Joe Muniz
Don Cantrell
Joe Muniz, 74, still maintains a hobby of raising and racing
horses, both quarterhorses and throughbreds, but “Chicks Benuino,” which
means “unruly man” in English, still ranks as one of his highest marks
over the years on the tracks.
“I was sky-high about that horse,” Muniz said. “He won a lot of races
and earned a half-million. There were so many write-ups. He raced as a
two-year-old and a three-year-old.”
Before the horse turned up with an injury as a three-year-old in 1986,
the gray colt scored his third straight victory in as many starts in the
34th running of the Bay Meadows Futurity.
Muniz, a major Southern California pipeline construction firm owner,
and a member of the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame, celebrating the
millennium, owns the colt with his son, Rory, and his son-in-law, John
Bobenreith.
A native of Costa Mesa, Muniz also owns a 22-acre ranch near Lompoc,
where Chicks Beuino was raised. The ranch is called Rancho Nuestro
Ensueno, which means “ranch of our dreams.”
The gray colt is now standing in Romoland and has bred more than 250
offspring. “He has done very well for us,” said Joe’s wife, Jerri.
One of the biggest thrills in their life was when Chicks Beduino was
named the 1986 state champion in California.
Muniz also gave a worthy account of himself in high school as a boxer
and as a stout member of the 1943-44 football teams as a guard and a
blocking back.
One of his sparring partners in the ring in high school days was the
late athletic director, Ralph Reed. Reed was quite a boxer in his time,
Muniz said.
Muniz was pleased with the ’44 grid team’s success and recalled it had
won four games in a row before World War II drew away seveal top stars,
including Muniz and tackle Dick Freeman.
Muniz subsequently wound up going on to the South Pacific with the
Navy and became one of the first to visit Nagasaki, Japan, after it had
been struck by an atomic bomb.
He was elated over the bright fortunes of his brothers, Manuel and Al,
in football. Manuel became an All-CIF tackle for Harbor High on the
championship team of ‘42, then advanced to Arizona State where he also
won Little All-America honors. The New York Giants bid for his talents,
but he turned them down due to serious knee injuries.
Al was an outstanding guard at 250 pounds at Newport Harbor, then
shifted to Orange Coast College where he was named to the All-Eastern
Conference team in the early ‘50s.
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