Kirkpatrick & Co. Presents In Their Care: Schosberg Always Answers The Call On Aftercare

Michael Sternklar shared two vignettes that say everything about Richard Schosberg's integrity as a trainer and his passion for Thoroughbred aftercare.

During their first meeting in 2005, an interview of sorts, Sternklar was blunt about how he wanted to proceed as a first-time owner. “I don't want to cheat. I care about the horses,” he told Schosberg. “If you have a different way of operating, I'll shake hands and wish you luck.”

Schosberg's face lit up in agreement and Clear Star Stable was born. It has gone on to include many successful years with its focus on New York-breds while growing to include 40 partners invested in approximately 14 horses.

The second vignette involves Saturday Appeal, a New York-bred gelding that Sternklar and Schosberg had campaigned successfully. Saturday Appeal, an earner of more than $300,000, was a shadow of himself when Sternklar spotted him running for a $4,000 claiming price at Camarero Race Track in Puerto Rico. He finished last of nine.

Sternklar was determined that Saturday Appeal should not be asked to give anything more on the racetrack. His 61st start needed to be his last. He called Schosberg and asked whether there was anything he could do.

When a horse is in need, Schosberg is not easily turned away. He quickly established a contact in Puerto Rico and arrangements were made to give exhausted Saturday Appeal the retirement he deserved.

In addition to training 16 horses, Schosberg serves as president of Take2/TAKE THE LEAD. The program, established in the autumn of 2013 to serve New York tracks, recently retired its 900th Thoroughbred. Schosberg also is on the board of the Thoroughbred Aftercare Association and is first vice president of the New York Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association.

There is not a call for help that he does not answer – and those calls keep coming. “My days are filled,” Schosberg said. “I could use a little more sleep.”

Why is he so committed?

“Because we need to,” he replied. “These horses give so much of themselves, racing and training, we owe it to them. They can't do it themselves and the industry generates enough revenue. A piece of that has to go to Thoroughbred aftercare.”

Schosberg went on, “The responsibility for proper, safe and purposeful aftercare – second careers – lies with the industry itself. And that doesn't just mean owners and it doesn't just mean trainers and it doesn't just mean horsemen's groups and the racetrack. Everybody who puts food on the table or puts gas in their vehicle because horses race has a responsibility to make sure those horses have a safe and proper retirement.”

Schosberg, 60, recognized the Thoroughbred's nobility and majesty while growing up on his parents' farm in Westchester County, N.Y. He can recall doing his homework while sitting in the stall of a mare preparing to deliver her foal. He graduated from Cornell in 1984, earning a degree in applied economics concentrating on animal science and equine studies.

Schosberg began training on his own in 1988, eventually overseeing Grade 1 winners Affirmed Success, As Indicated, Maria's Mon and Mossflower. He described Affirmed Success, winner of the Carter Handicap and earner of more than $2.2 million, as a “career horse.”

Trainer Rick Schosberg serves as president of Take2/TAKE THE LEAD and on the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance board of directors

Although he endures the travails of many trainers with small operations on the rugged New York circuit, he is widely respected. “Rick cannot make a slow horse run fast,” Sternklar said, “but he can make every horse run as fast as the gifts given to him or her. He's half veterinarian, half trainer, half therapist. I guess that's three halves.”

If anyone deserves such a description, it is Schosberg. He never stops.

“With him, horses have always come first,” said Andy Belfiore, executive director of the Florida Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association. “Even before aftercare became such an issue for horsemen, he was ahead of the curve on that. He always made sure his horses had a safe retirement. He even retired some of the horses he trained to his own property.”

Schosberg has done the heavy lifting in increasing the usefulness of Take2/TAKE THE LEAD. The program accommodated a high of 181 horses in its last fiscal year. Each horse is evaluated by a team of veterinarians to determine its medical needs and how to best prepare that horse for a second career. The transition process can cost anywhere from $3,500 to $5,000 per horse, depending on various factors.

“We make sure the horse has safety nets all along the way,” Schosberg said. “These horses are not going to fall through the cracks.”

Schosberg noted that the vast majority of an equine's lifespan will be spent after its final race. Second careers can range from dressage to police work to therapy. The usefulness of therapy programs is particularly encouraging.

“A lot of these programs are successful because horses feel your emotions,” Schosberg said. “They not only help with physical rehabilitation, helping with balance and stabilizing muscles and things like that for people who have physical challenges, but emotionally.”

Schosberg's favorite time of day comes when training hours are over, horses have cleaned their feed tubs and the daily chores are done. He will slip into a stall and sit quietly to observe in a corner, a man alone with his horse.

Tom Pedulla wrote for USA Today from 1995-2012 and has been a contributor to the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Blood-Horse, America's Best Racing and other publications.

If you wish to suggest someone as a potential subject for In Their Care, please send an email to info@paulickreport.com that includes the person's name and contact information in addition to a brief description of the individual's background.

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Where Are They Now: Zenyatta’s Sons, Cozmic One and Ziconic

In this new TDN column, Christie DeBernardis will tell the stories of popular and/or accomplished former racehorses who are now enjoying second careers as show horses, track ponies, etc.

The first two foals out of the mighty Zenyatta, Cozmic One (Bernardini) and Ziconic (Tapit), never reached the winner's circle during their brief careers on the racetrack, but they are both thriving in their second careers as jumpers and ambassadors for off-track Thoroughbreds.

The elder brother, Cozmic One's second career has been well documented in these pages (Cozmic One: Shining New Light on OTTBs and Checking in on Cozmic One) in the past, but we checked in with Hidden Brook Farm's Sergio de Sousa and his daughter Isabela for the latest update.

When Cozmic One first came to the de Sousas, he was Isabela's charge. An accomplished equestrian, Isabela was consistently in the blue ribbons with her OTTBs at the annual Thoroughbred Makeover, which was her first goal with “Coz” back in 2018.

When Isabela started traveling to pursue her career as a professional equestrian, Sergio took over the reins on Cozmic One. The two have been competing in jumper shows, focusing on the Take2 program, which partners with United States Equestrian Federation-rated horse shows that offer C-rated Thoroughbred hunter and jumper divisions, which are restricted to Thoroughbreds registered with The Jockey Club. They will also be competing in the Real Rider Cup for the second time this year in their new Kentucky-based event July 9.

“Isabela is around this summer, so if she wants to jump him she can, but he is basically my fun horse now,” Sergio said. “I just want to continue having fun with him and doing things like the Real Rider Cup. We did the .85 [meter jumpers] last week at the [Kentucky] Horse Park. I hope to qualify for the Take2 finals with him at the Horse Park in September.”

Cozmic One is now 10, which is considered old for a racehorse, but is the prime age for show horses.

“He has really matured,” Sergio said. “He is a much stronger horse now and I have improved my riding. We are just having fun and enjoying each other.”

“Coz is doing great and him and my dad are developing a lovely partnership,” Isabela added. “They both are learning from one another and are enjoying themselves while doing it.”

Ziconic & Sarah Pollock | Told By Film

While Cozmic One is enjoying the lush Kentucky bluegrass, his year-younger half-brother Ziconic remained on the West Coast when he left trainer John Shirreffs's barn three years ago. He was placed under the care of Linda Moss and her husband George Bedar, who already had a former Shirreffs trainee campaigned by Zenyatta's owners, Jerome and Ann Holbrook Moss, in her barn in Milyone (Maria's Mon).

Linda Moss became friends with Ann Holbrook Moss and Dottie Ingordo-Shirreffs back in 2011 when she honored Zenyatta at a local conference for women in business.

“I am a board advisor to the Professional Business Women of California and we have a conference every year,” Moss explained. “The theme for our conference in 2011 was connect, explore, inspire and I was responsible for producing the inspire section. I wanted a special woman to represent the inspired section and I chose Zenyatta to do that.”

The next thing Moss did was head to Hollywood Park to meet the queen herself.

“Shortly after the conference, I went down to the track and met Zenyatta,” said Moss, who had owned Arabs in the past, but always loved Thoroughbreds. “My older Thoroughbred Milyone was there, about three stalls down from Zenyatta. He just kept calling out to me as I was walking down the barn aisle. When I went up to his stall, he just put his head in my neck. John said, 'He has never done that with anyone before.' I jokingly said, 'Well if he ever needs a home, he has one.' A year and a half later, Dottie called me and said, 'Do you still want Milyone?'”

Of course, Moss said yes. Then, in June of 2019, she received another call from Ingordo-Shirreffs.

“When Ziconic was ready to be retired, Dottie called me and said John and I feel he should go to you,” Moss said. “We talked about it and that is how we got him exactly three years ago.”

According to Moss, Ziconic is well aware of his royal heritage and enjoys the attention that comes along with it.

“Ziconic is the type of horse who knows who he is and likes to be treated special,” she said. “He is extremely proud. He is probably the smartest horse I have ever been around. He is also very playful and loves an audience.”

Moss said Ziconic has taken to off-track life very well. He started his retraining as a jumper with trainer Sarah Pollock and the pair even won their first show together back in 2020. Unfortunately, Ziconic's show schedule was interrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic and an EHV outbreak in the state of California.

   “He is really enjoying his off-track life,” Moss said. “We give him a lot of diversity. He is kind of the king of the farm he is at right now, Eclipse Equine Sports Therapy Center in the Santa Ynez Valley. He was originally at a sporthorse farm, training with an amazing trainer, Sarah Pollock. She did an amazing job transitioning him.”

She continued, “He really loves to jump and be in the arena, getting all the cheers and being photographed. It has been a very inconsistent show career for him because of COVID and the EHV outbreak. We gave him the winter off. He is back in a jumping program now with the goal of showing in the fall jumping circuit. We will probably start him back at the .80 or .85 [meter], but he was jumping a meter previously.”

Under the care of Moss and the de Sousas, both of Zenyatta's boys have found their callings. They have taken the athletic ability and winning attitude they inherited from their superstar dam to new venues, shining a brighter spotlight on off-track Thoroughbreds everywhere in the process.

The post Where Are They Now: Zenyatta’s Sons, Cozmic One and Ziconic appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Jockey Jose Guerrero Reaching New Heights At Louisiana Downs

The 2022 Louisiana Downs Thoroughbred meet enters its ninth week this Saturday. It has been an excellent start of the live racing season for jockey Jose Guerrero who has been on top of the standings since the meet began on May 7.

The 28-year-old has come a long way since he rode his first winner in 2016. With brief stints in Texas and Arkansas, he has found his home in Louisiana. Guerrero was fifth in the standings here in 2020 and finished as the third-leading rider last year. When the Louisiana Downs season wraps, he heads to Delta Downs, where he has finished fourth in the standings for the past two years.

The native of Mexico has been in the lead at Louisiana Downs throughout the 2022 live racing season, holding off tough competition including former leading riders Emanuel Nieves, Joel Dominguez and Carlos Lozada.

“My luck has changed since I came to Louisiana,” stated Guerrero.

Top ranked trainer Shane Wilson has given Guerrero the first call on the majority of his horses and explained what he saw in the talented rider.

“I took notice of him three years ago and told my owners that Jose was going to be the guy,” stated Wilson. “He was riding these 40 and 50-1 shots and out finishing much better horses. Always a hard worker, Jose was always first to arrive in the morning and would still be around when the track closed.”

Last year, Wilson sat down with Guerrero and asked him if he knew the difference between being a jockey and a skilled race rider.

“Jose wasn't really sure what I was getting at, but I told him that to win more races, he would have to learn to study, understand his competition and be able to make a plan,” explained Wilson.

Guerrero liked the idea, and got on board, ignoring teasing from plenty of folks on the backside asking him how his “film study” was going.

“Shane has given me so much confidence,” said Guerrero. “He saw something in me, and we have developed a strong working relationship. After I work horses, we watch replays and talk about what each horse does well and what I can do to win more races. Shane has taught me a lot.”

Steve Melancon is Guerrero's agent and has booked him successfully with a number of trainers, including Patti Turner, Tim Dixon and Bob Schultz. He credits Turner for giving him mounts when he was just starting out.

“Patti is such a nice lady,” said Guerrero. “I began galloping for her when I was an apprentice and will always remember Jack Be Quick when he was a 2-year-old. He was such a beautiful horse and winning on him was so special!”

Turner laughed when told that the Arkansas-bred son of Forefathers was one of Guerrero's all-time favorite mounts.

“Jose fell in love with that horse,” recalled Turner. He would come to the barn and rub on Jack, who could be a little bit of a pill! It took a while for them to connect, but they ended up getting along well. I am happy for his success; Jose is a really good guy!”

He is a fulfilled young man away from the racetrack in a committed relationship with Jaqueline Edison and their young son, Matteo.

“There is always pressure,” admitted Guerrero. “Everyone wants to win, and someone is always trying to pass you. I've been in that position before, so I understand. I am not thinking ahead to the end of the meet. I am proud of how I am doing now and will continue to be positive.”

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