Breeders’ Cup Presents Connections: ‘Keep Showing Up’ Motto Pays Off For Davis

It only took four and a half years for trainer Chris Davis to progress from saddling his first winner to his 100th, and shortly thereafter to his first graded stakes win. Statistically speaking, he's ahead of the curve. Watching the filly Naval Laughter crossing the wire first in the Grade 3 Modesty Stakes last Saturday at Arlington, Davis' 105th winner overall, the 32-year-old trainer let the emotion show. 

He celebrated, of course, but like all lifelong horsemen he was right back in the barn before sunrise on Sunday morning.

“It's funny, when you go back and listen to some of these top-tier trainers, and they say the first 100 wins were the hardest to get,” Davis said. “You just keep doing your job, keep showing up and it'll happen. It's a marathon, not a sprint.”

The same could be said for Naval Laughter's career. The 4-year-old daughter of Midshipman was making just her fourth start in the Modesty, having missed the entirety of her sophomore season.

Breeder Anthony Braddock sold the filly as a yearling for $90,000 at Fasig-Tipton's July sale, then watched her run a game third in her first start in November of her 2-year-old season for trainer Ken McPeek. Naval Laughter developed an issue after that race, and the owners decided to run her back through another sale.

Braddock bought her back for $17,000 at the February Mixed sale in 2020, and gave her plenty of time to recover at his Two Hearts Farm. Meanwhile, the owner had been introduced to Davis through jockey Sophie Doyle.

Doyle got her first graded stakes win in the United States for Braddock in 2015 aboard Fioretti, and was aboard Naval Laughter for last Saturday's win to complete the full circle. 

Trainer Chris Davis and jockey Sophie Doyle celebrate Naval Laughter's graded stakes win in the Modesty

“Tony has been extremely patient with this filly, basically allowing us to have free rein with determining what her schedule is going to be,” Davis said. “She'd had plenty of time off, so there was no sense of rushing her back to the races only to get her hurt again. We really just let her take us to her first race.”

That collective “we” refers to Davis' assistant trainer Mynor Ortiz. The man has been with Davis since the beginning of his training career, and works hard to keep both the horses and the stable staff happy. He was instrumental in bringing Naval Laughter back to the races. 

In her first start off the layoff, the filly “just blew us away,” Davis said. 

That first start in nearly 18 months came on June 3 in a maiden special weight on the synthetic at Arlington, which Naval Laughter won by an impressive 19 ¾ lengths. 

In her second start, Davis had tried to get the filly on the turf course but the race was rained off and held on the synthetic once again. Naval Laughter went a bit too quickly early and had a 3 ½-length lead at the head of the lane, but was run down in the stretch and had to settle for second.

Davis finally got Naval Laughter on the turf for the Modesty, and the filly relaxed off the pace to run down the leaders in the stretch and win by a half-length. She completed 1 1/16 miles on the firm Arlington course in 1:54.58.

“It was a pretty awesome feeling,” Davis said.

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Davis has had horse racing ingrained in his soul since his earliest memories of toddling around his mother Liane Davis' shed rows throughout Chicago. She never trained more than 10 to 20 horses at a time, so their care was a family affair; Davis' father was her assistant, an exercise rider, and also served as an assistant starter on the gate in the afternoons.

There was, however, a brief period when Davis considered working outside the racetrack, he admits.

“I was really into movies and acting and theater when I was younger,” Davis said. “I worked at Medieval Times in Chicago, jousting, and I got into film school but I decided not to go. It was more about who you know than where you go to school, so I decided to go to community college and get a business degree instead while I worked at the track.

“I may have done a lot of acting stuff, but I've also always loved the racetrack; once it gets into your blood it's hard to get it out.”

Though he'd already passed the test to take out a trainer's license by the time he graduated, Davis knew he wanted to learn more before setting out on his own. He exercised horses for trainers like Richard Hazelton, Rusty Hellman, Wayne Catalano, and Pat Byrne, then took his first assistant's job for Mike Stidham.

Davis spent 5 ½ years with Stidham, then another two out on the west coast for Phil D'Amato.

“I was fortunate enough to see a lot,” Davis said. “People train so differently from coast to coast. I'd spent a lot of time in the Midwest, gone to New Orleans, New York, Gulfstream, shipping in to other trainers' barns and watching how they do things, but I hadn't spent a lot of time in California. Obviously there are trainers out there that are really strong in the game, so you figure there's got to be some reason for that. I wanted to be able to see what they were doing, how they trained. 

“Out West, they train a little bit harder, just the way they breeze their horses and the work schedules are a little bit different.”

Today, Davis puts all his varied experience to good use when developing individualized schedules for his 35-horse string in Chicago. 

“I never worked for a straight 'program guy,'” he explained. “Whether there were 50 or 150 in the barn, every horse got individual attention every day. So I'm always adapting different things to individualize it for each horse.”

A big part of his success has been Davis' ability to read both horses and people.

“I really try to individualize every client to their needs, just like the horses,” he said. “I think honesty is the most important thing; you're less likely to have a poor effort that's unexplained.”

Trainer Chris Davis

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With NYRA Ban Overturned, Baffert Plans To Enter Gamine At Saratoga

After a judge overturned the New York Racing Association's ban of Bob Baffert on July 14, the trainer told the Daily Racing Form he plans to enter reigning champion sprint mare Gamine in the Grade 1 Ballerina Stakes at Saratoga on Aug. 28.

NYRA notified Baffert ahead of the Belmont Stakes that it was suspending his ability to enter horses in races or have stall space at its racetracks due to his recent history of medication violations, the conflicting statements he provided to media around the Medina Spirit scandal, and Churchill Downs' suspension of the trainer.

Judge Carol Bagley Amon of the Eastern District of New York determined that NYRA's suspension of Baffert should not have taken place without some sort of hearing allowing him to address the organization's accusations against him. Although NYRA was asserting its private property rights in the case, Amon said the organization is closely entwined enough with the state that its suspension of Baffert constituted a state action, thereby requiring due process.

Gamine, a 4-year-old daughter of Into Mischief, is undefeated in three starts in 2021. She won the G3 Las Flores at Santa Anita on April 4, the G1 Derby City Distaff on May 1 at Churchill Downs, and the G2 Great Lady M Stakes at Los Alamitos on July 5. She has breezed twice at Del Mar since the Great Lady M victory.

The only blemish on Gamine's nine-race career is a ninth-place finish in the 2020 Kentucky Oaks, after which Baffert has kept the filly to sprint distances.

The Ballerina, contested over seven furlongs, is a “Win and You're In” race for the Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Sprint this fall at Del Mar.

Read more at the Daily Racing Form.

Additional stories about Baffert's Kentucky Derby positive and ensuing legal battles can be found here.

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‘Accidental Trainer’: Jump Jockey Sean McDermott Balancing Farm Work With Steeplechase Mounts

Born in Ireland, where has won more than 100 races riding over jumps, Sean McDermott has enjoyed similar success on the steeplechase circuit since coming to the United States. He has ranked in the top five in both races and money won every year since 2015, twice leading the country in purses earned.

Yet even that success didn't prepare the 38-year-old native of County Kerry for how it would feel to be in the winner's circle as a trainer.

Favorite Image, a Maryland homebred of the late Bob Kinsley's South Branch Equine, made it happen with a front-running triumph at odds of 6-1 July 23 at Pimlico Race Course. The 3-year-old gelding ran 1 1/8 miles in 1:50.98 over a firm turf to win the maiden claiming event by a comfortable 2 ¼ lengths.

“[It was] very different,” McDermott said. “I've ridden a lot of winners all over the world, from Australia to Ireland, England, America, everywhere. The first one as a trainer is more pride, especially with this horse because the previous advice Mr. Kinsley had gotten was to give this horse away. They thought he was too small, but he was actually just a very late foal and a late developer.

“The same horse, as a yearling on the farm where he grew up, he managed to stick his foot in a John Deere lawnmower somehow. They were able to fix it up and it doesn't affect him. He's a very tough, hardy horse but he's very [mischievous] so his nickname around here is 'JD,' he added. “It was more of a proud moment seeing him win because he had been written off more than once. It was good to see him get up the straight. I'm very proud of him and very happy.”

It was the first win from 23 starters for McDermott. He ran nine horses in 2020, two on the flat and seven over jumps, during a pandemic-shortened season. He debuted June 27, 2020 at Great Meadow with Aardwolf, who also gave McDermott his first flat starter Sept. 3 at Laurel Park.

McDermott's horses have raced primarily on the flat this year, at Laurel, Pimlico, Parx and Penn National, and he also has three seconds and a third in four races over jumps. Meanwhile, McDermott continues to ride in steeplechase events with two wins from 21 mounts. He is named on Decisive Triumph for trainer Mark Beecher in one of two non-wagering jump races that lead off Tuesday's card at Colonial Downs.

“I am a jump jockey, really. I'm an accidental trainer,” McDermott said. “This definitely was not a planned vocation. I guess covid had a lot to do with how this came up.

“Basically, myself and my fiancé were looking for an apartment or a house to live in, and Mr. Kinsley was looking for somebody to take care of a recent property he bought in early 2020,” he added. “That's where we fit in.”

Kinsley, founder and operator of his own multi-faceted construction company, was also a prominent steeplechase owner and philanthropist. He passed away last June at the age of 79.

“[The property] had a barn and a few arenas and he needed some yearlings broken,” McDermott said. “Then covid hit and racing was stop-start, steeplechase in particular, which depended on crowds to attend for the purses. Mr. Kinsley had a good way of not taking no for an answer. The barn was full and it just kind of spiraled into training, and here we are.”

McDermott operates out of Maple Springs Farm in Monkton, Md.

“We're kind of sorting through them but there's 11 or 12 here now. We're kind of grading them all and downsizing a little bit because Mrs. Kinsley doesn't have the same love for the sport that her husband did, but she's planning to keep it going a little bit,” McDermott said.

“There's a mixed batch of homebreds. There's maybe two steeplechasers and the horse that won, he seems pretty good after the race so we'll probably run him back in a few weeks. He will start over hurdles in the fall. He can mix the flat and hurdles, no problem. He always stays pretty well,” he added. “We're looking for a couple of new owners to come in on a couple of these horses to help Mrs. Kinsley out, so we'll see how that goes.”

According to Equibase, McDermott is a three-time Grade 1 winner over jumps as a rider, taking the 2016 Lonesome Glory Handicap and 2017 and 2019 Calvin Houghland Iroquois Hurdle Stakes with Scorpiancer. He also rode Scorpiancer to victory in the 2017 Temple Gwathmey Hurdle Handicap (G3).

National Steeplechase Association statistics show McDermott has the national leader in money won in 2016 ($648,750) and 2017 ($719,550), also ranking second with 14 wins from 100 mounts in 2017. McDermott had eight wins and $184,500 in purse earnings from 48 mounts last year.

“I can't ride as much as I would like at the moment. I had to turn down the (Hall of Fame steeplechase trainer) Jack Fisher job again this year and give up some pretty nice horses to ride but I committed to the Kinsley family and given Bob my word that we'd get the best out of the horses,” he said. “They're all homebreds, and I wasn't going to go back out on my word. I'm sure that job will be there for me again.”

McDermott made note of another significant difference between riding winners and training them.

“It's kind of reality. Being a small operation, you still have to go back and do all the work yourself,” he said. “When you're a jockey, you're patting them and you're getting all the praise, but you get off them and you walk away. You don't have to go back to a barn of horses and take care of them.

“Hopefully we'll be getting a couple of 2-year-olds started in a few weeks and [Favorite Image] will run back,” he added. “The steeplechase horses this year have all been second without winning. They're running to the max so, hopefully, we can improve them a little more.”

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Gary Sciacca Eyes Win Number 1,000

SARATOGA SPRINGS, NY – For sure, trainer Gary Sciacca knows the score. He is well aware and very proud of the fact that he is closing in on a personal milestone: 1,000 career victories.

A month shy of 40 years since he saddled his first runner at Belmont Park, Sciacca is sitting on 997 wins. Five Alarm Robin (Fed Biz) moved the 61-year-old New York stalwart a step closer with her victory at 11-1 on the opening day of Saratoga season.

Leaning against a rail at the barn that has been his base of operations at Saratoga for 25 years, Sciacca said that he started paying attention to his win total a year or so ago.

“I was saying, 'Boy, I'm pretty close,'” he said. “When you're at 700 or 800, nah, but when you get to like 50, 60…and then you are on three. Three is like a reality, you know. Then you come here opening day and the first one you run wins. That made it three. So it's kind of hitting home a little bit.”

Sciacca finished second with his first starter, Page Six, on Aug. 27, 1981. Nine races later, on Oct. 21, 1981 at Aqueduct, Proud Northern became his first winner.

Sciacca did not hesitate when asked what getting to 1,000 wins will mean to him.

“A whole lot,” he said. “A lot of people can't get to that spot in New York. It ain't like we are winning them at Finger Lakes or Suffolk Downs or something. To win a thousand here; they've all been here or in California with a couple. It's been good. It would be very nice to win it here in Saratoga. That would be a little special.”

Since there is no off-season, horsemen often say they will reflect on their accomplishments at some time on the future. Yet Sciacca said he has thought about getting to this milestone.

“If you go back to when I started out here, all my friends are retiring,” he said. “Nobody has really made that many wins. Of course, the big outfits have. A guy like me, it means a lot to. A lot of memories. A lot of big races. Between Saratoga Dew and Subordination, those are the big ones. We won two Belmont meets.”

Charles Engel's New York-bred filly Saratoga Dew was Sciacca's first star. Unraced at two, she won eight of 11 starts in 1992, including two Grade I races, the Gazelle and the Beldame, was second by a nose to November Snow in the GI Alabama, and become the first New York-bred to win an Eclipse Award. In the New York-bred awards, she was the champ of two divisions and the Horse of the Year.

“She was one of the best,” he said. “She launched me into the limelight.”

Though Engel decided to move Saratoga Dew to another trainer the following year–she never raced again–Sciacca's success with the filly was a boon for his stable. He won his first Belmont Park meet title in 1993 with 31 victories. Klaravich Stables' Subordination (Mt. Livermore) made his first start for Sciacca as a 2-year-old at Saratoga in 1996. In 21 starts over three seasons of racing, he won 11 of 21 starts, eight of them graded stakes and finished with $1.2 million in purse earnings.

“Subordination took me to Breeders' Cup,” Sciacca said. “Took me to Del Mar, where we won the Eddie Read, a Grade I. Took me to Hollywood Park, that's no more, and won the Hollywood Derby.”

Among the horses that Sciacca trained for NFL Hall of Fame coach Bill Parcells's August Dawn farm were Saratoga Snacks and Bavaro.

Sciacca said that during his most successful years he typically had a stable of 40 to 45 runners. These days he has 24 to 30 in his barn.

Born in Brooklyn and raised on Long Island, Sciacca was introduced to racing in his youth. His uncle was a trainer. He worked his way up in the business and started his stable with six horses.

“When I got a shot to train some horses I took it,” he said. “Actually, the game has been very good to me. What a place. I'm very fortunate to be in New York. To have the No. 1 racing in the country, to be brought up in that is pretty good. To win 1,000 races here is great.”

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