Feel So Good makes Korean history with maiden-claiming win
at Calder
by Brisnet.com
At first glance, Thursday’s
“There were five of us from Korea that were here watching the race,” said
“I haven’t been back to experience how big the story was, but the guys I
Korean racing dates back to the early 1900s, but the nation’s raid on
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“We started racing in Korea around 1922, but we didn’t send horses overseas
until a few years ago,” Ko explained. “The reason that changed was because we
wanted to find out how our racing had developed over the years; we simply wanted
to see how our horses compared to the American horses and we wanted to challenge
ourselves.”
The first horse sent from Korea to the United States was Pick Me Up, a winner
of seven races and approximately $450,000 in his native land who traveled from
the Asian continent in 2008 to compete in races at Delaware Park, Charles Town
and Laurel Park, where he found little success in just three starts.
“That horse was a good horse at home, and we thought he would be successful
in America,” Ko said of Pick Me Up. “But he didn’t have any good results in his
races and was sent back to Korea. We were bothered by this, so we set out to
find the reason why our horses could not beat the American horses. We wanted to
find out if it was a training problem or the horse’s problem.
“So this time, even though Feel So Good is a Korean horse, we had him in the
U.S. since he was young, and the horse learned to race here and was taught by
American trainers,” Ko said. “I think maybe we found out that the problem is not
the horse.”
Feel So Good first shipped to Calder in August 2011, and after his
“In our country, the KRA doesn’t own any racing horses,” Ko said. “But this
While the KRA will no longer have ownership of Feel So Good when the gelding
“This win is a very memorable and important thing for us,” Ko said. “So after
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Despite the impending departure of Feel So Good, the Braddy barn will retain
a certain amount of Korean feel to it over the next month as prospective
trainers Hee-jin Yang and Min-Sung Gu, who arrived with Ko from Korea this past
week, are scheduled to stay for a one-month apprenticeship.
“Our racing society has always been kind of conservative, but these days we
are trying to do international things,” Ko explained. “We try to send jockeys
all over the world, we just won a race in the U.S. with one of our horses, and
now these two new trainers will stay to learn how to manage a stable.
“And even though we haven’t decided yet if we will send more horses back to
the United States, I think we will be happy to send more. We believe that Mr.
Braddy is one of the leading trainers in Florida, and I think that in the future
we’ll do more business with him and with Calder.”
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