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Kenneth McPeek

Kenneth G. McPeek (born August 2, 1962) is an American Thoroughbred racehorse trainer and bloodstock agent. McPeek gained prominence in 2024 by winning the 150th Kentucky Derby in a three-horse photo finish with the 18:1 underdog Mystik Dan and the Kentucky Oaks with Thorpedo Anna. This achievement marked the first time since 1952 that a trainer swept both prestigious races in the same year, making McPeek the third trainer in history to achieve this feat. McPeek expressed that his proudest accomplishment is achieving this success with what he calls "working class horses." The 2024 Derby win also made McPeek one of only five living trainers who have won all three Triple Crown races.

McPeek won his first classic in 2002 with the 70:1 longshot Sarava in the Belmont Stakes. Eighteen years later, he won the 2020 Preakness Stakes with the filly Swiss Skydiver. In 2024, Lexington, Kentucky Mayor Linda Gorton proclaimed July 2 as Kenny McPeek Day in the city, stating "Kenny has accomplished something very few have, and we are excited to honor him and his many achievements. His success and determination are a great example of what's possible here in the Horse Capital of the World."

McPeek was born at the Fort Chafee military base near Fort Smith, Arkansas, while his father, Ron, was stationed with the 101st Airborne Division. His mother went into labor unexpectedly while visiting Ron. Shortly after Kenny's birth, he and his mother returned to their home in Lexington, Kentucky. Since both of his parents grew up in Lexington and McPeek was raised there, he regards himself as a native of the city.

McPeek's interest in horses and racing was sparked by his father's ownership of several Thoroughbreds. After earning a degree in Business Administration from the University of Kentucky, McPeek interviewed for a position as a stockbroker in New York, but decided his career to be in the Thoroughbred racing industry by taking a job as a hot walker for Shug McGaughey.

In 1985 McPeek obtained his training license when his father tasked him with overseeing some of his race horses. McPeek saddled his first winner, Final Destroyer, owned by his father, at River Downs (now known as Belterra Park) in October 1985.

McPeek's first break came in 1991 when he saddled his first First Stakes Winner, Red Wing, at Canterbury Park. Three years later, in 1994, he won his first graded stakes race in the Beaumont Stakes at Keeneland with Her Temper. In 2002, McPeek achieved his first grade 1 win in the Florida Derby at Gulfstream Park with Harlan's Holiday. The following month, he saddled Take Charge Lady to victory in Keeneland's Ashland Stakes. Later that year, with the Triple Crown on the line for War Emblem, McPeek's colt Sarava caused an upset by winning the Belmont Stakes at odds of 70:1. McPeek was also the recipient of Big Sport of Turfdom Award.

By June 2005 McPeek decided to scale back his training operations, feeling that his stable of 160 horses, in six states, had become too large. He chose to focus on being a bloodstock agent, a shift that led to his purchase of the future two-time Horse of the Year, Curlin, at the Keeneland Yearling September Sale for $57,000. McPeek returned to training in the spring of 2006.

In 2006, McPeek purchased the former Pillar Stud Farm, a 115-acre parcel in Lexington, Kentucky, from William du Pont Jr. McPeek renamed the farm to Magdalena Farm in honor of Magdalena Weber Shely (b. 1793), the original matriarch of the land. The office at Magdalena Farm is the home base for McPeek Racing.

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Thoroughbred trainer and farm owner
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