At age 87, Jack Brooks’s memory is astonishing. He recalls the names and faces of hundreds of acquaintances from decades past and he recalls literally thousands of horses right down to the minute details of their daily training and their overall careers. That ability to remember is one of the traits that enabled him to successfully pick through the hundreds of prospects offered at auction each year, in search of another champion. That keen mind allowed him to focus his energies and his vision on one overriding goal—the sport’s richest prize—the All American Futurity. It is the most difficult race to win of them all, because you don’t just have to outrun a single starting gate full of horses. You have to turn in one of the ten fastest times over two full days of trial races with varying wind and weather conditions—then you have to outrun a starting gate full of the world’s fastest sprinters.
Tom Brady won seven Super Bowls, competing against 31 other teams. Michael Jordan won five NBA titles, competing against 31 other teams. Jack Nicklaus won six Masters tournaments, competing against 149 other golfers. Bob Baffert has won six Kentucky Derbies, competing against 19 other horses. But horses trained by Jack Brooks won eight All American Futurities—competing against more than 220 opponents on an average year. No other trainer has won more than three.
Jack Brooks was about as far from an overnight sensation as you can get. But his hometown of Blanchard, Oklahoma, was a hotbed of Quarter Horse racing and a young Jack Brooks was captured by the excitement of it. He started working for local owners and trainers from the bottom up. Their races were unofficial but money was involved and the spirit of competition was keen. Reflecting on old black and white photos from the 1950s, Jack recalls with a smile, “We didn’t know anything back then. We thought we had really done something the first time we ran second in a race. Then when I went to work for Mr. Jack Byers I really started learning. He took me to Ruidoso the first time and we won with a Thoroughbred mare named…



