Horse owner Brook Smith joined our guy Louie on Rabaut & Co. on ESPN Louisville. He talks ownership, having great hair, and what it's like having a serious Derby contender.
Brook Smith, Owner of Sierra Leone
Full Transcript
really happy to welcome in Brooks Smith. He's
a part of the ownership group, of course, of Sierra
Leone, the horse atop of the Kentucky Derby points
rankings. Just that intro, how does that
make you feel? Good morning. Louis,
how are you? I'm doing great. What's
it like having the horse at the top of the Derby
rankings? I don't know a better way to
ask that question. I mean, like I said, you can
ask that question a hundred times. You
get a hundred different answers. The
general gist of it is it's a lot in a good way. Um,
tough to keep your mind off anything else. I
mean, hell, I went and got a chipping lesson just to
try to kill an hour. And the Lord knows anybody who
plays golf golf with me. I need it. Uh,
but if you need your yard, mold, you're like a garage,
cleaned out. I'm your guy because I want to
stay busy between now and uh, weeks and Saturday.
Smith joins us here on remote.
Go. He has been 680 105. Seven
reminder will be out there next Friday and Saturday.
10 to one on Friday, 11 to 11 to two on Saturday,
doing six hours of coverage around Oaks and Derby.
Look, the blue grass happens,
right? And so obviously this is a
horse that that comes off the layoff. He
runs in that remson, which has turned out to be an
incredible predictor of success for three year olds
this year. You've got doorknock, comes back,
wins off the bench. You've got domestic product,
frankly, ran seventh in that race, came back one,
the Tampa Bay Derby. Your horse wins the risen star
in the dark in the slop of Louisiana, comes up on
perfect day at Keeneland and wins the blue grass.
Man, did you know something when
that remson happened? Because
I got to say it's the only thing I've been right
about in horse racing in a minute was boy, I'm really
going to watch this year on the own horse the next
couple of months. Yeah, I mean, I think, you know,
with the Derby every year as it passes, he gets
through the triple crown races and maybe into the
summer, you know, it's always so clear when you
look back. And I think that the remson
might be, you know, depending on how how Sierra
Leone pans out could be, you know, one of the
greatest seconds, you know, of any two year old in
history. I mean, that's a big thing
to say because we got a lot of ground to cover.
And you know, but you know,
I've watched enough races. I
don't care if it's a cheaper claiming race or an
allowance race, but to have a horse come from that far
behind in the slop. I don't know. I
think I think quite honestly, that was his best
race. Obviously he's green then. But
he's, you know, he'll definitely make your hard
drop or your stomach sink with his running style.
It's for sure. Yeah,
we've seen horses come from off the pace and win the
Kentucky Derby. His ability to go seven eight
wide. I look, he's done it over
and over and over again. He
seems to like to try to get back to the rail and
he can't and scoot left. But
that ability to get outside and run deeper. I
mean, look, in a field like the bluegrass, right?
Where you've got, you know, you
know, 10 horses, essentially, you can drop
tonight and you can make that move. Is
there any talk with Tyler with any of the connections
about trying to run a slightly different race with
him? You know, I've been afraid to
ask that question. Certainly not above your pay grade.
Yeah, right. And
that's the one thing we all need to realize. And
I'm actually not going to give any advice. I
think you maybe maybe I guess hopefully and I'm
Chad and power and I'm sure we'll figure this out.
But if he could get an outside
post and then kind of rate in more towards the middle,
I think it would make a lot of us happy and then
kind of use the back stretch to move up and be
laying in the mix just off the pace, you know, maybe
five length four lengths, however long behind. But
yeah, I mean, Derby and when you come up with a
plan in the Derby with 20 horses, the planking go out
the window at the break or, you know, in the first
turn. So, you know, he here's the
one thing about him. He loves to race. He
loves to train and and talking to Tyler and Chad,
you know, they both say there's there's more under
the hood. So that's all good. I
agree with you. If you're if you're coming
from the clouds in your, you know, seven eight wide
and a horse like fierceness or whoever is kind of had
an easy way of it, you're going to have your work
cut out for you. Brooks Smith with us. He's
a part of the ownership group for Sierra Leone. Son
of gun runner. How did you name this horse?
You know, I've been asked that.
I haven't got a straight
answer. I did not name the horse.
Okay. I've done a lot of
research on Sierra Leone as a country, which is
interesting. There's got to be some connection
that relates to someone that's either been there,
some historical relevance. I do know that the Coolmore
folks have kind of a battery of names and they
just really like that name. I
don't know the origins of it, but it has it has a
great ring to it, except that, you know, I've been
caught in several occasions referring to he as a sheet
is because of Sierra Leone. So
yeah, I can't give you a solid answer. I'll
research that and if we find each other's facts
that I'll give you an update. Derby
week. Obviously, I know what I'm going to
be doing, which is exactly what I'm doing right now.
Talking on the radio. You've
talked about coming to my house and cleaning out the
garage, which my wife would really appreciate. What
do you think? How do you how are you going
to spend your derby week? Well,
you know, I was gonna actually I thought about
kind of talking in a business trip Monday
Tuesday, but as I started thinking about it, I
thought that that didn't make any sense. And
I didn't know I was going to be going to the back
side every day this week, but I have been just
because why not? It's just just amazing. You
know, there's a whole lot of stuff that goes on very
week in general. And then as it relates to the
derby, I mean, there's a trainer's dinner, you know,
on Tuesday, there's supposedly some kind of a
poker charity poker thing. It's
getting brewed up by this guy Stewart. And
so I might jump in that action. I
don't know. And then people start rolling
into town and oh, yeah, you know, they're going to
be talking to you and you're going to be looking
at them, but I don't know that you're going to hear
what they have to say. But one of my favorite things
to see is, you know, picking up a friend from
the airport for the derby or whatever. And
there's Chad Brown picking up an owner. The
job doesn't just stop at the track. You
know, Brooke, you know, something I always like to
bring up in the the HBPA presents all of my my
horse racing coverage here, especially on Fridays as we
get into the stakes races, usually around the country
on Saturdays is every time I get out there, you know,
that in three days on Monday, when I get out
there, I'm always reminded of the fact that within
the walls of a place like Churchill Downs, there's an
entire city, right? And, you know, people working in
a culture that's back there and people, you know, that
have built up their entire lives around this. You
know, I think of like the Foley family and those
sorts of folks where it's just multi generation, those
kinds of things. Do you ever get tired of
that? Or does it does it feel good,
especially as an owner to know that you're
contributing to that culture? Oh,
yeah, I mean, come on. That
culture is everything. And you can see it in the way
a guy like Chad Brown runs his operation. I
mean, everybody that's there cares about it clearly. And
they all know what they're doing. It's
not a whole lot of conversation around his bar.
I mean, it's structured,
organized. And that's good for the horses,
too. I mean, they got to have
that routine and that keeps that consistency. I
mean, if somebody's rushing to get you know, the
feeding of Ben and it doesn't happen to the kind
of regularity. But yeah, back back to just,
you know, being a Louisville and and having a
part of this story is is mind blowing. And
the community is where it all starts. You
know, I like to get out there in time to grab a
burrito or I'll be at Wagner in the first guy,
you know, firing down a vegetable beef soup. So
that's the that's what it's all about. I
mean, whether you have a horse in any race, let
alone the derby, just as a racing fan, it's it's a
soul of it. The smell, the noise is how
the sun comes up. It's it's an unbeatable. It's
untouchable. We're doing a derby seminar on
Tuesday at Blind Squirrel at seven o 'clock if you
want to get away and have a beer. I'm
just I'm just and just inside the Snyder right off
Shelbyville Road. Yeah, I love all this stuff. And
I'm I'm gonna keep a dance card full. Yeah.
And yeah, I can't promise a little come out of my
mouth. I'm sure I'll say something.
You know, you know, somebody
say that guy, you know, Jack after I don't know.
But anyway, well, the good
thing is the horses can't read the bulletin board
material. So you're good to go. Yes.
Thank God. Again, let the professionals do
what they do. But yeah, remind me of that. I
may show up then. Have a brew. There
you go. Our mutual friend, Justin, and
we'll have to drag him out there to this is great. I
mean, the work that you guys do and the type of
stuff that that's actually where we all get our juice
and excitement from is because you know, we're
talking about and you, you know, you get into the
detail. So, you know, I'm going to be
absorbing as much of that as I can consume. I
love it. No, we love doing it. And
I am reminded every time this year of Billy Reed,
essentially establish and covering the Derby and that
none of us get to do what we get to do if not for
Billy Reed. And frankly, I mean, guys like
Derrick Rogers and Kevin Kirste, those guys, like
they have jobs because of guys like Billy Reed really
pushing this as a national thing that it is. And
look, I mean, let's go ahead and dream. You
know, Sierra Leone comes around the turn. He's
in seventh, eighth place. He's
got a great spot. Maybe he does the, you know, the
route that orb took in 2013. I
think that's his most likely type of run to win
the Kentucky Derby is that kind of setup. Man,
you're in the you're in the winter circle. What
what what is that like? What's
it like, man? Wow. Um, I don't know. I
mean, yet I'm not a guy that'll cheer up, but I
can tell you right now, uh, it will be definitely
an overwhelming of emotion. Just
a look at the crowd. I mean, I'm going to try to
keep myself from like stage diving into one of the
boxes on the front row or grabbing the trophy and
running down the track, uh, because, you know, it's
just it's incredible. I, uh, I'll probably look at
the faces of everybody else and, uh, you know, it
might be one of these moments instead of screaming
and yelling and doing backflips that you just all
the sudden you just get quiet and reverent about
what just happened. Uh, horse racing is a sport
with many men with beautiful silver hair. Bob
Baffert, Todd Pletcher, uh, Safi Joseph Jr. is
sliding into that cat that category now. Obviously
Steve Asmussen, uh, you fall beautifully into this
spot. Where do you think you rank in
the top hair amongst men in horse racing? Ah,
this is a great question. Uh,
you must have been following me around because
I guess if I haven't seen people like six to 12
months or like your hair is white man, and I'm
like, I saw you at Keener. That's
what happened. I saw you on blue grass
deck. Yeah. Yeah. I
think somebody one time, uh, compared me to Benjamin
Franklin, I'm like, well, he's on a hundred dollar
bill. You know, uh, I got to be
careful with this white mop because if I go and I
get, um, oh, you look great. I
wouldn't mess with it at all. If
I get a little too trimming with it, it kind
of bobs up and I look a little bit like Lord Faqua.
My kids are just busting my
jobs, you know, it's a stretch over dad. So,
so I don't know. I mean, you'll see a hat on
my head. Uh, so it'll be, uh, it
probably contrasting black. Uh,
so yeah, um, that's a funny question. Maybe
you should do a poll. I'd probably be at the bottom,
uh, but, uh, well, what am I that kind of stuff? I
love. So one of my favorite guests
that we have on our podcast on the horse racing
happy hour is, is Brian Nadeau. He
does the track feed it and sets the morning line.
Gulfstream Park, great guy. And
he has the best fade and soul patch in horse racing
and he works with Safi Joseph, Jr. Who's
the best man bun chest hair combination and horse
racing. It is what it is. It
just is. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Well, look, here's the thing about life in
general. If you don't laugh at yourself
at the point, then you're around a little too tight
and, uh, you know, and I do it all the time. So,
um, that's funny. Yeah. And it is the people to
characters. Uh, there's a whole bunch of
them out there and just being on the backside this
week. Uh, I've run into a bunch of
people earlier that I haven't seen in a minute,
you know, a few jock agents and ran into a
flora and drew after spindle town and up in
Saratoga having some fun. I love your pool for a
route. Uh, he looks at me like I
have two heads, maybe because my hair is gray. I
don't know. It might be the arrow. I
don't have any. So that's why I break it up
because I'm very jealous. Um,
you have more hair right now than I've had at all
points of my life put together. So
good for you. It could turn to a moment
quick. You got to manage these things.
Uh, Louis, uh, we're sponsored
by man's game. I understand. It
is what it is. Uh, promo code horseracing. How
about that? Uh, Brooks Smith with us. He's
got, he's got the leader of the points. Uh,
that used to mean something in the Kentucky Derby. Uh,
and I think it still does, uh, outside of the top
two, is there a horse that you look at and go, man,
I think that guy's got a real shot in this derby.
Good question. Um,
there's going to be one that's in that grouping
that's going to be on the board. I
mean, you just know it, you know, it'd be kind of
cool to see a horse like on a Marie in the mix
with the local connections. Uh,
but you know, Brad with like catching freedom
clearly, you know, just touch could jump up after
the blue grass. Yeah, I'm trying to think he
would like complete my just a touch reminds me of mage
last year, like that stage of development, doesn't it?
Yeah. Yep. Yeah.
Um, you know, Chad likes, uh, domestic product. Uh,
you know, he's top man. Wow.
Yeah. He's tough. And
he made it. He made a good move. You
can knock the Tampa Bay Derby, but, uh, Dutchy
horse and his clearly, you know, had some seasoning.
Uh, so yeah. Um,
I don't know. I thought about it a bit.
Uh, sentimentally, I'd probably
try to pitch a horse like on a Marie in there. I
mean, look, you know, what? Sure.
Or call the jockey, go on the jockey club. And
again, if a horse like that even wins the Derby,
uh, you know, we'll look back and it might be a
shock in the mama, but if you, if you look back, you
can say, I can see that, you know how the Derby is.
Yeah. Audemarie and West Saratoga
both won preps at Churchill in the fall, right? And
those are things that we usually actually don't see
anymore as they win as two year olds. And
then they come back and actually qualify even for
the Derby. We don't see that much
anymore. And so, you know, that jockey,
good. Yeah. Go ahead. Now,
I just hope that the race gives the horses that
should be there the chance to be there. You
know, I hope there's not some, you know, scenario or
some, any of them get taken out, you know, uh, I
want it to be a good, hopefully, you know, clearly
just want all the horses to get around in good
order. And, but, you know, the Derby
is going to have the twist and turns is no other way
around it. But I'm hoping that, you know,
I can see early on the case. There's
something not important. Unfortunately,
that happens. It just, you know, doesn't
give him this chance, maybe to be a little closer,
maybe to make the big turn and run, you know, uh, so,
uh, just rubbing the rabbit foot. All
right. So speaking of rabbit feet,
uh, we will be at Pemlico for the preakness with the
show. Um, we're going to make a deal
right now on air and so that it's in front of God
and all these witnesses. Your
horse wins the Derby. You do an interview with us in
person at the preakness. Sound
good? Oh, 100%. And
I'll, uh, I'll leave it. I'll
do whatever you want. If we you know, I'll go bald
like you. I'm not gonna do that. But
I will tell you this. I won't tell you this right
now. If I knew that shaving his
mop off, would put him in the preakness after winning
the Derby. We're the Clippers. I
hear you. We're doing a Jimmy Seafood
preakness seminar the Friday night before preakness. You
should probably just come to that and crush the
guards with us. It'd be great. Yeah.
Yeah. Not love this kind of stuff.
It's the best. It
is. And, uh, again, if it's the
early on runs a big race, you know, just doesn't get
there. Maybe fierceness or something.
This runs off with it. But
he's the second or a third. But
telling like, you know, like wild, you gotta live
with that. I mean, that's just horse
racing. Uh, and, you know, then maybe,
maybe you don't go to the preaches. You
go to the Belmont Saratoga. I
don't know. They'll tell, they'll, the
connections for people will tell me the trainer and
such. But he's a, he's a horse. I
think, and I say this about everything in life.
The best is yet to come. And
I truly believe that about him. I
really do. He's done great this week. He's
gone to the gate a couple times and done it very
well. He went this morning and the
report was great. So, you know, don't tell
everybody that because I want the odds to stay as
high as possible. But, um, but yeah, just, just
hope that every, you know, that he has his chance and
that some of these others do too, so that we can
look back and go, wow, what a race, you know?
Well, the only thing I ever say
to close interviews like this is safe trip next
week. I hope he comes back well
and that he has a long career that all of us get
to watch, whether it's running or it's breeding
and we get to meet his kids or whatever that might
be. Yeah. But a safe trip next week
and Brooke, really great to meet you via the radio. I
wasn't kidding about blind squirrel on Tuesday. If
you want to make the trip. I'll
text you, I'll text you. We'll
get you out there. We'll have a couple beers of
blind squirrel Tuesday at seven o 'clock. He
is a Brooks Smith. He's part of the rocket ship
folks, owners of Sierra Leone going into the gate
next Saturday. We hope. And
so there you go. Brooke, thanks so much for being
part of the show. We'll catch up next week. Thanks.
Yeah. Bye. Bye. Hey,
Brooke Smith.