For some, the term “racino” brings to mind everything that
is wrong with horse racing today: in states where tracks are built merely as an
inconvenient necessity to acquiring a gaming license, not much effort is put
into maintaining the physical plant or providing fans with top quality racing.
Sunland Park in New Mexico seems to be bunking that trend, and certainly over
the past years has grown in terms of its importance as a testing ground for
3-year-olds intent on national prominence. For local fans, Sunland Derby Week
has become the second biggest event in the El Paso area (only surpassed by the
Sun Bowl), with a series of festivities leading up to record
attendance and record handle on track.
Dustin Dix, Director of Racing Operations at Sunland Park,
graciously agreed to answer some questions I posed to him about the track’s
rising prominence on the Triple Crown trail, and future expectations for New
Mexico racing.
VG: Over the past three years, more Classic winners have
emerged out of the G3 Sunland Derby than the Santa Anita Derby and Wood
Memorial combined—a pretty amazing fact considering the history of those races.
Congratulations! What factors do you attribute for the rising prominence of the
Sunland Derby as a Triple Crown prep race?
DD: We have kept our
date of the race pretty consistent over the years (the last Sunday in
March). We spend a lot of money
maintaining our dirt track, and Sunland has been a very progressive place to
work. We are accredited by the NTRA Safety Alliance; this shows the owners and trainers of Triple Crown
candidates that we are serious about the quality and integrity of racing. We have tweaked the Sunland Derby by changing
the distance (at the suggestion of horsemen including Bob Baffert) and by adding
more money to the race.
VG: Certain trainers and owners have gravitated to Sunland
as a stop on the Derby and Oaks trail over the past several years—WinStar, Bob
Baffert, and George and Lori Hall and their trainer Kelly Breen certainly come
to mind. Is there some special connection that draws each of them to Sunland?
How do you, as a director of racing, develop interest among owners and trainers
to make the trip that seems a little off the beaten path?
DD: In the early years of the WinStar/Sunland Derby, we always
took good care of any owner’s or trainer’s needs, and they were treated very
well. Before we were a graded race it
was difficult to get high quality horses in the Sunland Derby, but we’d
send letters to horsemen who had 3-year-olds with graded earnings telling them
about the bonus they would receive if they won the Sunland Derby. Now that we are graded, trainers must send
their best. Yet, we are always working
to improve the exposure of our big race. Florida horses are ones that we are
trying to target, but West Coast trainers have been very supportive of our
racing program, particularly Bob Baffert who has been a great ambassador for
Sunland Park.
VG: How special was Mine That Bird’s Kentucky Derby success,
and what did it mean for Sunland?
DD: A lot of our success for the Sunland Derby can be
credited to Mine That Bird, trainer Chip Woolley, and owners Dr. Leonard Blach and Mark
Allen. If they had shipped to Lone Star
and run in the Lone Star Derby instead of the Kentucky Derby we probably won’t
be talking about the Sunland Derby. The MTB camp had enough guts to run in the
Kentucky Derby, and he showed he wasn’t a fluke by his performance in the
Preakness and Belmont. Now we have a non-smoking simulcast room that is called
the Mine That Bird Room where much of his memorabilia is displayed, and there’s
a statue of MTB as you walk into the main entrance. Last season we had a Chip Woolley bobblehead
day as well.
VG: In past years, the Sunland Park Oaks has also produced
some outstanding fillies—multiple G1 winners Island Fashion, Tough Tiz’s Sis,
and Gabby’s Golden Gal, to name but a few. This year Plum Pretty followed up
her dominating Sunland Park Oaks performance with an impressive win in the G1
Kentucky Oaks. Why isn’t this race a graded stakes yet? Do you think Plum
Pretty’s win can help propel the race forward like Mine That Bird did the
Sunland Derby?
DD: We are disappointed that the Sunland Park Oaks has not
been graded. I went to the graded
stakes meeting in Lexington several years ago, and what they are looking for is
more depth for the race. We have had
some great fillies win the race, but we need better quality, top to
bottom. There seems to be a lot of 3-year-old filly races around the same time as our race and our purse is only
$200,000. We are trying to pursue
sponsorship to increase the purse of the Oaks in hopes of attracting more quality.
VG: The record-setting New Mexico-bred Peppers Pride
certainly generated a lot of excitement with her undefeated 19-race win streak,
and brought a much attention to New Mexico racing. How long do you think it
will be before we see a New Mexico-bred seriously contest the Kentucky Derby?
How has New Mexico breeding and racing been changed by the subsequent success
of Sunland-raced horses in recent years?
DD: The overall quality of our racing program has improved
dramatically over the past ten years.
Our horsemen go to other states and compete very well—at Remington, Lone
Star, and Prairie Meadows to name but a few.
I am not sure if or when a New Mexico bred will seriously contest the
Kentucky Derby, but this next season will be my tenth at Sunland Park, and if I
had told my boss when I was hired that we would have a horse run here and then
go on to win a Breeders’ Cup race (Thor’s Echo), the Kentucky Derby (Mine That
Bird), the Kentucky Oaks (Plum Pretty) and the Belmont (Ruler on Ice), I would
have been randomly drug tested. The
results of these races show that anything is possible.
We have a great team here at Sunland. Our owner Stan
Fulton, GM Harold Payne and our racing managers are passionate and care about
horse racing; we take a lot of pride in the success of Sunland horses. I
like to think Sunland Park is a good blueprint for what a racino should do to
improve the racing product. We spend a lot of money on improvements, and
it has had a positive result with the quality of racing, field size, handle,
and breeding in New Mexico.
Mine That Bird statue at Sunland Park, courtesy of Sue Bronx |
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