Breeders’ Cup Presents Connections: From Mishriff To Enable, Every Day Is The ‘Olympics’ For Traveling Tony Proctor

When UK native Antony Proctor checked the odds on Mishriff just before the start of the $20 million Saudi Cup last Saturday, he was surprised the French Classic winner wasn't getting much respect. As trainer John Gosden's head traveling lad, Proctor knew the 4-year-old colt was up to the challenge of facing high-profile American runners Charlatan and Knicks Go.

“The boss wouldn't send him out there just to fill the gate,” Proctor said. 

Mishriff wound up defeating Charlatan by a length, paying $41.60 on a $2 wager in the American pools. Proctor was thrilled, meeting his charge on the track in Saudi Arabia to give 21-year-old jockey David Egan a high five before leading Mishriff into the winner's circle.

“It was pretty amazing,” said the 50-year-old industry veteran. “You know, people back home say to me sometimes, 'Don't you get tired of winning all the time?', and I have to say, I don't. It's not an easy life, and it's not the best-paid job in the world, but if you're in love with it, and I am, then it's one of the most rewarding jobs in the world.”

While Mishriff's Saudi Cup win was a great one for the entire Gosden team, it doesn't come close to Proctor's most memorable moment in racing. That honor lies with champion Enable.

“There's never been a horse to make the hairs on the back of my neck stand up like she did,” Proctor said. “I'll always remember walking her over for the Breeders' Cup at Churchill Downs, leading her around that walking ring. The American public were just so pleased to see her, and everyone was rooting for her. They'd see her and say, 'Oh, look, the Queen.'

“It was quite emotional; it was just unreal.”

Antony Proctor, left, gives Enable a pat after her 2018 victory in the Breeders' Cup Turf

The only horse to win the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe and the Breeders' Cup Turf in the same season (2018), Enable won 15 of her 19 career starts, 11 of which were Group/Grade 1 races. She won the Arc twice, in 2017 and 2018, finished second in the premier race in 2019, and won a record three editions of the King George VI & Queen Elizabeth Stakes.

Her race record isn't the only reason Enable was unique, Proctor explained. The mare also had a special presence about her, an almost human-like intelligence, that no other horse has ever come close to.

“It was a bit of a family thing, because my partner, Hannah, was the head girl to Enable when she was in training,” he said. “It's quite funny, because she's quite quirky in the box, and it's only Imran (Shahwani, her traveling exercise rider) and Hannah that could catch her at home. But I'd come down and yell her name, and she'd stick her head out and start whinnying. 

“That's why I think she's the best, and she'll always be my favorite. It's just the character, her whole persona. You'd walk around with her, and she knows she's good, but she also had a little bit of insecurity to her. She'd look to see where you are, then she'd see me, and it's like she'd say, 'I'm okay and I'll carry on.'

“I saw it because I was beside her, and she'd look for me. I got the best of her; I was there when she won her biggest races, every one of them. I have this relationship with her that will never be topped.”

Head traveling lad Tony Proctor pats Enable on the neck during morning training at Churchill Downs in 2018

There are a couple good reasons that even the best horses look to Proctor for security; first, he's always there beside them, and second, his quiet temperament and steady touch are a calming presence in unfamiliar surroundings.

His employers also place a lot of faith in Proctor, especially Gosden, not just because he's good with the horses, but because he is meticulous in his care of them and is also good at dealing with people, from owners to shipping managers.

“I think the biggest compliment I've had from the boss was that when I came to Churchill with Enable, I had her and Roaring Lion, and he sent me on my own,” Proctor said. “So to go over there with two horses of that ability, be over there for best part of a week before the boss turns up, obviously there's a good deal of trust there. He knows the way I work and he's happy with it.”

Tony Proctor with John Gosden trainee Global Giant in Saudi Arabia in February, 2021

Proctor has been all around the world caring for some of the top racehorses in the game. His resume includes exercising Dubai World Cup winners Dubai Millennium and Street Cry for Godolphin, three years under Henry Cecil, another three under Michael Stoute, and he is now in his ninth year with Gosden, for whom he has worked with horses like Golden Horn, Kingman, and Stradivarius, along with those already mentioned.

Perhaps Proctor was destined to work with racehorses, since his own father was a jockey and long-time employee of four-time champion trainer Major Dick Hern.

Father and son, Brian and Antony Proctor

Brian Proctor taught himself to ride and enjoyed some success as a jockey, but his real talent was as an exercise rider. Among his top charges were Brigadier Gerard, rated as the best racehorse trained in Britain in the 20th century, as well as stars like champion Bustino and Dayjur.

His father was his hero and his mentor, Proctor said. Though his father passed in 2017, he still remembers hearing stories about the journey to America for the Breeders' Cup Sprint with Dayjur in 1990. The horse famously jumped a dark shadow over the track in the stretch and lost by a neck, but had he not jumped the shadow, Proctor said, Dayjur likely would have won the race.

“Dad said one of the clock watchers was kind of winding him up, because we were English, and English horses can't compete with American sprinters on the dirt,” Proctor remembered. “After Dayjur worked later that morning, the clocker said he'd never change that clock again, saying, 'I've never seen anything so fast.'”

Dayjur leaps over a shadow just yards from victory in the 1990 Breeders' Cup Sprint

Proctor's father didn't pressure him into the racing business, but by the time he was 13 years old, the young Proctor was riding out on weekends and school holidays. From there, it was a natural progression to become an apprentice jockey.

He was one of the rare few in England who could ride both on the flat and over jumps, and wound up winning just over 200 races in his career, including at Cheltenham, Aintree, and even Royal Ascot.

“I don't think there's any place that comes close to riding at the Cheltenham Festival,” said Proctor. “As far as I was concerned Cheltenham was the place to be. I was in love with jump racing; there's no better feeling than coming up to a fence and the horse coming up to you. It's like you're flying.”

In 1997, Proctor got a call from Godolphin inviting him to come down to Dubai.

“I was riding bad horses at the time which isn't a great feeling, wondering if you're going to make it all the way around, not where you're going to finish,” he said. “I got to ride Dubai Millennium for them there, and obviously he was very good, I'd never felt anything like him before.”

After five years in the sunshine, Proctor was ready to head home to the UK. He rode races for a couple more years, then took a job as the third traveling lad to 10-time champion trainer Sir Henry Cecil.

“He was just a perfect gentleman, and we got on like a house on fire,” Proctor said. “I can't describe how good it was working for him, really.”

Unfortunately there were no opportunities to advance his career in Cecil's yard, as the two traveling lads ahead of him planned to stick by the trainer until his retirement, so after three years, Proctor decided to move on.

“I promise you now it was the hardest decision I've ever made,” said Proctor, his voice catching with emotion. “I was nearly in tears telling him I was leaving, but I'd been head-hunted by Sir Michael Stoute to be his second traveler. I won't tell you a lie, I think it was the worst decision I ever made.

“I learned a lot, though, in the three years with him. I'm a great believer in fate, so when the job at Gosden's came up, I took it, and then got to be first traveler within a year.”

One of the first really good horses Proctor remembers riding for Gosden was Kingman, before the colt made his first start.

“The assistant met me at the end of the gallops, and asked what I thought of him,” Proctor remembered. “I told him, 'I've waited 13 years to ride a horse that quickens like this. The last horse I sat on that quickened like this was Dubai Millenium.' 

“The assistant said, 'That's a pretty brave statement.' But you look at what he did on the track, and I guess it wasn't that brave, after all.”

Kingman won four Group 1 races as a 3-year-old and was voted the 2014 Cartier Horse of the Year.

“When you look back and think of the horses I've traveled now, from the first year with Golden Horn, then I end up with Enable, Stradivarius, Roaring Lion, and now Mishriff, you sort of think to yourself, I mean, you've almost got to pinch yourself sometimes!”

Trainer John Gosden, right, and head traveling lad Antony Proctor, left, with champion Enable following her 2018 Breeders' Cup Turf victory at Churchill Downs

Proctor isn't just in charge of traveling with the horses. He rides out nearly every morning at home, then gets the racing gear ready, loads the horses, drives to the races, finds lads to get them ready, saddles them, and then drives them back home again.

The most fun part of his job is the trips overseas. Proctor makes annual trips to the Breeders' Cup, the Arc meet in France, the Saudi Cup, and sometimes Dubai, among other places.

“Just being around good horses, it's unreal,” Proctor said. “When you're working for a trainer like the boss, I'm not sure respected is the right word, but you know you're going there competing, you're not just making up numbers. It's like for an athlete going to the Olympics, you're always at the top of your game, and I think that's something we all strive for, if we're honest.”

When he isn't traveling, Proctor spends his afternoons watching his 20-year-old daughter and two younger sons enjoy their own horses at home. His 6-year-old, Thomas, is an especially gifted rider. 

“I know one thing, I couldn't ride like him when I was six,” Proctor said. “It's frightening how good he is. My father was very, very good, he had the best hands I'd ever seen, and I think Thomas has his traits. He's so soft with his hands, he doesn't move. He's a very rare talent.”

Still, Proctor won't push any of his children toward the racing lifestyle, just as his father never pushed him. 

“You need to be in love with it,” Proctor said. “I've been very lucky in my progression, always been with good trainers, but even though I've had good jobs, I have to be happy, myself, in what I do to go to work every day. 

“Obviously, I have no intention of leaving at the moment!”

Antony Proctor and his son, Thomas, out for a ride

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Gosden Strikes For A Third Winter Derby

Godolphin's Forest of Dean (GB) (Iffraaj {GB}) had finished adrift of Marco Botti trainee Felix (GB) (Lope de Vega {Ire}) in both starts this term and stepped forward to exact revenge on that familiar foe in Saturday's G3 Betway Winter Derby Trial at Lingfield, providing John Gosden with a record-breaking third renewal of the fledgling 10-furlong test. Successful in four of seven starts in 2019, he was under wraps until running third in a Jan. 11 Wolverhampton conditions heat on belated return before filling the same spot in the Feb. 6 Listed Winter Derby Trial over course and distance last time. The 10-3 third favourite accepted a tow from Johnny Drama (Ire) (Lilbourne Lad {Ire}) through halfway. Bounding to the front soon after passing the three-furlong marker, he poached a decisive lead off the home turn and kept on strongly under late urging to hold the late thrust of Felix by 3/4-of-a-length.

“He's definitely on an upward curve and Rab [Havlin] rode him beautifully,” the winning trainer said. “When he got to the top of the hill he said 'I'm gonna steal this' and kept him rolling. He's a brave little horse who was off for over 400 days after having problems following his run at Newbury [in Sept. 2019]. I think the [Apr. 2] Easter Classic over a mile-and-a-quarter [on All-Weather Championships Finals Day] might be more his scene than the [one-mile] Lincoln.”

Pedigree Notes

Forest of Dean is the fourth of eight foals produced by the dual stakes-placed Forest Crown (GB) (Royal Applause {GB}) and the March-foaled bay is a half-brother to G2 Prix de Sandringham second Golden Crown (GB) (Siyouni {Fr}) and G3 Athasi S. third Rionach (GB) (Sea the Stars {Ire}). From a family featuring GISW sire Storm Cat (Storm Bird) and dual Group 1 winner Reckless Abandon (GB) (Exchange Rate), he is also kin to a yearling colt by Wootton Bassett (GB) and a weanling colt by Lope de Vega {Ire}). His dam is a half-sister to G1 Racing Post Trophy-winning sire Crowded House (GB) (Rainbow Quest) and to the dam of MGISW distaffer Ticker Tape (GB) (Royal Applause {GB}) and G1 Prix Maurice de Gheest hero Brando (GB) (Pivotal {GB}).

Saturday, Lingfield, Britain
BETWAY WINTER DERBY S.-G3, £55,000, Lingfield, 2-27, 4yo/up, 10f (AWT), 2:04.92, st.
1–FOREST OF DEAN (GB), 126, g, 5, by Iffraaj (GB)
1st Dam: Forest Crown (GB) (MSP-Eng),
                                by Royal Applause (GB)
2nd Dam: Wiener Wald, by Woodman
3rd Dam: Chapel of Dreams, by Northern Dancer
1ST BLACK-TYPE WIN; 1ST GROUP WIN. (450,000gns Ylg '17
TATOCT). O-Godolphin; B-Car Colston Hall Stud (GB); T-John
Gosden; J-Robert Havlin. £30,811. Lifetime Record: 13-5-2-2,
$180,038. *1/2 to Golden Crown (GB) (Siyouni {Fr}), GSP-Fr;
and Rionach (GB) (Sea the Stars {Ire}), GSP-Ire. Werk Nick
   Rating: A. Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
2–Felix (GB), 126, g, 5, Lope de Vega (Ire)–Luminance (Ire), by
Danehill Dancer (Ire). (32,000gns RNA Ylg '17 TAOCT;
24,000gns 3yo '19 TATAHI). O-K Sohi & Partner; B-Fittocks Stud
(GB); T-Marco Botti. £11,732.
3–Father of Jazz (GB), 126, c, 4, Kingman (GB)–Bark (Ire), by
Galileo (Ire). O-W J & T C O Gredley; B-Stetchworth & Middle
Park Studs Ltd (GB); T-Roger Varian. £5,874.
Margins: 3/4, 1, 1 1/4. Odds: 3.33, 3.00, 1.50.
Also Ran: Power of States (Ire), Johnny Drama (Ire). Click for the Racing Post result or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree. Video, sponsored by Fasig-Tipton.

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Fresh Off Saudi Cup Win, John Gosden Joins TDN Writers’ Room

Three days after racking up yet another monumental win in a career chock full of them, legendary trainer John Gosden joined the TDN Writers' Room podcast presented by Keeneland Tuesday morning. Calling in via Zoom as the Green Group Guest of the Week, Gosden explained how he got Saudi Cup hero Mishriff (Ire) (Make Believe {GB}) to be as brilliant on dirt as he is on turf, what made his five-time champion Enable (GB) (Nathaniel {Ire}) such a phenomenon, how his roots of training in California in the 1980s informed the rest of his career and much more.

Asked about what it takes to get a horse to perform at a top level on multiple surfaces as Mishriff has done, Gosden said, “I think you've got to have the individual. You've got to have a horse that obviously handles the surface, but also the one that has the courage to face the kickback. And I think that's very much the issue. I had many good turf horses in California that could work a mile in a great time on the main track on their own in the morning, but put them in a race in the afternoon and they couldn't tolerate the dirt. They lose their breathing, their rhythm, everything. So, you need a horse with courage.”

Regarding what else made the difference for Mishriff against top American dirt horses Charlatan (Speightstown) and Knicks Go (Paynter) in the Saudi Cup, Gosden commented, “I think one thing is very clear, and I think Bob [Baffert] might have said this: the long straight at Riyadh made a big difference to us, because we are used to straights of two, three, four furlongs in distance. To that extent, he really relished the two-and-a-half furlong straight, which I think in the end just caught Charlatan out in that last 100 meters. So that type of track very much suits him.”

On what he's looking at for the rest of Mishriff's campaign and whether or not it will include a shot in the GI Breeders' Cup Classic, Gosden said, “We plan obviously to be running him here in races like the Eclipse Stakes. We may even consider looking at a race at the end of the year like The Arc. As regards to Del Mar, of course, that's to be discussed on the agenda. Having trained and had a lot of fun at Del Mar, I know it very well. The track and the finish line is quite a long way away from the clubhouse turn. It's quite a short straight. So that would probably be something that would be a positive for horses like Knicks Go and Charlatan and maybe not such a positive for us.”

Elsewhere on the show, the writers conducted their 2021 fantasy 3-year-old draft, checked in with TDN European Editor Emma Berry for more on the Saudi Cup and, in the West Point Thoroughbreds news segment, reacted to the huge news of three top stallion farms suing The Jockey Club over its 140-mare cap. Click here to watch the podcast; click here for the audio-only version.

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Gosden-Trained Mishriff Upsets Charlatan To Win Saudi Cup

The second edition of the Saudi Cup was billed as a battle between Grade 1 Pegasus World Cup winner Knicks Go and G1 Malibu winner Charlatan, but John Gosden-trained Mishriff, an Irish-bred 4-year-old colt by Make Believe who won last year's G1 French Derby, stole the show on Saturday, running down the Bob Baffert-trained, Mike Smith-ridden Charlatan in deep stretch to win by about one length under 21-year-old David Egan.

Saudi-based Great Scott finished third in the one-turn, 1 1/8-mile dirt race, with Knicks Go fourth after pushing Charlatan throughout and taking a brief lead into the far turn. The Brad Cox-trained Knicks Go was followed by Miguel Angel Silva-trained Sleepy Eyes Todd.

Mishriff paid $41.60 on a $2 wager in American pools for the Saudi Cup.

Mishriff, whose only previous race on dirt came when second in the 2020 Saudi Derby, was winning for the fifth time in nine career starts. He is owned by Prince AA Faisal. Mishriff was beaten 2 1/4 lengths by Japanese-trained Full Flat in the 2020 Saudi Derby, coming into that race off a 10-length maiden score in his third career start as a 2-year-old the previous November at Nottingham in England.

Coming out of the Saudi Derby, Mishriff won a Newmarket stakes in June, then proved 1 3/4 lengths the best in the G1 Prix du Jockey Club (French Derby) at Chantilly July 5. After a G2 stakes victory at Deauville, he finished a disappointing eighth in the G1 Champion Stakes at Ascot on Oct. 17. That was last race going into the Saudi Cup.

Charlatan darted to the front from the nine post in the 14-horse field, getting the jump on Knicks Go and Joel Rosario, who broke from the five post. Mishriff settled in just behind the top pair in the run down the backstretch, with Bill Mott-trained Tacitus up close and toward the inside.

Into the turn, Knicks Go poked his head in front, but Charlatan was not finished, re-gaining the lead as the field wound their way around the turn. At the top of the stretch, Knicks Go began to retreat, but Mishriff swung to Charlatan's outside and took dead aim on the leader. Despite running down the stretch on his left lead, Mishriff wore down Charlatan, taking a narrow advantage with 100 meters to run and gradually edged away.

The Saudi Cup was run under unusually cool, damp conditions at King Abdulaziz Racecourse in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Saturday.

This was the second running of what is billed as the world's richest race, offering a $20-million purse, with $10 million going to the winner. The first-place prize money from the inaugural running, won by Maximum Security, has not been paid due to the criminal charges against the horse's trainer, Jason Servis, in the United States that were filed just over a week after his victory in Saudi Arabia. Prince Bandar, head of the Saudi Cup, said in a television interview with commentator Nick Luck he hopes the purse situation will be settled in about six weeks.

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