Called To The Post

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Author Archives: Sarah Troxell

Pharoah’s Haskell

15 Saturday Aug 2015

Posted by Sarah Troxell in Uncategorized

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Note:  This ended up being written in a rather stream-of-consciousness” manner, as I was finishing my last course for my degree; also the reason for its late posting. But late or not, I definitely want to continue to cover Pharoah’s career in the pages of this blog.

American Pharoah took center stage once more in August 2015, just as he had 57 days previously in a Belmont Stakes tour-de-force. Since then he’d been feted by fans, media, and celebrities from all walks of life. His popularity was too large to contain within the boundaries of the racing world.  He really is a superstar, as owner Ahmed Zayat called him on the Haskell telecast.

While he has been training, and subsequently photographed and videotaped extensively since his Triple Crown win, my last class and full-time work in a new field had mostly kept my nose to the grindstone. He is the first Triple Crown winner in my lifetime, something I am so glad to see at last.  But as I had to get down to work not long after he won it, I had rejoiced in the moment and for a few days after but then everything become a blur of work.  I did buy a shirt and hat a local Kroger offered with his name on them that also honored him as a Triple Crown winner. They were more items for my racing memorabilia collection, along with the win ticket from the Belmont Stakes with his name on it and the program from Belmont for that day.

But because of getting swept up in the shuffle of work, until his race on August 2nd, I had not had a lot of time to still bask in his win and what an amazing horse he is.  I was glad of the chance to do that once more.  The whole reason I moved to Kentucky years ago, the whole reason I have put so much work into this degree, is to be part of this racing industry. And the whole reason this racing industry has captivated me so much is because of the horses like American Pharoah – not Triple Crown winners, necessarily, though they certainly have their place in drawing me in, but also the Rachel Alexandras, the Zenyattas, even the claimer that you may just lock eyes with one day who doesn’t go on to do big things but who still drew you in on a personal level.  The telecast reminded me why there are few thrills like racing, few things that after years and years still pull me in so strongly and are so exciting just because of the nature of the game, the adrenalin when the horses race by, when your favorite is going postward and the anticipation is so thick you can taste it.

And I loved that the show started with a recap of his Triple Crown journey, from the sun-splashed Derby to the parading most of the length of the grandstand, one of my favorite personal memories of all time, to the deluge at the Preakness that never fazed him, to the way he just couldn’t be stopped in the Belmont, making it look laughingly easy.  I wrote a while ago that while it is clear he is a horse of rare ability, with his incredible stride and the way he takes everything in stride, and the way he just makes it look so effortless, that it was still too soon to say what his place in history would be.  And this is not meant to be demeaning at all. I fully realize after the way he ran through his Triple Crown races, he is not a horse the likes of which we will see often.  But the prudent part of me still wanted to see how the rest of his career unfolded before fully saying, this is his place in history.

So it was nice to get “reacquainted” with him through the telecast – the reminder of all he ran through to win the Crown, the way the grandstand shook after his Belmont win, as recalled by Zayat… and I got goosebumps …. and it reminded me once more what an amazing horse he is to witness, and why I love racing, and how it is one more reason I will be grateful this degree will be behind me because I can jump into keeping up with that world once more…. ironically often put on the back burner though it makes my heart beat faster and brings me such joy….

And then seeing Pharoah as the previous video gave way to live shots …. gleaming coat, muscles, incredible beyond description, and still as calm and collected as ever, the kind of horse that makes you stop and watch and you don’t even have to be told he’s the TC winner, he’s just in a realm of his own and it shows with every step and even as he stands still, there’s just that air about him the great ones have…

Exuded even through my TV screen

and reminders of his floating stride

the long shadow of the Belmont gate across the track the day he burst through, like the long shadow of the drought of TC winners but he would outrun that shadow just as he burst forward to the lead almost immediately, leave it behind and never look back

and it became clear that he would do the same today

going into the first turn it was so clear he was just waiting for Espinoza to tell him when to run, that he had all the energy and power needed and then some

none of these horses, as impressive as Keen Ice, as impressive as Upstart looked, were his match

He’s in that realm of his own and he began to run off, opening up daylight in a matter of seconds before Espinoza eased him down and he won as he always does, effortlessly, ears pricked and with reserve in the tank. He could have won by a much further distance, but no need. It was clear he was just toying with his rivals and it was another race he made look like a easy paycheck, a little hack through the park for the fun of it, and I got goosebumps once more because though he made it look easy it was clear he only made it look easy because he just is a far superior horse to most, and yes I am a little more ready now to say what his place in history will be.  Whatever his race record is from here, he will be one of the best I’ve seen ever. A 3-year-old can still be somewhat of an unknown quantity and I had of course never seen a Triple Crown winner to compare. But he was showing what I suspected, what it takes to be a TC winner is a rare breed indeed.  Summer still lingers but the winds of fall will blow in soon, and there is a bit of a sense of the limited time left of his race career.  It is a time to savor,  not be sad about, but we are humans, we look ahead and you want to grab those moments and experience them.

I want to remember them as personal memories.

Watching him through a TV screen is incredible, but the part of me that waited so long for a TC winner wants to see him in action once more. Wants to go to wherever he races next.  It is not a thing I want to wish I’d done. I want to make it happen. First I pass this class. Then Pharoah lets them know the plan. Then hopefully I find myself on a plane to join him wherever he runs next.  Stay tuned…..

(Since I’ve written those words, it has become clear it may not be that feasible to go wherever he runs. Yet if he continues to do well and bounce out of races as remarkably as Bob Baffert indicates he does, then he will be in my “backyard” at Keeneland in October and there will be time to see him in action once more, and then of course at Ashford as he takes up stud duties. Whether I see him in person or not, I look forward to what the rest of his career brings.  It may be a tough task to win the Classic this fall against top older horses, but he has made so much look effortless. I give him a serious chance there, and even if he doesn’t win all his remaining races, an on-the-board finish in the Classic will not diminish his legacy in any way. I don’t see it as diminishing Zenyatta’s when she finished second to Blame, and I don’t see it as diminishing his if he doesn’t win. But I have faith he can, absolutely.)

Triple Crown glory, at last!

07 Sunday Jun 2015

Posted by Sarah Troxell in Uncategorized

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American Pharoah, Triple Crown

June 6th, 2015. Belmont Stakes day. There was yet another chance for a Triple Crown to become reality, as American Pharoah attempted to turn Derby glory and Preakness success into racing’s most elusive prize. A list of the names of horses who had prevailed in the first two legs and come up short in the third, the most taxing of all, revealed again that a very good horse is just not enough. He has to be great, in a class of his own. And that is just how American Pharoah was being described in the weeks, days, and especially when it got down to just hours until he contested the Belmont.

I’ve heard horses who were just one race away from being potential Triple Crown winners described as definitely being worthy and having what it takes to pull off that accomplishment. I understood, to those who were rooting for a Triple Crown winner, that it is hard not to seek out the reasons why any particular horse with a chance just might be the one to do it. I understood because I have walked that path too, since Silver Charm had his shot in 1997 and for quite a few horses after him. The racing-obsessed part of me wanted to see a Triple Crown winner in my lifetime. By the time Silver Charm had a shot, it had been 19 years since a horse won it, and I was 18. Too young to have been alive when Affirmed and his young jockey won it. So it went, through Real Quiet, War Emblem, Charismatic…. on to Big Brown in 2008. I now believe Barbaro had the most likely combination of talent and ability to pull it off, out of all the horses that made their run through the three races from 1997 to 2014. But as is well-known, it was not his path to see his try at glory go beyond a few strides into the Preakness. Everything they said about him and that I saw myself – his floating running action that made everything look so effortless, most notably – really made me think it was his to lose. It is a shame he was injured, for his own sake naturally, but also because all questions about the capability of the undefeated colt who looked like he literally soared when he ran were left unanswered.

Then Big Brown had a shot in 2008. For reasons that have been forgotten, I really thought he would be the one to pull it off. Disillusion followed when he was pulled up in the Belmont, and never really given a chance to try. And that is when I began to quit expecting a Triple Crown winner. This is not meant to sound pessimistic. It was just pragmatic, realistic. I didn’t think it was an impossible feat. The right horse could probably still pull it off. But it was so much easier for a horse to win two legs and not the third, and there didn’t have to be a Triple Crown on the line to witness historic achievements in racing. Rachel Alexandra and Zenyatta proved that.

Still, it was a good story to see California Chrome and Victor Espinoza have their moment in the spotlight last year. It was even more incredible to see Espinoza win back-to-back Kentucky Derbies, after he captured this year’s edition with American Pharoah. It brought back memories of the first time I witnessed a Triple Crown race at a track, when Espinoza and War Emblem captured the Preakness, and I cheered them on with a large group of people that had gathered to watch on the big screen in the Churchill Downs paddock. That memory stretches back to my earliest days in Kentucky, when I was just a visitor finally making my way to a bit of a personal mecca, the horse farms of the Bluegrass region and of course the home of the Kentucky Derby. I liked Espinoza’s seemingly sunny nature then and I liked to see it again as he added more Derby wins to his resume, handfuls of years later.

But most of all, I liked American Pharoah on a deep level, in a way I couldn’t shake. That too stretched back to earlier memory, this one rooted in the initial foray into an interest in racing that bloomed into a passion that never left. It was when Unbridled won his Kentucky Derby and trainer Carl Genter memorably provided a stretch call for owner Frances Genter. That now lives in Derby lore, and maybe it captivated me because it really showed how amazing it can be to someone to win that race. And maybe too I just liked Unbridled’s name, and the freedom it represented to follow your own path or your dreams.

Whatever it was, I followed that early interest in Unbridled – as said in a previous post – through the generations, until his great-grandson American Pharoah had his shot to win the Derby, proving himself to be the best of a class of deeply talented three-year-olds. They are no doubt still good horses, and some may still be close to greatness. But at every step of his Triple Crown run, from Louisville to Baltimore to New York, American Pharoah had a way of making them mere footnotes to his own legacy. I sensed that even when he entered the paddock for the Derby. There was just something about him that did put him in another class. I will never forget thinking, “Finally!” when he won the Derby, thinking how at last an Unbridled descendant wore the blanket of roses on the first Saturday in May. I will also never forget all the jubilation I felt when Espinoza brought him past my section of the grandstand and it was such an exciting moment to cheer on the newest Derby winner that it felt like my Derby win too, in a sense.

Victor Espinoza tips his cap to the roar of the record Derby crowd, cheering for him and American Pharoah

Victor Espinoza tips his cap to the roar of the record Derby crowd, cheering for him and American Pharoah; my favorite post-Derby memory from this year

Then of course it was on to Baltimore. I had to work on Preakness day, which fell on my birthday again this year. I didn’t get to see the race until it had already been run, but I had no doubt American Pharoah would win it. About the next step – that elusive Belmont Stakes victory – I wasn’t so sure. He was very good, maybe even great, but I hesitated to get my hopes up too much. If it happened, it would happen. All the previous attempts made me just take a “wait and see” attitude. But beneath all that, I must have felt like he had a real chance. There were several good reasons for this: the impression I gained of him at Churchill Downs, that characteristic that emanated from him even before he won the Derby, of how good he really is; the way he shook off the less-than-ideal track conditions in the Preakness, as Pimlico was hit by a torrential downpour just minutes before the race, and still won it with ears pricked, easily and well within himself. There just almost didn’t seem to be a challenge for this colt whose gallop was described as being like a floating action, almost like he soared when he ran. That to me was reminiscent of the description given to Barbaro’s stride. Between his Preakness and Belmont, when I saw how even the sloppy track couldn’t stop him and the way it looked like nothing had been taken out of him, the way he moved so easily, I think deep down I really began to think it was time for the next name to be written into the list of Triple Crown winners.

When I had a dream a few days before the Belmont that he won it, and that I felt disbelief that it had actually happened and then joy like I felt when he won the Derby, it made me pause. I don’t place any stock in dreams for any kind of capability of telling the future, but I do believe sometimes they tell us something we realize on a subconscious level but don’t let come into our thoughts in our waking hours. I didn’t see that dream as a “prophecy” by any stretch of the imagination, but I did see it as further revealing that American Pharoah probably had what it took more than any horse had since Affirmed won the Triple Crown in 1978.

I read the statistics: Horses that haven’t raced at Belmont traditionally haven’t fared well at the track. American Pharoah had not raced at Belmont. Jockeys have to be familiar with the track. Espinoza had a small number of winners out of total mounts. But then, his total mounts at the track were a small pool too, given he is mostly California-based.

That is one thing about statistics. They represent what the average is, the norm. But all it takes is the right conditions for them to find an anomaly to the data they represent. I considered that. I still wasn’t trying to get my hopes up but under the surface I still couldn’t shake the confidence I had in Pharoah. In this case, all it took for those statistics not to matter was the right horse. If he truly was worthy of winning the Triple Crown, none of that would matter.

What I had realized in all the years of seeing horses fall short was that even if a horse only lost the Belmont by a nose, that was all the distinction necessary between a good horse and a great one. A Triple Crown winner would need no excuses, or for everything to go perfectly. Everything would go perfectly because he would just be great enough to make it go perfectly. That may sound naïve, since they are horses and can have off days and still be great, but I do believe what so many do: The Belmont is considered the Test of the Champion for a reason. Only the best horse will prevail there, after five weeks of travel and different race distances and surfaces.

So I found my way to Keeneland, in between working at a horse farm in the morning and before going to work at a different job that evening. I still wasn’t saying it out loud, that it was going to be all Pharoah at the wire. But I wasn’t ignoring my gut feeling either, borne out of my impression of him personally, even of the dream, and of everyone’s descriptions of how well he was still training and still floating over the ground with that effortless stride. I had considered going to Churchill to see him the weekend before the Belmont, where the interest in him was so strong that the track opened up special training hours for him in response to all the calls from people wanting to see him. I ended up opting for a relaxing day, but I followed the progress of his last two gallops there with interest.

When I pulled into the Keeneland grounds, it felt like a bit of deja vu, back to the day when I went there to bet on Empire Maker to win the Derby. I was in that fervent, “he-just-has-to-do-it” stage then, while I was being a bit more settled about Pharoah. But the same desire was there, to have a win ticket on each horse, almost like putting my money where my mouth is gave my hopes of victory for them more weight.

But in fact, I didn’t feel so over-excited about Pharoah as I almost had about Empire Maker, because it really almost seemed like a logical conclusion he was going to win and that is all there was to it. All these years of not seeing Triple Crown winners made me a bit cautious to say that out loud, but deep down I just knew.

So I got my win ticket with his name on it and a program from Belmont to fit into my racing memorabilia collection. Then I went to work, and finally got to watch the race when the day it was run was nearly concluded. Even though I said I wouldn’t get my hopes up again, even though I wondered how the game plan of going to the lead immediately would impact his chances at the finish, I felt hope surge to a crescendo as I saw he was running so easily and with barely controlled power. He was just asking to be let loose when the time was right. It was extraordinary, after all these years, that a horse had plenty in reserve, that he was just waiting to be asked to run. And his ears were pricked, and he was still running well within himself when Espinoza gave him the signal to go. He took up a two-length lead so smoothly it really did seem he just glided there, and everything fell into place. There was just nothing any horse in the field could do against all that latent talent that lives in American Pharoah. He opened that lead easily to 5 ½ lengths at the wire, and then I knew for sure at last what it takes for a horse to be a Triple Crown winner. It takes the horse that makes it look effortless, because if a horse even fell just a nose short, he was struggling with the task as it was laid out. All it took was the right horse, and here he is at last, the first one I’ve seen in my lifetime. I just knew nothing was going to get to him, and then began my litany of “He’s gonna do it, he’s gonna do it, he’s gonna do it” all the way down the stretch. It was just like the dream I had, with disbelief followed by joy.

There’s still disbelief, not in what Pharoah is capable of, but just that the words “Triple Crown winner” can finally be used again for a new name in the list of those that have accomplished racing’s hardest achievement. Just as I thought when he won the Derby and it went to an Unbridled descendant, “Finally!” The Triple Crown has been won again. It is amazing just to be able to type those words, to see them be true at last.

I saw a USA Today journalist recently wrote that a Triple Crown winner will not “revive a dying sport” mostly finding its fandom among senior citizens and no younger people. She clearly was out of touch with the racing world. I know all across Lexington, this victory was celebrated. My jobs bring me in contact with a lot of the public, and I know this to be true. And of course, Lexington is a cradle of racing. It is a city where people still stop to follow all of racing, not just its biggest days. It is a city where young and old flock to the races, where kids are brought to a Keeneland meet as a spring and fall ritual, one they continue into their teens, twenties and beyond. Maybe that is a statistical deviation, because Keeneland is such a unique track, but I see young kids gather at Louisiana tracks, at Santa Anita, at Churchill… American Pharoah’s history is rooted here, too, with his dam and sire both residing in central Kentucky, with his great-grandsire Unbridled lying at rest at historic Claiborne farm….

I won’t deny the racing industry has lost traction in the entertainment realm since Affirmed won the Crown. It is a different world. But American Pharoah pulled off a feat we may not see again for a long long time. His accomplishment means everything to many people who live and breathe racing, who find their livelihood because of it. And it means a good, lingering memory for its many fans across the globe, of the day Pharoah proved once more what Triple Crown greatness really means. That is an achievement that will endure and long be remembered. And I am so glad I got to be there on the first step of his journey on Derby day. What a glorious run. What a tremendous horse.

Preakness Reflections, and Old Friends

27 Wednesday May 2015

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Preakness, Triple Crown

The Preakness broadcast this year included an update on Alex’s Lemonade Stand, 10 years after it intertwined with one of racing’s biggest days by having its stands set up at Pimlico. while the colt whose name was a common link to the young girl who started it all, ran on to Preakness glory after nearly falling to the dirt.  It was an improbable turn of events, and showed how dreams can be still be realized out of what seems like defeat.

Afleet Alex came from somewhat modest beginnings, and Alex’s Lemonade Stand was also begun simply.  The Preakness broadcast this year recapped how founder Alex Scott hoped to raise $1 million through her lemonade stands, a goal realized shortly before pediatric cancer claimed her life.  Today the lemonade stands have raised over $100 million, all to help fight pediatric cancer, and Afleet Alex is a stallion at Gainesway, having sent a few colts to the Triple Crown trail.  While his standout Breeders’ Cup Juvenile winner Texas Red was unable to get to the Derby, and likely wouldn’t have been a match for American Pharoah, he did have Materiality in the race.  Materiality’s impact was minimal, as well, but he did rank in Steve Haskin’s Derby Dozen.

So Afleet Alex’s name still ripples through Preakness lore even as his colts didn’t have the hoped-for impact on the Triple Crown trail, yet, but he’s shown he can get a horse that can compete at the top, even if the story right now is fittingly all American Pharoah.

And why not?  He made his Preakness victory look effortless, with his ears pricked and as he romped even with the deluge that poured down shortly before the race began and quickly turned the track to slop.

He’s clearly in another class among his fellow three-year-olds.  Time will tell if he’s in another class among Thoroughbreds, period.  He reminds me a little of the feeling I had watching Fusaichi Pegasus win his Wood Memorial, his final Derby prep.  I just had every feeling he would win the Derby after that, and though I saw potential in Carpe Diem and so many of the other very talented three-year-olds in the Derby field this year, I just couldn’t shake the feeling American Pharoah probably had the measure of all of them.  And when I heard he’d already excelled in the slop, the messy track conditions for the Preakness weren’t much of a concern, and Espinoza wisely changed tactics and kept the colt near the front.  It made all the difference, and the race was theirs, by a wide margin.  Every time I hear people talk of Pharoah’s floating action, it reminds me too of how Barbaro was said to run in a similar way, like everything was easy for him.

The Belmont, as we all know, is the tallest obstacle for its distance and demands of a third top effort against top horses in a five-week span.  But racing is built on dreams.  More Triple Crown dreams have been ended than won in the Belmont, but a horse like American Pharoah is enough to make you cautiously optimistic. Whatever happens remains to be seen, but he’s given us and his connections a good run, regardless of the outcome on June 6th.

One other Preakness recollection that came to mind the day he won was of Rachel Alexandra’s Preakness win, as the golden petals from the blanket of black-eyed susans clung to her dark coat like jewels on a mantle after the winners’ circle ceremony.  I was at  her Preakness, the only one I’ve ever attended, and that image is one of the most enduring from that day.  Like American Pharoah, she won the Preakness in a year when it fell on my birthday.

I had to work the day of the Preakness, so I postponed my birthday celebration for the next day.  After working part of the morning at a horse farm where I recently started working, I went to Old Friends to visit Silver Charm.  I saw him in March on a cold rainy day and in December not long after he arrived, but I had yet to feed him carrots and I looked forward to the chance to know his personality a little better.

I had seen him ago at Three Chimneys, when I first visited Kentucky, and he was understandably very territorial about his fence line.  That had been my only glimpse of his personality before.

Silver Charm now holds court where the fiery Creator once did.  He is wise, matured, and I felt a tug of connection as he was a total gentleman taking carrots from my hand.

Silver Charm

Silver Charm

We were told by the tour guide that he is still a stallion and not inclined to accept pats on the nose, as most stallions aren’t, since it is a sign of dominance to them.  Yet I have to admit, that just that once, I found it hard to resist not trying to pat him because I felt that tug of connection towards him, this horse I have liked since his own romp through 2/3 of the Triple Crown, his Dubai World Cup victory, and beyond to now when we stand face to face over another fence line in Kentucky.  He tolerated the nose pat, today at least, and I loved the chance to get to know his personality even more than I had that day at Three Chimneys.  It does mean more and is easier now that he is retired from stud duty and available for visits instead of stud duty.

We also saw Game on Dude, who has such a kind eye, and Porfidio wanting attention. It had been a beautiful day to spend with horses.

Sarava

Sarava

Game on Dude

Game on Dude

IMG_6137

Porfidio

Porfidio

 

 

Kentucky Derby 2015: Pharoah!

24 Sunday May 2015

Posted by Sarah Troxell in Uncategorized

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Kentucky Derby

 

Nestled among all the racing books on my shelf is one called The Kentucky Derby Vault.  It is an interactive look through Derby history, from its earliest beginnings.  It takes the storied race and all who participated in it from just being words on a page, and invites you into their world.  You can take a replica of an 1889 race program published by the Louisville Jockey Club, and be informed that trains will arrive from Cincinnati in three hours. Perhaps you see the gentility in your mind’s eye, reading this program, as they make their way to the track aboard the train, before ascending to the grandstand on the day in mid-May this program was for.  Or perhaps you pick up the postcard advertising the new Louisville Jockey Club of 1903, when track vice president Matt Winn had a clubhouse built and improved the grandstand. Now you can see the gentility arriving by train having a clubhouse to inhabit.

Perhaps you jumped much further ahead to 1973, and picked up a grandstand ticket in section 126, to discover such a spot would have been $18.75. That’s right, seeing Secretariat begin his romp through the Triple Crown would have cost $18.75.  Even if inflation was accounted for, that had to be a bargain to see him in all his glory right before your eyes. Or perhaps the full page photo of Unbridled, his jockey tucked so neatly into the horse’s neck he looked like one with the horse as they ran for the wire all alone made you pause, and then relive the moment his trainer Carl Nafzger called the race for Unbridled’s 92-year-old owner.   There are so many moments in the Derby vault worth replaying, and as I made my way to Churchill Downs in a small convoy on Derby day 2015, I was adding more memories to my own personal Derby vault.

Some of those memories, to be sure, are the ones read about or seen on TV.  Any hardcore racing fan worth his or her salt will have those in the memory bank.  Those will certainly do until attending the Derby and building up the memories in person become possible.

Definitely, Secretariat is in the vault of my memories.  But that goes without saying. I didn’t have to be born yet to have the big red horse fire my imagination.  Anyone who loves racing would say the same, I’d suppose.  Yet I had what felt like a bit of a personal link to him.  My mom watched his races on TV and hearing her tell how it felt to watch him win the Belmont with such dominance was so breathtaking, so incredible, that it took a few minutes for it to even sink in that he had won the Triple Crown.  Any horse that can capture a classic race that emphatically certainly deserves that to be seen as a sublime triumph in itself.  The bigger picture, of winning the Triple Crown in the process, I can see taking a moment to register.

Then there was Unbridled.  Racing was in my blood and the first Saturday in May meant nothing else but parking in front of a TV to see the Derby unfold.  I was 11 in Unbridled’s year, and I remember his name was one I loved, and the spontaneous race call and “I love you” that Nafzger said to Unbridled’s owner stuck with me, as it did with so many.

It has now been 25 years since Unbridled won his Derby.  I visited Lexington in 2002, just missing seeing him along with all the other stallions and farms I came to see.  But I followed his progeny.  The one that captivated me as he had? Empire Maker.  I believed in this horse fervently, and being unable to get off work while the 2003 Derby was run, I waited in line to place my wager on him in the Derby, longer than was probably necessary.  He didn’t have the measure of blue collar runner Funny Cide that day, but the tables were turned in the Belmont.  Redemption. That may have made me one of the few people rooting against Funny Cide and his owners, who saw their dreams realized beyond belief, but that Unbridled fervor lingered in me.

When Empire Maker sired Pioneerof the Nile who was favored in the 2009 Derby, I was in attendance.  It was my second Derby, and my first time seeing a horse from the Unbridled line run in the classic race in person.  He just had to win!  Of course, Mine That Bird snuck through the rail and Pioneer had no chance to catch him.  It was not his day.

American Pharoah would be the next to take up the cause, son of Pioneer, grandson of Empire Maker, great-grandson of Unbridled.

There’s nowhere better to be than under the spires on the first Saturday in May. That was confirmed among other attendees when I heard someone singing lyrics from the popular song “Uptown Funk”:

“Saturday night and we in the spot” rapidly answered with the next line, “Don’t believe me just watch!”

I read through the litany of familiar jockeys’ names as they all went postward.  In a sense they feel like old friends, these who ride on the Kentucky circuit or are just nationally known, as I follow racing year in and year out.

And then the moment came for one more three-year-old to write his name into Derby history, and American Pharoah did it! He was looming large near the top of the stretch and looked like he had all the run in the world still in him and he did, for he was all alone at the wire, though Firing Line was pressing the issue.

It had been noted ahead of the race that American Pharoah was not battle-tested, but he has class and a deep well of talent too, and there was no denying that when he drew home clear like he did. I felt so much excitement seeing him surge to the front, and it was thrilling too that Espinoza brought him down nearly the whole length of the grandstand and we got to cheer the newest Derby winner right in front of us, as Espinoza tipped his cap to the cheers of the record-setting crowd growing to a crescendo.  It was another glorious moment under the twin spires.

And that is an incredible memory for my own personal Derby vault. I really think it’s the best one I’ve put in that vault since I’ve begun attending. And if you could have bottled that feeling, the same feeling Nafzger had all those years ago when Unbridled won and he was so elated, everyone would be a racing fan.

We left as a glorious sunset illuminated the grandstand and the moon was starting to rise over the track. The twin spires were bathed in a golden glow and then the cool white of moonlight, and gradually faded to dark. The crowd streamed out, the cheers faded to echoes, but Derby day 2015 remains written in memory, and will linger every time I read American Pharoah’s name above the saddling stalls in the year ahead, or in its permanent spot in the line of other Derby winners that stretch across the facility.  It was thrilling for all the elements all the good horses entered brought into it, all the intriguing story lines every Derby carries, and all the potential this field had, but in the end there could only be one wearing the roses, and this year it was such a thrill to know it really was the best horse who won, and to have that moment to share Espinoza’s joy, post-race.

 

Top hat fashion on Derby day
The 2015 Kentucky Derby trophy

D. Wayne Lukas enters the paddock ahead of the Derby horses
Bob Baffert and his son Bode

More “interesting” Derby fashion
The Twin Spires shortly before the Derby begins

American Pharoah in the center, with the short tail
American Pharoah wins!
Victor Espinoza tips his cap to the roar of the record Derby crowd, cheering for him and American Pharoah

After the race, this pony caught my eye
Moon rise over Churchill at Derby day’s end

I wasn’t allowed to take my DSLR camera, so these images are not of the usual quality, but I wanted to share them because they still show my experience that day.

A Day in the Life at Stonestreet

24 Sunday May 2015

Posted by Sarah Troxell in Uncategorized

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Breezes blew across the pasture, brisk and strong. The green field was a smooth track and I ran and hopped along, full of baby exuberance.  Besides, there were people! A pretty big group of people! Of course they must have come to admire me and see what I could do.  These legs were hard to master at first, but look how much fun you can have with the things they let you do.

When I saw the people come closer, I had to come closer too, to say hi.  They met about me about halfway across the pasture and ran their fingers along my back.  A few steps behind was the solid reassuring presence of my mother or my dam, as I’ve heard her called.  I don’t really know what words mean mostly.  I just hear them said, some of them enough that they have a bit of a familiar rhythm.  What I do know is she is always there and so is her milk.  That’s enough to keep a baby content, plus all this time outside to play… and oh yeah, did I mention the other thing… people! They’re so great.

I hear more words float by on the breeze, from the one who I see a lot, the lovely lady with black hair.  She is telling them to the strangers standing by, all so eager to pat me and get to know me.  Even though I don’t understand the words, the cadence is soft and soothing.  These people are happy.

“imprint training….

lots of foal handling from the beginning…”

It sounds like a good thing, and if I knew what they meant, I’d know they were saying that they work with all of us babies from day one to get them used to people and used to being handled.  Whatever they’ve done it works.  But somewhere inside me, in my very nature, is another reason for me being so sweet and people-oriented.

And that’s her, grazing a few feet away while I soak up all the attention.  She’s mellow and sweet, and I seem to have picked that up too. I’m only a little more than a month old, but it doesn’t take long for temperament to show.

More words, lots of talking, they sure do use their voices a lot.  I use my body to tell them how I feel…. oh that spot …. yes keep scratching! I stretch out my neck and lean into the scratching fingers as the conversation flows on.

“What made you interested in Maggy Hawk?”  – oh, I know those words! They call my dam those words too, or sometimes just Maggy.

“I’ve liked Afleet Alex for so long I just wanted to see his dam, and that’s neat to hear she is as friendly and sweet as she is.  That’s one thing that always stood out to me about him, how sweet and people-oriented he is.”

People… that word almost seems like one I’ve heard enough to sound familiar.  People-oriented, hmm…. don’t know what that means, I think as I stand as close to the visitors as I can.  They are not strangers to me even if we just met.  I’m pretty young, but I don’t think I’ve ever met a stranger.  Every time they move a little further away, especially the one who keeps putting something that looks like a long shiny eye in front of her face, I move closer.  They can’t be ready to leave yet. I’m still here, and I sure would like some more back scratching.  I try to reach my back myself a few times with my teeth but my neck just isn’t quite long enough yet to really hit the right spot.

More talking, of course… I sure have learned that is what people do.

“fuzzy little ears…”

“so cute”

“it’s amazing how fuzzy she is”

The lady with black hair, the one I see a lot, is talking about how laid-back Maggy is and just keeps an eye on things in a real calm way and just then she raises her head and gives a low rumble of a nicker from deep in her throat.  Time to go! Only one thing could drag me away from people.  She speaks and that always means something to me, not just in tone like with people.  I go to her side in a big hurry and decide while I’m there I may as well nurse.
The people laugh, started by the black-haired lady… “She would have to prove me wrong” and everyone else watches as I nurse.  I nurse on the side closest to them for a few minutes before ambling off.  There’s still so much to do.  I wander the fence line, from one person to another, like a little Stonestreet ambassador.  Or maybe Storkstreet is more fitting at this time of year! I’ve heard that said too.

“little baby kisses!” one of the people says as I reach my nose up to her mouth, curiously, and just let the contact linger for a moment.  “I love that!”

The person next to her sees that and reaches her mouth towards me for her own nuzzling moment. I don’t know why her face is so short and her nose doesn’t make contact with mine, but I guess she can’t help it.  I still reach out to get acquainted by scent.  So important, that scent acquaintance.  I learned that the day I was born.

Closer to the gate, I reach down to nibble some grass. It’s not milk but it’s still good.  Enjoying that, I try the dandelion stems, no longer flowering or carrying seeds.   Not good! Spit that out.

The lady I’ve seen a lot here seems to be herding the other people away.  Sometimes I get taken to certain places by people, sometimes by my dam. I understand that, the way their movement is being controlled.

A few more words reach my ears. They’re still happy words.  It’s a good day for me, for them, for Maggy, and across Stonestreet.  There is peace here, and quiet.  It is the perfect nursery and place to grow up.  When we go in, it’s to large, luxurious stalls.  Our pastures are large too, with so much room to run and play, and filled with sweet green grass.

“She thinks this is her best day ever, all these people, all this attention…”

I see all the people still watching me.  There’s a lot of affection in the eyes on me, in the hands that reach out for a few more touches.

“Okay, 90% her best day.  All that was missing was food!”

There was more laughter.

In stillness I stand by the gate, all baby charm and tiny fuzzy cuteness, and watch them go.  They only turn away at the last possible moment and then they’re gone.  I go back to Maggy. I  have a life to live here under the bright blue skies and in the perfect nursery at Stonestreet Farms. I feel like a lucky filly, with a perfect life, and hopefully one day we find my dam and sire have passed on talent and a fire to win.  That seems so far away though. For now I’ll just keep being a little Storkstreet ambassador who loves to see people come and visit.  I have a feeling these people that met me today won’t forget me.

“I wish I could just take her home…”

Nope, they won’t forget me!

[A note about this piece:  So I wanted to try something a little different this time.  I normally do a narrative of my experiences at horse farms or race tracks, and try to maintain at least a semi-professional or completely professional tone.  Sometimes feelings about the horses I cover, an affection for them, does color my writing.  Some may not see that as professional, but as far as I’m concerned, this blog is not strictly for news.  I do hope to someday be a racing journalist and that will necessitate covering racing for news.  But I think there has to be heart in covering this sport too; first of all, because these horses put their hearts into racing, when they have the will to win and the desire.  They do this even if they are not the most talented horse in the race, sometimes.  And second, so many people from all walks of life and levels of participation in this sport, whether they are grooms, owners, trainers, or fans, find a personal connection with the horse.  To me, even on days when it’s just about news and photos, and setting a scene for what happened during a race day, there’s still usually a chance for connection with the horse, even if it’s just a fleeting moment of having a horse linger and look you in the eye with their deep gaze on the way back to the barn. Even if you don’t know their name, you will think of that moment later. It’s just a way a horse, a Thoroughbred, can have of touching the soul.  And then too, most of us have that one horse – at least – that has a place in our hearts.  So if that blurs the boundary of professionalism… well, for once I was drawn to write this type of story since the filly we met just had such a memorable little personality already…]

I am not sure at the moment what has become of the photos I took that day, but I can try to paint the images through words, and add the photos later if I come across them again.  Maggy Hawk was sleek and beautiful, a testament to the care received at Stonestreet.  She’s an amazing-looking mare.

It really is a serene farm, and this was the most I had seen of it yet.  Previous visits had “only” involved seeing Rachel Alexandra, absolutely in the top five of my list of favorite racehorses. But seeing the rest of the farm was great too, from the beautiful soothing pond with its swans to the pastoral scene of the large pasture that Maggy Hawk and her Smart Strike filly occupied, with its line of light green leafy trees around the fence perimeter.

On the late April day of this visit, Rachel was in a field with retired barren mares.

It was interesting to hear how self-sustaining Stonestreet is.  Each Stonestreet farm has its own workshops, and they make everything on site from their own wreaths for holidays to foal tags and fences.  All the ingredients are in place for a perfect home for horses, driven by the passion and enthusiasm Jess Jackson had for the sport, and carried on well by Barbara Banke.  This attention to detail and enthusiasm is evident across the whole farm and in any winner’s circle where Stonestreet horses are.

It was clear too, so close to the Derby on the day we visited, how much excitement Carpe Diem had generated.  Owned in partnership with Winstar, the silks he wears alternate between that farm’s and Stonestreet’s. On Derby day he would wear Stonestreet silks, and the expectation was high that he would carry them to victory.  It’s one more probable success story from this world-class farm.

April Mornings at Winstar and Keeneland

24 Sunday May 2015

Posted by Sarah Troxell in Uncategorized

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Note:  With wrapping up a semester and preparing for graduation, this post is a bit late, but still is one I wanted to share.  It was written before the Derby.

I attended my first Thoroughbred Owners’ and Breeders’ Association [TOBA] seminar, one specifically covering ownership, on April 18th and 19th. I had joined TOBA recently as well. I knew of the organization just from years of reading the Blood Horse, one of many resources TOBA has a hand in producing. But until Carrie Vaught, the marketing director for TOBA, was invited to speak to the Horse Racing club at the University of Kentucky, I never knew you didn’t have to be an owner or breeder to join, or what the benefits of joining are. It helped that there is a student membership fee, and that they try to put their seminars within financial reach of students too. Once I looked at the benefits and learning and networking opportunities they provide, it made perfect sense to join. I have spent a lot of my time at the University of Kentucky pursuing job leads, contacts, and anything I can to fit in more horse knowledge in general or racing industry knowledge, specifically. A lot of this has been practical hands-on work at several different farms, while other pursuits have been more about learning from people speaking of their work and knowledge they have gained in the course of that work.

A lot of the opportunities to learn from industry professionals, outside of class, came about because of my membership in the racing club at school. Professionals speak at our meetings, and usually once a month there are trips to farms to learn from them in their working environment.

My absolute favorite trip we took, for its educational aspect, was when we were invited to Ken McPeek’s Magdalena Farm, early in the days of my enrollment at UK. He took a lot of time to show us around his farm, tell us about his training methods in general, show us horses at the farm that were there either to have a bit of R&R or rehab, or to be prepared for the track if they were young and unraced. It even coincidentally came up that he had a fluency in Portuguese, while we were in the farm office and noticed the sales catalogs in Portuguese on the shelves. It was a fascinating glimpse into his training methods, and before that visit, I didn’t even know he had his own farm. That seems like a great step for a trainer, if they can take it, to have their own place to rehab their horses and give them space to be turned out and have a little breather from the track now and then.

Tying this in to TOBA and their seminar that I just attended, what drew me in was similar opportunities to get a look at another farm’s operation and training regimen for their horses, and really glean a lot of insight into what goes into getting horses ready for the track. I don’t know if I’ll ever own a racehorse; yet I do have to admit that there is a part of me that wants to someday at some point. If I don’t, I will still feel professional and personal fulfillment just by being part of the racing industry with my career. But the part of me that has seen from several people in this industry that you never know where being involved in racing may ultimately lead knows that I can’t say it’s impossible that I will own a horse. For now, that’s one of those goals that is more in the “wish” column and not nearly as pressing as what I’m trying to achieve now, meaning that it really isn’t on my radar that often. So if I do ever own a horse, it will have been valuable to me to attend this seminar. And even if I never own a racehorse, I am just so interested in soaking up everything I can learn from everyone that there is an opportunity to learn from, and made me feel that I needed to attend this seminar.

In a week that had seen rain almost every day, when the seminar began on a Friday that had also called for rain, the day couldn’t have been more perfect. It was April 18th, and we set out for Winstar Farm under bright blue skies and perfect temperatures.   The sunny skies and unexpectedly picture-perfect day made it feel like an auspicious day to be around horses for several hours. I later realized another reason the date felt so significant. It would have been the incredible Cigar’s 25th birthday, and was the first anniversary of his birth since he died a little over six months ago.

I had always reflected on him on that date and what he meant to me, still the best and most accomplished Thoroughbred I watched race, but it seemed in the flurry of getting ready for the seminar it had momentarily slipped my mind. I no longer felt sad he was gone, as sad as I had when he left. The saddest thing about his loss was just how sudden it was, how there’d been little time to prepare for it. Apparently he had been monitored for health concerns for some time, but I hadn’t realized how serious it had been until he was gone. But he had a full life, exemplary care, and the loving admiration of many visitors to the Horse Park, year in and year out.

He was a king of that domain. It was clear to anyone who saw him in his pasture that he knew it, and it showed when he was presented during his turn in the ring in Hall of Champion shows. The click of a camera shutter and the days of acclaim on the track definitely showed they lingered in his mind when he was presented to the audiences at the Park. So the sadness did not come from feeling his life had ended prematurely – even though it’s hard to imagine you can ever be ready to see a horse you followed for nearly two decades be gone – or that it had not been a good one.

Paul Simon has a song with the lyric, “the course of a lifetime runs over and over again.” I used to interpret this as meaning some things we may experience multiple times, such as the beginning of a new romantic relationship, or grief, or even the way I find myself at every Keeneland meet, spring to fall and back again.

The day this seminar started I came to see it another way. It was still about things occasionally coming full circle, but was also more about being led back to our true selves. I’m sure everyone can stray from who they really are and what they really love from time to time, whether it’s because of work obligations or any number of things. A day like today, having several hours to spend among nature and farmland as far as the eye can see, with the only noise being the breathing of horses and quiet commentary now and then about which horses we were seeing, and information about their training and how it prepares them for the track, did feel like one that brought me back to how much I love being at the farms. It is through these times of coming back to our true selves that we can even sometimes get new perspective. We really can almost be multiple people in a lifetime, not in the sense of having split personalities, but just due to growth and change, to being altered by experiences. Sometimes it can feel like we’ve lived many lives in one lifetime. Who I felt I was the day Cigar died is not who I feel I am now, on the 25th anniversary of his birth.

I’d say some of the other people who attended the seminar may have visited Lexington before, since it is such an epicenter of Thoroughbred racing and breeding and most of them were owners or potential owners. But several of them exclaimed over the landscape we passed on the way to Winstar, and once we arrived on how pastoral it is and how holistic some of the treatments their horses receive are. Seeing Lexington and the horse farms through their eyes reminded me of how I felt it was paradise when first visited, just like seeing racing through my nephew’s eyes at his first visit to the track gave me a new lens to see it. It was the kind of day to fully remind you why you love racing; not that I forgot that or why I love the horse side of this community but sometimes fresh glimpses are great. Spending the day with like-minded racing enthusiasts in a haven for us and the horses alike was just what I needed.

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As far as the educational aspect of the visit, we first visited their outdoor swimming pool developed outdoors that looks a lot like a pond, though it is set up with its own filtration system and stocked with carp to keep it clean. It is useful for developing yearlings for the sales, and for providing rehab to racehorses. We then watched workouts on Winstar’s own training track, a synthetic surface that allows them to train year-round, and also have more flexibility for when their horses can train than they would if they were training at a track. Subsequently, they do employ a farm trainer and exercise riders. That alone makes them unique among horse farms in this area. The track also has a separate component that leads off from the polytrack surface, and it provides an uphill, European-style turf course.

We had been joined by farm owner Elliott Walden when we were being told about the pool, and he walked down to the training track with us. This is an exciting time for Winstar. It’s not surprising, considering the depth of their stallion roster and all the work they put training homebreds and purchased horses that they have two serious and legitimate Kentucky Derby contenders with farm ties this year. Naturally, though that would still be incredible for any farm. Primarily West Coast-based American Pharoah is by their stallion Pioneer Ofthe Nile, and they own Carpe Diem in partnership with Stonestreet Farms. Carpe Diem has already made a large mark on the current Keeneland meet, winning the Blue Grass Stakes on opening weekend, and being accorded near rock-star status the morning we visited the farm. Keeneland harrowed the track and closed it to all horses but Carpe Diem that morning for him to train at 10:15, when he zipped through four furlongs in 48 seconds flat, a work watched by trainer Todd Pletcher, Elliott Walden, and quite a few spectators who applauded his entrance to the track to work. I would have liked to go over and see his work, but my friend saw him and got photos.

So back to the training at Winstar that morning: we saw quite a few promising two-year-olds, as pointed out by the farm trainer. Our guide at the farm, assistant trainer Sean Tugel, explained a lot about what results they plan to get and what they are looking for with the training, especially for the two-year-olds. He had a wealth of knowledge and the farm trainer elaborated upon horse names and pedigrees of the horses we were seeing, in between giving instructions to the riders and watching the works. Tugel told us the Keeneland gate crew comes over once a week for the horses to have gate training and that affords them time to get the horses well-versed in gate “manners” and etiquette. He said that all of their horses are well-mannered in the gate, and they work with them to stand quietly and take a cue for when to begin a work as well, instead of just taking off as soon as they get to the track.

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Winstar serenity

Winstar serenity

Of course, these are two-year-olds, and while Winstar definitely provides a less hectic setting than a typical track in morning training, there can still be rambunctious antics

Of course, these are two-year-olds, and while Winstar definitely provides a less hectic setting than a typical track in morning training, there can still be rambunctious antics

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This is the Tapit colt Creator, who was one of several pointed out to us as being especially promising of the two-year-olds we saw that morning.  He did settle down and work well, but first he had a little bit of settling to do.

This is the Tapit colt Creator, who was one of several pointed out to us as being especially promising of the two-year-olds we saw that morning. He did settle down and work well, but first he had a little bit of settling to do.

In between sets of horses training, we went into one of two training/rehab barns and watched the flow of equine traffic while Tugel and Reed Ringler of Fasig Tipton, our seminar moderator, explained more about what you look for in a young horse at a sale, what you want to see in a horse coming off a breeze, a work, or just a routine gallop – they are offered water at each cooling-out lap of the barn but the less water they take, the more fit they are.

The barn, as I knew from several equine classes I had taken, was ideal for horses. It was very well-ventilated, with a unique roof structure set well above the stalls instead of snugly on top of them, and the stalls were all composed of a metal grid structure, both of these being features that allowed a lot of air flow. I could tell the air flow, even without the large fans going that were in the barn, was excellent. There wasn’t any discernible dust or hay particles and the air just felt incredibly fresh and refreshing.   For athletes who need good lung capacity, that type of design can’t be underestimated.

We also got to see Daredevil and Khozan, related to stellar racemare Royal Delta, while in the barn. Then it was back to the track for the next sets to train, including horses that were described as their most promising two-year-olds. Who knows, they may be the Daredevil and Khozan, or the American Pharoah and the Carpe Diem, of their Winstar crop. A lot can change for a young horse from the farm to the track, and even those with lots of promise don’t always get the hang of racing right away. I’ve heard it said many times, the lightbulb has to come on and for those that get it, when that light switch does flick on, they can be a horse to be reckoned with. Hearing their praise for these horses, though, and seeing for myself their raw potential, I will definitely keep an eye on them in the future, especially the Tapit colt Creator.

Leaving Winstar and returning to the hotel where the first day of the seminar talks conducted by industry professionals were held, one of the most enlightening things to me was all the free services and wealth of information about racehorses that can be gleaned from Equineline. The option to build a horse portfolio most intrigued me.

I then attempted to get to Keeneland for the first race prior to going to work. Samantha Nicole, Rachel Alexandra’s full sister, was entered. I hadn’t seen her since she sold as a yearling at Keeneland a few years ago, and I was struck then by how similar to Rachel she looked. Her race career had been brief to date, and this would be only her fourth start.

Turned out, there just wasn’t enough time to get from the seminar to the track at the time I left, but I was pleased to hear she won, breaking her maiden that day. Whether she will go on to bigger things now remains to be seen but for this day it was a bright spot that she won at a great track. I went home pleased with the seminar experience, the news of Samantha Nicole’s win, and that there was a check from Coady Photography waiting in the mail. It was so much more generous than the pay I normally receive, from my “unskilled” labor jobs. One day I’ll find my permanent place in the racing world, and I am eager to step into a position at Coady when one arises. So far I’ve only done the Keeneland meets for them, but with graduation so close at hand and a greater flexibility to leave Lexington and to have time freed up from homework and studying, it is a possibility.

The seminar continued on a Sunday morning. It rained practically non-stop throughout the morning, a stark contrast to the brilliant sunny day spent at Winstar. Of course, given how rainy it had been this month that weather did seem more the norm.

We began the day with breakfast and a visit to trainer Ian Wilkes’ shedrow. For those who don’t know, he is Australian and apprenticed under Carl Nafzger, famously known for training Derby winners Unbridled and Street Sense. Wilkes told us a little about a horse he had training that morning, one who apparently was lazy in the mornings but stellar in races. That naturally led me to wonder if a horse will give any inclination he is talented at racing even if he shows little in the mornings? Wilkes said not really, that you just have to get them in a race and let them show you. He said you really do just have to get them in a race sometimes to see what kind of talent they are working with. He also said it can take five races before you really know what kind of horse you have, talent-wise, and that there can also be a learning curve, a few races needed just for the “lightbulb” to come on. I told him I’ve heard that before about the light bulb, that horses really do need it just to all come together and click in their minds sometimes, and when it does hopefully you realize you’ve got a good one on your hands. Wilkes was so gracious and really took the time to answer our questions.

Those were some of my favorite things about this seminar. It was incredibly informative, and everyone from Carrie Vaught at TOBA, to Keeneland, to all the speakers and people we visited like Wilkes and everyone at Winstar, were so gracious and welcoming. Because of the seminar, I got to have my first meal ever in the Phoenix Room, an occasion that called for dressy clothes. Stepping into this fourth-floor dining room was like stepping into another world. Don’t get me wrong, I love being at the rail and the paddock and in the midst of all the action, but it was wonderful to experience a world of privilege I rarely get to be a part of. Uniformed attendants were present at each door, from the ones in the hallway leading from the elevator, to the ones providing entrance to the Phoenix Room. It’s hard not to feel like you’re somebody when people are standing by just to open doors for you. Absolutely, Keeneland service from the grandstand to the top floor is better than most racetracks provide. But the level of service up there was on another level. And to be perfectly honest, it was a relief to be away from the hordes of frat boys and people so drunk they have trouble locating bathrooms. It was a place for gentility and civilized behavior, and it fit with the serenity I love to experience at Keeneland. It also was interesting to see the track from new perspectives. It was second only to the view on the roof outside the media box in terms of favorite vantage points at Keeneland.

As I left after watching the day’s racing, the spring blossoms were starting to fall to earth and give way to light green leaves on the trees, reflecting the ephemeral nature not only of spring but of the Keeneland meets.  They are wonderful but fleeting, and it came to me that we really were zooming to the end of the meet. It always happens so much more quickly than you’d think it would, even knowing the meets are brief.  Yet it also almost seems like so long ago Bravo was speaking in the jockey Q&A and Carpe Diem found his success and Derby path in the Blue Grass.

Speaking of Carpe Diem, I passed by to see him when I left, but he was not in the mood for visitors.  It was day’s end after all.

I left with the smoothness of bread pudding on my tongue; that is bliss too, just as being at the track and finding a space of stillness in watching the horses is.  There was happy solitude underneath the pink flowering trees, and I turned away, hoping to return for one more day of racing before the horses disperse to other tracks and the Derby hopefuls converge upon Churchill Downs.  I have a few more horses I hope to see, a few more golden hours at this track before picking up the threads of my usual work life.  It’s been a sweet interlude, as always.

 

Afleet Alex: Then and Now

10 Friday Apr 2015

Posted by Sarah Troxell in Uncategorized

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I saw an article recently about how Alex’s Lemonade Stand continues to be incredibly successful, ten years after the organization’s mission reached national news and major exposure when Afleet Alex was beginning his romp through 2/3 of the Triple Crown races.   Probably quite a few people still remember Afleet Alex’s career well. It wasn’t that long ago, and the way he nearly went to his knees in the Preakness and still recovered, and even more amazingly, went on to win… well that’s almost become part of horse racing lore, the improbable become probable, and it has lingered in people’s memories, even if they just saw it on TV, as I did.

Afleet Alex is a horse that grabbed my imagination from the time I first heard his story.  I remember the buzz that circulated around him leading up to the Derby.  And why not? His story almost was one of improbability from the beginning, even before he grabbed victory out near-catastrophe in the Preakness.  It was inspirational to hear how Afleet Alex came to mean so much to his breeder, stricken with cancer, and how the colt initially had to be bottle-fed, but hung in there and even thrived, going on to become a stellar racehorse.  He may never be considered one of the all-time greats, but he’s still cemented his place in racing history and memory for his career, if only for the moment he rallied to win the Preakness.  He has heart and determination, and that is more than enough to endear him to people.

This post, obviously, is a bit of a walk down memory lane.  The article about Alex’s Lemonade Stand and its affiliation with Afleet Alex brought it all back.

That summer and spring of 2005 did seem like a golden summer to me, because of Afleet Alex. I had all the hope in the world that he’d live up to his promise.  He was already an inspiration just because of he overcame a bit of a rocky start as a foal, and how he’d already made a difference to his breeder, given him hope as he battled cancer.  That was such a common theme running through Alex’s career and life, that of giving people hope. I love the quote that says something along the lines of a racehorse being able to take hundreds of people for a ride at one time.  Alex did that and more.

I still remember the broadcast piece taped for the Derby that followed Alex in morning training, and talked about his journeyman jockey, embarking on a grand journey to seek Derby glory.  He had a trainer that had never been in the spotlight much, and the “journeyman jockey” had been won the Eclipse Award for outstanding apprentice jockey, but he had yet to ride in a Kentucky Derby.  I was hooked on this colt and there was no one else in that field that even came close to dividing my loyalty, my emphatic desire to root him on.  Of course, we all know master jockey Mike Smith coaxed Giacomo to victory, leaving Afleet Alex third.  It was a credible finish to be sure, but Alex was far from done with the classic series for his age group.

Afleet Alex’s owners apparently happened to have several children among them named or nicknamed Alex, and according to this article I just read, his connections had been quietly making donations to Alex’s Lemonade Stand.  This lemonade stand literally started as small as could be, and just as the name suggests, as a lemonade stand in a family’s yard.  But its mission was grander than its modest beginnings.  The young girl who started the lemonade stand, Alex Scott, had been diagnosed with cancer at a very young age, and she began her lemonade stand to raise money for cancer research.  The colt who had a slightly rough start in life had gained a known link with the young girl who also had her own challenges, more serious challenges, to face beginning early in her life.

While the donations from Alex’s connections had been given anonymously, as this article stated, once the benefactor was revealed, Afleet Alex’s earnings were used to contribute to Alex’s Lemonade Stand, and lemonade stands were set up at the Preakness and Belmont to further collect donations.  Sadly, Alex Scott had lost her battle with cancer by then, but it was still inspirational to hear how Alex’s connections reached out even more to the organization and their equine Alex went out that first afternoon the lemonade stands appeared at tracks and earned his own significant paycheck to add to the lemonade stand fund.  He didn’t win the Preakness just for himself and just for his connections, although naturally winning a classic meant the world to them on its own merits.  I was moved to hear of the help extended to Alex’s Lemonade Stand and of course to see my favored colt win, especially against those odds that stacked against him when he nearly fell.  Afleet Alex now was an inspiration throughout the racing world, not just to his breeder.  At that time, I was more grateful he had escaped a serious mishap and astounded he still won the Preakness to consider it vindication for his Derby loss.

That vindication seemed to come in the Belmont, when he romped home much the best, winning by seven lengths.  He proved that day the best horse isn’t always the one who finished first in the Derby. I suppose a great horse can win against most odds, but when speaking of a good horse, many good horses have been shown to be unable to escape the cavalry charge of horses in the Kentucky Derby and find a clear path to win.  I still think Afleet Alex was the best of his crop that year.

Even with several graded stakes wins under his belt, it still felt like Afleet Alex was just starting to hit his best stride after that dominant performance in the Belmont Stakes.  While he had escaped major disaster in the Preakness, unfortunately he did not come out of the race unscathed.  He had several issues with leg problems and bruising later in 2005.  The bruising was believed to be a direct result of the mishap in the Preakness, and he was retired to Gainesway Farm to take up stud duties.

One of my favorite images of Afleet Alex was of him reaching over a fence, held by his groom, to take a peppermint from his jockey Jeremy Rose.  He and Rose seemed to have an affinity for one another, on track and off, but what that image showed me more was that Afleet Alex seemed to have a kind nature and be very people-oriented.  Any horse, I suppose, could appear that way when being offered a peppermint. Yet considering this photo was taken by Barbara Livingston, whom I consider a master at capturing the true essence of a horse’s personality – which she herself has described as her aim in taking photos – I definitely think the sweet nature of Alex was shining through in that photo.

When I finally got to meet Afleet Alex face to face at Gainesway, I found that to be very true.  He is an incredibly good-natured, people-oriented stallion, and one I love to visit.  Once I realized first-hand that he has such a good temperament, I hoped he’d stay in Kentucky (somewhat selfishly) so I could keep visiting him.  So far, so good.  Unlike many stallions that are rushed off to other countries or states, sometimes before it seems they’ve been given a reasonable interval of time to prove if they can establish themselves as good sires or not, Afleet Alex has lived at Gainesway since he retired.    Gainesway is not a farm that welcomes visitors on a regular basis like some will, or even has had routine open houses when most farms do, but I’ve visited him every time they let visitors stop by.

Even before he retired, and I knew first-hand what a sweet horse he is, he made another mark on my life. I adopted a sweet little kitten from the animal shelter in the early fall of 2005, and it seemed natural his name would be Alex, though I spelled it Alix.  It was my own homage to the horse that had been such an inspiration to me and so many others, and the best part is the feline Alix was every bit as sweet as his equine namesake.  He was probably the sweetest cat I’ve ever known, and in those early days of us getting to know one another, a deep bond grew.  He was intelligent too, so intelligent that somehow – I no longer remember how it started – we played hide and seek; I would hide, and he would find me. I’ve never had a cat do that before, and I think it’s a pretty abstract concept for a cat to grasp.

I’ve kept tabs on Afleet Alex since then, in between visits.  It wasn’t entirely for selfish reasons I wanted his stud career to be a success, so he would stay in Kentucky where I could easily visit him.  I wanted him to do well on his own merits, to keep the promise going that he showed on the track.  The odds of any stallion making a big splash are slim, but there’s always hope.  That’s what keeps people in the game, and Alex had provided hope at so many stages of his life.  I had hope for this stage of his life because he had won the Belmont, and if he passed on that stamina, I felt like that would be an excellent contribution to make to the breed.

He came to be described as a “useful” stallion a few years into his career.  It was not the most stellar praise, but “useful” can mean providing a return on the investment of the stud fee, even if it’s not done by winning huge races and having multitudes of stakes winners.  So that encouraged me a bit that he’d stay here in Kentucky.  I can’t even fully explain why it meant so much to me that he stay here, but I just really wanted him to.  It was more than wanting to visit him; I guess I just felt he was a horse I’d like to see have success in each stage of his life.

I began tracking his runners from the time they first showed up at sales early in his stud career and of course when they began running. One thing I noticed about a lot of them was they looked quite similar to Afleet Alex and many of them seemed to have his good-natured, calm temperament.  Michael Hernon, the director of sales at Gainesway, commented on that as well when interviewed for the Blood Horse about Afleet Alex several years ago.

The first of his progeny that really stood out to me at the auctions was a chestnut colt in one of Keeneland’s September yearling sales.  His consignors told me he’d be a Derby horse.  I had never heard a consignor make a prediction that optimistic before, and whether that would play out that way or not, I was intrigued enough to follow that colt and see if that prediction held true.  The colt went on to be named Dublin and won the Grade 1 Three Chimneys Hopeful Stakes at Saratoga at the age of 2, in his third start and his first try against graded-stakes company.  The Derby horse prediction was accurate, after all, when he entered the gate at Churchill Downs on the first Saturday in May.  He finished 7th, and raced a few more times before calling it a career.  Still, I remember him well just for that prediction I heard the day I saw him at Keeneland as a yearling. I no longer remember if he was Afleet Alex’s first big runner, but Dublin was indicative of the flashes of brilliance that Afleet Alex was capable of siring now and then.

It was encouraging to me also when Afleet Alex had a Breeders’ Cup Marathon winner in Afleet Again.  That race was never quite accorded the same status as the well-established Breeders’ Cup races that had been in place since the Breeders’ Cup was a one-day event, but I liked to see the infusion of stamina Afleet Alex no doubt gave Afleet Again, which Afleet Alex had displayed in his Belmont Stakes romp. It was another major milestone for him when he sired Afleet Express who won the incredibly historic and significant Travers Stakes, and now stands at Gainesway alongside his sire.

What’s incredible now, for those who follow and are somewhat enamored with Afleet Alex as I am, is what a good string of recent successes he had, one that would send any sire’s name filtering into racing headlines. He had Iotapa finish third in the Breeders’ Cup Distaff in October last year, starting a run of big horses for him. While she didn’t win the race, I was impressed by her determination. Even when she couldn’t match the top two finishers, she never appeared to throw in the towel.  Heart.  Afleet Alex clearly had it when he picked himself up and went on to win the Preakness, and Iotapa showed me she inherited that too.

She was sold at auction just a few days after her run in the Distaff, and that is when I saw her in person for the first time.  She had a definite presence and classiness about her, and that was reflected in her eventual purchase price of $2.8 million.

It was even more thrilling that in that same Breeders’ Cup, Afleet Alex-sired Texas Red won the Juvenile. I had not heard of this colt before that, but just given that he was sired by Alex made it exciting for me.  Subsequently, Texas Red began his journey on the Kentucky Derby trail. Unfortunately, that was derailed by a foot abscess, but given enough time off, he should still be a contender in 3-year-old races further down the road.

Meanwhile, Afleet Alex had another colt – Materiality – enter the picture for Derby contention.  While lightly raced, this colt is so far undefeated and just won the Florida Derby in late March.  Materiality has a lot of stand-out horses to compete against should he enter the starting gate for the Kentucky Derby, but he has been ranked 7th on Steve Haskin’s most recent Derby Dozen list, and he described him as having “unlimited potential.”  That doesn’t always play out but I am just so pleased to see Afleet Alex lately keep having some big hitters at the races for him.

Finally, this article about Alex’s Lemonade Stand that set me reminiscing about Afleet Alex’s career and the lives he’s impacted so positively was one I read on Monday of this week.  Not to dwell on this, but in some previous posts I spoke of losing the cat I named after Afleet Alex on a Monday.  Mondays do have me reflect upon his life and loss, which had been only six weeks ago this past Monday after I had him for nine years. Takes a while to fully grasp that loss.  But in positive terms, it can be a day to honor his life too.  And just as I greatly appreciate Afleet Alex and have been drawn to his kind nature, my cat drew people in with his incredibly sweet demeanor.  It turned out to be so fitting indeed that I gave him the name of a racehorse I greatly admire and appreciate, and he turned out to be such a great cat to know, one who made a positive impact on my life as well. So I was glad to see this article about the equine Alex on a Monday.  It made me reflect on the happiness watching him run and watching his progeny excel brings to me, as well as the joy my Alix brought to my life.  I like how all those threads intertwine, and that I too have been able to make the acquaintance of the equine Alex, who helped launched so many dreams for people, from his own classic victories to the Lemonade Stand donations to his Breeders’ Cup winners, and now with another horse on the Derby trail, I see his potential to help dreams be realized starting all over again.

Racing the way it was meant to be… once more

09 Thursday Apr 2015

Posted by Sarah Troxell in Uncategorized

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The day before the Keeneland meet began was the usual morning bustle of horses and riders, fitted into the span of training hours.  There was an anticipatory air evident that I have felt quite a few times on the eve of racing beginning there.  People gathered around the rail and asked each other how long they’ve been here, speaking of their sometimes transient lives, based on the schedule of the horses in their care and the calendar of racing.  The names of the horses working across the oval frequently change, but so many of the human players are a constant, year after after.  Zito accompanied his chestnut charge Frammento, a Blue Grass Stakes entrant, to be contested in two days, bumped up to opening weekend.

I arrived around seven a.m. when the light was still less than ideal for photographing the workouts, but Carpe Diem had run by during that time of low light, at some point.  Never mind. I’d get a better look at him Saturday, as he too entered the starting gate for the Blue Grass, on the way to hopefully make Derby dreams a reality for his connections.  I saw no reason to indicate he wouldn’t live up to his promise.

Later I saw Barbara Banke of Stonestreet – who owns Carpe Diem in partnership with Winstar – walking near the track kitchen.  She had been present to see his work that morning, and it was the first time I recall seeing her walking around the grounds.

Larry Jones also made an appearance on a pony, once accompanying a horse that was pointed out to me by another photographer as Believe You Can’s half brother.  The colt was rather full of himself, to the point of near-obstreperousness, but Jones just eased the stout frame of his pony near the young runner, and walked him to the barn, providing a bit of a settling presence.  [Read later that the colt, named How About Him, was actually a ¾ brother to Believe You Can.  Of course, these siblings to good runners don’t always pan out, but they are still worth noting for what potential they might possess.]

(Interesting to note, though, while I wrote this shortly after opening weekend, I am just now posting it while the second week of Keeneland is in full swing, and How About Him just won a maiden special weight on April 8th. So there’s definitely potential there.)

I was glad to see Jones again. He is a trainer that seems to bring a good string of horses and is genuine.  I happened to wait on him the day before the October meet began last year (in my “fill-in-the-gap” job that I have between graduation and working for Coady full-time), and we started talking about racing, naturally, and I told him I’d be working for Coady during the meet.  He then said that he hoped he’d see me a lot with a laugh, speaking of course of having winner’s circle photos taken.  The cool part, besides how I’ve always liked him as a trainer and liked his horses, was that he actually did remember me by name each time he saw me at the track. I haven’t been a part of that world professionally long enough for that to get old, and let’s be honest, to be seen as a part of the track community will never get old.  If it did, I think I’d be seeking the wrong profession, and I have aspired to be part of that world for too long for it to become something I ever take for granted.

So this go-round, it was just a bit of symmetry that I saw Larry Jones again before the meet began, though I didn’t introduce myself this time, and though the setting was a more expected setting, it was all just a reminder of that anticipation of the meet I felt last time and feel each time.  Keeneland, too, never gets old.  It is just a pinnacle of the racing experience, each and every time, and all the smiles and happiness I saw as people took to the track again spread to me as well.  There’s not much better than Keeneland on a bright beautiful morning.  I have been struggling a bit lately to stay on top of the largest class load I have had yet, and work, and other things, but I walked away that morning really feeling like everything is going to be okay.  Not only that, but I felt invigorated.  It’s amazing what a morning with horses can do, in such a beautiful setting.  Keeneland had worked its magic once more.

I next came back the following afternoon, on a temporary leave from my “fill-in-the-gap” job, for the duration of the meet.  In the past, I had primarily taken race photos.  A larger-than-usual staff for the meet this time made my assignment covering events and people.  Of course, the horses still drew my eye when they appeared, but focusing on the people to the extent I did that day even more drove home how happy people are to be at Keeneland, and to see racing once more in the heart of the bluegrass. I really can’t think of that many other tracks where you see so many happy faces, and that too makes it enjoyable to be here.  Of course, Keeneland does get its share of drunk people (not always pleasant to be near),but the camaraderie that I feel by the rail in the morning and in the photo office is also fully present.

The first day of the meet was quite rainy, and the sun did break through the clouds at one point.  At that time, it lasted long enough that it seemed the rain had passed by for the rest of the day, but there were more deluges in store.  Since I was not shooting the races that day, I was in the office when everybody went out to the track with the horses, and when they all came back seconds later, we asked if there’d been a delay.  Lightning had been spotted near Keeneland, so that was to be expected.  However, not long afterward, the announcement was made that the remainder of the card had been canceled due to inclement weather. I’ve been coming to Keeneland for over ten years, and could never remember that happening.  It turns out, it was the first time ever that Keeneland had canceled the remainder of a card.  Nothing to do about it, and of course it was for the safety of all concerned, but could you imagine how fired up those horses might have been back at the barn, sent out to race and even starting the procession to the track before being called back?  So just like that, our day too was suddenly over.  We finished up some things and watched the downpour from beneath the grandstand.  The track was starting to be washed into the winner’s circle, and every time it seemed like the rain would stop, it was only for a brief span of time. Keeneland even had everyone evacuate the grandstand.  Apparently all of Kentucky was under a tornado watch.

Nearly everyone tabbed to be the Keeneland team for Coady this meet were people I met for the first time on the first day of racing for this meet, as they usually worked for other tracks, often outside of Kentucky.  Some, though, were recently added to the fold and did work in Kentucky.  I met Clementine, who had been working at Turfway, and her husband Richard, who is a jockey.  They are from Britain originally and kept me laughing with that British sense of humor I’ve long liked from people as diverse as the Beatles to Monty Python. When the work is done for the day, it is great to feel that camaraderie and be brought into the racing community.  It bears repeating, because so far I’ve only been able to be part of that during 3 Keeneland meets, 1 week at Saratoga, and a day at Belterra.  Now that I am so close to graduation, though, I look forward to that being my life too, as I’ve always wanted it to be.

I also met Caitlin, who is Danielle’s assistant at Turfway.  I’ve helped Danielle at Belterra during the one day mentioned above, and we worked together during all the Keeneland meets I’ve been part of so far.  But Caitlin recently began, and like most of the Coady employee family, she welcomed me right away.  I just find it so easy to click with people in this setting, and it did occur to me after the meet last year, that is probably because we all share a common interest or passion for racing and photography.  While that seems obvious, it is a bit of a revelation to me, because most of the work I’ve done previously just involved walking through the door and putting in an application, without having any specific skills or being drawn to it because it was a passion.  As a result, that brings a hodgepodge of people of all ages and from all walks of life with all sorts of different motivators, and probably the one common thread in jobs like those is just the need to make a living.  And yes, I realize I am talking about the difference between a career and a job, but it is all the more wonderful to me that I get to be part of this not only because I am following a calling, but also because the common thread with the people that are there is one that is more likely to bond people, because it goes far beyond just needing to make a living.

The second day of racing was sunny but chilly, yet at least there was no chance of the races being called off due to weather. It was Blue Grass day!  I arrived as the National Anthem was being sung, before jockey Joe Bravo participated in a Q&A session.  He is riding his first full Keeneland meet this April, and was asked about what prompted him to move his tack here for the full meet.  He said the timing was right for meets he usually rides, such as Monmouth, which alludes to his nickname of “Jersey Joe.”  He might be a little under the radar around here, though I know he’s recognized for a few recent Kentucky Derby rides, but he has such a likeable demeanor and it came across during the time he was interviewed as well.  Another question revealed that he soon will have reached the milestone of 5,000 wins, and then he was asked which wins or horses were especially memorable from that span of victories.  I liked his answer a lot, as he said it was the horses that are warriors that mean so much to him.  He also mentioned being third in the Derby last year feeling incredible.  He said it wasn’t a win, but it was his best finish ever in that race, and I fully sensed how just being on the board in a Derby meant a lot. I could imagine if I was a jockey, especially if I didn’t often have a Derby mount, how incredible that would feel.

Another response he had (to a question I don’t recall), was about how he often meets people that own restaurants, and then he gets rides in races through those chance meetings.  He went on to say that the people you’ll meet through racing and that circle is incredible.  And that led me to reflect on the (so far) brief time I’ve been involved in this professionally.  You really will meet some incredible people, and the racing world can be smaller than you’d think.  I love how it brings people together, too, as he said. That was in full evidence yesterday, with all the people so happy to be here with their friends, to a few people I knew and ran into the day before the meet and on opening day, and to feeling an almost instant kinship with the people I just met in the photo office, and a renewal of the friendship with the ones I had already met but not seen for months.  I’ve heard similar stories of what a small world it is from other people in racing too, that common thread drawing us all together.

On a busy day, with thousands of people present and a big card of races, there is only time for a few key moments to really stand out, like snapshots.  I had several of those from this second day of racing, with an array of stakes races that culminated in the Blue Grass Stakes.

While it was my assignment to take photos of people that day and not the races, there was a gray horse in the seventh race that caught my eye.  I didn’t even know until later that his name is Kobe’s Back, but he was the only one I took a closeup of from the field in his race on their procession to the walking ring.  Gary Stevens rode him, and together they won. I was glad for them.

Stevens has long been one of my favorite jockeys and to see him come back and excel once more is watching his dream become reality.  I can only imagine how that feels, to come back after retirement and being older than many of the jockeys, and still see it all come together.  I’m older than most college students, and certainly the ones who follow the traditional path and pursue a degree right out of high school.  I understand the moments of people doubting you and what you want to achieve, and of feeling like you’re coming to something later than most, and maybe even having moments of doubt yourself.  I know Stevens has been here before, in this career, and he seemed quite confident upon his return, but there’s that and then there’s leaving them all behind aboard the back of a fleet gray horse, and knowing you can do it.  To see all the familiar players come back and for the buzz surrounding a race meeting to take root around Keeneland once more. All these things, big and little, make it feel like coming home, to a place that is familiar and welcoming.

Another snapshot moment that stood out was when Larry Jones entered the paddock with his horse Lovely Maria for the Grade 1 Ashland Stakes.  I know Larry Jones often has a top horse, and maybe she was expected to be in serious contention for this race. I don’t know, since I was only minimally watching the races and how they played out or were expected to play out.  But when she ran on to victory a few moments later, it did represent the culmination of a possibly improbable dream.  When she won, her jockey Kerwin Clark achieved his first Grade 1 win ever, after forty years of being a jockey.  Photos showed him wiping away tears after the victory.  I can only imagine that had to feel as amazing for him as a third-place finish in the Derby did for Joe Bravo.  When you reach a pinnacle you maybe never thought you’d reach, on an elite stage, after so much hard work day in and day out, the emotion makes all the sense in the world. And I’d say that is a feeling that will never fade.

The remaining snapshots from this day were all pertaining to the Blue Grass Stakes.  I had earlier spotted a woman carrying a circular sign she made decorated like a pepperoni and bearing Blue Grass entrant Pepper Roani’s name on it in big block letters. She disappeared into the crowd before I could get a photo of her and the sign, though, so I was on the lookout for her as the race approached. I got a perfect photo of her with her friends as she held up the sign and they all laughed together while the horses were in the walking ring.  That is the actually the first sign I’ve ever seen anyone make a sign for a horse at Keeneland, but his name was too perfect not to have fun with like that.

But before that, I just felt so lucky to be in the paddock for a Blue Grass.  Last year, Dance With Fate won, and while I wasn’t super-enthused about him personally, it was incredible to be that close to him when he won and get those shots of him winning and coming to the winner’s circle on the turf course. That was a thrill beyond words.  When I get to be that close when they run by, I swear some of the adrenaline the jockeys must feel transmits to me as well.

But on a whole, I felt the field this year – particularly my pick, Carpe Diem – had a much better shot at having impacts on the Derby picture as major contenders.  Perhaps that does have a lot to do with the Blue Grass being on dirt once more and a week before it had  previously been held.  That same thrilling feeling of being so close to the horses as they ran last year came over me once more during the wait for them to enter the paddock.  There’s just such an electric feeling that filters through the paddock before a big stakes race, and I felt that anticipation.  To me, it was just a bit of a realization of dreams – as in pursuing my dream career at last – to be standing there, and there was a sense that each horse entering that paddock was representing a culmination of dreams for their connections as well.

Quite a few horses caught my eye – those at the elite level will do that – but there was no denying Carpe Diem was the one to watch.  He looked like tightly coiled, quietly contained fire just waiting to be unleashed, and that held up on the track.  He was a looming presence on the outside, entering the turn, and the sense that he was waiting to be unleashed was even stronger than it had been in the paddock.  I had missed seeing him that dark morning two days ago but there was no missing him now.  He took charge of the race and drew off by daylight, leaving Frammento in his wake, the horse I had taken note of two mornings ago.  The story was all Carpe Diem, for sure, but Frammento still gave Zito a shot at the Derby with his fourth-place finish.

The day wrapped up quietly after one more race, when Francisco Torres evaded disaster and stayed on his mount after a hard bump in the stretch, and the fiery sun made a glow settle over Keeneland as it began to set.  One more glorious day at the track was in the books.

Keeneland: Looking Ahead

15 Sunday Mar 2015

Posted by Sarah Troxell in Uncategorized

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This is just a brief post to showcase Keeneland a little bit. For me, when March rolls around and the first warm days start to flow in, it means only one thing.  The countdown to Keeneland’s spring meet is on.  It means even more now that I am lucky enough to work for Coady Photography.  This year, too, my graduation from college is finally almost at hand, and getting to work in a career, doing what I love, is within reach.  So with spring slowly starting to roll in, it signifies quite a few countdowns.

Keeneland, of course, has its own countdown to a milestone achievement this year: hosting their first Breeders’ Cup ever.  For a track that has seen some of the biggest names in horse racing, human and equine, grace its stage – and even hosted a queen – it is another feather in their cap.

In fact, what brought me to Keeneland on this lovely sunny day was to see the recently-arrived Breeders’ Cup statue on their grounds for the first time ever.  As I climbed the stairs to the path that flanks the paddock and walking ring on either side, the statue was positioned straight ahead, a silent mark of things to come.

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It was exciting to see. I have spent so many wonderful days at Keeneland, and long before I began working for Coady, it felt like a second home to me, always welcoming and inviting.  I have seen so many thrilling moments here as well, and greatly look forward to their first Breeders’ Cup being yet another cascade of them.

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It seemed fitting, too, as I looked ahead to another Keeneland meet and their first Breeders’ Cup that I noticed this sign for the first time ever, right behind the BC statue.  I’ve been going to Keeneland for over a decade now and never even saw this until now.  Gems still wait to be discovered there, just like at their last meet when I discovered parts of the grounds (or more accurately, buildings and rooftop views) I never knew existed, as part of the course of the photographer workday.

 

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I just love the artistry and workmanship of the statue.

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I left after my brief visit on a beautiful day.  See you in April, Keeneland, when it all begins again. Always one of the highlights of my year!

Our Mims

10 Tuesday Mar 2015

Posted by Sarah Troxell in Uncategorized

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I made my way to Our Mims on the first truly warm day central Kentucky experienced in quite a while.  Two huge snowfalls within three weeks had made the tail end of winter range from unpleasant, to “car-stuck-in-the-snow” inconvenient.  One thing I’ve learned from my years of living in Kentucky is that you can never quite say winter is fully over just because March arrives.  I’ve seen blizzards hit at the Keeneland meet in April, but it almost seemed safe to say we’d seen the last of the huge snowfalls for this winter.

As I drove to Paris, one town over from Lexington for my appointment at Old Mims, I quickly left urban sprawl behind. There are some beautiful historic homes and areas in Lexington, but the whole reason I moved here was due to falling under the spell of the wide open spaces that horses inhabit here; that and the almost cathedral or canopy-like effect of the trees’ branches spread across many of the roads dotted with horse farms.

While working on my degree, I became a very infrequent visitor to area farms.  It was often necessary to have tunnel vision during a semester, to manage a heavy school workload and my job as well.  After the semester was ample time to once again do more fun activities.  So I had not fully realized how much I needed to take a little time to get back in touch with going out and doing those things I enjoy.  That sounds like an obvious statement, but when I started this degree nearly five years ago, I had a completely different mentality than I do now.  This was my third attempt to get a college degree and move up a career ladder, and I kept that laser-like focus through probably well over half of my time at the University of Kentucky.  When I hit burn-out over a year ago, I became less inclined to drop everything in life to work on school.  I still had to spend the majority of my time on it, of course, but I needed a little more life/work balance.

Fast-forward to now.  Though I’d tried to align life and work a little better, I still didn’t feel like I could afford the “luxury” of taking the time required for long drives through the countryside.  I knew I really didn’t have time on a peaceful Sunday at the end of the first week of March, but I took it anyway.  I had wanted to visit Our Mims for so long, and when Jeanne Mirabito, who owns and runs the farm, told me that it would have been Our Mims’ birthday the day of my visit and was another current resident’s birthday, that almost seemed too fortuitous not to go.  The day I finally cleared my calendar to go to her farm was the day the horse this was all in honor of had been foaled? I had to go.

That was an excellent decision. I was doing it for a photo assignment, or otherwise even then I may never have taken the time to go.  But just as with my visit to Old Friends recently, it did me a tremendous amount of good.  The drive alone was soothing: miles of driving past black fences, coralling pastures blanketed with pure white snow.  The contrast in colors and the wide open spaces had a calming effect.  And it was wonderful to get back to basics almost, to doing the things I loved doing when I first moved here.

It got slightly better day by day, but I still had moments of struggling with the sudden loss of my cat.  I was coming to the point where having known him and his sweet nature and cuddly ways was outweighing having lost him.  I had realized a few days ago the futility of wishing he was back to have more of that love.  I’ve spent so much of the past five years, the time I’ve taken for this degree, to push forward, to make progress.  There was no looking back.  To want to go back now, even to have more days with him, was as counterproductive as it was impossible.  That’s not to say I hardened my heart to having to lose him.  I can’t do that.

Realizing you’ve been the recipient of deep, unconditional love makes it harder to have the absence of that love in the here and now.  But oh, how lucky I was to have him give me that gift, and help me be the kind of person who could return that to him in full measure. Animals can teach us so much about love, life, and even death.  I still remember how bold and adventurous Choobie was right before we went to the vet on that final ride.  He was a cat on a mission, to live fully in spite of illness. I knew he still was not feeling very well, but he didn’t let that stop him from exploring his world.  And when he really wasn’t feeling well enough to do much at all, there was a stillness, a calm about him.  I know he was suffering at those times, most likely, and I couldn’t sit there and watch that go on.  But in those moments, he also showed me how to die with grace.  He didn’t, of course, understand he was dying.  But he knew he wasn’t himself, and he did what he had to do to handle that.  He rested for long periods, he ate when he could, and when he needed comfort or felt well enough to snuggle as he usually would, he sought out my company.

I would sit near him in those last days and just read, or sing along to music I put on to try to diminish the stress I was feeling at knowing our time together was growing short, and that he may be suffering more than he’d let on.  Some websites suggested just letting a dying cat know you were near was enough, especially if they didn’t feel like socialization or being touched.  And he did respond to me being near, in his usual endearing ways of rolling on to his back or stretching his legs out in contentment.  His last days were as peaceful and full of love as I could make them, and I have no doubt he knew until the end he was loved.

But I digress.  Going to Our Mims was one more opportunity to find solace in the company of horses. I was going that day primarily to gather photos more than for my own personal agenda, yet it turned out being there did me a world of good.

My visit began in the cemetery, as Jeanne narrated a little about the lives of the horses buried there.  However, just beyond the cemetery, the living residents inhabited one huge pasture and they were the focus at that time.  I hadn’t realized the visit would involve walking right among them, and getting so much one-on-one time.  That was wonderful.

We saw Elmhurst, a Breeders’ Cup Sprint winner, and he is stunning.  Jeanne hopes to take him to Breakfast with the Works at Keeneland’s fall meet, to honor his own Breeders’ Cup triumph at the same time Keeneland hosts the championship series for the first time.

Elmhurst

Elmhurst

We also saw birthday girl Trail Guide, and wandered around to see a few others.  All the horses were curious – a few followed behind us for a time, and all of them were so well-mannered; that day, at least.  Jeanne showed me little pens in the huge pasture and explained they were for people in case the horses got too fractious.  I loved her approach already.  The horses here got to be horses more than anything else, and it was the people who would get corralled if the horses needed space.

All the horses I saw looked at ease (except one who was dealing with cancer, but even she leaned in for head rubs, mostly from Jeanne, but I couldn’t resist the chance to love on her as well), and they all seemed quite content.  I’ve heard it said horses like to have jobs – and apparently some of the Our Mims residents are ridden or otherwise part of therapy.  But who knows? After the regimented life at racetracks, they may very well have enjoyed the time to just stand in a field and follow their own agenda.

Jeanne told me about one horse that had been part of a group of starved horses, and showed me the photo of her on her phone, pretty much just skin and bones.  Then she pointed her out now, her bay coat gleaming in the sun and her healthy weight a stark lovely contrast to the way she’d been before.

It was being reaffirmed to me that even while the animals people rescue have found a world of good, they quite often reflect that same good back to the people around them.

I hadn’t realized Our Mims also hosts therapy programs involving the horses, for disadvantaged teens and other people, as well.  But it made a tremendous amount of sense. I hadn’t even been on the property twenty minutes and I could feel a sense of well-being coming over me.  I couldn’t deny I had been in need of some type of therapy to cope with loss, and I continued to choose the animal sort.  How incredibly fitting then, that these horses are part of a formal therapy program as well.  The more time that the visit took, and the further we got into the property, the more I gained from being here.  There is just a sense I felt there of all the well-being and contentment the horses reflected.

I thought back to what Michael Blowen said about all he could tell from a horse based on who handled them before he arrived at the farm.  They pick up on what the people around them feel, no doubt.  And here, I could just feel the peace ripple across the farm, through the horses, and to me.  It was a quiet sensation but almost palpable.  We paused to greet a chestnut pony whose head almost reached past my torso.  He was still winter shaggy, and he felt so soft that I buried my hands in the thick hair along his neck and just happened to inhale that sweet horsy scent I’d not thought of in so long, but that I loved.  I could have stayed there just petting him all day, a tactile therapy.

From there, we moved on to the barn, and Jeanne explained how everyone who comes to the farm and participates in its programs leaves something painted on the barn.  It can be a quote, a painting, something that reflects what the time here meant to them… It seemed fitting this was the first quote I saw, on the outside of the barn.

IMG_6822

I hadn’t ridden during my time here, but I still felt as if I’d found a respite like this quote indicated was found on horseback.

All the stalls are painted with something that represents the horse who resides there, and when a horse passes, their panels are moved higher up the barn walls.  The result was a colorful ode to all the residents, past and present, and one more way Our Mims is for the horse first and then the people. I loved the concept of making it so horse-centric, and in the process could see how much even the people who come here gain as well.

Jeanne also described with amusement how Elmhurst is a master at shredding blankets, losing halters, and breaking or opening stall door latches.  She said they may just start to keep a tally of how many times he does those things or how long it takes him.  One thing she said then that resonated with me a lot was that when the horses are here they are in retirement.  If they really want to get out they can.  They are just free to be themselves.

IMG_6827

A cat was sunbathing in a patch of dirt underneath a stall panel of multicolored, painted squares, and it was then Jeanne began to tell me of a horse named Hana Bride.  She said she is used to getting calls about famous residents she has or had there.  Hana Bride, however, was not famous for any racing exploits, but she still got a call one day from a woman who said she can’t believe Our Mims has Hana Bride.  Jeanne noted that is a failing of the racing world, to not explore what value a horse may have beyond the racetrack.  It seems to me there are some organizations out there that try to do that, but as far as most horse owners, I suppose if they are heavily invested in racing, they may not be that interested in taking the time to find out where else a horse may excel.  I’m not saying they don’t provide for or try to rehome these horses, but a great incentive to find their value in other areas is probably not as important if racing is where their interest lies, and if that’s the sports endeavor they want to fund.

It turns out, Hana Bride had progeny that made her a legend in the dressage world.  If I remember correctly, Jeanne said she had been very close to being slaughtered, and yet she had offspring doing so well in the dressage ring that Hana Bride could have easily been worth $200,000.

As we left the barn, and went back towards the cemetery to conclude my visit, Jeanne began talking about how she found Our Mims and why the mare meant so much to her.  She said she’d seen her race on TV when she was growing up, and the horse just captivated her.  More than that, she said she was going to own her someday.  And wouldn’t you know, fate did end up bringing Jeanne and Our Mims together.  She heard about her being turned out to fend for herself, and was able to care for her in the last years of her life.  I could tell as she spoke how that time she had with Old Mims still lingered with her.  It is just like I thought when my cat died.  He is not with me physically, but the love never dies.  Deep bonds always stay with us.

As Jeanne told me about finding Old Mims, taking care of her, and then how she was buried at Calumet when her time came, to be among generations of her ancestors and on a land that had seen so many great horses born, raised, and live, had me reflecting on the continuity of Thoroughbred breeding.  All the generations and planning that go into each horse’s life is an interesting path through history, from three foundation stallions to the present day, from when horses may be out of mares that only had the names of their owners, yet it produced an alchemy that is the modern breed, that roared through the years and centuries to give us Secretariat… Seattle Slew…. Cigar… Barbaro…. And to give Jeanne Mirabito Our Mims, the horse she dreamed of as a girl.

A reverence came over me when I heard her talk about Our Mims.  It was more than what she said.  The story was straightforward, but between the lines was all that she had meant to Jeanne and how blessed she felt to get to bring the mare into into her life. She told me Our Mims had died in late 2003, and I thought that I wish I could have met her.  I had been living in Lexington for most of that year, and it would have been possible but she wasn’t on my radar at the time, even as I had gone to every horse farm in the area that allowed visitors.  In a sense, it was enough to hear her story, to know what she had meant.  She was even why we were standing here, on what would have been the champion mare’s forty-first birthday, on this farm that bore her name.

That is why I know, besides telling me about finding her and caring for her, that Our Mims lingers with Jeanne to this day.  I felt she would have understood my grief for Choobie, too, had I told her. Animals give so much unconditionally.  Losing that unconditional love cuts deep, but having had it at all can move us forward to help other animals know that same love.  It was moving that she had launched Our Mims in the beloved mare’s name to help other horses in similar situations.  I had a similar thought to wanting to send that same positive energy out into the world in Choobie’s memory too, and that came to me as Jeanne said she had vowed she wouldn’t let Our Mims’ name be forgotten.  I don’t expect Choobie (or Alix, to give him his more “dignified” given name, though it’s not the one he responded to or was called often), to have his name known widely, but I still want to make a difference to keep the effect of the difference he made in my life rippling through this world, too.

And because Our Mims’ horses helped me start to feel more whole again, and because Old Friends’ horses also helped me find solace, they will be two of the first recipients of donations in Choobie’s name.  I like too that they are organizations that rescue animals, since Choobie also came from a rescue situation when I got him as a kitten at the animal shelter.  We think we are rescuing these animals, and we are, but then they go on to do so much for us, on the most fundamental level.

As we came back to the cemetery again, and the story of Our Mims came to a conclusion, Jeanne started speaking of what happens to the horses here when their time comes.  They are here for the rest of their days when they arrive, and when they go, they are buried whole with their heads facing east, towards new beginnings.  And in the end, that’s all death is… just transition from one form to another.  We do get sad about it, but it is a new beginning.  Sometimes it is a needed new beginning, if the animal is suffering, and the final, most loving thing we can do for them.

Jeanne also said that each horse is buried with a bucket of favorite treats under their chins.  It was such a loving, reverent burial.  I still get a little emotional now and then, and it did bring tears to my eyes.  Doing what we can for the animals in our care, with love, compassion, and ultimately a dignified death and a respectful and meaningful burial is what they all are worthy of, for all the ways they enrich our lives.  The rituals are for us almost more than them, but there is still a lot to be said for a lovingly planned final ceremony to honor their lives.

So I left Our Mims feeling much better for having gone through its gates and having met Jeanne and some of the horses in her care.  I imagine they feel the same way when they arrive and realize what a good place they have to live now.



A few more scenes from Our Mims and the painted areas of the barn

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