New Hall of Famer Mark Casse Joins Writers’ Room

Fresh off of a year-delayed induction into racing's Hall of Fame Friday, Mark Casse joined the TDN Writers' Room presented by Keeneland Wednesday morning for an expansive discussion on his career and the sport at large. Calling in via Zoom as the Green Group Guest of the Week, Casse reflected on his family's growing legacy in the sport, remembered arguably his most famous pupil Tepin (Bernstein) and assessed where the industry stands on stamping out its drug problems.

Asked about the emotion of his Hall of Fame speech, Casse said, “[Racing] is all I've ever done. I was raised on the racetrack. Saratoga has been my life since I was a little boy. Horse racing has been my life. My father passed away five years ago, and I have so many memories of him at Saratoga and in the Fasig-Tipton sales pavilion and the Hall of Fame. Then I sired my first graded stakes-winning trainer son. It wasn't easy to get out, but to have him there and have the family continue on, I know my dad would be very proud.”

Casse has been instrumental in the movement to ban clenbuterol in racing ever since he penned an op/ed in the TDN talking about its performance-enhancing effects. Since then, a number of jurisdictions and racetracks have moved to restrict its use or ban it altogether. Casse was asked about the progress racing is making on that drug and others that have plagued the sport for years.

“I'm very proud of that,” he said of his letter and its aftereffects. “I just felt that at this time of my life, it was time to give back to sport, and the sport has some issues with it that need to be cleaned up. I just felt, you know what, I really don't care who I upset. I'm going to tell it the way I feel it is. I think there's been some serious movement. We saw a quick turnaround in Canada. They moved quickly. Things have changed in New York and Kentucky has been a little slow to adapt, but they're getting there. What's the one thing still going on that is disappointing to me? We've made a lot of new rules and rules are good, but they're only good if they can be enforced. So what happens is the men and women that play by the rules, every time you add a rule, it gives us that much bigger disadvantage. There's a lot of people out there that they only live for today and they're not looking long term. I just recently had a conversation with a big official and I said, if we're going to have these rules, it's your job to make sure that they're abided by. When they're not, [trainers] need to go. If we could do that, it would make our sport much better. It's very, very frustrating to me. Very frustrating.”

Elsewhere on the show, which is also sponsored by West Point Thoroughbreds, Spendthrift Farm, Legacy Bloodstock and the Minnesota Thoroughbred Association's 2021 Yearling Sale, the writers reacted to a huge weekend of racing at Saratoga that included Steve Asmussen's record-breaking victory, and, in late-breaking news, analyzed the development of Jorge Navarro's guilty plea. Click here to watch the podcast; click here for the audio-only version or find it on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.

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Smith Fit As Ever As He Celebrates 56th Birthday

Hall of Fame rider Mike Smith will mark birthday No. 56 on Tuesday. Here's what he said recently about the prospect:

“I know the number is getting higher, but I don't think about it that much,” Smith said. “I've been training since I was in my 20s, going five or six days a week, no breaks. And I feel, fitness-wise, I'm pretty much the same right now as I was in my 30s.

“The only thing I'm doing that's different is that I'm not lifting as much weight as I used to. Then I was lighter, tacking 114 and could afford to put some muscle on, so once a week I'd see how much I could lift. Now, I'm a little older and a little heavier, tacking 118, and I don't do that anymore.”

Smith said he runs about five miles a day with a goal of “a marathon a week,” or 26 miles over the period. “I love it when we're down here because I can run on the beach,” he said.

“I accept it (fitness) as a way of life,” he said. “If something is hurting, I'll work some other part of my body. The only time I've stopped is when I've been injured.”

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With Win at Saratoga, Asmussen Moves Past Baird for Record

Steve Asmussen entered Saturday with 13 chances to pass Dale Baird to become the winningest North American trainer of all time. He needed just one.

With his first starter on the day, Asmussen moved into sole possession of first place with a win from first-time-starter Stellar Tap (Tapit) in the fifth race at Saratoga, a maiden special weight race for 2-year-olds. It was the 9,446th win in a career that began quietly in 1986 at Ruidoso Downs in a race worth $2,600.

The win came for Winchell Thoroughbreds, who owns the colt along with L and N Racing LLC. Perhaps no owners have had a greater impact on Asmussen's career than the Winchells, who break their babies at the Texas training center owned by Asmussen's parents, Keith and Marilyn, and have supplied Asmussen with a number of top horses, including Gun Runner (Candy Ride {Arg}). Ricardo Santana, Jr. was the winning rider.

“I know how much this means to me and everyone in the family as well as the barn,” Asmussen said. “And it unfolded and happened on Whitney Day at Saratoga with a 2-year-old who came through Mom and Dad's program in Laredo that is owned by the Winchells. God is great and continues to bless us.”

“Congratulations to Steve on a well deserved accomplishment,” Ron Winchell said. “He has earned every bit of it. His attention to detail is remarkable and reflective in the results. The attention to detail, coupled with a near photographic memory, makes him a lethal competitor.”

Asmussen is the younger brother of Cash Asmussen, who enjoyed a standout career as a jockey, primarily in Europe, and grew up alongside his brother learning the business from their parents.

“To say congratulations does not sound like enough,” he said. “So I will live showing you my love and respect, as a brother, as a man, as a horseman. That is a start to saying how proud I am for you.”

Minutes after the race, Asmussen was still emotional, thanking not just his family but a sport that has given him so much.

“We are so blessed to be in horse racing,” he said. “Thanks to the amazing horses we have had and thanks for everything we have learned from every single one of them. They've made the Asmussen family possible. What an amazing sport to be in. I've said this before, it's amazing what a horse can do to make you feel good about yourself. What a blessing.”

Asmussen was born in Gettysburg, South Dakota, but grew up in Texas. His parents did a little bit of everything in racing but are best known for running a training center in Laredo, where they have prepared numerous top horses for the races. Growing up in a racing family and learning from top horsepeople in his parents, he was born to be a horse trainer. From an early age, he worked for his parents, who, Asmussen says, had a work ethic that is unmatched. Asmussen has always credited them with giving him the foundation he needed to be successful.

“They did things with a passion,” he said. “They always supported me and Cash and that made all of this possible. I've said it before and it's the truth, we are simply an extension of my mom and dad. I plan on continuing on doing things the way they taught us and with the same amount of passion and effort.

“Anybody who has ever been around my father knows he is the greatest horsemen there is. I was blessed to be in a position where I was able to witness this on a daily basis. They demanded work from me. You show up and you take care of what you are supposed to take care of. Don't do anything you can't sign your name to and always pay attention to every detail. None of it was easy but everyone was passionate and you did everything you did as hard as you could all the time and not some of the time. That's the way it ought to be.”

Asmussen started out as a jockey and rode 63 winners. In 1986, he went out on his own as a trainer and did not get off to a good start. He won just one race in 1986 and his stable earned all of $2,324. Asmussen didn't hit his stride until the late 90s. He won 120 races in 1999 and never looked back. His exploits include a single-season record 650 wins in 2009.

His operation, which has included Grade I winners, Horses of the Year and innumerable $5,000 claimers running at C-level tracks, became so potent over the years that it became apparent that Baird's record was well within his reach. Baird, who won the vast majority of his races at Waterford Park, now known as Mountaineer Park, died in 2007, the result of a car accident.

When asked what the Steve Asmussen of 1986 would say to the Asmussen of 2021, he replied: “I can't believe it took you so long. You can't imagine how much you want to do this and how much it is in you. Let's keep it up. We better not be done winning today. It's Whitney Day. We need to win.”

Considering that Asmussen is just 55 and that there are far fewer races available around the country now as there were only 10 years ago, he figures to put together a career win total that will never be matched. An upcoming goal might be 10,000 winners. He can also begin the chase to catch trainer Juan Suarez. Based in Peru, Suarez, as of Aug. 5, had 9,897 winners.

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It’s All About the Horses..And Their Trainers at HOF Induction Ceremony

SARATOGA SPRINGS, NY–To punctuate his acceptance speech that concluded the Hall of Fame induction ceremony Friday, trainer Todd Pletcher used a favorite line of the late Cot Campbell, the Thoroughbred owner and colorful racing personality who was one of his longtime patrons.

“It's not going to sound nearly as cool coming from me, he was a cool guy,” Pletcher said, “but most of all, I want to thank the horses, the horses and the horses.”

Campbell's words were a fitting coda for racing's annual feel-good day that salutes the best of the best in the America's oldest sport. The 2020 ceremony was cancelled because of the COVID-19 pandemic so the 65th and 66th Hall of Fame classes at the National Museum of Racing were welcomed into the shrine during a two-hour ceremony at the Fasig-Tipton's Humphrey S. Finney Sales Pavilion.

Pletcher, 2015 Triple Crown winner American Pharoah and steeplechase trainer Jack Fisher comprised this year's class. The 2020 inductees were trainer Mark Casse, jockey Darrell McHargue, the horses Wise Dan and Tom Bowling, and three honored as Pillars of the Turf: J. Keene Dangerfield Jr., George D. Widener, Jr. and Alice Headley Chandler. Pletcher and American Pharoah were elected in the first year they were eligible to be on the ballot: 25 years of service for a trainer and five calendar years after retirement for horses.

While Casse, with the help if his wife, Tina, delivered the most emotional speech of the event, Pletcher was typically precise and under control throughout. He was introduced by owner Mike Repole, who totally ignored the mandate to be brief and spoke for over 18 minutes. Repole served up a mix of praise and humor to salute his trainer and friend.

“I got into owning race horses 2004, and I watched this young trainer just keep winning races,” Repole said. “I sat there at Aqueuct, Belmont and Saratoga and I watched my horses in the same race as his. What consistently happened after the races, he would walk right by me and go to the winner's circle and I would sit there a loser. If you can't beat him, you join him.”

Repole said that Pletcher belonged in the Hall of Fame of Hall of Famers, the top 1% and predicted that at the age of 54, he would add to his long list of accomplishments.

“He's an icon. He's a legend,” Repole said. “He's going to go down as one of the greatest of all time.”

Pletcher already leads the way with $410 million in purse-money earned. He was the first to reach $300 million and has a $48 million lead over fellow Hall of Famer Steve Asmussen. Pletcher ranks seventh on the career list with 5,157 victories, which include two in the GI Kentucky Derby, three in GI Belmont S. and 11 in the Breeders' Cup.

After years working for Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas, Pletcher took out his license in December 1995 and opened a seven-horse stable. He now trains 200 horses.

“I can't tell you how humbled I am to join this esteemed group,” Pletcher said. “So many of these guys were my childhood heroes, role models and mentors, competitors.”

Pletcher noted that Jerry Bailey rode his first winner and that Jose Santos–one of the 14 Hall of Fame members introduced at the ceremony–was up for his first loser.

“Jose, don't feel bad,” Pletcher said, smiling. “I've lost 17,458 more since then.”

Pletcher called Lukas a great mentor.

“After I went out on my own, the most common question I'd get is 'What is one thing that you've learned working for Wayne Lukas?'” Pletcher said. “The answer is: There's not one thing. It's everything. Everything matters. Every horse matters. Every horse owner matters.”

Fearful of forgetting to name and thank someone, and error he said he made in 2004 when accepting his first Eclipse Award, Pletcher called his election to the Hall of Fame a team event. But he made a point of saluting the late Jeff Lukas, his first boss in 1989, who suffered brain injuries when he was run over by a loose horse.

“I feel like no one has been more influential in the way that I try to conduct my business, than Wayne's son Jeff,” Pletcher said. “Jeff was a detail-oriented person. He was driven. He was motivated. He was a skilled horseman and he had the unique ability to make those around him better. There's no doubt in my mind, that if he didn't have a tragic accident that Jeff would have been inducted into the Hall of Fame years ago.”

Breeder-owner Ahmed Zayat and his son Justin accepted American Pharoah's plaque. Trainer Bob Baffert did not attend the event.

“Thank you very much for voting for American Pharoah to be in here,” Zayat said. “This is very, very humbling for us. When I was trying to think of what to talk about–I probably can talk for another two hours about what the American Pharoah meant for me–I realized this is not about the Zayat family. This is about American Pharoah and what American Pharoah achieved.” He said he wanted “to point out  American Pharoah as the people's horse, the horse that excited fans.”

Zayat said he had three distinct memories of the 2015 season: announcer Larry Collmus's call of the GI Belmont S. finish that made American Pharoah the first Triple Crown winner in 37 years followed by the reaction of the crowd; the reception that American Pharoah received at Saratoga, where he galloped on Friday before an estimated crowd of 15,000 the morning before his upset loss in the GI Travers; the hero's tribute upon his arrival at Keeneland where he won the GI Breeders' Cup Classic.

“These are memories that I will never forget about what American Pharoah meant for the sport and the public,” Zayat said.

Zayat congratulated the inductees from both classes, including Pletcher who trained some horses for his stable.

“One final thing,” Zayat said. “Thank you, Bob Baffert for just a brilliant training job and for opening your barn for every single person to come and visit American Pharoah.”

Casse had to wait a year for his induction ceremony and he relished the opportunity to thank the people who set him on the path to the Hall of Fame. At the top of the list was his late father, Norman, a trainer and an important figure in the development of Florida's breeding and bloodstock business. Casse took out his license as a teenager and developed into successful trainer. He left the day-to-day competition on the track in the early 1990s to manager Harry Mangurian's farm, but returned several years later to win multiple titles in Canada and become one of the premier trainers in the United States.

Confident, enthusiastic and outgoing, Casse promptly set the stage as he stepped to podium wearing his new Hall of Fame blazer.

“Let me start by saying, I have a better chance of winning the Kentucky Derby that getting through this speech without losing my composure,” he said.

Casse' voice wavered and cracked a bit, but he continued.

“I've been very fortunate in my life to win many big races and awards but nothing greater than this honor,” he said. “The last few weeks, I've spent much time reflecting on the various paths my life has taken. It amazes me that every experience, relationship, conversation with friends, families and clients has molded and shaped my career.  Who would have thought 50 years ago, as I slept over there in the parking lot, the Fasig-Tipton parking lot, with my dad, had breakfast every morning at the Saratoga Snack Shack that I would be standing here today?”

Casse said he would not have made it to the Hall of Fame without having great horses, but that the people who touched his life influenced him the most.

“Obviously, my dad, Norman, greatly encouraged me to follow my passion,” he said “My father was a huge part of my education with horses. And I inherited my love of racing from him. On this journey. Many family members have had to make sacrifices for me to pursue my career, but none greater than my mom.”

At that point, Casse, too emotional to continue, had his wife take over. She read the part describing how when his parents divorced when he was 13 his mother agreed to his request to stay in Florida with his father to be near horses.

Casse returned to the podium and thanked several of his major owners, John and Debby Oxley, Charlotte Weber, Robert Masterson and Gary Barber–all of whom were at the ceremony–for their support.

“In closing, my dad and I first visited the Hall of Fame in 1972 when I was 11,” Casse said. “I still remember walking around with my mouth open in amazement. At the end of the visit I confidently told my dad , 'I'm going to be in here some day.' As any good father would do, he said, 'Yes, Mark you will.'

“Well, we did it.”

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