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Hal Hargrave
5/12/15 Santa Anita
Sports
Word Count:
It takes a lot to sell somebody on a sport that they know nothing about and may not find
entertaining.
It's no secret that men dominate the professional sports realm as athletes. But, contrary to
popular belief, there are women out there that truly know their stuff, even on a sport
dominated by male jockeys.
Imagine the love some men have for their favorite sports and times that by ten. That
amount of love, passion and knowledge you will find in a woman at horse racing track
who will teach any man a thing or two.
Nestled above the paddocks (small enclosure where horses are kept or exercised) of both the
Santa Anita and Los Alamitos race tracks, you will find a woman sitting in a stationary
chair delivering knowledgeable words to horse racing fans, but her mind is moving at a
mile a minute.
Michelle Yu races into action every race day by delivering her opening/morning spot for,
Race Track Network, alongside her counterpart Millie Ball.
Yu will make anybody a fan of horse racing. Just get to talking to her for a few minutes
or, if anything else, find your eyes reading to the end of the story and you'll find yourself
out at the track sometime soon.
Yu is a prime example of why horse racing can be argued as the most accessible sport
that there is.
“There is no other sports in the world that offers you the access that horse racing does,”
Yu said.
Yu will let anybody into her world that is willing to listen.
“Any time that I can, I try to educate someone on horse racing,” Yu said. “If I see
somebody around here that does not know something, then I will talk to them. I will take
them to the paddock, take them to pet a pony and take them to the winner’s circle if they
want. I will do anything possible to make somebody love horse racing.”
Yu’s day at the track begins around horses before she even reaches the track.
Yu, an owner of “quarterhorses,” has them stabled at Whittier Narrows where she wakes
up and tends to them, even on race days at Santa Anita or Los Alamitos.
Yu, who lives in Orange County, comes directly from Whittier and heads up into her
secret bathroom, in which she gets cleaned up for her day ahead and the start of her
simulcast.
“The simulcast is broadcast to the Race Track Network (RTN), any simulcast network
and is in-house over the loudspeakers at the racetracks,” Yu said.
The opening takes place 30 minutes before the first post (race) of the day. Yu and Ball
provide knowledge to horseracing fans on what to look for in particular horses in the
variety of races at the track each day. Yu and Ball do a quick two-minute spot, as well, 16
minutes prior to each post, which gives time for bettors to hear their knowledge and go
put in their bets.
“Before each race, Millie and I come on and talk about who we like in the race and why,”
Yu said. “We talk about seeing the horses work in the morning, we review morning
workouts and we talk about conversations that we had with jockeys or trainers. We will
talk about how the last time we saw horse if it freaked out in the paddock and flipped
over.”
Yu and Ball’s insight is valuable if you are a general fan who wants to throw down a few
bucks, or if you are a pick-six player looking for picks.
“We want to tell you and show you what you can see and also what you can't see about a
horse,” Yu said.
After Yu’s morning spot, she heads back upstairs into the press box where she will seek
out her favorite lunch delight, chicken tenders. After taking down her lunch and watching
the first race of the day up in the box and maybe talking to anybody who is wanting to
learn some horse-racing knowledge, she will head back down to her post, by the paddock,
for the rest of the day.
Yu’s knowledge of horse racing and exceptionality on camera came at a young age and
her roots are to thank for that. She was born on May 3, 1982, raised by her parents,
George and Valerie, as well as her stepdad Barry, in Southern California.
Yu grew up around her younger brother Chris and older half-sister Tambi.
Yu fell in love in horse racing when her dad brought her to track when she was 10 years
old.
“There was picture of a racehorse in the L.A. Times when I was 10 and every week after
that I would make sure to cut out the sports section of the newspaper,” Yu said. “Every
day I would cut out the charts on the horses and paste them all over my room. I still have
four scrapbooks of charts and stuff I cut out from horse racing in the paper.”
Yu loved horses and loved the fact that people just talked about horses and thought it was
amazing.
Bien Bien was the horse that really got Yu into horse racing at young age after she saw a
beautiful picture of him in a magazine and fell in love with him.
Bien Bien was an American Thoroughbred racehorse bred by William S. Farish III &
William S. Kilroy and raced by Trudy McCaffery and John Toffan. He won eight stakes
races during his career, including four Grade I events. He set a course record of 1:57.75
for 1¼ miles while winning the 1993 Hollywood Invitational Turf Handicap. He also ran
second in the 1993 Breeders' Cup Turf to winner Kotashaan.
Yu loved to ride horses and at 11 years old she started taking riding lessons and started
doing show jumping shortly after.
Yu went to Garey High School in Pomona and was a cheerleader in high school.
Yu’s childhood loves were ponies and pigskins, as she was raised a big Patriots and Bears
fan.
Yu’s father, George, passed away when Yu was 18 years old, but Yu managed to keep a
strong head on her shoulders due to having such an influential and positive upbringing
around her loving father.
In 2003, the Kentucky Derby was on Yu’s 21st birthday and her mom paid for her and
her best friend, Sarah, to go to the Kentucky Derby.
Funny Cide was the horse that won the Kentucky Derby that year. Funny Cide is a
thoroughbred racehorse that won the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness Stakes in 2003.
He was the first New York-bred horse to win the Kentucky Derby and the first gelding to
win since Clyde Van Dusen in 1929.
Yu and Sarah had got bumped off some flights going to Kentucky, so the airlines gave
them credits to fly again. So, the two went back a year later to see the Kentucky Derby
again.
“When I went back out to Louisville for my second Kentucky Derby, I was at a bar the
night of the Derby with my friend Sarah and she was talking to a couple (Jeff and Jessica
Sullivan),” Yu said. “Sarah came back to me and said that the couple said that I could
live with them ongoing if I moved back to Louisville. So, I ended up calling them when I
got back home and told them that I would be coming out to live with them.”
After going back to the Derby the second time, Yu said she was going to come back two
weeks later and if she found a job she would go live there with the Sullivans. So, she
came back two weeks later and within three days she found a job and already.
Yu found a job, in Louisville, at Wet Willie’s bar after she ‘BS’d’ her way to get the job,
by knowing what the ingredients in a Colorado Bulldog were.
“Back at a bar that I worked out here in California, Diamond Billiards Club in Brea, I had
met some gamblers at the bar that I would give them horses to bet on all the time,” Yu
said. “One day they had asked me what I wanted to do for a living, and I told them that I
wanted to be on TV. I wanted to be Charlsie Cantey. One of the gamblers knew a guy by
the name of Tony Allevato at TVG (Television Games Network) and referred me to
him.”
Tony Allevato was the executive producer at TVG, at the time and gave Yu a job as a
personal assistant. Yu as a P.A. would get coffee for people, run around forms and place
bets for people.
“When I was moving to Kentucky I had that connection already made at TVG and knew I
would be working a little bit,” Yu said.
HRTV (Horse Racing Television) and TVG used to be the two big horse racing networks,
until four months ago when TVG bought HRTV.
In June 2004, Yu drove out to Kentucky in her U-Haul and showed up one day at the
Sullivan’s front door and they welcomed Yu into their home with open arms. Yu lived
with the Sullivans for a year and a half.
Yu started working at “Wet Willie’s” and “Main Street Lounge” bars.
Yu thought she should get enrolled in school, so she enrolled that University of
Louisville as an Equine (Horse) Business major, in September 2004.
“They did not have journalism at Louisville, so I thought I wanted to do
communications,” Yu said. “Because I was an out-of-state transfer, getting classes was
very tough, so I was on the long track to graduate and I opted to do Equine Business
because it interested me.”
Yu had taken her horse, which was once stabled at Bonelli Park in San Dimas, out to
Louisville in anticipation of riding him for the school's equestrian team. There was a
police officer who used to run patrol at Wet Willie’s, Officer Mattingley, and he had a
place for Yu to stable her horse.
“I had an off-track thoroughbred horse, “Nansstar”, that I had bought myself,” Yu said. “I
got him when I was 18 years old and he was $1500. I had put down $500, my mom put
down $500 and a friend, that worked at Disneyland (Eric) with me, put down $500.”
Yu eventually paid back her mom and Eric and “Nansstar” was the first horse that Yu
could call her own.
When Yu was going to go out to for the equestrian team, a girl asked her Yu if she
thought that she could ride a horse well. Yu responded with, ‘Of course I can ride.’ The
girl then said to Yu, ‘Why don't you go out for the polo team?’
“Her name was Lauren Hexton and she was starting a polo club at the school,” Yu said.
“We called her Hexton the Texan.” The first day that we had practice, they purposely put
me on a horse that was a little hot and fresh and I handled myself really well. I ended up
falling in love with the horse. The horses name was Magwa.”
Within four months of Yu moving to Louisville, she had gotten a job, made friends,
enrolled in college and joined the polo team, a sport in which she had never heard of
before. Needless to say, the 22-year-old Yu was adventurous.
“Me and this girl Hailey Miller, who was from Kansas, were the two that really started to
love the Polo club a lot,” Yu said. “We started to go and play every single day and I
ended up getting a job at a farm where there was a polo team, called Hardscuffle.”
Yu worked for the Hardscuffle coach who was also the club pro, David Zeliger.
“I was traveling all over, playing for the college and actually playing for the polo club at
Hardscuffle,” Yu said. “I went to Florida and Saratoga to play with my own string (One’s
own set of polo ponies).”
A game of polo is divided into four or six chukkas. One chukka is seven minutes of play.
A proficient player needs at least one horse per chukka.
“A pro might have two horses per, but as you get more of your own horses you are able
to play more often,” Yu said. “David provided me with the horses to play, but as I started
getting more into polo, I started getting my own horses so I could have my own string.
I got one horse for free and made her (trained her) myself off the racetrack. Then I got
another off the racetrack and broke him in and traded him for a little made mare (An
adult female horse or other equine). I had one given to me (Cecil, I still have him. He's
like 30) and one I bought.”
Yu essentially stayed enrolled in school so she could continue to play polo. After she was
too old to play she opted to take life a different direction, while still staying in Kentucky.
Yu bounced around from Louisville and Lexington, while she was still working for TVG.
She went to Saratoga every summer, Florida or New Orleans in the winter, all while
working for TVG.
“We went everywhere for racing and we were just following racing throughout the year,”
Yu said.
In 2008, Yu worked for trainer Steve Asmussen for a summer in Saratoga.
“We had Curlin and Rachel Alexandra around the barn, right before Curlin went to Dubai
to take down the Dubai World Cup,” Yu said.
Curlin is an American Thoroughbred racehorse and the highest North American money
earner with over US$10.5 million accumulated. His major racing wins include the 2007
Preakness Stakes, 2007 Breeders' Cup Classic, and 2008 Dubai World Cup.
Rachel Alexandra is a retired American Thoroughbred racehorse and the 2009 Horse of
the Year. When she won the 2009 Preakness Stakes, the second leg of the Triple Crown,
she became the first filly (female horse under the age of four) to win the race in 85 years.
At TVG, Yu worked as a personal assistant and worked her way up to a stage manager
and a field production worker. Yu worked alongside TVG reporter Jill Byrne , who was a
huge mentor to Yu.
Yu got to go to Japan for a jockey challenge and to the United Kingdom’s Royal Ascot
for TVG.
Horses were life to Yu and she regards Zenyatta (Thoroughbred racehorse, winner of 19
consecutive races in a 20-race career) as one of the horses who changed the face of
horseracing for a lot of people.
However, getting to meet Goldikova is one of the best things that Yu has ever got to
experience.
Goldikova is a champion Thoroughbred race mare (Female race horse) based in France,
although she has raced in the USA and England. She has won 14 Group One races, with
nine victories over colts and geldings. Goldikova is the only horse to win three Breeders'
Cup Mile races, winning it in 2008, 2009 and 2010. Olivier Peslier rode Goldikova in all
of her race starts.
“I never get star-struck, but if I get the chance to meet a famous horse I get giddy like a
small child,” Yu said.
Yu had started working for TVG and Jill and her had split up, opting Yu to make a
change to come back to the West Coast.
“TVG is based out of California and I had a job offer to work full time if I came back to
California,” Yu said.
Anna James has been Yu’s camera woman ever since she started working at TVG as a
reporter. James has become Yu’s best friend in the process and speaks openly about her.
“Once Michelle came in to TVG, she was reporting a lot, so I got scheduled to work
alongside of her many times because she was the talent on hand most the time,” James
said. “She can be very loud and she doesn't even know it. She will be singing in the
paddock and everybody around will be looking at her.”
Yu had another opportunity in the sports industry when she came back to California. So,
Yu stopped working for TVG and started working for Fox doing high school football in
2012.
“I think that she can move on to any sport if she wanted to, but I do not see her leaving
horse racing,” James said. “She is great on TV.”
After a short stint with Fox, Yu found herself back in horse racing at Santa Anita Park
the place where she fell in love with horse racing at a young age.
“I got approached by (former Santa Anita Chairman) Mark Verge, from Santa Anita
racetrack, who was trying to bring in new blood to the sport,” Yu said. “He wanted me to
do some fluffy hits. More or less, an in event hosts that people see up on the jumbotron
doing interviews with fans and attractions inside the venue.”
While Yu was doing that, her current boss, Amy Zimmerman approached her about doing
simulcast for the races at Santa Anita and Los Alamitos and Yu took the offer. At the
time, Zimmerman was the executive producer of HRTV.
“Before each race, Millie (Yu’s on air counterpart) and I come on and talk about who we
like in the race and why,” Yu said.
Yu will provide insight if one is a general fan that wants to throw down a few bucks on a
race, or if one is a major pick six player, the difficult task of choosing the winning horse
in six consecutive races, looking for picks. Yu wants to tell and show someone what he or
she can and can't see about a horse.
“If somebody were to ask me why they should listen to my picks I would say, ‘Why
not?,’” Yu said. “I don't care somebody listens to my picks or not, everybody has
different goals as a handicapper.”
Yu has different goals that she tries to achieve while reaching people through her pre-race
spots.
“My goal isn't to give you or the viewer every winner of every race, because if I could do
that I would be rich,” Yu said laughing. “My goal is to try to get you to think of a horse
that you may have never even thought of before. There might be a horse that walks into a
race at a 17-1 odds and I would give you a good reason why I think you should maybe
look at him. He might not be able to win the race, but he might finish second, third or
fourth and pick up the pieces.”
In a male-dominated sport, at times it may be tough for a woman to be recognized or
given the credit that she is due for the type of skill set and knowledge that she attains. Yu
does not shy away from the stereotype she thrives on it.
“I would say that a lot of people may be one to judge her before even knowing her,”
James said. “Like any other woman in the business, they might think that she is not
credible or does not know her stuff. But, once they listen to her for just a few moments,
they can't help but soak up her wealth of knowledge and think differently. She has
definitely held her own in the industry.”
Yu is at Santa Anita every day the horses race, watching the horses train. If the horses are
not racing at Santa Anita, then she is not there, unless she is watching them work. This
type of commitment to analyze and horses has made Yu extremely knowledgeable over
the years at what she does.
“At Keeneland, I excelled at baby races, because those were all 2-year-old horses,” Yu
said. “I could literally physically pick out a good specimen, and tell somebody why it's a
great paddock pick. A lot of times they would deliver because there is no history behind
them and they had never won before.”
While Santa Anita only races thoroughbreds, Yu examines quarter horses in her spare
time.
Yu’s husband, Ryan Hanson, is a quarterhorse trainer in Idaho. Yu travels to and from
Idaho, to help her husband at his training spot. She picks stalls, feeds horses and tacks
horses, equipping a horse with a piece of equipment, such as a saddle among other things.
“I am major labor when I am up in Idaho, because it is a family-run business and we do it
all together,” Yu said.
Hanson is training one the top six quarterhorses in the nation right now, the horse is
called Ynot Walk. Ynot Walk won the Winter Derby at Los Alamitos. Hanson’s parents
own Ynot Walk in partnership with George and Judy Weldon.
“The difference between a thoroughbred and a quarterhorsehorse is like the difference
between a Dalmatian and a Husky,” Yu said.
Quarter horses have quick synapses so they do everything a lot faster. A quarter horse
will break out of a gate at full speed where a thoroughbred will not. A thoroughbred takes
a couple strides to get going. A quarter horse race will go for 220 yards to 870 yards (Or
four furlongs) because they cannot keep that stamina going.
The shortest race at Santa Anita is 4 1/2 furlongs, or a little more than a half-mile. Each
furlong is one-eighth of a mile
“I am around the horses so much I know what to look for,” Yu said. “I know when they
look good, I know when they look lame and I know when they look healthy. When I was
working for HRTV before they were bought out, I was out here for four days a week and
I can tell you anything that you need to know about any horse.”
Yu’s listeners, followers and even camera women have bought into how knowledgeable
she is in the sport even with her unique broadcasting style.
“She is very boisterous, but she knows a lot about horse racing,” James said. “She knows
a lot and she speaks her mind. She picks a lot of winners.”
Yu said ‘What a horse looks like to me, might be what any other woman looks like to a
guy.’
“You get to know them, and each of them has their own personality and different traits in
different looks,” Yu said.
Yu will continue to do her job that she loves as long as they are willing to keep her.
“I don't know how anybody could not do a job that they get paid to go and do what they
love,” Yu said. “When I am not doing horse racing, I am volunteering doing a radio show
about horse racing. Billy Koch and I do a show called, “The Horse Ownership
Experience” on LA talk radio.”
Yu tries to help the horse breeds get re-homed after they are done racing.
“I try my hardest to make sure that they are going to find a place to live where they will
live happy, because aftercare is a huge part of horse racing to me,” Yu said.
Yu loves horse racing so much that her and her husband, Hanson, planned their wedding
on a Monday so it was around horse racing. They planned their honeymoon around horse
racing as well.
“Somebody I know had their child induced early, because she was supposed to go into
labor during Breeders' Cup, which is the biggest day in racing during the entire year,” Yu
said.
While Yu knows of other people who have had kids at her age, she is in no rush, but
would love to have kids have her own someday. Her kids, you can guarantee, will be
raised around horses.
“My kids will sit on a horse before they can walk,” Yu said.
While Yu has a high respect and admiration for horses, her respect for jockeys rivals that
of horses, due to the demand that is put upon them in the sport that they participate in.
“Jockeys have one of the most dangerous jobs,” Yu said. “Half of these guys cannot play
football like Gronkowski, but I would also say that Gronkowski can't ride a horse like
these guys can.”
Yu loves hanging out at the racetrack, with all of her race-track junky friends. Yu loves to
be at the track with all of the people who bring out their little kids who ask the jockeys
for their goggles after the race.
“I love racing because it is the most accessible sport in the world,” Yu said. “If you went
to the Super Bowl, you would not hang out with Tom Brady after the game. But, after the
Breeders' Cup, you might get to give the winning jockey a hug, a kiss and have dinner
with him after the race. He might be your best friend before you leave. You might even
get your picture taken with one of the most famous horses in the world.”
When Yu says access to take pictures with the most famous horses in the world, she
means it. Yu has taken pictures with some of the best ever, including Zenyatta.
“What was so revolutionary about Zenyatta was that access the public had to her,” Yu
said. “She would get taken out of her stall and stood up every day for an hour and a half
so people could touch her and take pictures with her.”
It is not just the horses that are accessible at the track, it is the jockeys, the staff who
works there and even people like Yu. Yu will stop and try to talk to you to get to know
you, regardless if you are a college student trying to find a hidden story or a general
bystander trying to get to know horse racing.
If you are not sold on horse racing, go to the track and you will be. If that doesn't suffice,
then seek out Yu and she will make you a believer in five minutes. If she does not make
you a believer in horse racing, then you will still walk away wanting to be her friend.
“She is one person that if you get to meet her you will realize that she is a friend for life
and not too many people are like that,” James said. “She is just a good person at the bare-
bones of it all.”
If anything else, follow Yu’s twitter handle, @themichelleyu , and her thought-provoking
tweets will bring you to the track anyways.

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may 12 santa anita

  • 1. Hal Hargrave 5/12/15 Santa Anita Sports Word Count: It takes a lot to sell somebody on a sport that they know nothing about and may not find entertaining. It's no secret that men dominate the professional sports realm as athletes. But, contrary to popular belief, there are women out there that truly know their stuff, even on a sport dominated by male jockeys. Imagine the love some men have for their favorite sports and times that by ten. That amount of love, passion and knowledge you will find in a woman at horse racing track who will teach any man a thing or two. Nestled above the paddocks (small enclosure where horses are kept or exercised) of both the Santa Anita and Los Alamitos race tracks, you will find a woman sitting in a stationary chair delivering knowledgeable words to horse racing fans, but her mind is moving at a mile a minute. Michelle Yu races into action every race day by delivering her opening/morning spot for, Race Track Network, alongside her counterpart Millie Ball.
  • 2. Yu will make anybody a fan of horse racing. Just get to talking to her for a few minutes or, if anything else, find your eyes reading to the end of the story and you'll find yourself out at the track sometime soon. Yu is a prime example of why horse racing can be argued as the most accessible sport that there is. “There is no other sports in the world that offers you the access that horse racing does,” Yu said. Yu will let anybody into her world that is willing to listen. “Any time that I can, I try to educate someone on horse racing,” Yu said. “If I see somebody around here that does not know something, then I will talk to them. I will take them to the paddock, take them to pet a pony and take them to the winner’s circle if they want. I will do anything possible to make somebody love horse racing.” Yu’s day at the track begins around horses before she even reaches the track. Yu, an owner of “quarterhorses,” has them stabled at Whittier Narrows where she wakes up and tends to them, even on race days at Santa Anita or Los Alamitos.
  • 3. Yu, who lives in Orange County, comes directly from Whittier and heads up into her secret bathroom, in which she gets cleaned up for her day ahead and the start of her simulcast. “The simulcast is broadcast to the Race Track Network (RTN), any simulcast network and is in-house over the loudspeakers at the racetracks,” Yu said. The opening takes place 30 minutes before the first post (race) of the day. Yu and Ball provide knowledge to horseracing fans on what to look for in particular horses in the variety of races at the track each day. Yu and Ball do a quick two-minute spot, as well, 16 minutes prior to each post, which gives time for bettors to hear their knowledge and go put in their bets. “Before each race, Millie and I come on and talk about who we like in the race and why,” Yu said. “We talk about seeing the horses work in the morning, we review morning workouts and we talk about conversations that we had with jockeys or trainers. We will talk about how the last time we saw horse if it freaked out in the paddock and flipped over.” Yu and Ball’s insight is valuable if you are a general fan who wants to throw down a few bucks, or if you are a pick-six player looking for picks.
  • 4. “We want to tell you and show you what you can see and also what you can't see about a horse,” Yu said. After Yu’s morning spot, she heads back upstairs into the press box where she will seek out her favorite lunch delight, chicken tenders. After taking down her lunch and watching the first race of the day up in the box and maybe talking to anybody who is wanting to learn some horse-racing knowledge, she will head back down to her post, by the paddock, for the rest of the day. Yu’s knowledge of horse racing and exceptionality on camera came at a young age and her roots are to thank for that. She was born on May 3, 1982, raised by her parents, George and Valerie, as well as her stepdad Barry, in Southern California. Yu grew up around her younger brother Chris and older half-sister Tambi. Yu fell in love in horse racing when her dad brought her to track when she was 10 years old. “There was picture of a racehorse in the L.A. Times when I was 10 and every week after that I would make sure to cut out the sports section of the newspaper,” Yu said. “Every day I would cut out the charts on the horses and paste them all over my room. I still have four scrapbooks of charts and stuff I cut out from horse racing in the paper.”
  • 5. Yu loved horses and loved the fact that people just talked about horses and thought it was amazing. Bien Bien was the horse that really got Yu into horse racing at young age after she saw a beautiful picture of him in a magazine and fell in love with him. Bien Bien was an American Thoroughbred racehorse bred by William S. Farish III & William S. Kilroy and raced by Trudy McCaffery and John Toffan. He won eight stakes races during his career, including four Grade I events. He set a course record of 1:57.75 for 1¼ miles while winning the 1993 Hollywood Invitational Turf Handicap. He also ran second in the 1993 Breeders' Cup Turf to winner Kotashaan. Yu loved to ride horses and at 11 years old she started taking riding lessons and started doing show jumping shortly after. Yu went to Garey High School in Pomona and was a cheerleader in high school. Yu’s childhood loves were ponies and pigskins, as she was raised a big Patriots and Bears fan. Yu’s father, George, passed away when Yu was 18 years old, but Yu managed to keep a strong head on her shoulders due to having such an influential and positive upbringing around her loving father.
  • 6. In 2003, the Kentucky Derby was on Yu’s 21st birthday and her mom paid for her and her best friend, Sarah, to go to the Kentucky Derby. Funny Cide was the horse that won the Kentucky Derby that year. Funny Cide is a thoroughbred racehorse that won the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness Stakes in 2003. He was the first New York-bred horse to win the Kentucky Derby and the first gelding to win since Clyde Van Dusen in 1929. Yu and Sarah had got bumped off some flights going to Kentucky, so the airlines gave them credits to fly again. So, the two went back a year later to see the Kentucky Derby again. “When I went back out to Louisville for my second Kentucky Derby, I was at a bar the night of the Derby with my friend Sarah and she was talking to a couple (Jeff and Jessica Sullivan),” Yu said. “Sarah came back to me and said that the couple said that I could live with them ongoing if I moved back to Louisville. So, I ended up calling them when I got back home and told them that I would be coming out to live with them.” After going back to the Derby the second time, Yu said she was going to come back two weeks later and if she found a job she would go live there with the Sullivans. So, she came back two weeks later and within three days she found a job and already.
  • 7. Yu found a job, in Louisville, at Wet Willie’s bar after she ‘BS’d’ her way to get the job, by knowing what the ingredients in a Colorado Bulldog were. “Back at a bar that I worked out here in California, Diamond Billiards Club in Brea, I had met some gamblers at the bar that I would give them horses to bet on all the time,” Yu said. “One day they had asked me what I wanted to do for a living, and I told them that I wanted to be on TV. I wanted to be Charlsie Cantey. One of the gamblers knew a guy by the name of Tony Allevato at TVG (Television Games Network) and referred me to him.” Tony Allevato was the executive producer at TVG, at the time and gave Yu a job as a personal assistant. Yu as a P.A. would get coffee for people, run around forms and place bets for people. “When I was moving to Kentucky I had that connection already made at TVG and knew I would be working a little bit,” Yu said. HRTV (Horse Racing Television) and TVG used to be the two big horse racing networks, until four months ago when TVG bought HRTV. In June 2004, Yu drove out to Kentucky in her U-Haul and showed up one day at the Sullivan’s front door and they welcomed Yu into their home with open arms. Yu lived with the Sullivans for a year and a half.
  • 8. Yu started working at “Wet Willie’s” and “Main Street Lounge” bars. Yu thought she should get enrolled in school, so she enrolled that University of Louisville as an Equine (Horse) Business major, in September 2004. “They did not have journalism at Louisville, so I thought I wanted to do communications,” Yu said. “Because I was an out-of-state transfer, getting classes was very tough, so I was on the long track to graduate and I opted to do Equine Business because it interested me.” Yu had taken her horse, which was once stabled at Bonelli Park in San Dimas, out to Louisville in anticipation of riding him for the school's equestrian team. There was a police officer who used to run patrol at Wet Willie’s, Officer Mattingley, and he had a place for Yu to stable her horse. “I had an off-track thoroughbred horse, “Nansstar”, that I had bought myself,” Yu said. “I got him when I was 18 years old and he was $1500. I had put down $500, my mom put down $500 and a friend, that worked at Disneyland (Eric) with me, put down $500.” Yu eventually paid back her mom and Eric and “Nansstar” was the first horse that Yu could call her own.
  • 9. When Yu was going to go out to for the equestrian team, a girl asked her Yu if she thought that she could ride a horse well. Yu responded with, ‘Of course I can ride.’ The girl then said to Yu, ‘Why don't you go out for the polo team?’ “Her name was Lauren Hexton and she was starting a polo club at the school,” Yu said. “We called her Hexton the Texan.” The first day that we had practice, they purposely put me on a horse that was a little hot and fresh and I handled myself really well. I ended up falling in love with the horse. The horses name was Magwa.” Within four months of Yu moving to Louisville, she had gotten a job, made friends, enrolled in college and joined the polo team, a sport in which she had never heard of before. Needless to say, the 22-year-old Yu was adventurous. “Me and this girl Hailey Miller, who was from Kansas, were the two that really started to love the Polo club a lot,” Yu said. “We started to go and play every single day and I ended up getting a job at a farm where there was a polo team, called Hardscuffle.” Yu worked for the Hardscuffle coach who was also the club pro, David Zeliger. “I was traveling all over, playing for the college and actually playing for the polo club at Hardscuffle,” Yu said. “I went to Florida and Saratoga to play with my own string (One’s own set of polo ponies).”
  • 10. A game of polo is divided into four or six chukkas. One chukka is seven minutes of play. A proficient player needs at least one horse per chukka. “A pro might have two horses per, but as you get more of your own horses you are able to play more often,” Yu said. “David provided me with the horses to play, but as I started getting more into polo, I started getting my own horses so I could have my own string. I got one horse for free and made her (trained her) myself off the racetrack. Then I got another off the racetrack and broke him in and traded him for a little made mare (An adult female horse or other equine). I had one given to me (Cecil, I still have him. He's like 30) and one I bought.” Yu essentially stayed enrolled in school so she could continue to play polo. After she was too old to play she opted to take life a different direction, while still staying in Kentucky. Yu bounced around from Louisville and Lexington, while she was still working for TVG. She went to Saratoga every summer, Florida or New Orleans in the winter, all while working for TVG. “We went everywhere for racing and we were just following racing throughout the year,” Yu said. In 2008, Yu worked for trainer Steve Asmussen for a summer in Saratoga.
  • 11. “We had Curlin and Rachel Alexandra around the barn, right before Curlin went to Dubai to take down the Dubai World Cup,” Yu said. Curlin is an American Thoroughbred racehorse and the highest North American money earner with over US$10.5 million accumulated. His major racing wins include the 2007 Preakness Stakes, 2007 Breeders' Cup Classic, and 2008 Dubai World Cup. Rachel Alexandra is a retired American Thoroughbred racehorse and the 2009 Horse of the Year. When she won the 2009 Preakness Stakes, the second leg of the Triple Crown, she became the first filly (female horse under the age of four) to win the race in 85 years. At TVG, Yu worked as a personal assistant and worked her way up to a stage manager and a field production worker. Yu worked alongside TVG reporter Jill Byrne , who was a huge mentor to Yu. Yu got to go to Japan for a jockey challenge and to the United Kingdom’s Royal Ascot for TVG. Horses were life to Yu and she regards Zenyatta (Thoroughbred racehorse, winner of 19 consecutive races in a 20-race career) as one of the horses who changed the face of horseracing for a lot of people.
  • 12. However, getting to meet Goldikova is one of the best things that Yu has ever got to experience. Goldikova is a champion Thoroughbred race mare (Female race horse) based in France, although she has raced in the USA and England. She has won 14 Group One races, with nine victories over colts and geldings. Goldikova is the only horse to win three Breeders' Cup Mile races, winning it in 2008, 2009 and 2010. Olivier Peslier rode Goldikova in all of her race starts. “I never get star-struck, but if I get the chance to meet a famous horse I get giddy like a small child,” Yu said. Yu had started working for TVG and Jill and her had split up, opting Yu to make a change to come back to the West Coast. “TVG is based out of California and I had a job offer to work full time if I came back to California,” Yu said. Anna James has been Yu’s camera woman ever since she started working at TVG as a reporter. James has become Yu’s best friend in the process and speaks openly about her. “Once Michelle came in to TVG, she was reporting a lot, so I got scheduled to work alongside of her many times because she was the talent on hand most the time,” James
  • 13. said. “She can be very loud and she doesn't even know it. She will be singing in the paddock and everybody around will be looking at her.” Yu had another opportunity in the sports industry when she came back to California. So, Yu stopped working for TVG and started working for Fox doing high school football in 2012. “I think that she can move on to any sport if she wanted to, but I do not see her leaving horse racing,” James said. “She is great on TV.” After a short stint with Fox, Yu found herself back in horse racing at Santa Anita Park the place where she fell in love with horse racing at a young age. “I got approached by (former Santa Anita Chairman) Mark Verge, from Santa Anita racetrack, who was trying to bring in new blood to the sport,” Yu said. “He wanted me to do some fluffy hits. More or less, an in event hosts that people see up on the jumbotron doing interviews with fans and attractions inside the venue.” While Yu was doing that, her current boss, Amy Zimmerman approached her about doing simulcast for the races at Santa Anita and Los Alamitos and Yu took the offer. At the time, Zimmerman was the executive producer of HRTV.
  • 14. “Before each race, Millie (Yu’s on air counterpart) and I come on and talk about who we like in the race and why,” Yu said. Yu will provide insight if one is a general fan that wants to throw down a few bucks on a race, or if one is a major pick six player, the difficult task of choosing the winning horse in six consecutive races, looking for picks. Yu wants to tell and show someone what he or she can and can't see about a horse. “If somebody were to ask me why they should listen to my picks I would say, ‘Why not?,’” Yu said. “I don't care somebody listens to my picks or not, everybody has different goals as a handicapper.” Yu has different goals that she tries to achieve while reaching people through her pre-race spots. “My goal isn't to give you or the viewer every winner of every race, because if I could do that I would be rich,” Yu said laughing. “My goal is to try to get you to think of a horse that you may have never even thought of before. There might be a horse that walks into a race at a 17-1 odds and I would give you a good reason why I think you should maybe look at him. He might not be able to win the race, but he might finish second, third or fourth and pick up the pieces.”
  • 15. In a male-dominated sport, at times it may be tough for a woman to be recognized or given the credit that she is due for the type of skill set and knowledge that she attains. Yu does not shy away from the stereotype she thrives on it. “I would say that a lot of people may be one to judge her before even knowing her,” James said. “Like any other woman in the business, they might think that she is not credible or does not know her stuff. But, once they listen to her for just a few moments, they can't help but soak up her wealth of knowledge and think differently. She has definitely held her own in the industry.” Yu is at Santa Anita every day the horses race, watching the horses train. If the horses are not racing at Santa Anita, then she is not there, unless she is watching them work. This type of commitment to analyze and horses has made Yu extremely knowledgeable over the years at what she does. “At Keeneland, I excelled at baby races, because those were all 2-year-old horses,” Yu said. “I could literally physically pick out a good specimen, and tell somebody why it's a great paddock pick. A lot of times they would deliver because there is no history behind them and they had never won before.” While Santa Anita only races thoroughbreds, Yu examines quarter horses in her spare time.
  • 16. Yu’s husband, Ryan Hanson, is a quarterhorse trainer in Idaho. Yu travels to and from Idaho, to help her husband at his training spot. She picks stalls, feeds horses and tacks horses, equipping a horse with a piece of equipment, such as a saddle among other things. “I am major labor when I am up in Idaho, because it is a family-run business and we do it all together,” Yu said. Hanson is training one the top six quarterhorses in the nation right now, the horse is called Ynot Walk. Ynot Walk won the Winter Derby at Los Alamitos. Hanson’s parents own Ynot Walk in partnership with George and Judy Weldon. “The difference between a thoroughbred and a quarterhorsehorse is like the difference between a Dalmatian and a Husky,” Yu said. Quarter horses have quick synapses so they do everything a lot faster. A quarter horse will break out of a gate at full speed where a thoroughbred will not. A thoroughbred takes a couple strides to get going. A quarter horse race will go for 220 yards to 870 yards (Or four furlongs) because they cannot keep that stamina going. The shortest race at Santa Anita is 4 1/2 furlongs, or a little more than a half-mile. Each furlong is one-eighth of a mile
  • 17. “I am around the horses so much I know what to look for,” Yu said. “I know when they look good, I know when they look lame and I know when they look healthy. When I was working for HRTV before they were bought out, I was out here for four days a week and I can tell you anything that you need to know about any horse.” Yu’s listeners, followers and even camera women have bought into how knowledgeable she is in the sport even with her unique broadcasting style. “She is very boisterous, but she knows a lot about horse racing,” James said. “She knows a lot and she speaks her mind. She picks a lot of winners.” Yu said ‘What a horse looks like to me, might be what any other woman looks like to a guy.’ “You get to know them, and each of them has their own personality and different traits in different looks,” Yu said. Yu will continue to do her job that she loves as long as they are willing to keep her. “I don't know how anybody could not do a job that they get paid to go and do what they love,” Yu said. “When I am not doing horse racing, I am volunteering doing a radio show about horse racing. Billy Koch and I do a show called, “The Horse Ownership Experience” on LA talk radio.”
  • 18. Yu tries to help the horse breeds get re-homed after they are done racing. “I try my hardest to make sure that they are going to find a place to live where they will live happy, because aftercare is a huge part of horse racing to me,” Yu said. Yu loves horse racing so much that her and her husband, Hanson, planned their wedding on a Monday so it was around horse racing. They planned their honeymoon around horse racing as well. “Somebody I know had their child induced early, because she was supposed to go into labor during Breeders' Cup, which is the biggest day in racing during the entire year,” Yu said. While Yu knows of other people who have had kids at her age, she is in no rush, but would love to have kids have her own someday. Her kids, you can guarantee, will be raised around horses. “My kids will sit on a horse before they can walk,” Yu said. While Yu has a high respect and admiration for horses, her respect for jockeys rivals that of horses, due to the demand that is put upon them in the sport that they participate in.
  • 19. “Jockeys have one of the most dangerous jobs,” Yu said. “Half of these guys cannot play football like Gronkowski, but I would also say that Gronkowski can't ride a horse like these guys can.” Yu loves hanging out at the racetrack, with all of her race-track junky friends. Yu loves to be at the track with all of the people who bring out their little kids who ask the jockeys for their goggles after the race. “I love racing because it is the most accessible sport in the world,” Yu said. “If you went to the Super Bowl, you would not hang out with Tom Brady after the game. But, after the Breeders' Cup, you might get to give the winning jockey a hug, a kiss and have dinner with him after the race. He might be your best friend before you leave. You might even get your picture taken with one of the most famous horses in the world.” When Yu says access to take pictures with the most famous horses in the world, she means it. Yu has taken pictures with some of the best ever, including Zenyatta. “What was so revolutionary about Zenyatta was that access the public had to her,” Yu said. “She would get taken out of her stall and stood up every day for an hour and a half so people could touch her and take pictures with her.” It is not just the horses that are accessible at the track, it is the jockeys, the staff who works there and even people like Yu. Yu will stop and try to talk to you to get to know
  • 20. you, regardless if you are a college student trying to find a hidden story or a general bystander trying to get to know horse racing. If you are not sold on horse racing, go to the track and you will be. If that doesn't suffice, then seek out Yu and she will make you a believer in five minutes. If she does not make you a believer in horse racing, then you will still walk away wanting to be her friend. “She is one person that if you get to meet her you will realize that she is a friend for life and not too many people are like that,” James said. “She is just a good person at the bare- bones of it all.” If anything else, follow Yu’s twitter handle, @themichelleyu , and her thought-provoking tweets will bring you to the track anyways.