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Los Alamitos Futurity
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Los Alamitos Futurity
The Los Alamitos Futurity is a Grade II American Thoroughbred horse race for two-year-olds run over a distance of one and one sixteenth miles (8+1⁄2 furlongs) on the dirt held annually in early December at Los Alamitos Race Course in Cypress, California. The event currently offers a purse of $200,000.
The inaugural running of the event was on 29 November 1981 as the Hollywood Futurity and was won by Stalwart whose $365,805 winner's share was one of the largest in the history of American racing.
The event was upgrade to the highest classification of Grade I event in 1983. That year, the race had a total purse of $1,049,725, making it the first million-dollar race for two-year-olds and the richest Thoroughbred horse race at the time.
Between 1985 and 1990 the event was run at a shorter distance of one mile.
With his win in 1987, Tejano became the first two-year-old to achieve career earnings of $1 million.
The 1989 winner Grand Canyon won his fourth straight event and was undefeated winning by 6+1⁄2 lengths in a fastest time ever set by a two-year-old of 1:33 flat.
In 2006 the event was run on a new synthetic Cushion Track which was installed at Hollywood Park.
In 2007 the race name was changed to the CashCall Futurity under a sponsorship arrangement with the racing stable owner and founder of the CashCall consumer lending company, J. Paul Reddam. Reddam's Slow Down Andy won the 2021 edition of the event.
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Los Alamitos Futurity
The Los Alamitos Futurity is a Grade II American Thoroughbred horse race for two-year-olds run over a distance of one and one sixteenth miles (8+1⁄2 furlongs) on the dirt held annually in early December at Los Alamitos Race Course in Cypress, California. The event currently offers a purse of $200,000.
The inaugural running of the event was on 29 November 1981 as the Hollywood Futurity and was won by Stalwart whose $365,805 winner's share was one of the largest in the history of American racing.
The event was upgrade to the highest classification of Grade I event in 1983. That year, the race had a total purse of $1,049,725, making it the first million-dollar race for two-year-olds and the richest Thoroughbred horse race at the time.
Between 1985 and 1990 the event was run at a shorter distance of one mile.
With his win in 1987, Tejano became the first two-year-old to achieve career earnings of $1 million.
The 1989 winner Grand Canyon won his fourth straight event and was undefeated winning by 6+1⁄2 lengths in a fastest time ever set by a two-year-old of 1:33 flat.
In 2006 the event was run on a new synthetic Cushion Track which was installed at Hollywood Park.
In 2007 the race name was changed to the CashCall Futurity under a sponsorship arrangement with the racing stable owner and founder of the CashCall consumer lending company, J. Paul Reddam. Reddam's Slow Down Andy won the 2021 edition of the event.