‘A Serious Horse’: Maiden Winner Caddo River To Point For Smarty Jones

Powerful maiden winner Caddo River will make his stakes and two-turn debut in the $150,000 Smarty Jones for 3-year-olds Jan. 22 at Oaklawn, the colt's trainer Brad Cox said Tuesday morning.

The one-mile Smarty Jones is Oaklawn's first of four Kentucky Derby points races, a series that continues with the $750,000 Southwest Stakes (G3) Feb. 15, $1 million Rebel Stakes (G2) March 13 and the $1 million Arkansas Derby (G1) April 10.

A homebred for Arkansas lumberman John Ed Anthony's Shortleaf Stable, the lightly raced Caddo River finished second in his first two career starts in New York, both 7 furlongs, before concluding his 2-year-old campaign with a front-running 9 ½-length maiden victory Nov. 15 at Churchill Downs. Caddo River, as the odds-on favorite, covered a mile over a fast track in 1:35.22 to earn a career-high 104 Equibase speed rating, a 15-point increase over his previous start.

“He's a very good colt,” Cox said. “He ran against two really good colts in New York. He was able to break his maiden, one turn at Churchill. He's big, tall, rangy, leggy colt. I really do think that he's going to be better around two turns. He's got what I think it takes to be a serious horse. He's got speed and he can carry it.”

Caddo River has been based at Oaklawn since late December and already logged two half-mile workouts locally, including a :48 move over a fast track Sunday morning that ranked the third-fastest out of 85 published at the distance.

Caddo River is by 2007 Kentucky Derby runner-up Hard Spun and out of the Anthony-raced Pangburn, an allowance winner at the 2015 Oaklawn meeting. Pangburn then finished third in the $150,000 Honeybee Stakes (G3) and fourth in the $400,000 Fantasy Stakes (G3), Oaklawn's two biggest events for 3-year-old fillies. All three races were 1 1/16 miles.

“It appears as though he can carry it,” Cox said, referring to Caddo River's speed. “We'll find out this next race around two turns, but I think he's a very, very good colt.”

Cox has several other promising Kentucky Derby prospects, notably probable juvenile champion Essential Quality, who is unbeaten in three career starts. The Fair Grounds-based Essential Quality is under consideration for the Southwest, Cox said.

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Breeders’ Cup Presents Connections: ‘I Guess I’m One Of Those Dreamers’

From his teenage years mucking stalls at Ascot Park in Ohio to preparing to watch his silks line up in the Grade 1 Pegasus World Cup on Jan. 23, owner John Sondereker is enjoying the fruits of cultivating a lifelong passion for Thoroughbred racing.

When recent G2 San Antonio winner Kiss Today Goodbye enters that 12-horse starting gate at Gulfstream Park, Sondereker worries his emotions might overwhelm him. The newly-turned 4-year-old son of Cairo Prince is the owner's first graded stakes winner, and Sondereker himself selected the horse as a short yearling at the 2018 Keeneland January sale. 

“It's a big thing for me, of course; I've only been in a couple other Grade 1s, and I think I finished last in both of those,” Sondereker said, laughing genially. “He's just a colt that's really improving, and loves distance. This is a mile and an eighth, and there's a lot of speed in the race, so who knows? You get the right day for the right jockey, anything can happen.”

This sport has proven that adage many times over, launching the biggest dreams of small owners and trainers into the stratosphere.

That racing dream didn't really take hold of Sondereker until 1961. He'd been attending races at Waterford Park (now Mountaineer) with his father and uncle since the 1950's, and when the family moved to Cuyahoga Falls in Ohio, he was able to get a job cleaning stalls at the now-defunct Ascot Park for a dollar an hour.

After a couple years working there, the trainer employing Sondereker took him on a trip to the 1961 running of the Kentucky Derby. There was a horse running with an Ohio connection: Carry Back. His owner and trainer, Katherine and Jack Price, respectively, often ran horses at Ascot Park and Thistledown, so Sondereker had a natural rooting interest.

Carry Back won the Run for the Roses that day with a devastating come-from-behind late kick, and Sondereker has been hooked ever since.

“It was a small stable and they happened to win,” Sondereker said. “Here I was down there standing around with like Bill Hartack, and it was like, 'Wow, look at this.' There were all these impressive people, the kind I'd never been exposed to, and I had no clue it could be like that. 

“It just had a major impact on me. I said then, 'I hope someday I can own a horse like that.' I guess I'm one of those dreamers.”

John Sondereker with his purchase ticket for Kiss Today Goodbye at the 2018 Keeneland January sale

Sondereker worked for Wells Fargo in Des Moines, Ia. for 40 years, during which time he owned “a few cheap claimers” at nearby Prairie Meadows Racetrack. Since his retirement in the early 2000s, Sondereker has stepped up his ownership interests. 

He began with a few different partnership groups, learning the basics of what goes on behind the scenes.

“It was fine, but I just wanted more out of the game, more participation,” said Sondereker. “I knew there was more for me, and I found it with (trainer) Eric (Kruljac) and going to the sales. It takes a lot of practice, and even when you know what you're doing, you probably don't! I've got to where I'm confident, I know what I'm trying to do and how I want to do it. I just enjoy the whole process.”

By 2015 Sondereker was ready to try picking out a few horses on his own.

“It's hard buying any horse,” Sondereker admitted. “I'm not good at this, but I love to do it. Going out and doing it on my own, and seeing if I can accomplish something, that's the big thing to me. I thought I could learn, and Eric has really taught me a lot over the last 8 to 10 years.

“I'm having a ball, 78 years old and I'm still learning. That's the real secret to retirement, to be able to do something that you realize you're not the best in the world at. There's something you can always learn about the horse business. Eric probably has taught me 10 percent of what he knows, but that's a lot to me. It's given me a good foundation, and I've picked up a lot along the way. It's great when you're learning. That's the secret.”

Kiss Today Goodbye has easily been Sondereker's most successful purchase thus far, and is named for the opening line in the owner's favorite song, “What I Did For Love,” from the Broadway musical Chorus Line.

He'd considered the colt a turf horse when he bid up to $150,000 at the 2018 January sale. Kiss Today Goodbye is out of the Heatseeker mare Savvy Hester, who won or placed in multiple listed turf stakes at Woodbine.

The colt made his first two starts on the turf, then took three more starts over the dirt to break his maiden. Kiss Today Goodbye ran competitively in the listed Shared Belief Stakes at Del Mar in August of 2020, beaten just 1 ¼ lengths by Thousand Words, then went back to the turf for a pair of graded stakes efforts.

He finished fifth in the G2 Del Mar Derby and fourth in the G2 Twilight Derby at Santa Anita, then in mid-November came back to win a one-mile allowance race over the main track at Del Mar. Sondereker saw the G2 San Antonio coming up in the stakes schedule, and urged his trainer to consider entering Kiss Today Goodbye.

“His dam had accomplished quite a bit on the grass, but he just had trouble grabbing it for some reason,” said Sondereker. “I said to myself, 'His Thoro-graph numbers are competitive with most of the 3-year-olds in the country, so let's just try this Grade 2. He's definitely a distance horse, he has the numbers, there's no reason not to try it.'

Kiss Today Goodbye rallied from last under Mike Smith to win the G2 San Antonio

“Eric is more conservative than I am! I just thought we should go for it, and every once in a while you're right.”

Though he couldn't attend the race in person due to COVID-19 restrictions, the San Antonio victory was deeply satisfying for Sondereker. 

“There's a lot of skill involved, but there's also a lot of luck,” he said. “I probably wouldn't have gone over $200,000 for Kiss Today Goodbye, but that's not a tremendous amount of money at a sale when you have a stakes-winning mare and a good physical. But it was Cairo Prince's first crop, so that's how I ended up with him for sure.”

Whether it was skill, luck, or something in between, Sondereker is thrilled at the prospect of attending his colt's Grade 1 debut in the Pegasus World Cup. He hasn't been able to hang out with the horses on the backside nearly as much this year, of course, so he cherishes every opportunity to see the horses in person just a little bit more.

“There's going to be a lot of changes in the next 2 ½ weeks,” said Sondereker. “My wife is an RN and really involved in the COVID world, but Florida's held out and been pretty flexible, so they may still allow us to go.”

There are other things to look forward to, as well. 

Sondereker purchased an exciting daughter of War Front at the 2020 Fasig-Tipton Selected Yearling Showcase, spending his entire yearling budget in one fell swoop when the hammer fell at $625,000.

“When you start out, you wanna buy four or five or six in your budget, and I get why that's good for the industry,” Sondereker said. “You don't want to bid on anything you can't afford, but I'm the opposite. I'm the underbidder on a lot of really nice horses.

“For me, less is more; I currently have 18 Thoroughbreds.”

Additionally, the Breeders' Cup will return to Del Mar in 2021, where Sondereker has a vacation home. 

“Del Mar is the best place in the world,” he said. “Hopefully they'll get the vaccine stuff figured out this year, and I'll be able to get my box for the Breeders' Cup.”

Sondereker might even get the chance to wear a purple owners' cap all his own. It's horse racing, and anything is possible.

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Life is Good Possible for San Felipe

Life is Good (Into Mischief) exited his 3/4-length victory over late-closing stablemate Medina Spirit (Protonico) in Saturday’s GIII Sham S. in fine shape and could make his next start in the Mar. 6 GII San Felipe S., trainer Bob Baffert reported Sunday.

“They both came back well, so we’re pretty happy about both of them,” Baffert said. “The San Felipe is a race we’re considering, but I might keep them separated. I’m not sure what I’m going to do yet. It’s a long way off, but they both ran really well.”

Despite Life is Good’s fast-diminishing advantage nearing the wire Saturday, Baffert is not concerned about distance limitations for the ‘TDN Rising Star.’

“I always tell Mike [Smith] to try and save something,” Baffert said. “Life Is Good wasn’t as tired as I thought he could have been. He needs to learn to relax a little bit better, but he will. He’ll mature, just like [2020 GI Kentucky Derby and Sham S. winner] Authentic. When he won the Sham last year, he was sort of puzzling, zig-zagging all the way down the stretch, but they’re babies. Still, you can see their raw talent.”

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Dazzling Falls, Nebraska’s Only Kentucky Derby Starter, Dies At Age 28

As Nebraska sits on the precipice of seismic change with its recent racino green-light, the state also lays to rest one of its greatest equine heroes.

Dazzling Falls, who became the only Nebraska-bred to compete in the Kentucky Derby when he finished 13th in 1995, was found dead in his field Tuesday in Mead, Neb., just outside Omaha, bringing to an end 28 years as the standard bearer for the Cornhusker State as a runner and a sire.

The son of Taylor's Falls competed as a homebred for Donald and Barbara Kroeger's Chateau Ridge Farm, and he lived out his final years at Rogers Ranch, supported financially by Barbara on behalf of her late husband. Dazzling Falls was handled for the bulk of his racing career by Omaha-born trainer Chuck Turco.

Dazzling Falls came into Turco's barn at Remington Park near the end of his 2-year-old season after establishing himself as a multiple stakes winner at Ak-Sar-Ben for trainer Robert Jorgensen. Turco could tell by the colt's ground-devouring stride that he could handle the deeper waters in Oklahoma, but he'd have to change up the gameplan from what won him races in his home state.

That decision likely took Dazzling Falls from a good state-bred horse to one that could compete with the best of his class.

“He was a front runner, and they sent him to Remington for the [Mathis Brothers Remington] Futurity, and I thought it was a lot to ask for him,” Turco said. “Plus, Evansville Slew was floating around town, so being another speedball wasn't going to help. We changed his style of running, and he just relished it. He'd get way behind, and then he was able to use the speed he was bred for in the last quarter-mile.”

The change in tactics saw immediate returns when the colt showed restraint, then blew away in the stretch to win the Prevue Stakes at Remington by 3 1/2 lengths. Old foe Evansville Slew got his revenge in the Remington Futurity, but Dazzling Falls finished the season on a high note with a win in the Hawthorne Juvenile Stakes in Illinois.

Dazzling Falls returned to Remington Park for his spring campaign and linked up with jockey Garrett Gomez, who would become his most successful partner.

After a couple in-the-money efforts in prep races, Dazzling Falls successfully dialed in his closing kick again in the Remington Park Derby. With the backing of fans from both Nebraska and Oklahoma, the colt entered the Grade 2 Arkansas Derby as one of the favorites two weeks later, and he emerged a 1 1/4-length winner.

All of a sudden, two Nebraska boys had the graded stakes earnings to enter the Kentucky Derby. While the buzz back home revolved around Ak-Sar-Ben's eventual sale, it was a needed morale boost for a state about to face some hard times.

With that being said, the culture shock of the spotlight was real.

“The thing about racing a horse from this part of the country in those kinds of races is they're just not used to the noise, the attention, the crowds, the bigger cities, the airplanes and helicopters,” Turco said. “Things are pretty quiet in Nebraska. He really handled it step-by-step as he got better. I remember him staring at me the first time we put him on an airplane like, 'Get me off this thing right now.'”

Turco said he expected the Nebraska-bred to stick out like a sore thumb in Louisville, given his unorthodox background, and the media machine rumbled to life by the time the colt was back to his stall after the Arkansas Derby. Despite coming into the Derby off an impressive win in his final prep, Dazzling Falls was still considered one of the field's biggest longshots.

“I think the question really was, 'Do you think a horse with this pedigree should go to Churchill Downs?'” Turco said. “I said, 'I'm an Italian from south Omaha, and my pedigree probably doesn't match up, either, but we're going.'”

Dazzling Falls' sire, Taylor's Falls, earned his most lucrative victory in the Beef State Handicap at Ak-Sar-Ben, and he never raced at a distance longer than six furlongs. He was a solid sire of stakes winners, and he even got four graded stakes winners over the course of his stud career, but classic success was certainly not expected of his foals.

Even though the horse and trainer were outsiders at Churchill Downs, that didn't mean they were completely separated from their people.

Tulsa-based sportscaster Chris Lincoln, a friend of Turco's from the races at Remington Park, was on the outside rail covering the Derby for ESPN that year. As the trainer prepared to compete on the biggest stage of his life, Lincoln gave him a daily reminder of his roots.

“About a week out from the race, I heard this music playing,” Turco said. “The closer we got to the ESPN scaffold there, we heard the (University of) Nebraska fight song playing. Here at Churchill, everybody was looking at us like we were yokels, but we had a hell of a football team that year. Every morning that we went to the track, he'd play that song, and we would fight off tears.”

Turco knew he had his horse trending in the right direction heading into the Derby, having righted the ship from his defeats earlier in the spring to get him to Louisville with a two-race winning streak. However, he also knew the road he took to get there wasn't easy. No matter what Dazzling Falls did in the race, it was probably going to use up whatever was left in his tank.

“He had 13 days between the Remington Derby and the Arkansas Derby, and he had another 14 days between Arkansas Derby and the Kentucky Derby,” the trainer said. “I knew if he won the Kentucky Derby, I was going to be the most unpopular trainer in the world, because there was no way I was going to run in the Preakness, because that was another two weeks away. Even back then, that was too much.”

With Gomez once again in the irons, Dazzling Falls left the gate in the 1995 Kentucky Derby at the field's longest price: 27-1 in a group that was diluted on the odds board by two pairs of coupled entries and six horses lumped together as “the field.”

By that standard, he outran his odds. That's pretty much where the positive comments on his Derby trip end. Knocked around out of the gate from the dreaded inside post, Dazzling Falls hugged the rail for most of the race before Gomez fanned him out widest of all for the stretch run. He picked up a few placings, but he was never any kind of threat for eventual winner Thunder Gulch, settling for 13th of the 19 starters.

Dazzling Falls got his break after the Kentucky Derby, then he traveled to the now-defunct Birmingham Turf Club and won the Alabama Derby in what would be his final start with Gomez. The colt continued to barnstorm graded stakes races around the country for the remainder of his 3-year-old season, then he raced twice at Oaklawn Park at age four before an injury ended his career. He finished with nine wins in 20 starts and he made $904,622, making him the highest-earning Nebraska-bred of all-time.

Turco and Dazzling Falls went their separate ways after the horse retired, as is the way of things. The trainer went back to his base at Remington Park to find the next one, and Dazzling Falls went off to begin his stud career, first in Oklahoma, before moving to Iowa, and finally Rogers Ranch in his native state.

Six or seven years passed, and Dazzling Falls was a cherished memory for Turco, but little else. Tied up with his growing stable, he didn't have time to visit his star runner. One day, that changed. Then, Turco changed.

“I was a young man, and was busy,” Turco said. “You go through a lot of horses when you're training, and there's mechanisms you have to turn your emotions off. When I did have the opportunity to see him, six or seven of us went out there the first time, and he was out in this big pasture. He ran the length of that thing right to me and stuck his tongue out. At that point, I thought, 'My God, he remembered me after all these years,' and I felt guilty as hell. After that, I went out any chance I had.”

Between his visits with Dazzling Falls, Turco kept himself busy with a handful of his star's foals, including the best one he ever put on the track, Diamond Joe.

Over the course of seven seasons, Diamond Joe won 24 of 56 starts, and earned $507,482, joining his sire among Nebraska's highest all-time moneymakers. Among his 21 career stakes wins was a victory in Nebraska's signature race, the 2013 Bosselman/Gus Fonner Stakes at Fonner Park.

While Dazzling Falls was Turco's highest-profile runner, the trainer considered Diamond Joe his tour-de-force; an overachiever who banked a ton of money in a state where the purse structure makes banking a ton of money incredibly hard to do.

Dazzling Falls (right) comes face-to-face with Diamond Joe at Horsemen's Park.

Once again, the blueprint for success meant teaching a speed horse to use his ability at the right time.

“For one thing, I knew Diamond Joe was from a speed-happy family, and I already did this once, so I told the riders when he was a baby, 'If you work him fast, I'll fire you in a heartbeat,'” Turco said. “We never asked Diamond Joe for anything. It got to the point where he wouldn't even get published workouts, but we kept that edge off him that way.”

Though he's been pensioned for five years, Dazzling Falls still had a small handful of runners compete this year. From 18 crops at stud, he had 165 foals and 90 winners with combined progeny earnings of more than $4.5 million. He never got a graded stakes winner, but he did send 19 foals to victory in stakes company.

Turco's production as a trainer has geared down in recent seasons, and after a training career that spanned 35 years, he has not had any starters in 2020. Dazzling Falls remains his highest earner and lone graded stakes winner.

Dazzling Falls was the figurehead for his trainer's ascent in the 1990s, then as a sire, he was the catalyst for Turco's resurgence in the 2010s. The horse called it a career at stud around the same time his trainer began sizing down his stable, and he died in a year where the trainer went fully dormant on the racetrack.

The bond between the trainer and his greatest charge was special. One glowing conversation with Turco about the horse made that abundantly clear. It was the way their lives continued to intertwine over the course of decades that truly made it once-in-a-lifetime.

“It's been good for my soul over the last 10, 15 years, just going out and seeing him,” Turco said. “A lot of people don't get to do that. Some don't care to. Some trainers are too busy, and everybody's different. Some owners don't want to spend the money to take care of a horse for the next 20 years. What a testament to the Kroegers for doing that.”

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