 So we're at the 2015 NCHA Great American Insurance Summer Spectacular and I'm with the owner of the winning horse Raising the Cache that Gary Gonsal is just one on. And this is Tom Bailey from Carbondale. Congratulations Tom. Thank you very much. How did it feel when you saw Gary ride Raising the Cache the way he did tonight? Well first of all I'm nervous. I'm probably more nervous watching him ride in an event like this than I am riding myself in those little weekend shows. But it's a real thrill to see Gary do so well on the horse. We loved it in Vegas. The Derby is a special win to us. We've had a little bad luck on the other Fort Worth events earlier this year but this is sort of like redemption for us. We love it. Well because we were saying that it's a cool moving horse and there's been a lot of talk about Raising the Cache. He's obviously a champion. Yeah we're thrilled with the horse and both Lisa and myself are like we're very appreciative of that horse and we're very appreciative of the fact that we can own really good horses. We were thrilled to own Raydown Sally which is still at our ranch as a brood mare and it won 400,000 throughout her career and we're thrilled with Elvis. He's up to almost 100,000 maybe a little over that and we've got the rest of the four-year-old here and five and six to compete him. So we're looking forward to that and it's just really a blessing to own horses like that. So Elvis is the barn name? Elvis is the barn name. How did you come up with that? Elvis? We were just naming horses after singers that year, the barn name, but Raising the Cache came because one of the things I did in Wall Street was raised a lot of cash in the 70s, 73, 74, saved the firm a lot of money. And so that's sort of what made Janice and then when we got the horse we called the horse because it's a duare raising the cash. It must be very satisfying to really be with a horse the whole way through. It is, it is, but it's some you buy, some you breed, I mean, but they're your horses, whether you buy them or breed them or things like that, but you're right, having them from a baby from conception and that is special. Now you and Gary have been together about 12 years as a team and Gary has said you've stuck by him through the highs and the lows and it's not often you come across great loyalty like that. What does it mean to you? Well, Gary and I ever since we sort of met out there in California and, you know, I actually was trying to buy Spooky's Cache, which is how I met Gary and, and Jeff Barnes didn't want to sell him. But he said, you want to buy this other horse, which happened to be Spooky Smarty Pants, who was, I think, second in the futurity right behind Chiquita Pistol. And so I ended up buying that. And then I went out and I met Gary at Jeff's place and he put me on some cutting horse. I can't even tell you the name of the thing, but it scared the life out of me. I mean, I was petrified at this thing and Gary's working me back and forth in this thing. And ever since then we've had a sort of special bond. I mean, we think alike about horses, we think about their health, we think, you know, what needs to be sold, what doesn't need to be sold, what's going to work here, what's not going to work here, you know, how we're going to breed horses. And so Gary's been a very, very influential force in the growth of my ranch, Iron Rose, and what we do. So do you think your personal relationship is a big part of the overall success? Yes, I do. I do. What advice do you have for others who are trying to forge this same kind of team? Well, some people, and I think it's probably the prevalent attitude, is that they try to fit the horse to the particular rider or trainer. I don't try to do that. I try to select the trainer. And, you know, I think I've got him. So, you know, Gary and I will be together. I think we've been together a long time and I expect to be together a long time. So you're holding your buckle. Have you had a good look at it yet? Let's open it up and have a look. I haven't had a good look at it yet. She's pretty. It's a beauty of mine. So what are you going to do with the buckle? We're going to display it. We have an area at the ranch where we put all the buckles, whether I win them or Gary wins them or whatever. He wears his, okay? If you notice on mine, okay, it's an expensive buckle. It's not a title button. These are for cowboys. I'm the furthest thing from a cowboy. I'm just a Wall Street finance guy that rides cutting horses. That's what I am. And so you'll be taking these home to Carbondale. Now, third place horse tonight was also a Carbondale horse. Is that right? Which place? Did you say the third place horse tonight was also another Carbondale horse? Aspen. Aspen? Which is 30 miles from... So we're talking pretty local, though. Right. Its owner is Steven Finer. And Steven and I joke about that we're moving weather to Colorado. Right. Good luck with that. Steven's horses are trained by Wesley Galleon and mine are trained by Gary. Well, and Gary also had another horse fourth tonight that Paul hands my road. High-cash Galle, which is owned by Jeff Barnes, who owns the mother of Elvis. Right. Owned the mother of Elvis until I bought it. Right. Well, awesome night for you tonight. Thanks so much for your time. Thank you. Appreciate it.