Cox Too Busy To Reflect On Rise To The Top: ‘It’s Kind Of Been A Blur’

In the early spring of 2016, Livia Frazar was asked where she saw her husband's training career in five years. That trainer, then an up and comer obsessed with horses, was Brad Cox.

“I see him at the top,” she said. “He'll be at the top.”

Frazar was right, but it only took her husband four years to complete a meteoric rise and capture his first Eclipse Award as the country's outstanding trainer of 2020.

“I hope she's still seeing that five years from now or 10,” Cox said during a Feb. 1 interview at Oaklawn, where he has more than 40 horses stabled. “We'll see how it goes.”

It couldn't get much better than 2020, when Cox's powerful and far-reaching operation amassed 216 victories and a career-high $18,991,582 in purse earnings, figures nationally that ranked sixth and second, respectively, according to Equibase, racing's official data gathering organization. He also ranked second in graded stakes victories with 30.

Highlights, stretching from January to December, included a record-tying four Breeders' Cup victories, two Eclipse Award winners (Monomoy Girl and Essential Quality) and capturing the Kentucky Oaks, the nation's biggest prize for 3-year-old fillies, for the second time in three years.

Twice Cox has had to resurrect his career after splitting with powerful Midwest Thoroughbreds in 2010 and again in 2012. Twice left with only a handful of horses, Cox recovered. The second reboot, clearly, came with measured vengeance since Cox now has divisions in Arkansas, Louisiana, Kentucky, New York and Florida and trains for A-list clients such as Juddmonte Farms, Godolphin LLC, LNJ Foxwoods and Madaket Stables.

“It's kind of been a blur,” said Cox, 40, who grew up in the shadow of Churchill Downs. “You think back like, yeah, I was maybe coming here with 10 horses, 12 horses, and maybe five or six down at the Fair Grounds. It seems like it was not that long ago, really.”

The problem, Cox said, is there hasn't been a chance to really reflect on what he accomplished in recent years because he's managing a stable of more than 100 horses, in multiple jurisdictions, with an emphasis on what he likes to call “Saturday afternoon horses.” He was named an Eclipse Award winner Jan. 28. But, he noted, there are no timeouts in racing.

In addition to Monomoy Girl, Cox's breakout horse nationally, and Essential Quality, the trainer's rapidly growing resume includes Eclipse Award winners Covfefe (champion 3-year-old and champion female sprinter in 2019) and British Idiom (champion 2-year-old filly in 2019) and Knicks Go, who captured the $3 million Pegasus World Cup Invitational Stakes (G1) Jan. 23 at Gulfstream Park.

Monomoy Girl, in 2018, gave Cox his first career Grade 1 victory in the $500,000 Ashland at Keeneland, first Kentucky Oaks victory and first career Breeders' Cup victory in the $2 million Distaff at Churchill Downs en route to an Eclipse Award as the country's champion 3-year-old filly. After injury and illness sidelined Monomoy Girl in 2019, she returned to win all four starts last year, including a second Distaff, and was named champion older dirt female. It marked Cox's seventh career Breeders' Cup victory. Essential Quality (Juvenile), Knicks Go (Dirt Mile) and Aunt Pearl (Juvenile Fillies Turf) were Cox's other Breeders' Cup winners Nov. 6-7 at Keeneland.

This weekend at Oaklawn will have a Breeders' Cup feel since Cox is scheduled to saddle six horses in five stakes races, notably Essential Quality in Saturday's $750,000 Southwest (G3) for 3-year-olds and Monomoy Girl in Sunday's $250,000 Bayakoa Stakes (G3) for older fillies and mares.

“It's almost like you have to keep your foot on the gas pedal,” Cox said. “We, obviously, try to be competitive, year-round, at every place we race. And that's demanding. It's not as if we run through the November meet at Churchill and say, 'OK, we're going to take two months and just shut things down.' That's not the case. We try to come out swinging at the Fair Grounds and then we're obviously preparing for Oaklawn.”

Cox said Oaklawn represents an important career building block since striking out on his own in the fall of 2004 after coming up under trainers Burk Kessinger, James Baker and Dallas Stewart.

Cox's early success – high win percentages and shrewd claims – helped him cultivate Arkansas clients like Mike Langford of Jonesboro, Steve Landers of Little Rock, Frank Fletcher of North Little Rock, Starsky Weast of Star City, John Ed Anthony of Hot Springs and Staton Flurry of Hot Springs.

Carve, who was owned by Langford, gave Cox his first career graded stakes victory in the $300,000 Prairie Meadows Cornhusker Handicap (G3) in 2014 at Prairie Meadows and his first career Breeders' Cup starter later that year in the $1 million Dirt Mile (G1) at Santa Anita. Carve became Cox's first Oaklawn stakes winner in the $100,000 Fifth Season in 2015. He won three Arkansas-bred stakes in 2015 and 2016 with the nice sprinter Weast Hill. Cox and Landers teamed to capture the $500,000 Clark Handicap (G1) in 2018 at Churchill Downs with Leofric, a multiple Oaklawn allowance winner.

Cox entered Friday with 1,503 career victories, including 213 at Oaklawn, according to Equibase. He has 18 career Oaklawn stakes victories, one of the most recent coming with the promising Caddo River, an Anthony homebred, in the $150,000 Smarty Jones for 3-year-olds Jan. 22. Cox started his first horse in Hot Springs in 2006, won his first race in 2009 and was third-leading trainer last year with 26 victories.

“I'll never forget the day being stabled at Turfway and thinking I'm going to take horses to Oaklawn for the winter,” Cox said. “I left Kentucky and it helped me start picking up better horses and running for better purses and it just propelled things and we've tried to keep it going ever since.”

Flurry has had horses with Cox since 2013 after a friend touted the trainer as an “up and comer,” who actively played the claiming game.

Their first starter, Full Steam Ahead, won about three weeks after being claimed for $12,500 at the 2013 Oaklawn meeting. Their first stakes victory together came in the fall of 2015 at Louisiana Downs with Uncle Brennie in the $75,000 Sunday Silence. Cox and Flurry have since campaigned the top grass horse Mr. Misunderstood, a multiple graded stakes winner and near millionaire, and reached new heights when Shedaresthedevil won the $1.25 million Kentucky Oaks (G1) Sept. 4 at Churchill Downs. Shedaresthedevil won Oaklawn's $300,000 Honeybee Stakes (G3) earlier in the year and was a finalist for champion 3-year-old filly of 2020.

Flurry, who races Shedaresthedevil in partnership, said Cox's career trajectory isn't a surprise.

“I know how dedicated he is,” Flurry said. “I guess the best word to use is 'obsessed.' He lives, sleeps, everything horses. He may take a break to go fishing or go to the gym now and then, but usually, almost every waking hour of the day that he's not spending with his wife and kids, is all about horses. I can't remember who said it, but if you want to be successful at something, you have to be obsessed with it. That's what Brad is. He's obsessed. He spots them right. He does everything with these horses, 100 percent.”

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KHRC Awards $14.3 Million to Kentucky Breeders for 2020

The Kentucky Horse Racing Commission has awarded $14.3 million to qualified breeders through the Thoroughbred Breeders' Incentive Fund for Kentucky Thoroughbreds' wins in 2020. The incentive fund requires owners to board mares in Kentucky from the time of breeding until the birth of the foal. Incentive payments are based on the foal's eventual winnings on the racetrack. Last year, nearly 3,500 races were won by a Kentucky-bred receiving a breeder award.

Kentucky-breds won over 245 graded stakes in the United States and 18 group races in Canada, England, France and Ireland last year, victories that included Authentic's (Into Mischief) success in the GI Kentucky Derby, Shedaresthedevil's (Daredevil) win in the GI Kentucky Oaks and Swiss Skydiver's (Daredevil) win in the GI Preakness S.

“We need the commonwealth's signature horse industry to stay strong and engaged as we sprint out of the COVID-19 pandemic. On top of being part of our history, the industry supports many Kentucky families today and will continue to draw new visitors to the state in the future,” said Governor Andy Beshear. “Thanks to Kentucky breeders and a strong racing circuit enhanced by historical horse racing, Kentucky remains a leader in breeding with more stallions than any other state, and representing 42% of the foal crop in North America.”

Since its inception in 2006, more than $184 million has been awarded to Kentucky breeders for winning eligible races across the globe. The fund receives 80% of the 6% sales tax paid when breeding a stallion to a mare in the commonwealth. In addition, the 2020 fund received $1.1 million from wagers on historical horse racing.

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Daredevil’s Auspicious Return

A wise man changes his mind, but a fool never will.

Such is the association between the commercial market and Daredevil (More Than Ready– Chasethewildwind, by Forestry). Luckily for the third-crop sire, the market was quick to change its opinion and Lane's End jumped on the opportunity to bring him back.

After Daredevil failed to attract mares to fill his fourth book in 2019, WinStar Farm accepted an offer from the Jockey Club of Turkey and the son of More Than Ready boarded a flight abroad for last year's breeding season.

But 11 days before the announcement was made of the stallion's relocation, a filly by the name of Swiss Skydiver broke her maiden by 5 ½ lengths at Churchill Downs for Kenny McPeek.

This filly alone arguably could have changed the market's opinion of her sire., but then she ran second to another daughter of Daredevil in the GI Kentucky Oaks.

Shortly after Swiss Skydiver's gutsy duel with eventual Horse of the Year Authentic (Into Mischief) to win the GI Preakness S., becoming just the sixth filly in history to do so, it was announced that Daredevil would return to his home country, relocating to Lane's End Farm.

“Daredevil is just an incredible story,” said Lane's End's Bill Farish. “He got off to such a phenomenal start with his 3-year-olds, not having had that much 2-year-old form before, but to finish first and second in the Kentucky Oaks and then go on to win the Preakness with Swiss Skydiver, it's amazing what he's done. So when we had the opportunity to bring him back to the United States, we were very excited about it.”

Farish said demand was high when their negotiations were made with the Turkish Jockey Club.

“I wish we were the only ones looking at him,” he said. “We were just trying, as everybody else was, to find a deal that made the most sense to them. At the end of the day, they wanted to keep the whole horse. So that gave us an opportunity to get in there and make our pitch. Ultimately they chose us, so we feel very lucky.”

Daredevil will stand at Lane's End as property of the Jockey Club of Turkey. Farish said this point has brought up many questions from breeders.

“It kind of surprised us when people were assuming he might go back and forth,” he said. “But given that we're both in the same hemisphere, that's not really possible. It's fully their intention to leave him here. [Breeders' concern] really was something that caught us off guard because their decision was to send him back to where he is having the most success and certainly [where he can] generate the most revenue for the Jockey Club.”

Daredevil covered 97 mares while in Turkey, logging the largest book of any stallion in the country. He had also covered 397 mares in the four years prior to his first relocation.

“I think one thing that's often overlook about Daredevil is that he did have three good-sized books before he left,” Farish noted. “So we really look for him not to have much of a fall off. He only missed one breeding season here in North America so I don't think that's going to slow him down. I think he's got a likely chance to carry right on through.”

Despite his slower start with his 2-year-olds as a first-crop sire, the stallion's race record indicates he could have every chance to pass on his precocity.

A $260,000 yearling purchase, the Todd Pletcher pupil broke his maiden on debut by over six lengths and later caught a speedy victory in the GI Champagne S. over eventual millionaire Upstart (Flatter), scoring a 107 Beyer Speed Figure.

The Grade I winner is also a half-brother to millionaire Albertus Maximus (Albert the Great), winner of the 2009 GI Donn H. His Grade I-winning second dam, Race the Wild Wind (Sunny's Halo), is also a European Group 1 producer. Grade I winners Dayoutoftheoffice (Into Mischief) and Here Comes Ben (Street Cry {Ire}) both appear under the second dam.

“Physically, Daredevil looks a lot like More Than Ready,” said Farish. “He's strong-made and good-boned. I wasn't surprised at all when I saw him; he looked a lot like I had hoped he would. I think hopefully he'll pass that on because he's a great-looking horse.”

When asked on the trends Farish anticipates from Daredevil's first crops upon his return, he replied, “I think we're going to see a lot of the same attributes that More Than Ready has. They can run on the dirt and turf and we'll see that same type of a very strong-made, good-boned horse. That's what we've seen so far.”

Daredevil's star fillies are both on track to return for a 4-year-old campaign. Shedaresthedevil is in training at Oaklawn and trainer Brad Cox reported earlier this month that the Oaks heroine may return in the GII Azeri S. on Mar. 13. Last year's champion 3-year-old filly Swiss Skydiver recorded her first two works of 2021 at Gulfstream in February.

“Swiss Skydiver is one of those dream fillies with the way she strung together one phenomenal performance after another,” said Farish. “It would be one thing if she were the only horse that he produced, but then he had another filly that won the Oaks and then additional stakes performers as well. So he's really stamping himself as a super sire and so far, the breeders have really responded.”

Aside from his Grade I-winning pair, several other youngsters made headlines for their sire after his departure to Turkey.

Esplanande was undefeated in her first three starts last summer, winning the Hoover S. and the Cleveland Kindergarten S. for trainer Tim Hamm before running second to eventual GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies winner Vequist (Nyquist) in the GI Spinaway S. The sophomore filly is now recording works at Tampa Bay.

Jewel of Arabia ran third in her juvenile debut in 2019 in the Stillwater S. and last year, broke her maiden by seven lengths for Christophe Clemente before taking an allowance at Saratoga.

Daredevil wrapped up 2020 in the fourth slot for second-crop sires by earnings with only 84 starters compared to the over 130 for each of the top three finishers. Both he and leading first-crop sire American Pharoah led their class with two Grade I winners each.

The new Lane's End stallion will stand his first year at stud for $25,000.

“Demand has been really good from breeders,” Farish said. “He's a good-looking horse. Everybody that comes to see him is just positive all the way around and generally want to breed to him. He's a very reasonably-priced horse, for a horse that had two Classic winners in 2020, so we're looking forward to more great things from him.”

 

 

 

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Keepmeinmind, Shedaresthedevil Work at Oaklawn for ’21 Debuts

Keepmeinmind (Laoban) worked five furlongs in a bullet :59 at Oaklawn Tuesday morning in preparation for a start in the GIII Southwest S. Feb. 15. The fastest of 17 works published at the distance, the 3-year-old completed the final quarter-mile in a sharp :22.80, galloping out six furlongs in 1:11.80, seven furlongs in 1:25.40 and a mile in 1:40.40, according to local clockers.

Accompanied by David Cohen, the winner of the GII Kentucky Jockey Club S. last November worked over a fast track following the second break to renovate the racing surface.

It marked Keepmeinmind's fifth published workout this season at Oaklawn and the second bullet, following a five-furlong move in 1:00 Jan. 19.

“Did it the right way again,” said Robertino Diodoro, Oaklawn's leading trainer in 2020. “I love that his works have been very consistent. Again, I always say take each day at a time, but his works have been very consistent–consistently good–since he's been here.”

Diodoro indicated he plans to come back with an easy half-mile work and a “couple of stiff gallops” next week leading up to the Southwest, Oaklawn's second of four GI Kentucky Derby points races.

“I'd like it to be Tuesday [Feb. 9],” Diodoro said of the maintenance breeze. “But it could be adjusted by a day or two because it looks like a little bit of [weather].”

GI Kentucky Oaks heroine Shedaresthedevil (Daredevil) returned to the work tab Monday morning at Oaklawn, covering three furlongs in :36.60 in preparation for her 2021 debut, possibly the Mar. 13 GII Azeri S. Under exercise rider Fernando Espinoza, she breezed following the first renovation break for newly minted Eclipse Award-winning trainer Brad Cox. Clockers had the 4-year-old galloping out a half-mile in :49.80 over the fast track.

“Really, really good,” Cox said after the work. “We were just looking for like :38, and she honestly looked like she was going :38. Just well within herself. Just nice and easy. We're not going to get in a big hurry with her, just kind of pick it up a little bit each week. Couldn't have asked for a better first work back.”

Shedaresthedevil was a finalist for an Eclipse Award as the country's champion 3-year-old filly of 2020 after winning four races, including the Kentucky Oaks and Oaklawn's GIII Honeybee S. She hasn't started since finishing third in the GI Spinster S. Oct. 4 at Keeneland, her first start against older horses.

Following the Spinster, Shedaresthedevil received a 60-day break before resuming light training in mid-December in Kentucky. She arrived at Oaklawn Jan. 9. Cox said the 1 1/16-mile Azeri, Oaklawn's final major prep for the GI Apple Blossom H. Apr. 17, is possible for her 2021 debut.

“It's going to get close there,” Cox said. “We're just going to have to kind of really watch her and let her tell us if she's ready for that, but that would be the first logical target.”

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