Streaking Art Collector on Display in Runhappy Ellis Park Derby

All eyes will be on Art Collector (Bernardini) as he looks to go four-for-four on the year and punch his ticket to Louisville in Sunday’s $200,000 Runhappy Ellis Park Derby.

After airing over subsequent GIII Indiana Derby hero Shared Sense (Street Sense) in an optional claimer at Churchill Downs June 13, the Bruce Lunsford homebred followed up with another impressive performance capturing Keeneland’s GII Toyota Blue Grass S. July 11, his second straight victory with a triple digit Beyer Speed Figure.

“I’m just hoping for a good clean trip more than anything,” trainer Tom Drury, Jr. said. “We want this race to be a stepping stone for the next one. I’d love to see him go down there and get a good, clean, easy trip wherever he may finish and then be able to move forward from that race.”

A full field will be standing in the way of the 4-5 morning-line favorite in the 1 1/8-mile contest, which offers GI Kentucky Derby qualifying points of 50-20-10-5.

Dean Martini (Cairo Prince), claimed by Tom Amoss for $50,000 three starts back in his maiden breaker at Churchill Downs in May, posted a breakthrough victory in the GIII Ohio Derby last time June 27.

The aforementioned Shared Sense, 6 1/2 lengths adrift Art Collector in Louisville, delivered as the 5-2 favorite with a three-length decision in Indiana last time. He will have to work out a trip from post 12, however.

The post Streaking Art Collector on Display in Runhappy Ellis Park Derby appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

‘Really Strong Favorite’ Art Collector Draws Post Four Of Full Field For Ellis Park Derby

The field was set Thursday for Sunday's first-ever Kentucky Derby prep staged at Ellis Park, with Keeneland's Grade 2 Toyota Blue Grass winner Art Collector heading the thirteen 3-year-old colts and geldings entered in the $200,000 RUNHAPPY Ellis Park Derby.

“It's Art Collector and all the rest,” said trainer Tom Amoss, who will try to pull off the upset with Grade 3 Ohio Derby victor Dean Martini. “You've got a really strong favorite in this race, and I think everyone will measure the quality of their horse with how they perform against him.”

The Ellis Park Derby, which was instituted in 2018 as a mile race, anchors a five-stakes program that also includes the $100,000 RUNHAPPY Audubon Oaks for 3-year-old fillies, which offers 10 points to its winner toward qualifying for the Kentucky Oaks; $100,000 Groupie Doll Stakes for older fillies and mares; $100,000 RUNHAPPY Juvenile for 2-year-olds; and $100,000 RUNHAPPY Debutante for 2-year-old fillies.

The 1 1/8-mile Ellis Park Derby carries 50 points to the winner toward qualifying for the COVID-delayed Kentucky Derby on Sept. 5. Also earning qualifying points will be the runner-up (20), third place (10) and fourth (5).

Art Collector drew post 4 as he seeks to go to 4 for 4 since being turned over to trainer Tommy Drury this year. Thanks to the Blue Grass' 100 points, owner-breeder Bruce Lunsford's colt already has enough points to ensure a spot in the 20-horse Kentucky Derby field, with Drury using the Ellis Park Derby as a conditioning tool rather than training the eight weeks up to America's most important race.

“His first couple of wins, he just ran off the screen both times, certainly didn't have to overexert himself,” Drury said of Art Collector. “The Blue Grass, he had to earn it; that filly (Swiss Skydiver) made him work for it. Watching that race and evaluating the race afterward, I felt one more was going to be beneficial to him. I'm just really thankful that spot at Ellis is available. We were late getting to the party and we've needed every little thing to fall in place to get him to this point. For Ellis to have a Derby prep this year was a lifesaver to us.”

Other leading contenders include Grade 3 Indiana Derby winner Shared Sense (post 12); Anneau d'Or (post 2), the Breeders' Cup Juvenile runner-up and most recently fourth in the Santa Anita Derby; Grand Prairie Derby winner Little Menace (post 6), and last year's Ellis Park Juvenile winner Rowdy Yates (post 8).

Shared Sense could be on the Derby qualifying bubble points-wise, collecting 20 for winning the Grade 3 Indiana Derby in his graded-stakes debut. Godolphin's son of 2007 Kentucky Derby winner Street Sense faced Art Collector two races back, when Art Collector controlled the speed for a dominant win over Shared Sense in a four-horse Churchill Downs allowance field.

“First time we ran against him here, we were at the back of the pack, there was no pace,” said Brad Cox, Shared Sense's trainer. “I was pleased with the effort. They almost broke the track record; the track was quick. Honestly, we were the second-best horse that day. He bounced out of it in good shape. We turned our attention to the Indiana Derby and it worked out extremely well. Obviously the other horse went on to pick off a Grade 2 at Keeneland very impressively. Both horses seem to be going the right way right now, and I'm excited about Sunday.”

Saturday's $1 million, Grade 1 Travers Stakes at Saratoga, where Belmont Stakes winner Tiz the Law looms as the big favorite, also was a possibility for Shared Sense.

“If we're dreaming about the Derby, I think with my horse I would be comfortable trying to get a nice mile-and-an-eighth race into him four weeks before the Derby as opposed to a mile and a quarter at Saratoga,” Cox said. “That's a pretty demanding course, and that's a big ask four weeks before you're hopefully going to run the biggest race of your life.”

Because he wasn't nominated earlier in the year, Godolphin would have to pay $45,000 to make Shared Sense a supplemental nominee to the Kentucky Derby, on top of entry fees.

The same is true for Dean Martini, who was claimed by his owners Raise the BAR Racing out of a $50,000 maiden-claiming race May 17. The gelding actually started his career with a second at Ellis Park but needed seven more attempts to win, albeit while accumulating three seconds and three thirds. Dean Martini won the Ohio Derby in his second start for his new connections.

“We need to know if he can validate his Ohio Derby performance,” Amoss said. “It was a very good race, but is he consistently the kind of horse who can put in those kinds of performances? We need to find out, and we're going to do that on Sunday. Obviously with a horse like Art Collector in there, it will validate one way or the other where we need to head for our next race.”

If the Ellis Park Derby is a first for the racetrack as far as being a Kentucky Derby prep race, count Cox among those hoping that it's also the last.

“Unless we start running at Ellis earlier in the year,” he joked. “I hate to say it, but hopefully it's a one-time thing. I like the Derby in May, not September. “

Still, Cox believes the 2020 running is a great start in entrenching the Ellis Park Derby among the regional Derbys that populate racing after what normally is the Triple Crown.

“West Virginia, Ohio, Indiana, Iowa, Oklahoma — There are a lot of Derbys out there,” he said. “There's definitely a spot on the calendar where Kentucky could have a nice 3-year-old race like the Ellis Park Derby and it become a graded event. Hopefully this is the start of something bigger and better for the Ellis Park Derby.”

RUNHAPPY Ellis Park Derby
Purse: $200,000. Post time: Sunday at 5:10 p.m. CT (10th race). Distance: 1 1/8 miles. Division: 3-year-olds.
PP horse (weight) trainer/jockey

  1. Trident Hit (118) Brendan Walsh/Corey Lanerie
  2. Anneau d'Or (118) Blaine Wright/Tyler Baze
  3. Sprawl (118) Bill Mott/Julien Leparoux
  4. Art Collector (122) Tommy Drury/Brian Hernandez Jr.
  5. Necker Island (118) Chris Hartman/Mitchell Murrill
  6. Little Menace (120) Steve Asmussen/ Martin Garcia
  7. Truculent (118) Jack Sisterson/Adam Beschizza
  8. Rowdy Yates (118) Steve Asmussen/Shaun Bridgmohan
  9. Dean Martini (122) Tom Amoss/James Graham
  10. Attachment Rate (118) Dale Romans/Joe Talamo
  11. Winning Impressions (118) Dallas Stewart/Joe Rocco
  12. Shared Sense (122) Brad Cox/Florent Geroux
  13. (AE) Rogue Element (118) Dale Romans/Miguel Mena
    **(AE) Also eligible – needs scratch to run

The post ‘Really Strong Favorite’ Art Collector Draws Post Four Of Full Field For Ellis Park Derby appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Drury ‘Hit The Lottery’ With Ellis Park Derby Favorite Art Collector

When Tommy Drury runs Keeneland's Toyota Blue Grass winner Art Collector in Sunday's $200,000 RUNHAPPY Ellis Park Derby, the trainer might be in unchartered water but he's very familiar with the route to get there.

During a training career that began almost 30 years ago, Drury has made the 284-mile round trip from his Oldham County base to Ellis Park countless times. Ditto the 176 miles to and from Cincinnati's Belterra Park, 250 loop up and back from Indiana Grand, 700 miles for West Virginia's Mountaineer Park, 735 round trip from Ohio's Mahoning Valley.

But never has Drury made the trek with a horse who is one of the favorites for the Kentucky Derby, whose four-month COVID-created delay to Sept. 5 made it possible for Ellis Park to stage a prep race for the Derby for the first time in the track's 98-year history.

“Gosh, I think the second horse I ever raced ran at Ellis Park,” the second-generation trainer said. “I've been going there my entire life. Winning the Blue Grass at Keeneland, normally when I go into Keeneland our goal is just to win a race. And for Ellis to have a Derby prep and to be a part of that, it's kind of my people, if you will. These are the tracks that I normally race at. To be able to go to these places and run in their big races, it's a lot of fun.”

Owned by breeder and Louisville businessman Bruce Lunsford, Art Collector already is in the Kentucky Derby, thanks to the 100 qualifying points he earned in winning last month's Grade 2, $600,000 Toyota Blue Grass by 3 1/2 lengths over the impressive filly Swiss Skydiver. The 1 1/8-mile Ellis Park Derby offers 50 points to the winner, but for Art Collector is simply a tool in his preparation to get to the Kentucky Derby in the best condition possible to run 1 1/4 miles. Art Collector's regular rider is Brian Hernandez Jr., the 2012 Ellis Park meet leader.

Drury has been around a lot of top-caliber horses, but mostly he was getting 2-year-olds ready or bringing horses back off layoffs for other trainers. The Blue Grass was Drury's first victory in a graded stakes, those designated as America's best races. In fact, he's only even run in 12 other graded stakes. Drury, shipping around from his base at the Skylight training center in Goshen, has run in a slew of non-graded stakes, with 13 wins. While the Ellis Park Derby is not graded, it would be his second-most lucrative race to win.

The lifelong Louisvillian is determined to not only enjoy the ride but to make sure his crew at Skylight and Churchill Downs enjoy it as well.

“We've always been the guys behind the scenes,” Drury said Wednesday after Art Collector trained at Skylight. “A lot of the Grade 1 winners we've had here, a lot of people don't know we were ever associated with them. And that's our job, that's what we do. We're certainly happy to do that. Now all of a sudden it's our name, and we get to be the ones to lead one over there and we get to kind of be involved at this level. Yeah, it's been a lot of fun for all of us. These guys work really hard, and they deserve a lot of credit for our success.”

Among the horses Drury had before they went to more high-profile trainers are Lunsford's Grade 1-winning millionaire Madcap Escapade (trained by Frank Brothers), current leading older horse Tom's d'Etat (Al Stall Jr.), Grade 1 winner Lea (Bill Mott) and 2-year-old champion Hansen (Mike Maker).

“It's nice to be able to play the game at that level, even if it's for a short period of time,” Drury said. “Just the education of having horses like that, all of a sudden Art Collector comes into my life and I felt that I've got a pretty good handle of what I need to be doing on a day-to-day basis to have him compete at this level.”

Art Collector started his career last year racing on grass (getting his first win at Kentucky Downs) before sprinting on dirt, going to Drury in January to get back in shape after some time off. The plan was for Art Collector to go another trainer for his 3-year-old season. However because of the havoc the pandemic was having on racetracks, Lunsford asked Drury — insulated at Skylight with uninterrupted training — to go on and prepare Art Collector for his return to racing in May. After he won an allowance race for keeps at seven-eighths of a mile, Lunsford simply kept the horse with Drury. He's now 3-for-3 with Art Collector, including a 6 1/2-length second-level allowance victory at 1 1/16 miles over Indiana Derby winner Shared Sense, whom he'll meet again Sunday.

“Bruce was kind enough to leave him with us and give us an opportunity of a lifetime,” Drury said. “It's certainly not something that's taken for granted. We know how we got the horse, and we just want to make the most of it and try to remember to enjoy it while we're here.”

If not for COVID, Drury wouldn't have the horse, and even if he did, Art Collector wouldn't have been in the Kentucky Derby on its original May 2 date.

“I was joking with someone the other day; this horse was a 'half-mile fit' the first Saturday in May,” Drury said. “There was zero chance. You couldn't even consider the Derby if it had been on its normal schedule. Even with the Derby being pushed back, we were still in a situation where we absolutely needed everything to go just our way. In horse racing, more often than not, that doesn't happen. It's kind of been, 'Gosh, this horse could maybe get us there' but in the back of your mind, you're always thinking 'how often does everything go perfect?'

“I think that's taken a little bit of the pressure off. I knew the water was going to get deep in the Blue Grass. He passed that test and then you immediately work backward from the Derby. You need that next race; you need that next start. You look up, and here's the Ellis race. Hopefully we can just ride this out a little longer and keep things falling into place the way they have. It's almost like the stars aligned for us.”

Now he just has to hope the stars stay that way for another four weeks. Especially for a lifelong Louisvillian, this happy turn of events is a bit mind-boggling, with Drury acknowledging a lot of nights lying awake “staring at the ceiling.”

He says at age 28, “you're thinking about winning Kentucky Derbys and Breeders' Cups every day.” By the time he reached 48, Drury knew the hard reality probably was that something would “have to fall between the cracks” to even get a shot.

“I compare it to hitting the lottery,” he said. “You think about what it would be like to hit the lottery, and you think about how you would react and what you would do. For me, growing up in Louisville, you look at the Kentucky Derby the same way. You watch it from afar every year and you're a fan of horse racing. The horses and the people who are involved, to all of a sudden see your horse in your name and that race being mentioned, gosh, you just can't find the words to describe it. It's a dream come true.”

Entries will be taken and post positions drawn for the Ellis Park Derby on Thursday.

The post Drury ‘Hit The Lottery’ With Ellis Park Derby Favorite Art Collector appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Collector a Local Hero for Lunsford

“The Homeboy, I call him: the Louisville Homeboy.” Bruce Lunsford gives a proud chuckle. “With Tommy, and Brian, we’ve made it an all-Louisville crowd. So that’s kind of fun. In fact, when we laid out a plan, one of the good things was that we could get all the way to the Breeders’ Cup without leaving Kentucky. I think that’s an advantage, but who knows?”

One thing he does know: he would prefer to cede the limelight to those unsung horsemen, Tom Drury, Jr. and Brian Hernandez, Jr. But if Art Collector (Bernardini) can keep their dream alive in the Runhappy Ellis Park Derby, Lunsford will have to accept his share of civic goodwill when his homebred colt ships back along the Ohio River for the GI Kentucky Derby itself.

Because it’s the silks, above all, that qualify Art Collector as the hometown hope: the silks of a Kenton County native whose entire life—whether in business, in public service or, as now, in pursuit of a sporting passion—has rooted him in the Bluegrass.

Here’s a guy who was not just raised on an 80-acre tobacco farm, but who was running the place, right down to hiring the help, when 13 years old. That way, his dad could go out and work. The lesson, he said later, was that “the meek will inherit the earth, but not any time soon.” Sure enough, he worked on a road crew to pay his way through college. After the University of Kentucky, it was night classes at law school, between Army Reserve stints at Ft. Thomas.

At 32, he was appointed the state’s first Secretary of Commerce by Governor John Y. Brown Jr. Then, still in his thirties, Lunsford co-founded Vencor, the nationwide healthcare group nowadays known as Kindred but still with its headquarters in Louisville. And he even ran Mitch McConnell close, unexpectedly so, in their Senate race in 2008.

Lunsford has always polled well in Henderson and, within the prevailing restrictions, can again bank on local support Sunday.

“I used to spend a lot of time at Ellis Park, in my early days of racing,” Lunsford says. “I’ve a lot of friends down there. I’ve known the racing secretary for years, and everybody sounds so thrilled about having this horse come down. Hopefully it could really make their day.”

It would be hard, however, to do more than maintain the emotional pitch of Art Collector’s success in the GII Toyota Blue Grass S. Not just because Lunsford views Keeneland as another highly evocative environment, but also because of the personal significance of that particular race.

“In my college days I knew a lot of the old guys at Keeneland, the trainers and agents, names people might not know anymore,” Lunsford says. “That was when Keeneland really led the show. And it was a Blue Grass day when I really decided that I wanted to own horses: when I saw Graustark get beat by Abe’s Hope in a huge upset [in 1966]. Graustark was ahead 12, 15 lengths in the backstretch only to take that bad step. But he had such guts that he only lost by a nose. I got a copy of the photo finish, and had a painting made of it, because it meant so much to me being in the business. So I always wanted to win the Blue Grass S.”

As such, it was a poignant day when First Samurai (Giant’s Causeway), a dual Grade I winner co-owned with Lansdon Robbins III, derailed in the 2006 running. One minute they were on their way to the Derby, the next their horse had fractured ribs and would be retired.

“I owned him with a close friend, and he’d run third in the Breeders’ Cup despite getting stuck in the gate, then he’d run big in Florida,” recalls Lunsford. “He’s turned out to be a very good sire, at his level. But yes, that was a real, punch-in-the-gut lesson.”

So there will be no complacency about Art Collector making the Derby line-up until the moment the gates open. Fortunately, a syndication deal for First Samurai had already been tied up. At 72, however, Lunsford will this time roll with any punches.

“There’ve been lots of offers to buy Art Collector,” he admits. “But I don’t need the money, at this stage of my life, so I’m hopeful that maybe I can get lucky and he could be something akin to a long-term sire for me. I learned a lot watching Bill Young handle Storm Cat, and it would be great to have a really superior stud that I can co-own with people, and do favors for friends, and watch him grow. I may or may not get that chance. But at my age, it’s nice for this to be my baby.”

That’s a prospect that brings things full circle for Lunsford, as Art Collector’s grand-dam Bunting (Private Account) was one of his first two purchases—counselled by Seth Hancock of Claiborne Farm, where First Samurai found his home—after he decided to start his own program. Having been Grade I-placed, and offering a foothold into the Green Tree family of Buckaroo, Stop The Music and company, Bunting cost $500,000 as a 3-year-old in 1994.

“I can’t even remember the name of the other mare,” Lunsford says. “I sold her because she was one, out of not many that year, that did manage to get in foal to Lure. But yes, Bunting was bought to be a foundation mare. Up till then I’d just been fiddling around on a cheaper scale, claiming and stuff, kind of learning the business the way the old guys did it. At that time, $500,000 would put you in the top of the crop, to get a pretty nice mare. I raced Bunting for a year and then I bred her to Storm Cat.”

The result was Vision And Verse, who won the GII Illinois Derby and was beaten only by Lemon Drop Kid (Kingmambo) in both the GI Belmont S. and GI Travers S. The whole program, indeed, got off to a flying start. The first foal of another of his very first mares, again picked out by Hancock, turned out to be Golden Missile (A.P. Indy). Though sold as a weanling, Golden Missile’s third in the GI Breeders’ Cup Classic enabled Lunsford to cash in the dam days later for $1.35 million.

Bunting couldn’t quite come up with another Vision And Verse, but in 2007 delivered a Distorted Humor filly who matured into a very smart grass runner: Distorted Legacy was second in the GI Flower Bowl Inv., and then just missed the podium in a bunch finish for the GI Filly and Mare Turf at the Breeders’ Cup. Art Collector is her second foal.

His story, to this point, is well chronicled: one of the few silver linings to the clouds of COVID-19.

Art Collector was first welcomed by Drury at the Skylight Training Center in Goshen, Ky., simply for a spell of freshening. The colt was following a well-worn path. For while Drury had never been formally credited with graded stakes success, he can claim a behind-the-scenes contribution to animals as accomplished as Tom’s D’Etat (Smart Strike) or Lunsford’s cherished, Classic-placed Grade I winner Madcap Escapade (Hennessy).

Art Collector was initially just taking some time out after an impressive allowance success for Joe Sharp at Churchill last fall. When stripped of that success, as one of three Sharp horses that tested positive to a deworming agent, Lunsford decided that Art Collector should not return to his previous trainer but join Rusty Arnold. Then came the pandemic. Race programs and horse traffic were suspended. Lunsford told Drury to train Art Collector up to a race, when Churchill reopened; and when the colt won so well, it was decided to let destiny take its course. Characteristically, Arnold was among the first to ring and congratulate Drury.

Lunsford is thrilled that a horseman educated by Frankie Brothers, the trainer of First Samurai and Madcap Escapade, should now be getting his day in the sun.

“I’ve known Tommy almost since he started,” he says. “He has always been the go-to guy, out at the farm there, to bring horses back. And I’m one of the few who would go ahead and let him race once or twice before I sent a horse back out of town.

“Now Joe Sharp did a good job getting this horse ready as a 2-year-old, and I give him credit for that. But when all that stuff happened, I was going to send the horse to Rusty because he’d be going to Saratoga. And then the COVID has come along and we sat down and I said, ‘You know what, Tommy? You race this horse first and we’ll see what we got, okay?’

“I had never wanted to press this horse. You rush a horse to the Derby and they either never race again, or not much. So I’d laid him off for three months: a little swimming, a little jogging, let him grow up a little. And I could go out there and watch him train. Unlike a lot of these horses, he wasn’t losing any training time. And he just got better and better.”

Lunsford remembers hauling Drury into the winner’s circle photo when Madcap Escapade won her first race at Gulfstream back in 2004.

“He was young then but he’s still incredibly humble,” Lunsford says. “He’s a really good horseman with a work ethic second to none. The last two and a half years, he’s had one day off. He’s got a good head on him, and has had good mentors over the years, Frankie being one of them. I feel almost like I’ve got a nephew training for me. And I think his time has come.”

Another important member of Lunsford’s team is Patti Miller, who helps him at the sales; while he is also grateful to the teams at Claiborne, where he boards his mares, and Hill ‘n’ Dale, where he partners with John Sikura in a few others. A big decision looms, if Art Collector happens to go well in the Derby, as his Into Mischief half-brother is in the September Sale. (Distorted Legacy also has a weanling by the same sire, and is now in foal to Justify.)

In principle, however, Lunsford remains pretty much a breed-to-race guy; quite a throwback, as such, and likewise in his disinclination for the kind of high-end partnerships that are nowadays so common. He likes a horse to have an identity; and wants to share the highs and lows with his real buddies.

“Back in the old days, you knew who owned a horse,” he says. “Whether it was Claiborne, or E.P. Taylor, everybody knew. Now you have 17 people in a partnership to get these very expensive horses.

“I’m a little bit of a jokester and kidder anyway. Most all of us who know each other, we all do that, right? So I think that’s part of the game. With my closest friends—Greg Hudson, his dad Hoolie, and Bill Latta—we’ve been going to the races for 52 years. I mean, that’s unbelievable. We’ve gone to Del Mar, we’ve gone to London, we’ve had a tremendous amount of fun. When Vision And Verse ran in the Belmont, we had 16 people in an Italian restaurant and it was just a hoot night. And then flew back about one in the morning. That’s the kind of stuff that makes your memories.”

Lunsford has taken a similar approach to his business career. He loves to be in the thick of the action.

“I either want to be involved or not be involved,” he says. “I’m a guy with lots of interests and have never rested long. I grew up on a really small farm. I took care of the farm so my dad could have a job 40 hours a week, so we could get by. I raised tobacco, I did all kinds of things, and as a result I learned a lot about how to run things, both small and big. I think that’s helped me in life. And even today, at the companies I’m invested in, I don’t want to be passive.”

Of course, the ultimate example of this engagement, this urge to get out there and make a difference, is a political career crowned by that stirring Senate race in 2008, when he slashed McConnell’s margin from 29.4% to 5.9%. (Compared, moreover, with a 16.2% buffer for presidential candidate John McCain at the top of the state ticket.) Today, standing back from the political fray, he views the present crisis as a cue for leadership that inspires unity, not division.

“I think it’s been driven by a lot of things,” he says of the virulence of political discourse. “For one thing, by too much money spent on campaigns. I guarantee they’ll spend $3 billion in this presidential race. Both sides, and it’s all negative. And the media has picked sides. With no real advertising done anymore, the only way they can make revenue is through subscribers. So what they tend to do, liberal or conservative, is pander to their audience. It’s become so negative.

“I think it was Winston Churchill said democracy is a poor form of government, but it’s better than all the rest. And eventually democracy will win out. At the moment, we lack strong leaders. If you go back, I’m a big fan of the guys that made tough decisions in tough times. Truman probably made the toughest decision of all time, when he allowed the atomic bomb. Churchill, completely over-matched in the battle, called on England to fight on anyway. And they won. The spirited leaders know how to get things done. But I think a lot of avenues in the country have been [taken] because money has bought direction, not policy or values.”

But Lunsford feels optimism, too. He predicts a bright future for our industry in Kentucky, that’s for sure, and hopes that Art Collector can assist morale in the meantime.

“Listen, this is a horse that could be fun if he stays sound,” he says. “We all know that’s day-to-day. But I’m really proud of Tommy. I tell him all the time: ‘Just enjoy the ride. Enjoy the interviews, enjoy the media, enjoy everything that happens. Because it could be over in one day and then you’d look back and ask why you didn’t.’ I’ve always tried to be like that that with my horses. Even when something happens like with First Samurai, I don’t wear it too hard. I feel you learn a lot just by being in the business for a long time. You learn a kind of a free-spirited attitude about it.

“And I think Tommy’s felt that. He’s doing a great job, really handled himself well. He has tremendous passion for these horses, so I would really like to see it for him. I think the only time I ever cried at a race was when Madcap Escapade won her second race and set a stakes record down at Gulfstream Park. Because I felt a horse like that was what I’d got in the business for. So if this horse were to win the Derby, I don’t know if I’d cry more for Tommy, or more for the horse. But that’s how I feel about it.”

The post Collector a Local Hero for Lunsford appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights