My RTIP Story: For Grad Offerman, It Is Possible To Go Home Again

There is an old adage in American society that says, “you can never go home again.” It's a saying that speaks of nostalgia, how the places and the memories we made in childhood are always cast in a rosier hue than reality remembers.   

But sometimes, just sometimes, home is exactly how one remembers it and the places and the things we learned to love as children thrill us even more as adults.  

Andrew Offerman is one of the lucky few in Thoroughbred racing whose career led him right back to the racetrack to the place he fell in love with racing. 

“I didn't expect I would come back, and I was open to pretty much any opportunity,” said Offerman, who grew up in the suburbs of Minneapolis and now works as the senior vice president of racing at Canterbury Park. “It just so happened that things transpiring around the time made it possible to come home, and those same changes helped me progress into the role I'm in today.”  

It was at Canterbury Park where Offerman first discovered racing through his grandmother and aunt, who owned and ran horses out of the Minnesota track.   

“I was at the races with them from a young age and I enjoyed everything that went into race days and the excitement that it brought,” said Offerman. “I have pictures of me in the winner's circle from when I was just a couple years old. My aunt still races horses, but my grandmother passed about 10 years ago.   

“Those times were what spurred my interest in the track, but that was really my only true exposure to racing though through high school and even college. It was just what I knew as my home track. I started working at Canterbury as an intern in 2005 doing media and PR. I did that throughout undergrad while I was going to school at Gustavus Adolphus College.

“For whatever reason, I was captivated by horse racing in general. I did a lot of journalism work as an undergraduate and I was heavily involved in my college newspaper, so I always found the tack to be a fascinating microcosm of society. I loved the totality of the track and all the experiences you could have there. But not having much exposure to the industry outside of Canterbury, I didn't really have a broad perspective about what kinds of opportunities were out there.” 

Upon graduating with his undergraduate degree, Offerman found himself — as so many young people do — not quite settled in terms of where his professional life would take him. While he tooled around with professional programs like law school and other continuing education opportunities, he found the University of Arizona's Race Track Industry Program and was hooked.   

“Hearing about the RTIP, I knew I was interested because it was an opportunity to get that full picture of what the industry had to offer and it was the chance to get a master's degree while learning more about an industry that I was passionate about,” said Offerman. “It was the natural step to blend my skills and interests. Knowing how niche the industry can be within even the states it participates in, it seemed like the best place to get a broad perspective of how it all works.” 

“I knew I wanted to be on the operational side of the business,” said Offerman. “I'm fascinated by the business itself and especially how the facilities work.”

Offerman's internship took him to Belmont Park and Saratoga, where some of the grandest racing in the country takes place. But after four months in New York, with his internship complete and his degree in hand, the opportunity Offerman had been hoping to find was in the exact place he had left; home in Minnesota as the live racing coordinator for Canterbury Park.

“There was, I think, an understanding in the RTIP that opportunities can be few and far between based solely on the number of racetracks that are out there,” said Offerman. “It just happened to work out that I was able to come back. I'm one of the fortunate few that gets the chance to live and work where they grew up, but also where they first experienced horse racing which is really, really cool. Any time you have an opportunity to go home in this industry you have to be grateful.”

In the decade since he joined the Canterbury Park team, Offerman has climbed several rungs on the ladder to arrive where he is now as senior vice president of racing operations.

“The way the RTIP helps you is two-fold,” explained Offerman. “The broad experience of the different things you go to see and participate in is unique. You receive a wide breadth of knowledge in the industry which presents itself in terms of opportunities to show employers and coworkers that you could do a lot of different things and contribute to the overall organization.

Andrew Offerman

“There is also an amazing network that you establish early on in your career. If you take advantage of that during the program you can leave with an amazing catalog of people who can be very helpful in getting information to you and that can connect you to people you don't know in short order. In a complicated industry with a lot of moving pieces, and where things can sometimes go wrong, that is invaluable.”

While he credits the RTIP for the connections he made in establishing a career at home, Offerman was additionally lucky during his time in Arizona to meet his partner, Jen Perkins, who works as the Veterinarian Services Director for the Stronach Group and is also a graduate of the program.

Back where it all started, Offerman counts himself lucky to spend his days at the track that started it all for him and works to create that same sense of excitement and anticipation for Canterbury Park patrons that helped him fall in love with the sport.

“When people visit a racetrack, they can connect the dots in terms of thinking, 'OK, there is the stable and those are the people who take care of the horses. Here I can also see the kind of day-to-day work that goes into getting a horse ready for the races.' That is maybe not completely intuitive, but people have a cursory understanding of that,” said Offerman. “But when you look at trying to understand what goes in to getting those horses to the races, coming up with how races are put together, how information gets to the public, how wagering transpires, what actually goes on to putting on the show each day including asking the question, how do we get people to come out and ensure they have a good time? … All of those facets of the industry are a unique blend of gambling.

“It's like a minor league sport operation and that's always been fun for me to think about. It's not just about horse care or gambling, it's about how the pieces come together to entertain and ensure horse people putting on the show are getting the most out of the experience, that the horses are being put in the best conditions to be safe and successful, and that we're doing all we can to create a fun environment and ensuring people come back. It's a way to help expose new customers to the sport, to the same kid that I was at one point, and to have the opportunity to create a life-long fan. Making sure that the whole model works is what really appeals to me.”

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American Dream: English Apprentice William Humphrey Gets First Stateside Winner Thursday

Richard Burnsworth's 6-year-old gelding Zorb sprung a 9-1 upset in Thursday's second race at Laurel Park, rolling home by 4 ¼ lengths to give English jockey William Humphrey his first victory in the United States.

Humphrey, 20, who rides with a seven-pound weight allowance, had been winless in his first 11 stateside mounts, including 0-for-7 this year. Zorb ($20.20), a son of 2013 Florida Derby (G1) and Kentucky Derby (G1) winner Orb trained by Anthony Farrior, was his fifth mount since arriving in Maryland.

“I'm stuck for words, to be honest with you. I've gone a long time without a winner, even back in England,” Humphrey said. “It's nice to blow the cobwebs off.”

In Thursday's third-level claimer for 3-year-olds and up, Humphrey positioned himself in the clear two wide pressing favored pacesetter The Cairo Kid, who went the opening quarter-mile in 22.89 seconds and a half in 46.15. The Cairo Kid straightened for home with a three-length advantage but was unable to withstand the late rush of Zorb, who moved to even terms at the eighth pole and drew clear to win in 1:05.58 over a fast main track.

“I was actually happy with where I was. When I just started to give him a squeeze, I felt like I've actually got a lot of horse underneath me,” Humphrey said. “I knew that he had been running further than this, so I was confident that he would stick out the distance well. He ran through the line really strongly for me.”

Humphrey worked for trainers Simon and Ed Crisford at Gainsborough Stables in Newmarket, eventually becoming their apprentice. His first win came in his 10th professional mount in December 2020 aboard a horse named Blue Whisper – one of just two flat horses trained by his mother, Sarah, at her West Wratting base where she has mostly steeplechase runners.

It was Grade 1-winning jockey Aidan Coleman, who had been riding for his mother, that encouraged Humphrey to pursue a career as a jockey. Humphrey made his U.S. debut Dec. 3, 2021 at Tampa Bay Downs, where he was galloping horses for trainer and countryman Graham Motion.

Humphrey had three more mounts last December and rode three more races in January before heading north with Motion's string. He made his Maryland debut running sixth with Confusion Baby Boy April 2 at Laurel.

“I'd always loved American racing, even when I was back in England. To be honest with you, I was finding it hard in England and I went over to Tampa and was galloping for Graham Motion, who has just been an unbelievable supporter,” Humphrey said. “He kindly gave me a few rides there and I just caught the bug and loved it. It was a big decision to stay, but I'm absolutely loving it and excited for the future.”

Humphrey continues to spend mornings working for Motion at the Fair Hill Training Center in Elkton, Md. Represented by agent Simon Purdy, he had one other mount on Thursday's card, finishing off the board with Lola Flo in Race 7. He is named in one race Friday and two races on Saturday's Spring Stakes Spectacular program, including the Motion-trained Mrs. Postman in Race 5, a maiden special weight scheduled for Laurel's world-class turf course.

“When Graham and his team moved from Tampa to Fair Hill, I went up and started galloping horses there,” Humphrey said. “It's a bit colder [than Tampa], but I love it. It's my first time being in America, and I just can't believe how friendly everyone is and how supportive. Everyone really seems to want you to do well.”

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Firsts All Around: Punchy Girl’s Rainbow Miss A First Oaklawn Stakes Win For Owner-Breeder, Jockey, And Trainer

A little over a year after her first career victory as an owner, Sara Patterson was celebrating her first career stakes victory when Punchy Girl delivered the knockout in last Saturday's $150,000 Rainbow Miss Stakes at Oaklawn Park in Hot Springs, Ark.

Punchy Girl was born and raised at Cedar Run Farm, a 200-acre foaling and layup facility just west of Hot Springs that is owned by Patterson's father, Randy. Sara Patterson, 36, is farm manager.

Punchy Girl ($11.60) also represented the first Oaklawn stakes victory for jockey Elvin Gonzalez and trainer Jason Barkley.

“First stakes win for me,” Patterson said. “I think it was the first stakes win here for Jason and the first here, maybe, I think, for Elvin. Homebred – can't get much better than that.”

Punchy Girl is by Street Strategy, who captured the $100,000 Fifth Season Stakes for older horses in 2016 at Oaklawn for owner Randy Patterson and trainer Randy Morse. Cedar Run owns Street Strategy and millionaire Grade 1 winner Moonshine Mullin and stands both at nearby Lake Hamilton Equine Associates.

Sara Patterson foaled and named Punchy Girl, who is out of Union Boss, a winner at Gulfstream Park and Belmont Park in her 12-race career.

“Well, out in the pasture, she was always the one that was the boss,” Patterson said. “We called her boss growing up because she was the boss of the pasture. I couldn't get 'Boss Lady' or anything like that, so I got 'Punchy Girl' because she was always the one that would beat the rest to the punch.”

Cedar Run purchased Union Boss, in foal to millionaire multiple Grade 1 winner Tourist, for $22,000 at the 2017 Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale. The resulting foal, Mandona, now, 4, is winless in three lifetime starts for Randy Patterson and Morse. Mandona is entered in Friday's third race, a $10,000 maiden-claiming sprint for fillies and mares.

“We picked out the mare at the sale and brought her home,” Sara Patterson said. “Dad took a chance on her and so far, our Street Strategy, our actual stallion that stands here, is the one that's produced the best baby.”

Patterson said Union Boss recently had a colt by Mitole, the 2019 Eclipse Award winning sprinter and multiple Oaklawn stakes winner.

Patterson and her father, both natives of Anthony, Kan., began developing Cedar Run approximately eight years ago and concentrate on the lucrative Arkansas breeding program.

Sara Patterson recorded her first career victory as an owner when Longntall, a homebred daughter of Moonshine Mullin, broke her maiden by 12 lengths against state-breds March 21, 2021, at Oaklawn. It was Patterson's fifth career starter. Longntall also represented her first career starter, Feb. 6, 2021, at Oaklawn.

Sara Patterson named Longntall after her close friend, Oaklawn horsemen's bookkeeper Terri Hoffrogge, who is 5-11. Hoffrogge, coincidentally, made the trophy presentation for the Rainbow Miss. Another close friend and horsemen's bookkeeper employee, Dusti Pletcher, also was in the infield winner's circle following the Rainbow Miss.

“Both my best friends and very neat how it worked out,” Patterson said.

Punchy Girl has made her five career starts – all against state-breds – at the 2021-2022 Oaklawn meeting. She finished second in her Dec. 10 career debut, third Jan. 7 and second Jan. 28 before breaking her maiden Feb. 25 in her two-turn debut.

Punchy Girl cut back to a sprint in the Rainbow Miss and held off fast-closing Pattern Bet by a head to increase her career bankroll to $180,600.

Barkley said he plans to point Punchy Girl to the $150,000 Natural State Breeders' Stakes May 6. The 1-mile race is for state-bred females, 3 and upward.

“I think that's the plan,” Barkley said. “If nothing else, it kind of gives us a gauge as where we'll be next year. She'll get the summer off and we'll bring her back. She's already proven at the route distance, so I think that's a little edge we'll have over some of the others that might be stretching out in there.”

Patterson entered Friday with four victories from 25 starts and purse earnings of $247,156 in her career, according to Equibase, racing's official data gathering organization.

In addition to Longntall and two victories by Punchy Girl, Patterson had another winner at the 2021-2022 Oaklawn meeting in Smokin Boots, a homebred Moonshine Mullin gelding who broke his maiden against state-breds Jan. 30 for trainer Joe Petalino.

Longntall and Smokin Boots are full siblings.

Punchy Girl (5) wins the Rainbow Miss Stakes at Oaklawn Park

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Doug McPherson Named Track Announcer At Fort Erie Race Track

When Fort Erie Race Track's 125th racing season begins at the end of May, there will be a new voice ringing through the grandstands.

Experienced horseperson, handicapper and TV personality Doug McPherson will be adding a new skill to his horse racing resume when he becomes the announcer at Fort Erie Race Track. The 26-year-old has been a guest announcer at a few different tracks, including Woodbine Race Track and Sunland Park in New Mexico, but he will be the new voice of racing at Fort Erie this season.

“We are thrilled to welcome Doug to Fort Erie. He's a young and passionate horseperson with a wide range of knowledge and experience in the industry, and we're looking forward to watching him thrive in this new role,” said general manager of the Fort Erie Live Racing Consortium, Drew Cady.

McPherson works as a groom in his dad's stable at Woodbine, but his first racing job was as a hotwalker when he was 13. His first handicapping gig was at Ajax Downs, writing for their program and appearing as a guest on their pre-race show. He was the tip sheet author at Kawartha Downs for a few seasons, which is also where he called his first race. He has spent the last three years writing the Handicapper's Journal for Woodbine and is also a frequent guest on their pre-race show.

“I'm excited to be a part of the Fort Erie team and I'm looking forward to tackling a new challenge in my career,” said McPherson. “Horse racing in Ontario is my passion and I am very grateful for this opportunity to expand my participation in the industry.”

McPherson is taking over the announcing gig from Frank Salive, who retired from calling races at the border oval after six years with Fort Erie.

Fort Erie Race Track will be welcoming fans back this season, which kicks off on Tuesday, May 31 at 4:05 p.m. More information about the upcoming racing and event schedule is available at www.FortErieRacing.com.

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