The Racing Spotlight has returned!
Louie's guest this week is Sean Collins. He's Louie's co-host on BloodHorse Monday, and might be best known for his YouTube page APharoah12.
The Spotlight is presented by the KY HBPA.
The Racing Spotlight has returned!
Louie's guest this week is Sean Collins. He's Louie's co-host on BloodHorse Monday, and might be best known for his YouTube page APharoah12.
The Spotlight is presented by the KY HBPA.
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We are ESPN Louisville all right welcome in to another edition of
the Kentucky Racing Spotlight with Louis Rabo.
Guess what I'm Louis Rabo I'm actually in San Juan PR for this
episode of the program. I'm at the National Council of
Legislators from gaming States Conference and taking in all of
the good information that's happening down here.
If you happen to listen to Rabo and Co tend to new to hear on
ESPN 681 O 5 seven, you will have heard some of those
interviews both Thursday and Friday.
Can always head back to our podcast center at espnmobile.com
if you would like to hear those and it is amazing to me and by
the way we are presented by the HBPAKYHBP a.com.
I'm the Kentucky HBPA helping horsemen fantastic organization.
Go check out the website an equally fantastic website with
stories, videos and photos from all over our state.
The great people though and all the great equine athletes that
make our sport go in Kentucky and I'm here in Puerto Rico.
And it's interesting to hear the conversations just in the in the
general gaming space. And they are frankly very much
mirroring what we are concerned about in horse racing.
And it's interesting, for example, you know, on this
program, we've talked to their Camelback from the National HPPA
quite a bit and we've talked about what the coupling actually
stands for. And the coupling in Florida, for
example, stands for tearing down those wagering institutions like
Gulfstream, like Hialeah, like Calder or like Tampa Bay Downs
that built wagering in Florida. In Kentucky, the only legal
wagering for a long time was the tracks.
Certainly the state lottery later on in bingo halls and that
kind of stuff. But certainly the Para Mutual
game in many places was the origin of wage and to be at
conferences like this and to hear them worried about Gray
spaces, to worry about where people are betting, how they're
betting, etcetera, that there are no protections for
consumers, etcetera. How do we get new people into
the game? How do we keep them here?
Responsible gaming is an overwhelming thing, overwhelming
theme. Excuse me, at this conference.
And what I've heard from tribal leaders in Louisiana to the guy
from Hard Rock based in New Jersey to a FanDuel
representative in Florida is the same thing over and over, which
is, look, we need spaces for people to wager.
We need them to be regulated, we need them to be safe, and we
need them to be something that consumers can trust and that is
going to be a place that they'll go back to for their
entertainment options. When I do the show, when I get
to interview people who are in horse racing, who are trainers,
who are in that kind of space where they're the amongst the
group that helps us put these races on, the ones who
understand what this is, they know this is an entertainment
option, horse racing, and I love being at at conferences like
this because it reminds me that horse racing does in fact fit in
the fabric of what this is. When I told people that I wanted
to pop over to Cammarero to try to hit the pick six, they all
got it. They all understood it and
there's such a nice overlap in these spaces and it is
interesting to hear from someone.
You know, I got to interview someone on Thursday from the
Massapequa tribe, and they're the Foxwoods people.
It's probably a casino you've heard of.
They were one of the first destination casinos on the
Eastern seaboard outside of Atlantic City.
And I was talking with him and he essentially said what Eric
said about Hialeah and about Calder and about Gulfstream,
which is, hey, we were here 1st and you can't just make rules up
to kick us out without legitimate ramifications.
And if you think about a casino and all the people that work
there, it's a lot like a track all the way down to the farms
and different things that supply the things necessary for horse
racing. Casinos very similar that way as
far as restaurants, people working in cleaning Staffs,
etcetera. But it was interesting to hear
him talk that way. But they had to adjust.
And horse racing is going to have to do the same thing.
Certainly as we move forward with our wagering, we're going
to have to try to, I think, position ourselves alongside the
sports options as young people grow up around wagering and
it's, it is way less stigmatized.
It is amazing to be at this thing and hear women say things
like I talked with Sue Schneider today, Thursday, excuse me.
And she and she said I very proudly, I've been in this space
for 30 years. And so if you do the math on
that, it's pretty simple. She got in the game in the mid
90s. It's not a cool time to be in,
in, in gambling. And frankly, those of us who are
in horse racing, once in a while, when you get outside of
the horse racing bubble, people look at you.
Oh, horse racing, oh, casinos, oh, oh man, the younger people
don't feel that way. It's one of the reasons I think
that the the movements in horse racing right now need to be
intentional. They need to be entertainment
linked. Obviously take care of the
equine athlete first. That's one.
A1B, all of it. But if you take care of the
owner, you take care of the better, you're going to have a
great sport because that's where the the funding sources are.
That's another thing that Eric talks about quite a bit.
And it's another thing that comes up here at this conference
is that, hey, if you take care of the better, the person
infusing money into your product, you're going to be in a
good spot. And the other thing that stands
out, you heard some of this at the at the Arizona Global
Symposium as well on horse racing.
If you don't have the backing of your legislators, you're going
to go out of business. And frankly, every casino here
feels the same way. And one of the narratives in
horse racing right now that I hate but I cannot stand is that
horse racing is purely A subsidy sport.
You know what else then qualifies as a subsidy sport?
If you're going to throw a horse racing in there?
The NFL. There is one stadium in the NFL
that was built with private funds, 11.
Otherwise, they are all publicly funded.
All of them. Your tax dollars in some
jurisdiction went to pay for that stadium.
They don't pay taxes like a normal, you know, those teams
don't pay the same taxes as other places, etcetera.
There are so many government helps for teams like that to
keep profits, to keep money just to provide another entertainment
option in a town. Frankly, when you have those
things, if you're a Cincinnati and you've got the Reds and the
Bengals, you can attract talent to your town.
Younger people that want to go to Reds games, that want to go
to Bengals games, who then also have college options and towns
like that. So it makes sense that you would
want that. Churchill Downs, Keeneland,
those are places like that. They need help, they need to be
supported. But the reason is very simple to
me. It's that the layers of horse
racing matter. The farms matter, the Breeders
matter, the owners matter, the betters certainly matter as
well. And it's a giant, very strange
go sister we have in our sport that way today.
By the way, we'll talk with Sean Collins, my Co host on Blood
Horse Monday and we got into a discussion on our show this week
about predictive markets. And if you don't know what those
are, it's essentially a way for people to bet against one
another. You have to sell something to
another person though to get the payoff for it.
It's a a little bit different than wagering, but it's the
newest Gray space in our sport and it's the newest Gray space
frankly in sports betting. 90% of future, excuse me, of
predictive market wagers are on sports and this will almost
certainly creep into the Derby this year.
It'll be interesting to watch if legislators can get ahead of it
by then. I doubt it very much, but I do
think that the predictive markets thing can affect horse
racing in a pretty negative way. I think there are a lot of ways
to get ahead of it though. I think through regulation for
sure. And by the way, I'm not
necessarily anti predictive markets.
It might be really fun to have some bets on Derby day like,
hey, who finishes ahead of the other fierce necessary Sierra
Leone, who finishes ahead of the other journalism or sovereignty,
who finishes ahead of the other, etcetera.
Might be fun to do those kinds of things, right.
Heck, if you had rich strike ahead of two fields or not, not
2 fields, but if you had rich strike in that field, you might
have been in a good spot. So I do think there's a place
for predictive markets within horse racing.
But if it's not regulated, if it's not there, you're just in
a, you're in a black market, man.
You're not protected. And you can say whatever you
want about AD WS, you can say whatever you want about going to
the track and betting. At least you know you're
protected. At least you have that.
And some of the prediction markets you simply aren't.
And I'm hopeful that we'll move forward and try to figure those
things out within horse racing and frankly at the legislative
level as well, because we are so tied into the legislation, we
are so dependent on legislators understanding the layers of
horse racing. We should never stop talking
about it. By the way, the second you start
taking things for granted, you get to coupling in Florida.
The second you start to take things for granted, Hastings
closes. You cannot live that way.
You have to be vocal about these things.
You have to be, frankly, a little unpleasant about these
things. And shows like this afford us
that opportunity. Thank goodness.
But that's also why I'm here, because I want people to know
that I care about horse racing, that I care about the product,
that I care about betters. And so we're here at the Nickel
G's trying to talk to some legislators from around the
country. I've talked to people in West
Virginia, Indiana, Ohio, Florida, Kentucky since I've
been here and I'm I'm happy to hear, for example, that in West
Virginia the commitment to horse racing is through the roof
amongst the legislation legislator.
Excuse me, that's fantastic, fantastic.
If you think about what they accomplished here between
Mountaineer and Chucktown, it is remarkable.
They've got a great circuit of breeding program, all the stuff
they do a really, really, legitimately great job.
And I'm hopeful that we'll continue our momentum in
Kentucky. And frankly, I'm hopeful, well,
that other places around the country will mimic us a little
bit and and figure those things out because I don't need another
Hastings to close, man. They raced there for over 100
years. I don't need that.
No one needs that. No horse racing in Vancouver, no
horse racing. I mean, like these are towns
that we can't lose, man. Towns we just can't lose,
especially 100 year old plus horse racing tracks just can't
do it. And if you get lazy, man, if you
don't, if you don't rile up your, your legislators about
this stuff, it ain't going to matter.
It's not going to matter and Florida's no different for sure.
The synthetic championships are this weekend at Turfway Park.
I'll handicap those to close the show and I I was talking with
Sean on The Who we'll hear from next.
I think you'll love it. Sean's one of the more likable
guys in horse racing. If you if you think about what
the synthetic championships are, and I know in our area here, the
elevation of Turfway Park is one of the grand stories since I
moved to the area about 15 years ago, because there are a lot of
nickel claimers running for 10K at Turfway a lot.
And I remember when Churchill bottom and immediately said,
hey, we're going to double purses.
And at the time it wasn't a ton of money in some of those lower
level races. But now there's no concern of
that. On Saturday, none of the races
will be run for less than a $100,000 purse, whether that's
an optional claimer or maiden special, whatever it is.
But the four races that make up the synthetic championships, I
think are without them trying. I don't think that Turfway is
trying to do what I'm about to say, by the way, but I think
it's just an unintended consequence of these races.
Sean asked me on Blood Horse Monday, hey, do you think how
many years until these are graded?
And I responded this way, not only do I think they'll be
graded, I think in 10 years. So go ahead and bookmark this
2025, end of the year, whatever, 2020, 2035, excuse me, I think
we'll be talking about synthetic alongside dirt and turf way more
than we do now, way more. And I think it's something that
we'll come back, we'll start saying, Hey, is he a good
synthetic sire? Hey, is, is that a, you know, is
that synthetic surface? This, this and this?
What's the, you know, in the same way that we say, hey, the
turf at Saratoga is different than the turf at Del Mar or
whatever we might say, I think we're going to have those
conversations about synthetic. So in the same way that I think
the irrigation system at Kentucky Downs really changed
that place and the very best horses tend to win at a higher
rate now. I think the infusion of a Poly
track at Santa Anita where they train currently.
But if you think they're never going to run on that thing,
you're out of your mind. Of course they're going to
Belmont's installing one. They're very upfront about what
that's going to look like. We know how would bind a set up,
for example. And of course they've installed
at a Gulfstream Park as well. I think you're going to start to
see this as a version of thoroughbred racing in the
United States is that more and more these kinds of races will
not just be a turfway. They'll be in other places,
including spots like the new Belmont Park, spots like
Gulfstream Park, spots like Woodbine, and then eventually,
if they can get it together out of San Anita as well.
I think there's going to be considerably more synthetic
racing as we move forward in the United States.
And I think that, by the way, is just part of the changing game.
It used to not mean much to win a race at Turfway.
Now it can pay a lot of bills, right?
The game changes all the time and we just need to be ready for
it. We need to just move along and
adapt with it. How people train now is
different than they used to 20 years ago.
Sovereignty is going to Baltimore now he doesn't.
And half the group says, yeah, we get it, right, right.
Half the group said, we're, yeah, we get it.
I anticipate in about 5-10 years, 8090% of people are going
to say don't worry about, don't worry about Baltimore.
Do what's best for the horse. That's what they couch it as,
right? But I think with the synthetic
stuff, I think we need to be ready.
And I know that there is some, any time there's evolution, any
time that things change, people push back, right?
And people don't like change. I get it.
And the synthetic thing feels like a change, feels different,
right? What I would say to that, too
bad, too bad. In the same way that if you
wanted to bet Churchill a couple of years ago when they didn't
have a turf course, too bad. That's what they got right now.
That's your betting option. I think that turf way, that turf
and turf way, excuse me, synthetic and turf way, places
like that are going to start to really pop up in the sport.
And I think that Belmont Park will be a leader.
I think Turfway will be a leader.
And I do think that if they can keep it together at Gulfstream
Park, it'll be there as well. And as you look at the the past
performances leading into races like my charmer Caitlin, her
greatness is making the trip down out of the Kevin of Tarbarn
Flavi and Pratt gets them out here.
This is a guy who wrote her in the Ontario Matron.
And this is the kind of stuff that I I think we're going to
start to see over and over. Number one, if you put up the
money, no one cares if it's a great at stakes or not.
If there's 100 grand plus on the line for the winner, a lot of
people are going to show up. And the smallest field size we
have for a stake on Saturday at Turfoy Park is 11.
There's a reason people will show up for these races,
frankly. You get the turf horses who are
willing to try synth. You get the synthetic horses
already who we know in these races, including Caitlin or
Greatness, including Literate also in that race has run 8
times on synthetic. You've got Queen's Command in
here who's run four times on synthetic.
You've got other winners on in here as well.
Veena Ariana has multiple starts.
One For One is Next up on the synthetic at Turfway Park, by
the way, on debut. And so there are so many horses
where you used to look next to the synthetic number and see
0000 that's going away. You're going to see more and
more of these horses who just like it and frankly within
Kentucky, since Turfway is now a year round training facility, do
not be surprised if more and more of these horses lean toward
that way. I think one of the things for
example, that they should do in California, and I know it's way
outside of Kentucky, they should play up turf racing, they should
play up Polly and I think they should go all in on those
things. Obviously the dirt stuff needs
to maintain in the San Anita Derby, the Big Cap, you know,
Pacific Classic, whatever. But I, if I were out there and I
were trying to boost the number of horses running and try to
increase field size, I'd be using the Bali Dragon.
I'd be using the turf every freaking time I can.
If I'm running 10 races at at San Anita, maybe 3 around the
dirt maybe, because I think you're going to get a lot more
traffic in those other races. And I think all of us need to be
ready for that. I think that's going to spread
across the country. And by the way, as long as the
gate's full, I don't really care.
If you want to know why field size matters, go ahead and look
at any graphic about where the best Pick 4 payouts are.
They are always turf. They are always Oaklawn.
What are those two have in common?
They have the biggest field sizes.
The world's real simple. And I think you'll see as we
move forward that the Poly is going to become part of our
normal vernacular in horse racing.
And to that I say bring it on. I'm Lou Rebeau, this is the
Kentucky Racing Spotlight. I'm live in San Juan.
Thanks so much for hanging out with us this week, getting your
weekend started with us ahead of the synthetic championships
there in Florence at Turfway Park.
Please stay warm if you're this weekend.
My Gobber fly back on Sunday. We're going to go from 85 here
to 16 in Louisville. It's going to be quite the shock
to my system, I'm sure. Up next to Sean Collins, he's my
Co host on Blood Horse Monday. You can find us on that program
every Monday, frankly looking forward to the week itself.
It's really an industry podcast. We have everything from owners,
breeders, trainers, jockeys on down frankly.
And of course a cast of characters from Blood Horse
itself, previewing races, reviewing races, etcetera.
Frank Angst is a common a common guest for us on that program as
well. It's hard not to like Sean if
you're a horse racing fan. When I, when I pitched the idea
of Blood Horse Monday, I told the guys in that meeting room in
Lexington, I'll do this project. I think it's a good one.
I'm only doing it if Sean Collins is available.
And I think you'll hear his enthusiasm for the sport, how he
came up, how organic it was. I'm jealous.
I'm jealous that he got the bug earlier in life than I did.
I didn't get the bug about horse racing until I was in my 20s,
and Sean got it early on. You'll hear his story and you'll
hear it next here on the Kentucky Racing Spotlight with
Louis Ribow. I'm Louis Ribow.
We're presented by the HPPAKYHBP, a.com, Sean Collins.
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Download the ESPN Louisville app today on the Apple or Google
Play store brewed by Bud Light. Welcome back into the Kentucky
racing spotlight. My name is Louis Ribow we're on
the remote studio this week, but we'll be back at it on ESPN 680
and one O 5 seven where you can catch me every we are every
weekday. Excuse me 11:50 right here on
Ribow and Co general sports discussion on that one.
We do like to mix in our horse racing.
Never miss our horse racing segment at 10:20 AM every
Friday. We welcome in a handicapper from
somewhere around the country, try to make you some money on
the biggest races of the week in a man who I have gotten to know
way too well this year, frankly, uncomfortably well this year.
Sean Collins joins us. Of course, you know his work at
Blood Horse and at a Pharaoh 12. Frankly, Sean, if you had to
guess and welcome in and thank you for doing this outside of
our normal purviews of a blood Horse Monday.
If you had to guess, do more people know you through Blood
Horse or through AP 12 man? I don't, I feel like more people
know me through a Pharaoh 12, but they don't know my face as
much on a Pharaoh 12 because I'm always behind the camera.
So I feel like that's the more I feel like a Pharaoh 12 is a more
recognizable name for now, but my face is more recognizable as
being part of Blood Horse. So it's a, it's the.
It's a interesting balance there between the two.
A real mix of items for sure, but you know, we'll get into a
Pharaoh 12 and all of those things.
But Sean, you have become, you know, a bit of a fixture at
Churchill Downs on the backside, but you are not a native
Kentuckian. You and I have that in common,
frankly, that we, we were not raised in the Kentucky circuit.
Frankly, we don't have the same last names as anyone else on the
Kentucky circuit. Where?
Where did you get your origin and how'd you fall in love with
horse racing? Yes, I'm originally from
Bethlehem, PA, so about an hour and 15 minutes north of
Philadelphia in the Lehigh Valley area.
Not a horse racing area at all. So, you know, horse racing's not
very relevant. I was lucky when I was a kid, my
parents watched the Triple Crown races every year and the first
one I remember watching was Smarty Jones, which for
Pennsylvania, I guess that was the one time we did care about
horse racing. He was the Pennsylvania bred.
And so I didn't really realize it at the time, but that that
was why I think the Triple Crown was getting so much coverage in
my area that year, which allowed me to kind of follow it a little
bit more. You know, I was what, 4-5 years
old at the time. So I was able to kind of follow
it. I fell in love with Smarty
Jones. We watch the Derby the next year
with Giacomo and a fleet Alex in the Preakness in the Belmont.
And then the following year with Barbaro in 2006, fell in love
with him when he won the Kentucky Derby so impressively.
And then when he got injured in the Preakness, following along
with his recovery process is when I started to learn more and
more about the sport. That was how I learned that the
Breeders Cup, Breeders' Cup existed.
And so I watched the Breeders Cup for the first time that
year, started to realize there were more races than just the
Triple Crown races. So gradually pick that up.
And yeah, from there it was just non-stop watching horse racing
whenever it was on national TV, the Triple Crown, the Breeders
Cup. If they put the Travers on NBC
or something like that, I would watch.
I remember watching St. Sense when that remember
watching Big Brown when the Haskell and eventually when I
was in middle school, we ended up getting the TV package that
had HRTV and TVG on it. And so I'd come home from school
every day, just start watching horse racing non-stop every
single day. Eventually went to my first
horse race in 2014, the Haskell. That year we realized how easy
it is to go to a horse race when it's not the Kentucky Derby
price tickets. And so all of a sudden I was
hitting tracks all up and down the East Coast and eventually
moved out here to Kentucky to a attend the University of
Louisville's equine program. So yeah, that's kind of how how
I got started. This is Sean Collins with us on
the Kentucky Racing Spotlight. We're presented by the HBPA here
in Kentucky, KYHBP a.com. Go check them out for all their
great content at the website. So you get to Kentucky and you
go to the University of Louisville.
You know, by that point you want to work in horse racing itself.
Describe that that program at U of L though, because I think so
many people hear about it, Sean. You know, we hear about Arizona,
we hear about the program at Louisville, but I'm not sure
people have an idea of what equine business is all about.
What did you what did you focus on when you were at U of L?
Yeah. Well, the thing that I really
liked about this program is it's in the Business School.
So some of it's different from like the equine program at UK or
the one out in Arizona in the sense that you're getting the
business degree on on top of the horses, right.
So like for example, 11 semester I would have just the normal
marketing class and then the following semester I would have
it the marketing class again. But now we're focused
specifically on how this relates to things within the horse
industry. You'd have a law Class 1
semester and then the next semester you'd have the equine
law class. And so you'd kind of you'd have
the opportunity to learn all the basics of business, but then
also being able to specify that within examples within the horse
industry. And as someone from from my
perspective who did not grow up in the industry, you know, I'm,
I always say I'm the textbook definition of what we always say
we want in horse racing. The person that falls in love
with it just, you know, as a fan and wants to get involved with
it as somebody. I remember when I first got out
here and you know, seeing some of the other people in my
classes that had connections with horses, connections within
the industry and within the area already, like within the first
month or two, they're getting internships, they're getting
jobs within the industry. And I kind of felt a little, I
was like, what? I feel like I'm behind.
I feel like I'm not, I'm not doing what I'm supposed to be
doing at this point. But then as you know, time went
on. The great thing about that the
program was the professors and everybody involved with it were
able to help me build those connections, get me involved and
really get me first started within, within the industry and
kind of take those first steps. So for me, as someone who grew
up outside the industry, I felt like being in in that program
was crucial for sure. One, getting getting the, you
know, the good degree, getting the business degree.
If I ever decided to go outside of horse racing for something in
the future, I still have that to fall back on, but also it just
really helped me get my foot in the door in a lot of spots.
Sean Collins with us from Blood Horse.
You can hear him on Blood Horse Monday alongside me.
Every Monday we release that episode around all right before
you go to dinner, so right around 5:00 or so.
Guests from all over the industry and within the industry
itself. Sean, you and I have a very
similar back story that way where we got into horse racing
through non family means, essentially right through non
connections. We had to go figure it out
ourselves. Would you say the once you're
behind whatever that horse racing wall is, it is actually a
pretty welcoming place? Oh, definitely, yeah.
People in racing, 99% of people in racing are, yeah.
It's the nicest people you'll ever meet, the most
accommodating people you ever meet.
And the, you know, the big benefit that that I've, I've had
in the last two years working with blood horses now people are
starting to recognize my face. So now, you know, you know, that
that's a big, big step forward as far as, you know, kind of
getting the content that I need for what my job is.
But then, you know, just in general continuing to build on
those relationships. Like someone I someone I point
to that that's happened with is a trainer, Brendan Walsh, who,
you know, at first it was just, you know, I'd show up at the bar
and I'd say hello, asking my questions.
And that now, like when we were at the Pennsylvania Derby a
couple of months ago, like we stood there for a couple minutes
and just kind of had general conversation.
Wasn't me interviewing him or anything.
So you you build those relationships and the more you
see people, the more you get to hang out back there really does
play. They benefit.
Yeah, Brendan's my favorite guy to run into at the airport.
I think that's. I haven't done that yet.
I haven't run into. It at the airport yet so it's
the easiest conversation. He and I were like B-29 and B31
on a flight from Baltimore to Louisville and I let the woman
in B30 have the spot, you know, but yeah, no, it's it's you're
right. It's a, it's a spot where
getting through the, the impenetrable fortress of, of the
outside of horse racing isn't the easiest thing to do.
But at the same time, like you said, once you're in the, the
people, by and large, it's almost as much a sport as it is
a cause at this point, right? You know, we're, we're, we're
all fighting. We, we feel like there's, you
know, some bad indicators in some spots and good indicators
and others. We're trying to hold on to those
good indicators. But yeah, once you're once
you're inside the walls of the the forbidden horse racing city,
it feels like people are very kind.
I wanted to follow up though. You know, you mentioned, you
know, blood horse has allowed you to get your face out there,
specifically Blood Horse Monday. But a Pharaoh 12, you get your
start on YouTube essentially. And, and, and let's not, let's
not mix words here. I mean, that's largely, you
know, on top of your work at the, at the Kentucky Derby
museum, A Pharaoh 12 is a big boost for you getting, you know,
employed and, and, and noticed by by blood horse.
What What was the origin story of a Pharaoh 12 and what made
you want to do it? Yeah, well, the origin story
kind of I guess goes back to high school in the sense that I
was, my last two years of high school, I had took a video
editing class and I did a couple couple things in that class that
I really enjoyed focused around our our high school's marching
band, the Liberty High School Grenadier Band.
And so, yeah, I did. I did a couple behind the scenes
stuff with them and that kind of got my interest in video editing
and I just kind of sat on it for the first couple years of
college. And I was somebody when I would
go to the race track. I used to when I first started
going, my goal was I'm going to take a photo of every horse that
I ever see race. And then I ended up going too
frequently. So that's started to get a
little, a little outlandish of a goal.
So eventually for the big races, instead of taking photos, I was
like, why don't I take a video of these horses?
So like the 2019 Derby, I've got like a video clip of the post
parade and the, you know, a couple of the other races.
Like I started taking videos of them walking around and stuff
because I'm like, I'd rather go back and see the horses actually
moving rather than just looking at the pictures of them because,
you know, they're 8 billion photos of these horses at the
back races from 800 different photographers.
So in 2021, I was, I was at the at Churchill in the Lucas
Classic and I filmed the Knicks go at the Lucas Classic that
year. And I got some really good
footage of him walking around the paddock, of him running in
the race in the winner's circle afterwards.
And I was like, you know what, we're going to put all this
footage together did that. I was like, let me go ahead and
upload this to YouTube. I'm like, maybe somebody else
would enjoy watching this, you know, just something fun.
There's next goes fans out there.
Let me put this up there. So I uploaded it and end up
getting 30,000 views just the on site of him on on the racetrack.
So then I started going back to some of the other races I've
done before then and putting them together in the similar
style. Those caught on well.
Then as I was going to more races during the Churchill Downs
fall, me, I started to pick it up and intentionally filming
that kind of stuff. And then a couple months later
when the Derby came around, I was able to film all the horses
training for the Derby. And that seemed to really get a
good response to people enjoying watching and seeing all the all
the horses doing their preparations.
And then that happened to be the year Rich Strike one, the
Kentucky Derby, which was probably the most viral Kentucky
Derby of my lifetime, was when he won.
And so that the video I posted of him winning the Derby just
exploded. It's now over 1,000,000 views on
YouTube. But that was the thing that
really kick started me and got me to the point where I could
monetize my channel and then that would then pay for me to
travel to a lot of big races and just kept going, going on and on
and on. I've grown a pretty good
following there as well. But it's just something I didn't
really intend to turn into what it did, but I was able to turn
it into what I did what what it's become because just of 1
great horses, but two, just the effort that I put into it,
trying to get to as many of the big races as possible. 8 zero 12
/ 38 1/2 thousand Subs. What's your most popular video
and why is it hilarious? It's the 2024 Whitney.
For some reason I don't understand it something
something happened where that caught the algorithm.
It's got if you haven't pulled up there, it's got like several
million views. I just actually looked today.
It is my most the 2024 Whitney is my most watched video of 2025
for some reason. So it.
It caught the I caught the algorithm, it exploded.
The 2025 Whitney has benefited off of that because I guess it
just keeps recommending now a Pharaoh 12 Whitney.
So the 2025 Whitney is now my second most watched video this
year. So it just, I think it just
passed the Belmont Stakes for me.
I have no idea why. Now to be fair, it was a good
video. It was a well shot video, but it
wasn't the, you know, it's a grade one race, but it wasn't
like a superstar horse. It was Arthur's ride winning it.
I have no idea why that one is so popular, but I'll take it
now. The now because of how the
Whitney this year did. The Whitney is now the must hit
race of the year for me every year going forward.
Forever he shot Collin Lindsey's from blood horse joins us here
on the Kentucky Racing spotlight.
We're presented by the HBPAKYHBP a.com.
That's fantastic. You mentioned a relationship
with, with, you know, someone like like a Brendan Walsh or
whatever, and that's obviously cultivated, Sean, by your, your
showing up at the barn at Churchill Downs.
How many days a week is it? Is it 5 or 6?
How many days a week are you out on?
The bus, it really depends on the on what part we are in for
the racing season. So like Derby, my my thing with
Derby is once the first Kentucky Derby contender shows up, which
is usually somebody coming up that ran in the Louisiana Derby,
once that first horse shows up, I'm there every single day until
essentially until I leave for Preakness.
So, but even like during the fall meet, for example in
November, I'd say I mean I'm. There, I'm there every race day
for for the races, I'd say in the mornings I'm there probably
maybe 3-3 or so times a week, something like claiming crown.
I'm there every single day leading up to it.
Stephen Foster week. I'm there every day leading up
to it. Certain times a year I might go
maybe not as frequently, but I'm, I'm there pretty much at
least a couple times a week to get, get my comments for, for
the stories that I'm working on for the upcoming week, get some
video content for us as well. And the big race is definitely a
lot more when I was at Saratoga for the summer, I mean, I was
there 5:00 every single morning for that month and 1/2 because
there's so much going on there. But you're.
Going, you're going in the morning, Sean, over 100 * a
year. That's an easy number to put
together, right? And, and look, I'm a guy who
goes a couple dozen times a year, right?
I'm out there, but I'm not out there multiple times per week.
I'm out there once every other week.
If you aggregate the whole year together, something like that.
Why do you go to the barn so often, Sean?
I mean, it's just fun. I mean, that's that's the best
time of day to be there, see the horses as they're training.
That was something I fell in love with when I was a tour
guide at the Derby Museum. It was just being out there,
seeing all the horses out there on the track at the same time,
seeing the training. Now, even if I'm not, you know,
there's obviously the work aspect of it where there's times
where I do need to get comments from trainers and so I need to
go talk to them. So that pulls me in.
Or maybe, you know, there's a big race coming up this weekend.
And so I want to go get video footage for YouTube to have like
a training video that goes out the day before the race.
So there's, there's reasons like that that pulls me in.
But then in general, it's just, it's, it's a nice atmosphere.
Everybody's relaxed, everybody's having a good time.
The horses are out there. You get to see a whole bunch of
them out there at the same time. You're looking at, you know,
anywhere between maybe 50 to 100 horses going past you in the
span of a couple moments at any given point.
So it's just the atmosphere that I've really fallen in love with.
It's so much more unique from the races, and it's something
that when I was a tour guide at the Derby Museum, I just really
came to appreciate the fact that I had the ability to be present
for that and to have the access to be present for that.
And so I like to take advantage of that when I can, like
something like the Pennsylvania Derby, for example.
When I went home for that this past year and I had the option
to be there on the backstretch, it was worth waking up early and
driving an hour down the parks every single morning just to be
able to be on the backstretch at a different race track.
So it's just something that I really appreciate.
Michelle Collins, he's with Blood Horse.
He's on Blood Horse Monday as well.
You have worked with me now for 45 episodes, Sean.
And it doesn't have to be something about me.
It can be, of course, but Blood Horse Monday itself, you
mentioned people getting to know your face.
You went from being a guy with behind the camera on April 12.
You did get in front of it a little bit at least doing some
of those tours at church at Churchill Downs.
What's it been like doing Blood Horse Monday?
What have you learned this year? Oh it's been horrible because my
Co host just sucks you know? That's the whole thing.
It's not good people. Yeah, I.
Know Oh yeah, you know, I don't know, I don't know why they put
me with that guy. It's no, it's it it's been
awesome. The thing that I've really
enjoyed doing with that aside from working with you, because I
think we we really have a good rapport when we do that show,
but it's really for both of us, I think really open the door to
continue building relationships with people.
We're talking we're really analyzing all different parts of
the industry. We've had jockeys on trainers,
owners, breeders, people that are consignors at the sales
people, representatives of the race tracks, representatives of
the of the of the sales companies.
Like, I mean, we just had the racetrack, the executive
director from Abu Dhabi. On the podcast 2 weeks ago like
that, that's we're, we're really starting kind of grow, you know,
our involvement in the industry, both you and me in general.
But then also being able to bring the fans, bring, able to
bring people that are in the industry, bringing them along to
kind of get to know all the people in the industry.
Because you think about all the other sports, the main the big
thing with the other sports is you know all the people that are
involved. Like those are household names.
I feel like in racing you don't always have that as much.
It's like you know the horses, but you don't always know the
people that are behind the horses.
And so getting to shed a light on those people, I think is
definitely a huge deal. I think the other part is is
we've kind of gotten to shed the light on the people who work at
Blood Horse and who love this game too.
That too, yeah. You know the the Bobby halts of
the world and obviously everyone's gotten to know Frank
ganks throughout the year with his numerous segments with us
and and you. What I love about that part too,
especially I'll go to Frank just because we talk with him so
often. Sean, is he he, he is so good at
walking you through his editorial positions, right?
He explains how he gets from point A to point B.
And I think that part is really interesting because he's, like
you said, you know, you went and got a business degree.
Frank is talking business, right?
More than anything else. He's doing the literally the the
columns called dollars and cents SENSE, but it's a he's literally
looking at the finances of the sport at a time when we really
got to get that figured out right.
And so it's A and frankly, we'll always have to get it figured
out, but that sort of stuff. But getting Bobby hold on.
Bob Kieffer was on this week talking hog cog.
He's he's fantastic. You know, Byron Kings of the
world, the Joe Perez's of the world, you know, all the
different people that do the, the tough work at Blood horse.
You know, the behind the scenes stuff that frankly, you see the
names on the page, we actually get to, you know, we get to show
them off a little bit, right? You know, especially, you know,
the Breeders Cup coverage that we got to do etcetera.
I've loved that part of the job too, Sean, because I, I'm like
you, I grew, I grew up a fan. And so I saw all these names,
you know, in, in, in print, but getting to know them, I think
it's been really fun as well. Yeah, getting to know the
people, the people in our position that do the writing and
do the reporting and stuff too. I think that just for one, it
binds you more to like when you're reading the stories, you
can, if you get to know the people by watching them on the
podcast, you can kind of understand where their
viewpoints are coming from a little bit more.
You can understand their writing style a little bit more.
And I just feel like it makes it a more enjoyable reading
experience if you actually know who it is that's writing it
behind it. And you know, knowing the
passion, knowing the, you know, the parts that they of the
industry that they're really in tune with, I think is definitely
a big deal. Sean Collins with us.
I'll get you out of here on this.
Sean, you were a tour guide at the Kentucky Derby Museum.
For how long? Let's start with that.
Came up to be just under three years, I think.
Yeah, by the time I left, yeah, it was close to three years.
That's a lot of tours. That is a lot of work.
If you were in an elevator and you knew you had 45 seconds and
someone said, wow, what? What's Churchill all about?
What would you tell them? Gosh, I got too much.
I don't know if I could cram it into 4.
You got 45 seconds. Sean Collins radio.
Get it done. I mean, I would just, I would
tell them it's the most historic sporting venue on the planet.
Essentially the greatest race in the world is held there.
It's been one of the unique things about Churchill, I think
compared to a lot of other sporting venues is that every
single running of the Derby has happened at the same place over
the same track. And so, you know, you think
about some of the other sports and how do you get your new
stadiums and things kind of move around.
Even in horse racing, the Belmont Stakes has moved around.
The Preakness Stakes has run around, has moved around.
The Derby stayed put for 150 years, well, 151 years.
And that's been, I mean, all the history that's out of there on
the track. You can feel it every time you
go out there. And one of the things I really
enjoyed doing with the tours was just seeing people's reactions
to that. Like when they got there and
they looked around, they could see it.
And like you have the old with the twin Spires, but you have
the new with the new paddock in the new sections as well.
And you can see kind of how the old and the new mixed together.
But then I, you know, the thing we in the industry, I think
under undervalue is the lack of knowledge that the general
public has about the sport. And being able to kind of sit
down with people and talk to them about what the sport is,
what the Kentucky Derby is and really see them get a better
understanding for what we do on a daily basis and hopefully
enjoy it more as they go forward.
That was the part I really loved about that job was being able to
explain the industry to them and kind of understand.
I think understanding where some people are confused in the
industry as far as they don't understand what certain things
are. I think that has done helped me
in the career that I have now is because I know what people don't
aren't expecting and don't understand.
Synthetic championships this weekend on our circuit there in
Kentucky. Do you think they'll race with
the temperatures expected? I haven't even looked at what
the temperatures are expected. What are they?
I'm still I'm. I'm still getting adjusted.
Friday or something? What was it?
I think it's going to be 6 on Friday, the high is 33 on
Saturday and it's going to rain, snow, whatever that is.
I hope they run, but we'll see. I I'm still getting adjusted.
This is going to be a hard week for me.
I was on this past Saturday. I was 80° in Abu Dhabi watching
racing. I don't know if I'm going to
enjoy the 30° at Turfway Park on this weekend, but we'll do it no
matter what. So I'm.
Currently poolside and it is 85° in San Juan.
See you you're you're lucky. I'm not ready to come home
because the high on Sunday is 16.
This is what I'm getting at. This is.
What this is what I had to do with options.
Come on, Turf Point, get it done.
You got to. I mean, they got Now, to be
fair, jockeys will run when every race is worth at least
$100,000. I'm just saying.
Oh, yeah, everybody's going to ride around, be cold for for
that kind of first money. But all right, Sean, we'll let
you get out of here. Thank you so much for joining us
here on the Racing SPOTLIGHT. Other than replacing Louis
Rabeau, what's the best way to improve Blood Horse Mind?
Oh, I mean that that's a that's a big part of it.
Replace yeah, replace Louis and get me some give me a Co host
with hair. That's that's what we need.
We need more air on on Blood Works Monday.
Well, there you go. He's Sean Collins, a Pharaoh 12.
All the good things at BH under score Sean S Collins.
Is that right? Did I get there?
Yeah, BH under score S Collins or at a Pharaoh 12.
I have Twitter accounts for both.
There you go. So you can go find him there on
the social. Sean, really do appreciate you
jumping in. Have a great rest of the week,
buddy. Thank you.
Enjoy Puerto Rico. I'll see you back on Monday and.
Marrero closing day tomorrow. Let's go.
There you go, they close there. I thought they ran every day.
It's like, well, it's closing for like 2026.
They don't run around Christmas. So like they take a couple
weeks. Oh, really?
They used to? Yeah.
There you go. I I'm just going on what the
calendar says, my friend. So there you go.
All right. Thank you, Sean.
See ya. There you go.
Sean Collins. Appreciate him joining us from
Blood Horse at BH under score. S Collins, of course, it's an A
pharaoh 12 for the YouTube page. If you're the one horse racing
person that's not following that an absolute delight to sit next
to every Monday. I appreciate him jumping on the
program and frankly he's he's a mainstay at the Barnes in such a
positive way. Getting to walk around the
backside of Churchill Downs with Shawn Collins is an experience
unto itself because of the good relationships he's forged back
there. This is the racing spotlight.
My name is Louis Rabo, where we are in the mobile studios this
week, but usually are at ESPN 680 and 105.7 where you can
catch me 11:50 on Rabo and Co. Up next, we talked about those
synthetic championships. Let's handicap them.
We'll do that next welcome back in final segue here on the
Kentucky racing spotlight lure bow a San Juan edition of the
program. Appreciate everybody jumping on
with me here today starting your horse racing weekend with ESPN
680-1057. You can find my show daily 11:50
Monday through Friday odd Rabo and Co tons of hoops, tons of
football but of course we mix in the horse racing as well this
morning for example, we spoke with JD Fox about these exact
races. Everything I do about horse
racing, by the way, you can find at my personal podcast platform,
the Horse Racing Happy Hour. And so go ahead, get subscribed
over there. You'll get all of the great
segments, both from here on ESPN 680, but also out there at Blood
Horse and on the podcast platform itself, Horse Racing
Happy Hour. Go find our great stuff this
week. Of course, Blood Horse one day
will be up there. We will have this program up
there. You'll have my interview with JD
this morning. And of course, our weekly
program called the Socal Saturdays, we all look through
the entire cart in Southern California, wherever they are
running, and the low sale fraternity is this weekend.
So of course we went ahead and handicapped that this week.
My guest was Josh Rodriguez from the Wrong Lead podcast and a
good guy up there in Chicago helped me out with the
California preview as well. I wanted to talk about a couple
of horses that will be running in the synthetic championships
this weekend, ones that I think are interesting that I'm trying
to figure out if they fit in or not and maybe some local
connections can pick off some of these bigger, you know, some of
these bigger purses. But Race 6 will start that pick
four with the all synthetic championship pick four there at
Turfway Park. The my Charmer is a mile on the
synthetic there it is for three and up on the Philly and mare
side of things, I mentioned Caitlin, her greatness of the
open to this show. She comes in out of the Woodbine
circuit. She's never actually been at
Turfway Park, but her numbers at at Woodbine do suggest that she
would be good in the company here.
And frankly, she's run some colder weather as well up there
at Woodbine and it gives me some hope that maybe she'll be good
to go. She ran in the Maple Leaf last
year in November as a three-year old, came back this year as a
four year old, has already won twice, run second three times
from 7 starts in the Kevin Natard barn.
As I mentioned before, Flavian Pratt picks up the mount.
He won a board her in the Ontario Matron.
Now I want to be really clear. Flavian's in town, Irad's in
town for this day. I don't know what kind of odds
you're going to get on those kind of horses by the end of the
day. But what's really interesting to
watch is, generally speaking, people who don't ride a turfway
on big days, when they show up, they don't win the first four or
five races necessarily. But by the end of the day, they
figure out the track biases, they figure out what they want
to at least try to do with their mounts.
And so that'll be really interesting to watch.
And so frankly, by the time we get to Race 6 and we're talking
about Caitlin, her greatness, would we not expect them by
then? Flavian Pride, who has multiple
amounts on the day, Hey, every race is 100.
Ki was joking with Sean on Monday on the show that it's a
almost guarantee, even with the weather they're on.
And on Saturday, right? They're running tomorrow.
There's almost no doubt about it because hey, who's going to miss
out on five races of at least 100K and then four races of at
least $250,000? I mean, come on.
Of course every jockey in the world's going to want to do
that. But Caitlin, her greatness makes
the trip. Literate's in here for Brad Cox.
He acclaim after the after the Shaluchi out of the Drexler
Martin barn puts her back on the synthetic where she is 4 for
eight lifetime. All those runs at Woodbine and
many of them coming over two turns, including a win in July
in the Trillium up there in a grade 3 at Woodbine.
So I'm fascinated by Literate as well.
Brad has very quickly with the move, if I read Ortiz to
Kentucky, grabbed on to Irad Ortiz Junior as one of his top
writers. And as the Kentucky circuit
continues to evolve and Irad has already said going down for the
championship meet at at Gulfstream Park, and then as
soon as that's over, he'll be at Keeneland, he'll be doing those
things. You got to watch for him here.
And frankly, I think he's a name that we're going to see more and
more at Turfway Park. I think Irad's one of those
names you need to watch because I think because he's got a
Kentucky base now, I think he'll be at Turfway more often for big
weekends now, Gulfstream Park championship meet, that's its
own thing. And you don't have to.
I'm not going to fight anybody on being in South Florida when
they're running maidens in the high 80s, thousands and then
they're, you know, the Derby trail, all those things.
I'm not going to fight anybody. I'm going down to Gulfstream for
the winter, but I think you're going to see, I read more and
more at Turfway Park. I think you'll see Flabby and
Pratt at Turfway Park. Now that he's going to be
stationed, instead of going all the way to California, he's
going to be New York. It's one of those things where
we're just going to see these guys more and more because
there's money. There's money.
I read didn't move to Kentucky because he was a farmer.
No, not having to live on Long Island with your family might be
more attractive living here, right?
Living in Kentucky, but I'm not quite sure.
There are some locals as well in this race that I'm watching.
Landed is in here for Wesley Ward coming out of Kentucky
Downs. Most recently before that was
running at Keeneland and ran in the Broadway as a New York bred,
winning at Aqueduct as well. Over the seven furlongs, gets to
a mile here. Is only run twice at a mile, but
is 1 for two. An interesting one because
usually we think of horses going to Turfway as literally jumping
off the turf and trying the synthetic.
This is one that's going from dirt to synthetic and, you know,
tried the Kentucky Downs last time was good there.
Ran a good fourth, by the way, under John Velasquez.
Walter Rodriguez picks up them out here.
But this is a daughter of Omaha Beach.
And we're seeing more and more of this, as I said in the open,
we need to be ready for this. I think we're going to see more
and more synthetics and I think the Omaha beaches are the early
examples of that in the Holiday landing.
It's a six furlong Sprint here. This is on the female side of
things. Again, Ellen J is in here.
This is an exciting one from the Ellen J Foxwoods folks.
She ran good second at Presque Isle in the Presque Isle Downs
Masters just back in September. Flavia and Pratt went in for
that race and she's interesting because she's a closer in a
sprinter's world that can work at Turfway Park, but it's
usually from the outside. So I'm interested to see if L&J
gets a good trip here, is able to get out of the gate a little
bit quicker. She's over three this year, but
boy, she can be really fast when she wants to be.
She ran third in the Smart and Fancy up at Excuse Me at That at
Saratoga earlier this summer as well.
Here's who has been booked to ride her floral Giroux Bobby and
Brad Joel Rosario. I read Ortiz junior.
This is a serious connections. Brad Cox trains interested to
see her in this Sprint in race 7 in the holiday landing.
Pondering's going to break right next to her.
This is the other I read Ortiz mount Brandon Walsh trains here.
This one just won at Woodbine and so first time trying
synthetic wins the grade 3 up there going 7 furlongs.
This is going to be a lot faster.
Now the good news for Pondering is Pondering is a stalking type
is going to be near the front of the pace.
If I had to lean somewhere, it's the three-year old daughter of
Hard Spun who I think is going to pick off Race 7 as we get
there on Saturday at Turfway Park.
Well, I'm Louis Rabo and that is going to wrap us for this week
on the Kentucky Racing Spotlight.
So sorry that we didn't get into more handicapping at the end of
the show here, but wanted to make sure we've got time for the
other great, the other great programming around here at ESPN
Louisville. By the way, I think Encino wins
his race as well. I'm the Prairie, if that's a
helpful thing. All later in the show, thanks to
Sean Collins. Thanks to all of you for hanging
out with us. And certainly thanks to all the
folks at the National Council of Legislators from gaming states
for having me to their conference here in Puerto Rico.
Back to the snow on Sunday. Stay warm out there.
Good luck with all your wagers this weekend.
Thanks for joining us on the spotlight.
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