Bill Dwyre

Heatseeker to run with an older crowd at Hollywood Gold Cup

Saturday's Grade I race at Hollywood Park will feature the 5-year-old, one of the best thoroughbreds in the country, and several mature horses that show positive sides of racing.
Bill Dwyre
June 24, 2008
Since 1938, when Seabiscuit won, they have called this classic horse race the Hollywood Gold Cup. This year, they could just as well have gone with the AARP Invitational.

Saturday's $750,000 Grade I feature at Hollywood Park will showcase one of the best thoroughbreds in the country, being chased by the Geritol set. Picture Kobe Bryant going one on one with Dr. J. Or Federer serving to Borg.

Time marches on. Just a bit slower in horse racing.

When aptly named 5-year-old Heatseeker loads in the gate Saturday and glances right and left, he will see several father figures. He'll also probably smell lots of liniment and have to listen to whinnying about the good old days.

Although the field won't be set until Wednesday's draw, it could include the following equine elderly:

* Perfect Drift, age 9, making his 48th start.

* McCann's Mojave, 8, making his 35th start.

* Big Booster, 7, making his 45th start.

* Student Council, 6, making his 28th start.

They make a big deal out of experience in sports. Just this group would give 30 years of racing and 156 starts.

Of course, much of this could fall apart before Saturday. Things could get messed up at the rest home, or one of them could nap through a training session.

Matter of fact, it was even more of a senior citizens outing until Lava Man pulled out Sunday. The 7-year-old star had won the last three Gold Cups.

All kidding aside, this might be among the better positive stories in some time in horse racing.

After Barbaro went down in the Preakness in 2006, George Washington in the Breeders' Cup in '07 and Eight Belles in this year's Kentucky Derby, the public started to look more closely at the sport and, in many circles, concluded that, among its myriad problems was the current trend of breeding its stars to speed, fragility and a career that ended at age 3 en route immediately to the baby-making barn. Big stars from the Triple Crown circuit were quickly lost to the ticket-buying public.

With this Gold Cup field of ancient mariners, there has been plenty of time for the public to acquire some name recognition. The horse who Lava Man tied with his third straight victory last year, Native Diver, was so revered that he is buried in the paddock at Hollywood Park. Native Diver is the only horse to win the Gold Cup at age 8.

Richard Mandella, a Hall of Fame trainer who will saddle Perfect Drift, sees the positives.

"It's great when they stay around and race," he says. "It's better for the public. It helps them recognize the horses."

Jerry Hollendorfer, one of only four trainers to have saddled 5,000 winners, sees a different positive, even if his entry, Heatseeker, isn't one of the geriatrics.

"At least people can see that somebody is taking care of these horses," he says.

Perfect Drift and Big Booster have been gelded, so they have no breeding value. But Student Council and McCann's Mojave have not and have acquired a following by racing on.





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