From Camp Hope to Hollywood Derby

Camp Hope, a 3-year-old son of Summer Front who made it to the winner's circle on both opening day and closing day of Keeneland's fall meet, will take on Grade I company in Saturday's Hollywood Derby at Del Mar. The Kenny McPeek trainee carries the silks of owner Walking L Thoroughbreds, but his earnings go toward the important facility he was named after.

An intensive residential program in Houston, Texas, Camp Hope provides treatment for combat veterans suffering from trauma and PTSD. The facility opened its doors in 2012 and has since brought in over 1,600 veterans.

“Camp Hope is the residential program of the PTSD Foundation of America,” the program's Executive Director David Maulsby explained. “We bring in combat veterans from every era of war and every military branch. It is a peer-to-peer based program and is about six to eight months in length, although it can be up to a little over a year on occasion. Everything we do is absolutely free for our veterans and their family members. It's all about changing the trajectory of their life and trying to stop the ever-increasing suicide rate in our military.”

Scott Leeds, the founder of Walking L Thoroughbreds, was drawn to support Camp Hope through his racing stable when he learned of their goal of decreasing the average of 22 veterans who are lost every day to suicide.

“The simple mission of Camp Hope is for that number to become 21 or 20 or any number closer to zero than to 22 every day,” Leeds said. “Their goal is to let these guys live a life that isn't about whatever problems they might have. It's about being able to go to the grocery store without worrying about if there's something in a trash can that's going to blow up. You listen to these guys tell their stories and it just makes you want to do more.”

Residents of Camp Hope facility celebrated as the equine Camp Hope won on debut last October and brought attention to his namesake when he made it to the 2020 GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile, but they waited until nearly a year later for him to claim his next win.

David Mausby (far left) with staff and residents of Camp Hope | photo courtesy PTSD Foundation

The tables turned this summer when the colt switched over to the turf. After a pair of third-place finishes at Saratoga and Kentucky Downs, Camp Hope defeated allowance company by over five lengths on Keeneland's opening day and then took his second straight victory three weeks later in the Bryan Station S.

The next morning, residents of Camp Hope gathered for their weekly Sunday morning meeting. As the group sat down, Maulsby began playing the video of Camp Hope's win from the day before.

“I didn't tell them what to expect,” Maulsby recalled. “I just said, 'Hey guys, here are some great friends who are helping share our story and they named their horse in honor of what happens here.' As Camp Hope pulled away, it got pretty rowdy inside the multipurpose building. It was very exciting for them to see somebody recognize what's going on here and want to tell the story to the rest of the world.”

Camp Hope's residential program has seen a dramatic increase in intake since the onset of the pandemic. Early in 2020, their capacity averaged 65 residents. Today, that number has increased to 95.

“Many veterans who were going to the VA were told not to come back because they closed the doors to anything other than physical emergencies,” Maulsby said. “So our numbers increased not only with our intake here, but with our outreach programs as well.”

Maulsby shared the story of one recent graduate  who came to the facility during the height of the pandemic. The Vietnam veteran had been struggling with addiction and self-medication for five decades and was receiving help from the VA in his home city until they closed their doors.

“When they told him not to come back, he converted back. It was the only coping mechanism he had. About three weeks later, he ended up having to be taken back into the hospital because of the addiction and because he was suicidal.”

A case worker at the hospital told the veteran about Camp Hope. After participating in the program for over a year, he was able to return home.

“He is connecting with family members who never wanted to be a part of his life because of his behaviors,” Maulsby said. “It's exciting to see that joy back in his life and see family members come back in his life after three destroyed marriages over the years. He's rebuilding those connections and he points to Camp Hope for all of that.”

Despite an increased number of residents, the facility felt the impacts of the pandemic when they were forced to cancel their annual funding events last year.

“Camp Hope is operated primarily through fundraising events more so than a lot of nonprofits that might have endowments that could keep up with the lack of events,” Leeds explained. “These folks had to scramble to look for other ways to raise funds. Everyone who works here puts in seven days a week and it's not all success stories. One veteran just graduated and it was his fourth time being there. But they kept opening the door and saying, 'Yes, we're going to try this again.' The fourth time around, he spent eight months there and finally had his success story.”

Leeds and his wife Dana first became involved with Camp Hope and the PTSD Foundation through their colt Fighting Seabee (Summer Front), winner of the 2019 GIII With Anticipation S.

Residents of Camp Hope receive training in behavior modification, emotional control, anger management and workforce development | photo courtesy PTSD Foundation

“For both Camp Hope and Fighting Seabee to be stakes winners, we know this business and know there's a very small percent chance for that to happen, so there's karma at work when we picked those two horses [to race for a cause],” Leeds said. “The funds they have earned are great and add to what we already would have been giving to Camp Hope anyways, but the ability to use their success to get the message out is what, to me, has been the greatest benefit.  Now that Camp Hope is in a graded stake, there's an opportunity to get broader media exposure to share that this horse has a cool name for a reason.”

Leeds said that between Camp Hope and Fighting Seabee, over $40,000 has been sent to Camp Hope and the PTSD Foundation, including $13,000 from Camp Hope's back-to-back wins at Keeneland last month.

“Going into the allowance at Keeneland, we expected him to win, but we didn't expect him to win by five lengths,” he said. “The timing worked out well to put him in the stakes race on closing day. The horse has matured significantly as the year has gone on and our biggest concern coming out of the Bryan Station was that there were no turf races at Churchill Downs and we didn't want to slow down on a horse that was in such a groove. We thought the Hollywood Derby was a really good spot. It's a step up, but we feel good about how he matches up.”

Leeds added that trainer-jockey connections Kenny McPeek and Brian Hernandez, Jr. share his confidence going into the Grade I.

“Kenny's feedback has been that this is the best shape this horse has ever been in,” Leeds said.” After the last race, Brian said he had plenty of horse under him, which you can see with how he finished the race. The mile and an eighth is not a concern because he won the allowance at the same distance. I think it all lines up to be a good way to finish the year off . The way this horse has matured and with the surface change, there are a lot of opportunities as we look ahead to his 4-year-old campaign.”

Walking L Thoroughbreds has been in the Thoroughbred business for less than a decade, but Leeds shared that they have recently ventured into the breeding side of the game with an ownership share in Lane's End first-crop stallion Unified.

Camp Hope gets his first stakes win in the Bryan Station S. | Coady

“We made the decision that for anything we own that is related to Unified-the horses we breed to race, any yearlings or weanlings we sell-the proceeds are going to be shared with the PTSD Foundation. We like that because it's something that will keep on giving without us having to choose a specific horse. Now it's going to be any horse that comes through our Unified connection.”

For Leeds, the draw to support these organizations came through his grandfathers, who were both WWII veterans. Through his exposure to the work done at Camp Hope, he said the programs have become even more meaningful.

“Until the day my grandfather died, the thing he was most proud of besides his family was the time that he served our country,” Leeds shared. “The WWII veterans didn't even know what PTSD was, but I know for a fact that it was something that affected my grandfather for the rest of his life. I know if he knew what we were doing and what was happening at Camp Hope, he would want to be talking about it to everyone he knew. It's this little spot of land nestled in the suburbs of Houston, but to know what happens there, if we can tell one person every time we get a chance, I want to do that. These guys touch your heart, knowing what's going on there. It's just a really special feeling.”

The holiday season is a busy time at Camp Hope. Volunteers come in with dozens of smoked turkeys and twice as many freshly-baked pies. Hundreds of presents are wrapped and shipped out to the veterans' families back home.

And yet, it's almost inevitable that a veteran will show up on their doorstep on Thanksgiving or Christmas Day.

“It's heartbreaking to watch,” Maulsby said. “You think, 'How dark does your life have to be that this is the day you step away from your family and into a program where you're going to be gone from them for six months to a year?' But on the brighter side of that, they are starting on that day the work that needs to be done to change the trajectory of their lives.”

“Some pretty amazing things happen on these five acres of land,” he continued. “We have a great community that supports us and they understand that it takes more than a bumper sticker on the back of your car to support our troops.”

For more information on Camp Hope and the PTSD Foundation of America, click here.

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Free Pie and Live Racing: A Laurel Park Thanksgiving Tradition

Courtesy Maryland Jockey Club

No matter the time of year, or the occasion, holiday traditions mean different things to different people.

For more than three decades, aside from hosting its annual live race card, Thanksgiving Day has meant only one thing at Laurel Park–pies.

Tens of thousands of the tasty treats–apple or pumpkin, take your pick–have been handed out since the late Frank J. De Francis Jr.  purchased Laurel and historic Pimlico Race Course in late 1986.

“He's the one that started it, as a way of doing something special for the fans that come out,” Maryland Jockey Club Vice President of Racing Development Georganne Hale said. Hale first joined the MJC in 1984 as assistant racing secretary and has held various roles since, including racing secretary and Vice President of Racing.

“People look forward to it every year,” she added.

After spending several million dollars on innovative facilities improvements at Laurel and Pimlico, reviving the historic Pimlico Special in 1988 following a 29-year absence, spearheading legislation to authorize Sunday racing and telephone wagering in Maryland and the landmark tax reform act of 1985 which provided tax relief to the state's racing industry, De Francis passed away in August 1989.

His son, Joe, a successful attorney who had worked with his father for several years on Thoroughbred and Standardbred racing issues, became MJC's President and CEO at age 34. And the pie giveaway went on.

It continued when Magna Entertainment purchased majority interest of Laurel and Pimlico in July 2002 and following the transition to The Stronach Group and now 1/ST Racing. A pandemic canceled the pie giveaway last fall, only the second time in Hale's memory where it didn't take place. Already purchased, the pies were instead given away to members of the backstretch and local food banks.

Before online wagering and off-track betting, the MJC handed out as many as 10,000 pies. This year, it has 2,250 family sized apple and pumpkin pies ready for distribution, made by Clement's Pastry Shop in Hyattsville, Md.

“People love it. The line stretches out as far as you can see,” Hale said. “If we have any pies left over, we make sure everyone on the backside gets one and the rest we donate to the soup kitchens.”

Though Laurel is not the only jurisdiction racing on Thanksgiving–there are cards at six other Thoroughbred tracks in five states and Canada including Golden Gate Fields, Laurel's sister track in Albany, Calif.–the pie giveaway is one that sets Maryland apart.

“I've had people from California e-mail me asking if we're doing the pies again this year,” Hale said. “Everybody knows we do it. It's a great tradition.”

Laurel will open its doors at 10 a.m. on Thanksgiving Day with a special 11:25 a.m. post for the first of its nine live races.

Fans will be able to choose a family sized pumpkin or apple pie with purchase of a racing program, with a maximum of two pies per person, while supplies last. Pies will be distributed until 4:30 p.m. at the grandstand entrance.

Free donuts, coffee, cider and hot chocolate will be available at the grandstand and clubhouse entrances from 10 to 11:30 a.m.

Laurel will also host a Thanksgiving buffet from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the Terrace Dining Room. To make a buffet reservation, call 301-725-0770.

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New Vocations’ Anna Ford, Randy Moss Join TDN Writers’ Room

As the Thoroughbred Program Director for New Vocations, the nation's largest racehorse adoption program, Anna Ford knows how important it is for a horse-related charity to find creative ways to raise money. And Ford and her team might just have landed on a winning idea.

It was announced this week that New Vocations and DJ Stable have joined forces for a Giving Tuesday campaign. DJ Stable will match all donations up to $25,000.

That was among the subjects discussed when Ford joined ths week's Thoroughbred Daily News Writers' Room podcast brought to you by Keeneland as the Green Group Guest of the Week. Ford's appearance coincided with Randy Moss' debut as one of the panelists on the podcast. Moss filled in for the vacationing Joe Bianca.

“We're really excited about this because, first, it's our first annual Giving Tuesday campaign,” Ford said. “To have Jon (Green) and his family step up and make this match is really going to boost the whole campaign. Hopefully, we can raise 50 or more thousand dollars.”

Jon Green, the general manager of his family's DJ Stable and a regular on the TDN Writers' Room, summed up why it is so important for owners to accept the responsibilities involved when it comes to properly retiring their horses.

“As our stable has gotten bigger it's more important for us to make sure that the horses that we have a good home after they are done racing,” Green said “The most important thing we can do as owners is recognize our responsibility. And when we raise our hand at an auction and buy a horse, or we decide to breed a horse and foal it out and have it run in our colors, it's our responsibility to ensure that those horses are cared for once their racing careers are over.”

Ford also spoke to changing attitudes in a sport that once attempted to sweep the problem of what to do with retirees under the rug. Ford said that the advent of social media has made her job a lot easier.

“We first saw a big change with Facebook,” she said. “Once there was more awareness of the issues people started asking questions. We started to see a shift around 2009, 2010. That's when more people started wanting to send us horses and more people wanted to fund our efforts because they saw the value in our efforts. I really feel like it was a matter of raising awareness and getting people educated on what was going on.”

In addition to Giving Tuesday, New Vocations relies heavily on its Breeders' Cup Pledge program, in which owners, trainers and others involved with Breeders' Cup starters pledge a portion of their winning to New Vocations. This year, there were eight Breeders' Cup winners who were part of the pledge, which raised $140,000.

Elsewhere on the show, which is also sponsored by West Point Thoroughbreds, Coolmore, Legacy Bloodstock and XBTV, the writers focused on the ongoing problems the sport is having accurately timing races. The times of several Breeders' Cup races had to be recalculated after the races were run. Moss, who is part of the Beyer speed figure team, was particularly critical of the Gmax timing system now in place at several tracks, among them Del Mar, the home of this year's Breeders' Cup.

“It amazing that it's 2021 and this sport is doing a worse job of timing races now than it did in 1971,” said Bill Finley.

“It's doing a worse job than it did in 1941,” Moss said.

Other topics under discussion included Peter Miller's decision to step away from racing and the debate over who should be the 3-year-old male champion. Moss threw his support behind Medina Spirit (Protonico), while Green and Finley supported Essential Quality (Tapit).

Click here to watch the podcast; click here for the audio-only version or find it on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.

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Staton Flurry on a Historic Ride With the Team

Four years ago–almost to the day–when Arkansas native Staton Flurry sat down for a tête-à-tête with the TDN, his trainer Brad Cox took the opportunity to indulge in a little divination.

“He's out for good horses and wants to win stake races,” said Cox at the time, before pointing to their as yet unfinished greatest hits tour with multiple graded-stakes winner, Mr. Misunderstood (Archarcharch). “What this horse has done for him, those are the kinds of horses that he's looking for.”

Turns out, Cox reads the tea leaves as well as he does the condition book.

“Mr. Misunderstood took us on just such a fun ride, getting me my first graded-stakes win to becoming tied for the all-time winning-most stakes winner at Churchill Downs,” said Flurry.

And from Mr. Misunderstood's near million-dollar piggy bank, “that allowed us to go after Shedaresthedevil (Daredevil),” Flurry added, of the three-time Grade I-winning doyen of the distaff division. This includes a win in the 2020 GI Kentucky Oaks in record fashion.

“The rest is history with her,” said Flurry. “She's taken us on such a historic ride. To be able to still be a part of it, and to do it in 2022–well, it's going to be fun again.”

If you read a touch of disbelief to Flurry's remarks, that's understandable given he had accompanied Shedaresthedevil–owned for the bulk of her career in a partnership between Flurry Racing, Qatar Racing and Big Aut Farms–to the recent Fasig-Tipton November sale with expectations of a fond adieu.

“If she hadn't met the reserve, I think there's no doubt we would have kept the same partnership together, kept on running,” he said. “But we had every intention of selling her.”

But not 10 or 15 minutes before Shedaresthedevil went through the ring, Flurry and the Qatar Racing contingent were presented with a proposition from Mandy Pope of Whisper Hill Farm.

“If you all want to stay in, Mandy would love you all to stay in for a piece,” said Flurry, recounting a deal engineered by agent Alex Solis.

“I said I'd sure love to,” said Flurry. The hammer dropped at the $5-million mark for Shedaresthedevil's new team of owners. “It just worked out perfect.”

Currently sunning like a citrus fruit at Pope's Floridian farm, Shedaresthedevil will likely return to training with Cox at Fair Grounds come the turn of the year, before launching her 5-year-old career at Oaklawn Park, said Flurry.

Her two main targets, he said, bifurcate 2022: The GI Apple Blossom S. at Oaklawn Apr. 23, and the Breeders' Cup, held next year at Keeneland Nov. 4 and 5. A return to the latter event would carry with it the promise of reparations.

“You have to throw out the Breeders' Cup race,” Flurry said, of Shedaresthedevil's performance in this year's GI Breeders' Cup Distaff, when she participated in a frothy war up front, only to pay the price when the legionnaires charged from the back.

“The pace early on was just suicidal. We went in with a game plan–Flo [Geroux] stuck with that game plan. I don't think anybody realized the pace was going to be that hot,” he said, adding however that “we out-finished everybody in that early opening pack.”

A self-described “Hot Springs guy,” Flurry's racing and professional life, designs and aspirations, are as rooted in Oaklawn as the hickory of Hot Springs National Park.

He's the key player in Flurry Parking, which owns several parking lots around the racetrack, and manages the family's rental properties in the area–some soon occupied by racing's Arkansas-bound winter diaspora.

“They're coming in this morning,” said Flurry, about Brad Cox's assistant and some of their grooms, when he picked up the phone to the TDN a tad out of breath. “We were hurrying to get stuff loaded and ready for them.”

Since claiming his first horse in 2012, Flurry makes sure to ready the ranks in preparation for the annual Oaklawn winter meet, scheduled to start this year on Dec. 3. He dreams of a Derby–one minus the Twin Spires. “My ultimate goal is to win the [GI] Arkansas Derby–more than any other race.”

And he hopes one day that Mike Smith will carry his colors to victory there–a nod to the hotly anticipated head-to-head between Zenyatta and Rachel Alexandra in the 2010 Apple Blossom, a match-up eventually scrapped, to much chagrin.

“Always loved watching Zenyatta,” said Flurry. “She's probably my favorite horse of all time that I haven't owned. Just watching Mike Smith ride such epic races here at Oaklawn, I'd love to win one with him. He's such a great guy–Hall of Famer. It's just another weird goal of mine.”

But as steeped as Flurry is in all things Oaklawn, he could soon take on international horizons, thanks to a busy year at the yearling sales.

At Keeneland September, he signed the ticket on three colts (by Liam's Map, Speightstown and Connect), for a combined $550,000, in partnership with Titletown Racing's Paul Farr.

At the Fasig-Tipton July sale, he went to $175,000 for a Midshipman filly. In an inaugural transatlantic raid, Flurry went to €170,000 for an Invincible Spirit (Ire) filly at Goff's Orby Sale. This could set the stage for another such voyage across the wide blue beyond.

“Goffs came to us, said, 'we're having this sale, would love to have you all come over,'” said Flurry. And so, with funds left over from the September sale, he chewed the fat with his bloodstock adviser, Clay Scherer.

“He said, 'let's give it a shot, see if we can maybe get a [Royal] Ascot horse,'” said Flurry.

“I'd love to go over there,” Flurry added. “You see all the success Brad [Cox] has had with turf horses, sooner or later he'll get some starters over there, and hopefully we're one of them.”

If augurs can be found from one of Ascot's anointed sons, then it bears pointing out that Wesley Ward trains a full brother to Flurry's Invincible Spirit yearling filly–the 2-year-old Napa Spirit, who broke his maiden at Keeneland in April before being shipped to Europe.

“The Midshipman filly we bought, she looks like she's going to be fast early, too,” said Flurry. “We'll see how everything falls.”

At age 31 and with nearly a decade of practical hands-on ownership experience under the belt, Flurry brings to the sport the clear-eyed perspective of someone looking at his role as it connects to a broader ecosystem–one being shaped by swiftly evolving mores.

Flurry sits on the Arkansas Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association's board of directors.

“We've got a good re-homing program we've started this last year here. We're always trying to improve but it's been pretty fulfilling so far,” he said.

“Obviously I'm still active in the claiming races, but anything that doesn't get claimed and needs to be retired, we try to find a good second home for them,” Flurry added, pointing to Mr. Misunderstood's new career in dressage. “As much as he treated myself and Brad well, to see him enjoy his second career and have a good life after racing, it's so fulfilling.”

A fraction of the whole indeed.

“Crazy accomplishments”–that's how Flurry describes his run these past few years. “Crazy accomplishments” he never would in his “wildest dreams” have predicted.

Besides the young stock coming through, Flurry has around 13 horses in training–five with Cox, five with Karl Broberg and three with Ron Faucheux. Grand heights then forged from a streamlined operation.

Or as Flurry succinctly puts it, “It's a testament to the team I've built around me.”

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