The Friday Show Presented By Woodbine: Tom Amoss On The ‘Most Special Horse I’ve Ever Had’

Trainer Tom Amoss joins Ray Paulick and Joe Nevills on this week's Friday Show to talk about his unbeaten 2-year-old filly Hoosier Philly, who ran her record to a perfect 3-for-3 with a five-length victory at Churchill Downs on Nov. 26 in the Grade 2 Golden Rod Stakes.

A daughter of red-hot sire Into Mischief out of a mare by Tapit who races for Bill Stone and Rod Ratcliff's Gold Standard Racing Stable, Hoosier Philly was a $510,000 Keeneland September Yearling Sale purchase that Amoss said outworked all of his other 2-year-olds to the point he had to start pairing her up with older horses to make sure she was getting enough out of her training.

“We knew we had something different than we've ever had before, and I've been doing this since 1987,” Amoss said. “I said before she ever ran, I've never had one get ready like she's getting ready, and when she started displaying in the afternoons it became clear to me that we have a really special horse – the most special horse I've ever had.”

In the aftermath of the Golden Rod, Amoss said he has “flirted” with the idea of putting Hoosier Philly on the road to the Kentucky Derby instead of the Kentucky Oaks, a race he won in 2019 with Serengeti Empress. On the Friday Show, he said, “I'm not going to do anything with her that she doesn't suggest she's ready for.”

Watch this week's episode of the Friday Show below:

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Chichakly: The Shandian Case Should Be A Reminder That ‘The Horse Owes You Nothing’

On Nov. 18, 2022 we published a story tracing the story of Shandian, who was euthanized after being diagnosed with serious chronic injuries soon after running at a Pennsylvania racetrack. Trainer Amira Chichakly submitted the following guest editorial this week looking back on her time with the horse prior to his death.

Nothing can turn my stomach faster than reading a sad story about a horse but I never expect to read one about a horse I've known, or worse, a horse I've had. I don't want to talk about that yet. For a moment I want to remember the positives.

I met Shandian after he shipped in from the 2-year-old OBS sale in March in 2019. A beautiful little black colt with a lot of chrome on his face. I was working as an assistant for Gary Contessa and oversaw this horse as he first went to the track. And his first training partner? An American Pharoah colt soon to be named Another Miracle who would go on to the Breeders' Cup.

My connection with Shandian became more intimate when I took him with a small string to Tampa for Gary the following winter. I really started to see his character. He would make weird noises and shake his head at you and I swear he rolled his eyes. Anything to get attention.

He got very accustomed to grazing every afternoon and then when we got sand in, he was more interested in rolling and sunbathing. I'll never forget one day when he was so comfortable and refusing to get up no matter how I pulled on the shank. He kept his eyes closed and ignored me. Then moved his legs to rest in an awkward, unnatural position. I called my vet via FaceTime, the most believable look of panic on my face and cried “You have to come help me, I don't know what to do, he won't get up.” She waited a moment but I didn't blink. I turned the phone to show him to her and she said she would be right there. I burst out laughing. By the time she came I think I was laying next to him. That was almost every afternoon.

I took out my trainer's license in March. He was the first horse I got on after that. Technically the first one in my care. When COVID-19 hit I had to wait to ship him back from Florida to New York, but he was one of the first horses to come back in. I rode him because I knew the male riders could easily get in a fight with him. He wasn't crazy, just sensitive. He was the last horse I galloped when I was pregnant, and he was the last mostly because when I was five months pregnant, a groom yanked on his head as I got legged up and catapulted me sideways off him. I landed on my ankle and it broke. It wasn't Shandian's fault, of course.

Shandian snoozing in the sand during a restful afternoon with Chichakly. Photo courtesy Amira Chichakly

I remember the owners seeing my belly in Saratoga. The looks on their faces. I remember getting the phone call that he was moving. I remember fighting it. I remember saying they were going to be responsible for that horse landing in a bad spot. It was said out of anger and concern for that sensitive but finicky colt. It was said from my gut, not from any true belief anyone would put him in that situation. But I had that feeling just the same. He went through many hands before that happened.

Randomly I would look him up. The last time I did I saw he ran terribly for $5,000 at Parx. I started trying to get in contact with the trainer. On April 29, 2022, I spoke to his trainer, saying I would love to retire him without even a plan of what I would do if I got him. He told me the breeder was already taking him. On a whim I asked if I could visit him. He said the horse had already left and was going to be part of a riding program in upstate New York.

(Editor's note: Our reporting revealed that Shandian left his barn at Parx a week later.)

No one told me the truth. No one called me later on to tell me, not even the people who had put me in touch with that trainer. I didn't find out until the article on Shandian was published. In my mind he was upstate, living a life I didn't think he'd like but was probably fine and I'd get him some day. That's what I always thought, I'd get him back some day. I'm sure his breeder thought the same.

People were there for this horse. People within the racing industry. And yet the system still failed him., making another black mark on racing for us all. The breeder had asked to take him multiple times before I had the intuition to look for him, but she was always pushed off, told to wait another race.

What is the obsession with running a horse repeatedly that can't hit the board in the easiest spot out there? It isn't fiscally prudent. Is it pride? Is it punishment?

The horse owes you nothing.

I have this conversation with people a lot. Not always the people you would think. I retire a lot of horses myself, hoping to keep spaces open for others in official programs and to keep my ex-horses close enough to keep an eye on. Every once in a while one doesn't settle well in their placement or the new connections look to “get back what they invested.” I have to explain how that horse's previous connections, invested tens of thousands, and still gave him away for free. The horse owes them nothing. He brought entertainment, awe, experience, exercise, and in some instances financial gain (shows/lessons); what more did they think he owed them? Why does a last minute profit need to be squeezed out when the horse no longer fits their needs?

Owning horses is a privilege. I was taught they are always a liability, never an investment. That doesn't mean horses can't be profitable but this obsession with thinking every horse has to give a positive financial return leaves horses in bad situations.  It happens off track as often as on it. Blame your investment. Blame sheer luck and living creatures being what they are, which is not invincible. Don't blame the horse — the bystander in YOUR plans.

Chichakly, who is also an artist, drew this portrait of Shandian in the first weeks she knew him

This happens every day, across disciplines. Across breeds. To animals that are put through so much before their brains and bodies are even mature. I don't think these horses are given enough credit for what they give to us.

I wish the “but I put so much money into him” mentality would change. Then put him in the right situation to stop costing you money, don't try to grab a last fistful of dollars for him while risking his welfare. Any real horseman knows, there is no such thing as a free horse. Yet licensed horsemen who should know better won't release an animal for “free” to good homes when it is costing them daily to keep it.

Shandian was paid for. And begged for. His breeder didn't have a profit to gain from him. She just wanted her horse.

As did I. Shandian, named for lightning, by people who could not have possibly realized the weight of their choices. But how accurately it fit him. A hot fire whose image is still on our eyelids. Here one second, gone the next.

Amira Chichakly is a trainer based in New York.

Have a guest op/ed or letter to the editor you'd like to submit? Send it to info at paulickreport.com

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Paulick: Luis Saez Has Put Reputation For Careless Riding In His Past

Kiaran McLaughlin doesn't believe Luis Saez deserved to be tagged with the reputation of a reckless rider, but he admits it was there. When McLaughlin shocked the racing world in March 2020 with an announcement that he was disbanding his successful stable to become agent for Saez, he sat down with the Panamanian rider and said he wanted him to forget about the past and focus on the future.

The previous year, Saez rode Maximum Security to an apparent victory in the Grade 1 Kentucky Derby, only to be disqualified for interfering with several rivals at the top of the stretch when he drifted out several paths while racing on the lead. It was a bitter pill to swallow for Saez, who became the first jockey in history to have his mount disqualified from a Derby win for fouling his rivals.

Saez was suspended 15 days for his actions, one of six suspensions he received for careless riding in 2019 in Florida, Kentucky, and New York. Saez appealed the Derby suspension and was still fighting it in 2020 when McLaughlin became his agent.

“Let's put that behind us,” McLaughlin told Saez.

Without hesitation, the rider told his new agent, “I agree.”

The appeal was dropped and Saez served his days.

“He had hired a lawyer and it was getting very expensive to fight it,” McLaughlin said.

This was McLaughlin's second go-round as an agent, having handled the book of the late Chris Antley in 1992-'93 after working as an assistant trainer for nearly a decade. The Lexington, Ky., native opened a public stable in 1995 and over the next 25 years won 1,577 races in North America, 41 of them Grade 1, including the 2006 Belmont Stakes with Jazil and the 2006 Breeders' Cup Classic with Horse of the Year and Hall of Famer Invasor.

In 2019, McLaughlin was one of several trainers in New York sanctioned for violating labor laws.

That same year, Richard DePass, who had been agent for Saez, told McLaughlin he was retiring.

“He asked me if I would be interested in taking over,” McLaughlin remembered. “I had a stable full of nice horses, but with all the issues with the state, the fines, the workers' compensation costs, I told him, 'Yes, I would be interested.' We talked back and forth for a while. He didn't believe me and I didn't believe him, but we got together with Luis and his wife (Andrea) in January 2020 and started a few months later.”

“Luis is very humble and very appreciative,” McLaughlin said. “He's got a great wife and three daughters. He stays home, doesn't go out and about. He's a very good person and it's a real pleasure to work with him. And he's a hard worker.”

McLaughlin keeps his rider busy. While his productivity was down slightly in 2020 after missing some time due to previous suspensions, Saez bounced back in 2021 to ride 1,635 races, winning 293 and compiling a career best $26,194,654 in mount earnings. No jockey rode more races that year.

He also officially won his first Triple Crown race in 2021 when Essential Quality took the Belmont Stakes. That same horse gave Saez his initial Breeders' Cup winner the previous year by winning the Grade 1 Juvenile. In 2022, Saez rode Secret Oath to victory in the Grade 1 Kentucky Oaks for McLaughlin's old boss, trainer D. Wayne Lukas.

“The one thing that has helped us a lot is the support of so many top trainers with top horses,” McLaughlin said. “Brad Cox letting us ride Essential Quality was just fabulous.”

Saez has ridden other Grade 1 winners in recent years for Hall of Famers Lukas, Bill Mott, Roger Attfield, and Todd Pletcher, among others.

Saez, who turned 30 years old on May 19, has won riding titles at prestigious meets in Florida, Kentucky and New York. This year, he and McLaughlin opted to stay in Kentucky after the Keeneland fall meet, ride the Breeders' Cup at Keeneland and the Churchill Downs meet that ended last Sunday, Nov. 27.

Saez finished the Churchill meet with a flourish, winning six races on Saturday and building up a big enough lead to hold off Tyler Gaffalione by two wins, 23-21, to secure the title. Gaffalione bagged four wins on closing day, with Saez finishing second four times.

Normally, after the Keeneland meet, he would have returned to New York, where three-time Eclipse Award winner Irad Ortiz Jr. rules the roost.

“The decision to go to Kentucky wasn't easy,” McLaughlin said. “He's got a house in New York, but in Kentucky we are first or second choice by just about everybody, so it makes it a little easier. In New York, Irad has so much business, it's tough.”

Looking ahead, after Saez rides Cigar Mile day at Aqueduct on Saturday, he'll head down to Florida and Gulfstream Park for the winter. Saez will go to Keeneland in the spring, then he and McLaughlin will have a decision to make about summer. McLaughlin is leaning toward Churchill Downs and Saratoga though the Belmont Park spring-summer meet remains a possibility. “We've had a lot of success in Kentucky,” McLaughlin said, “and the turf course being back at Churchill Downs would help.”

With the Maximum Security disqualification and other careless riding suspensions now years in his past, conversations about Saez center on how good he is riding, not how recklessly.

“It's a shame he had that reputation, even though I don't think he deserved it,” McLaughlin said. “Maybe I've helped him some with certain things. I've told him to please be careful out there, that suspensions really hurt our momentum.

“Luis has always been a really good person and is a very talented rider who rides correctly,” McLaughlin said. “He is always looking forward, focusing on the future instead of the past. I'm very proud of him.“

 

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The Friday Show Presented By Woodbine: 2022 Turkey Awards

It's time again for the Paulick Report Turkey Awards, an annual event that recognizes some of the less-than-spectacular events of the past year.

As always, there was an abundance of candidates for these prestigious awards and the nominating committee carefully screened all of the potential winners before putting the nominees up before a secretive online poll.

In keeping with the general transparency policies of the industry, we are not able to  divulge the voters or the list of nominees, but trust us when we tell you it was a record turnout, unlike anything we've ever seen before.

Some of the usual suspects make an appearance in this year's Turkey Awards, but there are some newcomers, too. Jockeys, trainers, racing officials … even a bird or two. We recognize bad behavior on the racetrack as well as on social media platforms. There are so many awards given to recognize outstanding achievements and good behavior, we felt it only fair to offer alternative programming.

So without further adieu, we invite you to sit back and enjoy this year's Turkey Awards broadcast.

Watch this week's episode of the Friday Show below:

 

 

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