Foley Family Teaching New Lessons at Old School Stable

It was a day Greg Foley will never forget when his stable got to the winner's circle for not just one, but two stakes wins last Saturday at Ellis Park. The barn's beloved Bango (Congrats) added to his already impressive resume when he took the Kelly's Landing S. Not long after, Stitched (Mizzen Mast) pulled a 46-1 upset in the GII Wise Dan S. to give Foley his second career Grade II victory.

“It was an exciting day for sure,” Foley said later the following week. “It was one of biggest days, if not the biggest day, of my career. The whole family was there–my wife Sheree, my sister Vickie, and my two sons.”

How did they celebrate?

“Well we went back to the barn to check the horses out. The crew had a couple of beers back at the barn. Sheree and I actually drove back to Louisville and I think we got a Big Mac on the way home.”

That last part was added with a grin and a wink as Foley sat in his office at Barn 11 at Churchill Downs, where the Greg Foley Racing Stable signage has been a constant presence for several decades. A second-generation horseman, Foley began training on his own in 1981. Since then, he has made his mark as one of the winningest trainers in the history of his home track at Churchill Downs, but now, as new members of the Foley family join the operation, it might be that their barn is just getting started.

Not only has his sister Vickie Foley, herself a Grade I-winning trainer, molded her barn in with her brother's and become his assistant, but now Greg's two sons Travis and Alex have joined the 60-horse stable as well.

Travis, 39, has an MBA and worked in the business world for a few years, but he soon found out that corporate life was not for him. When his father asked if he would be interested in setting up their stable for the winter at Fair Ground 11 years ago, he agreed and has stuck around ever since.

Alex, 31, earned a law degree but also found his way back to racing and now heads up the Foley base at Ellis Park.

A packed winner's circle for the GII Wise Dan | Coady

With an impish laugh, Travis Foley describes working for his father as both awesome and terrible. He explained that while he and his brother have the utmost respect for their father's abilities as a trainer, their goal has been to use their business backgrounds to help grow the operation.

“Horsemanship-wise, Dad is as good as there is,” he explained. “My brother and I, we're just more social than he is. He's more of a barn guy and we're kind of the social guys. So it's a full-service operation and we've developed a pretty good team. It comes down to trying to do everything you can to win races and do right by the horses, but also make sure owners feel connected and have fun.”

While their father does just fine with his flip phone, the brothers are making sure owners receive updates through training and workout videos and they've also established an online presence for the stable with a website and social media channels.

Perhaps the greatest contribution the sibling pair is making is through their drive to go out and find the next generation of clientele.

Stitched is the first horse that the Foleys have trained for Nathan McCauley. When McCauley bought back his homebred as a yearling, he put together a partnership with friends and, having formed a relationship with Travis and Alex, sent the colt to the Foley barn.

Greg Foley and Grade II winner Stitched | Katie Petrunyak

A smart, good-moving 2-year-old, Stitched was a stable favorite from the start and the team had high hopes when he made his debut at Fair Grounds in December of 2021.

“He ran horrible,” Greg Foley recalled. “He was last, got beat like 25 lengths. You just sit there thinking, 'What the heck is this? No way this horse could have run that bad.' He's by Mizzen Mast and has a lot of turf breeding, so we put him on the grass next time and he wins at a big price. We actually ran him back in a one-other-than at Fair Grounds that same meet and he won again.”

Stitched went on to claim a pair of stakes wins as a 3-year-old, but got a knee chip later in his sophomore season that required surgery. He returned this spring at four, but was disappointing in his first three efforts. Even still, Foley believed that the bay's ability was much better than his recent performances indicated.

Foley debated between sending Stitched to the Wise Dan or the $100,000 Jonathan B. Schuster Memorial S. the following weekend at Horseshoe Indianapolis, but he decided to go with his gut and opt for the Grade II.

“Thank goodness we went in the race at Ellis,” Foley joked. “He ran huge. He was training great, like he would run a very good race, but we were jumping into the toughest race of his life. He's just a neat horse and is very smart. He's fun to be around.”

Foley said that their team is planning to head to the Kentucky Downs meet for Stitched to make his next start.

While the Foleys are enjoying early success with McCauley and his group, Bango's owners have been longtime supporters of the Foley stable.

Fred and Debbie Schwartz of Tamaroak Partners sent Bango's dam Josaka to Foley in 2009. The daughter of Smart Strike showed promise when she broke her maiden at three, but an injury forced her into an early retirement. Her first foal Eton Ridge (Stephen Got Even) launched his career with Foley and went on to become a stakes winner, but it was her fourth foal who would become a real star.

Now six years old, Bango is Foley's highest-earning trainee with eight stakes wins to his credit. The millionaire has won a stake every year since he was three, including the 2021 and 2023 editions of the Kelly's Landing.

“It takes a very special horse to just stay around that long,” said Foley. “I think he's as good right now as he's ever been. He looks amazing out of the race the other day. He's just dappled from head to toe and is a very sound horse to keep running up through a 6-year-old year.”

Optimistic that racing will return to Churchill Downs this fall, Foley said they are aiming Bango for a start in September in Louisville. Bango is one win away from tying the Churchill Downs all-time win mark, which is now held by Ready's Rocket (More Than Ready) from 2005 to 2012. While Bango came close to achieving the goal when he ran second to Gunite (Gun Runner) in the Aristides S. on June 3, Foley said their team has continued to eye the current record of 11 wins.

In the meantime, Bango's 2-year-old full-brother named Evan On Earth is approaching his debut.

Perhaps flying a bit under the radar amidst all the celebration last Saturday, Stitched's victory in the Wise Dan also provided Foley with his 1,500th career win.

Greg, Travis and Alex Foley | courtesy Travis Foley

Travis Foley has watched firsthand as his father has remained steadfast through the many ups and downs of the sport and he believes his father's achievements can be accredited to a love of the game, but first and foremost, a love of the horse.

“Being a horse trainer is about discipline and doing it win, lose or draw, every day,” he said. “His ability to persevere through the tough times is really impressive. The way he is here regardless of what happened in the races, he just loves being with his horses. Kudos to him to be able to grind it out for his whole life, but to him it's not even a grind. He loves it. He lights up when he goes into the barn.”

Foley has been, and probably always will be, more interested in tending to his pupils back at the barn rather than going out and recruiting clients. Now, he has the next generation of Foleys helping to shine a light on what makes their father's expertise such a rarity.

“It's very deserved for him,” Travis said. “We're getting more clients and more money behind us and you're seeing some of the results stem from that.”

As for the seasoned horseman himself, Foley said he is grateful for the work his sons have put in to advance their stable, but also for the opportunity he has to work with his family on a daily basis.

“I don't think any of us planned for them to be doing this,” Foley admitted. “Whatever happened, they found their way back over here to the racetrack and I love it. That's what they want to do and they're doing a great job. I'm really proud of both of them.”

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Apprentice Rachel Slevinsky ‘Really Grateful’ For New Opportunities At Woodbine

Rachel Slevinsky sighs at the recollection of her first career race.

The apprentice rider knew that winning her debut would be a tall order. It certainly wasn't out of the question as the six horses made their way to the starting gate for the sixth race at Century Mile in the early evening last July, but it would take a perfect trip and a little racing luck to see it come to fruition.

Slevinsky, aboard 19-1 Cuvee Tee, the longest shot on the tote board, had dreamt of this moment for years, hopeful it could produce the fairytale-type ending she had played out in her mind in the days leading up to the seven-furlong sprint over the Calgary oval's dirt track.

That isn't how it would play out.

The bay mare, then four, hopped at the start, causing Slevinsky to slip out of the irons.

At the wire, the Cuvee Tee was fifth of six, passing a tiring foe late, four lengths back of the fourth-place finisher.

“Most of the time, nothing goes to plan. Even if you've mapped out a race in your head, it never seems to play out that way the majority of the time. That's how it kind of went in my first race. Luckily, I had been on the horse in the mornings, and I knew her pretty well. She was known for being a little finicky in the gate, so when the gates opened, she took that hop.”

Slevinsky, however, found a silver lining in the off-board result.

“She took care of me. When I got back in the stirrups, she held her path. She could have ducked and dived or run off with me, but she took care of me. She tried her hardest and that's all I could have asked for.”

Two months to the day after her first race, the apprentice had a far more memorable outcome when she teamed with the dark bay mare Sophie McTrophy in the first race at Century Mile.

Sent on her way at 6-1, the daughter of Declassify dueled with another rival early, put that one away, then moved clear of her five rivals ahead of the stretch run and coasted home to an easy four-length score in the 6 ½-furlong main track race.

“It was a great moment. You always wonder what that feeling will be like and it was even better than I imagined.”

The native of St. Albert, a city in Alberta on the Sturgeon River northwest of the City of Edmonton, spent countless hours on her grandparents' farm in Bonnyville, a two-and-a-half hour's drive northeast of her home, during her childhood days, a place where her riding horses stay throughout the year.

Slevinsky's introduction to racetrack life began at 16 when she started out as a groom for trainer Jerri Robertson before going on to gallop for various barns.

She wasn't expecting her part-time gig to turn into a riding career, at least early on.

“It was a summer job, which helped pay for my riding horse and other things,” she recalled. “But then I fell in love with it.”

Months later, she was on the path to earning her riding license.

Upon graduation from the jockey training program at Olds College in Alberta, Slevinsky was mentored by Nancy Jumpsen, who won the Sovereign Award as Canada's champion apprentice in 1985.

“It was a fun journey to get to the point where I could ride in my first race.”

After competing in her native Alberta, Slevinsky, just a little over a year after her debut, moved her tack east where she will look to make her mark in Ontario, competing at both Woodbine and Fort Erie.

Part of a crowded and competitive Woodbine jockey colony has meant stepping up her game and showing trainers she's capable of keeping pace against her more seasoned contemporaries.

“It was tough because to them, I am just another face, just another helmet. There are a lot of riders and a lot of big riders here at Woodbine. It's not an easy job to start with and it's even tougher when you are an apprentice. Back home, I was galloping for people that I had already established relationships with. Here, I needed to create those relationships. I had to show everyone I galloped for what I was capable of doing with each horse.”

That persistence and perseverance, coupled with her personable nature, has paid off.

“You start to earn trust, to have people see my strengths and give me a chance. I'm also left-handed, and there aren't as many bugs or journeyman who are left-handed by nature. I'm always a happy person, so I have never had an issue with anyone. They have all been kind to me. I think that helps as well.”

As do her performances on the racetrack.

So far, her efforts, both in the mornings and afternoons, have yielded a successful campaign to date.

Slevinsky won her first Woodbine race with 11-1 A Gal For T J, trained by Tedston Holder, to a front-running score in a 1 1/16 mile turf race on June 15.

The victory came on her 24th birthday.

“She took off and she was awesome. That was a great feeling to draw away. And to win it on my birthday was extra special. And it was also my only ride of the day. I couldn't have asked for a better moment.”

On July 5, she posted a two-win day at Fort Erie.

“I got the early double… also, the only races I rode that day. So, that was my first daily double. It was pretty cool.”

Hard work remains the foundation of the five-pound apprentice's approach to her craft.

So too does maintaining a healthy work-life balance.

On Thursday, after getting on seven horses on a hot, humid July 5 morning at the Toronto oval, Slevinsky was happy to remain outdoors, albeit in a more laid-back setting ahead of a late Thursday afternoon card at Woodbine.

“I do like to unwind a little bit, to reset for the day. Usually, I'll take my dog out for a walk or during the summer, I like to sit outside in the sun. I have a couple books that I like to read every now and again.”

No need to guess the theme of her reading material.

“They're horse books,” she said with a laugh. “For the most part, I like to sit out in the sun and read the program. Riding can be very stressful, but I love what I do, so I am just really grateful to all the people and for all the opportunities that have come my way. Everyone has been very kind and I've enjoyed riding every horse that I've been on.”

Even the ones with unmistakable eccentricities and peculiarities.

Slevinsky welcomes the challenge.

“I just get along with those crazy horses. I don't know what it is about them, but I can get them to calm down. I think I'm able to understand them in ways maybe some other riders can't. The tougher, older horses, and the babies, when they are happy and they know they are safe, they run a lot harder for you.”

As of July 5, she has eight wins from 46 mounts, along with 20 top-three finishes.

Although it's over a four-hour flight from Toronto back to St. Albert, Slevinsky is feeling right at home at Canada's Showplace of Racing. ​

“I want to keep going, win races, and win the big races. This is just the beginning. I haven't really broken the surface yet. It's been incredible so far and I can't wait to see where my career takes me.”

The post Apprentice Rachel Slevinsky ‘Really Grateful’ For New Opportunities At Woodbine appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Monmouth Jockey Update: Camacho, Gonzalez Out Four To Six Weeks With Separated Shoulder, Vertebral Fracture

Samy Camacho, Monmouth Park's second-leading rider and the leading jockey at Tampa Bay Downs each of the past three years, said he will be sidelined “four to six weeks” with a right shoulder separation suffered in a spill on July 2 at the Jersey Shore track.

Camacho has 121 wins overall this year, 29 at Monmouth Park.

Also injured in the spill was jockey Jorge Luis Gonzalez, who said he suffered a stable fracture of his L3 vertebrae from the incident that could sideline him four to six weeks as well.

“I'm home resting, taking my time to get better soon,” Camacho said by phone from his home in New Port Richey, Fla. “It's a separation of the anterior joint of my right shoulder. The specialist said it all depends on how quickly I heal but he thinks I will be out four to six weeks.”

Camacho hit the turf in the fourth race when his mount, Bingo's Girl, could not avoid a fallen Momma's Kim and Gonzalez. Momma's Kim went down after clipping heels with Gold Alliance, who drifted out at the three-eighths mark of the five-furlong grass event for 2-year-old fillies.

The 35-year-old Camacho, who hails from Caracas, Venezuela, said he is not frustrated “because I'm with my family and spending time with my wife and (four) kids.”

“The same thing happened to me in 2017, except it was the left shoulder that time. This time it's the right shoulder,” he said.

His future riding plans depend on how quickly he recovers.

“If I can't get back until September I will probably go to Gulfstream and wait for Tampa to start,” said Camacho, who has won four of the past five riding titles at Tampa Bay Downs. “If I can be back sometime in August I will probably come back to Monmouth Park to finish the meet.

“But if it's later than August I will probably just go to Gulfstream. I want to come back as soon as possible but I want to make sure I am 100 percent first.”

Monmouth Park's meet ends on Sept. 10.

Gonzalez, who has five wins from 42 starts at the Monmouth meet, initially did not think he had suffered any injuries in the spill and even rode Bayou Shack to a second-place finish two races later. X-rays taken late last Sunday revealed the fracture.

The post Monmouth Jockey Update: Camacho, Gonzalez Out Four To Six Weeks With Separated Shoulder, Vertebral Fracture appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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NTRA Releases Names of Disqualified NHC Players

The National Thoroughbred Racing Association announced the disqualification of three unnamed players from the NHC and NHC Tour for a period of two years on Thursday. After hearing input from the horseplayer community and others in the industry, the NTRA revealed on Friday that the players who colluded are Jordan Jayne, James Pauly and Ryan Patrick Scully.

“Protecting the integrity of the NTRA and the NHC tournament is among my highest priorities in this job,” said NTRA President and CEO Tom Rooney. “By not initially releasing the names of the players involved, even though our rules give us broad discretion to do so for all prize winners, I believed I was doing what was best for the NHC. The demand from the public we have received far outweighs my personal beliefs. I highly value the opinion of the horseplayers' community, without whom our sport would not be what it is and whom we work with to protect all NHC sanctioned contests throughout the year.”

These three players controlled five entries in the 2023 NHC. The event paid out to the top 78 entries. The NTRA has officially disqualified the five entries controlled by these individuals and will proceed to move all other entries up in the prize structure. The entries that finished 79-83 who did not make the initial cut will be moved into the prize structure. Additionally, the NTRA will distribute the difference in prize money for all other entries that move up in the prize structure. The NTRA will mail checks to all individuals involved and the official leaderboard has been updated.

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