Zenyatta always gives something to remember
Aug 2nd, 2010 | By admin | Category: Champions, Racetrack ReportsGene Williams
Del Mar Thoroughbred Club
DEL MAR, Calif. – Do you remember where you were when … ???
It’s always been a popular pastime for Americans in recalling momentous occasions, and in Thoroughbred racing where wagering is a major factor, jockey Mike Smith is betting he can place thousands, maybe millions, where they were and what they were doing on Saturday, Nov. 7, 2009.
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Benoit Photo
Zenyatta and jockey Mike Smith parade before one of her recent races.
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That’s when Zenyatta, who seeks her 18th consecutive victory in Saturday’s Clement L. Hirsch Stakes and third straight in the race, wrote history by becoming the first female to win the Breeders’ Cup Classic. The thousands at Santa Anita that day and, doubtless, the millions watching on television surely would testify to Smith’s belief.
Remembering how the Santa Anita crowd responded to the majestic Zenyatta, Smith could only say, “I think people realized that they had just seen something that they will never forget.” And he counts himself among them, though he was involved far more than any other fan, being up close and personal as Zenyatta’s rider.
“I’ve never seen a crowd react to a horse like that,” Smith continued. “When I rode Holy Bull, the crowds — especially those in Florida — were impressed, but I’ve never seen a whole crowd stand on its feet like that for what seemed like 20 minutes. It just went on and on, and I started looking at the crowd and there were people crying (for joy).”
Looking back over his 14 races as regular jockey of the two-time Eclipse Award champion older female, Smith recalled that she wasn’t always the picture of the perfect lady. “When we started,” he said, “she was still pretty nervous and she didn’t know exactly what was going on. But she was a quick study and it didn’t take her long to figure it out.
“Not only did she figure it out,” he continued, “she took it to levels I had never seen before. It’s become a big show to her. Every time she gets ready to run, she plays, she strikes a pose, she does a dance, and sometimes stands up and towers over the field.
“You can almost imagine her saying, ‘This place is mine,’” said the ebullient Smith.
“It’s just amazing how she grew into this,” he added. “If she was a country music star, she could be Entertainer of the Year.”
Her special dance that charms paddock fans began to develop, Smith recalls, shortly after his second time aboard, at the same time Team Zenyatta, headed by trainer John Shirreffs, chose not to put her through normal pre-race warm-ups. Instead, she was allowed to just do what made her feel best, hence the dance — basically, a strut that features a head bob and legs thrust forward in the manner of a Russian dancer.
“She used to get a little hot when she’d warm up,” Smith remembers. “So we just walked her and that’s when she decided she’d just do this dance. Then when she realized the people liked it, she just started doing it more. She’s really just a ham at heart.”
That doesn’t mean she’s not focused on her job — to win races. When she reaches the gate, Smith says, she’s all business — but in a laid-back way. “She just settles down and waits for the gate to open. Then she watches them go out and goes out behind them.”
As for getting home first, Smith said, “It’s like she knows where the wire is anymore. She makes it a little closer than we all like sometimes. But I think we’re the only ones that are worried.
“She’s definitely a gift from God. She makes you think that if God wanted to get into this game, he would send her. She’s not from here.”
Zenyatta’s presence has reached far and wide, conjuring wonderful visions of her other-worldly being, not the least of which was produced rhapsodically by free-lance writer Ellen Parker following Zenyatta’s record-setting 17th consecutive victory in Hollywood Park’s Grade I Vanity Handicap.
Here’s her take on the majestic mare: “Zenyatta’s dramatic charge in the Vanity brought to mind the words of respected journalist Kent Hollingsworth, who once wrote of 1971 European Horse of the Year Mill Reef: ‘His races were not marked by sudden acceleration, just with relentless, increasing power.’
“Great horses have much in common. They stir the spirit of crowds … They energize a sport …”

