At the height of his career as a jockey, which included more than 1,000 wins during stops and starts between 1981 and 1998, Jose Corrales never earned more purses in a single season than the $972,180 his mounts banked in 1988.
With Something Awesome, the horse he helped turn from a former claimer into a multiple Graded-stakes winning millionaire, Corrales (pictured) has the unique opportunity to earn more than four times that amount – in a single race.
Stronach Stables’ homebred Something Awesome is set to make his 8-year-old debut in the $9 million Pegasus World Cup Invitational at Gulfstream Park on Saturday. It is a fitting stage for both horse and trainer, whose success has been intertwined since they were first united in the fall of 2017 at Laurel Park.
“I remember back about four years ago, I was at the Preakness and I sat with Mr. Frank [Stronach] and my son, J.T. Mr. Frank came to me and said, ‘You’re a good trainer. I’m going to make you famous.’ But I never thought I’m going be this famous to go to a big race like the Pegasus. To me, I was just lucky to watch it on television. To be participating in it, I think it’s very good to have this opportunity and I’m very thankful to everyone.”
Corrales, 58, knew he wanted to become a jockey at the age of seven, learning the trade in his native Panama, a country that has exported the likes of Hall of Famers Laffit Pincay Jr., Manny Ycaza, Braulio Baeza, Jorge Velasquez, Jacinto Vasquez, Javier Castellano and Alex Solis, and Gulfstream’s record-setting two-time Championship Meet leading rider, Luis Saez.
Riding primarily at tracks in the state of Washington during the mid-1980s, Corrales became friends with Wesley Ward, the Eclipse Award-winning apprentice jockey of 1984. Ward turned to training in 1991 and hired Corrales as his assistant, but when Ward relocated to California, Corrales went to train in Macau.
Soon Corrales returned to the United States and, by 2011, finally got his big break. Owner-trainer Burton Sipp introduced him to Andy Stronach, a breeder and owner and the son of Pegasus founder Frank Stronach, and the two began a solid working relationship.
“The first time I met Andy, it was at midnight at Beulah Park,” Corrales said. “He was in a truck with a driver, and they were delivering a horse to me. A filly. Can’t recall her name. But we won with her. And then he started sending me horses.”
One of them was Bodhisattva, a horse Andy Stronach bred and gave to Corrales as a gift. The horse whose hard-to-pronounce name means “enlightened being” won three stakes for the owner-trainer and was among seven opponents defeated by eventual Triple Crown winner American Pharoah in the 2015 Preakness Stakes.
“Andy has helped me the most, no doubt. He has been the biggest influence in my career,” Corrales said. “To run against a horse that wins the Triple Crown is quite an experience. I’m so grateful. And to do it with a horse that Andy bred and gave to me as a present … at a track owned by the Stronach family,, made it even more exciting. We’ll be in the record books forever.”
Watch Something Awesome working at Gulfstream Park
Enter Something Awesome. A gelded son of Awesome Again – a Frank Stronach homebred who won nine of 12 career starts, including the 1998 Breeders’ Cup Classic, and purses of more than $4.3 million – Something Awesome is out of the Dance Floor mare Somethinaboutlaura, both multiple Graded-stakes winners.
Something Awesome began his career in Southern California with trainer John Shirreffs before the Ontario-bred was sent to Danny Vella at Woodbine in the spring of 2016. Overall, he won four of his first 18 races and ran for a tag four times between April and October of 2016, for as little as $32,000.
Corrales got Something Awesome at his Laurel barn after the horse finished seventh in a seven-furlong optional claimer over Woodbine’s synthetic surface in August 2017 – the 14th time in 18 races the horse had run at distances of a mile or less.
Something Awesome debuted for Corrales Nov. 5, 2017, coming from last to win a six-furlong second-level optional claiming allowance by four lengths in 1:10 flat with Hall of Famer Edgar Prado aboard. Prado is named to ride for the sixth time and fifth in a row in the Pegasus.
“When the horse came over here, he was like any other horse. I thought he was going to run maybe for allowance or claiming or wherever the horse would fit, and if he’s not doing it he’d probably go to a lower level,” Corrales said. “But, when he came, the horse changed. The horse was working really good and when I really started running him, he showed me. He won the first time in 1:10 and I said, ‘Wow, this horse can run.’ Prado was excited about it. If a Hall of Fame jockey can get excited about this horse, we can go somewhere.”
Corrales kept Something Awesome sprinting, where he reeled off another optional claiming allowance win and was third in the Fire Plug Stakes, both at six furlongs, before his gutsy neck triumph over late-running Fellowship in the seven-furlong G3 General George). It was the first Graded victory for both trainer and horse, now ridden by Elvis Trujillo.
“That was exciting. My mother was here, and my nephew was riding the horse,” Corrales said. “It was snowing so bad and we really could not see. I was sitting watching the race and I didn’t really see where the horse was coming. Somebody said, ‘You won.’ The other horse came flying, and I thought maybe he got me. But it was very exciting and a touching moment for me because my mother was there.”
From there, Corrales stretched Something Awesome out to 1⅛ miles in the Harrison E. Johnson Memorial Stakes, where he cruised by 2¼ lengths, and then the G2 Charles Town Classic, taking a short lead into the stretch and staying resolute to the wire in a neck triumph that marked the first for the trainer in a race with a seven-figure purse.
“First of all you have to thank God for that because it’s rare. It’s like trying to win the lottery and you don’t get enough time to get the ticket. It’s special for where I’ve come from and what I’ve done to reach that level. It’s not that easy,” Corrales said.
‘Maybe the horses just like Maryland water’
“You have to be able to appreciate getting there, and I appreciate Andy Stronach who put me in this situation with his father and everything. He’s always been so helpful to me. Maybe the horses just like Maryland water or whatever, but they have improved and I’m so glad to have been able to do that.”
Something Awesome has raced just twice since then, getting a break after finishing eighth in the G3 Pimlico Special last May. He returned to be second behind subsequent stakes winner Colonel Sharp in an open seven-furlong allowance Nov. 16 at Laurel, and has been preparing for Pegasus at Gulfstream since Christmas.
“The Pimlico Special came and I think he ran too much and he was a little tired then. The horse came back and bled a little bit. We gave him a couple months and brought him back,” Corrales said. “It was a little difficult to get him back. I couldn’t get him right. With a few prayers and everybody’s help, the horse got good. I had him ready for the race. We hooked a little horse and got a lot of competition. The time was fast and he ran a very good race. Since then, he just got better.
“At the beginning, the horse went three-quarters and then we tried seven-eighths, and he did it. Then we’re not sure if he’d go a mile and an eighth, and he did,” he added. “Then we’re not sure if we were going to run at Charles Town and we did, and he won it. The horse has given me so much all the way through.”
In the 1⅛-mile Pegasus, Something Awesome will be part of a field that includes 2018 Horse of the Year finalist and likely race favorite Accelerate and fellow G1 winners Audible, City Of Light, Patternrecognition and Seeking The Soul, Preakness and Clark Handicap (G1) runner-up Bravazo, and Mexican Triple Crown winner Kukulkan, undefeated in 14 starts.
“Like everything else, it is a race and you want to win as many as you can. But, it’s a race that if you win it would help your whole life. It would be nice for me and my family and everybody just to win this kind of race,” Corrales said. “It would mean a lot, but I would be the same person.
“I’m just happy to [represent] Laurel Park to come and participate in this kind of race. [It shows] all the little people have a chance, and to have that opportunity is great,” he added. “My family will be there, and a lot of friends. All over the world, friends will see you that you haven’t seen. They say, ‘I thought he was dead. But he’s still alive, and look where he’s running.’ That’s what we’ve got to do; keep going.”