Breeders’ Cup Presents Connections: Barkley Lets ‘Quirky’ Spooky Channel Be Himself

Just a week before Halloween, a horse named “Spooky Channel” carried orange-and-black silks to the post at Keeneland. Hunch bettors who were paying attention could have been paid at 7-1 in last weekend's Grade 3 Sycamore Stakes.

Jason Barkley didn't even consider that connection until days after the 6-year-old son of English Channel delivered him the first graded stakes victory of his career. The trainer was too busy planning for the next step.

“I'm kind of an action junkie,” Barkley admitted. “I just love the racing, the handicapping, the figuring out the puzzle. The handicapping side is so much of how it plays out on the track, and you have to have a tactical plan for what is going to happen in the race.” 

That puzzle was part of what led Barkley to claim Spooky Channel for $80,000 on April 30, 2021, a bold gamble that has definitely paid off in just his fourth year of running his own stable.

“We liked his consistency and with the purse structures what they are, there will be plenty of opportunities for him,” said Barkley. “He just tries. You don't win 11 races by mistake, I don't care where you're at. It's evident to everyone that he likes what he does. He's kind of a quirky dude, but we just accept that and do what works for him. We just treat them all as individuals: get 'em happy, keep 'em happy!”

That philosophy is part of the reason Spooky Channel has a large stuffed unicorn that travels with him to his races.

“He doesn't really play with it, but if you take it away, he's not happy,” Barkley said. “He's just a little nervous. He'll stand at the front of the stall and weave a bit, looking for the action, so we also built him a window into the stall next to him, and that's helped him settle down, too.”

Working with and accepting each horse's different quirks has helped the 32-year-old grow his operation: Barkley began with a one-horse string at the end of 2017, and now has 35 head under his care. 

It's where Barkley always envisioned himself, but as with all best-laid plans, the path to that goal was anything but linear. 

He grew up around Ellis Park, a third-generation trainer who helped his father on the weekends and after school. Barkley's logo, a triangle, pays homage to that history.

His parents insisted he pursue a college degree, if only to have a backup plan in case training Thoroughbreds didn't pan out, so Barkley attended the University of Louisville's Equine Industry Program. He intended to use the program primarily as a networking opportunity — having grown up at a smaller track, he didn't know the right people to advance his career.

That program is where Barkley met his mentor Tim Capps, a longtime horse racing executive and head of the EIP until his death in 2017.

“He wasn't Mr. Capps, or Professor Capps, just 'Capps,'” Barkley recalled. “If I'd have done exactly what he told me to do, I'd be training harness horses! You know, because they run every week. 

“Whenever you'd walk by his office, you could just go in and talk to him. You'd meet whoever else was in there, talk for like an hour, at least. He was always willing to help, and he had great stories, some clean, some not clean. It was refreshing to go from being a high school kid, who had teachers who were just teachers, to a guy who not only wanted to help you succeed but also could answer any question you had, or could find the answer.

“He introduced me around, and always kind of helped steer me in the right direction. That's what I remember about college the most.”

Barkley spent summers hotwalking at Churchill Downs, gaining experience with bigger stables for the first time, and got a job as a foreman after graduation. He wanted to travel to other racetracks, too, so when the opportunity came to work for Nick Zito, Barkley jumped at the chance.

A year of working for the Hall of Famer, while invaluable, took its toll.

“When you're young, you want to work at the track, but then you do it and there's no free time,” said Barkley. “I'd never had a job that was seven days a week, 365 days a year, and I guess I got a little burnt.”

Spooky Channel with his favorite stuffed unicorn

The young horseman had a girlfriend in New Hampshire at the time, so he moved there and took a job with SmarkPak, then at a casino. It didn't take long for Barkley to realize the racetrack was where he belonged.

“After a year I decided I didn't want a normal life; I wanted a racetrack life,” Barkley said.

He learned that Joe Sharp needed an assistant trainer, and decided to learn about the claiming part of the business while he could. From there, an opportunity with Wesley Ward sparked his interest in learning more about developing young horses.

“My whole plan all along – when you grow up on the racetrack, you know a lot – but I wanted to learn from a lot of people,” said Barkley. “The issues that claiming horses have compared to the issues that babies have are so vastly different, so it was nice to have that experience.”

At the end of 2017, an owner offered Barkley the chance to claim one horse and open his own stable.

“I took the leap,” Barkley said, laughing.

The young trainer figured the best claiming opportunities could be had at Oaklawn Park, so he wintered there, coming home to Kentucky in the spring with six horses. Barkley has grown his stable from there, a “slow grind,” but one with a steady upward trajectory.

Each year he's sent out a few more winners than the year before: he went 1-for-12 in 2017, then won 11 races in 2018, 15 in 2019, and last year had his picture taken 22 times. With two months to go in 2021, Barkley has saddled 20 winners for earnings of $718,685.

Also growing over the past four years has been his family. He and his fiancee, who also serves as his assistant trainer, have a young daughter, so Barkley has had to learn to balance work with a bit of free time.

“When I'm home I try not to work unless my daughter is taking a nap, or after she goes to bed, like 8pm to 11pm at night,” Barkley said. “I try not to take away from the free time with her. It's a little bit of a lack of sleep right now, but I'm still only 32 so I guess I can manage on that right now! You're just trying to have a life as you go, and I wouldn't trade it.”

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‘Older, Wiser And Hopefully A Little Better’: Desormeaux, Hess Back Together For Breeders’ Cup

In 1991, Robert B. Hess, Jr., won the first of back-to-back Del Mar training titles. In 1992, Hess' championship cohort was jockey Kent Desormeaux, who would score his first of back-to-back riding titles and rack up 135 wins in the two-year span.

A lot has happened in the 30 years since.

Desormeaux, 51, has notched victories in three Kentucky Derbies, three Preakness and a Belmont Stakes. He has six Breeders' Cup wins, three Eclipse Awards and has held membership in racing's Hall of Fame since 2004. With two wins Sunday at Santa Anita, Equibase statistics show him with 6,101 career victories from 32,413 mounts in a 35-year career.

Hess, 56, has gone nationwide with strings in Kentucky and Florida. But the native of Chula Vista has remained headquartered in Southern California and unabashedly citing Del Mar as holding a special place in his heart.

“Del Mar is my paradise,” Hess said Sunday. It is, after all, the place that provided him with his first winner (Palapiano, July 31, 1987), first training title in 1991 and first graded stakes winner (River Special, 1992 Del Mar Futurity).

And as they have over the years, Desormeaux and Hess are hoping to make headlines again when they team up with Cairo Memories in the Juvenile Fillies Turf and Chaos Theory in the Turf Sprint during Breeders' Cup weekend.

“I've got gray hair and he's got a couple of wrinkles, but hopefully we're older, wiser and hopefully a little better,” Hess said. “But we have the A-team back together and we're looking forward to it.”

Cairo Memories, a daughter of Cairo Prince, was pre-entered in the Juvenile Fillies and Juvenile Fillies Turf and will go in the $1 million, one mile grass event. She is 2-for-2 in a career begun at Del Mar on Sept. 5 and comes in off a win in the Surfer Girl Stakes at Santa Anita on Oct. 3.

“Cairo is splendid, a wonderful, gifted filly and just a pleasure to be around,” Hess said. “Unless the jock screws it up (with a wink toward Desormeaux), I think we'll get the money.”

Chaos Theory, like Cairo Memories owned by David Bernsen and partners, is a 6-year-old gelded son of Curlin. He has six wins in 18 starts with earnings of $359,454. Chaos Theory is 0-for-5 in 2021 but won both his career starts at Del Mar – the Green Flash in August and an optional claimer in November of 2020. Desormeaux was aboard for the first time in a third-place finish in the Eddie D Stakes at Santa Anita on Oct. 1.

Chaos Theory is one of 19 pre-entered in the $1 million, five-furlong event.

“Chaos, if he gets in, will run fantastic,” Hess said. “I've tweaked a few things, Kent knows him even better and it will be at his favorite distance on his favorite turf course.”

Desormeaux has one other Breeders' Cup mount lined up, Oviatt Class in the $2 million TVG Breeders' Cup Juvenile for his trainer/brother Keith.

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Jockey Miguel Mena Killed In Vehicular Accident

Jockey Miguel Mena was tragically killed in a vehicular accident on Sunday night in Louisville, Ky. The 34-year-old was struck by a vehicle as a pedestrian on Interstate 64, according to wave3.com. Local police are calling the death an accident.

A native of Peru, Mena moved to the United States at age 17. Basing his career in the Midwest, Mena won 2,079 races from just over 16,000 starts.

Mena was presented with the inaugural Randy Romero “Pure Courage” Award in February of 2020, following his recovering from a debilitating ankle injury suffered in early 2018.

Mena is survived by his wife April and their two daughters, Naelah and Montserrat.

For more about Mena's career, here is a feature from earlier this summer.

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Collmus To Pinch Hit For Injured Denman During Del Mar Meet

Veteran announcer Larry Collmus, who stepped up to pinch hit for Del Mar's longtime caller Trevor Denman during the height of the COVID 19 crisis in 2020, has been called to the plate once more. He'll take over this time for the recently injured Denman for the majority of the seaside track's upcoming fall race meet starting Wednesday, November 3.

Denman, 68, suffered a painful herniated disc in his back earlier this week at his home in Minnesota when he slipped and tumbled down the stairs of his deck which were wet from early morning dew. He was readying to drive to Del Mar to follow up his return to calling at the seaside track this past summer, but his injury makes it all but impossible for him to travel.

Collmus, 55, was going to be at Del Mar anyway next week for his regular role as NBC's caller for the Breeders' Cup, which will be presented for the second time at Del Mar on Friday, November 5 and Saturday, November 6. He's now agreed to take on the Del Mar role from opening day right though the season's finish on Sunday, November 28 with the exception of three days (November 12-14) when he'll be on a previously planned holiday.

Collmus, who has called races for 37 years and for the past decade has been the voice of not only the Breeders' Cup but also the Triple Crown races on NBC, drew rave reviews for his Del Mar debut last year at both its summer and fall meets. He'll be a busy man on the two Breeders' Cup Days when he'll call five undercard races and five Breeders' Cup races Friday, then come back Saturday to be the voice for three more undercard events and nine BC races, including the $6-million Breeders' Cup Classic.

Denman had celebrated his 50th year of race calling this past summer and he told Del Mar's CEO Joe Harper in his explanatory message that he was “devastated” by this latest turn of events.

“I have never missed a day's racing in 50 years and now I have had to miss racing two years in a row because of the virus and this freak accident,” he said. “I am devastated, but this is completely out of my control.”

Del Mar will call on its back-up announcer John Lies to handle the three days that Collmus will be away. Lies has called at various racetracks around the country and has filled in smartly at Del Mar on several occasions previously.

First post daily at Del Mar will be 12:30 p.m. for the majority of the meeting. For the Breeders' Cup days it will be 11:55 a.m. on Friday and 10:15 a.m. on Saturday. The one other exception is Thanksgiving Day, Thursday, November 25, when it will be 11 a.m.

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