Breeders’ Cup Presents Connections: Forster Readies His ‘Favorite Player’ For Dirt Mile

By his own admission, Grant Forster is not a “big fish in a small pond” kind of guy. He was extremely successful at Emerald Downs in the early years of his training career but made the decision to move to Kentucky in 2007 to “take on the sport's biggest players.”

Forster's stable was reduced by the move, but 13 years later the trainer is preparing to saddle his first Breeders' Cup starter. Gulliver Racing, Craig Drager, and Dan Legan's Pirate's Punch, a 4-year-old son of Shanghai Bobby, will be one of the top choices in the Grade 1 Dirt Mile on Nov. 7 at Keeneland.

“It's obviously super exciting,” said Forster, 46. “Everybody in horse racing, whether you're a jockey, a trainer, a groom, wants to be associated with a horse in the Triple Crown or the Breeders' Cup. Now, not only do we have a horse in the Breeders' Cup, but we have a live chance to win.

“Winning a race like that would really be big for my career. We're a smaller stable but we've been fortunate; it always seems like we've had one stakes horse in the barn. We've won some nice graded stakes, and we've placed in nice graded stakes, but we've never won a Grade 1, never competed in the Breeders' Cup, so to do that, that's why we're all here.”

Pirate's Punch won the G3 Salvator Mile at Monmouth Park last Saturday by two lengths, returning to the winner's circle after a disqualification from victory in the G3 Phillip H. Iselin at the New Jersey oval on Aug. 22.

“When he crossed the wire first in the Iselin at Monmouth, the Breeders' Cup really entered the conversation,” Forster said. “The horse he beat, Warrior's Charge, was one of the top contenders in the division. Even though we were disqualified, we felt we had the best horse on that day; we looked him in the eye and beat him.”

Warrior's Charge returned to finish a disappointing eighth in the G3 Ack Ack at Churchill Downs on Sept. 26 after setting a wicked early pace, but Pirate's Punch showed he has not regressed off the Iselin effort. His Salvator Mile victory was accomplished in easy style, with jockey Jorge Vargas, Jr. allowing the gelding to ease up in the final sixteenth of a mile.

“It was a nice redemption,” said Forster. “He has consistently improved, and his confidence is at an all-time high. He's just a lovely horse, loves to train, loves attention, and loves people. As he's accomplished more he's gotten more proud of himself, and he thinks he's king of the world now!”

It's a good feeling heading into the Breeders' Cup, even with all the uncertainty of 2020.

Forster, a native of British Columbia, Canada, has long hoped for a shot at the top of the sport. A son of two Canadian horsemen, he attended the University of Arizona Race Track Industry Program and began his career as a media relations specialist at Emerald Downs in 1997.

Three years later, Forster found himself really missing the day-to-day contact with horses and returned to working for his British Columbia Racing Hall of Fame father, Dave Forster, as a groom at Emerald. He worked his way up to assistant trainer and took out his own license in 2003.

Forster earned several leading trainer titles at Emerald and saddled the winners of three consecutive editions of the Washington Oaks, as well as the winner of the 2005 edition of the G3 Longacres Mile. He was also successful during winter meetings at Oaklawn Park in Arkansas.

“I had some wonderful years there and trained for wonderful people,” Forster said. “I felt like I'd accomplished everything I could out there, though, so to me it was more exciting to be based in Kentucky.”

So far, the top horse in Forster's stable has been the 2008 mare Brushed By A Star, by Eddington. She was a $10,000 yearling at the Keeneland September sale, but earned $441,991 on the track with wins in the G2 Chilukki and G2 Molly Pitcher Stakes under Forster's care.

Still, Pirate's Punch has worked his way into Forster's heart in a way none of his previous trainees has been able to touch.

Pirate's Punch, Jorge Vargas Jr. aboard

“If I was a coach in high school basketball, he'd be my favorite player,” Forster admitted. “He's run well for us every time, just his consistency on the track is remarkable. He's also an unbelievably kind horse. He loves to work with people, he loves being around people. He just wants them to pet him, but not in any kind of needy way; he just is a very social horse.

“He lives in the first stall on the corner, nearest the office. He's an absolute savage for carrots! We go through many many bags of baby carrots each week, and we're more than happy to provide those for him.”

Pirate's Punch was first in training with Jeff Mullins in California, but moved to Forster's care after breaking his maiden for a $30,000 tag at Ellis Park in July of 2019. The gelding immediately stepped up to win an allowance race at Indiana Grand, then finished third in the G3 Super Derby at Louisiana Downs.

Now, Pirate's Punch has a record of five wins, three seconds, and four thirds from 17 starts for earnings of $332,751.

“We got him at just the right time,” Forster said. “He'd been gelded, broken his maiden and gained some confidence. He's just continued to improve ever since.

“When we got him, what he had accomplished and what he turned into, hopefully it's a strong commercial for our program.”

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Baffert 1-2 As Improbable Defeats Maximum Security In Awesome Again

With his highly regarded stablemate pressured while a joint second between horses going to the far turn, Bob Baffert's rapidly improving Improbable kicked into high gear from dead last and swept to an emphatic 4 1/2-length score in Saturday's Grade 1, $300,000 Awesome Again Stakes at Santa Anita in Arcadia, Calif., a key prep for the G1, $6 million Breeders' Cup Classic at Keeneland Nov 7.

Ridden by Drayden Van Dyke, Improbable got a mile and one eighth in 1:49.01 while notching his third consecutive G1 victory.

The Awesome Again, named for the 1998 Breeders' Cup Classic winner that was bred in Ontario, Canada, by Frank Stronach and owned by his Stronach Stables, is a Breeders' Cup “Win & You're In” Challenge Race qualifier, with the winner earning a fees-paid berth into the Grade I, $6 million Breeders' Cup Classic at Keeneland on Nov. 7.

Longshot Take the One O One, ridden by Jose Valdivia, Jr., set a solid pace while Maximum Security, regarded by many as the best horse in America, sat a joint second between Sleepy Eyes Todd and Midcourt, while Take the One O One opened up to a two-length lead a quarter mile out, only to see the winner sweep by four-deep turning for home.

“I knew I was coming in here with two really good horses,” said Baffert, who collected his fourth Awesome Again win.  “Maximum Security was in that scrum and they were really running up close (together).  I saw Drayden, he knew what was happening, so he just sat back.  He rode a great race, he knew what was going on, he took his time, rode him with patience.

“He's had good luck with this horse.  He loves this track.  He seems to be better in the gate here, that's why we ran him here.  I hate to see my horses have to beat the other horse but 'Max' ran gallantly.  He fended off the speed, but the next one is the big one.  But today, it was all about Improbable.”

Owned by WinStar Farm, LLC, China Horse Club International, Ltd. and SF Racing, LLC, Improbable, fifth as the favorite behind Maximum Security in the 2019 Kentucky Derby and most recently a winner of the G1 Whitney at Saratoga Aug. 1 and the G1 Hollywood Gold Cup at Santa Anita June 6, was off at 9-5 and paid $5.60, $2.40 and $2.10.

“The gate guy did a fabulous job with him, holding him still, he got out clean,” said Van Dyke, who has now won six races with Improbable, including the Hollywood Gold Cup.  “I was going to see what everyone else was gonna do, and they did what they did and I did what I did and it worked out good.”

With regard to his thoughts on the upcoming Breeders' Cup Classic, Van Dyke took an introspective approach.  “I take it a day at a time and I'm grateful for this win.  He showed a different tactic today, which he showed before when he was two.  He used to come off the pace more than usual…He's been training super, so I was just waiting for the stretch to come.

“It's awesome, especially for Bob and the owners, everyone involved.  I'm grateful for the chance.  He's gotten better and better.  He's a great horse.”

With today's win, Improbable, a 4-year-old colt by City Zip out of the A.P. Indy mare Rare Event, collected his fourth G1 win and improved his overall mark to 14-7-3-0.  With the winner's share of $180,000, he increased his earnings to $1,709,520.

Maximum Security, who became the only horse in Kentucky Derby history to be disqualified from victory for a racing infraction, had a six-race winning streak snapped in what was his third start for Baffert.  Pressured between horses throughout, he battled gamely for the place, finishing a half length in front of Midcourt.

Reunited with Luis Saez, who last rode him in the $20 million Saudi Cup three starts back on Feb. 29, Maximum Security was the 1-2 favorite in a field of five and paid $2.10 and $2.10.

“There was a lot of pressure along the way and he couldn't get comfortable, but that's how these races go,” said Saez.  “You win sometimes and don't others.  The good thing is he pulled up pretty good, so let's see how next time goes.  He was fighting at the end of the race, but we lost.”

Off at 12-1 with Victor Espinoza, Midcourt paid $2.40 to show.

Fractions on the race were 23.33, 46.36, 1:09.79 and 1:35.65.

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The Friday Show Presented By Woodbine: Historical Setback In Kentucky?

The shockwaves felt on Thursday when the Kentucky Supreme Court unanimously ruled against the claim that certain historical horse racing (HHR) machines constitute pari-mutuel wagering were felt all the way from the state capitol in Frankfort to financial markets on Wall Street.

In the immediate aftermath of the ruling – in a case brought to the courts by the anti-gambling Family Foundation – Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear and state Senate majority floor leader Damon Thayer spoke out in support of historical horse racing wagering that has helped lift Kentucky purses to among the best in the nation.

Share prices in Churchill Downs Inc. – whose Derby City Gaming facility in Louisville generated the largest market share of the $2.2 billion wagered on historical racing in the last fiscal year – took a nearly 10% fall after the news broke. CDI officials issued a statement suggesting legislative relief may be needed in the wake of the Supreme Court ruling.

In this week's edition of the Friday Show, publisher Ray Paulick and editor-in-chief Natalie Voss assess what may happen next with historical horse racing in Kentucky.

Watch the Friday Show below.

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Michiganders McGowan And ‘Pippi’ Make Their Maiden Voyage To Keeneland September Sale

It's often true that one never forgets their first time visiting Keeneland, whether it's for the races or a sale. Courtney McGowan's version of that story, though, is different than most.

McGowan, 37, first set foot on the Lexington, Ky., property Tuesday evening and unloaded her chestnut Fed Biz filly from the trailer after an eight-hour drive from central Michigan. The filly's there to sell Thursday as the maiden offering of the McGowan Thoroughbreds program, both as a breeder and a consignor, bringing to a crescendo McGowan's crash course in chasing her dreams.

“This is the first Thoroughbred I've ever bred,” McGowan said. “I've been dreaming of this since I was eight years old.”

A native of Northern California, McGowan was introduced to the Thoroughbred world through some family members who raced and bred in the Northwest, and she caught the horse bug early spending her summers on their farms. She'd planned on staying in the region after some time spent in the Mountain Time Zone for school and other pursuits, but that plan changed six years ago when her career as a retail store manager sent her elsewhere.

“I went into the manager training program in Portland, Ore., and I was supposed to go north to Washington, and the next thing I knew, they said, 'You're going to Michigan.'” McGowan said. “I went, 'I'm sorry, where?'”

The job was in Grand Rapids, but McGowan set herself up in Sand Lake, a single-blinking-stoplight town that'll get you into the city in short order after a quick trip down US-131. She had no family in Michigan, but she had a couple paint horses that came with her on the trip east.

The Michigan-bred program isn't what it used to be, owing to a decades-long decline that's left the state without a Thoroughbred racetrack since 2017, but McGowan never lost her love of the breed, and especially its bloodlines, that she developed as a horse-crazy child. When a friend sent her the listing for an unraced Spanish Steps broodmare prospect in Kentucky named Spanish Thunder, the gears started turning quickly.

Sire Spanish Steps didn't immediately ring a bell for McGowan until she saw he was a full-brother to mega-sire Unbridled's Song. The mare never raced, owing to a bowed tendon, but she had some Grade 1 winners on her page and McGowan loved her physical. She admitted it was a bit of an impulse buy, but it was a long time coming.

“I had finally come into a financial situation where I could start looking beyond my two riding horses,” she said, “and my best friend was looking online, and sent me this message that said, 'Oh my God, you have to have this mare.' Life gets in the way, and you can get discouraged and think, 'Well, you're never going to achieve that.' When I saw that mare, I thought, 'I'm buying her. We're doing this.'”

That decision was quick and easy. Choosing Spanish Thunder's first partner took some time.

“She's a phenomenal mare – great mind, great conformation, just a compact mare,” McGowan said. “I wanted to find a stallion that could lengthen her out. She has an old bowed tendon, and I wanted a stallion that had some longevity, and I spent many, many hours doing bloodline analysis of what was going to cross the best. I ultimately landed on Fed Biz because I liked his dam line, and I obviously love Giant's Causeway (the sire of Fed Biz). My ultimate goal was finding a cross for making a successful athlete.”

McGowan admitted to growing up as a city girl, but her approach to her new endeavor was to be hands-on throughout the process. The first time she'd ever crossed over the Kentucky state line was taking Spanish Thunder into the state last spring to be bred.

She tried to be hands-on with the foaling, but the filly had other ideas.

“The baby popped out while I was at work on a Friday,” McGowan said “When I came back, she was on the wrong side of the fence.”

McGowan nicknamed the chestnut “Pippi” after the children's book character Pippi Longstocking – a fellow free-spirited young redhead.

The newly-minted breeder immediately liked what she saw, and that didn't change as the filly grew. The mantra of McGowan's fledgling breeding operation is “attractive on paper, irresistible in person,” and with Pippi, she felt she was onto something.

“She throws a temper, and then looks at you and says, 'Okay, fine. I'm done,' and she gets over it,” McGowan said. “She's got a great brain on her. I can't complain about her conformation. I can't find a fault in the filly.

“I want an attractive horse that when you pull them out of the stall, everyone goes, 'wow,'” she continued. “That's what I was ultimately going for, and with Pippi, that's what I got. I'm not just breeding for a racehorse. I want to set up my babies to have the best life during and after racing. I want something that's attractive to anybody outside of the racing industry.”

Making sure her foals are bred to succeed at a vocation beyond racing factored heavily into McGowan's mating decision with Pippi. Though Thoroughbreds were the family business, her own hands-on background with horses has primarily been from the Western disciplines, so she was fully aware of all the things a horse can do besides go fast. If McGowan could give her foals a better shot at a productive life after the track through her genetic choices, she was set on doing it.

“I've always loved the Thoroughbreds,” she said. “I've always loved watching them race, and I love the versatility of them, because a lot of my friends are in the hunter jumper world, which Thoroughbreds excel at after the track. I love that versatility – being able to run flat out, and love running, and being able to transition that into the fearlessness and heart to jump over these amazing jumps, and just love what they're doing.”

Now that she's on the sales grounds at Keeneland, McGowan remains a one-woman show, owing both to her status as a small-time seller with just one horse to offer and COVID-19 restrictions keeping some friends away who'd planned on helping her through the process.

Those restrictions also mean consignors are largely letting their showpeople lead their horses through the ring when it's time to sell this year. If she ends up doing it herself, McGowan will have an especially unique hands-on experience Thursday when offering Pippi, who is cataloged as Hip 3880.

Of course, there are plenty of tough realities the duo will have to stare down as they head to the ring. In a market becoming ever-more selective, Book 6 of the Keeneland September sale can be a tough spot to make commerce happen, especially commerce of any kind of significance. Offering a horse from a state-bred program with no racetrack probably won't help, either.

Despite the challenges, McGowan is approaching the sale with the long game in mind. Selling the horse under her own shingle instead of through a consignor was a conscious choice, and one she hopes will stick in the memories of shoppers if they like what they see at the end of the shank.

“I have the Western show experience,” she said. “I know how to present a nice-looking horse. I ultimately decided to do that just to get my name out there. Even though I'm a small-time breeder, I'm breeding quality over quantity.”

For someone who's had a hand in every part in Pippi's life, from planning the mating to walking her through the ring, opening that hand and letting the filly go might seem wrought with emotional landmines. There is no shortage of tearful goodbyes when a horse and the people responsible for their care part ways, and it's a long drive back to Michigan with an empty trailer.

McGowan said that wouldn't be the case with her and Pippi. She's been preparing from the moment she saw the little redhead on the wrong side of the fence.

“I don't necessarily think it's going to be hard,” she said. “Yes, she's my first foal, and she is kind of the culmination of my dream, but from day one, it's always been, 'I'm not keeping her.' When I first laid eyes on her, the first thing I thought was, 'Oh my God, she's red.' I crossed two bays and I got a red. The second thing I thought was from that moment on, as awesome as this is, I'm in this as a business. As nice as she is, keeping her would be a disservice to her. I can't hold on to her. She needs to go do something.”

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