The document discusses Morrisville State College's equine program which prepares students for careers working with racehorses. The program takes a hands-on approach teaching daily horse care and students will help exercise racehorses. The program is led by Dr. Clyde Cranwell who aims to give students pragmatic experience for jobs in racing. Graduate Steven Campbell credits the program for helping him obtain a job as a trainer and exercise rider at a nearby racetrack.
The document discusses Morrisville State College's equine program which prepares students for careers working with racehorses. The program takes a hands-on approach teaching daily horse care and students will help exercise racehorses. The program is led by Dr. Clyde Cranwell who aims to give students pragmatic experience for jobs in racing. Graduate Steven Campbell credits the program for helping him obtain a job as a trainer and exercise rider at a nearby racetrack.
The document discusses Morrisville State College's equine program which prepares students for careers working with racehorses. The program takes a hands-on approach teaching daily horse care and students will help exercise racehorses. The program is led by Dr. Clyde Cranwell who aims to give students pragmatic experience for jobs in racing. Graduate Steven Campbell credits the program for helping him obtain a job as a trainer and exercise rider at a nearby racetrack.
The document discusses Morrisville State College's equine program which prepares students for careers working with racehorses. The program takes a hands-on approach teaching daily horse care and students will help exercise racehorses. The program is led by Dr. Clyde Cranwell who aims to give students pragmatic experience for jobs in racing. Graduate Steven Campbell credits the program for helping him obtain a job as a trainer and exercise rider at a nearby racetrack.
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NORT HE AS T /MI D- AT L ANT I C
112 / BloodHorse.com / NOVEMBER 9, 2013
C O N N E C T I C U T
D E L A W A R E
M A I N E
M A R Y L A N D
M A S S A C H U S E T T S
N E W
H A M P S H I R E
N E W
J E R S E Y
N E W
Y O R K
P E N N S Y L V A N I A
R H O D E
I S L A N D
V E R M O N T
V I R G I N I A
W E S T
V I R G I N I A NESTLED IN A sleepy town along Route 20 in Central New York 30 miles southeast of Syracuse University and no more than 10 from Colgate University in Hamilton, Morrisville State College, though smaller than its two famous neighbors, is making a name for itself in the world of horse racing. For the past two years the college has handled drug testing for New Yorks Thorough- bred and Standardbred industries. At about the same time, the college opened a new equine rehabilitation and physiology facility. And for nearly two decades the college has offered unique, hands-on degree programs for students wanting to get a leg up on a career working with horses. While the University of Arizonas Racetrack Industry Program specializes in front- side jobs at the racetrack and the University of Louisville has a business slant to its equine courses, Morrisville takes a more blue-collar approach that teaches students the ins and outs of daily care and maintenance of racehorses with an eye on careers as trainers or assistant trainers, riders, or farm jobs. On any given morning students will apply poultices or bandages and then help van a racehorse to nearby Finger Lakes Casino & Racetrack and gallop him, cool him out, and van him back to the barn at the college before hitting a textbook in the afternoon. Steven Campbell graduated from the Thoroughbred program six years ago, and since then he has taken out owner, trainer, and exercise rider licenses at Fin- ger Lakes. He credits Morrisville with having helped him obtain a variety of skills. It is such a well-rounded program, Camp- bell said. You have the hands-on aspect and the classroom portion, and then applying all that under the direction of an experienced teacher like Dr. Cranwell. Morrisville students in the winners circle with Hot Idea after his maiden win at Finger Lakes; Assistant professor Dr. Clyde Cranwell (above) IN THIS SECTION LEADING SIRES IN NEW YORK BY 2013 PROGENY EARNINGS LEADING SIRES IN MARYLAND BY 2013 PROGENY EARNINGS LEADING SIRES IN PENNSYLVANIA BY 2013 PROGENY EARNINGS LEADING SIRES IN NEW JERSEY BY 2013 PROGENY EARNINGS LEADING SIRES IN WEST VIRGINIA BY 2013 PROGENY EARNINGS ADVERTISERS INDEX
115 COUNTRY LIFE FARM WWW.SPENDTHRIFTFARM.COM 113 M c MAHON OF SARATOGA WWW.MCMAHONTHOROUGHBREDS.COM 91 NEW YORK THOROUGHBRED BREEDERS ASSOCIATION WWW.NYTBREEDERS.ORG 117 SARATOGA STUD, LLC 110 WALDORF FARM WWW.WALDORFFARM.COM T O M
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( A B O V E ) Schools In BY LENNY SHULMAN Morrisville State College prepares students for racing jobs REG_NE_Morrisville_Nov9.indd 112 11/4/13 1:16 PM BH44-112.pgs 11.04.2013 13:25 TheBloodHorse BLACKYELLOWMAGENTACYAN Inquiries to Joe or John McMahon 180 Fitch Road / Saratoga Springs, NY 12866 (518) 587-3426 / [email protected] / www.mcmahonthoroughbreds.com GRADE I Connections in New York All Under One Roof CATIENUS Has Sired Grade 1 Performers on all Surfaces, Grade 1 Broodmare Sire HERE COMES BEN Grade 1 Winner of Saratogas Forego S. over Champion Big Drama JUSTENUFFHUMOR Family of Champion DREAMING OF ANNA and #1 Sire KITTENS JOY TEUFLESBERG Sire of Breeders Cup Sprint-G1 winner TRINNIBERG from his first crop UTOPIA The only continual NY sire to top 1st, 2nd & 3rd Crop Sires in the state for the last 3 years Family Owned Since 1971 BH44-113.pgs 11.04.2013 15:28 TheBloodHorse fbegley BLACKYELLOWMAGENTACYAN NORTHEAST / MI D-ATLANTI C 114 / BloodHorse.com / NOVEMBER 9, 2013 Clyde Cranwell is the assistant profes- sor in charge of the colleges Thorough- bred program, which is home to 30 of the 300 or so students that are engaged in equine majors. Cranwells pedigree in- cludes a grandfather who trained Thor- oughbreds in Nebraska starting in the 1940s, and a father who still does so at age 74. A biology major in college, Cranwell ended up working on a horse farm and then took some horses to the racetrack. For a while I thought I was the smart- est guy on the planet, winning races with first-time starters, he said. But then ev- erything went wrongshins, stifles, you name it. I barely had enough to pay the feed man, so I decided to go to graduate school. Cranwell, who had worked for the Uni- versity of Nebraska before moving to New York, began at Morrisville in 2006 and brought with him the pragmatic experi- ence of life at the racetrack and the farm. And his goal is equally as pragmatic: to de- Special Note For Sire Lists: For stallions that stand, will stand, or stood (deceased) in North America (stallions exported prior to the 2009 breeding season are excluded), and have runners in North America. All available statistics listed for the Northern Hemisphere through November 3, 2013. As supplied to The Blood-Horse by The Jockey Club Information Systems, Inc., earnings exclude monies from Japan and Hong Kong. Current year stakes winners include all N.H.-foaled stakes winners worldwide and any S.H.-foaled horses that won a N.H. stakes. *Foal counts include Southern Hemisphere. Cumulative stakes winners includes all countries. (A indicates a sire represented by his first crop to race.) *AVERAGE-EARNINGS INDEX and COMPARABLE INDEX: Lifetime AVERAGE-EARNINGS INDEX indicates how much purse money the progeny of one sire has earned in relation to the average earnings of all runners in the same years; average earnings of all runners in any year is represented by an index of 1.00; COMPARABLE INDEX indicates the average earnings of progeny produced from mares bred to one sire, when these same mares were bred to other sires. Only 32% of all sires have a lifetime AVERAGE-EARNINGS INDEX higher than their mares COMPARABLE INDEX. 1 BLUEGRASS CAT (03, Storm Cat), Vinery New York at Sugar Maple $15,000 209/108 8/9 1/8 (Percussion, $279,800) $4,914,657 *383 17 1.37 2.05 2 FREUD (98, Storm Cat), Sequel Stallions New York $10,000 142/73 9/13 6/9 (Effie Trinket, $331,300) $4,566,072 *476 35 1.77 1.25 3 POSSE (00, Silver Deputy), Vinery New York at Sugar Maple $12,500 159/99 4/5 2/4 (In the Fairway, $114,334) $3,546,817 *497 20 1.41 1.39 4 EL CORREDOR (97, Mr. Greeley), Questroyal North $7,500 157/66 4/6 2/4 (Little Ms Protocol, $204,500) $2,372,890 *918 34 1.24 1.53 5 BOB AND JOHN (03, Seeking the Gold), McMahon of Saratoga Tbreds $6,000 95/60 3/3 1/3 (Brothersofthetime, $112,300) $2,170,178 *160 7 1.02 1.43 6 UTOPIA (JPN) (00, Forty Niner), McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds $5,000 103/46 2/2 2/2 (Sally's Dream, $216,732) $2,088,094 198 5 1.12 1.30 7 CONGAREE (98, Arazi), McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds $7,500 85/45 4/7 0/4 (Don't Tell Sophia, $302,208) $1,881,524 *285 14 1.36 1.46 8 ALPHABET SOUP (91, Cozzene), McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds $6,000 95/49 5/7 1/5 (Egg Drop, $298,980) $1,781,183 *797 47 1.24 1.36 9 POMEROY (01, Boundary), Vinery New York at Sugar Maple $5,000 89/48 4/5 0/4 (Brooklyn Cowboy, $114,505) $1,669,386 *201 8 1.17 1.33 10 CATIENUS (94, Storm Cat), McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds $5,000 104/58 0/0 0/0 (Glamour Puss, $86,130) $1,392,678 *518 26 1.16 1.29 11 TOUCH GOLD (94, Deputy Minister), McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds $7,500 109/51 0/0 0/0 (Sola Gratia, $80,166) $1,268,540 *811 31 1.25 1.95 12 DISCO RICO (97, Citidancer), Keane Stud Operations $5,000 57/26 0/0 0/0 (Vicki's Dancer, $141,050) $1,257,849 235 8 1.30 1.22 13 GOLDEN MISSILE (95, A.P. Indy), Milfer Farm $3,500 77/43 0/0 0/0 (Estrada's Girl, $162,081) $1,228,010 *605 15 1.07 1.57 14 FROST GIANT (03, Giant's Causeway), Keane Stud Operations $7,500 32/12 2/4 2/2 (West Hills Giant, $231,996) $1,203,380 *78 3 2.27 1.17 15 NOBLE CAUSEWAY (02, Giant's Causeway), Sequel Stallions New York N/A 89/44 0/0 0/0 (How Convenient, $75,790) $1,202,456 168 2 0.66 1.08 16 STONESIDER (03, Giant's Causeway), McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds N/A 44/18 2/2 2/2 (Stock Fund, $179,200) $1,192,718 121 2 1.02 1.19 17 POLLARD'S VISION (01, Carson City), Waldorf Farm $5,000 82/32 2/3 1/2 (Got Shades, $134,123) $1,148,896 *299 15 1.59 1.31 18 TEUFLESBERG (04, Johannesburg), McMahon of Saratoga Thoroughbreds $5,000 35/21 3/4 1/3 (Logan's Peak, $130,077) $1,108,936 62 4 2.14 1.24 19 HERE'S ZEALOUS (97, Dehere), Kaz Hill Farm $3,000 52/28 0/0 0/0 (Flying Zealous, $126,050) $1,093,526 162 0 0.79 0.96 20 SUNRIVER (03, Saint Ballado) Died, 2009 58/26 1/1 0/1 (Suilleabhain, $98,508) $990,764 107 3 1.07 1.44 1 ORIENTATE (98, Mt. Livermore), Northview Stallion Station $5,000 176/87 8/10 2/8 (Great Hot, $180,960) $3,324,541 *714 38 1.34 1.81 2 NOT FOR LOVE (90, Mr. Prospector), Northview Stallion Station $15,000 126/55 2/3 1/2 (Eighttofasttocatch, $234,155) $2,406,849 848 74 1.73 1.45 3 DANCE WITH RAVENS (02, A.P. Indy), Northview Stallion Station $3,000 110/51 1/1 1/1 (Maddy's Dance, $153,140) $2,147,028 284 9 1.23 1.48 4 OUTFLANKER (94, Danzig), Shamrock Farm $3,000 66/33 2/2 1/2 (Javerre, $199,034) $1,558,796 *481 22 1.40 1.16 5 GREAT NOTION (00, Elusive Quality), Northview Stallion Station $3,500 54/24 3/4 2/3 (Havelock, $154,023) $1,436,943 144 8 1.67 1.24 6 LION HEARTED (96, Storm Cat), Northview Stallion Station $3,000 97/43 0/0 0/0 (Irish Lion, $80,250) $1,313,320 *529 20 1.25 1.32 7 TWO PUNCH (83, Mr. Prospector) Died, 2011 68/30 1/3 0/1 (Bold Affair, $195,000) $1,185,646 *1090 56 1.44 1.41 8 LOUIS QUATORZE (93, Sovereign Dancer), Murmur Farm $3,000 68/34 1/2 0/1 (Ribo Bobo, $197,435) $1,156,936 *924 24 1.15 1.36 9 ROCK SLIDE (98, A.P. Indy), Shamrock Farm $2,500 58/26 1/1 0/1 (Pass You Bye Bye, $110,080) $1,040,391 234 7 1.05 1.23 10 SCIPION (02, A.P. Indy), Murmur Farm $3,000 42/22 0/0 0/0 (Pitch N Roll, $125,605) $967,734 77 2 1.17 1.10 R a n k
Stallion (Foreign foaled), (YOB,Sire), Where Stands 2013 Stud Fee Rnrs/ Wnrs Stakes Wnrs/ Wns Rstrct SW/ BT SW (Chief Earner, Earnings) Cumulative 2013 Earnings Foals Stks Wnrs A-E Index Comp Index R a n k
Stallion (Foreign foaled), (YOB,Sire), Where Stands 2013 Stud Fee Rnrs/ Wnrs Stakes Wnrs/ Wns Rstrct SW/ BT SW (Chief Earner, Earnings) Cumulative 2013 Earnings Foals Stks Wnrs A-E Index Comp Index 2013 Leading Sires in New York 2013 Leading Sires in Maryland
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Go to BloodHorse.com for daily updated sire lists C I A R A
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P H O T O S Corinthians Lark with students: Heather Abbey (left) and Colleen Fox (holding the horse) REG_NE_Morrisville_Nov9.indd 114 11/4/13 1:16 PM BH44-114.pgs 11.04.2013 13:25 TheBloodHorse BLACKYELLOWMAGENTACYAN Spendthrift and Country Life Farm partner again to bring Midlantic breeders a new Moon rising... Do more than just imagine -- Share The Upside on this exciting young stallion prospect poised to carry on the Malibu Moon legacy. Call to learn more about this unique opportunity NEW to Midlantic breeders. COUNTRY LIFE FARM Josh & Mike Pons P.O. Box 107, Bel Air, MD 21014 (410) 879-1952 STANDING AT Direct inquiries to Ken Wilkins, Spendthrift Farm: Cell: (859) 699-4887 or (888) 816-8787 Josh & Mike Pons, Country Life Farm: (410) 879-1952 Fee: $3,500 LF 139753-FreedomChild-BH.indd 1 11/1/13 12:42 PM BH44-115.pgs 11.04.2013 15:04 TheBloodHorse fbegley BLACKYELLOWMAGENTACYAN NORTHEAST / MI D-ATLANTI C 116 / BloodHorse.com / NOVEMBER 9, 2013 velop a workforce for the racing industry in the state of New York. Graduates have found jobs as assistant trainers, farriers, exercise riders, and sales associates. Some have even hung out their own shingles to train racehorses. At orientation every year I get asked by parents, Can these kids get jobs? Cran- well said. And I tell them that in this busi- ness, if I can tell an employer that this kid will show up early, work hard to do every- thing right, and stay late if they need to, there will be a job. Morrisvilles Equine Racing Manage- ment school, which is unaffiliated with the testing laboratory, has its own degree programs, where students can opt for an associate of applied science two-year program or a bachelors of technology four-year program, which was the first four-year degree offered and put in place at Morrisville. Students can choose from multiple disciplineswestern, hunt seat, draft horses, breeding, Standardbreds, or Thoroughbreds. Cranwell will buy the spare yearling at public auction and also receives stock from horsemen around the state such as Joe McMahon of McMahon of Sara- toga Thoroughbreds, Dan Barraclough of Saratoga Glen Farm, and Albert Fried Jr. of Buttonwood Farm. Young horses are broken at the equine facility on campus and then taken to Finger Lakes or other tracks in the region to race under the Morrisville Stable banner, with Cranwell the trainer of record. Thus, the program generates a large percentage of its operat- ing revenue. In addition to breaking and racing horses, the college stands a hand- ful of Standardbred horses and holds its own yearling sale, where the average has hit $10,000. The Thoroughbred side uses a 31-stall barn along with a large indoor riding arena where horses are trained and rid- den. Another building houses an equine swimming pool, underwater treadmill, and cold water spa, all part of a recently de- veloped curriculum in equine rehabilita- tion. A half-mile training track was on the planning board until the economic down- turn hit and capital projects were frozen throughout the state, but Cranwell hopes to see the track come to fruition. Students are involved in every phase of the horses development on a daily basis. Mirroring life on the racetrack, students arrive at the equine facility at 6:30 every morning and are handling horses from 7-11, with a couple of afternoon lecture pe- riods during the week. Most of what we do is laboratory- based, hands-on learning, said Cranwell. Each student has a horse to take care of, and some upperclassmen have two if were breaking horses. Everything we do is geared to getting these kids ready to be a racetrack employee. I try and take a straight-down-the-middle approach on procedures: This is how you wrap legs. This is how you poultice a horse. Hopefully when they leave here and go into the indus- try, they are aware of how things happen in a race barn and will be aware of other philosophies that exist out there as well. I dont tell them whats right and wrong; I tell them you do it the way the person whos signing your paycheck wants it done. In addition to traditional treatments Morrisville students also get acquainted with new equipment and methods of help- ing keep horses sound. The program has two magnetic blankets that are used on the backs and legs of horses. They use Game Ready pressure and cooling sys- tems for the legs and also low-level lasers for laser therapy. We try to think outside the box a little bit so the students are prepared to go into a stable that uses upper-tier equipment, in addition to being trained in all the tra- ditional ways horses are cared for at the racetrack, Cranwell said. The professor continued, Anyone can train a sound horse, but were dealing with horses for the most part that have been cast off by other people. Whats bad about our program is that we have horses with lots of problems; whats good about our program is students are going to see those problems and have to deal with them. There are two kinds of racehorses: those that are unsound and those that 1 ROCKPORT HARBOR (02, Unbridled's Song), Pin Oak Lane Farm Died, 2013 213/123 12/16 3/12 (Ria Antonia, $1,156,140) $5,991,054 355 21 1.35 1.49 2 E DUBAI (98, Mr. Prospector), Northview PA $7,500 187/103 3/4 0/3 (Fort Larned, $790,086) $4,396,143 *742 31 1.38 1.24 3 WISEMAN'S FERRY (99, Hennessy), Dana Point Farm $5,000 69/40 2/7 0/2 (Wise Dan, $2,751,972) $4,006,756 *269 6 1.72 1.07 4 JUMP START (99, A.P. Indy), Northview PA $10,000 138/79 9/13 2/9 (Prayer for Relief, $385,681) $3,845,046 *656 36 1.56 1.35 5 SMARTY JONES (01, Elusive Quality), Northview PA $7,500 122/68 7/9 0/7 (Better Life, $678,635) $3,566,351 *365 22 1.70 2.20 6 SILVER TRAIN (02, Old Trieste), Northview PA $5,000 166/93 3/3 0/3 (Ogermeister, $102,491) $2,998,020 *304 13 1.07 1.36 7 OFFLEE WILD (00, Wild Again), Pin Oak Lane Farm $4,000 103/52 4/7 0/4 (Hogy, $339,500) $2,138,656 *278 9 1.32 1.29 8 PETIONVILLE (92, Seeking the Gold), Penn Ridge Farms $6,000 97/46 2/3 1/2 (Tomorrow's Tale, $125,365) $1,637,726 *647 46 1.35 1.24 9 REAL QUIET (95, Quiet American) Died, 2010 69/30 2/3 1/2 (Norman Asbjornson, $191,750) $1,347,587 *623 15 1.20 1.24 10 FAIRBANKS (03, Giant's Causeway), Northview PA $4,500 62/27 1/1 0/1 (Synapse, $100,200) $1,284,979 106 1 0.94 1.38 11 EUROSILVER (01, Unbridled's Song), Penn Ridge Farms $3,500 83/35 0/0 0/0 (Blues and Silvers, $149,960) $1,160,134 *290 7 0.97 1.34 12 ALBERT THE GREAT (97, Go for Gin), Pin Oak Lane Farm $2,500 55/32 0/0 0/0 (Chicharito, $157,450) $1,148,808 *345 9 1.15 1.16 13 TRAJECTORY (97, Gone West), Mountain Springs Racing Stable N/A 69/25 1/1 1/1 (Line of Best Fit, $143,364) $1,067,743 353 14 1.12 1.35 14 LOVE OF MONEY (01, Not For Love), Northview PA Died, 2012 54/25 0/0 0/0 (Lexi's Pal, $75,604) $1,047,838 99 2 1.10 1.24 15 MEDALLIST (01, Touch Gold), Northview PA $2,500 48/27 1/4 0/1 (Horizontalyspeakin, $91,810) $985,948 165 6 1.32 1.46 R a n k
Stallion (Foreign foaled), (YOB,Sire), Where Stands 2013 Stud Fee Rnrs/ Wnrs Stakes Wnrs/ Wns Rstrct SW/ BT SW (Chief Earner, Earnings) Cumulative 2013 Earnings Foals Stks Wnrs A-E Index Comp Index 2013 Leading Sires in Pennsylvania
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Go to BloodHorse.com for daily updated sire lists Students are trained in a broad range of technologies so they can step into any job REG_NE_Morrisville_Nov9.indd 116 11/4/13 1:16 PM BH44-116.pgs 11.04.2013 13:25 TheBloodHorse BLACKYELLOWMAGENTACYAN Saratoga Stud llc Formerly Highclif Stallions Brand new 10 stall stallion barn and breeding shed just fve minutes from Saratoga Racetrack. Now accepting stallions for 2014 to join our roster. BOB AND JOHN CONGAREE COSMONAUT MAYBRYS BOY SMART BID STONESIDER Suzie & C. Lynwood OCain D.V.M. 518.573.2304 or 518.306.5027 Rick Burke 518.527.2701 or e mail [email protected] Opening December 2013 BH44-117.pgs 11.04.2013 16:01 TheBloodHorse fbegley BLACKYELLOWMAGENTACYAN NORTHEAST / MI D-ATLANTI C 118 / BloodHorse.com / NOVEMBER 9, 2013 will be someday. Im amazed how quickly students pick up on lameness problems by watching horses go or by riding them. Theyre very astute. Said Morrisville graduate Campbell, When I started training myself, I was prepared thanks to the experience of working around the barn. Working with the horses, seeing them, and having your hands on them, was a huge help. And Dr. Cranwell has always been there for me whenever I call to ask about a problem Im seeing with a horse. Much like what they will experience in racetrack life, students know going in that the hours they put into learning go beyond traditional time schedules. Each is required to work five weekends per semester, and they have the option of working over holidays as well, re- ceiving compensation for holiday work. They might as well know up front if theyre going to be working with some- thing that lives and breathes, its a 365- day responsibility, Cranwell noted. A large part of what students learn comes from receiving young horses and taking them through the lengthy process of getting them fit and ready to race. Cran- well, throughout his career, has won 17 races from 128 starts, hitting at a respect- able 13% clip. He has a positive return on investment and the horses he has trained have earned $201,175 in purse money through Oct. 17. Every horse that weve started here in this region, our students have had their hands on, he said. Its very euphoric for us when we win. Our best day was when we took a filly and a mare to Presque Isle. The filly broke her maiden and the mare ran second. That was like Christmas. Im not sure well have another day where we put $35,000 in the bank. What keeps us going is hoping that happens again. But I tell the students up front that if youre an owner or a trainer or a jockey in this business and youre winning at a 20% rate, youre considered very successful. But that rate of success will get you fired in just about every other vocation in the world. Four-year students in the Thorough- bred program will have taken several courses in equine nutrition, a breeding class, and an exercise physiology class. In addition, they are required to do a 15-week internship out in the real world. Along with nutrition and physiology, Cranwell also stresses the business side of running a stable. Students are tasked with devel- oping a business plan for their own hypo- thetical business operation, taking into account salaries for their help, the cost of feed, and such items as social security and workers compensation payments. Hav- ing totaled their expenses, they must es- tablish a day rate and a plan for cash flow. When theyre starting out, theyre probably not going to get their owners to pay their bills in return mail, said Cran- well. They have to be prepared to go 60-90 days with a lot of clients. Its an eye- opener for them. Graduates of the Morrisville program have found jobs in all corners of the indus- try, including working for trainers such as Michael Matz and Eddie Plesa Jr., and for leading farms such as WinStar and Ash- ford Stud. Cranwell said that the success of his program comes in no small part from the cooperation of Finger Lakes, which is located about a two-hour van ride west, near Rochester. I cant have a racing program where we just do our own thing here at the school and show them the film Seabiscuit and take them on a tour of the Saratoga backside and then kick them out into the world, said Cranwell. The racetrack is its own universe with its rules, written and unwritten. Without the support of Finger Lakes giving us stalls every summer for our summer program and then allowing us to ship in to breeze and race once school starts, I could not run this program and do it the way it should be done. They have been phenomenal in working with us. For those that have been bitten by the horse racing bug, or for those young peo- ple who might wonder if it is for them, the Morrisville programs give them not just a taste, but the full flavor of what life around horses truly entails. If students have trou- ble rising with the bugle and being able to get to work at dawn, they know right away they might as well seek another profes- sion. But if they come through their train- ing with full marks, they can also be con- fident that there is the potential for a long and satisfying career doing something they love. My grandfather trained his whole life. My dad is still training into his 70s, said Cranwell. I warn the students that this racetrack business is a narcotic-strength addiction; once you get it youre going to have a hard time letting go of it. They can just look at me. I left and did a Masters and a Ph.D., and I landed right back in the middle of it again. B 1 DEFRERE (92, Deputy Minister), Walnford Stud $1,500 64/28 0/0 0/0 (Peri Whan, $111,840) $1,185,779 *562 22 1.24 1.19 2 DON SIX (00, Wild Escapade), Greenfields Farm $2,500 30/15 2/2 1/2 (Saucy Don, $93,565) $656,319 67 2 1.20 1.22 3 MO MON (98, Maria's Mon) Died, 2011 31/12 1/1 1/1 (Elba, $113,185) $535,202 122 3 0.79 1.18 4 UNBRIDLED JET (96, Unbridled) Died, 2011 21/9 1/1 1/1 (Pinot Grigio, $95,124) $424,257 *250 9 1.04 1.23 5 PRIVATE INTERVIEW (92, Nureyev), Colonial Farms $1,000 16/7 0/0 0/0 (Tactical Saenz, $79,925) $231,354 219 4 1.10 1.23 1 LIMEHOUSE (01, Grand Slam), O'Sullivan Farms LLC $3,500 124/70 6/11 1/6 (Sandy'z Slew, $102,073) $2,372,523 *308 16 1.25 1.26 2 WINDSOR CASTLE (98, Lord Carson), Taylor Mountain Farm $3,000 73/36 2/6 2/2 (Down Town Allen, $113,860) $1,326,217 179 9 1.21 1.15 3 LUFTIKUS (96, Meadowlake), Taylor Mountain Farm $2,500 56/24 2/3 2/2 (Blisstikus, $107,335) $979,439 261 9 1.02 1.10 4 FIBER SONDE (05, Unbridled's Song), Beau Ridge Farm $1,000 20/13 1/2 1/1 (Hidden Canyon, $109,005) $567,096 34 2 1.39 0.74 5 BOP (97, Rahy) Died, 2012 39/14 0/0 0/0 (Bomber, $70,790) $515,827 *148 5 1.02 0.92 R a n k
Stallion (Foreign foaled), (YOB,Sire), Where Stands 2013 Stud Fee Rnrs/ Wnrs Stakes Wnrs/ Wns Rstrct SW/ BT SW (Chief Earner, Earnings) Cumulative 2013 Earnings Foals Stks Wnrs A-E Index Comp Index R a n k
Stallion (Foreign foaled), (YOB,Sire), Where Stands 2013 Stud Fee Rnrs/ Wnrs Stakes Wnrs/ Wns Rstrct SW/ BT SW (Chief Earner, Earnings) Cumulative 2013 Earnings Foals Stks Wnrs A-E Index Comp Index 2013 Leading Sires in New Jersey 2013 Leading Sires in West Virginia
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Go to BloodHorse.com for daily updated sire lists REG_NE_Morrisville_Nov9.indd 118 11/4/13 1:17 PM BH44-118.pgs 11.04.2013 13:25 TheBloodHorse BLACKYELLOWMAGENTACYAN