‘They Give You Their All’: OTTBs Becoming More Common In Western Disciplines

Off-track Thoroughbreds have developed increasing visibility across Western disciplines, according to horseandrider.com, thanks in part to the increasing popularity of the Thoroughbred Makeover which includes competition in ranch work, barrel racing, and competitive trail.

Dale Simanton of Belle Fourche, South Dakota, explained that  a fair number of ranchers have been riding their dual-purpose racehorses during winter ranch work for decades.

“Thoroughbreds probably have more natural cow in them than any Quarter Horse I've ever ridden,” Simanton told horseandrider.com. “If you get one that's about half scared of cattle, but still has the natural aggressiveness toward cattle that most horses have, then he'll never lose focus when working cows because he wants to know where that cow is at all times.”

Similarly, Richard Weber III of Ridgway, Colorado, likes Thoroughbreds for both ranch work and winter skijoring competitions—an event where a horse pulls a skier through obstacles.

“To say there's any task an OTTB can't do is crazy in my opinion,” said Weber. “Especially working up in the mountains, roping 50 calves in a day, and working a branding, that's where they shine. Thoroughbreds are like the Energizer Bunny, and I love that they have that marathon aspect to them.

“For me, to have a horse whose heart won't stop means everything. They don't quit you—they give you their all.”

Read more at horseandrider.com.

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Kirkpatrick & Co Presents In Their Care: Viral Filly’s Trainer Went From Show Horses To Racing, Keeps Learning

Trainer Michael Ann Ewing found herself internet famous this summer for a strange series of events she never could have imagined. After a decade training Thoroughbreds, she had dreamed of one day being the trainer generating buzz ahead of a run in the Kentucky Derby or the Breeders' Cup. She still dreams of that. What she didn't figure on was that she would spend a few weeks fielding interview requests about an unstarted 2-year-old filly running down the highway.

“I even had a paper from Ireland call me,” she said. “A friend of mine who was up in Canada saw it on the news there. People were fascinated. It was a quirky story and people were concerned.”

Video of Ewing runner Bold and Bossy went viral after the filly dropped jockey Miguel Mena in the paddock ahead of her first race at Ellis Park in August and ran back to the backstretch before leaving the track property and getting onto the road nearby. Ewing had stayed in Lexington that day and sent Bold and Bossy with her assistant, with plans to watch the race on television. She saw the filly's outburst in the paddock and knew they weren't going to make the gate.

“Kelsey [Wallace], assistant trainer was calling me five minutes later, saying 'We can't find her, she's gone,'” recalled Ewing. “I said, 'What do you mean, you can't find her?' and she said, 'She has left the property.'”

Bold And Bossy ran down US-41, then to I-69 and onto Veterans Memorial Parkway, with cars whizzing by and trainers following her in their vehicles. Eventually, the bewildered filly tired enough she could be safely caught and immediately treated by the state veterinarian, who had followed her in the horse ambulance.

Ewing bases at The Thoroughbred Center just outside of Lexington, Ky., and normally brings all her horses home immediately after their races. Wallace and Ewing agreed that putting the filly on a trailer on a hot afternoon for a three-hour haul was not the best thing for her, as the highway jaunt had left her dehydrated, exhausted, and sore. Wallace checked on her throughout the night, running fluids to her and expecting a quiet drive home in the cool of the morning. Then, she got a call at 4 a.m. just before she was to head back to Ellis to load up. There had been a fire in the receiving barn, the person on the other end told her, and they couldn't find her filly.

As most people know by now, all the horses in the receiving barn that night made it out alive, thanks to employees of nearby trainers who spotted the flames. 'Bossy' was the only one who came out with burns, and at first Ewing thought they weren't too bad. She had a few places where her hair and skin were rippled but not bald and pink, so Ewing had expected her recovery would be fairly simple. As she quickly learned though, burns sometimes take a while to fully manifest, and the hair and skin gradually sloughed off from her withers over her topline to her hindquarters.

Bossy spent most of the summer hand walking in the barn at The Thoroughbred Center because she was recovering from some residual hoof bruising and other damage from her highway run and also couldn't risk the burns being exposed to heat or flies. Last week though, she received clearance to return to turnout and is now enjoying a vacation at a nearby farm, where she spends her days grazing alongside two mini donkeys.

Incredibly, Ewing said the filly has seemed back to her usual self mentally since a few days after the mishaps.

“Once she was home here, she didn't appear particularly traumatized,” said Ewing. “For days when she got back here, she was kind of wiped out because she had been so dehydrated but she was pretty much herself and perky … we won't know till we start training if she has any [mental trauma].

“What could have had a tragedy had a very, very good outcome … whatever she does, she'll have a good life.”

Bold and Bossy runs down US-41 after dumping her rider and escaping the Ellis Park property.

Ewing, who maintains a string of between 20 and 30, was hands-on in Bossy's recovery, the same way she has been hands on with every other horse in her barn. Like many racetrack trainers, she said she can't imagine any other way. But Ewing came to the track in a different route than many of her competitors.

Ewing grew up in California as the only horse-crazy person in her family.

“I begged my mother to learn to ride, so she signed me up at a pony club and they had school horses,” she said. “Before I could drive, I'd ride my bike an hour and a half to go to the barn and I'd be there all day. Before I had my lesson, I'd ask people if they wanted me to bathe their horse or braid their horse or whatever they needed.”

She started out riding hunter/jumpers in Pony Club, then transitioned to fox hunters and eventually got into Quarter Horses. She did a little bit of everything with Quarter Horses and Paints – reining, trail, halter classes, hunter under saddle – and loved every minute. Ewing's husband works in real estate in Los Angeles, and they attended races and other events at Santa Anita Park from time to time. They grew interested in dipping a toe into racing ownership, even though it seemed like a completely different world from the one Ewing knew. It was at Santa Anita they met Bob Hess, who agreed to train the couple's first horse.

“I thought, 'I can't, as a horseman, own a horse and just show up when it races. I've got to learn all about racing,'” she said.

While some particularly involved owners may have requested a phone call each morning or might pop by for a workout here and there, Ewing rolled up her sleeves and grabbed a pitchfork.

“I told Bob, I'm going to be one of those annoying owners who wants to figure it out,” she said. “I told him, I just want to be here all morning. I'll work for free.”

Gradually, she began selling her show horses as she spent more and more time in Hess' barn. By this time, it was the early 2000s and Ewing was in her forties – not usually the time that horse people make a major shift in horse sports. But Ewing has always considered herself a lifelong student of horses.

“In the horse business, I don't care what you're doing, you never know it all because every horse is different,” she said. “You don't train every horse the same. You can go 20 years and one will have some kind of injury or something you've never dealt with. Whatever discipline it is, you have to learn what makes your horse tick and what's going to work for your horse.

“I think it keeps you young and growing, even as you age. I always think I'm so lucky to have horses as a passion, and having showing as part of my background.”

She started off walking hots for Hess, then became a groom, and then a forewoman – all as she owned a couple of horses in the barn. She eventually became a full-blown assistant for Hess, taking a string to Kentucky for part of the year while he stayed in California. When it was time to go out on her own, Ewing wanted to relocate to the Bluegrass.

Ewing said she likes her set-up at the training center. The smaller number of horses allows her to still do a lot of work herself, and gives her the chance to turn horses out when they need rest and to send them out for hack days in the fields if they get sour or too strong. She has carried over knowledge from the show horse world, mixing ideas and practices to find what works. The horses you'll see from her barn in January have the same coats they did in mid-summer because Ewing puts them under lights and has multiple blankets for each, negating the skin disease that can accompany longer, sweaty coats as well as the stripping of a coat from a full body clip.

Ewing still dreams of saddling a runner in a classic race, and she came close when Barrister Tom was named as an also-eligible to last year's Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf – but she knows that having graded stakes runners is a numbers game, and she's not interested in big numbers. In lieu of that, she hopes instead people know her as the trainer who's not afraid to develop a young horse slowly and problem-solve to find out exactly what they need to succeed.

“I think of myself as patient,” she said. “You wouldn't send a horse to me to rush. I'm very careful; I'm not going to run a sore horse. If it comes along all on its own, that's fine, but we're pretty patient.”

As for Bold and Bossy, Ewing is embracing her trademark patience. She has made no decision yet on whether she will try to get the filly back to a race, preferring to see how she's doing physically and mentally in late winter. Whether the paddock Bossy ends up in is the saddling area at a racecourse or a field at a riding stable or breeding farm, Ewing said she considers her story a success.

“Life throws you curves, as does this business,” she said. “You have to be optimistic and deal with setbacks and disappointments, because you have a lot of those in racing. I think it's a great game of hope. You deal with what you have and you move forward.”

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Full Fields On Tap For Thanksgiving Weekend At Laurel

Thanksgiving weekend continues at Laurel Park with a strong Saturday program featuring full fields and competitive racing led by a trio of post-holiday stakes worth $300,000 in purses.

 A total of 97 horses were entered for the nine-race card, an average of 10.7 starters per race, all scheduled for Laurel's recently refurbished main track. Post time is 12:25 p.m.

 Race 2 is a 6 ½-furlong claiming sprint for maidens age three, four, and five that attracted a field of 14 including Gold Fellow from fall meet-leading trainer Claudio Gonzalez and Damon Dilodovico-trained stablemates Divine Proportion and Creative Storm.

Eleven fillies and mares three and up were entered in Race 4, a six-furlong claimer, including Fudge Cake, exiting the Maryland Million Distaff Starter Handicap. A field of 12 will contest Race 5, a 6 ½-furlong claiming sprint for 3-year-olds and up, where Interesting Legacy (12), Stroll Smokin (10), Getoffmyback (15) and Mr. Pete (11) combining for 48 career victories.

The stakes come in succession – the seven-furlong, $100,000 City of Laurel for 3-year-olds in Race 6, where stakes winner Everett's Song goes after his fourth straight victory and Pickin' Time seeks to regain his graded-stakes winning form; seven-furlong $100,000 Safely Kept for 3-year-old fillies in Race 7 featuring stakes winners Street Lute, Prodigy Doll and Malibu Beauty; and 1 1/8-mile, $100,000 Richard W. Small for 3-year-olds and up in Race 8.

Friday's nine-race card at Laurel, featuring a pair of $75,000 stakes, attracted 96 entries. Laurel's world-class turf course has closed for the season, meaning Races 3 and 6 will be contested over the main track. Race 3 is a 5 ½-furlong claiming sprint for fillies and mares three and up, while Race 6 is a Maryland-bred/sired allowance for 3-year-olds and up to be run at one mile.

Hello Beautiful will go after her fourth straight win and ninth career stakes victory in Race 4, the six-furlong Politely for Maryland-bred/sired fillies and mares 3 and up, where the 4-year-old filly drew Post 1 in a field of eight and was installed as the 1-2 morning line favorite.

Brittany Russell-trained stablemate Whereshetoldmetogo is the narrow 3-1 program favorite in Race 8, the seven-furlong Howard and Sondra Bender Memorial for Maryland-bred/sired 3-year-olds and up. The 6-year-old gelding is a 12-time career winner, nine in stakes.

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Jen Roytz To Step Back From Retired Racehorse Project Leadership

After serving for four years as Retired Racehorse Project's executive director and five years prior to that as a board member, Jen Roytz announced this week that she will be stepping down from her leadership role at the end of the year. Longtime staff member and current managing director, Kirsten Green, will serve as interim executive director while the organization conducts a national search for the role.

Under Roytz's leadership the Retired Racehorse Project (RRP) has expanded in both size and scope. The organization's flagship event, the Thoroughbred Makeover and National Symposium, has grown into the largest and most lucrative retraining competition for off-track Thoroughbreds in the world, hosting hundreds of equestrians competing on Thoroughbreds in their first year of retraining after racing for well over $100,000 in prize money. The event also includes a robust vendor fair, racehorse retraining clinic, seminars, health and soundness exams for all horses competing and more. Since 2019 the event has also played host to the Thoroughbred Aftercare Summit, a joint effort between the RRP, Thoroughbred Charities of America, Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance and The Jockey Club's Thoroughbred Incentive Program (T.I.P.).

In 2018, the RRP launched its now-popular Master Class series. These clinics, held throughout the country, showcase the various approaches professional trainers from various equestrian backgrounds take when working with Thoroughbreds transitioning to new careers after racing. This past year, the RRP partnered with OTTB United to create a mobile app specializing in the adoption and sale of off-track Thoroughbreds.

“It has been one of my life's greatest honors to head up an organization that is making such a profound difference in how Thoroughbreds are received and repurposed by the equestrian community. In my opinion, the RRP's focus on expanding the market of equestrians who are willing and able to transition racehorses to sport horses is a critical part of the aftercare equation,” said Roytz. “As someone who is active in both the racing and equestrian worlds, this organization is close to my heart, and its mission speaks to my soul. I look forward to staying engaged with the organization and its leadership team and supporting them in whatever ways I can.”

In addition to serving as the executive director for the RRP, Roytz is a partner in Topline Communications, a marketing and communications agency based in Lexington, Kentucky. She and her fiancé also own and operate Brownstead Farm, where they focus on Thoroughbred breeding, selling, breaking of young horses and post-racing retraining. Roytz's board affiliations include the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance's Advisory Board, the Kentucky Horse Council, the National HBPA's Aftercare Committee and Saddle Up Safely, among others.

This past October, the RRP hosted the largest event in its organization's history. When the 2020 Thoroughbred Makeover was forced to postpone due to COVID19 restrictions, the organization made a commitment to its competitors that the time and investment they had made into the hundreds of horses pointing to that year's competition would be rewarded and that they would have the opportunity to compete once pandemic-related restrictions were lifted. This year, the RRP hosted the “Mega-Makeover,” which hosted both the 2020 and 2021 classes of competitors and offered more than $135,000 in prize money for each year's entries.

The week-long event, held at the Kentucky Horse Park on October 12 through 17, also included the inaugural T.I.P. Barrel Racing Championship, one of several collaborations between the two organizations in recent years.

“Jen's efforts on behalf of the RRP over the term of her leadership have continued the organization's remarkable growth trajectory and expanded its network, opening doors that have created strong working relationships with racing institutions and aftercare organizations alike,” said Green. “We're so thankful for Jen's tireless enthusiasm, collaborative spirit, and thoughtful stewardship of our charitable mission and I look forward to supporting the board in their search as we transition into the next chapter in the RRP's work.”

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Founded in 2010 by Steuart Pittman in response to the Thoroughbred breed's decline in popularity in the sport horse world and residual adverse impact on viable homes and career opportunities for them after racing, the RRP set out to shine a spotlight on the breed for new and old audiences alike. The organization began by putting on demonstrations at equine expos and equestrian events that showcased off-track Thoroughbreds in various equestrian disciplines. In 2011 the RRP hosted the 100-Day Trainer Challenge, an invitational retraining competition. The following year, thanks to seed money from longtime supporter, lead benefactor and current board president, Dr. Carolyn Karlson, the organization hosted the inaugural Thoroughbred Makeover the following year with 26 competitors.

“It's been the greatest honor to support RRP and the Makeover from its infancy to where it stands today as a nationally-recognized brand of excellence for Thoroughbred aftercare,” said Karlson. “Working alongside both Jen and Steuart to facilitate this growth over the last decade has been a true privilege. The RRP Board extends their profound thanks for Jen's leadership and commitment to the RRP mission.”

The RRP has gained national recognition in recent years for increasing demand and value for Thoroughbreds after racing and helping them regain their prominence in the sport horse world. The RRP was the recipient of the ASPCA's Equine Welfare Award in 2021 and previously has been similarly honored by the Equus Foundation. Roytz has represented the RRP on stages throughout the racing and equestrian world, including as the keynote speaker at the 2018 United States Hunter/Jumper Association Annual Convention. She has also been a featured speaker and/or panelist at the University of Arizona Racetrack Industry Program's Global Symposium on Racing, the Grayson Jockey Club's Welfare and Safety of the Racehorse Summit, the ASPCA's The Right Horse Summit, Equestricon, the National Conference on Equine Law, U. S. Pony Club Festival, Equitana and more.

“The team behind the RRP is the reason this effort has been so successful. Their loyalty to the organization, its mission and to each other are why the RRP has accomplished all it has in a relatively short period of time,” said Roytz. “Kirsten Green, the RRP's longest-serving employee, has played a pivotal role in both the RRP's evolution and my success at its helm. I'm incredibly grateful to her, and to the staff and board, for their support and excited for what the organization's future holds, as it is surely bright.”

The RRP board of directors is conducting a national search for Roytz's successor. Interested candidates are invited to send their resume and cover letter to rrpapplications@gmail.com. A full job description can be found here.

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