Breeders’ Cup Presents Connections: ‘I Don’t Think I Could Ever Work For Somebody Else’

Jorje Abrego distinctly remembers that dark day in 2012 when Midwest Thoroughbreds abruptly removed their horses from trainer Brad Cox's barn. 

“It was 3:00 in the afternoon, and I looked down the shed row to see all webbings laying open, no horses in the stalls; it was sad,” Abrego said. “I remember somebody told me, 'You know, you better find another job, because Brad has only two horses!' 

“Brad came into Barn 47 and told me, 'Please don't go anywhere, I'll keep you on your salary if you stay here. I'm going to get more horses.'”

That he did. The Cox operation is now setting new milestones: the barn had four Breeders' Cup winners at the 2020 World Championships, and has three top candidates on the Kentucky Derby trail early in 2021.

“You know, sometimes bad things come, and then very good things come after,” Abrego said from his office at Oaklawn Park. “The rest is a very good story. It's amazing, really.”

The 35-year-old native of Guatemala has been at Cox's side since 2009, working his way up from a part-time groom and part-time hotwalker to one of the trainer's top assistants. Abrego had only ever worked with a few horses, and had never seen a racehorse before arriving in the United States at the age of 22. He only walked hots before taking the job in Cox's barn.

It isn't hard to see that Abrego's long-time loyalty to the trainer runs deep; he's one of the first ones at the barn in the morning, and one of the last to leave it at night. He can be found in most of the photographs of the barn's top runners, and he still answers Cox's calls with a crisp, respectful, “Yes, sir.”

For the past five or six years, Abrego has made Oaklawn Park his winter home, handling a barn full of horses as well as the high-quality ship-in runners. Last weekend, for example, champions Monomoy Girl and Essential Quality shipped up from New Orleans before triumphing in local stakes races.

Assistant trainer Jorje Abrego celebrates a victory at Oaklawn Park

The chestnut phenom Monomoy Girl is the one who has Abrego's heart, however. 

“I love every single horse in my barn, and maybe Brad Cox will win 100 more Grade 1 races, but I'll always remember her,” Abrego said. “She was the first Grade 1 for the team, and it's amazing to have a 6-year-old filly still running.”

The daughter of Tapizar gave Cox his first G1 win in the 2018 Ashland Stakes at Keeneland, and has now won two editions of the Breeders' Cup Distaff, in 2018 and in 2020. She missed over a year of racing between her championship-defining victories, but came back with a vengeance to dominate her division in 2020. 

Monomoy Girl sold to Spendthrift Farm for $9.5 million at the end of 2020, and B. Wayne Hughes decided to return the champion racemare to Cox for a final season of racing in 2021. In her first start as a 6-year-old, Monomoy Girl posted a facile victory in the G3 Bayakoa Stakes on Feb. 28 at Oaklawn.

Her racing success isn't the only thing Abrego loves about the mare.

“This filly is so sweet, too, especially when you give her a peppermint,” he said. “When this filly is walking the shed row, she's like a pony. You'd never think she would run like that.”

The excitement is ramping up in the whole barn this year, as Cox has three runners with points on the Road to the Kentucky Derby. The trainer has never started a horse in the Run for the Roses, but with 2-year-old champion Essential Quality in the barn, as well as prep winners Mandaloun and Caddo River, the first Saturday in May can't come quickly enough.

“I just hope we have the right one in the barn, the winner,” Abrego said, smiling.

Jorje Abrego, left, schooling Essential Quality in the paddock at Oaklawn before the colt's win in the G3 Southwest Stakes

At the end of the day, win or lose, Abrego knows he has the best job in the world. He has a hard time expressing his gratitude to Cox for taking a chance on him all those years ago, but he'll never forget it.

“When I told him this, believe me, it came from my heart,” Abrego relayed. “I told him, 'I don't think I could ever work for somebody else.' I love this job too much. 

“I don't feel like Brad Cox is my boss, really. The guy treats me like family.”

The post Breeders’ Cup Presents Connections: ‘I Don’t Think I Could Ever Work For Somebody Else’ appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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The Sports Business Furlong: Michael Behrens, Founder and CEO of MyRacehorse

   Michael Behrens is synonymous with innovation in the racing industry, having brought the concept of microshares into everyday conversation. His MyRacehorse struck gold early–and almost immediately–when Authentic (Into Mischief) won the 2020 GI Kentucky Derby and GI Breeders' Cup Classic en route to Horse of the Year honors just months after buying in. Carter Carnegie recently had a conversation with Behrens, who remains in the news with other high-profile investments, including a recently announced partnership in two-time champion Monomoy Girl (Tapizar).

   CC: Please share your favorite racing memories.

   MB: That one is easy. It was the first Saturday in September 2020, and it was when Authentic turned back Tiz the Law [Constitution] and won the Kentucky Derby. For me personally, as an entrepreneur, it was a combination of years of getting this idea off the ground and getting the business going and the hard work of a lot of people to help me get it to that point. Two, it was the first time ever you had over 5,000 people that had the same vested interest. And third, it was in partnership with Mr. [B. Wayne] Hughes, who has been such a tremendous partner on this journey. So, there's definitely nothing close to it. That's been the pinnacle for me in racing.

   CC: Can you share a brief history of your professional career?

   MB: It's not in racing. Racing has been my joy and my place of decompression and to let loose after a tough week at the office, but the reality is I spend most of my time in e-commerce, ad tech, and marketing.

   CC: What was your motivation to explore microshares?

   MB: As a marketer, my obsession was how brands are built and how categories are created. As a fan of racing, I had been searching for the reasons that were holding racing back from a prominent place in the sports entertainment landscape in America, and came to the conclusion that the sport was very difficult for people to try to experience. [I thought] the best possible way to do that was to experience it through the lens of ownership. This is a sport that has really struggled with attracting new fans and educating fans how to experience the sport. Microshares became what I believe to be the perfect product to meet that need.

   CC: What similarities do you see between what Casper Mattress did to the mattress industry during your time as chief marketing officer and what you are doing with MyRacehorse in the Thoroughbred industry?

   MB: You wouldn't think there's a lot of similarities, but there's a common trait as both industries were stale and lacked the desire to promote innovation. Prior to Casper, the mattress industry provided a terrible buying experience. [Casper] proved to be ridiculously disruptive to the mattress industry because it offered the consumer a better product and a better experience.

The same thing is true in racing. It's been done the same way for decades, and people have either not thought of or had the wherewithal to bring a lot of disruptions to its business model. My obsession is to understand the consumer, what their wants are, what the desires are, where they find frustrations in each industry. In the case of racing, it was unlocking a way to make a fan participatory without just focusing on betting.

   CC: What are some of the key results that you believe have benefited the Thoroughbred industry through microshare participation?

   MB: A lot of people will think the obvious: that MyRacehorse in a very short period of time has come in and bought a lot of bloodstock. As a new player, the amount of bloodstock we have been able to purchase benefits a lot of people whose livelihood relies on raising, training, or caring for Thoroughbreds, but I think that's just a small fraction of the influence that MyRacehorse and the community that we have develop has had. These fans are bringing in new fans. These new fans are spending time in racing content, on racing media websites, and hopefully–after COVID–returning to the track. They are also very active wagering as our horses' odds definitely indicate compared to the morning line. Therefore, more than our bloodstock acquisitions, I think what's

exponentially bigger is the amount of people that we've re-energized or newly captured and brought them into the entire ecosystem.

   CC: With such a large community, how do you manage/balance the natural restrictions of providing real-world experiences while keeping the microowners engaged and participatory in their investment?

   MB: Like most brands, it is being able to give a rewarding digital experience by providing unique content and experiences within the digital platform. And then balancing that with being opportunistic and how you can have the physical experiences we've been able to deliver. Prior to the pandemic, outside of a few big days, the racetracks have a lot of capacity. We don't have to shy away from the fact that racing is widely enjoyed and really appreciated when you're in the physical environments of the game. Some racetracks have really embraced this concept, Santa Anita specifically, who has been a big supporter of ours early on and did a lot to get our fans to come out and enjoy racing. I expect that's going to be a huge part of 2021 and beyond as we're seeing a lot of demand to attend the racetrack. But the digital side supports the largest percent of our owners and we have great online communities which are very vibrant as well.

   CC: Do you think MyRacehorse is a powerful marketing platform for the sport?

   MB: It's becoming a very significant channel. Our customers are becoming brand ambassadors that are sharing their visits to their horses, the race results they've had, and their connection with the other stakeholders. Our community is very active in sharing that kind of content in their own personal networks. I think that's how categories like racing can achieve scales. When you think about the size of our community and how socially-centric they are and how socially active they are, the fact that with their good experiences, they're going back out and they're sharing that. The numbers are pretty tremendous in terms of how much scale you get by just the network effect of the racehorse owners that we've created.

   CC: What can stakeholders do to help in your efforts?

   MB: I think that there have been those that have been more helpful than others. And I get it. It's new. It's not defined. There's not a lot of precedent for it. But the reality is that if you take a step back as any stakeholder in industry and realize that there's just a lot of passionate, excited people that are now involved in racing, what we need to do is enrich and cultivate that collectively. We need to harness it. I think the fact that whatever we can do to allow these people to experience everything that racing has to offer. Right now, I think we're approaching a situation where with the pandemic restrictions hopefully lifting in the next three to four months, we're going to really turn to the tracks and we're going to look for their support as we want to be able to bring out this community and be able to enjoy the races live and with friends and with family, and have them bring new people out to the races.

   CC: Do you see your category having an impact on wagering?

   MB: Absolutely. You can see it in each race that we have, how much money are into the pools, how disproportionately our horses are relative to the morning-line odds. I think over time, we'll do a lot more work on being able to measure this. But the reality is that when you get connected to the sport, there is a direct correlation to your participation in pari-mutuel. We'll see it more and more and it won't even be so directly correlated to the horses that we have racing, but just the size of the community that is now better educated, and that education is going to manifest itself in much more significant handle because they have become more confident with the product.

   CC: Can you address how significantly the support of B. Wayne Hughes has impacted your success?

   MB: I'm not sure I can totally put it into words. It's been something that I couldn't even have imagined that I'd have a partner with this type of support, this type of commitment, this type of passion for seeing something be done differently and be able to catalyze real change. There's just innovation. There's creativity. As a business partner, there's a lot of accountability, but the reality is that his commitment and passion and love of the sport has been a benefit to us. We wouldn't have the success that we've had in such a short period of time without his support.

   CC: You just announced Monomoy Girl on your platform. Why are purchase of shares limited and what is your goal with this offering?

   MB: We want people to be able to experience every part of this game. One part of this game is competing at the highest level. I think there's not much of a higher level than Monomoy Girl. She is the definition of a champion. We want as many people to participate and go on this journey as possible. The financials, as people will see, are very, very attractive. They're very shareholder-friendly. This is not about having a few people come in and take up a lion's share of it. We want as many people as possible to experience this. So, there'll be very aggressive limits on how much one person can participate.

   CC: What is more important, financial success or a positive experience for your investor?

   MB: It's both. I don't think you're in a positive experience if you're basically not having financial success, but no one does this because they're selling their 401(k) and deciding this is going to be the wave of their future investment. So, at the end of the day, we live in a world in which we have to be fiscally responsible. We have to make sure we get people into horses that provide them a great experience. We have to then take that experience and we have to deliver great content and digital and physical experiences that matched the joys and the thrills of what it is to own a racehorse, but we also want to be good stewards of other investments.

   CC: Can you share some of the other plans you have for MyRacehorse in 2021?

   MB: Our focus now is really going to be to continue to scale. One of the challenges the business has faced in the last couple of months is to keep up with the amount of demand that we've had by new people coming in. People who've had a good experience are telling friends. We're super happy they're signed up. They're downloading the app. They're registering for investments. We've actually only had horses on the website for a handful of days in the last couple of months, just because the overwhelming demand. So, what we focus on aggressively is building out infrastructure and we are committed to making sure that we have more inventory to meet the demand. We are also going to go explore expansion in international markets. The two international markets that we are focused on right now are Australia, which will be launching in the next month or so, and then we'll be going into the UK and Ireland shortly thereafter.

   CC: What does success look like?

   MB: According to a survey that I saw a few years back, there's over nine million people that have a curiosity of horse racing. There's no doubt that we've been losing market share overall to other sport. Success will be when we basically start seeing tremendous growth overall in the industry. Obviously, we want to build a good business and we want to be able to build a big base of customers. But overall, I think the ultimate success is going to be that we bring a real growth trajectory back to racing.

   CC: What are the unique traits in horse racing that need to be exploited by stakeholders to deliver a greater interest from owners and race fans? 

   MB: I think racing has a very unique combination of the ability to have competition at the highest level centered around this majestic animal and the equine athlete and the Thoroughbred and the gaming components. The intersection of those makes it very, very compelling when you think about what you're competing against in terms of mind share for consumer attention. We have to continue to be able to embrace the fact that it's the intersection that's so important. It's not one or the other. It's not just about the experiential component, which is great. It's not just about the gaming component and it's not just about the athlete and the sport. It really is about bringing it all together. Overall, we need to do a better job of making it available. We've got to make it easy to participate in all those things. We have to make it more digestible. It seems to focus on the audiences that are already known. When you expand and you bring them into a world that maybe isn't the easiest to understand, you've got to change. I think that's really what we have to do is get to understand what makes us unique and different. We have to accept the fact that maybe it's not simple and that's okay, but we just got to be able to change the way that we engage and change the way we message and share it, change the way we market to be able to get that message out there. Because once the message is appreciated, once the sport is really understood, it's beautiful and it's going to capture a lot of people.

   CC: What's the best professional advice you've received as a marketer?

   MB: I think the best thing is to ask why, an intellectual curiosity, the ability to question everything. It's really what I wake up every single day and I challenge: why did we do what we did yesterday? Was that the best possible result we could achieve? How could we have done it better? Why did this cause frustration? Why can't we do it differently? Why can't we emulate another role model from a brand or a category that we like? I'm sure my staff will attest to the fact that it can get tiring if you're questioning everything, but that's the best way to be a marketer, to have this pursuit of always doing better. You question why can't we do it better.

   CC: Is there a business mistake that you try to avoid at all costs?

   MB: I think one of the biggest mistakes is being afraid to fail. Early in my career, I was and I think a lot of people are. But the reality is that experimentation, testing, and learning is part of the natural evolution of any business of any category and you've got to embrace it. You've always got to celebrate failure. I think when you really do create a culture, be it in your professional career, be it in your business, be it in the industry, that you embrace trial, you embrace experimentation, you embrace failure, you learn from it, you enjoy it. It's something that Mr. Hughes is as adamant [about] as I am. It's very liberating to have a culture, to have a business philosophy that embraces failure, celebrates failure. If you're not failing, then you're really not trying.

   Carter Carnegie is president of Metrical Consulting and has over 30 years of experience as a sports business professional both in racing and working with sports leagues/events such as the NBA, NFL, and Olympics. Metrical offers marketing solutions and business strategics to brands as well as sports properties.

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Champions Monomoy Girl, Essential Quality Return To Fair Grounds To Prepare For Next Engagements

Champions Monomoy Girl and Essential Quality left Oaklawn in Hot Springs, Ark., late Tuesday morning after successful 2021 debuts over the weekend for Eclipse Award-winning trainer Brad Cox.

Assistant trainer Jorgito Abrego, who oversees Cox's Oaklawn division, said Monomoy Girl and Essential Quality were vanned back to Fair Grounds in New Orleans, La.,  where they have been based and trained this winter, and now, early spring. Essential Quality (4 for 4 overall) won Saturday's $750,000 Southwest Stakes (G3) for 3-year-olds, his first start since clinching an Eclipse Award as the country's champion 2-year-old male in the $2 million Breeders' Cup Juvenile (G1) Nov. 6 at Keeneland.

Monomoy Girl began her farewell tour by winning Sunday's $250,000 Bayakoa Stakes (G3) for older fillies and mares to stretch her career record to 14-2-0 from 16 starts. She was the county's champion 3-year-old filly of 2018 and champion older dirt female last year.

Cox said Essential Quality could return to Hot Springs for the $1 million Arkansas Derby (G1) April 10. Plans are more concrete for Monomoy Girl, who will be pointed for the $1 million Apple Blossom Handicap (G1) April 17 at Oaklawn, Cox said.

“Little more consistent weather there right now,” Cox said. “That would be the main reason we're taking them back down. Neither one of them will run there, obviously.”

Monomoy Girl received a preliminary Beyer Speed Figure of 96 for her two-length Bayakoa victory. It was her first start since winning the $2 million Breeders' Cup Distaff (G1) Nov. 7 at Keeneland and first since Spendthrift Farm purchased the 6-year-old daughter of Tapizar for $9.5 million the following day at Fasig-Tipton's Kentucky Fall Mixed Sale. Monomoy Girl will join Spendthrift's broodmare band in 2022, its stallion sales manager, Mark Toothaker, said in the Larry Snyder Winner's Circle following the Bayakoa.

Bloodstock agent Liz Crow purchased Monomoy Girl for $100,000 at the 2016 Keeneland September Yearling Sale for her original owner, Sol Kumin. Shortly before the Bayakoa, it was revealed that Kumin had bought back into the mare and My Racehorse Stable, which offers fractional ownership to investors, was another of Spendthrift's racing partners.

“You couldn't help but being a little bit nervous,” Toothaker, a Van Buren, Ark., native, said. “She did what she does. She doesn't win always drawing off, just does enough to win. Brad said that's probably why she's still around at 6 years old.”

Favored at 1-5 under regular rider Florent Geroux, Monomoy Girl ($2.40) ran 1 1/16 miles over a sloppy surface in 1:45.92. Lightning was visible southeast of Oaklawn during the post parade. Like Toothaker, Cox said he was a “little bit” nervous leading up to Monomoy Girl's 2021 debut.

“That kind of comes with what she's accomplished,” Cox said moments after sweeping the final three races Sunday. “It's kind of a relief to get it over with.”

Monomoy Girl's 11th stakes victory increased her career earnings to $4,576,818, which ranks 82nd in North American history, according to Equibase, racing's official data gathering organization. Among Oaklawn-raced females, only Eclipse Award winners Midnight Bisou ($7,471,520) and Zenyatta ($7,304,580) have bankrolled more money. Zenyatta won the 2008 and 2010 Apple Blossom en route to champion older dirt female honors. She was also 2010 Horse of the Year. Midnight Bisou used a victory in the 2019 Apple Blossom as a springboard to an Eclipse Award as champion older dirt female.

“We're just very fortunate to be around her and to own her,” Toothaker said. “Look forward to this year and we'll look forward to breeding her to Into Mischief next year. Very exciting.”

Kentucky's Spendthrift stands Into Mischief, North America's leading sire the last two years.

The Southwest and Bayakoa were originally scheduled Feb. 15 before being postponed twice because of severe winter weather. The Bayakoa was Monomoy Girl's first start at Oaklawn.

The post Champions Monomoy Girl, Essential Quality Return To Fair Grounds To Prepare For Next Engagements appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Op/Ed: It’s Time to Challenge Monomoy Girl

Don't get me wrong. I respect Monomoy Girl (Tapizar). She's right up there among the best fillies and mares to compete in any of our lifetimes. But there was something routine about her victory in Sunday's GIII Bayakoa S. at Oaklawn Park.

It was the 16th chapter in what has essentially been the same story from the start. In 15 of her 16 races, she has crossed the wire first, always against fillies and mares while winning in a manner better described as professional rather than breathtaking. There were some decent fillies, including Grade II winner Finite (Munnings) in there, but there was never any doubt who would win the Bayakoa. Monomoy Girl is just a lot better than those horses. She's just a lot better than any filly in training.

The Bayakoa was a tuneup for the April 27 Apple Blossom H. Though it's a $1-million, Grade I race, the Apple Blossom will likely be another one-horse race. So far as what will come after that, her new owners haven't said. But where she goes after the Apple Blossom will tell us a lot about their intentions going forward.

Will the kid gloves come off? It's time for that to happen.

Through her 5-year-old year, Monomoy Girl was owned by the partnership of Michael Dubb, Monomoy Stables, Stuart Grant and Bethlehem Stables, and the group did a masterful job of managing her. They won the two races that matter most for a 3-year-old filly, the GI Kentucky Oaks and the GI Breeders' Cup Distaff. Due to a variety of setbacks, she missed her entire 4-year-old year and, then, the owners were understandably cautious when bringing her back last year as a 5-year-old. She didn't return until May, ran just four times and completed her year with another win in the Distaff and another Eclipse Award.

A few days after the Breeders' Cup, she was sold for $9.5 million at the Fasig-Tipton November Sale, and her new owners, Spendthrift Farm, My Racehorse Stable and Madaket Stable, gave the sport a gift when announcing they would run her this year as a 6-year-old. Presumably, she will be retired at the end of this year after the Breeders' Cup and will settle in at Spendthrift, where she will be among the most valuable broodmares on the planet.

That likely means that there are eight months left before she is done and eight months left to define her career.

The safe route would be to stay in her own division and run in races like the Apple Blossom, the GI La Troienne S., the GI Ogden Phipps S., the GI Personal Ensign S. and the GI Spinster S. before attempting to win the Distaff for a third time.

But what would that prove? She would be heavily favored in each race against overmatched rivals and it's unlikely that anyone would beat her.

Even with an unprecedented third win in the Distaff, should Monomoy Girl stick to running against fillies and mares, she will have retired without an all-important race against males. And that would set her apart from the two greatest fillies of her era. Rachel Alexandra (Medaglia d'Oro) defeated males in the GI Preakness S., the GI Haskell Invitational and in the GI Woodward S. Zenyatta (Street Cry {Ire}) won the richest race on the U.S. calendar, beating males in the GI Breeders' Cup Classic.

Should Monomoy Girl stay in her division and run the table, she'd earn about $2 million on the racetrack. Considering how much they paid for her, how much she is worth as a broodmare and that Spendthrift has very deep pockets, it's doubtful that $2 million really matters to them one way or the other. And if they were in any hurry to retire her, at age six, they had every reason to do so rather than bringing her back to race this year.

The hope is that Spendthrift bought her and brought her back to the races this year, at least in part, so that they could enjoy what could be a terrific ride from an outstanding mare. Winning the La Troienne at 1-5 for the second straight year is not going to accomplish that. Or do anything for her legacy.

It would have been nice to see Monomoy Girl do what her rival Midnight Bisou (Midnight Lute) did when she took on males last year in the $20-million Saudi Cup. Or they might have pointed her for the G1 Dubai World Cup. It's too late for that, but not too late to schedule a post-Apple Blossom campaign that includes races against the boys. I'd like to see her run in a bunch of them, maybe the GI Whitney S., the GI Jockey Club Gold Cup and then the Classic. But I won't complain if they pick only the Classic. That's the race she belongs in.

Spendthrift owner B. Wayne Hughes is a smart businessman and he has every right to try to make as much money off of Monomoy Girl as possible. But he also comes across as someone who understands the history of the sport and is a sportsman. He gave the other great mare he campaigned, Beholder (Henny Hughes), a chance against males and she came through with a dominant win in the 2015 GI Pacific Classic. Let's hope he does the same with Monomoy Girl. Win or lose, she deserves the chance to show the sport just how great she really is.

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