‘A Heart The Size Of Texas’: Entrepreneur, Philanthropist Lunsford Gets First Preakness Starter

Bruce Lunsford, who will have his first Preakness Stakes (G1) entrant when Art Collector takes on Kentucky Derby winner Authentic Saturday at Pimlico, knows something about tough races and taking on formidable opponents.

After all, as the Democratic nominee for Kentucky's U.S. Senate seat in 2008, he gave Mitch McConnell the closest call of the Senate Majority Leader's long political career.

“Oh sure, even in politics there's a common thread,” said Lunsford, comparing it to horse racing. “I went into a race that nobody thought I could win. I was 25 points behind; I was tied with two weeks to go. It was like the stretch drive. It was fun, exhilarating, and I got to meet a lot of people. Mitch and I still have a decent relationship today. I think he respected what I did, and I saw where he was quoted as saying the only time he'd had his people write a concession letter was in the race with me. Because two weeks out, it looked like we were going to win.”

The 72-year-old entrepreneur and philanthropist from Louisville has been many things: Founder of a Fortune 500 company, investor in a myriad of start-up companies, producer of movies, partner in the Kentucky Kingdom amusement park and Hurricane Bay water park. He worked in state government as Kentucky's commerce secretary. Now Lunsford would love nothing more than to add classic-winning horse owner and breeder.

Art Collector, out of Lunsford's mare Distorted Legacy, is his first Preakness entrant and his second in the Triple Crown, following Vision and Verse, the 1999 Belmont Stakes (G1) runner-up to Lemon Drop Kid at odds of 54-1. Art Collector — who is 4- for-4 this year, including the $200,000 RUNHAPPY Ellis Park Derby and Keeneland's Toyota Blue Grass (G2) — was supposed to be the first Kentucky Derby starter for Lunsford and trainer Tommy Drury.

Within days of being fulfilled, that Derby dream was derailed when Art Collector sustained a minor and fleeting, but untimely, foot issue. A month later they are back on solid ground for another swing in the Triple Crown.

“It's the only thing you work on, probably, that you spend weeks and days and everything to get ready and it lasts two minutes or less,” Lunsford said. “So a lot of stuff is just outside your control. I do like the way this horse runs. They all have to get out of the gate. We've seen a lot of horses over the years who are really good break bad and it takes them out of the action. This horse has not shown a propensity to do that. If he gets in the flow and we get a fair trip, I've got to like our chances to hit the board. Anything above that gets to be gravy. But a lot of the handicappers all of a sudden are picking him. So I don't know exactly what that means.”

Lunsford wonders how the Derby might have been different had Art Collector been in the field, given that his horse and jockey Brian Hernandez Jr. logically figured to put more pressure than the front-running winner Authentic faced in his absence.

“The good thing is that speculation doesn't matter, because we're going to get a chance to run against each other,” Lunsford said. “I'm hopeful both have a good trip, and I'd love to see them down the stretch together. I'll take my chances.”

Lunsford grew up in Kenton County in northern Kentucky near Cincinnati, his dad a union shop steward who wound up buying a small farm. Young Lunsford got interested in horse racing while attending the University of Kentucky and going to Keeneland. In the summers he'd go to Ellis Park with his fraternity brother and close friend Greg Hudson, whose dad owned horses.

A CPA who also received a law degree from Northern Kentucky University, Lunsford in his early 30s was Kentucky's commerce secretary under John Y. Brown. In that capacity, he helped bring United Parcel Service's worldwide air hub to Louisville and was involved with launching the Kentucky Center for the Performing Arts.

A few years later, Lunsford got into horse ownership by claiming a couple of cheap horses with his pal Hudson.

“The good news or bad news, whichever way you look at it, both of them won about $100,000,” he said. “So we thought this game is easy. We found out later it's a little more complicated.”

A couple of years later, Lunsford wanted to get involved in the breeding side of racing. He purchased one of his first broodmare prospects in 1994, paying $500,000 for a 3-year-old filly out of the Greentree Stable dispersal upon the advice of Claiborne Farm head Seth Hancock.

“You know Bruce, he wanted action,” Hancock recalled. “We said, 'Well look here. You can have your cake and eat it too. Greentree is dispersing these things, and here's a pretty good racemare who's got a great pedigree. You'll have some fun running her and maybe we can make a pretty decent broodmare out of her.' ”

That half-million dollar filly, Bunting, had one win out of 13 starts for her prior connections, but she also finished second in Keeneland's Ashland (G1) and Pimlico's Black-Eyed Susan (G2). In four starts for Lunsford, she won a Gulfstream Park allowance race before being retired to Claiborne Farm. She proved far better than pretty decent as a broodmare.

Bunting's first foal was Vision and Verse, who won the Illinois Derby G2) and also was second in the Travers Stakes while earning $1 million. Her 11th foal was a filly named Distorted Legacy, a minor stakes-winner who placed second in Belmont Park's Flower Bowl (G1). Distorted Legacy's second foal was Art Collector.

Until Art Collector, Lunsford's home-run horses came around 15 years ago.

His $160,000 yearling purchase Madcap Escapade won 7 of 9 starts and more than $1 million, including Keeneland's Ashland G1), and finished third in the 2004 Kentucky Oaks. The Frankie Brothers charge was being pointed for the 2005 Breeders' Cup Sprint against males when she suffered a career-ending injury. He sold a half-interest in Madcap Escapade at auction for $3 million, staying in for the other half, to another trusted advisor, John Sikura, with whom Lunsford also boards mares at Hill 'N' Dale Farm.

The Brothers-trained First Samurai, purchased as a yearling with his friend Lansdon Robbins of Louisville, won his first four starts in 2005, including New York's Grade 1 Hopeful and Champagne before finishing third in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile. The winner of Gulfstream Park's Fountain of Youth (G2) upon the disqualification of Corinthian for interference, First Samurai's Derby aspirations ended when he was injured in Keeneland's Blue Grass. He retired to a stallion career at Claiborne.

Lunsford also bred and sold Golden Missile, winner of the Grade 1 Pimlico Special in 2000, then sold that horse's mom, Santa Catalina, for $1.35 million five years later. He also bred and sold Canada's 2006 Horse of the Year Arravale, a two-time Grade 1 winner.

For all his success, Lunsford knows well how difficult it is to just get to the championship races, let alone win.

“Just like the experience at the Derby,” he said. “All things went right, and then he winds up getting what is almost like an ingrown toenail. You're talking about creatures that have large bodies and small legs. And things happen. Seth Hancock told me one time, you've got to learn to take the hard blows in this business… My good friend Don Dizney told me that it's the lows that make the highs so good. There's a lot of truth to that. If you can win 15, 20 percent of your races, they cover you pretty well. It's like the baseball player who bats .300.”

Lunsford today is chairman and CEO of Lunsford Capital, a private investment company he founded in 2003. The companies he has founded include Vencor, a Fortune 500 company now known as Kindred Healthcare, and its spinoff real-estate company Ventas; Atria Communities, the third-largest assisted-living company in America; and Valor Healthcare, Inc., a company that develops and operates outpatient clinics for military veterans under the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.

“I was a start-up guy,” he said. “Now what I do is I invest in people that I think have it. I tell people I don't invest in financial statements, I invest in people. When I realize they have the skillset, we try to give them the things they need to do to make it work.”

Drury is an example. Lunsford one day this summer asked Drury what he had going on for the week. The trainer mentioned the various trips he'd be making up and down the highway to Belterra Park and Ellis Park.

“He said, 'Man, we've got to get you to the point to where you're not bouncing around so much,'” Drury recalled. “He said, 'Better-quality horses is going to do that to you. We need to sit down and talk.'

“And that's the kind of guy Bruce is. He's always willing to help others. Always willing to try to help you reach your goal and get to the next level. It's like the Blue Grass,” Drury continued, referencing Art Collector giving him his first graded-stakes victory. “It took me a long time to get to that. He knew that and I think he was genuinely happy for me. He's got a heart the size of Texas. It makes you want to work that much harder and want to win that much more for people like that.”

Lunsford said that at this stage of his life, he only wants to do things that are fun and challenging.

“The thing I've done well is I've built a really nice staff,” he said. “The guy who runs the whole real-estate company which is assisted living and apartments, his dad was my barber. His son Brian (Durbin) is like my right-hand man. Every time I get out of Jerry's chair, I say, 'I just can't tell you how he's changed my life.' I have a team of about six people of his quality. I've built a team of people where, if I drop dead tomorrow, they can keep it going.”

Lunsford laughed when asked if he's an under-the-radar Shark Tank.

“I can relate to everything they do, except I don't have as much money,” he said.

So maybe a Shark Tank Lite?

“That's right,” he said. “You know I was in the movie business for a while with Ed Hart, had about 10 movies we made. We had a lot of fun. Made a little money, lost a lot of money. But I will say one thing: I was in the two toughest business anybody can be in: the horse business and the movie business.”

Making having a horse of Art Collector's caliber even more satisfying for the father of daughters Amy, Cindy and Brandy and grandfather to six is sharing the experience with his significant other, Eleanor Porco.

“I have a lot that I enjoy in life, because I like action a little bit,” Lunsford said. “I don't think I'm an action junkie or anything. But this is one of those things where my friends are able to enjoy it. My two best friends are still alive. I mean, we're at the age where that could not be true. The whole idea of having a horse of this quality and at a time in my life when I've really got a great soulmate with me has just really turned it into a great blessing.

“There are only so many interesting things you can do in life. Outside of having your children and things you do as a kid, sports and otherwise, when you're older, it's harder to keep it exciting. I'm 72 years old and my life is still exciting.”

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Triple Crown News Minute Presented By Kentucky Equine Research: Betting Against Baffert?

The rescheduled Triple Crown season of 2020 draws to a close with Saturday's Grade 1 Preakness Stakes from Baltimore's Pimlico Race Course, and while it has been a year like no other, there is one factor that has brought some normalcy to the event: the presence of Hall of Famer and seven-time Preakness winner Bob Baffert.

Baffert is five-for-five in the Preakness with winners of the G1 Kentucky Derby and he brings morning-line favorite Authentic to Old Hilltop off his upset of Tiz the Law in the Sept. 5 Run for the Roses. For good measure, Baffert also will tighten the girth (or at least attempt to) on Thousand Words, the colt who was scratched from the Derby after flipping in the saddling paddock at Churchill Downs.

In this final edition of the 2020 Triple Crown News Minute, Ray Paulick and news editor Chelsea Hackbarth assess the current crop of 3-year-olds relative to the older horse division that they will soon be taking on at the Breeders' Cup world championships Nov. 7 at Keeneland. And, of course, they also make their selections for the Preakness Stakes and explain why they are going against the grain and not picking one of the Baffert runners.

Watch the Triple Crown News Minute below.

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Preakness Notes: Swiss Skydiver ‘Continues To Impress,’ Mr. Big News ‘Bouncing And Happy’

Swiss Skydiver

Peter Callahan's Swiss Skydiver was among the first Preakness contenders to take to the sloppy main track at Pimlico Wednesday morning.

“She likes to go in the early set. She likes to get in and out. We sent her out to gallop, but we just took her around twice the wrong way,” trainer Kenny McPeek said. “We'll gallop tomorrow.”

Swiss Skydiver, a multiple graded-stakes winner against 3-year-old fillies, will meet the boys for a second time this year in the Preakness. The daughter of Daredevil, who finished second behind Art Collector in the July 11 Blue Grass (G2) at Keeneland, is rated at 6-1 in the Preakness morning line. McPeek's other options were the Spinster (G1) against older fillies and mares on Oct. 4 or the Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup (G1)on turf Oct. 10, both to be run at Keeneland.

“If they had written a 3-year-old filly race at a mile and an eighth or a mile and a quarter, a Grade 1, it would have been a no-brainer. We'd probably be in that,” McPeek said. “In the case of running against older fillies and mares, we've got a lot of time to do that. In the case of running on the grass – I think she'd like it; I think she could have won the QE II– you only get a window of time to run against straight 3-year-olds and that's here and now.

“She continues to do good. She continues to impress us every day. She eats great. You can't have fear. We'd like to get the big prize, and here we are.”

Swiss Skydiver, who was bought for $35,000 at the 2018 Keeneland September sale, has earned nearly $1.2 million while winning the Gulfstream Park Oaks (G2), Fantasy (G3) at Oaklawn, Santa Anita Oaks (G2) and Alabama (G1) at Saratoga. She finished second in the Kentucky Oaks (G1) at Churchill in her most recent start.

“It's all gravy. She only cost $35,000. She's done more than we'd ever dreamt and she, hopefully, continues to do that,” McPeek said. “That's what keeps this game great. You can take a $30,000 yearling and run against a million-dollar colt and be competitive.”

Mr. Big News

Allied Racing Stable LLC's Mr. Big News galloped 1 ½ miles at Pimlico shortly after 6 a.m. Wednesday in preparation for a bid to improve on his third-place Kentucky Derby finish in Saturday's Preakness Stakes.

“It was pretty dark. The track was obviously pretty wet, but he kind of likes the 'off' going. The track was in very good condition,” trainer Bret Calhoun said. “He seemed to love it. He settled in really good, made the trip very, very well. He got across the track great this morning and seemed to come back bouncing and happy.”

Mr. Big News, a son of Giant's Causeway, came from off the pace to enter contention on the turn into the homestretch in the Kentucky Derby but was unable to overtake the 1-2 finishers, Authentic and Tiz the Law.

“He gave me a real thrill in the Derby. Between the three-eighths pole and the quarter pole, I got pretty excited. I knew the horses were running pretty quick up front and I thought there was a pretty good chance they might back up to us,” Calhoun said. “The way he was moving, I thought if they backed up and he continued moving like that, he had a chance to win the whole thing. It was a huge effort on his part. The winner and second-place horse ran outstanding races. They made all the pace, a quick pace, and kept on running.”

Calhoun reported that Mr. Big News came out of his big Derby effort well and has maintained his weight for his second Triple Crown start.

Art Collector

The 3-year-old son of Bernardini galloped over the sloppy racetrack at Pimlico Wednesday morning in preparation for his first start in the 2020 Triple Crown campaign.

Jose Garcia, assistant to trainer Tommy Drury, reported that Art Collector, who is rated second at 5-2 in the Preakness morning line, has quickly adapted to his new surroundings after shipping from Churchill Downs Tuesday.

Bruce Lunsford's homebred colt, who missed a start in the Kentucky Derby due to a minor foot injury, will seek his sixth straight first-place finish in the Preakness. He is coming off victories in the Aug. 9 Ellis Park Derby and July 11 Blue Grass (G2) at Keeneland.

Drury is scheduled to travel to Baltimore Thursday.

Ny Traffic

The 3-year-old son of Cross Traffic galloped a mile Wednesday morning at Pimlico under Sabine Langvad, assistant to trainer Saffie Joseph Jr.

“The track was sloppy, so it was a nice easy gallop,” said Langvad, who arrived at Pimlico from Churchill Downs with the gray colt Tuesday evening.

Ny Traffic, who is owned by John Fanelli, Cash is King LLC, LC Racing, Paul Braverman and Team Hanley, finished eighth in the Kentucky Derby after being forwardly placed into the stretch. The NY-bred colt finished second, a nose behind Authentic, in the Haskell (G1) at Monmouth in his previous start.

Joseph is scheduled to arrive in Baltimore Thursday.

Max Player, Pneumatic, Excession

Darren Fleming, Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen's longtime assistant in the Midwest, is handling the stable's trio of Preakness entrants this week. All three had their final workouts Monday and were out of their stalls in the Preakness Stakes barn at Pimlico before dawn Wednesday, their first morning in Baltimore.

Winchell Thoroughbreds' Pneumatic, who shipped in from Saratoga Race Course Tuesday, went to the track and galloped a mile under Roberto Howell. Meanwhile, Calumet Farm's Excession and Max Player, who is owned by George Hall and SportBLX Thoroughbreds, walked the shedrow under tack. Excession and Max Player were part of the group of Preakness runners that were flown from Louisville, Ky. to Maryland Tuesday afternoon.

Fleming said he expects that all three will go to the track Thursday morning.

Liveyourbeastlife

William H. Lawrence's Preakness Stakes (G1) contender Liveyourbeastlife got a quick tour of Pimlico's main track Wednesday, his first morning at Old Hilltop since arriving from Belmont Park with trainer Jorge Abreu Tuesday afternoon.

After going out at 8:45 a.m. under exercise rider Kenneth Cruz, Liveyourbeastlife jogged one clockwise lap around the one-mile surface made sloppy from overnight rain. The original plan was for Liveyourbeastlife to gallop 1 ¼ miles, which Abreu hopes to get in Thursday.

“We just jogged him once around. It was a little wetter than I thought it would be today. That's why I waited until 8:45 because I thought it would dry out a little,” Abreu said. “I'm going to plan on galloping tomorrow. Today the idea was to gallop him, but he's dead fit. One day is not going to hurt him. He got a chance to get familiar with his surroundings.”

Abreu was pleased with the way Liveyourbeastlife has already adjusted to the new environment, even if the trainer – making his Triple Crown race debut – hadn't quite gotten to that point.

“There's a lot of nerves. I didn't sleep last night,” Abreu said. “He had a good night. He ate up everything, which is good. He's got a good attitude. He's doing everything the right way right now.”

Abreu said he spoke briefly Tuesday with jockey Trevor McCarthy, who will be aboard Liveyourbeastlife in the Preakness from outside Post 11. Abreu said he will meet McCarthy Thursday morning before Maryland's four-time champion rider, who owns three Pimlico meet titles, rides the afternoon card.

“I'm not going to give him too many instructions. He knows this track pretty well,” Abreu said. “When the agent called and told me, 'We got you,' I said, 'Great!' Yesterday he gave me a call. We spoke a little bit and he's going to stop by the barn tomorrow. If he wants, he can get on him. That way he could feel him out. The horse is pretty straightforward, though.”

Liveyourbeastlife enters the 1 3/16-mile Preakness off a runner-up finish behind Mystic Guide in the Jim Dandy (G2) Sept. 5 at Saratoga, contested at 1 1/8 miles. The son of Hall of Famer Ghostzapper dropped back to last in that race with three furlongs to run but came with a late run under Junior Alvarado that fell less than a length shy of the winner. Fellow Preakness contender Jesus' Team was third.

“I'm pretty sure he could have won, but Junior didn't know the horse. He admitted to me when he came back, he said I probably let him do too much from the quarter pole home,” Abreu said. “But, there's nobody to blame. The horse came out of that race in pretty good shape.”

Lawrence, in partnership with Klaravich Stables, won the 2017 Preakness with Cloud Computing, trained by Chad Brown, the year after Abreu went out on his own after nine years as Brown's top assistant. McCarthy's only previous Preakness ride came on his 21st birthday in 2015, when he was eighth behind Triple Crown champion American Pharoah aboard Bodhisattva.

Jesus' Team

Grupo Seven C Stable's Jesus' Team galloped once around the Pimlico racetrack Wednesday in preparation for joining the 2020 Triple Crown campaign in Saturday's Preakness (G1).

The Jose D'Angelo-trained son of Tapiture, who was the first Preakness candidate to arrive at Pimlico Sunday afternoon, finished third in the Jim Dandy (G2) at Saratoga in his most recent start. He finished fourth behind Authentic in the July 18 Haskell (G1) at Monmouth.

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The Haiku Handicapper Presented By BC2A Equine Sports Performance: 2020 Preakness Stakes

Time to analyze the 2020 Preakness Stakes field, in post position order, in the form of Haiku; a Japanese poem of 17 syllables, in three lines of five, seven, and five.

To read previous editions of The Haiku Handicapper, click here.

#1 – Excession
Hey, remember March?
We were so young then, weren't we?
That was his last start

#2 – Mr. Big News
Do we judge this horse
By his bank-breaking upsets
Or his long-priced duds?

#3 – Art Collector
The most likely threat
To test Authentic up front
With gas to kick on

#4 – Swiss Skydiver
Closer to Rachel
Than Ria Antonia
Not afraid to fight

#5 – Thousand Words
Ought to come in fresh
If he didn't leave his race
In Churchill's paddock

#6 – Jesus' Team
This would be his first
Win not running for a tag
Gonna look elsewhere

#7 – Ny Traffic
Caused Derby trouble
Still lacking killer instinct
No ticket-topper

#8 – Max Player
Always runs his race
Stands to move up with more time
In Asmussen's barn

#9 – Authentic
Minor Derby shock
He might be unbeatable
With an unchecked lead

#10 – Pneumatic
Wisely skipped Derby
His reward? Hooking a field
That might be tougher

#11 – Liveyourbeastlife
Fierce Jim Dandy drive
Is he a Spa specialist
Or finding his form?

Prediction
First, a pace meltdown
Then, Max Player secures the bag
Nine, six, three follow

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