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New Faces Among California Fair Stewards Daftary is returning to the steward stands after an 11-year absence. She served as a steward from 1987 to 1994, and at one time or another she worked all of the fairs. Her first new assignment will be the Pleasanton meet beginning June 29. Later, she will be going to Ferndale.For the last 11 years, Daftary has worked at racetracks in a variety of capacities – as assistant racing secretary, paddock judge, patrol judge, placing judge, and currently clerk of scales at Golden Gate Fields."I'm thrilled to be working as a steward again," said Daftary. "It's a responsible job, and you've got to know what you're doing. But doing it correctly makes it a rewarding job." Chaney graduated from law school and passed the bar exam. He could either become a lawyer or work with horses. He chose what he considered to be the more interesting profession and went to work as an assistant trainer for Darrell Vienna.There's some history behind that decision, dating back to his childhood when his parents owned a few racehorses in Maryland and he took riding lessons. Then when he came west to attend USC, he met someone who knew somebody and, well, he ended up walking hots and grooming horses for Vienna during summer breaks."I think my educational background helped me get the job of steward," said Chaney, whose first assignment will be at Pleasanton, followed by stints at Vallejo and San Mateo. "The job of steward requires more legal expertise today than it did in the past. Even though I never practiced law, I learned things at law school that should help."Smith rode from 1969 to 1988. She guided home about 1,200 winners during those 19 years. Smith was born to a racing family, and the Seattle native started ponying horses at Longacres at the age of 10, then two years later began galloping horses at Turf Paradise. During her riding career, she competed in Washington, Oregon, Wyoming, New York, Colorado, Arizona, and California.Smith became a racing official in 1988, initially at the county fairs in Idaho, then Nebraska, and currently in Arizona, where she has served as a steward for 14 years.Nicolo will be filling in a couple of days at Stockton but his first full assignment will be at Santa Rosa beginning July 27, then on to Ferndale. Like Smith, he is a former jockey. He rode for 20 years from 1974 to 1994 until, after winning approximately 1,300 races and suffering through two hip replacements, his knees finally gave out.Nicolo became a racing official at Golden Gate Fields in 1994, and for the last 11 years has worked the Golden Gate-Bay Meadows circuit as a stewards' aide, entry clerk, patrol judge, film analyst, and for the last nine years, clerk of scales."It's been a good career," said Nicolo. "I rode at 52 tracks – just about every track except in the southwest. I rode Special Honor in the 1978 Kentucky Derby. That was the Affirmed-Alydar Derby. I had a good seat to watch the action in front of me."It's so different being on the other side of the fence. I've done about everything in racing. I worked for $100 a month on a farm and I rode in the Derby, and everything in between. Now, as a steward, anybody who comes in front of me, I've walked a mile in their shoes.""The fair season, with the overlapping meets, creates more demand for stewards than at other times of the year," said Ingrid Fermin, the CHRB's executive director who selected the new officials. "So the fairs provide an opportunity for people to get some days, to get their feet wet, and gain experience in the steward position. And it gives us an opportunity to see them in action."
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