© 2024 Ideastream Public Media

1375 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio 44115
(216) 916-6100 | (877) 399-3307

WKSU is a public media service licensed to Kent State University and operated by Ideastream Public Media.
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Jockey Remembers 'My Guy Barbaro'

SCOTT SIMON, host:

When Edgar Prado was a young jockey, he was cautioned to never care too much about a horse. You can love them, of course, but horse racing is a tough and competitive business in which riders often switch mounts and race against friends. And then Edgar Prado rode Barbaro, the teammate of a lifetime, as he calls him, and together they won the Kentucky Derby by a margin that left fans gasping.

(Soundbite of race)

Unidentified Male (Announcer): And here comes Barbaro, the undefeated Barbaro comes up on the outside and he takes the lead as the field (inaudible) for home and the Kentucky Derby and it's, oh, Barbaro in a sublime performance. He runs away from them all and he has saved something left for the pictures. Barbaro wins by seven.

SIMON: Prado was on Barbaro two weeks later in the Preakness, but that great athlete broke down in the first few steps in the race. And in that moment and in the months of ultimately unsuccessful recovery that followed, Edgar Prado says that commandment not to care too much for a horse shattered into tiny pieces. Mr. Prado, who's one of the world's leading jockeys with almost 6,000 career wins has written a book with sports writer John Eisenberg, "My Guy Barbaro: A Jockey's Journey Through Love, Triumph, and Heartbreak with America's Favorite Horse." Mr. Prado joins us from the studios of WLRM in Miami, Florida. Mr. Prado, thanks very much for being with us.

Mr. EDGAR PRADO (Jockey): It's very nice to be here.

SIMON: Well, and of course we want to specify the obvious, this is being prerecorded earlier in the week before you were riding Adriano on Saturday's Kentucky Derby.

Mr. PRADO: Yes, I'm looking forward, you know?

SIMON: Something about you first, you grew up in Peru and sometimes, I love this story, joined your father sleeping in the stables with sick horses.

Mr. PRADO: Yes. Yes, we did, you know. My father's a very loving, caring person, he love animals, he love horses, and one of the horses got real sick, he wanted to be sure everything goes okay, you know. And I was right next to him, feeding the horse, take care of him, just trying to give him comfort and try to be sure everything goes nice and smooth.

SIMON: Barbaro came into your life just as your mother was preparing to leave your life.

Mr. PRADO: Yes. My mother was everything for me and she was very strong. She always remember we had to be decent, clean, and honest. She was here for a little while and then went back to Peru and then in the nineties have to come back to this country again. I was trying to do everything I can to bring my mother because we just find out she had a cancer. And I was very devastated because I wanted to bring my mother to have a good chance to fight the cancer.

SIMON: Um-hum.

Mr. PRADO: I was trying to find a good cause for the derby at sometime. I knew that at the time that Barbaro was very special and I tried to spend time with Barbaro, but at the same time I was trying to see my mother too. So it was a very hard situation at the moment.

SIMON: What was it like to race Barbaro?

Mr. PRADO: Barbaro was very special, you know. What it is is that he was enjoying it, every single minute. He was put to the test. He would get - loved to run and I think he loved the wipe out after the race, you know. I can see his ears flipping around, his eyes getting real bright. He was a very smart horse and he was very proud of the job that he accomplished.

SIMON: I'm afraid I have to bring you - bring you back to that fateful day at the Preakness. The way you describe it in the book, you had to stop him from running.

Mr. PRADO: Yes.

SIMON: He would have kept on going.

Mr. PRADO: I felt something right away and I don't care about the race, I don't care about anything. I pull him up and pray and hope that the doctors trying to save him and I'm given another change.

SIMON: Mr. Prado, in this book, you and John Eisenberg describe a moment in Barbaro's stall that afternoon.

Mr. PRADO: Yes, I went to the stall and I hollered and he let me put his head on my shoulder. I can feel that he was in pain and it was our time together, just me and him.

SIMON: Were you communicating in that moment, or when you'd see him over the next few months in the hospital or in the stables?

Mr. PRADO: Yeah. And well, and he let me know exactly. He was a horse with a lot of personality. I take a drive from the video club in the morning and go to see him because it takes about three and a half hours to go to the hospital. He let me know that - when he wanted to see people and when not.

SIMON: Now for the life of a big time jockey, you constantly have to be on airplanes. You're flying all over the world, aren't you?

Mr. PRADO: Yeah. Well, I spend more time in the air than I spend in the ground.

SIMON: But you kept coming back to this town in Pennsylvania to see Barbaro.

Mr. PRADO: Yes, I went to see him six times. My wife, she was big part of that too. My wife, my kids, everybody in the family really love him.

SIMON: I guess I don't have to tell you Mr. Prado, Roy and Gretchen Jackson, who own Barbaro, were criticized by some people for going through those extraordinary measures for so many months, multiple surgeries to try and keep Barbaro going. What do you think of those arguments?

Mr. PRADO: I think it - they've given their best to try to happen. Believe me, I've been going to see Barbaro. He wasn't that uncomfortable, but he never was really on pain and he was doing his best every single day. I mean it was a great patient, like a human just trying to overcome something that was against their odds.

SIMON: You think that a great deal was learned and a great deal was accomplished by the effort to keep Barbaro alive all those months?

Mr. PRADO: Oh, yeah, absolutely. Unfortunately, something good had to come on out of the something bad.

SIMON: Can you tell us about Nicanor?

Mr. PRADO: Yeah, Nicanor is - actually he's named after my uncle.

SIMON: This is Barbaro's...

Mr. PRADO: Full brother.

SIMON: Yeah. So you're going to ride Nicanor when the time comes for him to start racing?

Mr. PRADO: I would love to ride him. Hopefully he continues to do what Barbaro has started. You know, that would make a lot of people happy.

SIMON: Mr. Prado, thank you so much.

Mr. PRADO: Oh, thank you.

SIMON: Edgar Prado, his new book is My Guy Barbaro: A Jockey's Journey Through Love, Triumph, and Heartbreak with America's Favorite Horse.

You're listening to Weekend Edition Saturday from NPR News. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

Scott Simon is one of America's most admired writers and broadcasters. He is the host of Weekend Edition Saturday and is one of the hosts of NPR's morning news podcast Up First. He has reported from all fifty states, five continents, and ten wars, from El Salvador to Sarajevo to Afghanistan and Iraq. His books have chronicled character and characters, in war and peace, sports and art, tragedy and comedy.