Oaklawn-based trainer Ron Moquett joined Louie & Mike on Rabaut & Co. They discuss Whitmore, the camaraderie between trainers, and the pressure from owners to run in specific spots.
Trainer Ron Moquett & Whitmore
Full Transcript
You know who else is fantastic? Who's that Ron Moquette?
How about that? I'm I'm assuming Ron's in the
air. Do we have Ron?
OK great. So listen we we wanted to do
this piece and so for people who don't know Ron is an amazing
trainer based out of the Oak Lawn mainly comes up here for
sure and is actually have a weird Ron moquette story that he
100% does not remember that we've actually met before.
But the. Could you introduce him and
bring him on the show? Yeah.
We're bringing him on the show, but we wanted to talk
specifically. We're not here.
To listen to you. All right, we're.
Here to listen. To Ron Moquette.
Ron, how's it going today? Good.
How are you? It's great, Ron.
Like you know, the the reason why I think we wanted to bring
you on today is we wanted to talk a little bit about how
horses get to the Kentucky Derby.
But specifically, you had a horse run dead last in the
Kentucky Derby who ended up having an OK career.
You may have heard of him. That's.
Right, his the horse named Whitmore.
They've actually got stakes races named after him.
He's unbelievable. I heard they're considering
naming it Oaklawn Whitmore. Yeah, yeah, I've heard.
That, yeah, I don't know. Yeah, and and we really want to
just talk about, like, you know, we know that the winner's going
to go to the the stud barn pretty quickly.
There's a lot of horses that come out of this race that have
amazing careers and just not the classic distances.
So tell us a little bit about Whitmore's story, how he
qualified that Arkansas road to the Derby and and you know, how
you all kind of figured out who he was going to be after the
Derby? Well, when we got him
originally, he's bred out of a scat daddy mare being but
pleasantly perfect that won the Breeders Cup, you know, Classic
and the Dubai World Cup. He's actually on paper looked
like to be a route horse. We knew he had a tremendous
amount of speed and we knew he was precocious, but he's bred to
be a route horse. His father, his father went in
the Breeders Cup Classic and and all that stuff kind of indicated
that the further was the better. And so when we started, you know
all signs pointed to a good horse if you have one going to
the Kentucky Derby. So we allowed him to develop in
that way. We've been lucky enough to go
you know, and be second in the Arkansas Derby with far right.
So we knew the the way to get there and we kind of took him on
that same path. We thought it was a lot better
horse than far right. You know as far as talent wise,
and I know he had better pedigree, but he runs second in
The Rebel we got beat by by Baffert.
I can't even remember the name of the horse but I did curse him
that day pretty well. And then we run third in the
Cupid was. The name of that horse in that
race. Yeah, yeah it was Cupid.
And actually we they had to leave and they left Cupid to
ride on the van to to Kentucky with us.
So we actually helped load Cupid and he rode right beside right
beside Whitmore. But anyways, we we thought that
he had a shot. We believe that you know, if you
deserve to be there, if you've done all the things to do to
deserve to be there. We've watched horses, you know
Super Saver run second in the Arkansas Derby and and won the
Kentucky Derby. Little ET had run, you know,
third, I think in the Arkansas Derby or or second and won the
Kentucky Derby. So we felt that he deserved the
right to be there and the gambling public did too.
He went off at, I think you know, about middle of the pack,
but he got trapped down on the rail that day and he come out of
the race with a chip. Knee he.
Ended up running absolutely last and you know we we took care of
the knee. We give him time and we brought
him back and decided that we were going to bring him back
short and and see how that went. I I don't care if you run a mile
and a half. I'll bring your if you're coming
off a layoff, I'll let you do a couple short races before I
stretch out. And he he did it so easy, like
whenever he was sprinting, he'd come back to the test bar and
he. Wouldn't be blowing hard.
So I was like, maybe he's telling us that this.
Is easier. For him and and it'll help keep
him around longer to to do. What's easier for him?
So you're not straining him and pressing him to run this further
distance. So we basically kept him short
and, you know, thank God that we did because, you know, you know
what followed after that 4. And a half million dollars,
first money. Yeah, yeah, Four and a heck
$1,000,000. But not only that, you know, no
matter what, all these trainers that have horses in the Kentucky
Derby, they're there because the horse, not them.
And we go everywhere we go in this business is on the back of
a race horse. And just imagine if I would have
just kept going at a route to try to make him something he's
not. He wouldn't have carried us near
as far as he carried it. And, you know, it's kind of a
deal where he told me what he wanted to do and I was, I was,
you know, lucky enough to listen to it.
Well, it's a really interesting point because I think when you
said you look at the breeding like this horse should be a
route horse, right? So we get all this data and all
this stuff. We got too much data in horse
racing in some type of ways, right?
It's the original. It's the original.
Oh gosh. Analytics.
Sport, right. It's the original analytics,
yeah. Right.
And you could have easily said, oh, this horse should be
routing, should be routing. And then all you had to do is go
see what the horse was doing it. But talk about that as the job
as a trainer a little more. Unpack that, like, you know that
you're looking all this data you think you figured out.
Louis and I talk about how horses are basically middle
school athletes and when they're come to the Kentucky Derby and
we just really don't know what that horse is going to be on.
So, like, what's that? What's that process overall
like? Just like about just trying to
figure out what they do really want to do so.
A lot of stuff that I've learned in this business is by listening
to other people and asking questions, obviously.
And one of the things that Lucas said a long time ago that I
always remember is that is that trainers and gamblers have
opinions, horses have the facts. So.
Whenever you when you buy a horse or you bet on a horse you
do it based on your opinion and afterwards you got to you got to
look at what happened. The horse is going to tell you
the truth. Your job is to figure it out and
then you know. For instance, I'll give you a
big for instance, if you look up the horse that is is 1/2 brother
to my Tolley, which was. Whitmore's nemesis.
You know that horse was better at a mile and a eight?
Yeah. And yet my pulley was one of the
best sprinters we've seen in in decades.
And yet his brother. What is this, my boy Charlie, or
whatever his? Name is.
He's a. He was a very good horse at a
mile and A8, so you. If you didn't.
Take what? What?
And if you bought that horse to be a sprinter and then you just
did that, you would have never, you would have never won those
grade. Ones with that.
That horse is now standing stallion that is 1/2 to my toy
that never run well under 7/8. So the other thing that I.
Could. Tell you is.
Is. You know the old saying mom Paul
Jack had nine or mom Paul Dempsey had nine sons, only one
Jack. So every they could have the
exact same pedigree and be different individuals.
I mean, why do we have to be? Why are we listening to Wayne
Lucas, the only one that's raced like what, 4 * 25 Eclipse
winning horses? Yeah, he's, yeah, he's, he's
been there a few days. So I think we we should listen
to it. I, you know, I have an
interesting take on the Derby. I want to win it.
I think everybody in this business should have changed to
win it. It's the biggest race in the
world and if you're not trying to win the biggest race, then
what are you doing? However, I will tell you that if
you're a gambling fan or a racing fan, you know there's a
lot better races on the card in the Kentucky Derby.
We won 100%. Talk about that every year.
You know how everyone's looking at these three-year old horses
about how the like they're the stars and lo and behold, you
have a wise Dan on the track or something like that.
It's like that. Classic.
Field has like 6 stars in a year.
Right. Yeah, Yeah, absolutely.
Yeah. And I think if you go there as a
fan, if you know that you can, you can set aside, you know,
some some money to say, hey, look wise, Dan's not running
without me. Watching and betting on it.
I don't care if there's a bunch of three-year olds I've never
seen run before or not. We understand what brings people
in, but you know at the end of the day you need to.
You need to make the memories while you can.
And a lot of times I feel that some of these good horses are
overlooked. And I want to.
We should always build up the best in our business.
Rob Mccett's with us. He's a trainer.
He's based at Oaklawn Park. He had Whitmore as as his, his,
his greatest trainee ever. Like I said, they're renaming
where he lives to Whitmore and the Hot Springs are moving it
out of the way. They're just going to.
Call it Whitmore, hey. There's a horse in the Derby
this year named Endlessly and he came out of the Jeff Ruby
Stakes. His his trainer, Mike McCarthy
is really convinced his future is on the turf.
Obviously the ownership is the the big push for him to run in
the Kentucky Derby. I don't want you to speak for
Mike McCarthy, obviously, but is this a commonplace occurrence
for for for trainers? Do you do you have owners call
in and say, hey, I'd like to try this, I want to do this.
And how much do you do you ask your owners to rely on, you
know, what you're getting. You know that feedback, frankly,
just from the horse itself. Well, I mean the fact of the
matter is, is that Bob? Baffert, Steve Asmussen and Todd
Fletcher get by with with saying what they want to do and doing
it more than somebody that's Mike McCarthy's age or stature
in the business. If if Bob said do it, they'd
probably say, OK, do it. But Rich Strike has made it
tough on all of us that don't think our horses belong in the
Kentucky Derby. If you remember Rich Strike, the
owner wanted to go, the trainer didn't and it just kind of
happened and you won. So anybody that's a gambler
wants to have a shot. Yeah.
There is pressure, definitely there is pressure.
And Mike's a good horseman. And at the end of the day,
you're going to make more money listening to the people you put
in charge that know about the horse.
But I understand the passion. There is a thing that is
documented called Derby Fever and you're you're not going to
outrun it. If you want to do business with
people that want to go to the Derby and you have a horse that
qualified and you didn't, that's probably the quickest way to not
do business with those people anymore.
Well Ron, I needed since you've mentioned everybody's name, I'm
going to tell you where you and I actually met before because
the story is like one of my favorite Derby moments of all
time. Let's go.
I it was, it was like the weekend before the Derby before
all the media circus gets here and I got here stupid early and
I'm up in the observation deck and actually Wayne Lucas comes
up on his you know, huge the huge horse.
He rides out here. He always has the duck get to
the barns and whatever else and he he just pulls up and we start
having a conversation and before I know it, you come up, Baffer
comes up and I'm like, what the hell am I?
Doing here. Like I'm sitting here with like
these these. Awesome baffer.
Just like nod my head and not say a word.
And so you know, like I said 100%, no, you would not remember
that because I didn't say anything, I didn't introduce
myself, but it was just unbelievable for me to be kind
of in that conversation. So.
But that's the kind of magic stuff that happens Derby week.
That's right. Yeah.
And you know, that could be something like.
I promise you, I was probably. Doing the same fanboy thing that
you were doing because. If you get a chance.
To be around Bafford, it's one thing, or Lucas it's one thing.
But if you get a chance to be around all of them together,
that's magic. That's that's something that's,
if you're in this industry, that's something that you can
tell your grandkids about. I sat next to Wayne Lucas and
and Bob Baffert giving each other so much grief one day and
it was like the best banter back and forth because they're both
good at it. And I'll never forget it.
And I did just look like what you said you did.
I just sat quiet and in amazement and looked like, you
know, watching 22 Legends rumble.
It was. It was a blast.
Absolutely, man. We're big fans of Arkansas.
Go ahead, Louis. Yeah.
No Ron, we're just up at the at the top of the hour here and I I
think a good closer for Ron. Yeah, we used to have a a man
here who did radio in the afternoons buddy of ours, Jason
Anderson. He's he's since moved on to the
Kansas City market and he would ask all of the coaches that came
on a question. Would you is it XS and OS or
jimmies and Joe's in basketball. What matters more if every
single coach he ever had on said jimmies and Joe's.
It's about the players. Yeah, I have to imagine, Ron, is
it about training or is it about the horses?
No, here's the thing. If I couldn't have the
individual relationship with my horses, I'd quit.
There's not enough joy in it. I like the I like the individual
relationship, but we are a product of what we take care of
no matter what. I'll tell you a quick story real
quick. Yeah, sure.
I want you to look up the the look up the the coach of
Shaquille O'Neal whenever he was a junior at Houston in high
school and that's that's how we are with horse racing.
And here's what I mean by that is this man had a 50 year old 50
year career. And the the year that he had
Shaquille O'Neal, he was the USA TODAY high school coach of the
Year. So I'm going to tell you, if you
don't think that Jimmy's and Joe's moved the needle, I can.
I can train a guy all day, every day if it's a four foot, if he's
4 foot tall, to dunk a basketball and coach him up to
the best of my ability. And he's not going to be able to
touch a, you know, dunk a basketball, basketball.
So you want the people with the talent and just like with
horses, we want horses that have the ability to get us to where
we want to go and then we'll coach them up and train them the
best we can. You're not going to, you're not
going to make a force of God dunk a basketball by coaching.
I will say Mike and I happened to be very fortunate and we were
there at Keeneland, won his race in the Breeders Cup, he won the
Sprint and it was even even in a subdued environment like that
Ron, I I think Mike remembers. I actually stood up and
applauded. Especially can deal with the
win. Well, no, no, no, not that.
It was the one before that. Yeah.
So it was the Covad 1. Yeah, yeah.
No, no. But remember, front runners were
winning everything. And he actually came from on
the. Pace that day.
And it was that was an all time round, that was an all time
Sprint performance. And I, and I hope when you have
trouble sleeping, you think about that you're able to just
fall right asleep. As happy as thank you.
Well, I can tell you this that that was laid out for me because
I was going through health issues and if it wasn't been for
the COVID year, I wouldn't have been able to go, I wouldn't have
been able to witness my Breeders' Cup win.
And also it was so quiet there that all the trainers were
sitting beside each other. And one of the reasons that I
love that so much is because as we're going down the stretch,
you know Steve Ashley and I give each other a hard time.
He beats me every chance he get. I try to compete with him.
But as he saw that his horses wasn't winning and he looked
down to see who was in front, When he saw that he wasn't going
to win and that Whitmore was the horse that he recognized was
winning, he started screaming for us.
And that is the the thing that people don't.
Understand it wasn't. Just Ron Moquet.
It was a good horse that tried for several times to get there.
And finally he did. And that's what this, this game
is about. That's what keeps you from,
from, you know, driving off of a bridge.
I mean, you've got to have those moments there.
You go, well, he is. Ron Moquet.
He's down there at Oakland Park, joins us here.
Honorable Co, ESPN 680-1057. Ron, don't be a stranger, buddy.
We really. Appreciate and we hope to come
down there and visit you too. We want to get we.
Love Matt Dinnerman? Give us a Matt Dinnerman story.
He's, he's the man. He's.
I I'll tell you this, he's. One of the up and coming guys,
Oaklawn is very happy to have him and you know he is just like
you and I. He's a fan of all things sports
and all things racing and that's what I want.
There you go. All right.
He is a I Know CZ Rocket Forenze, Fire Empire of Gold,
Manny Watch Creek. Hustle oh.
Man, that was Frank. Rocket was in that race.
That is one of the great Breeders' Cup sprints of all
time. Ron, thanks so much for joining
us, man. We'll talk to you soon.
All right. We'll see you guys later.
Bye. All right, there you go, Ron
Marquez.