Journalists Wandering Eyes Posted October 30, 2018 Journalists Posted October 30, 2018 LOUISVILLE, KentuckyāDespite a stable half the size it was at its peak in 2016, trainer Ben Colebrook is having the best year of his career this season, and could pad his stats further with two Breedersā Cup contenders. First up is KRA Stud Farmās Knicks Go (Paynter), who will look to shock the world for a second-straight time in the GI Sentient Jet Breedersā Cup Juvenile. A debut winner at Ellis July 4, the grey was fifth in Saratogaās GIII Sanford S. 17 days later and third in the Arlington-Washington Futurity Sept. 8 before running away to a five-length victory at 70-1 in Keenelandās GI Claiborne Breedersā Futurity Oct. 6. Knicks Goās victory was 40-year-old Colebrookās first at the Grade I level. āIt surprised me a little bit in how easily he beat a pretty good field, but he did have a dream trip and that was probably part of it,ā the Lexington, KY native said. āI thought he belonged in the raceāto me, his two races before that you could kind of draw a line throughāso Iām kind of thinking of it like heās only run twice. Heās in great form right now. He came out of that race even better than he went in. Heās always been kind of laid back, but he came out of the race wanting to do more in his gallops and heās just feeling good. Heās sort of just become a man, so to speak.ā While Knicks Go might just be coming into his own, Colebrookās other Breedersā Cup runner has been there for years now. Limousine Liberal (Successful Appeal) will contest his third GI TwinSpires Breedersā Cup Sprint in four yearsāhis connections opted to skip last yearās race at Del Mar by design. The hard-knocking 6-year-old has bankrolled more than $1.7 million to date, and annexed the GII Churchill Downs S. here in May before finishing third in the GI Metropolitan H. and cutting back to take the GII Belmont Sprint Championship July 7. He enters off of thirds in the GI Forego S. and GII Phoenix S. behind a couple of these foes. āItās been amazing to have a horse this consistent who shows up every time,ā Colebrook said. āHeās just been a pleasure. Heās kind of a throwback horseāhe lays it all on the line every time, and I think he can do it anywhere from six furlongs to a mile, too. Heās just a really neat horse.ā Bred by Mike and K.K. Ball and campaigned in K.K.ās name, Limousine Liberal boasts twice as many wins under the Twin Spiresāsixāas the rest of the field combined. āIt certainly canāt be a disadvantage considering heās won five straight stakes over the track,ā said Colebrook. āWeāre confident in our horse over the racetrack, whereas some people donāt know how their horse will handle the track and some have had bad races over the track⦠Weāre going to need every advantage to be involved in a race like this. Everythingās going to have to go perfectly, not just for us, but for whoever wins the race. I donāt think thereās a lot really separating the top five or six horses.ā Colebrook currently trains 38 headādown from as many as 78āand he says heās happier to keep the barn a bit smaller but of higher quality overall. Heās had a particularly good season with juveniles this year. In addition to Knickās Goās big win at Keeneland, the Ballsā Into Trouble (Into Mischief) annexed the Arlington-Washington Lassie S., while Life Mission (Noble Mission {GB}) and Blame the Frog (Blame) finished second and third, respectively, in the $500,000 Kentucky Downs Juvenile Turf Sprint S. Beach Getaway (Run Away and Hide) was third in the Debutante S. back in June. Colebrook has two other promising 2-year-olds, owned by high-profile connections, who havenāt even made it into stakes company yet. Claiborne Farm and Adele Dilschneiderās Wrath (Flatter), who had some buzz behind him earlier this year, has recently gotten back on the worktab. He was second on debut at Belmont back in May before fading to sixth after a wide trip in a key Ellis heat July 29. āFrom really early, he was always kind of number one [among the group of 2-year-olds], and he still might beāI still think heāll be a very good horse,ā Colebrook, who trains four for Wrathās powerful owners, said. āHeās just taken some time to do it. He was doing everything so easily that we decided to take him to Belmont, and he ran very well that day, but then we took him down to Ellis and it didnāt go according to plan. But heās come back and heās doing well, working at Keeneland.ā He credits his year-round presence in Lexington as a key factor to picking up clients like Claiborne. Colebrook also sent out Fancy Dress Party (Munnings) to a good-looking 3 1/4-length debut score in a sloppy off-the-turf sprint in Lexington Oct. 26 on behalf of the Roth familyās LNJ Foxwoods. āI was on the filly for Mike and K.K., we had vetted her [at last yearās Keeneland September sale], but we had already spent our money,ā Colebrook said when asked how he came to train one for another big name. āIād known [LNJ co-advisor] Jason Litt for a while, so I reached out to them when they bought her and told them that if theyād like to leave her in Kentucky Iād love to have her. They said theyād keep me in mind, and when she was ready to be sent to the track, they called me out of the blue. It was a pleasant surprise.ā Of expectations heading into last weekās race, he said, āI thought sheād run well, but I didnāt know if sheād be the type to win first out like that. Sheād shown the tendency to not break real well, so going 5 1/2 furlongs on the dirt I was a little worried, but she broke fine and Julien [Leparoux] gave her a very patient ride. Going in, I thought maybe sheād be better on turfāshe just has kind of a round action about herābut now I donāt know that she is solely turf. Weāll probably keep her on the dirt for now, but we have the grass angle to play with, which is always nice.ā Colebrook has already begun further building for the futureāhe bought some pricey yearlings at this yearās Keeneland September for a new group, and a 20-acre farm with his wife Marina some 11 or 12 minutes from Keeneland. Buying on behalf of New River Equine, an entity that includes the Balls, Colebrook picked up three well-pedigreed youngsters at September for a combined $1.625 million, topped by a $900,000 Tapit filly from the highly productive family of Grade I winners Got Lucky, Rhythm, Girolamo, Imagining, Super Saver, Blue Grass Cat, Callback, et al. āThatās the most expensive horse that Iāve gotten to pick out at the sales, for sure,ā Colebrook said. āHer pedigree goes back to a good Phipps familyāsheās got a great pedigreeāand youāve got to like Tapit fillies. We looked at all the Tapit fillies at September and also [Fasig-Tipton] Saratoga, and I thought she was at the top of the list. For us, she was one we really honed in on.ā Colebrookās father John was a farm manager in Kentucky, and Ben grew up helping his dad break babies before moving on to stints at Bill Hariganās Miacomet Farm and later as an assistant for Christophe Clement. Heāll get to call upon those early experiences again on his own farm. āIāll use that as a place, ideally, to send horses after they run for a week or two so they can just be a horse, get outside and eat grass. Plus, Iāll also use it for lay-ups and if I need to break babies of my own⦠Hopefully itāll be another tool in my arsenal as a trainer.ā ā@BDiDonatoTDN Ā Ā View the full article Quote
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