Transitions - tips for training on synthetic and racing on dirt

“He not busy being born is busy dying,” to borrow from a Bob Dylan song. It has application to Thoroughbred horse racing. 

Oh, there’s been dying—Arlington Park, Calder, Hialeah, Hollywood Park, Suffolk Downs and Golden Gate Fields to name but a few major tracks that have passed since the turn of the century.

But there’s rebirth, too. (The lyric above is from a song ironically entitled,  “It’s Alright Ma (I’m Only Bleeding).”

The “bleeding” in racing, if not minimized, is way less than in the past. In its relative infancy HISA, the self-regulatory agency, has significantly impacted the use of illegal medication; racetrack fatalities are at a record low thanks to better track maintenance (along with med regulation); and still to be rebirthed in 2026 is a new Belmont Park. 

For traditionalists, that pesky synthetic surface is still around. If there hasn’t been a rebirth with synthetic surfaces, it is at least on its proverbial feet in horse racing despite Del Mar, Keeneland, and Santa Anita laying then lifting it to return to dirt.

 Belmont Park will include it with their dirt and turf courses with something vitally important: an infield tunnel enabling horses to reach all three surfaces with no interruption for horses crossing one track to get to another. 

Training on synthetic surfaces for dirt racing is standard practice for many trainers and inherently practical. One, it’s all-weather—impervious, precipitation-wise, to everything short of a monsoon. Two, with the exception of freezes, it is now “all-climate.” No longer is it “tight” during morning workouts in colder temperatures and loose and sticky in hot weather.  

Three, and maybe most critically, trainers have learned how to train on it for dirt races. 

 “Horses just skip across it,” said trainer Mark Casse, a proponent of synthetic surfaces. In fact, the ease with which they travel over it requires an adjustment from normal training on dirt. “When you train on dirt, the horses run in it. It's a solid where there is no rebound effect from the dirt. On the synthetic it actually bounces back a little bit.”  

Richard Budge, a former racetrack trainer on four continents who is now general manager at Margaux Farm, a training center in Midway Kentucky, elaborated on Casse’s observation. “Without the ‘bounce’ on synthetics a horse on a dirt surface feels impact straight up to their knees and shoulders, which tires them and adds bone stress.”

“You have to train them a little harder, a little quicker, more often, in my opinion,” he added.

Casse expressed it thusly: “When things take less effort, then you have to do more than get them right, get them fitter.”

Even with a more stringent training regimen on synthetics as opposed to dirt, there are benefits beyond fitness. Trainer Eoin Harty, a self-described fan of synthetic surfaces, points out the obvious: “If your horse is sounder longer, it runs more often, it has a lengthier career. 

“I think in general, dirt tracks certainly seem to have gotten better over the last four or five years, but in general, they take a toll on them.”

The bottom line is the synthetic surfaces of ten years ago are not what horses are training and running on now. Specifically, manufacturers of synthetic surfaces tweaked the composition of elements, reducing the slide that occurs when front hooves strike the racetrack surface. 

The reduction is much less than in the past and much less than what happens on a dirt track. This is why a term often heard is horses run “over it.” Front hooves essentially don’t penetrate deeply into a synthetic surface like they would on dirt. 

Also the surface needs minimal maintenance, far less than the frequent and necessary harrowing of dirt. It’s a flat base that doesn’t wash down toward the rail. There’s also minimal kickback so that track basically stays in place as opposed to dirt literally dug up and thrown back during races, producing a surface that is “cuppy” with divots. 

The benefits with maintenance are immense and economical for trainers.  “[On dirt] there's a break at six-thirty. There's a break at seven forty-five. And there's another break at eight-thirty,” said Harty. That’s an hour and a half of your daily training schedule that's lost.  

“You're forced to hire more help just in order to get your horses out. It makes things more expensive, whereas, if you're at Turfway Park and you've got thirty horses, you can pretty much get them out to exercise in two hours with two exercise riders.”

Mark Casse, who is Florida-based, offers a more extreme example of low maintenance required with synthetics. “In one day, with two year old sales--working at seven o'clock in the morning and breezing two-hundred horses into the middle of the afternoon--you won't see a whole lot of track change.

“That would never be the case in Florida on dirt. You'd have to be putting so much water on it, we'd be having breaks every forty-five minutes. “

Perhaps not surprisingly, most horses like synthetic surfaces, according to Mark Casse. It would stand to reason both for the feel of it as they run and also familiarity. They all grew up running on grass, Casse said. Synthetic surfaces are the closest approximation to it.  

“I would say that probably seventy-five or eighty percent of horses will move well over turf. You hardly find a horse that doesn't move better over the turf. I would say about the same number on synthetic, maybe eighty or ninety percent of horses will run on and like synthetics.” He estimated that probably only thirty to thirty-five percent of horses actually like running on dirt.

Richard Budge said the preference with most horses is immediately evident watching a horse travel over synthetic and how it differs from dirt. “You can tell the way that they move over the surface. Horses really spring over it.”

Budge, Casse, and Harty would tell you that while there are expectations in training, they should be confined to horse health. A horse race is still a horse race where anything can happen. The one hedge or angle that might possibly be a first timer to a dirt race who has trained on synthetics or better, raced over it before running on dirt. 

“On the synthetic side, there's not a whole lot of kickback. There's a little bit, but it seems to settle right back where it came from. On a dirt track, of course, you’re going over it at thirty-five or forty miles an hour. When a horse puts his hooves down and pushes off, there’s a clod of dirt that was under his hoof that is now twenty feet behind them,” said Harty.

“With all that sand kicked in their face it's overwhelming for a lot of horses, and they just don't like it,” he added. “With synthetic, any kick back kind of bounces off and it’s not really much of a bother. Horses can sit mid-pack or at the back before making a stretch run.

“Look at the spread from first to last in a synthetic race compared to a dirt race. In dirt racing it can be up to thirty lengths, but with a synthetic they're more bunched.” Harty believes the difference in kickback between dirt and synthetic is the reason also for how horses finish. 

Rarely will you see horses running five wide down the stretch like you will in races over a synthetic surface. The reason? They haven’t been deterred by heavy kickback.

One practice to familiarize a horse with kick back on dirt is to run them behind one or even two horses to feel and get cast-off to kickback. 

The synthetic surface at the new Belmont should garner a lot of attention for its novelty as well as its effect on racing as a whole. “You'll see a big influx of Canadian horses going there for the winter to run,” Casse believes.

He envisions a circuit of Belmont, Woodbine, and Turfway. So, too, does Richard Budge foresee it with something added: a synthetic Triple Crown.

Recently he looked at a Saturday card at Turfway and noticed nearly every race had overfilled. That is a handicapper’s delight. 

With the current Triple Crown, trainers like Casse and Harty aren’t shy about training at Turfway (a mere  94 miles away from Churchill Downs) on that track’s Tapeta surface. Rich Strike, the Kentucky Derby winner in 2022 trained at Turfway. Currently Eoin Harty has a Triple Crown series contender, Poster, training there. 

It seems as if the bias against synthetics has weakened considerably over the last decade. One piece of evidence comes from Mark Casse. 

“About twenty years ago NYRA had a special committee to look into synthetics. I think at the time, they probably would have done it, but they couldn't afford it.” 

Casse remembered a trainer telling him, “‘We can’t do it. We have to worry about tradition.” He responded, “You’re not going to have to worry about tradition because you’re going to be history.

“I want to say about two years ago he called me and said, ‘You were right.’” Tradition hasn’t blocked the synthetic surface going in at Belmont.

“If you stand still, you get run over,” said Casse.

Horses will keep running no matter if there are fewer racetracks or fewer races. And they’ll do so on the best surfaces in the history of the sport—synthetic or dirt.

“He not busy being born is busy dying.”

**NEW** for 2024 - Bloodstock Briefing - Asking pinhookers if the shift in the 2yo sales season (to later dates) has influenced the type of horses they consign for sale

Article by Jordin Rosser

Breeze up sales

Even though term pinhooking came from the tobacco industry in Kentucky, it is widely used in the Thoroughbred racing industry as a concept where horses are bought at one stage of life and sold at another stage of development in the hopes of a profit based on the breaking, training and maturing process of these animals. 

We have gathered a panel of pinhook sellers of both yearling to two-year-olds, weanling to yearlings, and breeders to discuss their thoughts on selection at sales and their view of the business. Our panelists include: Richard Budge, the general manager of Margaux Farm who oversees the breeding and training of yearlings and two-year-olds; Eddie Woods, a well-established two-year-old consignor and yearling pinhooker; Marshall Taylor, a thoroughbred advisor at Taylor Made – known for yearling consignments; Niall Brennan, a respected two-year-old consignor and yearling pinhooker. 

Q: When selecting yearlings for pinhooking to the two-year-old sales or weanlings for the yearling sales, which qualities do you look for? 

Eddie Woods

Many of the panelists concur on the primary qualities necessary for a prospective successful pinhook being conformation, pedigree, and clean vetting – but generally, wanting “quality”. Such traits include an early maturing body, muscle, good conformation, and pedigree for yearling pinhooks to two-year-olds. Some consignors weigh some of the main qualities with different weights, for example, Eddie Woods looks at the conformation of the prospect before the pedigree but will analyze sire lines and sire statistics to assist him in his selections. In contrast, Richard Budge starts with the pedigree then evaluates the conformation and analyzes the whole picture. For weanling to yearling pinhooks, the primary attributes to consider are pedigree, conformation, good movement, and early foaling dates. Marshall Taylor further discussed wanting to find a good-sized body, longer neck, laid back shoulders and good strides when walking. At the end of the day, “quality is a perception” as stated by Niall Brennan – these qualities are statistically likely to sell well in both the yearling sales and the two-year-old sales from the seller’s perspective.  

Q: Given the two-year-old sales have decreased in number and have moved to later months, do you believe it has incentivized yearling selection and/or breeders to favor later maturing horses?  

A resounding “no” came from the panelists. Looking back into the history of two-year-old sales gave a clearer picture as to why the sentiment has not changed. The main two-year-old sales currently are the OBS March, April and June sales in Ocala, Florida as well as the Fasig Tipton May and June sales in Timonium, Maryland. However, there used to be OBS February, Calder and Adena Springs sales, Fasig Tipton’s Gulfstream sale, and Barretts’ (a company whose final auction was in 2018) March and May sales in Pomona, California. 

Niall Brennan commented that when the earlier sales were going on, the horses would “breeze within themselves easily” instead of breezing for the clock as is evident in today’s sales. Due to this emphasis, pinhookers noticed some horses needed more time to mature to run quicker times and with the horsemanship shown throughout the industry – all the panelists indicated that “the horse will tell you which sale it belongs in”. With the two-year-olds’ sales model having changed many variables, one variable that stayed the same is the horse attributes needed to be successful in these sales. Which leads to the conclusion being the same and sentiment remaining steady despite changes in the industry.

Q:  Hypothetically, if the two-year-old sales changed from breezing to galloping with technological devices to provide metrics to analyze, do you think the market or breeders would change their strategies? 

Most of the panelists believed this hypothetical would not work well for the two-year-old sales model. Some of the panelists discussed the Barretts sales model having horses gallop untimed instead of breezing or breezing with times in the 100ths. Niall Brennan commented that the granularization of the breeze times “caused more speculation from the buyers” and changed their perspective on the individual horses based on fractions of a second. The juxtaposition of sales with only untimed gallops and sales with timed breezes caused many buyers to “compare apples to oranges” – leading to a perceived dismissal of the idea. 

Marshall Taylor - Taylor Made Bloodstock

In the current market and with the technology available today, this may not be possible, but Marshall Taylor believes “any information you have is good information” and “moving forward with technology is a positive”. In the future and with significant technological advancements, this hypothetical could be real. In the words of Niall Brennan, “the time will come when we aren’t worried about time [during breezing]”. 

Q: In terms of breeding, what trends do you currently see and what trends do you want to see benefiting the pinhooking market? 

The consensus from the panelists indicated breeding speed and quick maturing horses is the current trend in the pinhooking market. Richard Budge stated “precociousness is valued highly into the making of a stallion” in America. Marshall Taylor mentioned technology is used in making breeding decisions, particularly Nick reports. These use the daily updating percentage of stakes winner indexes to determine if sire and dam lines are compatible for the desired outcome culminating in a high performing racehorse. 

Based on many of the responses in what type of weanlings or yearlings are selected at the beginning of the pinhooking process, the need for precocious and well-bred horses is no surprise. Richard Budge, believes that turf racing has become more popular and believes the growth of this segment in thoroughbred racing should encourage pinhooks to look for turf in their prospect’s pedigrees. However, the bloodlines will need to support this idea and the American breeders will need to include more English, French and South American bloodlines to adjust for these factors. 

Q:  Where do you see the pinhooking market right now? 

The panelists all agree on this point: the buyer market is focused on quality over quantity and concentration of the buyer market. These trends encourage pinhookers to purchase weanlings or yearlings that tick all their boxes to produce quality prospects leading to increased prices as a function of competition. According to many panelists, the market is focused on what is perceived to be the “top end” – by pedigree, conformation, vetting, and/or under tack time. Based on the rising costs of ownership, Marshall Taylor mentioned “partnerships are becoming more popular” amongst the buyers, allowing owners to offset these increased costs. 

———-

Throughout these interviews, it is apparent pinhookers have a keen ability to read the horses and determine how to bring their best on “NFL combine” day in the case of the two-year-olds. Niall Brennan and Richard Budge gave credit and appreciation to all the pinhookers who actively prepare these athletes and show their horsemanship through breaking, training, consigning, and breeding of these animals. 

We see all the hard work that goes into preparing these athletes for race day through their accomplishments. To produce this feat on demand and to make money in the process is what pinhooking thoroughbreds is all about. 

Brian Lynch - the Australian born trainer whose set to make a mark at Ellis Park this summer

By Ken Synder

“If you find something you love, you’ll never work a day in your life,” said trainer Brian Lynch. “I’ve been blessed to do a job that I have a passion for. I have fun with it.”

“Fun” is not a word often associated with training Thoroughbreds. The job, as everyone in racing knows and as Lynch noted, “is seven days a week, 365 days a year.”  The word, however, crops up often for those who know Lynch.

“He’s fun to be around,” said Richard Budge, general manager at Margaux Farm, where many of Lynch’s horses have begun careers as yearlings. 

Dermot Carty, a bloodstock agent who first met Lynch when he came to Canada in 2005, echoed Budge: “With Brian, he just makes it fun. He makes it enjoyable through the good times and the bad. He’s one of the few true characters in the business who actually puts enjoyment into horse racing.” 

Greg Blasi, Churchill Downs outrider who knows Lynch away from the racetrack “cowboying” with him, (more on this later), expressed it most succinctly: “He’s a hoot.”

Of course, the most fun is trips to the winner’s circle, and Lynch has made plenty of those: 720 at press time and earnings just short of $47 million.

A native of Wagga Wagga in New South Wales, Australia, Lynch fits, perhaps, the profile of a stereotypical and classic “Aussie.” 

“We have more of a laid-back attitude than Americans. It’s nothing to share a few beers with each other and have a good time…helps you make new friends, that’s for sure.”

What Lynch did before coming on the racetrack may explain also why racing is more fun to him than anything. He was a bull rider back home. In fact, he came to America in 1992 to join this country’s professional circuit with big purses after learning the trade locally. “They had a local rodeo back home, and it was a big thing. Not far from the racetrack was a horse trader who had some bucking horses and some bucking bulls; and I used to hang around his place a lot. That’s where I got the taste for jumping on bulls.”

The racetrack Lynch mentioned is an unusual triangular racecourse that was across the road from his home and where he got his start, filling water buckets and learning to ride as a boy. “I could ride from a young age. It wasn’t long before I graduated to galloping horses. 

“I was always a little bit too big to be a jockey. I sort of found a lot of work helping on the wilder horses.”  Apparently, it was experience sufficient to prepare him for something bigger and more dangerous…with horns.

Thoroughbreds sidetracked Lynch when he came to Southern California and a small farm near the border with Mexico. “There was a little Thoroughbred farm called Suncoast Thoroughbreds. I got a job breaking colts for them, and it wasn’t far from San Luis Rey.”  

Lynch said he “annoyed” the stewards there till they gave him a trainer’s license. His start was with two horses at San Luis Rey.

That led to training for the Mabee family’s Golden Eagle Farm in Ramona in San Diego County.

“I kicked around California for a lot of years just with small numbers, just scratching out a living—selling, and running horses, and flipping horses. I was bringing some from Australia and moving them.” 

His big break was training at Santa Anita and Del Mar where he met some important influences. “Most say they admire the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. For me, it’s Ron McAnally, Jack Van Berg, and Bobby Frankel,” he said with a laugh.

When Frankel learned the Mabee family was going to downsize their Thoroughbred operation, he approached Lynch about joining his stable as an assistant. “He was starting to get more two-year-olds than he’d ever had. That’s when Chad [Brown] and I teamed up with horses for Bobby. Chad went to California, and I went to South Florida and Palm Meadows in the first year that it opened,” said Lynch.

“Bobby certainly wasn’t a textbook teacher,” Lynch said of the legendary New York trainer who died in 2009. “He wasn’t going to walk you through everything. He was a guy that if you were around him enough and you didn’t absorb anything from him or learn anything from him, then shame on you.”

Frankel, not known publicly as being chatty, was half of a truly odd couple with the amiable Aussie. Not just the experience, but the friendship is treasured by Lynch. “He had a heart of gold. He was a great guy to train horses for and just a wonderful human being.”

Lynch’s big break came when he moved to Canada to manage Frankel’s division at Woodbine in 2005. In 2006 he went out on his own, eventually becoming a private trainer for Frank Stronach. 

Canada was very much to his liking; in both 2006 and 2007, his earnings topped $1 million before jumping to over $3 million in 2008. That year began his string of consecutive top 100 earning trainers in North America that continued through last year.

He is quick to credit owners for his success and consistency: “I’ve been very blessed to have long-term owners who like to play the game and who have always tried to work on finding the better horses.  Fortunately enough, if you look back over the list, there’s been quite a few of them.”

Quite a few indeed. Lynch trained Clearly Now, who set the Belmont record for seven furlongs (1:19.96) in that track’s 2014 Sprint Championship, earning an Equibase speed figure of 122. (To give you an idea of how phenomenal the performance was, the next year’s Sprint Championship winner won in 1:22.57.)  Other top horses include Grand Arch, owned by Jim and Susan Hill of Margaux Farm and  winner of the Gr. 1 Shadwell Turf Mile Stakes at Keeneland in 2015; Oscar Performance, winner of the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Turf at Santa Anita in 2016; and Heart to Heart, winner of two consecutive back-to-back Gr. 1 stakes in 2018 at Keeneland and Gulfstream Park. Most notable outside the U.S. was a win in Canada’s 2015 Queen’s Plate Stakes with Shaman Ghost.

While many trainers get labels for being good with two-year-olds, sprinters, etc., there is an enviable trademark for Lynch’s horses: long careers. “I’ve raced two- and three-year-olds and still have them around running Gr. 1’s and winning at six or seven.” Grand Arch raced till the ripe old age of seven and in stakes company, finishing his career in the Forbidden Apple Stakes at Belmont. “Keep them in good form and you’ll have them still around when they’re older,” said Lynch who also points to “patient owners” like the Hills, willing to give their horses a break as a necessary ingredient in managing racing careers.  

If there is a label, Lynch is unaware of it. When it was pointed out that in the past five years he had started more horses on the turf than on dirt, his response elicited another Lynch trademark: humor.  “Probably because they were too slow for the dirt.

“I guess I primarily grew up training horses and riding horses to run on the turf down there [Australia], so I probably am influenced to run ‘em on the grass. I’m certainly not frightened by the dirt, by any means, but somehow, I ended up trying them on the grass. If they run well there, I’ll keep them on that surface.”

Brian Lynch with mentor D. Wayne Lucas

As intent as he is on enjoying himself and bringing enjoyment to others in the game, he is “no-nonsense” as a trainer—a euphemism not used by Carty to describe Lynch. “He can figure out in a very short period of time if a horse has or does not have any talent. He’s not one of those bull***t trainers who tells people that, ‘yes, yes, it’s going to get better’ and in his heart and soul, he knows it’s just for a day rate. He’s not interested in the day rate. He’s interested in developing and making great racehorses.”

Asked about his success and consistency, Lynch responded with characteristic modesty and self-deprecation: “One thing I’ve learned about training horses over the years is I’ve gotten very good at delivering bad news. That’s what you seem to do a lot.”

Unlike many high-profile trainers with multiple divisions and large strings of horses who are more business people than trainers, Lynch’s focus is the barn first, and then business. “It’s switch on, switch off,” said Carty. “Clients will feel good and enjoy themselves at the races with Lynch. But when he goes back to that barn and those horses, he switches to Brian Lynch who looks after the horses, making sure they’re ok. 

“He’s there first thing in the morning, and following the races, he goes over and checks every stall and goes through it. He’s not one who would just leave it to the help,” said Carty.

Richard Budge offered another perspective on Lynch. “I would say he’s unique in the fact he’s willing to roll the dice in a stakes race with a horse that may be an outsider.”

Brian Lynch with groom Juan Garcia

A case in point was a recent start by Phantom Currency (yet another Hills-owned horse) in the Gr. 3 Kitten’s Joy Appleton Stakes at Gulfstream in April. The horse was coming off a 13-month layoff. While most trainers may have looked for an allowance race tune-up, Lynch went for the gold. The horse won, earning a very impressive 114 Equibase speed figure.   

“If a horse is training well, he’ll ask, ‘Why not? Let’s give it a shot,’” added Budge.  

“That would be a huge positive. We can be a little tentative about where to place them or put them. You never know if you could have run a stakes race when you run in an allowance.

That very question faces Lynch with his first potential Kentucky Derby starter, in Classic Causeway.  

After two impressive wins—the first in the Gr. 3 Sam F. Davis Stakes in February and a month later in the Gr. 2 Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby with identical and impressive Equibase speed figures of 104—the horse finished a mystifying last in the Florida Derby.

Classic Causeway, owned and bred by Clarke M. Cooper and Kentucky West Racing, is one of three foals from the final crop of Giant’s Causeway who died in 2018. 

He made his debut at Saratoga last September and blew away the competition from gate to wire over seven furlongs, winning by six-and-a-half lengths. The horse entered the Derby picture with a third-place finish in the Gr. 1 Breeders’ Futurity in October at Keeneland and followed that with a second-place finish in the Gr. 2 Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes in November at Churchill Downs. His two wins at Tampa Bay Downs earned him qualifying points for one of the 20 spots in the gate the first Saturday in May.

Before the Florida Derby, Lynch had this to say about the son of the great Giant’s Causeway, known as the “Iron Horse” after winning five Gp. 1 races in just 11 weeks as a three-year-old. “You always hope that you come across one in your career that you can have a ‘kick at the can’ in the Derby, but fortunately this horse came into our stable, and he’s done everything we’ve asked of him. I think he’s just getting better, and we’re really excited to have him.”

louis rushlow

Whatever lies ahead, Lynch said he will “stop and smell the roses,” whether they’re draped across the withers of Classic Causeway at Churchill Downs or the figurative kind. 

He embraces a positive attitude toward racing that most of us should emulate. “Racing is a game of ups and downs. You could be dodging missiles in Ukraine. You get over a loss, have a beer or soft drink, and move on.”  

His idea of relaxation may be an indication of the kind of person Brian Lynch is. When Greg Blasi mentioned one day he and other outriders were going up to a farm east of Louisville to work cattle, the 57-year-old Lynch was quick to say to Blasi, “If you ever need some help, just let me know.”  

He’s ridden with Blasi, and the others as many times as he’s had the opportunity, ever since. “He’s just a very good horseman, whether it’s on the back of a pony herding cows—just whatever,” said Blasi. “He used to gallop his own horses. He’s come up the hard way, and he tells stories about when he didn’t have a couple of nickels to rub together. Nothing was handed to him. I respect guys like that. There are a lot of people that didn’t have to struggle to get where they are.

“He’s also a lot of fun to be around.”  Ah, there’s that word. 

For a guy who’s ridden bucking broncos and bulls, you might expect a certain fearlessness. Not so: “I have one fear in life, and that is that there’s a good time going on somewhere and I’m not in the middle of it.”