McGaughey Looking To Add Pegasus Success To Hall Of Fame Résumé

Hall of Fame trainer Shug McGaughey has a resume that includes a Kentucky Derby (G1), Belmont (G1), Florida Derby (G1), nine Breeders' Cup championships and more than 100 Grade 1 victories.

Now he's taking aim for the first time at the Pegasus World Cup Championship Invitational (G1) Saturday at Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach, Fla., with Code of Honor in the $3-million Pegasus World Cup and North Dakota and Breaking the Rules in the $1-million Pegasus World Cup Turf.

Code of Honor, a 5-year-old son Noble Mission who won the 2019 Travers (G1), has been “doing well” training at Payson Park and McGaughey believes he'll appreciate the 1 1/8 mile distance of the Pegasus and a firm track.

In the wide-open Pegasus Turf, McGaughey will saddle North Dakota, coming into the race off a victory in the Red Smith (G3), and Breaking the Rules, third at Gulfstream Dec. 12 in the Fort Lauderdale (G2).

McGaughey spoke to Gulfstream host and analyst Acacia Courtney about his three horses and his chances in the Pegasus World Cup Championship Invitational.

Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xG7xIh9Ow84

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Hollendorfer, With Frank Stronach As New Client, Well-Stocked For Oaklawn Meet

Southern California-based trainers flourished last year at Oaklawn, with two finishing in the top 10 in the standings.

Horses for John Sadler were scheduled to arrive at the Hot Springs, Ark., track on Sunday in advance of the 57-day meeting that is scheduled to begin Friday, Jan. 22. Sadler, in his Oaklawn debut, won 15 races in 2020 to finish fifth in the trainer standings. Horses for another Southern California-based trainer, Hall of Famer Jerry Hollendorfer, have been on the grounds since late December under the direction of his longtime assistant, Dan Ward. Hollendorfer wintered at Oaklawn for the first time in 2020 and recorded 12 victories to finish eighth in the standings.

“We finished good,” Ward said Sunday morning. “We were in the top 10. We ran a lot of horses and we stayed safe and finished up good.”

Hollendorfer has more horsepower this year, roughly 40 head, including several holdovers from the 2020 meeting and seven for a high-profile new client, Frank Stronach.

A 2008 Eclipse Award winner as the country's outstanding owner, Stronach has campaigned, among others, 2004 Horse of the Year Ghostzapper, champions Ginger Punch, Perfect Sting and Macho Uno, Breeders' Cup Classic winner Awesome Again and Preakness winner Red Bullet. Stronach also campaigned Spun Sugar, winner of the $500,000 Apple Blossom Handicap (G1) for older fillies and mares in 2006 at Oaklawn.

Stronach's 2021 Oaklawn contingent is headed by Green Light Go, who won the $200,000 Saratoga Special Stakes (G2) for 2-year-olds in 2019 at Saratoga when with trainer Jimmy Jerkens. Unraced since mid-May, Green Light Go has recorded two workouts at Oaklawn, the last a five-furlong move from the gate in 1:00.20 Wednesday.

“He's coming along good,” Ward said.

Sunny Dale, a three-time winner last year at Oaklawn, has also recorded two local works in advance of her 5-year-old debut. The well-traveled Sunny Dale ran fifth in the $125,000 Carousel Stakes for older female sprinters last April at Oaklawn and completed her 2020 campaign with a fifth-place finish in the $80,000 Floral Park Stakes Oct. 17 at Belmont Park.

“We freshened her up a little bit and she's doing good,” Ward said.

Another 2020 Oaklawn winner, Awesome Anywhere, could resurface late in the meeting, Ward said. Awesome Anywhere ran six furlongs in 1:08.76 to capture a starter-allowance race last March at Oaklawn and closed 2020 with a runner-up finish in the $100,000 Mr. Prospector Stakes Sept. 12 at Monmouth Park.

Hollendorfer entered seven horses for the first two days of racing, including Causeway Jones in an entry-level allowance sprint for 3-year-olds on Saturday. Hollendorfer and two partners privately purchased the Creative Cause colt following a 7 ½-length debut victory Dec. 18 at Remington Park. Causeway Jones also has two published works at Oaklawn.

“We noticed last year that we started running better once we worked a couple of times over the track,” Ward said. “We got here like (Jan. 16) and a lot of starters didn't even have a work over the track. We got here earlier and have gotten two or three breezes over the track – most of them – and I think that will help.”

Hollendorfer has 18 career victories at Oaklawn, including four stakes (all graded). The stakes victories include Blind Luck in the $300,000 Fantasy Stakes (G2) in 2010. Blind Luck was named the country's champion 3-year-old filly of 2010.

Southern California-based trainers Phil D'Amato and Peter Miller also have horses on the grounds in advance of the 2021 meet. They each won five races last year at Oaklawn.

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Breeders’ Cup Presents Connections: Akifumi Kato’s 50 Years Riding Winners ‘Went By Quick’

If you've spent a lot of time watching racing on the West Coast, you may have been surprised to see Akifumi Kato's name in the program at Turf Paradise in Phoenix, Ariz., last week. Could it be the same jockey who once dominated Playfair Race Course, taking four editions of the Playfair Mile?

Indeed, it is the same Akifumi Kato who made the winner's circles in the state of Washington familiar spaces in the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s. In fact, Kato turned 69 years old on Jan. 7, the same day he booted home his 2,034th career winner, She's a Lady Griz, earning him the unusual distinction of having ridden a winner a year for 50 years.

Kato said it's hard to believe it's been 50 years since he started his career as a jockey.

“It went by quick,” he laughed. “Time goes by quick when you keep busy. Sometimes I look at my age and say, 'Oh, I didn't know I was that old.'”

At this point in his career, Kato rides by choice rather than by necessity and pilots horses exclusively for friends and family.

“I feel I can still compete, so that's why I still do it. And it keeps me healthy too,” he said. “Mainly I ride for my daughter and my friends. That's enough. I did the hard grind when I was young.

“It gets in my blood, I think.”

The people have always been a central draw to the racetrack life for Kato. The son of a Japanese jockey turned trainer, he was born in Osaka and immigrated to Spokane in the early 1970s, at which point he was transfixed by racehorses. In racing families it seems the next generation either embraces the track life wholeheartedly or runs the other way as fast as they can. Kato watched his father zip around aboard fast horses and thought simply, 'That looks fun. I'll try that.'

He learned to gallop at Hollywood Park, which he said he mostly knew about because it was close to Los Angeles International Airport, got his first mount at Golden Gate Fields and his first winner at the Humboldt County Fair in Ferndale, Calif. Kato would go on to settle in Spokane and set a Playfair apprentice record of 48 wins and hovered at or near the top of the jockey standings through the 1980s.

Akifumi Kato, in pre-coronavirus pandemic photo (courtesy of Kato family)

At the height of his career, Kato said he struggled to find well-priced jockey equipment and tack. Before the internet, there were few options, especially if you wanted something cutting edge or something produced overseas. Many fans underestimate the array of different choices (and the expense) a rider may have in their supplies. Kato began importing equipment from Japan and selling it to his fellow riders.

“I didn't think I'd still be doing it all this time later,” he said. “I know what equipment will help people. I can explain it to them when they ask me. And most of the guys know me from the past, so it's a word-of-mouth deal. I love the friendships. I like to see everyone do well.”

As if two jobs weren't enough, he cut back on mounts in the 1990s when he had the chance to try his hand at purchasing horses. Kato had maintained contacts in the Japanese racing industry and began scouting horses at top American sales for Kazuo Nakamura and later his son Isami.

At the 1995 Keeneland November Sale, Kato said he was the agent representing Nakamura when he bought the sale-topping British broodmare User Friendly for $2.5 million. He made trips to Kentucky as racing manager for several Japanese clients, checking on boarded horses and shopping at the big sales as requested, and would then return to the West Coast and resume riding blue collar horses at Playfair.

“By definition they're different, when you're looking at the top end of horses [versus claimers], but in reality I have to deal with the inexpensive horse,” he said. “But I still get the same adrenaline out of riding an inexpensive horse or a good horse. I think people should have the same drive. When you get on a horse, you have to do the best you can.”

Gradually though, Kato's sales clients cut back due to illness and he was back to having two jobs again instead of three. His primary employer on the track these days is his daughter, Kaylyn Kato, who trains a string of five at Turf Paradise for herself, her family and one outside client.

As much as she had loved horses, Kaylyn Kato hadn't planned on becoming a trainer, but she graduated from college in the middle of the Great Recession and went to the track to earn a living while she figured out what to do. Jobs in the outside world were scarce, and she quickly realized that she took pride and comfort from managing her own horses and knowing they were getting the best of care.

Kaylyn keeps her operation small so that she can do most of the work herself, but she has help from her father, who is in the saddle every morning.

“He can tell if they don't have quite as much bounce in their step,” she said. “I think that day-to-day interaction gives him a better feel of how they are on race day.”

It may seem like a recipe for awkwardness, a daughter having to give riding instructions to her father in the paddock, but Kaylyn believes it's an advantage.

“Especially now that we've worked together for so long, it's really easy to communicate because I think I'm fully able to explain what I want from him and what I'm looking to get out of the horse,” she said. “Because we're father and daughter, I'm not afraid to speak my mind. I really, really trust my dad. I know he's going to give me his very honest feedback on how a horse feels.”

The horse Akifumi Kato took to victory earlier this month was trained by Kaylyn. The family also keeps their four-legged family members close – Kaylyn said the most impactful horse in her partnership with her father was Frisky Ricky, winner of the 2014 Sandra Hall Grand Canyon Handicap and hard-knocking claimer who has been retired to her shedrow. She's trying to convince 15-year-old “Ricky” that he should be a pony now that his last race was two years ago, but the spunky gelding asks her each morning if she's sure he couldn't have a little gallop around the Turf Paradise course.

Kaylyn said that the family has hoped Akifumi would slow down as the years have worn on, but they know not to expect him to retire before he's ready – he's cheerful and easygoing, but determined. He says it's all a matter of drive. Each fall becomes harder to recover from physically and mentally as you age, but he still feels capable of swinging back aboard and giving a competitive effort. The moment that comfort evaporates, he said, he's hanging it up.

Whenever that day comes, he will leave a legacy Kaylyn is proud to carry on.

“He's an amazing athlete to keep going for this long,” she said. “He's been a really good role model, I think. He always taught us to work hard and treat other people well, that you contribute to a happy atmosphere and everyone does better.”

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Bruce Headley: A Legacy Dating Back To Seabiscuit And Kayak II

The racing world and Santa Anita in particular mourn the passing of Bruce Headley, who died Friday, just a month short of his 87th birthday on Feb. 17.

A no-nonsense stickler who adhered to a pristine philosophy when it came to training, Headley was born on Feb. 17, 1934, 10 months before Santa Anita opened on Christmas Day, 1934. More than eight decades later, Headley had remained close to his home away from home, Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, Calif.

I had one of the last interviews with Headley in his waning days at Clockers' Corner. It appeared in Santa Anita's Stable Notes on April 14, 2019, and as it concisely captures the essence of the man and the horseman, it seems appropriate to reprint it here in his memory:

Headley, best remembered as the trainer of Kona Gold, is still a fixture at Santa Anita, where his Aunt Flora brought him as a kid when he was five years old.

“I saw Seabiscuit and Kayak II run here,” Headley said, referring to the winners of the 1939 and 1940 Santa Anita Handicap, trained by 'Silent' Tom Smith. “That's how I got hooked on racing. My Uncle Ted was a security guard here. I was born in a house in nearby Baldwin Park that's still there.”

Kona Gold was pure race horse. A Kentucky-bred son of Java Gold from the Slew o' Gold dam Double Sunrise, the bay gelding owned in part by Headley won nearly half his starts, 14 of 30, with seven seconds and two thirds, earning $2,293,384.

Sold as a yearling for $35,000, he was the champion sprinter of 2000, winning an Eclipse Award that year in which he captured the Breeders' Cup Sprint at Churchill Downs in a dazzling 1:07.60 for six furlongs. He raced until he was nine years old.

“He could run faster than anybody and stayed sound,” Headley recalled. “He had real good bone structure. He was just an honest race horse and when he ran, he ran.

“When he got too old to race, he became a very good pony. He'd lead the horses back and forth to the track, and even though some of them had a wild brain, he knew he had a job to do and he did it.

“When he got too old to pony, I retired him to the Kentucky Horse Park so everybody could visit him.”

Kona Gold was euthanized at the age of 15 on Sept. 25, 2009, after fracturing his left front leg while exercising in his paddock. But for Bruce Headley and others of his ilk who sanctify the equine ghosts of Santa Anita, Kona Gold lives on in perpetuity.

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