And now we have another article on one of the major racing sites regarding
Brittany Russell. I have mentioned her often and going back more than a couple of years. She has learned from gurus like Brad Cox and the others she cites but she has been a marvel on her own. The addition of her husband often riding mounts while the couple oftentimes bring their young children in the winners' circle is wonderful for the sport. The lack of national notoriety with horse racing on the supposed all-sports channels isn't anything new. Perhaps it is better for the industry not to have some of the talking heads discuss a sport in which they aren't accustomed or have a natural tendency to mock through lack of knowledge and preparedness.
Horse racing has so many hard-working people who will never get a simple whiff of such shows unless it is a main stage such as the Ky. Derby. Brittany Russell is one of many people who deserve acclaim but for now here is an article front-and-center produced by the Maryland Jockey Club. Racing is flourishing on so many levels as we witnessed Monday at Santa Anita and yet the claustrophobic desires to discuss the same-ole- same-ole on those shows is short-sighted. Yet then again, maybe racing is better for it.
Brittany and Sheldon Russell are the centerpiece for all the good the sport offers:
Now, the 32-year-old Pennsylvania native is poised to take it one step further. She is not only on the verge of securing her third meet championship at Laurel’s calendar-year ending fall stand but becoming the first woman to finish the year as the state’s leading trainer.
paulickreport.com
“I really don't pay attention to the numbers and the stats and those things. I just kind of focus on who's next and winning the next race. I try and keep it just day to day,” Russell said. “I have people that sort of remind me regularly, but I don't like to think about it. I just like to think about the individual horses I have to get ready to run and getting those things accomplished.”
“I don't think about those things. I think about the job as far as being a mom and a trainer, because it's such a balance,” Russell said. “I'm juggling a lot, but it takes a village. We have my staff at the barn. We have Sheldon's mom. It takes so many good people on your team. I'm blessed. We have these good people around us for a reason, and it makes me feel good.”
Russell's introduction to horses came at a young age while working at local farms growing up in Peach Bottom, Pa. After a brief stint riding amateur races she turned to training, working for such horsemen as Hall of Famer Jonathan Sheppard, Brad Cox, Jimmy Jerkens and Ron Moquett before going out on her own, winning with her first starter, Oh My, Feb. 25, 2018 at Laurel.
Her breakthrough year came in pandemic-shortened 2020 when she won 46 of 159 starters and surpassed the $1 million mark in season earnings for the first time. Russell went 71-for-274 last year, topping $2.8 million in purses earned and winning her first graded-stakes, the Bold Ruler (G3) at Aqueduct with Wondrwherecraigis on the day before her son was born.
Russell is quick to credit her whole team, from her husband to assistants Emma Wolfe at the Fair Hill Training Center in Elkton, Md. and Luis Barajas at Laurel to her riders, grooms, hotwalkers and staff, for the success they've shared.
“It's amazing how we've grown. It's amazing what we've accomplished so far. I'm so proud of everybody really,” Russell said. “We have multiple strings. Emma's up at Fair Hill getting these young horses going. It's hard to get a lot of 2-year-olds in and to do everything. It's really hard to do it, and to grow. My team's done such a great job of helping me get to where we are.”