Tales from the Crib: Epicenter
Mar 21, 2022 Kellie Reilly/Brisnet.com
“He was really easy to get along with,” Harris recalled. “He wasn’t afraid of anything, like some foals would be. He would go up to something strange in the hallway of the barn and smell at it. He’d go see what it is. He was just a really smart colt.”
Like Silent Candy’s other foals, her Not This Time colt took his time to develop as a yearling.
“Most of her foals are late developers, as far as progressing to the yearling sale,” Harris said. “Early in the year, and even up until about May, they haven’t filled out like some of the earlier foals have. It always took two or three months before the sale for most of hers to blossom.”
The clock was ticking for the yet-unnamed colt, who was slated to sell at Keeneland September. But he ended up putting it all together beautifully – so much so that he was unrecognizable, even to an astute judge who’d come to see the yearlings on the farm a couple of months prior.
Aside from looking the part, the yearling also had the mechanics of an athlete.
“He was just a really nice colt, fluid walker. He had the kind of walk that you want them to have. He was really well balanced and really smart.”
Cataloged as Hip No. 1956, in Book 3, and touring the ring
during the sixth session of the 12-day sale, the Bettersworth Westwind colt
sold to Winchell Thoroughbreds for $260,000.
Winchell’s top runners of recent years include Horse of the Year Gun Runner and champion Untapable, both trained by Steve Asmussen. Earlier at the same Keeneland Sale, Winchell acquired a filly from Gun Runner’s first crop for $300,000 – we now know her as champion Echo Zulu, who will also race Saturday in the Fair Grounds Oaks (G2).
Like Echo Zulu, Epicenter went to school at El Primero, the Laredo, Texas, academy of Asmussen’s parents, Keith and Marilyn. The filly was ready to race by July, but Epicenter didn’t debut until September.
Not fully fit when sixth in that Churchill Downs unveiling, Epicenter was primed next time out beneath the Twin Spires in November. His convincing maiden tally propelled him straight to the Dec. 26 Gun Runner S. at Fair Grounds, where he starred in a sentimental victory for connections. Epicenter came close in the Jan. 22 Lecomte (G3), just nailed late, but rebounded in style in the Feb. 19 Risen Star (G2).
If Epicenter adds the Louisiana Derby’s 100 points to his resume, he’d cause a seismic shift on the Kentucky Derby leaderboard. And those waves would reverberate all the way back to Bowling Green, where Silent Candy just delivered a half-sister (by Outwork) to Epicenter. Silent Candy is set to return to Not This Time, so a full sibling hopefully will be on the way – you might call that baby an “aftershock.”
All photos courtesy of Beth Harris
Ticket Info
Sign up for race updates and more