Three-Year-Layoff Winner a Study in Patient Horsemanship

The Week in Review by T.D. Thornton

When Silver Seeker (Central Banker) made his second start off a nearly three-year layoff Saturday at Aqueduct, the betting public was skeptical of the Midwest shipper's chances, dismissing him at 19-1 in a second-level allowance/optional claimer for New York-breds.

The price seemed about right if all you had to go on were the gelding's past performances, which showed just a ninth-place November prep at Hawthorne for Gene LaCroix, an obscure-to-horseplayers trainer riding an 0-for-30 losing streak that dated to Sept. 20, 2020.

Bettors might have assessed Silver Seeker's chances more favorably had they been aware that even though LaCroix, 74, is only a hobbyist trainer with a several-horse private stable, he is, by many accounts, considered to be an expert layoff conditioner.

Raised in a horse-centric family with decades of multi-breed experience, LaCroix for the past 20 years has operated LaCroix Training Center in La Grange, Kentucky, alongside his wife, Erin. A bit off the beaten path, their facility is a green, 65-stall spread with a half-mile training track; a tranquil oasis where some of America's top Thoroughbred outfits send horses (including a few Grade I winners) for breaking, legging-up and conditioning.

Likewise, even if they didn't have a wager on him, railbirds might have cheered a little more lustily for Silver Seeker himself if they knew the incredible physical obstacles and setbacks the gelding faced just to make it back to the races on a chilly December afternoon, let alone win by two lengths en route to a $41.40 upset.

“This whole thing has been a challenge to bring this horse back, to give him a chance to see if he still had the heart and the will to do it,” Gene LaCroix told TDN by phone several hours after the Dec. 10 win. “Our operation, LaCroix rehab, is well known. But Erin and I are like amateur trainers. We don't do it professionally. We just have a few horses. We're pretty much out of it except for this silver horse. And it's just been such a pleasure to see him come along and how good he looked. He's a big, handsome horse.”

LaCroix grew up accompanying his father, Dr. Eugene E. LaCroix, to the backside of Turf Paradise in Phoenix, Arizona, in the 1950s and 60s. Dr. LaCroix was one of the pioneers of Arabian racing on a pari-mutuel basis, but like his son, his horsemanship was not confined to one specific breed.

The younger Gene was an innovator in Arabian stallion syndication by the 1980s, and prior to focusing their attention on Thoroughbreds, he and Erin enjoyed successful careers in the show horse industry, earning more than 100 U.S. National Championships and two lifetime achievement awards.

After moving to Kentucky, in 2003 the LaCroixes started a rehabilitation and lay-up program for Thoroughbreds at their farm, handling all aspects of the operation, from business management to equine care. Because they live on the property, they are responsible for all the late barn inspections before turning in themselves, although the operation is rounded out by longtime, experienced staffers.

Over the past two decades, trainers and owners such as Tom Amoss, Tim Glyshaw, Maggi Moss, and Padua Stables have utilized the LaCroixes' services. The farm's website even includes a testimonial from Dr. Larry Bramlage, one of the most respected equine surgeons in America, alongside words of praise from other notable veterinarians.

In 2008, Gene became a licensed trainer. But the scope of his own stable has generally been limited to buying a few yearlings, training them. and then either selling them at auction or racing them. Over 15 years, he's only had 127 starters, and just five this year prior to Saturday's race.

Shortly after Silver Seeker was foaled on May 1, 2016, Gene and Erin entered into a partnership on him with breeder Patrick Davis and a third investor.

“The original plan was to send him to an auction in New York,” Gene LaCroix said. “He came in here as a long-legged, shaggy weanling. And when it came time for the X-rays, they didn't come out good. So we decided to scrap the New York auction and put him in Keeneland with a modest reserve.”

There were no takers, and Silver Seeker RNA'd for $7,500 as a yearling.

It turned out that Silver Seeker had developed osteochondrosis in his left stifle. The plan then switched to letting it heal before trying to race against New York-breds.

But, as LaCroix explained, “to make a long story short, we decided to get out of the partnership because we didn't want to be a one-third owner and paying the expense of sending him to another trainer in New York,” when the horse might not be good enough to win there and they had their own training facility in Kentucky.

“But,” LaCroix added, “we suggested that we would take the gamble if we owned 100% of him. And they took us up on it.”

So Gene and Erin bought out the other partners, and were encouraged when Silver Seeker breezed fast as 2-year-old. Then the stifle started bothering him again and he underwent surgery to try and fix it.

That pushed the gelding's debut to age three, when LaCroix entered Silver Seeker in a 5 1/2-furlong maiden special weight at Indiana Grand after training him on the farm for his debut.

“We expected him to do well, but the bettors sure didn't,” LaCroix said. “He went off at 88-1 and won by three.”

The LaCroixes thought Silver Seeker might blossom into a grass router, and they considered sending him to New York. But they first wanted to try him on turf closer to home. A month after his debut upset, the gelding again ran at Indy, but he had trouble on the turns before finishing a credible fourth.

But he came out of that race with a condylar bruise on his left hind, LaCroix said. “They suggested we put a screw in it. And that took another two or three months.”

On Dec. 6, 2019, Silver Seeker returned to action at Turfway Park, prevailing by a head in a 6 1/2-furlong sprint at 16-1 odds in an two-lifetime allowance.

“So I felt pretty good, and we said, 'Okay, he's ready for New York,'” LaCroix recalled. “And we took him to New York and he won that race,” a one-other-than, state-bred allowance over seven furlongs in the slop at Aqueduct on Dec. 31, 2019, this time at 9-1 odds.

But Silver Seeker's left hind lameness returned post-win, and Dr. Bramlage diagnosed a suspensory issue.

“Then in the process of bringing him back, he got a bow in his right front,” LaCroix said. “So we took a year, brought him back slow, just like they told us to do. And one breeze into it, an easy breeze, he showed he was going to tear again. It was minimal, but they thought it was a different spot.”

This meant another entire year off. The list of the veterinarians that the LaCroixes consulted reads like a Who's Who of Kentucky equine practitioners. The gray would eventually miss his entire 4-, 5-, and almost all of his 6-year-old seasons.

“We figured out a plan of bringing him back with a lot of warm-up,” LaCroix said. “Every day, before he went to the track, he went to the exerciser machine for 20 minutes. And he learned to lope at first, not gallop. He'd do a half-mile lope after the jog, and then he would start his gallop. And we built that gallop up starting by getting a mile slow, and then gradually bringing him up.

“My wife is listed as the owner,” LaCroix continued. “But she's really the co-trainer. She's been his caretaker. I go over him too, but it's been a team effort. And we just had so much hope with this horse, that if we could rehab him properly, he could come back.”

Slowly but surely, Silver Seeker regained his fitness and remained sound.

“With all the icing and everything else, we never saw a problem,” LaCroix said.

By the autumn of 2022, he believed that “no horseman could look at either leg and tell which one [had bowed].”

Trouble was, the LaCroixes couldn't find a racing commission vet who would do so much as even glance at Silver Seeker because of the huge gap in his racing career. Their private vets vouched for the gelding's soundness, but the regulatory vets wouldn't budge.

“I can't tell you the effort we went through to get him qualified to race because of the new rule changes,” LaCroix said. “We couldn't get the state vets in Kentucky, Ohio or Indiana to even give him a work to evaluate, pass, or fail him. They wouldn't even look at him.”

Finally, LaCroix said, “Illinois said they would do that. He went up to Hawthorne and had a bullet work, passed with flying colors. So that got him off the vet's list to be eligible to enter.”

Although they still wanted to race him for New York-bred purses, the LaCroixes figured–just like before–that sticking closer to home would be the more prudent first step. Since he worked so well up in Chicago, they entered him at Hawthorne on Nov. 6, 2022, choosing not to run for a tag in an optional $40,000 claiming sprint over six furlongs.

Silver Seeker drew post 10 and went off at 8-1 odds. “He'd never been in an outside post, and the track was lightning fast,” LaCroix explained. “He gained from ninth to fourth, and then he just tired. It made us wonder if it was going to affect him mentally, because it wasn't his fault coming off a 34-month layoff.”

Even if they weren't sure about that potential mental duress, the LaCroixes were certain Silver Seeker was physically ready for a New York race. When the Dec. 10 spot came up in the condition book, Erin, her sister, a groom, and a driver loaded the gray gelding on a van and pointed it 750 miles east to Aqueduct.

“One of us had to stay at the farm,” Gene LaCroix said. “I was there the last time he went to New York, so she went this time. And that was the appropriate way, because Erin has always been more involved in his caretaking.”

Gene watched Silver Seeker's pace-pressing victory at home in Kentucky on TV. Erin told TDN she was “screaming her lungs out” at the rail in New York. The 1:23.99 winning time for seven furlongs equated to a 90 Beyer Speed Figure, a career best for the gelding.

“This horse is very special,” Erin LaCroix said while preparing for the 12-hour ride home. “He's been with us since he was eight months old. And to see him come back like that, he's just a special horse. He is very classy. It's amazing how smart he is. Because he knows what he needs to do to get the job done, and he loves it.”

And how did Silver Seeker come out of the win that ran his lifetime record to 4-for-6 and pushed the one-time $7,500 RNA's purse earnings above the six-figure mark?

“He looks great,” Erin LaCroix said. “Everything's tight. He's happy. He knows he did a good job. He ate all his sweet potatoes and peppermints.”

The post Three-Year-Layoff Winner a Study in Patient Horsemanship appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Southeast Asia Blog: Treating Colic in the Jungle

Jockey and veterinarian Ferrin Peterson has been writing a blog for the TDN on a charitable veterinary trip to Southeast Asia to help refugees care for their animals. To read the prior installments, click here or here.

I had my first meeting with my new team: the five men who are given the job title in their village as the “mule handlers.” They were all new acquaintances to me, as the mule handlers I worked with in the past became human medics and others moved to new villages. The translator that was going to work with me was an old acquaintance who felt like an uncle to many of us. His name is Poh and he is a human medic, which is helpful when he translates medical concepts for me. One of the mule men pulled out the book, “Where There Is No Animal Doctor,” that I had left with the past mule team. It was a miracle after the disappointment of my failed attempt to bring them their own copy when I had to rearrange my schedule after missing my connection. I suppose my missed flight connection was not as detrimental as I had originally thought.

The mule handlers, Poh, and I sat together, and they told me about the problems they had been witnessing with the herd. Listening to the mule men's questions gave me a sense of their compassion for their herd and attention to detail, and knew I would enjoy working with them. The herd's problems mostly originated from their digestive tracts, so I would be looking for a common denominator there.

I got up early the next morning and walked into the village, when one of the mule men alerted me that one of the mules had a stomach ache. I was planning to teach them how to do a colic workup by the end of the week. Here was a real life example instead, so we sprung into action.

Grabbing my stethoscope, I showed them how to take a heart rate, which took a few tries for the first man to come up with the same number as I did. With a horse's heart beat having a distinct “lub-dub,” they had a tendency to double count. I observed them correcting each other as each man took his turn with the stethoscope while I gathered supplies.

I fetched my nasogastric tube and showed them how to pass it through mule's nose and into her stomach. Poh was there beside me as I described the signs to check to be sure they passed the tube down the esophagus and into the stomach and not down the trachea and into the lungs, an easy and lethal mistake.

After emptying the mule's stomach, I pulled the tube and had the mule men pass it themselves. We all worked together as one person would hold the tube in place, another would funnel in water, and another would hold the bucket for the siphoned stomach contents. The men continued checking vitals, but our mule quickly went downhill. It became apparent to me that this colic would require surgery, which is not an option in the jungle where we do not have an anesthetic machine nor a sterile environment. The mule did not make it, but she provided a valuable teaching opportunity that will help the mule men to treat future sick members of her herd.

I spent the next day in data collection and observation. I believe a lot can be learned from simply studying and getting to know your patient. I stayed around the herd all day, sometimes watching from afar and other times sitting on a rock near them. It was fun to see different members of the herd come up to check me out. I usually won them over with scratches.

On my past trips, the herd would wander far off and forage all day. I noticed this herd was staying in the center of the village waiting for their breakfast and dinner. The mule men were feeding pellets for breakfast, and dinner was rice hulls which had been ground into a powder. I realized the herd was consuming all concentrates and no fiber, which is not conducive to the function of the equine gut.

At breakfast the next morning, I brought this up with the other volunteers. None of them had a horse background, but everyone was concerned about the herd and asked for updates at every meal we shared. I told the coordinator that we needed to increase their pellets for calories, but most importantly the herd needed plant fiber that they can eat throughout the day. He said they could send in more pellets and they would hire porters to carry them in. Unfortunately, to bring in enough hay would be too impractical long-term. One volunteer at the breakfast table had worked in another region of Asia and said he had seen horses eating banana leaves. Fortunately, there were plenty of banana plants surrounding the village here.

Banana leaves and bamboo adds necessary fiber to the mules' diet | Ferrin Peterson photo

When the mule men came to feed the herd their breakfast, I had them add salt and water to the grain and asked them increase the quantity. They told me they would run out of grain by the end of the week if they fed more, but I assured them that more grain was on the way. Then I asked if they could help me get a few banana leaves to see if the herd would eat them. They grabbed their machetes and chopped off a few branches and the herd loved it! The mule men were excited by this finding too and went back to chop down more banana leaves.

I started taking the mules hiking. They needed to build their fitness in order to be useful for packing, and I wanted to see what plants they chose to eat along the route. It also helped me get to know their personalities, and I certainly discovered which mules were the most stubborn of the group. I learned they enjoyed dry banana leaves as well as the fresh ones, and they loved bamboo, both the leaves and the young shoots. That was another exciting discovery, as there is a surplus of bamboo in the jungle.

On one of my mule treks, I came across a fenced-in rice field. I mentioned it to the volunteer coordinator, and he said they had seen the herd out in that field in the past after the rice was harvested. He brought it up to the owner of the rice field, and they gave permission to turn the herd out on it. It was a 45-minute hike from where the herd was staying. I asked the mule handlers to help me turn them out overnight and bring them back in the morning. I did not want to make a sudden feed change and cause one of them to founder. The mule men happily obliged. I left them to work on some things for an hour then returned to move the herd to their pasture, but the herd was gone. I went on my own out to the rice field and found the herd grazing in the rice paddies. One of the mule men was still there, and he showed me the buckets he had filled for their water source. I was extremely impressed with their initiative.

Tomorrow: horses and water buffalo.

 

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Apprentine Jockey Olver Notches First Career Win At Aqueduct

Apprentice jockey Madison Olver, who launched her career on November 12 at Aqueduct Racetrack, earned her first victory in her 16th attempt aboard Curbstone for trainer Tom Morley in Friday's sixth race, a $40,000 claiming event, at the Big A.

“I don't think I would have been happier to win the Kentucky Derby right now,” an emotional Olver said after being doused with water by her fellow celebrating jockeys. “It's the best kind of cold.”

Curbstone, a 3-year-old homebred for owner Patricia Moseley, scored the second win of his career after breaking his maiden in May at Churchill Downs. The son of Street Sense was sent to post at 12-1 odds under Olver for the first time and stalked in fourth through the first half-mile of the nine-furlong test before coming under a ride from Olver.

Curbstone went three-wide and began to pick off his rivals passing the three-quarters pole, and by the stretch call, had taken a 5 1/2-length advantage on the field. Olver continued steady urging and Curbstone responded, coasting home six lengths in front in a final time of 1:52.82.

“A good horse makes me look good,” said Olver, who was greeted by a large crowd of cheering fans upon her return to the winner's circle. “He is just honest and I knew he didn't want kickback, so I took him out where there wasn't any. He'll just keep going and he's a good kid.”

Olver's win came after hitting the board in seven other races, including five runner-up efforts, one of which happened earlier on the Friday card aboard B C Glory Days. Olver, 23, is represented by agent Joe Migliore and is named on four horses on Thursday's card at the Big A.

The post Apprentine Jockey Olver Notches First Career Win At Aqueduct appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Brisset: Former Kentucky Oaks starter Yuugiri Nearing Return At Oaklawn, We The People To Start Jogging Soon Following Layoff

Yuugiri is scheduled to breeze Monday morning at Oaklawn in advance of her scheduled comeback race this month in Arkansas or California, trainer Rodolphe Brisset said Saturday afternoon.

Yuugiri was among Oaklawn's leading 3-year-old fillies last season after finishing third in the Honeybee Stakes (G3) and winning the Fantasy Stakes (G3). Both races were 1 1/16 miles. Yuugiri hasn't started since finishing 13th in the Kentucky Oaks (G1) going 1 1/8 miles May 6 at Churchill Downs.

Following a 60-day vacation, Yuugiri resumed training around Labor Day and had seven published workouts since Oct. 12. The last four have come at Oaklawn.

“I thought it was time to give her a break,” Brisset said. “She has done super, like she has really, really changed physically, put weight on. So, I'm going to go race by race. The first step is breeze on Monday.”

Brisset said Yuugiri is eyeing a six-furlong allowance race Dec. 18 at Oaklawn and the $300,000 La Brea Stakes (G1) at seven furlongs Dec. 26 at Santa Anita.

“Plan B is the La Brea at Santa Anita,” Brisset said. “Hopefully, the race here will go.”

Regardless of where she runs next, Brisset said he intends to target shorter races in 2023 for Yuugiri, who has compiled a 2-2-1 record from six starts and earned $556,110. She is a daughter of 2011 Preakness (G1) winner Shackleford.

“More than likely, we're going to keep her to one turn,” Brisset said. “She won at a mile and a sixteenth here, so maybe she can run a mile here. But more than likely, we're going to keep her around one turn.”

Oaklawn's beefed-up stakes series for older female sprinters is highlighted by the inaugural $250,000 Matron March 31. The Matron is preceded by the $150,000 American Beauty Jan. 21 and the $150,000 Carousel Feb. 25. All three races are six furlongs.

“We'll map something out,” Brisset said. “I'm going to take it race by race.”

Brisset, WinStar Farm's in-house trainer, is wintering at Oaklawn for the second time. He has 20 stalls for the 2022-2023 meeting that began Friday. Brisset compiled a sparkling 8-6-5 record from 31 starts last season at Oaklawn, with his horses earning $962,745 in purse money.

“We have an OK group,” Brisset said. “Some of these look like they'll need a race or two to figure out what we're going to ask, but I'm sure through the winter they're going to show their true talents. Hopefully, we have something that can go on to the big stage, Oaks and Derby. Kind of the same idea we had last year. Now, we have to see if anybody will take us there.”

In addition to getting Yuugiri to the Kentucky Oaks, the Brisset-trained We the People was an eye-catching winner of his first two career starts at Oaklawn before missing a chance to secure a spot in the Kentucky Derby with a seventh-place finish in the Arkansas Derby (G1) last April.

We the People, a son of Constitution co-owned by WinStar, became a Grade 3 winner and concluded his 3-year-old campaign with an eighth-place finish in the Pennsylvania Derby (G1) Sept. 24 at Parx.

“We gave him some time, 60 days, and he should be on his way back, starting to jog, pretty soon,” Brisset said. “I don't think he's going to make it back here.”

The post Brisset: Former Kentucky Oaks starter Yuugiri Nearing Return At Oaklawn, We The People To Start Jogging Soon Following Layoff appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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