Saturday, August 15, 2026
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85 days away
The 87th summer season at Del Mar opens July 17 and runs through Labor Day weekend, September 7 — 32 days of thoroughbred racing where the turf meets the surf. The Opening Day hat tradition, the infield lawn, the Pacific fog burning off by the second race. The Pacific Classic in late August draws the best horses on the West Coast. One hour from Murrieta. If you've never been to Del Mar, this season is the reason. Dates and tickets at dmtc.com.
Coming Soon
85 days away
They've been saying 'Where the Turf Meets the Surf' for eighty years at Del Mar, and the moment you walk through the gates on Opening Day, you understand why. Women in elaborate hats, the Pacific breeze drifting in from a quarter mile away, a field of world-class thoroughbreds loading into the gate. July 17, 2026 — the most festive single day in San Diego's sports calendar. Dress well. Pick a horse. Stay all afternoon.
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86 days away
Opening Weekend Saturday at Del Mar on July 18 carries a different energy from Opening Day — the crowds have sorted themselves from the spectacle-seekers into the more serious racing audience, and the Saturday card tends to be sharper. Del Mar's summer meet runs Wednesdays through Sundays from mid-July through Labor Day, and the Saturday cards consistently draw the meet's best fields. The Thoroughbred Club has attracted the West Coast's top horses since 1937, and a Saturday afternoon in mid-July under the San Diego sun with Grade-quality horses going five and a half furlongs on the turf course is as good as racing gets anywhere in North America. First post at 2pm. The grandstand has seating or you can stand along the rail for free and watch the horses warm up before the crowd fully assembles.
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87 days away
Sundays at Del Mar during the summer meet are built for the fan who is not already a racing regular — the format-friendly card, the lower-key atmosphere compared to Saturday, and the proximity to the Pacific Ocean make it one of the most accessible sports afternoons in San Diego County. A Sunday in August at Del Mar means arriving at 2pm, learning to read a basic racing form with help from the grandstand regulars who are always willing to explain, and watching eight or nine races before the sun moves west over the Pacific. Del Mar's Sunday crowds run younger than the weekday meet, and the energy reflects it: casual conversations about the horses, the occasional spectacular finish celebrated by the entire grandstand, and the walk back to the parking lot a genuinely complete afternoon.
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90 days away
Del Mar runs Wednesdays through Sundays during the summer meet, and a Wednesday afternoon at the track is one of the most underrated sports afternoons in Southern California. The crowd is smaller, the line for the mutuel windows is shorter, and the horses are the same ones that ran in front of 40,000 on Saturday. A Wednesday card at Del Mar draws the professional racing public — horseplayers, trainers, the regulars who come every week — and creates an intimacy with the racing that weekend crowds don't allow. The rail along the stretch run has open space on Wednesdays. You can watch the horses in the paddock without fighting a crowd. First post at 2pm. The marine layer is usually gone by then. There is genuinely nothing else like this in Southern California sports.
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91 days away
A Thursday evening at Del Mar during the summer meet is racing conducted as the San Diego summer intended it — the track running a card that starts at 4pm, the grandstand filling after the workday, and the final races run with the Pacific sky going pink and orange behind the western stands. Del Mar's Thursday programs during the summer meet are among the most pleasant in American racing: the crowd dressed comfortably rather than formally, the races competitive, and the atmosphere entirely relaxed in a way that Saturday's crowds cannot be. The sunset over the Del Mar stretch run is a genuine spectacle — if you have not been to a Del Mar evening card, Thursday is the best entry point into what makes this track different from every other racetrack in the country.
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93 days away
The Bing Crosby Stakes on July 25 is one of the oldest Grade I sprint races on the West Coast — named for the man who co-founded Del Mar in 1937, run at six furlongs on the main track, and contested by the top sprint horses in North America. A Grade I race at Del Mar on a July Saturday draws both the serious racing public and the event crowd who wouldn't mark a racing day otherwise. The Bing Crosby carries $500,000 in purse and the winner's connections have reliably used it as a launching point for the Breeders' Cup Sprint in October. See these horses two weeks before they become national news. Del Mar's grandstand on Bing Crosby day is at capacity by the second race — arrive early enough to claim your spot at the rail.
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100 days away
August 1 brings the Clement L. Hirsch Stakes to Del Mar — a Grade I race for fillies and mares at one mile and one-sixteenth on the main track, one of the most significant races on the West Coast calendar for the female division. The Hirsch is the counterpart to the Pacific Classic: where the Classic defines the older male division, the Hirsch defines the top female performers for the second half of the year. August 1 is deep into the summer meet, when the best horses have had a race or two on this track and the fan base knows who to watch. The card surrounding the Hirsch typically includes several stakes races on the turf, making it one of the richest single programs of the summer. First post 2pm, feature race in the late afternoon.
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