HORSE RACING / BILL CHRISTINE : Malibu Winner Diazo Favored in San Fernando - Los Angeles Times
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HORSE RACING / BILL CHRISTINE : Malibu Winner Diazo Favored in San Fernando

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Trainer Mel Stute can speak from experience about how tough it is to sweep the three-race Strub series at Santa Anita.

Stute went into the 1986-87 series with Snow Chief, the Preakness winner and champion 3-year-old colt of 1986, but he was unable to win the first two legs, finishing second behind Ferdinand in the Malibu Stakes and getting outrun by Variety Road and Broad Brush in the San Fernando.

“Those first two races might have been too short for my horse, but then he won the big one,†Stute said.

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In the 1 1/4-mile Strub, Snow Chief beat Ferdinand by a neck for the last major victory of his career, with Broad Brush finishing third.

Those were the days. The Strub series brought together archrivals Ferdinand and Snow Chief, respective winners of the Kentucky Derby and Preakness, and when Broad Brush shipped out to California from Maryland, Santa Anita got the horse who had finished third in both of those races, too.

This year’s Strub series is flimsy by comparison. From a thin crop of 3-year-olds--Prairie Bayou, who was destroyed after being injured in the Belmont Stakes, probably will be voted division champion--the seven-furlong Malibu on Dec. 26 had only one starter who ran in a Triple Crown race, and Sunday’s field for the 1 1/8-mile San Fernando is not any deeper. Diazo, fifth in the Kentucky Derby and winner by a half-length in the Malibu, will be favored, and other than River Special, a leading 2-year-old in 1992, the other 10 starters are belatedly trying to build their reputations.

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Stute says that his Bat Eclat’s chances are as good as anybody’s. “I thought he ran a big race in the Malibu,†Stute said. “He closed a lot of ground, this race is longer, and I think he’s capable of doing a lot better.â€

Eight lengths behind and in last place after a half-mile in the Malibu, Bat Eclat finished fourth, beaten by less than four lengths. The 3-year-old gelding, a California-bred like Snow Chief, has taken a left turn under Stute, returning to dirt for the Strub series after a campaign last year that was mostly on grass.

Bred and owned by Robert and Barbara Walter, Bat Eclat was sent to Stute last fall to run on grass in the California Cup Mile. But because of a technicality--he had been scratched by a veterinarian from a race at Bay Meadows the week before--he was not permitted to compete.

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Two weeks after the Cal Cup, Stute ran Bat Eclat for an $80,000 claiming price at a mile on grass, and he won with a closing rush, paying $67.40. His time of 1:34 was the same as Megan’s Interco’s winning time in the Cal Cup.

Sticking to the turf, Bat Eclat won two allowance races before running in the Malibu, which was his first dirt assignment since last winter at Golden Gate Fields, where Noble Hay II did the training.

“We’re excited about his chances and we’ll be down for the race,†Barbara Walter said by phone Thursday. The Walters own Vine Hill Ranch, a 550-acre spread 60 miles north of San Francisco, where Battonier, Bat Eclat’s sire, and their three other stallions stand, along with dozens of broodmares.

The Walters bought Battonier, winner of the 1978 Illinois Derby, for $60,000 from a Preston Madden dispersal, and from his first crop in California they got Charmonnier, who was 28-1 when he beat Best Pal, at 2-5, in the 1991 Cal Cup Classic at Santa Anita.

Like Bat Eclat, Charmonnier is a gelding. Barbara Walter said that her husband, despite being a prominent breeder, still gelds many of their horses because he believes that there is an oversupply of stallions in California.

“You’ve got to have a lot going for you to win important races,†said Robert Walter, who bought Vine Hill 10 years ago. “You need a superior horse, you need money and patience, and you’ve got to have all the luck in the world.â€

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Unlucky has been River Special, who won the Del Mar Futurity, the Norfolk at Santa Anita and the Hollywood Futurity in 1992, then was sidelined for most of last year, including the Triple Crown, because of a splint injury.

Here’s the post-position order for the San Fernando:

Nonproductive Asset, Nancy’s French Fry, Vegieman, Goldigger’s Dream, River Special, Bat Eclat, Diazo, Stuka, Del Mar Dennis, Pleasant Tango, Goldigger’s Dream and Zignew. Diazo and Stuka, both owned by Allen Paulson, will run as an entry. Diazo will carry 120 pounds, Goldigger’s Dream 118 and the rest 116.

Since it began in 1952, only five horses--Round Table, Hillsdale, Ancient Title, Spectacular Bid and Precisionist--have swept the Strub series.

Horse Racing Notes

Eddie Belmonte is the last jockey to win the San Fernando in successive years. Starting in 1969, Belmonte won the stake three times in a row, counting his dead heat with Autobiography against Triple Bend in 1972. . . . Chris McCarron, who won last year’s San Fernando with Bertrando, will be riding Zignew in the $200,000 race Sunday. . . . Bill Shoemaker, who trains Diazo, was Spectacular Bid’s jockey when they swept the Strub series in 1980. Shoemaker rode eight San Fernando winners. . . . Pleasant Tango will be making his first start since a fifth-place finish in the Breeders’ Cup Classic.

Another race on Sunday’s card is the filly division of the $100,000 California Breeders’ Champion Stakes. At 121 pounds apiece, Dezibelle’s Star and Private Persuasion are the highweights in the 12-horse field. . . . On Monday’s Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, Santa Anita will run the $150,000 Santa Monica Handicap for fillies and mares. . . . In Santa Anita’s three-race series for 4-year-old fillies, Mamselle Bebette, who won the La Brea Stakes, will try for the second leg today in the El Encino. The series finale will be the La Canada on Feb. 5. Taisez Vous swept the races in 1978, as did Mitterand in 1985.

Peteski, the Canadian horse of the year for 1993, has been retired to stud. Winless in the United States, Peteski beat Kentucky Derby winner Sea Hero and Belmont winner Colonial Affair in the Molson Million at Woodbine. A training injury resulted in Peteski being scratched from the Breeders’ Cup Classic at Santa Anita in November. . . . Several tracks, including Aqueduct, gave up to the winter weather Friday, and racing was also suspended on Thursday and Friday at Gulfstream Park, where the temperatures have been about 80 degrees. After one race was run Thursday, Gulfstream’s jockeys voted not to ride. They said that the track was a muddy mess after rain earlier in the week.

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