Veteran jockey Gary Boulanger recalls how he lit up the board at Gulfstream Park – at 143-1

Big-race shock: Built For Pleasure gets his neck in front under Gary Boulanger to win the Fountain of Youth in 1996. Photo courtesy of Barbara Livingston

Ahead of Saturday’s 77th edition of the G2 Fountain of Youth, Phil Janack interviews the Canadian rider who stunned the racing world in 1996 with a triple-digit triumph on Built For Pleasure in the main prep for the Florida Derby.

 

USA: By late February 1996, South Florida’s betting public had seen plenty of a nondescript horse named Built For Pleasure. Starting at two, the Florida-bred son of Homebuilder had made seven of his nine career starts at either Gulfstream Park or Calder Race Course, winning twice, and had already raced three times in the first six weeks of his three-year-old season.

So, when the Fountain of Youth rolled around – having attracted a star-studded cast to Gulfstream led by Breeders’ Cup Juvenile winner Unbridled’s Song, a horse touted as the one destined to end a Triple Crown drought that would last for another 19 years – little if any attention was given to Built For Pleasure. Until the race was over.

Gary Boulanger: career total of 3,681 winners. Photo: Dave Landry/Canadian Hall of FameOwned and trained by 78-year-old Tommy Heard Jr., Built For Pleasure got an ideal trip under dual Calder riding champ Gary Boulanger to run down the heavy favorite and earn the first stakes victory of his career in the prestigious Triple Crown prep by a neck at odds of 143-1, still the biggest upset in race history.

“People ask me about it all the time,” said Canadian Hall of Fame jockey Boulanger.“They’re like, ‘What’s the biggest winner you’ve ever had?’ Built For Pleasure. Fountain of Youth. 1996.

‘Something you’ll never forget’

“It’s something that you’ll never forget. It’s something that’s always part of your history. It’s a blessing.”

Built For Pleasure is the only horse ever to have won the Florida Derby prep with a win payoff in triple digits – $288.20 – breaking the previous record of $88.40 set by Green Gambados in 1974.

“It was amazing – you didn’t even know what his real number was, because it only showed him at 99-1 when we went into the paddock,” said Boulanger, who is now 55.

“He’s a big price, he’s got a Calder-based trainer and a Calder-based rider, really, at the time. You’re thinking everything just went the way you wanted it, but you’re not thinking ‘What did he just pay?’ You’re just glad you got there.”

Unbridled’s Song headed to the Fountain of Youth having run second in the G2 Hutcheson sprinting seven furlongs at Gulfstream to open his sophomore campaign. The Hutcheson winner, Appealing Skier, who also won the 1995 Laurel Futurity, would be back for another run.

Trainer D. Wayne Lukas entered the pair of G3 winner Editor’s Note and Victory Speech, riding a three-race win streak, including back-to-back allowance triumphs at Gulfstream to start the year. Frisco View, who beat Built For Pleasure in a Gulfstream allowance the month before, Gold Fever and graded-stakes winners Gator Dancer and Gomtuu completed the field.

Returning heroes: Gary Boulanger and Built For Pleasure after their triple-digit triumph. Photo courtesy of Barbara Livingston“Going into the Fountain of Youth we were really confident,” said Boulanger. “I knew he’d probably be a price but I loved him going into that race.

‘Really, really excited’

“Gary Stevens was coming in from California to ride [Victory Speech], and I knew he wasn’t going to leave Mike Smith alone with Unbridled’s Song. My horse had learned how to relax and had a really good move, so that had me really, really excited.

“Did I think I could beat him? Absolutely. I thought I could beat him if the cards fell the right way. It ended up falling out perfectly.”

Boulanger had gotten to know Built for Pleasure that winter, riding him four times at Gulfstream prior to the Fountain of Youth. They finished second to favored Seacliff in the G2 Spectacular Bid (Jan 7) and ran in two allowance races before the month was out, including the loss to Frisco View. One more allowance was on tap Feb. 12, two weeks before the Fountain of Youth, ending in a front-running head victory in 1:45.36.

Built For Pleasure broke from post four in the Fountain of Youth, between Smith and Unbridled’s Song on the rail and Stevens and Victory Speech in post six. Gomtuu took the early initiative and led through four furlongs when Unbridled’s Song closed to within a half-length, closely followed by Victory Speech. Boulanger and Built For Pleasure sat sixth, less than a length behind, watching Unbridled’s Song and Victory Speech duke it out.

Boulanger recalled: “Gary went to Unbridled’s Song at about the 4½-pole, put pressure on him all down the backside. I’m about five or six lengths back, then like three lengths off it turning for home, and I’m sitting on a ton of horse.

“I absolutely loved the trip I was getting,” Boulanger added. “I got into a really good position early on. He was sitting well and doing everything very comfortably.

“It wasn’t like I had to use him to get any kind of position. He got there very easily, and he was relaxed and doing what I wanted him to do. I was never worried about where I was.

“I thought I was in a great position at the time. Turning for home, I loved where I was. What I didn’t know was how much Mike had with Unbridled’s Song or Gary had with Victory Speech. It worked out that day where everything fell together the right way.”

Boulanger swung Built For Pleasure out four-wide entering the stretch and came with a steady run to reel in the front-runners approaching the wire and emerge from a three-way photo-finish a neck in front of Unbridled’s Song, with Victory Speech another neck back in third. Appealing Skier ran fourth followed by Editor’s Note – who would go on to run second in the Preakness and win the Belmont.

Mind you, shock result though it clearly was, Built For Pleasure was not even the longest shot in the Fountain of Youth. That honor went to Gomtuu, who was sent off at odds of nearly 145-1.

‘I knew I had got by them’

“It wasn’t a head bob or one of those – I knew I had got by them,” Boulanger said. “At the eighth pole, you’re just working. You don’t know if you’re going to get there or not, but he’s running, they’re running and the wire’s coming. When it did, I knew I got there.”

Built For Pleasure went on to run seventh after pressing a fast early pace in the Florida Derby, with Unbridled’s Song and Editor’s Note finishing one-two and Appealing Skier sixth. He would never win another race or run in another graded stakes following a 19th place finish in the Kentucky Derby, in which he was ridden by John Velazquez.

 “It’s fun when you work with a horse and you help develop their real talent and it shows up in a race,” said Boulanger.

“I wish we could have done things differently in the Florida Derby. That was kind of the downfall for him. It’s unfortunate because the horse had a lot of talent to beat those kind he did.”

Boulanger moved his tack to South Florida two years prior to winning the Fountain of Youth but found instant success with 1994 and 1995 riding titles at Calder as well as the 1994-95 Tropical Park meet. He had come from the west coast, riding in northern California and Washington state, where he broke Stevens’ single-season record with 247 wins at Longacres, a 13½-hour drive from his birthplace of Drayton Valley, Alberta.

Boulanger is approaching 3,700 career victories including two of Canada’s most prestigious races – the 2001 Queen’s Plate with Hall of Fame filly Dancethruthedawn and 2021 Prince of Wales with Haddassah. The latter came 16 years after Boulanger went down in a near-fatal spill during the Mac Diarmida at Gulfstream, in which he suffered a ruptured spleen, broken ribs and a detached tendon in his left elbow, and needed part of his skull removed to prevent pressure on his brain.

Told he would never ride again, Boulanger returned in February 2013 at Tampa Bay Downs, two years after Heard passed away at the age of 93. He continues to be a mainstay at Woodbine in Canada, spending the winter with his family in Ocala, Florida.

“In our game, it’s not when you get hurt, it’s how bad,” he said. “I’ve had some injuries, and I’ve had some bad ones. I’m just grateful that I got to do something that I love to do, and I’m still doing it.

“I never look back at it,” he went on. “I don’t have any bitter thoughts toward Gulfstream, and I don’t have any bitter thoughts from when I broke my back at Calder. That’s part of our game. If you dwell on all the little things, you’re probably not going to make it back. That was always my goal – what did I have to do to get back do doing what I really love to do – and that’s all I ever focused on.

‘I have a really good three-year-old’

“Now I’m just trying to get my body to where I want it physically fit-wise going into Woodbine and be prepared the best I can be,” he added. “I’m getting on horses in Ocala, and I have a really good three-year-old Canadian colt, Twin City, for [trainer] Stu Simon.

“He’s probably second or third choice for the King’s Plate. He’s as good a three-year-old Canadian-bred that there is in Canada. I think he’s a bright light in my future, so I’m really excited about him.”

Boulanger was inducted into Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame in 2020, three years after receiving the Avelino Gomez Memorial Award which recognizes a jockey that has made a significant contribution to the sport.

Looking back at his Fountain of Youth victory on Built For Pleasure, he added: “Obviously when you’re acknowledged as one of the biggest upsets in a major sporting event, to win that is something you never forget.

“It’s part of history. It’s something you always cherish – it’s right up there with winning the Queen’s Plate and the Prince of Wales and breaking Gary Stevens’ record. Those were huge accomplishments.

“You’re proud of things like that. You don’t look at it when it really happens, but when they keep talking about it 30 years later that means something,” he added. “Do you have a special spot in your heart for Built for Pleasure? Yeah, of course I do. It’s an honor to be remembered from this far back. It was a fun day.”

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