Longtime NYRA Employee Eddie Brown Dies

Eddie Brown, who worked for many years at Aqueduct Racetrack, Belmont Park and Saratoga Race Course, most recently as the New York Racing Association's assistant clerk of scales, has passed away, NYRA announced Sunday. Brown, who was 85, retired in 2019 and lived in Seaford, NY.

A racetrack to the core, Brown turned a childhood love of horse racing into a career on the track that lasted more than 65 years. He was a throwback, a colleague with great reverence for the sport, an encyclopedic knowledge of its history and a love for sharing the wisdom of what he knew with fellow employees and fans. He fell in love with racing as a boy attending Jamaica Racetrack and made his way in the sport galloping horses and working as an assistant to the trainers, Frank Wright and Lefty Nickerson. Joining NYRA in 1972, he worked as a valet with Hall of Fame riders Angel Cordero, Jr., Steve Cauthen, Jerry Bailey and Pat Day.

Brown was Day's valet when he won the 1989 Belmont Stakes on Easy Goer, which he once described as his favorite memory of the “Test of the Champion.” And Brown maintained close friendships with all those riders, especially Bailey, who when working with NBC at Belmont or Saratoga always made a beeline for the jockey room to see him.

Brown, a widower, was laid to rest Saturday at Pinelawn Memorial Park in Pinelawn, NY. Krauss Funeral Home handled the arrangements and has a tribute page on its website where anyone is welcome to leave a note that it will pass along to the family. In the coming days, NYRA will honor Brown with a moment of silence.

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Acclaimed Florida Horseman Luke McKathan Passes Away

James Bryan “Luke” McKathan, Sr., the patriarch of one of Florida's most successful racing families and an accomplished horseman and pinhooker, died Feb. 14 at the age of 89.

According to a lengthy profile on the McKathan family in a 2004 edition of the Florida Horse magazine, Luke McKathan was born and raised on a family farm in Alabama, where he picked cotton, and left home at 13 in search of a better life.

He began his career in racing with Standardbreds and found a job with legendary harness racing trainer and driver Billy Haughton. He branched out and became a Quarter Horse trainer before shifting gears again and becoming a Thoroughbred trainer in 1968.
McKathan's next stop was Marion County, Florida where he and his wife Jocelyn opened McKathan Farms in Reddick.

“I moved to Ocala as an alternative to being at the racetrack,” he told the magazine. “I was starving to death at the racetrack and you could do that anywhere. When I first came to Ocala, I was surprised that there were so many horsemen, but so few trainers. I didn't know if I would be successful and the first few years were difficult.”

After his early struggles, McKathan thrived while establishing himself as one of the most astute and versatile horsemen in the region. He seemed to be good at whatever he did, particularly when it came to pinhooking.

“He was very talented at communicating with the horses,” said his nephew David McKathan. “He was just very good at it. He was the best I've ever seen around a horse.”

McKathan became a mentor to many, including horseman Casey Seaman.

“He's an amazing man,” Seaman told the Florida Horse. “I've trained here for 10 years and I have learned so much. He's been my hero since making the decision to move to Florida. He thinks of the most difficult situations, applies common sense, and produces positive results.”

As one of the first to master the pinhooking game, McKathan had problems with the way horses were showcased at the 2-year-old sales and was instrumental in changing how the pre-sale works were conducted.

“I had to convince the sales company to have a horse work by itself and not in the company of another horse,” McKathan told the Florida Horse. “You always had to work horses together, and you'd find yourself selling one horse and bringing the other horse home. Everyone should have a few seconds to showcase what their horse can do so that the buyers will have the opportunity to see what the racing prospect is capable of doing.”

McKathan was also a tremendous teacher and taught his sons J.B., who passed away in 2019, and Kevin the business. They started their own consignment named McKathan Bros. and had one of their first big successes when privately purchasing 1997 GI Kentucky Derby and GI Preakness S. winner Silver Charm for Bob Baffert. Often teaming up with Baffert, they were also involved in the careers of Real Quiet, Captain Steve, Silverbulletday and American Pharoah.

“The words 'no' and 'can't' weren't acceptable answers,” Kevin McKathan said of his father to the Florida Horse. “He would either make you or break you. He would give you all you could handle and in the end you were better for it.”

McKathan is survived by Jocelyn McKathan, his siblings Shirley and Miles, his children Kevin, Bo, and Brenda and several grandchildren.

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Injury Claims Young Sire Speightster At Age 10

Speightster, a Grade 3 winner and young sire who recently relocated to Canada, was euthanized on Feb. 6 after suffering an irreparable hind leg injury in his stall, Canadian Thoroughbred reports.

The 10-year-old son of Speightstown had relocated to Northern Dawn Stables in Hillsburgh, Ontario last month after being purchased by Ontario-based breeders Jay and Christine Hayden. Speightster stood his first four years at stud at WinStar Farm in Kentucky before moving north of the border.

From three crops of racing age, Speightster has sired 88 winners, and his combined progeny earnings exceed $5.4 million.

Speighter had already made an impression in Canada with Woodbine stakes winners Aubrieta and Dreaming of Drew. His other runners of note include stakes winners Door Buster, Tantrum, and That Kenney Kid, as well as Grade 3-placed Tough to Tame.

A homebred for WinStar Farm, Speightster won three of four career starts and earned $368,800, highlighted by a win in the Grade 3 Dwyer Stakes.

Read more at Canadian Thoroughbred.

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Grade 3 Winner Adcat Dies In Korea At Age 26

Adcat, a Grade 3 winner and veteran sire, died on Dec. 30, per Korea Racing Authority records. He was 26.

The son of Storm Cat had resided in Korea since the summer of 2007 after beginning his stud career at Farnsworth Farms in Florida for the 2001 breeding season.

Adcat was a New York homebred for Gallagher's Stud, which campaigned the horse in partnership with Caesar Kimmel and Phillip Solondz. He broke his maiden in the summer of his 3-year-old season, and finished second in the Japan Racing Association Stakes at Laurel Park to finish the campaign.

The horse achieved his biggest accolade during his 4-year-old season, when he closed sharply to win the Grade 3 New Hampshire Sweepstakes Handicap at Rockingham Park. He bolstered his resume that season with a trio of stakes placings in New York.

In his final season, Adcat won the Mohawk Handicap at Belmont Park and placed in three stakes races, including a runner-up effort in the G3 Laurel Turf Cup Stakes at Laurel Park.

Adcat retired with five wins in 28 starts for earnings of $435,597.

His domestic-born runners are led by multiple Grade 2 winner Briecat, and stakes winners Cat Can Do and Survicat. His highlight as a broodmare sire is the Grade 3-placed stakes winner Temper Mint Patty.

Adcat sold to Korean connections for $52,000 at the 2006 Ocala Breeders' Sales Co. Fall Mixed Sale, and he was exported the following year. His highest placing on Korea's general sire list came in 2016, when he finished 33rd.

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