A Few Words Of Gratitude...

If I tried to thank everyone that deserved it during the Eclipse Awards broadcast, they’d play me off with impunity, and rightfully so. That said, earning the highest North American year-end honor for a turf writer is not a feat that’s done alone, and I want to make sure those contributions receive their due notice.

But first, a couple (brief, I promise) stories…

The first winner I ever picked at the races was an Arabian at Mount Pleasant Meadows named Fast Dance. I was five years old and I liked the name. The memory of sitting next to my Grandpa Murphy in the grandstands as he taught this future degenerate how to read the program was my first vivid recollection of being at a racetrack.

That said, my first recorded memory came two years earlier, when my grandpa’s star runner – and future cornerstone of his broodmare program – Janies Echo won an allowance race at the same track. My grandma held on to me as I looked at the mare instead of the photographer.

In both situations, I was surrounded by family in a place that would become the backdrop for love, learning, and lots of crazy stories that I was fortunate enough to experience and look back upon with fondness.

Janies Echo 7-15-1990.jpg

Fast forward a couple decades, and I was a twentysomething about to leave home to start my first full-time job with Thoroughbred Times in Kentucky.

The track that produced my first memories in the sport had become my training ground as I wrote for my blog, The Michigan-Bred Claimer and develop the skills to land precisely the job I was leaving to do. I’d become great friends with so many people at the track, but it didn’t truly sink in how much that friendship meant until my last day there as a Michigan resident in 2011.

I stayed at the track long after the live races had concluded, partially because I wanted to place some simulcast bets, but mostly because I wasn’t ready to leave. When I did decide to call it a night, I was sent off with a round of applause from the remaining horsemen and horseplayers in the Winner’s Circle Lounge. I clutched my camera in my hand and thrust it in the air as I exited into the dark parking lot and into the next chapter of my life. There just aren’t that many racetracks where that’s going to happen, but I was fortunate enough to be from one of them. It remains one of my most treasured memories.

As I walked down the stairs that night, I made a promise to myself to bring an Eclipse Award back to Michigan, to Mount Pleasant Meadows, to make good on the investments of time, energy, and expertise its residents put into me over the course of decades; and to make the people proud who held up a wobbly toddler in that first win photo. I wish there were a track to bring it back to – MPM or otherwise – but I hope I’ve adequately held up my end of the deal for the people that would have been there.

This story took over five years to write, from the first brainstorms when the track closed in early 2014 to finally hitting “send” on the final draft this summer. I worked on it over nights and weekends, in airports and restaurants. It was both my hobby and my obsession in that time, and I had a lot of help along the way.

I owe gratitude to so many for getting to a point in my life where I can make a living writing about horse racing, whether I’d won an Eclipse or not. The statue at the end of the trail is as much a celebration of their achievements as it is for mine.

-  My parents, Tom and Lynette Nevills, for first introducing me to the racetrack, and taking me there again, and again, and again, from Muskegon to Mount Pleasant, and all over the country. Perhaps most importantly, for nurturing my passion for horse racing, being tireless editors and listeners, and permitting me to chase my dreams instead making me go out and find a real job. I can never fully repay them for all they’ve done to help me become the person that I am, but hopefully this can at least work toward the interest.

- My family, on both sides, for teaching me about the sport and supporting my desires to be a part of it, from the first time I looked over at Janies Echo in the winner’s circle.

- My wife, Natalie Voss, for being my most trusted and patient confidante and sounding board. She is the writer I want to be when I grow up, and her keen eye and blunt-force editing sharpened the story into what it needed to become to really stick the landing. She makes me a better writer and a better person every single day.

- Nate Funnell, Lee Gates, and Scott Csernyik for being open, willing subjects to tell their stories in words and pictures – not only for this piece, but throughout our time at Mount Pleasant Meadows.

- Ray Paulick for giving the green light to a 6,000-word story about a long-dead bullring in the middle of nowhere. Also, and most importantly, for plucking me out of the unemployment line at a time when I was unsure if there was still a full-time place for me in turf writing.

- Scott Jagow for editing the piece and giving the ending the extra “pop” it needed.

- Rick McCune for picking up the baton from my grandpa in teaching me about the horse racing business on every level from the farm, to the track, to the state capital. Learning under Rick gave me a complete education – and countless stories from the road. The next breakfast at Beardslee’s is on me.

- Michigan’s racing community at large, for providing me with a nurturing – and incredibly patient – environment for me to develop skills, ask questions, and get access and opportunities that would have taken worlds more effort – and probably worlds more corporate pushback – in a larger jurisdiction. Across tracks and across breeds, I was invited in with open arms, and I hope this piece and the ensuing Eclipse Award have done your stories justice.

- The braintrust of people kind enough to read and offer feedback over the course of the story’s many drafts, including Andrew Champagne, Alicia Hughes, Nicole Russo, and Emilie Evenson.

- Ed DeRosa for giving me my break in the turf writing business on multiple occasions, and instigating so many of the good things that have stemmed from it.

- Stephanie Ruff and Don and Bobbi Patscheider of Arabian Finish Line for allowing me the platform to wax poetic about Mount Pleasant – and anything else that caught my attention – in my “Making Claims” column. That freedom allowed me invaluable space to figure out my voice for moments like this story.

- Our cat/alien companion Oreo, who sat with me for countless hours of writing and revising the story, swinging between wide-eyed admiration and flat disapproval – both key elements in the management of a writer. He was in my lap when I filed the final draft of the story. I wish he was still around to share in this.

- John K. Samson, a Canadian singer/songwriter with whom I’ve never met nor been in contact. “Biting the Dust” was on the back burner for months, its writer lacking the time and inspiration to get it over the line, when I heard The Weakerthans’ “Tournament of Hearts.” The song detailed an Alberta curling bar with such care that I could picture Mount Pleasant’s Winner’s Circle Lounge in its place. This led me to revisit the simulcast bar in my mind and fill in the scenery in the story. Then, things got rolling again, and Samson’s songs were played on repeat throughout the process.

Here’s the song if you’d like to hear it. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZYWkUeFYzl4

While we’re on the subject of music and this story, I made a Spotify playlist as a companion piece to “Biting the Dust” if you want something to set the mood as you read. That can be found here. https://open.spotify.com/playlist/5jyGMjo1lV9n0WxOpV2Dqz?si=YAVQ3YZKSTeJp2F0H4yFcg%E2%80%AC&fbclid=IwAR2VsNjfVVDa_ArrtSIoEQEjd40nnjYueK5-I5e9g1CjrQotaG7yd_5LFIc

- You. If you’re reading this right now, there’s a good chance you’ve supported me or this story at some point on the road; whether it was providing guidance, companionship, or inspiration; or if it was something as small as clicking on the story to boost its reader count, reading the story, or sharing it online. Each and every one of you helped the story – and myself – grow into what we are today.

This story would have been impossible to pull off without the full combination of everyone listed above and many more. You have all helped the dreams of a racing-crazy kid from Edmore, Michigan come true, and – like a Sol Kumin runner – you’ve all got a little piece in this thing. Thank you all, now and forever.

Nevills Wins 2019 Media Eclipse Award For Feature/Commentary Writing

The National Thoroughbred Racing Association, Daily Racing Form, and the National Turf Writers and Broadcasters today announced the winners of the 2019 Media Eclipse Awards.

Feature/Commentary Writing – Joe Nevills

This is the first Eclipse Award for Joe Nevills, of Georgetown, Kentucky, who has been the bloodstock editor of the Paulick Report since 2018, and prior to that was a reporter for Daily Racing Form and the Thoroughbred Times. Nevills’ wife, Natalie Voss, won an Eclipse Award for News/Enterprise writing in 2016.

“It’s just one of those things you dream of doing, like hitting a Grand Slam to win Game 7 of the World Series,” Nevills said about winning an Eclipse Award. “This is something I’ve always wanted to accomplish and never expected, but this one was very personal for me. I had been working on this story for five years, since the track closed."

In “Biting The Dust: A Long Goodbye to Mount Pleasant Meadows,” Nevills tells the story of the demise of a small mixed-breed track in central Michigan through the eyes of trainer Nate Funnell, jockey Lee Gates, track announcer and marketing director Scott Csernyik, and through his own personal recollections of a place where he learned and enjoyed horse racing beginning with his family at age four. He had revisited the closed grounds several times since it was shuttered, and he was able to finally complete his story this year.

“I wanted to write a John Mellencamp song about horse racing, without the music: Give a spotlight to blue-collar horse people on the small circuit that made me,” Nevills said. “I like to write things that I'd have liked to read when I was young, looking through magazines for whatever I could find about my home circuit. The entire Michigan racing community has had my back since I started writing about the sport. They've been instrumental in teaching me about the industry, even today.” 

Opened in 1985, Mount Pleasant Meadows in Mount Pleasant, Michigan, experienced just a few good years of racing, damaged by an ever-growing list of internal and political obstacles, before closing in 2013. And yet, in describing the run-down conditions of the track he revisited several times, Nevills revealed the strength and joy of those who worked there.

“Even at its loudest, Mount Pleasant was a good place for people who liked to hear what was going on: the sound of jockeys smooching and barking to urge their mounts, then explaining themselves to the trainers afterward; the gate crew pleading with the starter to keep his thumb off the button; and the occasional trash talk between people on horseback.

This was especially true around the paddock, where horsemen and revelers shot the breeze between races over a flimsy chain-link fence. The sternly-worded sign warning folks with racing licenses against chatter with the outside world, hung by the state's racing commission, might as well have been written in Cantonese.”

Nevills is a native of Edmore, Michigan, attended Montabella High School, and graduated from Central Michigan University.

The winning feature/commentary article can be accessed here: https://www.paulickreport.com/news/ray-s-paddock/biting-the-dust-a-long-goodbye-to-mount-pleasant-meadows/

Judges in the Feature Commentary category were Tom LaMarra, Director of Communications for the Maryland Thoroughbred Horsemen’s Association and Managing Editor of THAracing.com; Myra Lewyn, turf writer, editor, and publicist with four decades devoted to the coverage of Thoroughbred racing and Dan Liebman, former editor of The Blood-Horse as well The State-Journal in Frankfort, Kentucky.

My Final Arabian Finish Line Column (For Now)

If you haven’t seen the news, Arabian Finish Line announced it has suspended publication due to a variety of factors.

The magazine did a lot for me personally and professionally over the near-decade that I wrote for it, and when editor Stephanie Ruff informed me a while back that the next issue of the Finish Line could be the last, I wanted to make sure what could be the final installment of my “Making Claims” column hit its mark. Now that the issue is looking unlikely to see the light of day, I got permission from Stephanie to share what would have run.

If and when Arabian Racing’s foremost publication comes back, I will take great pride in being there to write for it. Until then, here’s one for the road…

———

Joe with Arabian Finish Line editor Stephanie Ruff at Churchill Downs

Joe with Arabian Finish Line editor Stephanie Ruff at Churchill Downs

It’s hard to find things to get excited about in horse racing these days.

There’s a cloud hanging over Southern California that, if the ball takes some unlucky but realistic bounces, could consume the entire North American sport as we know it. It’s heavy stuff and I deal with it enough in my day job. Instead, I’ll use this space to focus on something positive – namely, the idea of gratitude, with a focus on the Arabian racing industry.

I’ve been writing for Arabian Finish Line in some manner or another since 2010. That’s longer than my combined full-time stays with Thoroughbred Times (went bankrupt and shut down), Daily Racing Form (got laid off), and Paulick Report (so far, so good).

Arabian Finish Line has been there when I was out on the figurative street, and it’s been an outlet for the stuff rattling around in my brain when the other places I have written for couldn’t, or wouldn’t, give it ink. It’s helped develop my voice, both on the page and behind the microphone.

None of this happens if Don and Bobbi Patscheider don’t take a chance on a wet-behind-the-ears recent college graduate on the recommendation of the Arabian platoon at Mount Pleasant Meadows.

The first time I was ever on an airplane was because they bought me a ticket to attend the 2011 Darley Awards. When I moved from Central Michigan to Kentucky to start my job with Thoroughbred Times, they flew up from Florida to attend my going away party at MPM. The level of faith and trust they put in me to give me my own column and let me run wild with crazy ideas like having championship belts in horse racing (which should absolutely still happen) and writing silly haiku about the Darley Awards is something for which I’ll always be indebted.

Joe with Bobbi and Don Patscheider at Mount Pleasant Meadows

Joe with Bobbi and Don Patscheider at Mount Pleasant Meadows

Just as important to my journey in Arabian racing was the next Finish Line head honcho, Stephanie Ruff. I’m so proud of the work she’s done to bring the magazine and its brand into modernity after a sudden and unexpected handing over of the reins.

A key cog in that transition was the Arabian Racing Radio podcast, and I remain honored that Stephanie chose me to be her co-host. The level of confidence and discipline I gained as an on-air personality over the year of the show’s run has spilled over into everything else I do, and it was just fun to find new people to geek out with each time we had a new guest on the show. 

And, for crying out loud, Stephanie had enough trust in me to let me pen a two-part epic about a Wisconsin-bred blue-eyed horse that only ran twice at the lowest level the racing breed has to offer. Arabian Finish Line has always meant freedom for me, and that freedom has produced some of my favorite stories, both on the printed page and over the airwaves.

Staying on the podcast front, Jemmy Legagneur and Glenn Hebert were invaluable guides for me in my growth from an incompetent radio presence into a barely competent one. That’s a pretty good jump. Their patience with two writers with zero radio experience and glitchy equipment made the process a joy. You might not have heard their voices on Arabian Racing Radio, but without them, you’d have never heard ours.

I got into Arabian racing because the breed ran at one of my home tracks, Mount Pleasant Meadows. From nearly top-to-bottom, the track’s residents were willing – or at least tolerant – participants in my professional development, but the Arabian folks went the extra mile to make me a part of their world and give me opportunities to grow and succeed.

The Holst-Ruvalcaba clan won a lot of races in those days, and their purple and orange silks gave my photographs a nice “pop” when their horses did something worth photographing. Nicole and Rafael were constant supporters as I developed from my homemade blog, The Michigan-Bred Claimer, into my national-scale endeavors, helping me become about as active a member of Michigan’s Arabian racing community as I could be without actually laying my hands on a horse.

One of my favorite pieces of memorabilia on my office wall is the “2” placard that hung above the coinciding paddock stall at Mount Pleasant Meadows. There were only 10 to go around when the structure was torn down after the track closed, and Nicole saved that one for me. The track had a small population compared to most, but it meant a lot to those who endured it. When you have that shared unique experience, a simple board with a green “2” on it can carry a lot of weight. 

Joe with Quick and Rich at Churchill Downs

Joe with Quick and Rich at Churchill Downs

Of course, one of the greatest artifacts of Mount Pleasant Meadows, and perhaps of Michigan Arabian racing as a whole, is still in training.

I’ve beaten this story into the ground on the printed page and over the airwaves at this point, but watching Quick and Rich go from a first-out maiden winner at sleepy Mount Pleasant to a Grade 1 winner in North America’s richest race at Churchill Downs has been one of the most satisfying experiences of both my professional career and my personal fandom of horse racing. It can get easy to feel disconnected from racehorses when you cover them for a living because they tend to come and go so quickly, but the pride I feel in that horse gives me the kind of energy I haven’t felt since my own family’s horses ran.

I don’t consider myself a true “fan” of very many horses, the way some militant followers of the sport might feel about California Chrome or American Pharoah, but I absolutely feel that way about Quick and Rich, and will fight anyone that disagrees.

I’ll forever be grateful to Tom and Joyce Fritz for not only campaigning their star runner at the world’s highest levels, but for letting me be a hanger-on for the experience. The Fritzes were the subjects of my first feature for Arabian Finish Line, back before the start of my column, and it pleases me to no end that I’m still able to tell the stories of them and their horses nearly a decade later when so many other parts of my early days in racing have fallen by the wayside.

To the rest of Michigan’s Arabian racing platoon, scattered as you might be, I miss you guys. Nobody in the state deserved what ultimately happened in the end, but I wish things had gone smoother for you after the move to Hazel Park so you could have at least made to that point with the rest of the horsemen.

Looking nationally, Kathy Smoke is due gratitude for recommending me to join the Arabian Jockey Club’s Graded Stakes Committee. As someone whose connection to the Arabian racing breed is largely limited to this column, I never expected to even be in the conversation for a responsibility like this, but the experience has been invaluable for learning the nuts and bolts of the sport and the breed, and it’s been a pleasure interacting with the other people on the board.

I’ve gotta say, though, it feels pretty boss to tell my friends and acquaintances that I’m on the Graded Stakes Committee when the President of the U.A.E. Cup comes to Kentucky. Being the designated “guy who knows things about Arabian racing” among my group of turf writers never gets old.

Jonathan Horowitz and Ashley Gubich, thanks for having me on AJC Live when you’re in town and putting up with my corny jokes and shameless fandom of Quick and Rich. Your broadcasts are how guerilla marketing of the sport should be done, and I can’t wait to see what directions you take the show in going forward.

Thanks to my parents and grandma for being faithful subscribers to Arabian Finish Line and for letting me chase dreams instead of making me go out and get a real job, and to my wife Natalie Voss and cohort Nicole Russo for pinch-hitting with the column when pesky things like appendicitis get in the way.

If I’ve corresponded with you over phone, email, or in person for a column, story, or podcast interview, that piece of the page or sound file was there because you put it there, and I couldn’t have done it without you. I’ve gotten to tell some really cool stories in Arabian Finish Line over the past decade, and that wouldn’t be possible if the racing breed weren’t filled with really cool people.

This sport is my life. I have a house, a car, my wife, and my career because of it. The racing Arabian breed has played a vital role in that, and has given me something to get excited about since I placed my first bet on an Arabian named Fast Dance before I was even in grade school.

Now, perhaps more than ever, we need things to get excited about. If you’re reading this right now, thank you for doing that for me.