Japanese trainer Terunobu Fujita has visited Santa Anita to get the lay of the land ahead of his historic participation in the Santa Anita Derby on April 8 with Mandarin Hero.
Fujita, 46, will be the first trainer from Japan’s National Association of Racing (NAR) circuit to start a horse in the US when Mandarin Hero goes postward for the G1 contest.
Comprised of regional tracks that race mostly on dirt, Japan’s NAR circuit can boast huge prize-money and massive crowds – especially at the Tokyo City Keiba, or Ohi as it is more familarly known.
However, the NAR is generally considered the nation’s second-tier circuit, a notch below that of the more prominent Japan Racing Association, which races mostly on turf.
Mandarin Hero was a perfect 4-for-4 last year as a two-year-old and in one start this year was a fast-closing second in a 1.800-metre (1m1f) stakes race on Feb. 23. All five of his races were run at Ohi.
The city-centre venue and Santa Anita have had a ‘sister track’ relationship going back decades. Each October, Santa Anita partners with Ohi to hold a ‘Japan Family Day’ featuring the Grade 3 Tokyo City Cup; in turn, the Japanese track hosts a ‘Santa Anita Week’ with the featured race being the Santa Anita Trophy.
In 2018, a program was implemented where horses at Ohi could earn qualifying points for the Santa Anita Derby through designated races – a series dominated by Mandarin Hero.
While enjoying the races trackside on Saturday, Fujita said: “It was my dream to have a horse run in the Santa Anita Derby. I knew right after Mandarin Hero’s maiden win I wanted to come to Santa Anita.”
This was not Fujita’s first trip to Santa Anita. In 2010, just as he was opening his stable in Japan, he spent a week at Santa Anita “to look around and study American racing”.
Mandarin Hero is slated to touch down at LAX on March 29 following a 10-hour direct flight from Tokyo via US Equine. Presuming there are no issues with quarantine, Mandarin Hero should be on the grounds at Santa Anita by noon on March 31.
Owned by Hiroaki Arai, Mandarin Hero is a dark brown colt from the first Japanese crop of Shanghai Bobby, North America’s champion two-year-old male of 2012. Shanghai Bobby spent his first five seasons at stud in Kentucky before being sold to Japanese interests in 2018.
Fujita said Arai was initially hesitant to send Mandarin Hero to the US. “I asked the owner at the end of last year, ‘Can we go to Santa Anita?’ He didn’t want to come,” Fujita recalled. “But after Mandarin Hero’s last race, he said ‘let’s go.’
“It was big news in Japan,” Fujita added. “I’m very proud of that.”
Through his first five starts, Mandarin Hero’s running style has been to come from off the pace. In the Santa Anita Derby, Fujita plans to use a jockey from the local colony.
“He has really good acceleration in the final stretch,” Fujita said. “I think he probably cannot handle the early pace, but he really likes to chase down other horses.”
If Mandarin Hero were to finish first or second in the Santa Anita Derby, he would likely earn enough qualifying points to move on to the Kentucky Derby. “That would be a dream come true,” Fujita said.
The Santa Anita Derby will be part of a blockbuster card on April 8. Also scheduled are the G2 Santa Anita Oaks and G2 Charles Whittingham on turf.
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