Branching Out
The fortunate find that led Brad and Pattie Marshall from barrel racing into Quarter Horse racing
Michiganders Brad and Pattie Marshall’s horse-industry careers didn’t begin until after they’d married and started their family. Yet over the years, they’ve spread their horse interests from 4-H to National Barrel Horse Association (NBHA) competition to, quite accidentally, the Quarter Horse racing industry.
Through the guidance of treasured friends and trainers, the logger and the convenience-store clerk/manager turned their “mom and pop” horse venture into profitable partnerships in racing and breeding. Most recently those ventures have included their runner Red Headed Beach (Escondido Beach-Red Storm Flash, Red Storm Cat)— QHRAI’s Indiana-Bred Horse Of The Year, Champion 2-Year-Old Indiana-Bred, Horseshoe Indianapolis’ 2023 2-Year-Old Indiana-Bred Filly, 2-Year-Old Indiana-Bred High-Point Champion and—and A Win Investments, a partnership that Brad and Pattie belong to that owns the stallion EOS A Political Win (2015, Apollitical Jess-Pithia, PYC Paint Your Wagon). They accomplished even more along the way, and they’re not finished yet.
Humble Beginnings
Brad—born in Plainwell, Michigan, to Clayton and Nancy Marshall—and Pattie—born in La Chappelle, France, to Army enlistee Jim Foote and his wife, Patricia—had gone to the same high school in Delton, Michigan. But they didn’t become acquainted until after Pattie was named Miss Delton in 1981, the same year she graduated. They married in 1982, had their first daughter, Jessica, in 1983, and their second, Amanda, in 1984.
“When we first got married, we had no money,” Pattie says, “My grandma had married a man who had a house in town that he rented to us for $175 a month. We didn’t have anything to do one day so we pushed our car out in the driveway and were washing it, and we found $10. We walked down to the grocery store and bought a loaf of bread and a gallon of milk and thought we were rich!” Pattie says.
By 1985 they were able to buy a trailer and found a piece of property to rent. The property was, coincidentally, across the street from an arena used for playday events and was, also coincidentally, owned by…