Owner/Breeder Sarah Ramsey Passes At Age 83

Sarah Kathern “Kitten” Ramsey, who along with her husband Ken is the all-time leading owner at Churchill Downs with 510 local wins and a record 32 titles as meet-leading owners, passed away Sunday at age 83.

“It is with great sadness that we share the passing of Sarah Kathern Ramsey,” said Churchill Downs Racetrack President Mike Anderson. “Our hearts are with Ken and his entire family during this very difficult time. She lived a wonderful life, and we'll miss her smiling face in the Churchill Downs winner's circle.”

Ken and Sarah Ramsey won Eclipse Awards as Outstanding Owner in 2004 and 2011, and took both the Outstanding Owner and Breeder titles in 2013 and 2014. They sent out four Breeders' Cup winners, as well as six-figure earners Roses in May, Stephanie's Kitten, Big Blue Kitten, Kitten's Joy, and Oscar Nominated, among others.

Visitations will be held Thursday from 6-9 p.m. at Kerr Brothers Funeral Home at 3421 Harrodsburg Rd. in Lexington and Friday from 6-9 p.m. at Knox Funeral Home at 325 Knox St. in Barbourville, Ky. Her funeral will be Saturday at 2 p.m. (visitation 12-2 p.m.) at East Barbourville Baptist Church at 279 Old 25 E. Barbourville, Ky. and burial will be across the street at Barbourville Cemetery.

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Kirkpatrick & Co. Presents In Their Care: Lindsy Reed The ‘Right Hand’ Of Family Stable That Shocked The Derby

Lindsy Reed sensed trouble the instant the phone rang at approximately 1 a.m. on Dec. 18, 2016. When she heard her mother's frightened voice, she was sure of it.

“You need to get to the farm now. The barn is on fire!” Kay told her.

“Excuse me?”

“Get your ass to the barn!”

When Lindsy finally arrived at Mercury Equine Center in Lexington, Ky. – a facility that represented a  dream come true for her racing family – all that remained of one of three barns was a smoldering tin roof.

She shuddered at the sight.

“It was a feeling of my heart being ripped out of my chest. Right now, I get cold just talking about it,” Lindsy said. “Those horses, just because they're gone doesn't mean I don't remember them and I don't remember how much love they showed me and how much trust they had in me to protect them. And I couldn't do it that night because I wasn't there.”

She could not do anything to bring back the 23 horses — most of them yearlings — that perished in a fire attributed to a rare December lightning strike. Thirteen horses were saved. She committed herself to the future of the 60-acre farm by moving into a renovated house there.

Her father, Eric, was so heartbroken he wondered whether he could continue as a trainer. Much of his equipment and memorabilia were gone. Lindsy's determination and her willingness to be an all-day, everyday presence encouraged him to persevere.

This story, of course, took an unbelievably wonderful turn. Rich Strike, an against-all-odds product of the Reeds' love and devotion, staged a breathtaking rally for unheralded jockey Sonny Leon to win the May 7 Kentucky Derby at 80-1 odds. The former $30,000 claimer, 1-for-7 lifetime, had been in the throes of a five-race losing streak. Only 91-1 Donerail, in 1913, brought home the roses as a longer shot.

“It's shocking and it's exciting,” said Lindsy, 26. “It's great to let the world know that we're here. We're the little guys and we did what the big guys said we couldn't do. We don't have to have 400 head of horses to prove that.”

Eric, Kay and Lindsy continue to apply lessons taught by Eric's father, Herbert. “We put our horses first. We are always at their beck and call,” Kay said. “The main thing is the love for the horses.”

“Basically, she's my right hand,” Kay Reed says of daughter Lindsy

Many say that. The Reed family means it. So much so that they and owner Richard Dawson refused to yield to pressure and pulled another shocker. They spurned a Triple Crown bid to stick to their plan of running distance-loving Rich Strike in the mile-and-a-half Belmont Stakes on June 11.

Lindsy joined the family business in 2015, learning from the ground up and now ranking as an assistant trainer. She was a reluctant participant at first.

“I didn't think the horses were going to be my thing,” she said. “I was young and I was lazy and I didn't want to do the hard work. That passion kind of grew like a wildfire and didn't stop.”

It is impossible to imagine a more driven person. As a backup plan, she is studying medical administration through an online program offered by DeVry University.

“Sleep is invisible to me now, but it's worth it,” she said. “It's another achievement.”

She acknowledges that meeting horses' daily needs appeals to her much more than medical administration. She has become an integral part of Mercury Equine Center, which features 160 stalls, a 5/8-mile training track and an equine pool.

“Basically, she's my right hand,” Kay said.

Lindsy brings a youthful energy and a fresh perspective that energizes her parents. “She's always known about horses. The longer she works with racehorses, the more she's learning and sometimes teaching us new tricks,” Kay said.

Lindsy credits her mother with inspiring her. “She's taught me the seriousness and responsibility of it,” she said. “She's taught me if you want to be taken seriously, you have to act the role and you have to do it daily. She says, 'It's a male-dominated sport, but you're going to show the boys how it's done.'”

Lindsy is still young. Yet she must feel as though she has been through several lifetimes, overcoming tragedy to experience the ultimate triumph that hard-charging Rich Strike delivered.

“He's our phoenix, that's who he is,” she said. “He rose up from the ashes.”

Whatever the future brings, Lindsy will never forget that magical afternoon at Churchill Downs, when she stood beside members of her close-knit family and watched the unthinkable happen.

“I'll cherish it for the rest of my life. I was there the day my daddy proved you can do what you want to do,” she said. “You just have to believe in it.”

Tom Pedulla wrote for USA Today from 1995-2012 and has been a contributor to the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Blood-Horse, America's Best Racing and other publications.

If you wish to suggest someone as a potential subject for In Their Care, please send an email to info@paulickreport.com that includes the person's name and contact information in addition to a brief description of the individual's background.

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Scandinavian Riding Champion Elione Chaves Wins With First Monmouth Park Mount

If Elione Chaves was suffering from jet leg following a nearly 8½-flight from Sweden on Sunday, it didn't show in Monday's first race at Monmouth Park.

The 38-year-old from Brasilia, Brazil, who now calls Malmo, Sweden, home prevailed in a stretch duel with Samy Camacho to capture the opening race on the Memorial Day card with Twisted Treasure for trainer Rafael Schistl.

It marked the first mount at Monmouth Park for the champion Scandinavian rider who has topped the jockey standings in Sweden six of the past eight years. Chaves said he plans to be at Monmouth throughout the summer, riding first call for his good friend Schistl.

The victory came barely 18 hours after he left Stockholm.

“I feel good. I'm very happy to win my first race here,” said Chaves. “I don't know anyone else here so it's a little unusual for me. Right now I am riding for Rafael but we will see what happens.”

Chaves said he met Schistl 16 years ago when both were riding in Brazil. When Schistl left to first ride and then train at Scandinavian tracks he reached out Chaves and invited him to come ride for him.

“I have been there 13 years now,” said Chaves, who has also ridden in Germany, Italy, Singapore, Dubai, Denmark, Germany, and Norway. He said he has been leading rider at various Scandinavian tracks 19 times.

“I decided to come to the United States in March and I tried Oaklawn, but I didn't feel comfortable there. I didn't feel at home,” he said, going 0-for-3 in his brief time in Hot Springs, Ark.

Enter Schistl once again. Schistl told him to try Tampa Downs and that he would give him mounts if he came.

“So I went to Tampa for the last six weeks. I rode six winners,” Chaves said. “Then Rafael said to me 'I am going to Monmouth Park for the summer. Do you want to come with me?' I said yes.”

Chaves' plan is to ride as often as possible during the Monmouth meet with a couple of exceptions when he returns to Sweden and Norway to ride in big races in those countries during the summer. He has ridden more than 1,400 winners overall, with more than half (735) coming in Sweden.

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Toledo Secures Pimlico Riding Title, Russell, Sillaman Tied In Trainer Standings Heading Into Final Day Of Preakness Meet

By the time the high-profile Preakness Meet wraps up with Monday's special Memorial Day holiday program at Pimlico Race Course, there will be significant firsts in both the jockey and trainer standings.

Jevian Toledo will own his ninth career riding title in Maryland but first at Pimlico after eight at Laurel Park. The 27-year-old native of Puerto Rico goes into the finale of the 12-day Preakness Meet with 15 wins, followed by Victor Carrasco with nine. Carrasco won twice Sunday aboard Friar Tuck ($15.20) in Race 6 and By the Sey Shore ($8.80) in Race 7.

Toledo, represented by agent Marty Leonard, has two mounts scheduled for Monday while Carrasco is named in three of eight races.

“I'm feeling good, really good. It means a lot, to be honest. We have a really good colony of jockeys over here, pretty strong, and it feels amazing,” Toledo said. “I've never won the Pimlico meet before in my life, so the first one is pretty special. It's a special place. Everybody looks at the races at Pimlico every day, especially the Preakness, and it's really special to win the meet.”

Toledo registered five multi-win days during Preakness Meet, with hat tricks on opening day, May 12, and Black-Eyed Susan Day, May 20. He kicked off the meet by winning on each of his first five mounts, and also won four in a row May 26-27.

Maryland's overall leading rider in 2015, 2017 and 2021, Toledo won Laurel's 2022 winter meet title before finishing second by one win to 18-year-old apprentice Jeiron Barbosa at its spring stand that preceded Pimlico.

“I have to thank every single trainer and owner for the opportunity, and all the staff. Without the grooms, as a rider it's impossible. I have to thank everybody involved, especially the horses. They're the ones running. We just try to put them in the right spot and get them to the wire first.”

Brittany Russell and Richard Sillaman are tied atop the trainer standings with seven wins apiece. Russell has horses entered in two races Monday, while Sillaman had none in over the final two racing days.

Mike Trombetta is next with five wins following By the Sey Shore's victory, but has just one starter Monday.

Even without a win Monday, a tie makes Russell, 32, the first female to win more than one meet title in Maryland. She earned her first championship at Laurel's 2022 spring stand to join Karen Patty (1992 Pimlico spring), Mary Eppler (2016 Laurel fall) and Linda Rice (T-1st, 2017 Laurel winter) as other women to be meet-leading trainers.

“That's amazing. I never would have thought that,” Russell said. “Again, I don't think of it in those terms but it's pretty cool to do it. At the end of the day this is a tough game and it's hard to win races, period, so to be the leading trainer is a big deal no matter what.”

Russell notched two-win days May 13, 20 and 27, with all seven of her wins coming with Toledo aboard. With strings at both Pimlico and Laurel, she also won five races at three different tracks May 26 and 27 – Pimlico, Delaware Park and Charles Town.

“It's awesome. It feels pretty good,” Russell said. “It sort of feels like we've been able to keep the momentum going. We have a lot of horses that we're just getting right and getting in the entries, so I feel like we could have a really good summer ahead of us.

“The goal is to just keep winning races and to keep the horses and the clients happy,” she added. “To have another title, it's nice for the whole team. The hard work they put in shows up and pays off. It's a big deal.”

For Sillaman, 61, it would mark the first training title in a career spent with horses. The Anne Arundel County native followed in the footsteps of his father, Robert, who also trained horses in Maryland.

“I've been doing this my whole life,” Sillaman said. “I was an assistant trainer for Jerry Robb on and off for a long time, back in the 80s and 90s when he had Little Bold John. I was his groom for five years and won 27 stakes rubbing him. He was one of a kind.”

Sillaman has seven wins and one second from 11 starters at the meet. Six of his wins have come from eight starters for Herman Braude, making Braude the leading owner.

“It's been phenomenal. We've been lucky enough that the races went and I got the right kind of horses for the condition book, I guess,” Sillaman said. “They're all claimers, and they're just doing well. Most of them I got down in Tampa and they've just transitioned great up here.”

According to Equibase statistics, Sillaman is a multiple stakes-winning trainer with 279 career victories since his first in 1983. He had two wins May 13 and 27, and has won two races apiece during the meet with 4-year-old geldings Ghost Stalker and Jimmy the Kid.

“I was on my own a couple times, but things are just clicking now. I've got some really good clients and great help. My help's been with me for six years, they're just phenomenal,” he said. “The last couple years have been really good, percentage-wise. I've always had between 12 and 16 horses and now it's up to 20 with a few more coming in. I'm enjoying it. My wife just retired a couple months ago and we're just enjoying it.”

Without a starter Monday, Sillaman will be watching closely. Russell has the narrow 3-1 program favorite, 13-time career winner Stroll Smokin, in Race 4, a starter-optional claimer scheduled for five furlongs on the grass. She also has Reassured, rated at 6-1 on the morning line, in Race 6, a 1 1/16-mile starter-optional claimer also carded for the turf.

“It's exciting. I'm low-key, though. I don't get too excited because I know it can turn on you in a heartbeat and you can go 0-for-30 before you know it and nobody's talking to you and nobody's looking at you,” Sillaman said. “It's exciting now, though. I'm enjoying it. I've got a lot of people rooting for me, lots of friends and family, really pulling for me.”

Russell claimed Stroll Smokin on behalf of Stuart Grant's The Elkstone Group for $16,000 in February at Laurel, and the 7-year-old gelding has won both times for his new connections including a May 8 victory that helped the trainer clinch her first title on Mother's Day.

“He's so cool. I really have to thank Stuart for claiming that horse,” Russell said. “We love that horse more than anything. He won a race on closing day that helped us win the last title; if he ends up winning on closing day to help us win it again he's never, ever leaving my barn.”

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