‘Each And Every Win’ Matters As Todd Pletcher Approaches 5,000-Win Milestone

Some victories for a trainer always stand out. From triumphs in American Classic engagements to Breeders' Cup scores to prestigious Grade 1 wins, trips to the winner's circle leave indelible impressions. But the wins that bring less fanfare – allowance, optional claimers and maiden races – are still the backbone of any long-time conditioner's ledger, and trainer Todd Pletcher can claim a body of work on par with some of the sport's all-time greats as he approaches career win No. 5,000.

In nearly 25 years of conditioning thoroughbreds at the highest level, Pletcher has set a high bar for any subsequent aspiring trainer. Since notching his first win in 1996, Pletcher has saddled winners of five American Classics and 11 Breeders' Cup races as part of 161 total Grade 1 wins. The seven-time Eclipse Award winner for Outstanding Trainer will soon secure a spot in the National Museum of Racing Hall of Fame upon gaining eligibility in 2021.

Just seven trainers have reached the 5,000-win plateau. In reflecting on the wins that resonate the most, Pletcher said the ones that stand out aren't necessarily the most obvious guesses, such as his two Kentucky Derby victories [Super Saver, 2010; Always Dreaming, 2017], a trio of Belmont Stakes trophies [Rags to Riches, 2007; Palace Malice, 2013; Tapwrit, 2017] or his Breeders' Cup haul.

“I've found that when you reach these milestone victories, it gives you an appreciation for just how special each and every win is,” Pletcher said. “There are certainly career highlights that might be Grade 1 races or Classics, but sometimes as a trainer you get just as much enjoyment out of having a first timer prepared properly to win on debut. Or maybe a horse that has been a challenge and you get them there to a spot to win a race. I think it gives you an opportunity to appreciate the body of work and also each and every owner, each and every horse and all the staff behind you along the way.”

Pletcher said he still holds his top-level triumphs in high regard. Especially the 2007 Belmont Stakes, where Rags to Riches made history as only the third filly to win the “Test of a Champion.” Despite stumbling out of the gate, losing ground on the backstretch and engaging in a dramatic stretch battle with Curlin, Rags to Riches was able to keep the eventual 2007-08 Horse of the Year at bay under Hall of Fame jockey John Velazquez. The filly's famous score provided the famed Pletcher-Velazquez partnership their first respective win in a Triple Crown race.

“At that point in our stable's development, that was the first Classic win and to come about in such a historic way – with her being the first filly to win in over 100 years – and the rollercoaster of emotions during the race with the stumble where you thought you had no chance to putting a head in front and thinking you did have a chance and then Curlin fighting back in a stretch long duel,” Pletcher recalled. “A lot goes through your mind in two and a half minutes. It was a broad range of emotions. The first Kentucky Derby is way up there and I got a lot of enjoyment from the Belmont win by Palace Malice, which was our first Classic win for Dogwood Stable and Mr. [Cothran] Campbell, who was a big supporter from the beginning.”

Velazquez has won more than 6,000 races in his illustrious career, with more than 1,800 coming aboard Pletcher-trained horses, including that famous Belmont.

“It was an incredible race, especially for a horse to do what she did that day,” Velazquez said. “It was equally special for the both of us, since it was a first win in a Triple Crown race for not just him but for me, as well. After this long, I still ride for him. I'm still a part of the team and I'm very grateful for that.”

Pletcher has a proven track record in conditioning quality horses who have parlayed their talent into their post-racing career as stallions.

In 2018, former Pletcher trainees Quality Road and More Than Ready led all North American stallions in Grade 1 victories with five apiece. The late Scat Daddy, also conditioned by Pletcher, was the leading producer of Grade 1 winners in 2016 and became the leading sire in overall graded stakes wins the following two years.

Additionally, nine former members of the Pletcher brigade have gone on to produce Eclipse Award winners across seven divisions, with champion-producer Uncle Mo being an Eclipse Award winner himself when being crowned 2010 Champion 2-Year-Old.

“We've developed some successful stallions that have been able to go out there and make an impact on the breed, we take a lot of pride in that as well,” Pletcher said.

Mike Repole, who owned Uncle Mo, praised Pletcher for his talent to train horses able to compete at the top of multiple divisions. Pletcher has conditioned horses to Eclipse Award wins in six different divisions, including three Champion Older Males like 2019 Breeders' Cup Classic winner Vino Rosso, who Repole also owned.

“He does it in every category,” Repole said. “Dirt, turf, colts, fillies, there's no one better than Todd. He's successful in all divisions. When you look at the overall business, Todd knows it in and out. As an entrepreneur, I respect people who have a strong work ethic and think outside of the box. Todd may have the title 'trainer,' but no matter what he decided to do in life, he would be successful at it. He has the business mind set and sees things differently.”

Repole said Pletcher is more than a business partner. He's a member of the family.

“When I first entered the game with a couple of horses, it was strictly a trainer-client relationship,” Repole said. “Since then, it's gone from trainer-client, to partner, to friendship, to family. We've had an amazing run together and it's been fun. We had Uncle Mo become a champion in 2010 and almost 10 years later Vino Rosso wins the Classic. He's the best. He's either Michael Jordan or LeBron James.”

Jack Wolf of Starlight Racing, who campaigned multiple Grade 1-winner and champion producing sire Harlan's Holiday with Pletcher, said the conditioner's ability to develop so many eventual quality sires is one of many reasons why Pletcher is a master at what he does.

“It's another credit to how good he is on all phases of the training game,” Wolf said. “It's unbelievable how many good stallions that he's produced. He's getting the offspring of these stallions out of the mares he's trained and it is a credit to how good a trainer he is. He's not just there to win races, he's concerned about the whole campaign of the horse. From its racing career and beyond.”

Wolf, who also partnered with Pletcher in campaigning champions Ashado [2004 Champion 3-Year-Old Filly, 2005 Champion Older Mare] and Shanghai Bobby [2012 Champion 2-Year-Old Colt], praised Pletcher for his truthfulness and ability to understand how to place a horse in a winning position.

“I think that's another quality that makes Todd stand out. He's honest with the owners,” Wolf said. “He knows where to place a horse to win, whether it's a maiden special weight, a $25,000 claiming race, or a stakes race. He has good judgment in terms of where a horse belongs. You don't get to almost 5,000 wins without having that quality.”

Pletcher's win output has produced a metronome-like consistency, achieving approximately one thousand victories each four-year stretch, starting with his 1,000th career win in 2004. He has since achieved a new milestone quadrennially, with his 4,000th career victory coming on March 18, 2016 with first-time starter Eagle Scout at Gulfstream Park.

“He's right on schedule to do it every four years, which is remarkable,” Wolf said.

“The one thing we take pride in is that we've been very consistent, and we've been able to operate at a high level for a while,” Pletcher added. “You never take anything for granted in this business, and certainly couldn't do it without a lot of great owners that have supported us for a number of years. You're only as good as the horses you're training.”

Pletcher, who has campaigned a total of 11 Eclipse Award-winning champions, said no matter how many good horses a trainer has, there will always be more losses than there are wins.

“This business will keep you grounded. No matter how well you're doing, you're still going to have challenges and the losses are going to accumulate much faster than the wins,” Pletcher said. “I think the one thing you try to do is not get too high off the wins and even more difficult sometimes is not to get too low off the losses. You have to try and come in and do the job consistently to the best of your abilities and hopefully, it falls into place from there.”

Velazquez, who guided Always Dreaming to Kentucky Derby glory in 2017, praised Pletcher's relentless dedication in maintaining one of the most competitive stables in the country.

“He's such a hard-working guy,” Velazquez said. “Day after day, week after week and month after month, he's there at the barn and he's dedicated. It's hard to stay and continue at that pace for this long.”

Pletcher's work ethic and attention to detail has trickled down to his former assistants, such as Mike McCarthy, who went out on his own in 2014 and has conditioned five Grade 1 winners after serving as Pletcher's longtime primary assistant through career highlights including the Kentucky Derby victory with Super Saver.

When asked of Pletcher's greatest attribute, McCarthy was unable to give an immediate answer. Not because he couldn't think of any, but because he said there are too many to name.

“I wouldn't know where to start. It's like asking what makes Michael Jordan so good,” McCarthy said.

As Pletcher's righthand man through his most successful years to date, including 2007 where he amassed over $28 million in earnings, McCarthy has witnessed the conditioner's work ethic firsthand.

“I think it's just the fact that he has a desire to get up and give 100 percent every day to his owners, his horses, and his staff,” McCarthy said. “To be able to balance all of that and raise a family shows what he's like as a person and is a credit to him. Everyone that works for Todd enjoys working for him and gets a lot out of it.”

McCarthy said he appreciated Pletcher's ability to delegate responsibility during his time working in his barn.

“It's definitely one of his strongest suits,” McCarthy said. “It takes an incredible amount of confidence to be able to send different people to oversee strings of horses in other places across the country and the ability to tell owners, 'check with my assistant' shows that he has faith in his staff. I can say that I've gotten so much out of working for Todd. For me, it's made a difference in my life.”

Pletcher, in trying to encapsulate his success, said his philosophy has always been to try the absolute best with every horse under his care.

“We've always tried to do the very best we can with every horse we have the opportunity to train,” Pletcher said. “And if that turns out to be a win in a maiden claiming race or a Classic win, if we brought the very best out of that horse's ability then we've done our job.”

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Kyle Frey, Jonathan Wong, Irvin Racing Take Summer Meet Titles At Golden Gate Fields

Jockey Kyle Frey, trainer Jonathan Wong and owner Irvin Racing Stable sat atop their respective divisions' standings at the recently concluded Golden Gate Fields summer meet.

Twenty-eight-year-old journeyman rider Kyle Frey won the most races out of any jockey with 47 victories from 205 mounts, equating to a strong 23 percent. Represented by agent Fernando “Shoes” Navarro, Frey tallied $803,264 in purse earnings and finished in-the-money with 54 percent of his rides. Apprentice jockey Santos Rivera finished second in the jockey standings with 27 wins while Irving Orozco and Evin Roman tied for third with 25 wins apiece. Frank Alvarado completed the top five with 23 first place finishes.

Trainer Jonathan Wong picked up his ninth training title at Golden Gate Fields when saddling 40 winners from 159 starters at the 6-week summer meet. Wong earned $764,062 in purse money and hit the board with 58 percent of his starters. Isidro Tamayo, the conditioner with the second most wins at the summer meet, visited the winner's circle 21 times. Steve Sherman, who finished third in the trainer standings with 17 wins, had the highest win percentage of any trainer who saddled more than 50 starters, tallying a 27 percent win rate.

Owners Betty and Diane Irvin, who race under the name “Irvin Racing Stable,” won more races than any other owner with 6 victories from their 21 entrants. They campaigned 5 additional second place finishers and 4 horses who hit the wire third, finishing in the money with 71 percent of their starters. Irvin Racing Stables has horses with trainers Greg James and Bill McLean in Northern California and Carla Gaines in Southern California.

Betty and Diane Irvin, a mother-daughter team, are strong supporters of California racing. Betty resides in Los Angeles while Diane has residences in Colorado and Nevada. They own C-Punch Ranch in Lovelock, Nevada, and all of their racehorses are Irvin family homebreds.

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Four Stakes Wins Net Richard Eramia Jockey Of The Week Title

With more stakes wins than any other North American jockey, Richard Eramia was voted Jockey of the Week for Oct. 12 through Oct. 18. The award, which is voted on by a panel of racing industry experts, is for jockeys who are members of the Jockeys' Guild, the organization which represents more than 950 active riders in the United States as well as retired and permanently disabled jockeys.

With mounts in eight of the ten stakes races on Oklahoma Classics Night for top Oklahoma-breds in divisional stakes competition, Eramia made four trips to the winner's circle. All four of his stakes wins were for different trainers.

He won three stakes in a row starting with Number One Dude for trainer Kari Craddock in the Oklahoma Classics Juvenile. Number One Dude set the pace early in the six-furlong sprint and prevailed by a length. For trainer Donnie Von Hemel. Eramia had the mount on She's All Wolfe who rallied from off the pace and hooked up with Lady Orchid over the final yards, with the two bobbing heads to the finish. Trainer Kenny Smith called on Eramia to ride Three Chords in the Oklahoma Classics Sprint and blew away the competition by 5-1/4 lengths going six furlongs. Eramia capped the evening by winning the Oklahoma Classics Starter Stakes under Rockport Kat for trainer Theresa Luneack.

A native of Uruguay, Eramia began his riding career there and also rode in Argentina and Brazil before coming to the U.S. in 2005. He earned his first graded stakes win in 2012 aboard Gantry in the Grade II Smile Sprint Handicap. In 2019, he won the Grade III Super Derby with Rotation for trainer Steve Asmussen and last month, he won the Grade III Oklahoma Derby with Shared Sense for trainer Brad Cox.

Eramia's weekly stats were 29-6-6-3 for a 21% win percentage and 52% in-the-money percentage and total purse earnings of $326,693.

Eramia out-polled fellow jockeys David Cabrera who won two stakes at Remington, Kyle Frey, the week's leading rider by wins, Manuel Franco who won two graded stakes at Keeneland and Rafael Manuel Hernandez who won the Grade I E.P. Taylor at Woodbine.

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Kirkpatrick & Co Presents In Their Care: Smullen Is The Glue That Holds Tagg Operation Together

Robin Smullen was 17 years old when she was preparing Barnabas, her finest horse, for a show. He was as responsive as ever to her cues – until he could respond no longer.

Barnabas collapsed beneath Smullen due to an aneurysm. Nothing could be done except to comfort him. He died in the arms of a teenager with whom he had enjoyed such a wonderful connection, his head nestled in her lap.

Smullen was devastated. She remained in her bedroom at her family's Oxford, Pa., farm for three days. She sold her three or four remaining show horses. She did not know how she would go on.

“At that point, I was thinking I wanted to give up on horses completely,” she said.

She soon realized how strong a hold horses can have on someone who had been around them for as long as she could remember. There is a pull that is undeniable. And perhaps inescapable.

“I was born into horses. That is all I ever knew,” said Smullen. “A lot of people who get into horses and leave, they always come back.”

Come back she did, and Thoroughbred racing is so much better for that. As an assistant to Barclay Tagg and his life partner, Smullen has been instrumental in the development of a pair of outstanding New York-bred 3-year-olds for modest Sackatoga Stable.

The gelded Funny Cide swept the Kentucky Derby and Preakness in 2003. Tiz the Law looms as a prime contender in the $6 million Breeders' Cup Classic on Nov. 7 at Keeneland Race Course. He could emerge as Horse of the Year if he adds his first test against older horses to his authoritative Florida Derby, Belmont and Travers triumphs.

Smullen aboard Funny Cide. Photo courtesy Robin Smullen

“Robin is really the glue that holds Barclay Tagg Racing Stable together,” said Jack Knowlton, who has overseen Sackatoga since he established it with five high school friends in 1995.

Tagg and Smullen have shown they can accomplish a lot with relatively little. Funny Cide was purchased privately for the comparatively meager sum of $75,000 as a 2-year-old in training. Tagg made a winning bid of $110,000 to bring home Tiz the Law as a yearling at Fasig-Tipton's 2018 Saratoga Sale.

Smullen is proud of the keen eyes they bring to sales.

“We've picked out so many good horses and people don't realize,” she said. “A lot of people could have bought Funny Cide, but we did. You can't see that he's going to win the Derby, but you can see that a horse can run.”

Confrontation, a $35,000 purchase as a 2-year-old, and Realm, a $75,000 yearling, provide two more examples of diamonds in the rough that the tag team of Tagg and Smullen discovered. Each horse surpassed half a million dollars in earnings.

Smullen has been aboard tractable Tiz the Law throughout his development, just as she was the headstrong Funny Cide. When she talks, Knowlton and Tagg listen.

“That is invaluable to have somebody with her knowledge,” Knowlton said. “If there is one little thing that is maybe bothering him, she'll identify it. She may know what it is or, if not, she will work with the veterinarian or the blacksmith or the chiropractor or the masseuse.”

When Smullen detected upper body stiffness in Tiz the Law following his loss to Authentic in the Sept. 5 Kentucky Derby, she showed her unwavering commitment to always putting the horse first by urging that the colt skip the $1 million Preakness, the final leg of this year's Triple Crown due to the pandemic. Knowlton abided by that advice. He also was on board when she and Tagg opposed shipping the colt across the country to Santa Anita for last year's Juvenile despite a fees-paid berth in the demanding $2 million race courtesy of a Champagne romp.

Smullen and Tagg have long enjoyed a relationship most couples would envy.

“We went to dinner,” Tagg likes to say, “and she never left.”

One of the keys to their staying power is their ability to leave work behind once long days at the barn and the track are done. They currently oversee approximately 20 horses.

“The good part about Barclay is he leaves the barn at the barn and then home is home,” Smullen said. “If you don't get along with the way you make a decision on a certain horse or a certain race, you leave that at the barn.”

Doswell, a quirky 5-year-old that is fairly new to their stable, represents a constant source of disagreement.

“He's a little bit of a head case, but I try to get along with him and compromise on things,” said Smullen. She gallops Doswell each morning; she is the one aboard for his antics once his training is done. Tagg would like to see the veteran walk back to the barn. The gelded son of Giant's Causeway, bred and owned by Joseph Allen, has other ideas.

“He doesn't like to walk off the track,” Smullen said. “He's jigging and carrying on the whole time, so I just jog him home.”

Although Tagg is routinely dismayed by that unusual sight, Smullen's willingness to live with that idiosyncrasy appears to be reaping rewards. After going winless through his first five career starts, Doswell is perfect in two turf starts for Tagg and Smullen. He led at every call when he finally broke his maiden on Aug. 8 at Saratoga Race Course. He displayed the same front-running command in capturing  an allowance race on Oct. 2 at Belmont Park.

With each of those victories, Smullen is reminded of the rewards that working with horses can bring. And she is grateful she persevered long after the beloved Barnabas took his last breath.

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 a backstretch worker 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 employee's background.

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