of
a year-long series of NTRA-sanctioned local tournaments conducted by racetracks,
casino racebooks, off-track betting facilities and horse racing and handicapping
websites, each of which sends its top qualifiers to the national finals.

More than 4,500 people signed up for the 2012 NHC Tour and
participated in these local tournaments, hoping to win a coveted spot in the NHC
Finals. Treasure Island will also host the “Wager to Win” tournament on Sunday,
offering two berths to the January 2014 NHC.