Author Archives: Darrell Wood

Altamura Has Sights Set On Stakes Sweep In Sunday’s $75,000 Oakley Stakes

The following is a press release from the Maryland Jockey Club

LAUREL, MD – Susan Moulton’s Altamura, having already captured the first two legs in Laurel Park’s series for Virginia-bred/sired horses, looks to make it a clean sweep while extending her win streak to four in Sunday’s $75,000 Oakley Stakes.

Carded as Race 4, the 5 ½-furlong Oakley for fillies and mares 3 and up is the first of four $75,000 turf stakes for Virginia-bred/sired horses on a 12-race Commonwealth Day program. It is followed by the 5 ½-furlong Punch Line (Race 6) and 1 1/8-mile Bert Allen (Race 9) for 3-year-olds and up, and the 1 1/8-mile Brookmeade for females 3 and older.

Commonwealth Day was originally scheduled for Sept. 22 but pushed back a day following the rescheduling of Laurel’s Fall Festival of Racing program from Sept. 15 due to the threat of severe weather from Hurricane Florence. First race post time Sunday is 12:30 p.m.

Altamura is a perfect 3-0 at Laurel, all of her wins coming against older horses. She broke her maiden by a length June 15 and won the M. Tyson Gilpin Stakes by a head eight days later, both over Oakley contender Virginia Fable. Moulton purchased the 3-year-old daughter of Grade 1 turf winner Artie Schiller for $205,000 at Fasig-Tipton’s summer horses of racing age sale in July and turned her over to trainer Wayne Catalano.

Altamura won her third race in a row, capturing the Camptown Stakes August 4th at Laurel. Photo by Jim McCue.

In the first start for her new connections, Altamura led from start to finish to win the off-the-turf Camptown Stakes by 1 ¼ lengths under Midwest-based jockey Channing Hill, who returns to ride from Post 1 in the field of 8 at topweight of 120 pounds.

Also in the Oakley are Camptown runner-up What the Beep; Up Hill Battle, third in both the Gilpin and Camptown; Do What I Say, Northern Eclipse, Secret Or Not and Sister Says.

The Punch Line will feature a rubber match between White Oak Farm Stakes winner Determined Vision and Meadow Stable Stakes winner Homespun Hero. Determined Vision surprised at 11-1 in the White Oak Farm, a race where Homespun Hero ran fifth, but was beaten a length as the favorite in an off-the-turf Meadow Stable.

Homespun Hero was best in an exciting four horse field August 4th in the Meadow Stable Stakes. photo courtesy of Jim McCue.

Two Notch Road, an 11-year-old multiple stakes winner of $522,913 in purses, was sixth in both races and goes after his eighth career win and first since the 2017 Meadow Stable. Also entered are Lime House Louie, Available, Elusive Mischief, Tiz Unbeatable, Divine Interventio, Rucker, Braxton and Fly E Dubai.

Mr. and Mrs. Bertram Firestone’s homebred Special Envoy swept the Edward Evans, Hansel and Bert Allen for Virginia-bred/sired horses last year at Laurel but will be looking for his first win of 2018 in the Bert Allen. The Arnaud Delacour trainee opened his 7-year-old campaign finishing second by a length in the Evans, but was scratched from the Hansel when it was rained off the turf. Most recently, he ran seventh following a rough trip in the Red Bank (G3) Sept. 1 at Monmouth Park.

Sheldon Russell guided River Deep to victory in the $75,000 Hansel Stakes August 4th. Photo by Jim McCue.

Morgans Ford Farm’s River Deep romped to a front-running 7 ¼-length triumph in the one-mile Hansel Aug. 4 and returns as the 122-pound topweight in the Bert Allen. Fourth in the Evans and three-for-five lifetime over Laurel’s world-class turf course, River Deep followed the Hansel by running fourth, beaten 1 ¼ lengths, in the Maryland Coalition Stakes at about 6 ½ furlongs during the Maryland State Fair meet in Timonium Sept. 1.

Speed Gracer, Vincent Van Gogo, Unpredictable, Black Prong, Runninginthevale, Macue, Jump Ship, Officer’s Oath, Accountable and Whiskey Wu complete the field.

Fair Hill Training Center-based Delacour entered the trio of Well Blessed, Paulita and Armoire in an attempt to complete a personal sweep in the Brookmeade. Armoire, second in the Nellie Mae Cox, William M. Backer and Brookmeade in 2017, earned her first stakes win in this year’s Nellie Mae Cox. She went on to run third by a neck in a third-level optional claimer Aug. 16 at Laurel and sixth in the 1 1/8-mile Violet (G3) Sept. 1 at Monmouth.

Paulita stepped in for her stablemate and was a two-length winner of the William Backer in just her fifth career start, first in a stakes and first since joining Delacour. The 3-year-old filly finished third in her most recent effort, an optional claimer going 1 1/8 miles Aug. 31 at Monmouth.

The Firestone’s Well Blessed will be making her 14th start and first beyond 1 1/16 miles. Off the board in both the Nellie Mae Cox and William Backer in her lone 2018 races, she won a 1 1/16-mile optional claimer last September to close her 4-year-old campaign.

Rounding out the field are Complete St., Secret Or Not, Daniella, Sweet Sandy, Wolverette, My Vixen and Street Miz.

Nominations Sere Set For Commonwealth Day Stakes Card At Laurel Sunday Sept. 23rd

The next round of $75,000 Virginia-bred stakes races is this Sunday, September 23rd, at Laurel Park. Nominations are in as follows: Oakley (18), Jamestown (27), Punch Line (18), Bert Allen (24) and Brookmeade (14). 2017 Bert Allen Stakes winner Special Envoy has nominated again. The 7 year old Stroll gelding was bred by Mr. & Mrs. Bertram Firestone and enters Sunday’s stakes with a bankroll of $304,500. Last year, Special Envoy also captured the Hansel and Edward Evans Stakes (shown here). Photo courtesy of Jim McCue.

Special Envoy (outside) battled with Rose Brier (inside) in the $75,000 Edward Evans Stakes in 2017. Photo by Jim McCue.

Nominations List:

All Along Stakes

Oakley Stakes

Jamestown Stakes

Punch Line Stakes

Bert Allen Stakes

Brookmeade Stakes

MATCH Winner Page McKenney Inducted Into Parx Hall of Fame

The following appeared in the Paulick Report on September 19th.

Pennsylvania-bred Page McKenney had already accomplished quite a bit before his 2018 campaign ended prematurely with retirement in August, but he left the racetrack with additional recognition: a MATCH Series division title and induction into the Parx Racing Hall of Fame.

Page McKenney, owned by Adam Staple and Jalin Stable and trained by Mary Eppler, won the MATCH Series 3-Year-Olds and Up Long—Dirt Division and on Sept. 15 was among those honored at Parx, where he won seven of 10 starts, five of them stakes. Dr. Jim Bryant, who co-bred Page McKenney with Linda Davis—they make up Jalin Stable—was on hand to accept the Hall of Fame plaque.

“Some of his most exciting races were here,” said Bryant, an owner and breeder who lives in Virginia. “When he won the Roanoke Stakes and PA Derby Championship Stakes last year, those were probably my favorites. But his race in the Swatara Stakes at Penn National really stood out, too. Kid Cruz came flying up to him in the stretch and went to eyeball-to-eyeball with him and he just wouldn’t let him go by.

 McKenney

Dr. Jim Bryant of Virginia and PTHA Board member Kate Demasi at Parx hall of Fame induction.

“Adam really nailed it when he said Page had a long, amazing run. I think that sums it up. It’s mixed emotions now but everybody was on board to retire him because it was the right thing to do. I’m happy we’re not going to run him past the point when he should run.”

In 58 starts, Page McKenney had 22 wins, 16 seconds and five thirds for earnings of $1,905,940. His last victory came in the grade III Salvator Mile in late May at Monmouth Park.

Page McKenney was claimed for $16,000 by Eppler on behalf of Staple in 2013, and Bryant and Davis, his previous owners, purchased a minority share. He was stabled with Eppler at Pimlico Race Course and remains there for now.

“Jasmine Napravnik broke him and gave him an unbelievable foundation. He ended up Mary, and he blossomed slowly but surely. Mary is talking about making him a stable pony. He’s what I call an equine gym rat—he likes the track. Once he’s done with his stall rest, maybe we’ll take him to the farm in Virginia for the winter. But we’ll probably give Mary a shot at making him a stable pony.”

The Parx Hall of Fame, organized by the Pennsylvania Thoroughbred Horsemen’s Association, also inducted four individuals: Dr. Patty Hogan, who operates an equine clinic in New Jersey; Russell Jones Jr., a Pennsylvania Horse Racing Commission member and lifelong horsemen with involvement in the auction sector; Ed Rendell, the former Pennsylvania governor who signed the Pennsylvania Race Horse Development and Gaming Act into law in 2004; and trainer Richard Vega, who has won many races at Parx since he got his trainer’s license in 1992 and in 2016 won his 1,000th race.

Danielle Montgomery, who administrates the PTHA’s Turning for Home aftercare program, said Hogan, for the first five years of the program, performed many surgeries and consultations on racehorses that entered the program for new homes and second careers. Hogan studied veterinary medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.

“So many people work very hard for this program,” Hogan said of Turning For Home. “I’m happy to see it thriving as a model aftercare program.”

Rendell, who at this time isn’t involved in politics, was represented at Parx by Steve Crawford, his one-time chief of staff who was a point person on the gaming legislation in 2004. Crawford discussed what many people have long believed: The 3-year-old campaign of Pennsylvania-bred Smarty Jones that year definitely fueled passage of the bill.

“The governor is a huge racing fan,” Crawford said. “I remember the thrill of getting that bill passed, not only to give Pennsylvania residents property tax relief but to protect agriculture and all the people in the horseracing business. Smarty Jones can be credited with getting the slots bill passed in Pennsylvania—he was actually racing for all of us that day.”

Colonial Downs Aiming For March 2019 Opening Of “Rosie’s Gaming Emporium”

The following piece appeared in the Richmond Times Dispatch and was written by Graham Moomaw.

The new owners of Colonial Downs are hoping to open their casino-like gambling facility in New Kent County in March, with live horse racing expected to return in the fall of 2019.

Since buying the closed track in April, Chicago-based Revolutionary Racing and its partners have been building a management team and fixing up a track that had sat idle since 2014.

On Wednesday, company leaders hosted a media walkthrough of the Colonial Downs facility, showing renderings of the industrial-looking, red-themed interior that will emerge from the construction dust.

Chad Bartelson, VP of Construction & Facilities, and Larry Lucas, Colonial Downs Board member, attend a media tour at the New Kent track on September 5th. Photo by Daniel Sangib Min.

“We ran into the typical leaky roof. And some holes in the wall,” Marshall said. “Nothing overwhelming.”

The revamped facility will feature several restaurants, bars and a doughnut shop, Marshall said.

The track itself, Marshall said, is “race ready.”

Historical horse racing — a technology that uses past horse races to power slots-like machines expected to attract a wider gambling clientele — will be the most distinctive change from the old Colonial Downs. The machines will be installed on several floors of the revamped facility under the brand “Rosie’s gaming emporium.”

Colonial Downs plans to open its Richmond facility in a former Kmart building off Midlothian Turnpike in South Richmond.

The General Assembly approved the gambling-centric reopening of Colonial Downs earlier this year by passing legislation to authorize historical horse racing.

The Virginia Racing Commission, the state agency that oversees horse racing and associated gambling activities, is expected to finalize regulations on the new form of gambling within the next month.

Breeders Ned Moore & Jill Gordon-Moore’s Jump Start Colt Takes Top Honors At $27,500 Yearling Futurity August 29th

Ned Moore & Jill Gordon-Moore’s dark bay colt out of Blazeaway  captured Grand Champion honors at the $27,500 Virginia Breeders’ Yearling Futurity, held at the Warrenton Horse Show Grounds August 29th.  He also won top honors in the Virginia-bred or sired Colt & Gelding division. The event featured competitions in both the Virginia-Bred/Sired Colt & Gelding and Filly classes, in addition to the new Certified class as well. A breakfast kicked of the morning festivities and a seminar featuring Futurity Judge Jonathan Thomas followed. Thomas’s three-year-old horse Catholic Boy most recently won the Grade I Travers Stakes and the Grade I Belmont Derby Invitational.

Pictured with the Grand Champion Blazeaway colt are Cindy Curtis and Susie Hart (who gave the conformation and show presentation seminar), Diana McClure, Ned Moore and Jill Gordon-Moore.

Moore’s yearling champ is by Jump Start out of Blazeaway by Proud Citizen. In the colt & gelding class, More Twirl, bred and owned by Quest Realty was second and Matsuda, bred and owned by Helen Masek, took third. The former is by Twirling Candy out of Lucy Stragemore by Tale of the Cat while the latter is by Midas Touch out of Tangerine Mimosa by Hansel. The rest of the finishers in order were a chestnut colt out of Green Jeans by Imagining (Althea Richards), River Baptism RVF (Riverview Farms), Great Quest (Quest Realty), Overthemoon (Lady Olivia at North Cliff, LLC) and Cara Mor (Renee Bourke).

Pictured with Beach Traffic are: VTA President Brooke Royster, Patricia Ramey and handler Junior Johnson.

​Breeders Patricia Ramey and Maciej Szwarc saw there Virginia-Certified colt Beach Traffic take honors as Reserve Grand Champion in addition to winning the Certified class. Beach Traffic is by Cross Traffic out of Pink Sand by Sky Mesa.  A pair of yearlings bred and owned by Riverview Farm LLC  took second and third in the Certified Class. River Beauty RVF (by Astrology out of Lost in the Woods by Forest Danger) was runner-up and River Dreamer RVF (by Warrior’s Reward out of Debra’s Dream by Reprized) followed. The rest of the finishers in order were a Lone Star Special  filly (Tigertail Ranch/Irwin Olian), Former Marine (Henry Nothhaft/HnR Nothhaft Racing, LLC), a Bourbon Courage colt and a Imagining colt named Collar the Kitten (both owned and bred by Lady Olivia at North Cliff, LLC) and Patriotic Punch (Charles Reed and Michael Zanella). ​

2018 VTA Futurity – Champion VA-Bred filly, 2017 filly out of Cat Alert by Tapizar
Bred and owned by Morgan’s Ford Farm

​Morgan’s Ford Farm’s bay filly out of Cat Alert and their gray filly out of Occasionally took first and second place honors in the Virginia-bred or sired fillies division. The winner is by Tapizar out of Cat Alert by Tobasco Cat while the runner-up is by Liams Map out of Occasionally by Tizow. Owaw’s Empress, bred and owned by Rene Woolcott/Woodslane Farm, took third. She is by Bodemeister out of Oh What a Windfall by Seeking the Gold. The rest of the finishers in order were a bay filly by Mclean’s Music out of Stacey’s Flight (Sam English II), I’m Deplorable (Frazer Hendrick) and a Tapizar filly out of Lion Down by Me by Lion Heart (Sam English II).​

Breakers Off Track Betting Center In Richmond Will Be Closed On Tuesday September 4th

Attention horseplayers — due to extreme heat inside Breakers OTB in Richmond’s west end, betting will not be available on Tuesday September 4th.

Free pre-printed programs are available at Breakers Sports Grille every Wednesday.

The air conditioning unit that services the OTB portion of Breakers went out late last week and it is being replaced early this week.

The Ponies & Pints OTB has beverage specials daily from 11 AM – 7 PM and food specials many nights including a Sunday brunch. It is located at 110 N. 18th Street in the Shockoe Bottom neighborhood.

Feel free to visit the other Richmond OTB at Ponies & Pints (110 N. 18th Street) on Tuesday!

Fauquier High Alums Win Huge Races At Saratoga

The following appeared in The Fauquier Times and was written by Betsy Burke Parker

Two Fauquier High graduates broke through big at the Saratoga Racecourse in New York last weekend.

Upperville native Jonathan Thomas saddled Catholic Boy to win the $1.25 million Grade 1 Travers Stakes, and Marshall native Chuck Lawrence sent out Glorious Empire to win the $1 million Grade 1 Sword Dancer turf stake.

“We’re just so proud of the horse and what he’s accomplished,” said Thomas, 38, a 1998 Fauquier High grad who was raised at Rokeby Farm, where he spent his youth foxhunting, showing and working in the steeplechase industry.

He rode over jumps starting at 17, riding two graded hurdle stakes winners during his apprentice championship year, 2000.

Thomas moved into flat racing, signing on as assistant trainer to Christophe Clement in New York, and then with Dale Romans before moving to Saudi Arabia in 2007 to work for King Abdullah.

Two Fauquier High graduates broke through big at the Saratoga Racecourse in New York last weekend.

Upperville native Jonathan Thomas saddled Catholic Boy to win the $1.25 million Grade 1 Travers Stakes, and Marshall native Chuck Lawrence sent out Glorious Empire to win the $1 million Grade 1 Sword Dancer turf stake.

“We’re just so proud of the horse and what he’s accomplished,” said Thomas, 38, a 1998 Fauquier High grad who was raised at Rokeby Farm, where he spent his youth foxhunting, showing and working in the steeplechase industry.

He rode over jumps starting at 17, riding two graded hurdle stakes winners during his apprentice championship year, 2000.

Thomas moved into flat racing, signing on as assistant trainer to Christophe Clement in New York, and then with Dale Romans before moving to Saudi Arabia in 2007 to work for King Abdullah.

He returned as Todd Pletcher’s assistant in 2008, and then went out on his own in 2013, based at Florida’s Bridlewood Farm.

Thomas-trained horses have amassed lifetime earnings of almost $3 million.

Lawrence, 52, a 1984 Fauquier grad, grew up in racing as well. Winning his first race in 1978 with pony racing phenom Lil Fritz, Lawrence went on to partner some of steeplechasing’s best: Eclipse champs Lonesome Glory, Hirapour and Warm Spell, along with International Gold Cup winner Jamaica Bay. Lawrence was champion jockey in 1989 and 1993.

He hung up his tack after the 1994 season, swapping to training on the flat and moving to the training center in Fair Hill, Maryland.

“The Virginia boys made us all proud,” said John Dale Thomas, Jonathan’s father and longtime track manager of Virginia’s Shenandoah Downs and Colonial Downs racecourses.

Catholic Boy wins the 2018 Travers. Photo by Joe Labozzetta/NYRA.

Lawrence said he and Thomas share more than a little Fauquier High history.

“Jonathan and I were comparing notes after our big days on Saturday,” Lawrence said. “We both remember (hall monitor) Mr. (Lynn) Ward signing us in when we were tardy when we were late working horses on the track in the early morning.

“Mr. Ward was a big racing fan. He understood what we were doing,” not just ditching school, he added.

He returned as Todd Pletcher’s assistant in 2008, and then went out on his own in 2013, based at Florida’s Bridlewood Farm.

Thomas-trained horses have amassed lifetime earnings of almost $3 million.

Lawrence, 52, a 1984 Fauquier grad, grew up in racing as well. Winning his first race in 1978 with pony racing phenom Lil Fritz, Lawrence went on to partner some of steeplechasing’s best: Eclipse champs Lonesome Glory, Hirapour and Warm Spell, along with International Gold Cup winner Jamaica Bay. Lawrence was champion jockey in 1989 and 1993.

He hung up his tack after the 1994 season, swapping to training on the flat and moving to the training center in Fair Hill, Maryland.

“The Virginia boys made us all proud,” said John Dale Thomas, Jonathan’s father and longtime track manager of Virginia’s Shenandoah Downs and Colonial Downs racecourses.

Lawrence said he and Thomas share more than a little Fauquier High history.

“Jonathan and I were comparing notes after our big days on Saturday,” Lawrence said. “We both remember (hall monitor) Mr. (Lynn) Ward signing us in when we were tardy when we were late working horses on the track in the early morning.

“Mr. Ward was a big racing fan. He understood what we were doing,” not just ditching school, he added.

New Upgraded Betting Terminals Installed At Virginia Bets OTBs In Time For Travers Weekend

Horseplayers that frequent the four Virginia Bets OTBs in the state will be in for a nice surprise on their next visit .

Am Tote, who is the Virginia Bets Tote provider, has brand new betting terminals and they are being installed at all four sites this week.  The Richmond install at Breakers Sports Grille and Ponies & Pints took place Wednesday morning.

The install at the Buckets Bar & Grill in Chesapeake will take place Thursday morning and  in Collinsville Friday at The Windmill Off Track Betting Sports Grill.

The new terminals will allow customers to see the cost of each wager as it is being entered, and see a display that outlines the horse name, number, odds, jockey/driver, etc. each race.

The upgrade will be finished in time for the Travers Day card at Saratoga on Saturday (Aug. 25) and for the free handicapping contest Sunday (Aug. 26) at Breakers!

Combined OTB & ADW Horse Racing Handle In Virginia Is Up Almost $10 Million Thru July

Virginia’s handle on horse race wagering is up nearly $10 Million over the same seven month period of a year ago courtesy of increases in both Advance Deposit Wagering (ADW) and Off Track Betting (OTB) handle.

In the month of July, the four licensed ADWs — or on line betting partners — handled over $6.7 million from Virginia residents. TVG handled the most with $3,009,450 while Twin Spires was next with $2,616,924.  Xpress Bet came in third with $947,657 and relative newcomer NYRA Bets was fourth with $183,077.  ADW handle for the first seven months of 2018 was $52,468,854, up 3.2% over last year’s $50,842,558. ADW handle for the same period in 2016 was $47,457,633.

The Windmill OTB opened in mid-March, and currently is the only one in the Southwest, Virginia market.

Despite being second in handle generation,Twin Spires has made considerable gains in Virginia this year. They still trail TVG in terms of overall handle, but are up over 9% so far, processing $20,256,670 in horse race wagers versus $18,582,457 last year and $17,497,440 in 2016. TVG has handled $23,407,489 through July 31st.

OTB handle is up over $8 million this year with four sites operating now versus two sites a year ago. The OTB at Buckets Bar & Grill in Chesapeake, which opened last November,  has handled over $7.2 million in the seven months. The Windmill  OTB inside Collinsville’s Dutch Inn hotel has handled $2.1 million, though that center did not open until mid-March. Both Richmond sites — at Breakers Sports Grille and Ponies & Pints — continue to do well with respective handles of $6.01 million and $4.3 million.

Overall, when combining both the ADW and OTB monies along with handle generated at the May Virginia Gold Cup event, the seven month handle for 2018 is $72,3423,168, versus $62,568,893 in 2017.

Saratoga’s summer season is a popular for horseplayers. Their meet runs every Wednesday thru Monday until Labor Day.

Both Saratoga and Del Mar summer meets continue through Labor Day with their respective signature events still to come — Pacific Classic Day (Del Mar) on August 18th and Travers Day on August 25th (Saratoga). Both circuits run through Labor Day. A complete OTB simulcast schedule is available at virginiahorseracing.com.

Thanks To Catholic Boy, Thomas No Longer Racing’s Best Secret

The following appeared in Thoroughbred Racing News and was written by Bill Finley

He was a valued and respected assistant to Todd Pletcher and was hired by Bridlewood Farm as their trainer, which gives him access to their first-class facility in Florida to train not only their horse but those for outside clients. Jonathan Thomas, just 38, has been busy building the groundwork for a top stable, one that some day could rival that of the premier trainers in the country. What he needed was a marquee horse to put him on the map.

That’s no longer a problem. Catholic Boy (More Than Ready) is coming off a win in the GI $1.2 million Belmont Derby, has won stakes on both the dirt and grass and has proven to be among the gamest horses in the sport. His next assignment will likely come in the GI Travers S., where he could be the second choice behind Good Magic (Curlin) and where a win would only further raise Thomas’s profile.

“The Travers and Belmont Derby are both obviously very important races,” he said. “For me, personally, it’s extremely meaningful. I think more important than that, for me being responsible for the career of Catholic Boy and showcasing his abilities and possibly putting him into a stallion barn down the road, that’s as meaningful as anything. He’s a deserving horse so are the clients that support us. Being able to deliver on a big day in the Belmont Derby was stellar for them.”

Trainer Jonathan Thomas is the son of Virginia Equine Alliance Track Superintendent J.D. Thomas. Photo by Sarah Andrew.

Thomas literally grew up on Rokeby Farm in Virginia and surrounded himself with horses from a young age. He began as a steeplechase jockey until a serious injured forced him to look elsewhere. He was an assistant to Dale Romans, spent some time working in Saudi Arabia, and then worked as an assistant to Christophe Clement and Todd Pletcher.

“Jonathan Thomas, he was a terrific assistant,” Pletcher said. “He’s a consummate professional, everything you’re looking for in an assistant trainer. He’s totally reliable, honest, good communicator, good horseman. We had some good years together. He did a great job, and I’m not surprised that he’s doing well on his own.”

In 2013, he left Pletcher to go work for Bridlewood and its owners, Leslie and John Malone. While he would be based for much of the year at their Ocala farm, he worked out an unusual arrangement with them as he would also be allowed to take on outside clients.

“We want to make sure we’re doing the best job possible on both fronts,” Thomas said. “I’m very fortunate to have the team that I have and the support I’ve gotten from my clients. Good people and good clients make it easy enough.”

Thomas says he currently has about 45 horses, which doesn’t include some of his 2-year-olds who aren’t quite ready for the races or horses coming back from layoffs.

Things started slowly for Thomas, and as recently as 2016, he had only two winners on the year from 18 starters, and stable earnings of $34,485. Things started to turn around when he began to attract outside owners.

Thomas discovered Catholic Boy at the 2016 Keeneland January Horses of All Ages Sale, where he RNA’d for $170,000. He was able to buy him after the sale for a “fair price” on behalf of owner Robert LaPenta.

“He was a horse that Mr. LaPenta and his team allowed us to purchase and develop and he seemed to be doing real well in our system, so they left him with us. Thankfully, he did,” he said.

Catholic Boy won his first two races on the turf, including the GIII With Anticipation S., which was Thomas’s first career stakes win. After running fourth in the GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Turf, he made his first try on the dirt and won the GII Remsen S.

That had LaPenta, his fellow owners and Thomas, thinking GI Kentucky Derby. He ran respectably in the GIII Sam F. Davis at Tampa, finishing second, but followed that up with a well-beaten fourth in the GI Florida Derby.

“He had a one off bleeding episode (in the Florida Derby), which was unusual,” Thomas said. “It was enough to explain the effort, which was a little below par for him. At that point in time, the right thing to do was to regroup. The Kentucky Derby is very important, but in our operation we never want to let it compromise the horse.”

When Catholic Boy was ready, Thomas sent him back to the turf and the result was two remarkable efforts. In the first, the GIII Pennine Ridge S. and then the Belmont Derby, he gave up the lead to the Chad Brown-trained Analyze It (Point of Entry) in deep stretch, looked hopelessly beaten and then came on again to win.

“He’s certainly the gamest horse we’ve trained,” Thomas said. “The first mile of those races I watched as a trainer and the last furlong to a quarter of a mile I watched as a fan. It was something to behold. Analyze It is a very good horse and he’s a good barometer for our horse’s effort. We’re very proud of him. This horse really grinds it out.”

It might have made more sense to keep him on the grass but the connections want a definitive answer as far as his dirt ability goes, which they don’t believe they got in the Florida Derby. Barring a last-minute change of mind, the Travers will be next.

“We owe it to the horse and to the clients to leave that option on the table,” Thomas said. “We’ve let the horse dictate our next step and I think we’ll continue to do that. The timing of the Travers is very good. If there’s something we don’t like we can always adjust, but it’s worth at least investigating.”

Catholic Boy remains the only stakes winner Thomas has ever trained, but it’s not hard to envision his career taking off. Catholic Boy has given him exposure, new owners are starting to take notice and he shares many of the same traits that made Pletcher a star. Like his mentor, he’s polished, professional and ambitious.

Does he see himself someday having a stable that rivals Pletcher’s?

“I think as long as we can do a great job and do what’s best for our clients and our horses, I’d certainly be willing to head in that direction.” he said. “As long as we’re doing a quality job.”

He has a long way to go, but he certainly seems to have the tools to succeed and now he’s got a horse everyone is paying attention to. The Travers will be a big race not just for Catholic Boy but for his trainer.