Earlier this spring I travelled to Missouri to see a dear friend. She’s not just a friend, she’s become family to me and has been a staunch supporter of mine for several years. I want to tell you more about our friendship, so please take a walk down this trail with me….
Most of you know that I trained with my late husband Steve from when we were married in 1992 until his untimely death in December 2000. I decided quickly that I was going to continue training on my own, but despite making that announcement, most of the coming two year olds were moved to other trainers. I understood that, because people who did not know my own history as a horseman before marrying Steve needed to make a decision that they were most comfortable with regarding their babies. When I embarked on my own in 2001 I was blessed with abundant success, albeit mostly with a shedrow of horses that were three year olds and up. I won a lot of stakes in 2001, but none of them were futurities. Add the ensuing AQHA World Champion honors for that year, and my abilities as a racehorse trainer were validated. But I knew I had to make a mark with the juveniles to build a viable future for Janet VanBebber Racing.
So, while at the yearling sales conducted during the fall of 2001 I was focused on the task: get nice babies! I was able to secure two Corona Cartels to fill the roster for the 2002 futurity year, among others. One was Chicks Cartel, the other Coronas Prospect. Chicks Cartel dead-heated for the win in the Lazy E Futurity – one of the first futurities of the year, so I came out with a splash. Then there was Coronas Prospect. He was, in my book, extraordinary. He won back-to-back futurities at Delta Downs that spring, set a track record, then broke his own track record while doing it. I think the world realized that I could indeed train a two year old, and even more, that I was capable enough to choose a yearling, break him under my own training program, and then manage a stellar race career. People always think that Tailor Fit, Streakin Sin Tacha and Panther Mountain (all AQHA Champions) are the ones who built my career, but horses like Coronas Prospect were equally important, and I loved each of them dearly.
Fast forward a decade: Coronas Prospect was later sold to people who were interested in standing him as a stud. When I retired from training in 2012 and moved to Oklahoma, I was delighted to learn he was at a nearby farm. I did not know the new owners, but I would say complimentary things about…