Coolmore’s John Magnier The 2022 Recipient Of The Sir Peter O’Sullevan Award

Coolmore's John Magnier was the recipient of the 2022 Peter O'Sullevan Award and was celebrated at the 25th edition of the Peter O'Sullevan Annual Award Lunch in London on Thursday. The 74-year-old received his award from JP McManus at Coolmore, as he was not present at the lunch.

“I don't deserve it, but I'm happy to get it,” Magnier told ITV Racing anchor Ed Chamberlin in an interview, which was played during the ceremony. “I'm blown away by it, really.”

Magnier spoke in favour of racing's various factions coming together to work for the good of the whole sport.

“Our people running the sport really have to make some tough decisions–and when they make tough decisions, the rest of us are going to have to row in behind them. There are too many sectional interests pulling in different directions.”

Internationally renowned for his bloodstock acumen, the owner-breeder also reminisced about various bloodstock adventures, from Camelot (GB)'s Triple Crown bid with a near-miss in the G1 St Leger, to losing out to Juddmonte on the colt that would subsequently become the undefeated, wunderkind Frankel (GB) (Galileo {Ire}).

“That was tough to take, all right,” said Magnier of the Doncaster reverse, adding of the Triple Crown, “It's something we would love to do one day. We won't give up.

Frankel was a foal share with Juddmonte. Every second year we got the first pick. That year Juddmonte had the first pick and they picked Frankel. That was another one that got away.”

Added Magnier, whose Vincent O'Brien-trained Robert Sangster-owned El Gran Senor lost the G1 Derby in 1984 to Secreto, who was trained by the latter's son David, “He [El Gran Senor] was sold for $80 million if he had won the Derby. That's racing. In actual fact, I had a bet on Secreto, and Ladbrokes shut my account after. Mike Dillon gave me the cheque and I still have it framed in my office. We were able to buy a drink that night, anyway.”

Besides affirming Coolmore's ambition to secure the Triple Crown, Magnier emphasised the organisation's continued commitment to the Blue Riband. Coolmore and its affiliates have won nine Derbys since 2001, eight under the watchful eye of Ballydoyle's resident trainer Aidan O'Brien.

“A horse has to have everything to win at Epsom,” he said. “He has to have speed. He has to have stamina. He has to have soundness. He has to have courage. He has to go through the razzamatazz of the day. It's the complete test of the horse.

“There's an interesting story [on hiring Aidan]. He came here to the office, and I was going to have a chat with him to see if we could work something out. He said to me he had been here before. I said to him, 'What were you doing here before?' He said he had tried to get a job here and had met Christy Grassick. I asked him what happened, and he said he hadn't given him the job. I said, 'Clever of him. Christy could have lost his job!'”

He added of Vincent O'Brien, who preceded O'Brien at Rosegreen, “He understood all aspects of the business. He understood the American bloodlines, he understood the finance and he understood if you didn't have the owner, you weren't going to get the horse. He was a man apart, really. You couldn't help but learn from him. He was a genius.

Magnier also paid tribute to his late mother, Evie StockwellThe Queen, as well as legendary jockey Lester Piggott, who all died this year.

“She loved the horses and spent two or three hours reading the Racing Post,” reflected Magnier on his mother, who enjoyed Breeders' Cup success as an owner-breeder with Hit It A Bomb (War Front). “It was a big part of her life.

“She [The Queen] was such a positive for racing. It will be very tough to manage without her.”

Of Piggott, Magnier said, “You could hear the crack of Lester's whip. He would probably get jailed today if he did that, but he was an artist at work. He had an aura about him. If he came into a room, you kind of knew he was there. He would come to Ballydoyle, especially in the spring, have a few glasses of champagne and smoke a cigar. He was very interesting.”

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Moyglare Buys 550k Frankel Filly At December Foal Sale

Lot 1063, a bay daughter of Frankel (GB)–Sunny Again (GB) (Shirocco {Ger}), caught the eye of Fiona Craig, who shelled out 550,000 gns on behalf of Moyglare Stud Farm at Tattersalls on Friday. The second-highest lot of the day so far, the Apr. 4 foal from the Mount Coote Stud draft, is a half-sister to Group 3 winner Elisa Again (GB) (Champs Elysees {GB}), stakes winner and G1 St Leger runner-up Berkshire Rocco (Fr) (Sir Percy {GB}), and the G1 Moyglare Stud S. third Sunset Shiraz (Ire) (Time Test {GB}). Bred by Mount Coote Estates, she is from the same female family as the late G1 Phoenix S. hero and Group 1 sire Zoffany (Ire). Her Sea The Stars (Ire) half-brother brought 550,000gns during the Tattersalls October Yearling Sale.

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Japan Road To Kentucky Derby Starts With Cattleya Stakes At Tokyo Racecourse

The Japan Road to the Kentucky Derby will begin at 12:15 a.m. (ET) Saturday at Tokyo Racecourse where Yuji Hasegawa's maiden winner Plavi is the 5-2 favorite against nine Japanese-breds in the $220,325 Cattleya Stakes.

The Cattleya, run at about one mile, will award the top five finishers points on a 10-4-3-2-1 scale for the stand-alone Japan Road to the Kentucky.

Trained by Haruki Sugiyama, Plavi broke his maiden Oct. 1 at Chukyo Racecourse, located about four hours west of Tokyo. The chestnut son of Duramente will be ridden in the Cattleya by Keita Tosaki from post No. 2

Several horses that entered the Cattleya have breeding familiar to many North Americans. There are two sons of 2018 Lukas Classic ((G3) winner Mind Your Biscuits: Mirror of Mind (5-1) and Toa Raiden (11-1).

The Cattleya will go as Race 9 of 12 prior to the featured Capital Stakes in Race 11. Sunday's card at Tokyo features the Grade I Japan Cup worth a purse of approximately $5.5 million.

There have been four horses based in Japan that have run in the Kentucky Derby: Ski Captain (14th, 1995); Lani (9th, 2016); Master Fencer (6th, 2019), and Crown Pride  (13th, 2022).

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‘This Is The Greatest Game In The World’: Vietnam Veteran Tom Knust Found Solace In Racetrack Life After Harrowing Tour Of Duty

If you've been around Del Mar for any length of time, you've probably run into—and maybe even met—Tom Knust. He has been coming out to Del Mar since he was a teenager and has made a lifetime career out of his love for the horses.

Knust is now 75 years old and currently the agent for jockeys Victor Espinoza and Edwin Maldonado. But his journey to this place in his life has been filled with peaks and valleys and, had a Vietnam corpsman's diagnosis been correct, there wouldn't be a story to tell.

“I moved with my family to Arcadia (California) when I was a junior in high school,” Knust said. “I only lived a few blocks from the track (Santa Anita). The first time I went to the track I went with my best friend. We had to sneak in because you had to be 21 at that time. I made two bets, had two hot dogs and a coke, and I left with 80 cents more than I came with and I thought 'This is the greatest game in the world.' From that time on I've been stuck with it.”

That was in 1964. A few years later he found himself on his one and only tour in Vietnam and, like so many others, it changed his life.

“I was with the Second Battalion, Ninth Marines,” Knust said. “We were an infantry battalion up in the DMZ. I had only been in Vietnam for less than a month and one time we were out in the field for nine days. Usually you go in the field for two or three days at the most. We were in a lot of firefights and when you're out in the jungle sometimes you'll find a path and it's your job to go up that path and see what's there and then come back. This one time we got ambushed and I got shot in the head.”

Corpsmen conducting triage at the site where several Marines had been wounded, passed over Knust, believing at the time he was past the point of being saved.

“I heard one of the guys conducting the priorities,” Knust said. “I remember it vividly he said: 'Oh, he's a vegetable. We'll just leave him until later.' It wasn't very good bedside manner.”

Knust defied the medic's best judgment and survived the ordeal, though the road to recovery was difficult.

“I was paralyzed on my right side for about six months,” Knust remembered. “I spent the time at the hospital down in San Diego, the Balboa Naval Hospital (now known as the Naval Medical Center San Diego). I couldn't move anything on my right side and the doctors didn't know what would come back or how much would come back. Then one day I moved my little finger and eventually everything came back but my foot. I have drop foot. I can't move my ankle on my right side. All in all, I was pretty lucky.”

Lucky indeed. Since then Knust got married to his now bride of 49 years. They have a daughter, and Knust has a son he just found out about a few years ago. Both have given Tom a total of four grandkids.

“This past Veterans Day I was at a restaurant and there was a guy wearing a Vietnam Veteran hat with his daughter and grandkids,” Knust said, “and I thought to myself, for the first time, I could have been killed and then I wouldn't have any grandkids. That made me emotional.”

When he left the Marines and went looking for a life, Knust turned to horse racing and he's been involved it for over 50 years now.

“I started walking hots for trainer Joe Dunn,” Knust recalled. “Then I got a job as a groom for Reggie Cornell. I went on the fair circuit and was an assistant trainer for a while and then I got my trainers' license.

“I got married and we were going to have a baby,” he said. “I went to see Mr. (Jimmy) Kilroe. He was the head of Santa Anita and the dean of racing at that time; probably the most respected person in racing. I wanted to try and get a job in the racing office. He told me if I go back to the University of Arizona and get a degree in their racetrack management program, he promised to get me a job.”

So he went to the U. of A. and got a degree in Animal Science with an option in racetrack management.

“I went back to Kilroe and he gave me a job in the stable office as a clerk,” Knust said, “and that's where I started. I moved over to the racing office. I moved up from being a clerk there to being a placing judge, then an assistant handicapper to assistant racing secretary.”

That's when Knust started taking jobs as a racing secretary at smaller tracks around the state.

“I was racing secretary at some fair tracks,” Knust said. “Victorville in Imperial was my first job. Then I was racing secretary up at Valley Racing in Fresno. It worked out because then I could still come back to Del Mar in the summer.”

Knust's days at Del Mar date back to before the new grandstand was built in 1991. He fondly remembers the old wooden grandstand and the black top where fans could bring their coolers filled with beer.

“My wife used to come with our baby and sit on the old brick wall just inside the main entrance,” Knust said, “right where the grandstand would be. There was a lot of history in the adobe grandstand. I liked it. I thought it was really cool.”

Knust landed his first big gig in Minnesota where he became racing secretary at Canterbury Downs when it was first built. But after five years he came back to Southern California to be racing secretary at Santa Anita and Del Mar, a job that lasted 10 years. And then the ax fell.

“When Frank Stronach bought Santa Anita I worked for him for one year,” Knust said “Cliff Goodrich was the general manager and when he retired they brought in a new GM who fired everybody; myself, Tom Robbins, Craig Dado, all of the department heads.”

That new GM lasted a year and then he was gone. As for Knust, as one door closed, a new one opened.

“I needed something to do,” Knust said. “Tom Robbins made a deal with Del Mar that he would work here year round so that made me the odd man out. I had to do something to make a living. I didn't want to go out of state and there was an opportunity to pick up Kent Desormeaux, so I became a jocks agent and I've been an agent ever since.”

That was 22 years ago. He's had about 16 jockeys since he started, some he's let go and some who have let him go.

“I like it a lot,” Knust said. “I had Corey Nakatani, P. Val (Patrick Valenzuela), Kent Desormeaux. I've had Richie Migliore, Kevin Krigger, David Cohen, Abel Cedillo. I had Jose Valdivia Jr. for a while. We won the Santa Anita Derby (G1) together and then he fired me after that. I had Jon Court for two years.”

Knust has learned you have to grow a thick skin in his line of work and not take anything personal.

“They're all good people,” he said, “but with everybody, if they're not doing good, they want to make a change whether it's me or them. I don't mind somebody firing me. But when I have to tell somebody I'm going in a different direction, that's the hard thing. I'd rather they just fire me, it makes it a lot easier.

“It is a competitive job,” Knust continued. “You have good times and bad times. I had Patrick Valenzuela four different times; I had Nakatani twice. A lot of good riders but there's a lot of things that go along with it that are not good. You can't blame them when they're riding, their lives on the line every day. But you start out good and everybody's happy and then things start to go south and everybody wants to change.”

He said in his line of work it's all about relationships.

“You try to have relationships with trainers who have some good horses or a lot of horses,” Knust said. “Then there are trainers who have only a few horses but you want to ride them. So you try to balance it out. You work horses for the big stables then, when you can, you work horses for the smaller stables.

“Then you keep track of the horses you've ridden,” Knust said, “and when the (condition) book comes out, you mark the horses you want to ride back and fill in the other races with new horses. It's a continuous thing from day to day. You also have to set up (morning) workers for your jockeys which is very important in this game because, again, relationships. You might work horses you don't ride and somebody might work the horses you ride. It all balances out.”

Knust has seen many changes in the game of horse racing over the years. So what does he think about the state of horse racing in 2022?

“I still think it's a game that can survive,” Knust said “I just don't think there will be as many racetracks in the future. We have to compete with the tracks back east that, number one, have casino money and number two, you can race in two or three places within a two-hour drive. So that puts us (West Coast racing) on an island.

“For 50 years we've tried to get stables to come out here and stay,” Knust said, “and none of them do. I think a lot of it has to do with the competition. It's very, very tough out here.”

Knust's involvement in racing has afforded him the opportunity to meet some interesting people over the years.

When I worked at Hollywood Park, I used to ride up on the elevator with Cary Grant all the time,” he said. (Country music singer) Dwight Yoakum had horses. I was good friends with (Spendthrift Farm owner) B. Wayne Hughes before he passed. I'm really good friends with Marty Wygod and Paul Reddam. Now we're riding for Lee Searing. He puts a lot of money into horse racing. Jed Cohen, of Red Baron's Racing, he's a good friend and he's put millions into the game. Gary Barber is a good friend.

“You also have opportunities to be with people who aren't so famous, don't have a lot of money but they're good people,” Knust said. “The track gets you in a situation where you can meet a variety of different people.”

Colorful and interesting people…like Tom Knust.

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