Chad Brown’s First 100 Grade 1 Wins: Individual Management, Imagination Fuel Meteoric Rise

Since 1973, when the Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association began designating the best American stakes as Grade 1, 2 or 3, no trainer has won his first 100 Grade 1 races – the sport's most prestigious  –  faster than Chad Brown.

Brown registered his first Grade 1 victory on July 30, 2011, when Zagora won the Diana at Saratoga. His 100th came less than nine years later, on July 11, 2020, when Guarana won the Madison Stakes at Keeneland. The four-time (2016-'19) Eclipse Award winner as outstanding trainer added his 101st Grade 1 win that same afternoon when Rushing Fall took the Jenny Wiley at Keeneland.

Thirty years earlier, D. Wayne Lukas put the pedal to the metal almost as quickly as Brown would do, winning his first Grade 1 with Codex in the Santa Anita Derby March 30, 1980, and crossing the 100 mark a little over nine years later. Lukas is the all-time leader by Grade 1 wins, with 219, followed by Bob Baffert, who won his first Grade 1 with Thirty Slews in the 1992 Breeders' Cup Sprint. Baffert didn't reach 100 Grade 1s until 2010, although he has been the most productive trainer at the Grade 1 level in the last decade, winning 111 in the U.S. from 2010 until the present. He is second behind Lukas, with 207.

At 41 years old, Brown is the youngest trainer to reach the century mark in Grade 1 victories.

Based on available data compiled from Equibase, only seven trainers have exceeded 100 American Grade 1 victories in their careers.

They are:

Wayne Lukas…219
Bob Baffert…207
Robert Frankel…171
Todd Pletcher…158
Charles Whittingham…138
Shug McGaughey…129
William Mott…122
Chad Brown…101

Caveats: The list does not include Grade/Group 1 victories in Dubai, Europe or Asia. Because Equibase does not list any graded stakes prior to 1976 on trainer profiles, Ron McAnally (with 94 from 1976 to present) may be the ninth trainer to make that list.  For the purposes of the above list, stakes results for Charlie Whittingham from 1973-'75 were taken from the Jay Hovdey biography, “Whittingham: The Story of a Thoroughbred Racing Legend,” and added to what Equibase includes on his trainer profile page. Not included are pre-1973 races that would become Grade 1 fixtures once grading of stakes began.

Brown, a native of Mechanicville, N.Y., has come a long way in a short time since saddling his first winner, Dual Jewels, in a $5,000 claiming race at Churchill Downs on Nov. 23, 2007. His first graded stakes winner came in 2008 when Maram won the Grade 3 Miss Grillo. The filly would give Brown his first Breeders' Cup victory later that year while winning the inaugural Juvenile Fillies Turf, a race would that would become a Grade 1 in 2012. It was the first of his 15 Breeders' Cup championship races.

Brown was accustomed to working with Grade 1 winners years before he hung out his shingle as a public trainer, having worked for two Hall of Famers, Shug McGaughey and Bobby Frankel. The latter spent much of his career dominating the claiming ranks, but once he proved what he could do with good horses, there was no looking back. Frankel was voted Eclipse Awards as outstanding trainer five times (1993, 2000-'03) and inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1995.

Brown was an assistant to Frankel in 2003 when the latter established an all-time record for most Grade 1 victories in a single year: 25.

“It seemed like we were winning Grade 1s every week,” said Brown, who spent time that year with Frankel strings at Hollywood Park in California and Belmont Park in New York. “We had a murderer's row of great horses, and I learned a lot. It was hard to believe all these horses were in the same barn. You try to take it all in, every day. He and  Humberto (longtime Frankel assistant Humberto Ascanio) trained you to be so focused on your task every day.

“I remember Frankel carefully managing each horse individually,” Brown said. “It's where I started to learn about managing horses at the top end, how he did it on an individual basis, and recognizing how important it is to do it that way. We were winning Grade 1s on dirt, turf, long, short, male, female, young and very old. It really stuck with me to really pay attention every day, every hour, every minute.

“Bobby was a perfectionist. He set high goals for himself and had an incredible feel for horses and animals in general. The other thing with Bobby that I saw in managing horses was this: Anyone can say I wish I had that guy's or that girl's horses. But when you have them, you find out they're not all easy. With Bobby, when I say I learned so much, the one thing I feel I have in common is imagination. Bobby had an imagination to see into the future, how things were going to turn out. When you train horses at this level, that would be a common trait, that you have an imagination.

Ghostzapper was not always a great work horse,” Brown said. “Bobby knew that this was the best horse he ever trained. He said it all the time, before that horse became who he was. I couldn't figure it out, not until the Iselin, when he finally showed how good he was.” The Grade 3 Philip H. Iselin, Ghostzapper's eighth career start and his second race at 4 when he was voted Horse of the Year, was followed by Grade 1 victories in 2004 in the Woodward, Breeders' Cup Classic and the 2005 Met Mile.

“I caught him at the perfect time,” Brown said of Frankel. “He had the best horses and he was the smartest trainer. I was a huge beneficiary.”

Fast forward to the present, where Brown has applied the many lessons learned from Frankel, who died in 2009.

“Our system, our roster of horses has been built over time to compete in all categories,” he said. “I want to be able to individually train and manage horses across the board. Frankel was very rare to be able to do that.”

Has Brown set Frankel's single-season record of 25 Grade 1 victories as a goal for his stable?

“I am a goal-oriented person, just conceptually to motivate me and my team to try and get somewhere, not for personal recognition or satisfaction,” he said. “We try to do better than in the previous year. That record did cross my mind the last two years, only because it was Bobby. When we got to the high teens, I thought we had a chance. I always thought this was a record that no one could ever hit, but then I saw a couple of scenarios: if, if, if …”

Each year Brown maxed out at 20 Grade 1 victories.

With all the disruptions to racing in 2020 from the coronavirus pandemic (including several Grade 1 races not being run), it's highly unlikely anyone will approach Frankel's record this year.

But success begets success, and Brown has a steady pipeline of high-end racing prospects and proven imports coming his way from some of the sport's leading owners.

In a sense, he's just getting warmed up.

“I'm lucky to have an amazing team,” said Brown. “We've built a talented roster of teammates, co-workers. It's pretty obvious that it's a team effort.”

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Baffert Has ‘A Really Good Feeling’ About Maximum Security Ahead Of San Diego

The Del Mar barber's knowledge of Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert, whose distinctive white locks he was trimming, apparently did not extend to the horses in Baffert's deeply talented stable.

So, asking about the best horses Baffert had on hand for the Del Mar summer meeting was a logical conversation starter or extender.

“Well, I've got this horse Maximum Security …” Baffert said.

“Oh, I know THAT horse,” the barber exclaimed.

Maximum Security, the horse that crossed under the wire the apparent winner of the 2019 Kentucky Derby before an extensively-chronicled disqualification, the first in Derby history. The multi-million-dollar earner that, also in extensively-chronicled circumstances, was transferred in March to the care of Baffert.

Maximum Security, the 4-year-old son of New Year's Day who will make his first start for Baffert, and first in nearly five months, in Saturday's $150,000 San Diego Handicap at Del Mar.

“He's a very famous horse,” Baffert said in a phone interview earlier this week. “I'm very excited and a little bit nervous for him to run. There's a lot of pressure when you're around really good horses and we always have that.”

Any trainer looks forward to a new horse in the stable and there are physical checks to be made upon arrival, which Maximum Security passed routinely. There was, however, one obstacle to overcome in the transition according to Baffert.

“Every trainer feeds a little differently and at first he was kind of a finicky eater when we got him,” Baffert said. “Which was strange, because he doesn't look like he ever missed a meal in his life. But once we got that worked out, he has been fine.

“He's very intelligent and around here he's been kind of quiet.”

Maximum Security had two works at Del Mar, one more than was originally planned after the race was delayed a week by COVID-19 positives in the jockey colony.

He covered five furlongs in :59.60 on July 11, fourth-fastest of 88 at the distance that day, and came back a week later – the original date of the San Diego – to work a bullet six furlongs in 1:11.60.

“He's a big, strong horse and I can't be happier with the way he's training,” Baffert said. “He trains like a really good horse.”

Maximum Security will be ridden for the first time by Del Mar-based Abel Cedillo. Luis Saez, aboard for the last seven starts, tested positive for COVID-19 two weeks ago at Keeneland and is subject to travel restrictions.

“When I got the word on Saez, I asked around about who was open.” Baffert related. “Some (jockey agents) said, 'If it's Maximum Security, maybe I could get open.' But I really didn't want to take anyone's rider.”

Trainer Mark Glatt had nominated the multiple-stakes winning 6-year-old gelding Sharp Samurai, a turf specialist, to both the San Diego on dirt and the Eddie Read Stakes the following day on grass. The obvious strategy: provide opportunity for Grade II honors on either surface and a way of avoiding Maximum Security.

“Bob thought that because Abel and Luis Saez have similar styles, Abel would be a good fit and was his first choice,” Cedillo's agent, Tom Knust, said. “I thought that was very complimentary of both Abel and Bob.

“We ride a lot for Mark Glatt and Sharp Samurai's owners (Red Baron Barn and Rancho Temescal). We told them we would hold the mount if they wanted to run in the San Diego. They were nice enough to say they didn't want Abel to miss having the opportunity to ride 'Maximum'.”

With Maximum Security committed to the San Diego, Cedillo – most recently aboard Sharp Samurai in a third-place effort in the American Stakes at Santa Anita on June 21 – was free to take the call from Baffert. Once, that is, Baffert got clearance from owner/breeders Gary and Mary West of Rancho Santa Fe and their partners.

“(Cedillo) is strong and aggressive,” Baffert said. “He won on Fighting Mad for Gary and Mary West, he's won other races for me and he seems like he can handle the pressure. I'm happy to have him.”

The victory by Cedillo for the West stable was in the Grade II $200,000 Santa Maria Stakes at Santa Anita on May 31.

Cedillo, a 31-year-old native of Guatemala, was a dominant presence in Northern California before making a successful transition to the Southern California circuit a year ago. He's been doing the due diligence for what could be career-boosting opportunity.

“I was very excited when (Knust) said I have a chance to ride this horse,” Cedillo said. “Right now, I'm watching the replays of all his races. It looks to me like I'll have to kind of stay busy on him, but I'm going to try to talk to Luis Saez in the next few days and, of course, I'll talk to Mr. Baffert and see what they say.”

Under normal circumstances, Cedillo's assignment would be a one-race replacement for the proven Saez. But these are not normal times, with COVID-19 protocols curtailing jockey travel. And, Baffert said, Maximum Security is staying put for the summer.

“It's a challenge. We've got this great horse and we've got this race as a prep for the (TVG) Pacific Classic,” Baffert said. Del Mar's signature race, the Grade I, $500,000 mile and a quarter is scheduled for Saturday, August 22.

Back when Quarter Horse racing was the name of Baffert's game, he had a good one named Gold Coast Express transferred to his stable.

“The first time he ran for me, I was so excited when I gave (jockey) Danny Cardoza a leg up I almost threw him over the horse,” Baffert said. Gold Coast Express won eight races in a row and was the 1986 World Champion.

Unlike most Del Mar stakes races, especially the ones for juveniles, the San Diego has not been good to Baffert. He's won it once (Fed Biz, 2014) and had a couple of seconds (Paynter, 2013, Dr. Dorr 2016). But there were a couple of nasty ones, too.

In 1998 he ran his Triple Crown star and champion Silver Charm in the San Diego at odds of 3-10. Alas, they had to send out the proverbial search party to find him at the end of that one. Then, even more uncomfortably, there was 2017.

Arrogate came into the San Diego as the No. 1 ranked Thoroughbred in world, having won the Breeders' Cup Classic, Pegasus World Cup and Dubai World Cup. Arrogate went off at odds of 1-20 but was never much of a factor and finished fourth, beaten 15 lengths, by the John Sadler-trained Accelerate.

“The track can be tricky. Some horses like it and some don't,” Baffert said. “Arrogate didn't. But this horse has worked well on it and I think he likes this track.

“I have a really good feeling about this horse and I really want him to run well. What he's gone through in his career is not his fault.”

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Uncle Chuck Breezes Bullet Six Furlongs At Del Mar

Los Alamitos Derby winner Uncle Chuck put in an “effortless” six furlong workout for Hall fo Fame trainer Bob Baffert on July 20 at Del Mar, covering the distance in bullet 1:13.40.

“He's got a big, long stride,” Baffert told the Daily Racing Form. “He's a galloper.”

The 3-year-old son of Uncle Mo is expected to make his next start in the 1 1/4-mile Travers Stakes at Saratoga on Aug. 8. Owned by Karl Watson, Mike Pegram, and Paul Weitman, the colt won his first career start on June 12 before defeating stablemate Thousand Words in the G3 Los Alamitos Derby on July 4.

A $250,000 yearling purchase at the Keeneland September sale, Uncle Chuck has earned $120,000 in his two career starts and has 20 points toward the Kentucky Derby.

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Baffert: Haskell Winner Authentic ‘Still Has A Lot Of Improving To Do’

With the win secured in Saturday's Grade 1, $1 million TVG.com Haskell Stakes at Monmouth Park in Oceanport, N.J., Authentic will train into the Kentucky Derby, which has been rescheduled to Sept. 5. The Into Mischief colt has some lessons to learn over the next seven weeks, Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert said.

After racing to what appeared to be a comfortable lead in the stretch on the way to an easy victory, Authentic and Hall of Fame jockey Mike Smith had to hold off a determined and fast-closing Ny TrafficThe margin of victory, confirmed via photo finish, was a nose – the fourth time in the Haskell's 53-year history it has produced that margin of victory at the finish.

The 14-race card also produced a record non-Breeders' Cup day handle of $20,479,392 for Monmouth Park.

“We're going to work on him a little until then (the Derby),” Baffert said by phone from his Southern California base Sunday morning. “I was pretty proud of him. He ran well. I might have to put a little blinker on him because he went to idling on me.

“Turning for home, I kept waiting for him to turn it on, but he was doing some looking around and idling there. Mike saw that other horse (Ny Traffic) coming at the last minute.”

The victory extended Baffert's record for Haskell wins to nine.

Authentic, meanwhile, achieved millionaire status with the winner's share of the Haskell purse and has four wins and one second in five career, including three graded stakes victories. That is even more notable considering he was foaled May 5, 2017, making biologically younger than many of his sophomore classmates.

“He's a late foal. He's maturing but he's a quirky little guy,” Baffert said. “I think that it's impressive that he shipped, he got on a plane, he went all the way over there, and he handled it well. He didn't get hot in the paddock. He handled it all well and that's what you want to see.

“I'm happy with him. But he still has a lot of improving to do.”

Baffert, who said that had Authentic not won it would have been what he termed a horrible beat, was in an upbeat mood the day after and shared some of the conversation he and Smith had immediately after the race.

“It was funny,” Baffert said. “I told Mike, 'You know, you've got to stay busy on him.' And Mike said, 'Well, we turned for home and he cut, and I thought he was okay, and I was smooching to him. I said, 'Um, Mike, he had ear plugs in.' It was pretty funny. But it worked out right. It worked out good. But Mike said when that horse came to him, he could feel it. He wasn't going to let him get by him. He just took off. I'm proud of him.”

As happy as he was with Authentic, who with the win also guaranteed his spot in the Nov. 7 Breeders' Cup Classic through the “Win and You're In” Challenge Series, Baffert was quick to praise the effort by the Saffie Joseph, Jr.trained Ny Traffic.

“I have to credit to the horse who ran second. The track wasn't that fast yesterday,” said Baffert. “That Ny Traffic is a nice horse. He's right there. He gets beat by the good horses, so you have to give him credit, too.”

Ny Traffic has yet to win a stakes race, but he's been second in graded stakes in his last three starts so he's been banging on the door and signaling he's poised to knock it down.

“I hope when he does it's not my door that he knocks down,” said Baffert.

Authentic came out of the Haskell in terrific shape and on Sunday was headed by van to Lexington, Ky., where he will remain for a week before catching a flight back to rejoin Baffert's Southern California stable.

Joseph, who earned his first and only Grade1 victory last year with Math Wizard in the Pennsylvania Derby, was philosophical the morning after the race.

“That was a tough beat, but to be honest, it really didn't hurt that much because I am just so proud of this horse,” he said. “He ran an amazing race. At the quarter-pole it looked like he was all done and the other horse (Authentic) was going to win easily. But he got going again and I'm very proud of him.”

Joseph was excited about the New York-bred son of Cross Traffic going into the Haskell and he is even more so afterward.

“He showed he's got a lot of guts, a lot of heart, and a lot of fight in him. Most definitely,” he said.

Next up it's the Kentucky Derby, and a rematch with Authentic.

“I thought we already had enough Derby points going in, so the important thing was to just get a good race into him,” he said. “Now it's about who is moving forward, not who has peaked or is going backward. Going forward is the most important thing right now and that's why that tough beat can't really hurt me.

“I was just really happy to see him take that major step forward. That's the most important thing. Most definitely, there is a lot to be excited about with him. I just want him to stay sound and healthy and then we're on to the Derby.”

Ny Traffic, who would be Joseph's first Kentucky Derby starter, was reported to have come out of his race in excellent shape. He left Monmouth Park on Sunday morning at 8 a.m. by van for upstate New York to rejoin Joseph's Saratoga string.

ht that was a good race. He was beaten less than two lengths. So it looked like he was getting back to where we think he can be. He's a classy, sound horse who makes it easy.”

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