Like many in harness racing, Collin Workman did not begin his foray into the business through the traditional path of following in the footsteps of family members. Despite the challenge, the 26-year-old Sewell, New Jersey native recently scored his first pari-mutuel win, guiding the pacer Racing For Rick (Western Maverick) to victory on March 29 at Freehold.
As the youngest of five children (brothers Cody and Damien, sisters Misty and Megan), Collin, began working with rodeo horses from a very young age in Cowtown, New Jersey. His mother Staci is a special needs schoolteacher, and his father is a union truck driver.
āMy dad was a rodeo clown on the weekends,ā Collin explained. āI grew up rodeoingābull and bronc riding. When I was a teenagerāin middle schoolāI was with my dad every Saturday night, as Cowtown has a rodeo from May through September. A few years later I started traveling with Dave Martin, a local rodeo guy, through Pennsylvania and a few other places.ā
After graduating from Salem County Vocational and Technical School in 2016, where he focused on carpentry, Collin continued to focus on rodeoing. That all changed five years ago, however, when Collin broke his ankle due to an especially fractious bucking horse.
āI wasnāt sure what I was going to do after that,ā Collin admitted. āI had worked my senior year part time for a small construction business and also at a place called EP Henryāthey make cement blocks and pavers. But we averaged about 84 hours a week and I had enough of it after three years; it was dusty, demanding work. So, I went back to school to learn how to work on boat engines. I love working on boats and right before I went back to school, I hit a deer and totaled my car, and decided to push school back to the fall.
āMy girlfriend, Brielle Roman, who was working for Chris Ryder at the time, told me that he was looking for a groom for the summer, so I went and talked with Chris, and he hired me,ā Collin added.
That was exactly two years ago, in April 2022, and Collin is still working for Ryder, who has 65 horses at Winnerās Training Center in Chesterfield, New Jersey. A quick study, Collin has progressed from caretaker to second trainer in a relatively short time.
āI started out cleaning stalls and taking care of horses, and then gravitated up from grooming,ā Collin offered. āChris moved me up to his main barn and gave me better horses to take care of and made me a second trainer.ā
In the meantime, Collin and Brielle have acquired six horses of their own, also housed at Winnerās.
āI never have any problems and enjoy working for Chris because I show up and do my job,ā Collin stressed. āBrielle and I began our day at five in the morning taking care of our own horses, and then I start at Chrisā barn at seven. Chris has a ton of horses, and at times it can be overwhelming, but we get it done.
āChris is a good, honest guy,ā Collin continued. āEverything I know about training I learned from Chrisāhis biggest strength is having a good opinion about horses. He treats every horse as an individual.Ā Ā I see a lot of trainers who put the same stuff on all their horses, and Chris doesnāt do that. He definitely cares about integrity and the horses themselves. Heās honest. I went to Chrisā barn, the first harness training I knew, and I never left. I love going to the barn every day and sometimes I never want to leave.ā
The calm demeanor of Standardbreds initially came as a bit of a surprise to Collin.
āWhen I was in my mid-teens and early 20s, I had taken care of some Thoroughbreds and Quarter Horses for some people,ā Collin said. āWhat shocked me the most was how nice and easy the harness horses were to deal with. Also, itās wild that these horses can trot at such high speeds, since horses are genetically inclined to gallop. Thatās amazing.ā
Collin says the first horse that he ever trained the Western Ideal pacer, Barrage Hanover, p, 3, 1:51 ($91,926)āfor Ryder in 2022, will be one he will always remember.
āBarrage was an average horse, but he was the first horse that Chris let me train, and even though we really werenāt going a fast mile, to me it felt like we were flying, and Iāll never forget that first time,ā Collin admitted. āLater, I got to sit behind Walner Payton (Walner-Lonely Lady-Muscle Hill) quite a few times, and she will always be special to me as well.ā
Walner Payton 3, 1:51.4 ($801,701) won the $105,900 International Stallion Stakes at 2 and was second in both her Breeders Crown elim and final in 2022, and as a sophomore won her Hambo Oaks elim and the $78,000 Bluegrass Stakes at Lexingtonāboth in 1:51.4.
āBeing in Lexington was like nowhere else I had ever been,ā Collin stressed. āItās a whole different world racing there. I feel like horse racing should be at places like The Red Mileāwhere everyone hangs out and youāre in a beautiful setting. The Meadowlands is nice, but itās all concrete, and after the races everyone just packs up and goes home. At The Red Mile, there is a lot going on in the barn area, and people spend time together, and the atmosphere is great for the horses.ā
Enamored by the horses and the business, Collin purchased his first horse, a pacer named Legato, a son of Art Director-Badlandās Legacy-Badlands Hanover) in October 2022.
āBrielle got me my first horse through some Facebook connections,ā Collin said. āShe and I had met during Covid when she was working for a riding horse barn, and weāve been together ever since.ā
Collin began qualifying horses in July of 2023, with his first start coming at the Meadowlands behind Legato. He had 11 qualifiers under his belt last year, and four more in early 2024, before going behind the gate for the first time in his pari-mutuel debut as a āPā driver on March 15, steering the 11-year-old Racing For Rick (Western Maverick) to a second-place finish at Freehold. Three starts later, on March 29, he piloted the same mare to a front-stepping 1:59.1 triumph at Freehold.
āMy first wināit happened so quick,ā Collin recalled. āI thought I had a good chance to win this raced, as I knew if I got her on the front, I more than likely had it wrapped up.ā
Collin, who has hunter green, black, and white silks, says while he is happy in his current situation, he would someday like to settle down near The Red Mile.
āOur end goal, for Brielle and me, is to end up in Lexington,ā he said. āIām happy where Iām at now, but I see Kentucky, with all the opportunities that are springing up there, as the place a lot of horsemen will want to be in years to come.ā
by Kimberly Rinker, for Harnesslink