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L.A. mayor,
Antonio Villaraigosa says Breeders' Cup should be at Santa Anita every other
year Louisville, Ky.— Nov. 7, 2011 -
On a sparkling Kentucky fall afternoon, Los Angeles Mayor Antonio
Villaraigosa stood in a Breeders' Cup winner's circle in the shrine
of horse racing and didn't pause to proclaim that his metropolis can
do better by staging the event routinely at Santa Anita.
It's what politicians do.
Chris Quinn, Santa Anita's vice president of sales and marketing,
said that "politically" it might be best not to interrupt
negotiating momentum to place the 2013 Breeders' Cup at Belmont Park
in New York, but the Santa Anita contingent is nonetheless pushing
Breeders' Cup officials to make the Arcadia track the event's home
every other year starting next year.
For a second consecutive year, Churchill Downs allowed horse
racing's richest two days to thrive.
The Breeders' Cup drew the second-largest two-day crowd in the
event's 28-year history, with 105,820 packing Churchill Downs with
colorful hats, sharp suits and grand dreams to strike it rich in
mammoth pick-six offerings as longshots hit often.
"Coming off last year, a huge year with the greatest interest ever
in the Breeders' Cup, these numbers are solid," Breeders' Cup
spokesman Jim Gluckson said.
The 2010 event at Churchill Downs was sold on the interest in
Zenyatta's bid to win the Breeders' Cup Classic and retire unbeaten.
Zenyatta finished second, but 114,353 swarmed the track that weekend
and a record $163,619,784 was wagered at Churchill in those two
days.
This year's figure was $155,525,947, a 4.9% decrease, and betting on
Breeders' Cup races was down 5.1% from last year.
Strong horse racing is a near guarantee with the Breeders' Cup,
which will come to Santa Anita next year after two years in
Kentucky.
What the event needs, Villaraigosa said to The Times and Breeders'
Cup officials in a private suite meeting Saturday, is an injection
of the Hollywood star power cache, California's usually beautiful
weather in early November, and the grand boost of major sponsors in
town.
"I'd like to see [Santa Anita] as a permanent home," Villaraigosa
said.
Villaraigosa said he has had three to four meetings with Breeders'
Cup executives during the year.
He was accompanied by Santa Anita executive Greg Avioli and
California Horse Racing Board Executive Director Keith Brackpool for
Saturday's informal talks.
Breeders' Cup officials are intrigued by the idea of placing the
event at Santa Anita on the every-other-year rotation, but they
would like the personable Avioli to preside over the talks, keeping
Santa Anita czar Frank Stronach's role limited.
read more:
LA Times
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