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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Shedaresthedevil Makes Victorious Return, Holds Off Letruska In Azeri

Shedaresthedevil, winner of the Grade 1 Kentucky Oaks last September, made a winning return to the races at Oaklawn in Hot Springs, Ark., on Saturday, going right to the front, controlling the pace and holding off a late bid in deep stretch from favored Letruska to win the G2, $250,000 Azeri Stakes by a short head.

Off since tiring in the stretch to be third in the G1 Spinster Stakes at Keeneland in her lone start against older fillies and mares in 2020, Shedaresthedevil covered 1 1/16 miles on a fast track in 1:42.57 and paid $5.60 as the second choice in the wagering. She carried 119 pounds, five fewer than  Letruska.

Letruska, a star at Hipodromo de las Americas in Mexico City before coming to the U.S. late in 2019, finished second in the field of five in her bid for a third consecutive graded stakes win. Encoutante finished third, with Getridofwhatailesu fourth and Motion Emotion fifth.

A 4-year-old filly by Daredevil owned by Qatar Racing, Big Aut Farms and Flurry Racing Stable, Shedaresthedevil is trained by Brad Cox and was ridden to victory by Florent Geroux.

Breaking from the outside post, Shedaresthedevil darted to the front immediately and set fractions of :23.93 for the opening quarter mile, :47.79 for the half and 1:11.54 for six furlongs. Envoutante was her closest pursuer with Letruska – who typically runs on the front end – three wide while third into the first turn and in the run down the backstretch.

As the field rounded into the stretch, Joel Rosario allowed Letruska to drift out even further while trying to run down the favorite. Shedaresthedevil maintained a clear advantage at the mile marker — clocked in 1:36.25 – but was all out to hold off a surge from Letruska in deep stretch.

“We caught a flyer out of the gate,” Geroux said. “I was expecting Letruska to lead all the way. I don't know if she didn't break fast enough or stumbled, but we inherited the lead and I just took it from there. My filly is extremely talented. You know you want to slow her down, just keep her in a nice rhythm. Turning for home, she gave me everything she had. She maybe got a little bit tired down the lane, but it was good for her first race off the break. I don't think she was 100% cranked up for this. We have hopes for a big year with her.”

The win was the sixth from 12 starts for Shedaresthedevil, who won the G3 Honeybee at Oaklawn in 2020, along with the G3 Indiana Oaks prior to winning the Kentucky Oaks. She was bred in Kentucky by WinStar Farm.

“Whenever I run here, I'm nervous,” Staton Flurry of Flurry Racing said. “I expected the three (Letruska) to break good, but she didn't. We just went on with it. She really dug in. Florent rode a great race. I'm glad to have her back. It's going to be a fun year.”

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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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Oaks Winner Shedaresthedevil Back On The Work Tab At Oaklawn, Azeri Potential Target

Kentucky Oaks winner Shedaresthedevil returned to the work tab Monday morning at Oaklawn, covering 3 furlongs in :36.60 in preparation for her 2021 debut, possibly the $350,000 Azeri Stakes (G2) for older fillies and mares March 13.

Shedaresthedevil, under exercise rider Fernando Espinoza, breezed on a fast track following the first break to renovate the racing surface for newly minted Eclipse Award-winning trainer Brad Cox and co-owner Staton Flurry of Hot Springs. Clockers had the 4-year-old daughter of Daredevil galloping out a half-mile in :49.80.

“Really, really good,” Cox said after watching 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 Oaklawn's $300,000 Honeybee Stakes (G3) and the $1.25 million Kentucky Oaks (G1) Sept. 4 at Churchill Downs, Shedaresthedevil hasn't started since finishing third in the $400,000 Spinster Stakes (G1) Oct. 4 at Keeneland, her first start against older horses.

Following the Spinster, Shedaresthedevil received a 60-day break, Flurry said, 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 $1 million Apple Blossom Handicap (G1) April 17, is a potential landing spot for Shedaresthedevil's 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.”

Cox already has won Oaklawn's first of three Apple Blossom preps and is scheduled to have the heavy favorite in the second.

Getridofwhatailesu – in her stakes debut – was a 1 ½-length winner of the $150,000 Pippin at 1 mile Jan. 23. It marked the third victory in the last four starts for Getridofwhatailesu, who hadn't raced since winning an allowance route last March at Oaklawn. Cox said Getridofwhatailesu was subsequently diagnosed with “lameness that didn't require surgery” and sent to Custom Care Equine in South Carolina to recover.

“They did a fantastic job,” Cox said. “She came back to us and when we started breezing her she appeared to be the same horse she was last year. We had a lot of high hopes for her last year. We thought she was a graded-stakes filly. It wasn't ideal, probably, to bring her back in that stake off the layoff, but just based off the condition book, with what she's eligible for, there's not a lot of options. We were kind of forced into the race and it worked out well.”

Cox said Getridofwhatailesu is being pointed for the Azeri.

Monomoy Girl, Cox's dual Eclipse Award winner, is scheduled to make her 2021 debut in the $250,000 Bayakoa Stakes (G3) Feb. 15 at Oaklawn. Monomoy Girl has won 13 of 15 career starts, including the $2 million Breeders' Cup Distaff (G1) Nov. 7 at Keeneland to conclude a perfect 2020 campaign (4 for 4) and clinch an Eclipse Award as the country's champion older dirt female. Monomoy Girl won the 2018 Kentucky Oaks en route to champion 3-year-old filly honors.

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