The seven-race Thursday card at Golden Gate Fields wasn’t all that interesting from a gambling standpoint but boy am I glad I went out there to see it. 

The facility is way better than it looks on TV.  On the eastern shore of San Francisco Bay, Golden Gate is a big, old racing plant with great character and beauty.  Built in 1941, the track experienced a few decades of success during a period when people actually went to go see horse races.  That time is gone, of course.  And soon this place will probably be gone too.

Unlike many similar-sized thoroughbred race tracks facing extinction however, Golden Gate seems to be at least making an effort to retain the few patrons bothering to show up.  The place was clean and orderly.  Staffers were friendly and helpful.  Things worked.  Drinks were served.  Somewhat creative food was prepared.  The paddock was well kept and accessible.  There was no discernible surface bias. Track announcer Michael Wrona may be the best of any at his craft.  I was impressed with everything about Golden Gate Fields.  Except for the racing.  Short fields of low-priced claimers made it a yawn to handicap. 

The one exception was a specially created race for an old horse based in Southern California named Awesome Gem (pictured above).  Since Gem’s connections have made it known they’d like to run in the April 28th San Francisco Mile at Golden Gate, the track’s racing secretary constructed a race to serve as a prep for Gem over the local surface.            

Consistent rain over the last week or so forced the race’s removal from the grass but the synthetic main track surface is considered turf-like in its qualities which left Gem and the balance of his rivals in this field out of the scratch column.  To make it all more intriguing, Awesome Gem was ridden by the legendary 53-year-jockey Russell Baze (pictured above). The far-and-away all-time leader in wins by a jockey, Baze had only ridden Awesome Gem in two of the gelding’s 47 lifetime races coming in.  Gem’s go-to rider David Flores was down the coast at Santa Anita Thursday with more lucrative riding assignments. 

To see Baze ride Awesome Gem to a half-length victory in such a beautiful setting felt special to me.  Baze has racked up most of his 11-thousand plus wins against soft company but it doesn’t matter.  He’s a towering figure in the sport.  Awesome Gem is no slouch either.  He’s won more than $2.7 million in a racing career spanning six years.  Now 9-years-old, Gem made his debut as a three-year-old in July 2006.  He’s run in four Breeder’s Cup races.  He finished third in the BC Classic the year it was run at Monmouth.  His preferred surface?  It’s hard to say.  He runs over all of them although has never won on grass. 

Attendance was announced at 984.  It was six bucks to get in.  The track lists seating capacity at 14750 but it looked a lot bigger than that.  

Just before the seventh and final race, I bumped into my pal Fairgrounds Jimmy (the brother of Steelers Fan Mike).  It’s a small world isn’t it?  We watched the finale together.  I think my confidence in a first-time starter pushed Jimmy’s wager away from the eventual winner.  Oops. 

A complementary shuttle service took a dozen of us broken down horseplayers to the North Berkeley Bart station after it was over. 

We had dinner Thursday night at Razan’s Organic Kitchen in downtown Berkeley.  A “Free Bradley Manning” sticker was affixed prominently at the entrance.  The Jordanian Wrap (falafel and cauliflower) was superb.  We took a stroll through the beautiful Cal campus after dinner. 

This afternoon, it’s the Giants home opener before returning to New York tomorrow.

We went back to the ballpark Wednesday afternoon for the series finale of A’s/Royals.  The Coliseum day-of-game window sells $2 tickets on Wednesdays.  The assigned location of those seats is way out by the foul poles and in the upper outfield deck.  Not bad for two bucks.  My Dad and I roved around a bit, sitting an inning here, a couple innings there. 

The sun came out in spots and the predicted rain never panned out.  A chilly wind whipped up late but overall, it was a nice day for baseball by the Bay. 

This contest had a wild ending.  You could see it coming.  After scoring a go-ahead run in the top of the 12th inning, the Royals sent out their 300 pound (plus) closer Jonathan Broxton.  The big guy had been up and down in the bullpen at least four times.  Jacket on.  Jacket off.  For over an hour during the four-hour and ten-minute game, Broxton got hot – and then he sat down in the teeth of cold Oakland gusts.  He threw a bunch of warm-up pitches in the bullpen but never looked comfortable.  The threat of live game line-drives down the first base stripe can create an uneasy feeling for a guy in the bullpen here.  His back is to the action.  Some clubs install a lookout guy with a glove to guard the pitcher. 

Anyway.  Broxton waddled out to the mound in the bottom of the 12th and set down the first A’s batter with his mid-90’s heat.  Young Royals shortstop Alcides Escobar then botched an easy Seth Smith grounder and it all went downhill for Broxton from there.  He walked the next two batters.  It was bases jammed for Coco.  Crisp hit a weak grounder to second, which plated the tying run.  That left men on second and third for new A’s slugger Yoenis Cespedes.  I thought Broxton would intentionally walk the Cuban defector.  Instead, he plunked him.  Same difference.  So, in stepped Gomes.  The first pitch from Broxton was up and in on the bulky left elbow pad of Gomes and the game was over.  Because of the Escobar error, none of the runs were earned.  But this was a big meltdown by the big Royals closer.  

Using data from Baseball Reference, the Yahoo baseball writer Kevin Kaduk reported that this was the first time back-to-back plunks ended a game since 1966.

Broxton’s size is such now that it may no longer work to his advantage.  It may be just a matter of time before Greg Holland supplants Broxton as the Royals ninth-inning guy.   

I kinda thought Broxton would end up as the Met closer when he lingered on the free agent market last winter.  Now I guess I know why he got just the one-year deal for four mil from the Royals.

Attendance was announced at 12390.  It was a spirited crowd despite its size.  Fans are allowed to blow horns and bang on drums.  The counterculture that you see outside the ballpark in these parts very much drifts into its sporting venues.  Especially for baseball at the Coliseum, where cost doesn’t necessarily exclude the 99-percent like it may across the Bay.   

All eyes in Oakland this season are on Yoenis Cespedes, the 26-year-old outfielder from Cuba.  Everyone in baseball was surprised that it was Oakland who landed the 5-10, 210 pound slugger after he defected to the D-R a year ago.  The A’s offered 4 years, $36 mil and that was enough to get a guy with massive power and skill. 

When you look at how Cespedes is built physically, it’s impossible not to wonder whether performance enhancers were part of the equation as he matured as a player in Cuba.  He’ll have to pass MLB drug tests here and I’d think it’s possible Mr. Moneyball may have at least explored the matter during the recruitment process.

As Cespedes settles in as a big league player, he’ll likely be asked to avoid the temptation of swinging at bad pitches.  During the two games we saw him, Cespedes waved at balls way out of the zone.  His swing is really sweet though.  Long and fluid backed by a Sosa-in-his-prime-like frame, Cespedes has been putting on shows during batting practice.  If only the A’s had someone to protect him in the lineup.  With a guy like Gomes batting behind him, Cespedes will not see much in the way of meaty offerings. 

After the game, we hit Shan Dong on 10th Street in downtown Oakland.  The Mandarin restaurant’s “Special Shan Dong Dumplings” were excellent homemade creations filled with pork and cabbage.  Staffers packaged large delivery orders in the center of the dining room and two women prepared buns near the front of the store. 

-Tuesday’s A’s loss referenced here yesterday was the first rain-shortened game at the Coliseum since May 4, 2005 (according to the San Francisco Chronicle).