After Battling Substance Abuse Issues, Belmont Winner Jeremy Rose Launches a Comeback

Back in 2005, when he won the GI Preakness S. and the GI Belmont S. with Afleet Alex (Northern Afleet), Jeremy Rose was convinced that the run he was on would never end. He was just 26, had already won more than 950 races and had won an Eclipse Award in 2001 as the nation's top apprentice. Rose was well established as one of the top riders in the Mid-Atlantic region, was earning in the mid-six figures every year and his best years seemed yet to come.

“It may sound arrogant, but I thought there was no stopping me,” Rose said. “I was on a roll. Alex put me on a pedestal, allowed me to go to a place few jockeys get to go. I was winning a lot of races, making good money. I was being flown all over the country to ride for people like Graham Motion. I couldn't do anything wrong. It was awesome.”

Seventeen years after Afleet Alex won the Belmont, Rose will not be riding at Belmont Park this Saturday but some 150 miles to the south, down the road to Delaware Park. He's 43 now and has ridden just two winners on the year. But he's not feeling sorry for himself. After all that he's been through, the addiction to opiods, the battle with alcohol, some 2 1/2 years away from the track, he's just happy to be back.

“I really let things get out of control,” he said.

Afleet Alex ran well in the GI Kentucky Derby, but finished third behind Giacomo (Holy Bull). It was in the Preakness that he showed his talent and his athleticism. Afleet Alex was making what looked like a winning move coming out of the far turn when Scrappy T (Fit to Fight) bore out in front of him, causing Afleet Alex to clip heels with his rival. For an instant, it appeared that Afleet Alex was going to go down in what could have been a horrific spill, but he somehow righted himself and carried Rose to a 4 3/4-length victory.

Come Belmont time, there was little doubt who the best 3-year-old in training was. Afleet Alex, in what would be his last-ever start, blew the field away, winning by seven lengths.

“I thought Jeremy rode a tremendous race,” winning trainer Tim Ritchey said afterward.

Rose finished the year with 178 wins and had 221 in 2006 and 288 in 2007.

Afleet Alex nearly goes down in the Preakness | Horsephotos

He may have thought there was nothing that could stop him, but that was proven wrong in 2008. In a race at Delaware Park, Rose struck his mount, Appeal to the City (Appealing Skier), with his whip in the eye, causing the eye to hemorrhage. He said he did not mean to injure the horse, but the Delaware Park stewards took no mercy. They initially suspended him for six months, a penalty that was reduced to 90 days on appeal. The incident happened shortly after Eight Belles (Unbridled's Song) had broken down in the Derby, and animal rights activists were not in a forgiving mood and pointed their slings and arrows at Rose, who was the target of death threats.

“Mentally, it took me a long time to bounce back from that, if I ever did bounce all the way back,” Rose said. “That was something I didn't let go of. They sent emails to commissions that they were going to kill me. They said they were coming in to take my dogs away from me. I got crucified.”

Rose was eventually able to put the incident behind him, but he was about to face a problem much more debilitating. As happens with most every jockey, riding started to take a toll on him. In constant pain, he thought he was doing the right thing when he went to a doctor for help. He was prescribed OxyContin.

“I can't remember exactly when I started,” he said. “I had all kinds of old fractures. My neck was hurting. My back was hurting. If you're a jockey and you're not racing, unless you have disability insurance, no money is coming in. You have to keep riding and you have to win races.”

When the drugs were first given to him, he had no idea how dangerous they were.

“I was driving to New York with an agent friend of mine and I had either Oxy or Percocet in the cup holder and he saw them and said to me, 'Do you know those pills are just like heroin?' I said, 'How can that be, a doctor prescribed them to me,'” Rose said. “Up until the time I was prescribed OxyContin, I literally had never taken a drug. At most, I was a social drinker. I would have a couple of beers and that was it. So when I got prescribed pain pills, I thought it was like getting ibuprofen. I had no idea it was even a narcotic.”

As is so often the case with opiods, they took over Rose's life. Desperate for the drug, he started buying them on the street and said he was taking as much as 300 milligrams a day.

For the most part, he was able to hide the addiction from trainers and owners, but anyone paying attention to his numbers could have told that there was something wrong. He won just 78 races in 2012 and 59 in 2013. He said that he was in and out of rehab over the next couple of years and was able to finally stay clear of the pills in 2014. But that wasn't the end of his problems.

He replaced one addiction with another. Alcohol became his next issue.

“The pills are easier to stay away from than alcohol,” he said. “You have to buy them on the street corner or go to a doctor to get them. Alcohol is on every corner. I can be sitting in a parking lot and see three liquor stores right in front of me. I could get alcohol any time I wanted and it was, for the most part, socially acceptable. I went from one thing to another and let things get out of control with alcohol. One thing about alcoholics, we like having instant gratification. That's why you like alcohol and drugs. You get that right away. For a jockey, it's the same thing when you win a race–instant gratification.”

In 2019, a year after he got married, he was in the midst of another miserable year in which he would win just 35 races. So, he walked away. His last mount that year came at Parx on Dec. 7. He knew it was time to focus on his mental health and his substance issues and, at least for a while, forget about being a jockey. He spent much of his time working at his family's pizza shop in Lewistown, Pa. and faced his demons head on. He said he has been sober for more than two years.

Rose with Afleet Alex | Horsephotos

For a while, he didn't know if he was going to come back or not, but he never strayed too far from the sport. A few times a week, he would travel from his home in Pennsylvania to work horses for trainer Anthony Pecoraro.

“When you go away one of two things can happen,” he said. “You either forget about it completely or you start getting the itch to come back. I kept coming in and worked horses for Pecoraro. That kept me in the game a little bit. The more I did it the more I got that itch to ride again.”

He made his return on May 12 at Penn National, finishing fifth in a starter optional claimer aboard Special Beam (Divining Rod) for Pecoraro. Thirteen days later, he had his first winner since coming back, guiding Our Sweet Pea (Micromanage) to a win in a $12,500 claimer. He won again on June 1, again for Pecoraro. He entered Wednesday's card at Delaware with a record of 2-for-9 on the year.

He knows that the days of his vying for leading rider at Delaware are probably in the past.

“Do I have the ability and do I still think I can ride a smart race? Yes,” he said. “And I'm as fit as I've ever been. I don't feel like I've really aged. I'm still solid and I'm as light as I've been in years. I left the room today at 114 pounds and it's been all natural. It's not like I've been killing myself to cut weight. I think I can ride at that level. Am I going to get those horses? That is the issue. To be realistic, probably not. You have these guys at Delaware, younger riders who are good, like Jaime Rodriguez. Now that I've ridden against him a few times I can see that he is a very natural, very gifted rider. The trainers are going to go with someone like him. That's just the way it is. There are trainers I have a background with and they might give me a shot. If I'm in the top five in the standings, to me, that will be a good meet.”

After the 2005 Belmont, he never got another chance on Afleet Alex, who came down with a hairline fracture in his left front cannon bone and was retired. He knows it's highly unlikely that he'll ever get a mount like that again. But there's no point in fixating on his past, the good or the bad. He'll watch the Belmont on television Saturday and try to win some races at Delaware Park. There will be no complaints.

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Rich Strike Breezes Bullet Five Furlongs

RED-TR Racing's GI Kentucky Derby winner Rich Strike (Keen Ice) dazzled fans Monday at Churchill Downs with a five-furlong move in :59 between Races 5-6 in his final major preparation toward the $1.5 million GI Belmont Stakes S. June 11.

With rider Gabe Lagunes in the saddle, Rich Strike clipped off eighth-mile fractions of :11.80, :23.20 and :34.80, according to Churchill Downs clocker John Robertson. The 80-1 upset winner of the Derby galloped out six furlongs in 1:12 and completed seven furlongs in 1:26.

Trainer Eric Reed watched the work from the backside so he could watch his prized colt gallop out and supervise him coming off the track.

“He got away real well and worked exactly like we wanted him to do,” Reed said. “The track was a little quicker since it was in the afternoon but it was exactly what we wanted to do. Yesterday he was starting to relax in the morning. After some time away from the races that's sort of what we've seen from him. There's no doubt about his confidence. We've seen him come off the track in mornings more playful. It's like he knows what he did in the Derby. I still don't think we've seen the best of him.”

Rich Strike is scheduled to leave early Tuesday morning to compete in the 1 1/2-mile Belmont, the third jewel of racing's Triple Crown. Reed and owner Rick Dawson opted to skip the second leg, the $1.5 million GI Preakness S., to give Rich Strike more time between starts. The former $30,000 claimer has been based at Churchill Downs' Barn 17 for nearly two weeks.

“We're going on with the year with no regrets,” Reed said. “We did what was best for Ritchie and I'm confident we made the right decision.”

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Chad Brown Talks Preakness, Triple Crown Spacing On Writers’ Room

Already a four-time champion trainer, Chad Brown became a two-time Classic-winning conditioner Saturday at Pimlico when his Early Voting (Gun Runner) scored in the GI Preakness S., five years after Brown took down the Preakness using a similar formula with Cloud Computing (Maclean's Music). Tuesday, Brown sat down with the crew of the TDN Writers' Room presented by Keeneland from his headquarters in Saratoga Springs as the Green Group Guest of the Week to talk about his decision to skip the GI Kentucky Derby with Early Voting paying off, why he's in favor of keeping Triple Crown races' spacing the way it is, what's next for his other top sophomores Zandon (Upstart) and Jack Christopher (Munnings) and more.

Asked about his recent comments in support of the Triple Crown's current calendar alignment, somewhat surprising given that Brown runs his horses less frequently than average, he said, “I prefer to space my horses out and give them rest, but my answer was really based on the history of the sport. When I got into horse racing right here in Saratoga Springs, I was drawn to the rich, rich history and prestige of the sport. I'm really an old-fashioned guy. I like to stick to the basics. I'm not really in favor of too much change at the top, in the real pillars of the sport, meaning Triple Crown races and older track settings. I don't like changing the names of stakes races. Ironically, I'm in favor of changing things and adapting over time in my training system, but the things that most define the history of the sport, I would leave alone.”

Elsewhere on the show, which is also sponsored by Coolmore, Lane's End, XBTV, the Kentucky Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders, West Point Thoroughbreds and Legacy Bloodstock, the writers reacted to the Preakness and followed up on last week's debate about the future of the Triple Crown. Click here to watch the show; click here for the audio-only version or find it on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.

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Don’t Forget the Other Name on the Ticket

Most of us have voted early, and voted often, when it comes to the biggest impact recently made by a new stallion–and now, it seems, we've celebrated his official inauguration. Because a Classic winner for Gun Runner rounds out the narrative that so excited everybody last year, when his first juveniles showed such startling speed and precocity relative to his own Horse of the Year campaign, around two turns as a 4-year-old.

Sure, Gun Runner himself managed to win his first two (of three) juvenile starts, and then added the two big Fair Grounds trials before making the GI Kentucky Derby podium. But it was only in maturity that he reached his full potential, streaking through five Grade Is by an aggregate 27 1/2 lengths. Given the many Classic influences in his pedigree, then, he was surely only getting started when a GI Hopeful winner and champion 2-year-old filly contributed to a first-crop earnings record of $4.3 million. Sure enough, this spring Gun Runner had already followed through with winners of the GI Arkansas Derby and GI Santa Anita Derby, and now Early Voting has sealed the deal in the GI Preakness S.

We know that a ruthless price is exacted from young stallions if failing to capitalize on the one opportunity they tend to be given by commercial breeders, and even Gun Runner–despite having absolutely lived up to his billing at the yearling sales–was trimmed by Three Chimneys last year from $70,000 to $50,000, just to keep him in the game pending the launch of his first runners. But while many peers have meanwhile begun the usual, inexorable slide, he had already been hoisted to $125,000 for this spring and has been quick to reassure investors that his advent among the elite will be as lasting as it has been unmistakable.

By this stage, then, nobody still needs to be told that Gun Runner is a landslide success. But let's not forget the second name on the ticket. Because the other half of his genetic equation is certainly going to assist Early Voting, as and when he gets the chance to open up the next frontier for Gun Runner–as a sire of sires.

Pitch it short or drive it long, Early Voting's maternal family will sit very prettily in a stallion brochure. His dam is a Tiznow half-sister to an outstanding stallion in Speightstown; and full sister to a highly accomplished runner in the tragic Irap. And the quality of this dynasty–which eventually unspools, as seventh dam, to the Virginia matriarch Hildene–can be judged by reminding ourselves that Speightstown, though a first foal, brought $2 million as a yearling.

The line admittedly tapers pretty thinly by the time it reaches Hildene, foaled in 1938 and a foundation mare at Christopher T. Chenery's Meadow Farm, eventually famed for the nativity of Secretariat. Though Hildene (like her first two dams) was mediocre on the track, and apparently a bleeder, her five stakes winners included Hill Prince, Horse of the Year in 1950; and First Landing, champion juvenile of 1958.

First Flush was one of Hildene's less distinguished foals, unplaced in a light career. But if that seemed unsurprising in view of her paternity–her sire had won steeplechases in France–the fact is that she went on to prove a fertile source of stakes performers and/or producers. These included Copper Canyon, whose sire Bryan G. had been selected after coming up with triple champion Cicada from one of First Flush's half-sisters. Three of Copper Canyon's daughters would go on to produce Grade I winners, including an unraced daughter of the great Buckpasser named Insilca who delivered GI Turf Classic Inv. scorer Turk Passer (Turkoman).

Insilca's daughter by Bold Ruler's son Chieftain, Silken Doll, ran up a sequence of four as a sophomore (crowned with a stakes win) before in turn becoming quite a useful producer. Her foals included a Group 1-placed juvenile (admittedly regressive after) in Britain by Silver Hawk; the dam of GII Indiana Derby winner/GI King's Bishop runner-up Star Dabbler (Saint Ballado); and a Storm Cat filly named Silken Cat, whose three processional wins round Woodbine qualified her as Canada's leading 2-year-old filly of 1995.

Silken Cat, who had been bred in Quebec by Ferme Du Bois-Vert and sold to Sam-Son Farm as a yearling, was at this point acquired by Aaron and Marie Jones but had to be retired after a single sophomore start (and first defeat) in California. Any disappointment was soon assuaged, however, when her first yearling colt, by Gone West, brought that $2 million from Eugene Melnyk. Though Speightstown took his time to repay his investment, at one stage surfacing only twice in 30 months, he put it all together as champion sprinter at six, bowing out in style at the Lone Star Breeders' Cup.

On the face of it, Silken Cat then appeared to produce a series of costly duds. There was a winner in Malaysia, but that was it. Three never even made the starting gate: a $1.5 million sister to Speightstown; a $1.75 million Tiznow filly; and a colt by Unbridled's Song, plainly unraceable, discarded for just $8,000 as a 2-year-old at the Keeneland November Sale. By the time the very difficult delivery of a Tiznow colt caused her retirement, 16 years after she had produced Speightstown, Silken Cat had burned enough fingers for her final son to fail to reach his yearling reserve at $140,000.

Pinhooker Bobby Dodd did a deal, however, and managed to advance the colt's value to $300,000 at OBS the following March. The very same day, Silken Cat lay down peacefully in her paddock at Taylor Made and died. Her work, albeit protracted and fitful, was done: 11 yearlings sold for over $8.5 million.

Her final bequest, this Tiznow colt, was always campaigned like a talented horse by Doug O'Neill and a shock success in the GII Blue Grass S. showed why. Irap later added the GIII Ohio Derby and GIII Indiana Derby before making the podium in the GI Travers, only to succumb to laminitis that fall.

In the meantime, two of those ostensible “dud” siblings have enhanced their dam's legacy in astounding fashion. The Unbridled's Song colt written off for $8,000 was bought by John McKee, who offered him to West Virginia breeders at Beau Ridge Farm as a half-brother to Speightstown. Fiber Sonde has since accumulated 21 black-type winners, two at graded stakes level, including the 15-for-27 millionaire and Charles Town stalwart Runnin'toluvya.

And then there was that very expensive Tiznow filly, named Amour d'Ete, unraced after her acquisition as a yearling by incoming Three Chimneys chairman Goncalo Borges Torrealba at the 2013 September Sale. Evidently a stunning physical, she apparently suffered a fungal infection in training that nearly cost her an eye. The Three Chimneys team did try to cash her in, with a Super Saver cover at the November Sale of 2016, but in the end held their nerve and retained her at $725,000.

That has turned out to be an inspired gamble. True, her daughter by Super Saver was sold as a yearling for barely a tenth of that sum, at $75,000, and only won a maiden claimer. But how Ten Strike Racing must be congratulating themselves after claiming this filly for $50,000 at Churchill in November! Because she now finds herself half-sister to a Preakness winner.

Things had started to turn round for Amour d'Ete immediately after she was retained at the November Sale, her full brother Irap coming good the following spring. And fortunately her 2019 foal by the farm's rookie stallion Gun Runner (apparently still immature when making $200,000 at the Keeneland September Sale, to join Klaravich Stables) was striking enough for her to be bred straight back.

As a result, Three Chimneys find themselves not only with both the sire and dam of a Preakness winner, but also a full sister–along with several other new shoots on this long-flourishing family tree, Amour d'Ete having otherwise produced only fillies. Her first foal, by Distorted Humor, required patience but did break her maiden stylishly at four; after Early Voting's sister, now two, came a yearling by another recent breakout sire in Constitution; while just last month the farm welcomed a filly by Volatile.

So let's now just take a step back and consider the mating that produced a Preakness winner. Apart from sheer quality of blood–both Gun Runner and Amour d'Ete, after all, are real aristocrats–the first thing that stands out is a nice echo behind Silken Cat, blue hen as she has unmistakably become, and Gun Runner's great damsire Giant's Causeway. Because Early Voting's second dam, as noted, is by Storm Cat out of Chieftain's daughter Silken Doll; and Giant's Causeway, also by Storm Cat, was out of a granddaughter of a Chieftain mare.

While his contribution to the package is plainly limited, Chieftain is a wholesome kind of brand to find top and bottom. Though he never established his own branch of the Bold Ruler line, he was a conduit not just for speed and durability but for some regal genes: he was a half-brother to Tom Rolfe, while their dam was out of How, the Kentucky Oaks winner whose sister delivered Sham.

How sire Princequillo tends to recur in almost any worthwhile American pedigree and this one is no exception. For instance, he also helps to lace together the very familiar pedigree of Quiet Dance, whose mating with Giant's Causeway produced the dam of Gun Runner. (Quiet Dance, of course, also gave us Saint Liam by Saint Ballado.) Quiet Dance's second dam was by a son of Princequillo, while the famously close inbreeding to Dr. Fager in her sire Quiet American was in each case via daughters of Princequillo's prolific producer Cequillo.

Turning to those opposing strands of Storm Cat, his damsire Secretariat–besides being another son of Bold Ruler–introduces more Princequillo through his dam Somethingroyal. For the little it may be worth, moreover, Tiznow's damsire Seattle Song combines a Bold Ruler line with a mare by a son of Princequillo.

Doubtless these are fairly random tints to pick from a complex palette. In broader brushstrokes, however, we can say that Early Voting's prestigious family has had the benefit of commensurate seeding throughout–first four dams by Tiznow, Storm Cat, Chieftain and Buckpasser–and that there won't be a chink in his genetic armor when he goes to stud. His four grandparents are a developing sire of sires in Candy Ride (Arg); a half-sister to Saint Liam; a broodmare sire now up to 29 graded stakes winners, following We the People (Constitution) only the previous weekend; and the dam of Speightstown, Irap and Fiber Sonde.

To me, that's what makes a copper-bottomed pedigree: when all genetic contributors have established their worth through horses other than those who actually put them on the page in front of you.

Gun Runner's first crop has already drawn alongside that of Speightstown, which eventually mustered five Grade I winners. These largely proved typical of Speightstown's stock overall, however, in tending to need time to mature. For his half-sister by another fairly slow burner in Tiznow to have produced a Classic winner, then, certainly attests to the striking dynamism we're seeing in Gun Runner.

But let's not get ahead of ourselves. The previous Preakness winner in Early Voting's maternal line, Hill Prince, was also from his sire's debut crop. As we've just seen in this pedigree, that was the start of a road that led to one of the commanding summits of the modern breed. If Gun Runner can go on and become even half as influential as Princequillo, then he will indeed be looking at greatness.

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