By Cynthia McFarland
A movie script writer couldn’t have crafted a better finale.
When the hammer dropped on the $3 million Gunner Runner colt at the 2025 Ocala Breeders’ Sales Company March Sale, it was fitting recognition of a man who has been one of the leading consignors of 2-year-olds for the past quarter century.
A favorite on the sale grounds, the colt had captured attention with his blazing fast eighth-mile work in :9.60, but even Eddie Woods, the colt’s trainer and consignor, was pleasantly surprised when Donato Lanni as agent for Zedan Racing, secured the final bid at $3 million, an all-time OBS record.
Surrounded by reporters and fellow horsemen offering heartfelt congratulations, Woods was emotional. Not only did he sell a record-breaking horse, but he did so in his backyard at the sales ground where he’s been active for 31 years. Adding to the impact was the knowledge that he would only hang his consignment boards at one more sale.
After hundreds of stakes winners, multiple Eclipse champions and decades in the industry, Eddie Woods has announced that the 2025 OBS Spring sale would be his final consignment.
As of April 10, 2025, Eddie Woods currently ranks second among Leading Consignors of 2-year-olds for 2025 North America Sales, having sold 19 head for a gross of $6,448,500.
It’s been a long and satisfying journey for the Irish lad from Meath.
Irish-born and bred
Born in 1958, Woods grew up in an Irish family where horses were front and center. His father, Paddy Woods, was a steeplechase jockey turned trainer, so it was no surprise when young Eddie took up the mantle.
“I started as a steeplechase jockey when I was 15 and rode in Ireland and England until I was almost 28,” Woods said.
Over a dozen years of riding races, he managed to avoid catastrophic injury but finally walked away from that rough-and-tumble sport having broken his collarbones numerous times, fractured his cheekbone and having had multiple concussions.
By the mid-1980s, times were changing in Ireland as wealthy international owners bought up property around the family farm. Woods was ready to head for America and try his hand in the Thoroughbred industry there.
He arrived in Ocala in 1986 and immediately sought a farm position but had no background with the breeding end of the business, as his horse experience was all race related.
Woods was hired at Cashel Stud, but the former jockey soon realized working with mares and foals was too slow paced for him. Fortunately, an old family connection provided the solution and only a few weeks later he was working at Tony and Joanne Everard’s Another Episode Training Center.
“My parents had been friends with Tony Everard since childhood; they grew up together,” Woods said. “At the time, Tony was taking consignments to Miami and needed help on the farm while he was gone. I went there and stayed working with him and Joanne for about eight years.”
Woods admits coming to Ocala from Ireland was a bit of a culture shock.
“It’s a different ball game here with training, even though we had flat horses at home. The biggest things were the dirt and the turns. At that time, all racing at home was on turf. We trained on other surfaces, but only raced on grass,” Woods said.
As he worked for the Everards, learning the ins and outs of training horses and juvenile consignments, there was no question in Woods’ mind that this was the direction he wanted to pursue.
“In 1993, I got fortunate to meet Bobby Spalding (farm manager of Elmendorf Farm in Lexington) at the Keeneland November Sale. He was looking for someone to train the Elmendorf horses in Florida,” Woods said.
It was the opportunity Woods needed to go out on his own. Before the year ended, he’d rented a barn in the 700-acre Classic Mile Park training center in Ocala.
“I rented one barn before the end of 1993, and it was full. Shortly after that I needed another one. To begin with, it was all Elmendorf horses, but it gradually expanded,” he noted.
“Joe Greeley, who owned Sabine Stables, came over to Classic Mile one day during the winter of ‘93-‘94 and asked if I’d like to help him buy some yearlings to go to the 2-year-old sales. He had his own farm to train them, and they’d come to me to get finished up and I’d consign them for the sales. Bob Kelly partnered with him. We bought a horse at Saratoga and several at the Keeneland September Sale. They gave me an opportunity to buy some quality horses,” Woods said.
He took his first consignment of 2-year-olds in his own name to OBS in April 1994 for the Spring Sale. He couldn’t have known it then, but it was the start of a legacy.
Woods continued leasing barns at Classic Mile until 1996, when he moved to Post Time Training Center with 70 to 80 horses. His client base continued to expand and included a good contingent of horses from owner Ken Ramsey.
Also among his clients at the time were Dennis Foster and Bob Leonard.
“Bob wanted to buy some land with rolling hills because he liked his horses to train uphill,” recalled Woods, who had been training out of Post Time for about three years when Foster and Leonard bought a 414-acre piece of property on Highway 40 west of Ocala.
“The same day they bought that property in 2000, I bought 240 acres off them. Dennis was my banker for this whole deal,” Woods said.
Woods finally had the land to develop an operation tailored to his specifications, which is exactly what he did. Eddie Woods Stables grew to six barns with a total of 196 stalls, 41 paddocks, multiple round pens, a one-mile dirt track and a seven-furlong turf course.
Making an Impact

Photo by Serita Hult
From the late 1990s all the way through 2024, Eddie Woods consistently ranked among the leading consignors of 2-year-olds in North America.
A homebred Sabine Stable filly was one of Woods’ first sale homeruns. He consigned the Hennessy filly at the 2000 Fasig-Tipton Florida Select Two-Year-Olds in Training Sale where she brought $1.65 million from buyer Eugene Melnyk. Harmony Lodge became a multiple graded stakes winner of $851,120 for the Melnyks.
Woods can’t name a favorite out of the many horses that have come through his barns and gone on to success at the track. He does admit that the “firsts” are always the most memorable. There are several equine stars in his earlier years who helped establish Woods in the upper echelon of training and 2-year-old sales.
“I feel things grew because of them,” Woods said of such standout graduates as Left Bank, 2002 champion older horse; Midnight Lute, 2007 champion sprinter and winner of the 2007 and 2008 Breeders’ Cup Sprint (G1); Big Brown, 2008 Kentucky Derby (G1) and Preakness Stakes (G1) winner and 2008 3-Year-Old colt Eclipse champion; Lady Eli, 2017 turf female Eclipse champion and winner of the 2014 Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf (G1); Spring in the Air, Grade 1 winner in the United States and 2012 champion 2-year-old filly in Canada; and Union Rags, multiple graded stakes winner, including the 2012 Belmont Stakes (G1) and later, a successful sire.
Numbers Don’t Lie
Woods’ program has produced hundreds of stakes winners, both from horses that have gone through his training program and/or his consignments.
In 2002, Eddie Woods was the leading consignor of Grade 1 winners in North America. From 2015 through 2018, Woods was the leading consignors of 2-year-olds for North American sales. In 2024, he ranked fourth among leading juvenile consignors, having sold 49 head for a total of $10,060,500.
At the 2024 Eclipse Awards program this past January, two of Woods’ training grads were recognized with championship honors as Citizen Bull was named champion 2-year-old male, and National Treasure was named champion older dirt male. Both horses were trained by Bob Baffert.
Among recent Woods’ training grads is the Medaglia d’Oro filly Good Cheer, a multiple graded stakes winner of $877,630 who in March added the Fair Grounds Oaks (G1) to her victories. The Godolphin homebred and Brad Cox trainee is high on the list of 2025 Kentucky Oaks (G1) contenders.
“It was a great moment when the Gun Runner colt topped the OBS March 2025 Sale at a record-breaking price of $3 million under the Eddie Woods banner. What a way to put an exclamation point on a great career! Now, let’s hope the horse becomes a star on the racetrack,” OBS President Tom Ventura said.
“Eddie has earned the trust and respect of owners, trainers and horsemen from around the world. His horsemanship is unparalleled and his honest and straightforward approach is appreciated by all those that rely on his opinion,” Ventura said.
“The quality of horses that the Eddie Woods team has sold at OBS has helped propel us to be the leading source of 2-year-olds in training in the world. We are thankful for all his contributions to OBS and will continue to lean on him in the future for his insight and perspective,” he added.
Sales and Races
Woods’ remarkable success as a trainer and consignor have resulted both from horses purchased specifically for sales and from horses trained for clients who race.
“It’s been a cross section. We’ve always had horses in the barn for race clients. I think in recent years, we’ve probably produced more successful horses from the training end, not the sales end,” Woods said.
Whether he’s working with pinhooks or homebreds, Woods always has high hopes for quality horses with good pedigrees.
“We’ve had some great clients who’ve sent us hand-picked horses,” he said.
He points out that the sales offer their own unique trials, as opposed to just preparing a horse to race.
“The sales are quite challenging,” he said. “It’s great when you’ve brought one who vets well, works well and sells well. You’re kind of proud of yourself then,” he said, adding that the $3 million OBS March colt fell into this category and checked all the boxes.

Photo by Serita Hult
Solid Connections
It’s often said, “it’s not what you know, but who you know.” In Woods’ case, it happens to be both.
He is the first to say that his connections with good people in the industry through the years have been instrumental in his success. This also applies to running his own farm where he’s been blessed to have a core group of employees who have worked with him from the beginning.
“We’ve been fortunate to have really good staff, who are the backbone of our operation. We’ve had the same vet, Bill Russell, from the get-go,” Woods said.
Woods’ son David is also involved in the racing industry and works with FanDuel Sports Network.
In 2001, Woods met Angela Mellerick, who’d apprenticed at Highclere with hopes of being a jockey.
“She came to the U.S. from England to teach summer camps, worked for some steeplechase trainers in Aiken and ended up in Kentucky, which is where we met. We’ve been together a long time and got married in 2018,” Woods said.
“Angela had her own successful business in Kentucky. She leased broodmare farms where she prepped yearlings for prominent operations and had mares for multiple clients. We had a long-distance relationship for a while, and she gave up her business to come down here to Ocala. It was a huge move on her part,” Woods acknowledged.
He appreciates Angela’s knowledge and horsemanship, noting that she plays a significant role in every aspect of the operation, especially when it comes to buying and selling at the sales.
“She’s a fabulous judge of a horse and an extremely hard worker—at the sales and at home on the farm. She’s part of this seven days a week,” says Woods, who values Angela’s input and level-headed approach—to business and life.
Swan Song

Photo by Judit Seipert
Woods has made it clear that the 2025 OBS Spring Sale was his last venture as a consignor, but simply walking away from the industry isn’t the kind of retirement Woods envisions.
“I plan on still being involved. People have approached me about doing some consulting and I may partner up on a few horses,” he said.
“I don’t see us opening up a bait shop or anything,” quipped Woods, who enjoys boating and saltwater fishing. He and Angela have a place in the fishing town of Cedar Key on the Gulf in northwest Florida where they enjoy getting out on the water and dropping a line.
He jokes that he probably won’t be spending much time on the golf course.
“I played some golf, but as bad as I was, I didn’t think I’d improve as I got older,” he said.
Travel is a passion that had to take a backseat due to the demands of training and prepping sale horses, but it’s definitely on the agenda going forward.
“Now we can have time to do things we couldn’t afford to do when we were younger. We plan to travel and see some of the world,” Woods said.
This fall, Eddie and Angela will head out on a three-week adventure that will take them across northern Australia, Papua New Guinea, and wrap up on the stunning beaches of Bali.
As Woods attended to last-minute details of his final consignment on April 15 -18 at OBS, he was characteristically pragmatic, but also optimistic.
Among the 38 horses he entered in this Spring Sale, he didn’t anticipate another record-breaking sale topper like the $3 million colt in March. But he had a solid group. No doubt, some of these will add to his expanding list of stakes-winning graduates.
More than anything, Eddie Woods comes across as satisfied in the sunset of his career.
“I never wanted to do anything else,” he says simply of his life’s work over the past four decades.
Not many people can say with conviction that they wouldn’t have chosen another path in life. Eddie Woods is one of the few who can.