Joe Bravo: ‘These Horses Don’t Talk, But You Gotta Listen To ‘Em’

With more than 5,500 wins to his credit in a career dating back to 1988, Joe Bravo, a third generation jockey, enters 2022 as a full-time member of the Santa Anita jockey colony and perhaps the early favorite to win the 73rd George Woolf Memorial Jockey Award as one of five finalists along with Glenn Corbett, Julien Leparoux, Rodney Prescott and Tim Thornton.

Bravo, 50, a 13-time leading rider in his native New Jersey, made national news when he decided to shift his tack to Southern California this past summer. “Jersey Joe” sat down for an extensive Q & A to address his past, present and racing's future Friday morning.

Q. Your father and grandfather were both jockeys. Being around the business your entire life, when did you know this is what you were going to do?

A. Really, before I could walk, I kinda knew I was going to be a jockey. There was no way at anytime in my life I was going to be a basketball player, I'll put it like that. I was kind of built for this game. All I ever wanted to do was learn about horse racing. Not too many people know this, but between the ages of 10 years old and 16, I spent that time in Texas. That was kind of my schooling, riding match races and that's where I kind of learned all my skills before I was legal age to start riding.

Q. Would you agree, that for any young jockey, there is no substitute for riding races?

A. It's the experience you get. It's like going out and doing any job, every day you learn something. That's one thing my grandfather told me, 'You can be a 100 years old in this game, and every day, you're going to learn.' You gotta be a sponge. These horses don't talk, but you gotta listen to 'em.

Q. As a young guy coming up in the business, was there any one jock or several jocks that you really admired and respected?

A. Yeah, my father (George Bravo). He really took me by the hand and took me to the right place. Every day, you learn from all these guys. The Hall of Fame riders, the Bill Shoemaker's, the Pat Day's, the Jerry Bailey's, Mike Smith…But one thing you gotta know, jockeys don't make horses go faster. There's no jock that can make a horse go quicker but a jock can make mistakes and you gotta learn by each one you ride out there. You go out there, give it your best, learn to read your animal, that's how you get the most out of 'em.

Q. You're approaching your 34th year in racing. You don't appear to be a big self-promoter. Safe to say you're a guy that likes to let his work, morning and afternoon, speak for itself?

A. The real start to the game is the horses. We're just blessed to be able to be a part of their team when they go out to race. What makes you a great rider is sitting on good horses. So if you go out there and try to ride 10 horses a day that are 30-1, some people might think, 'That's a really bad jockey cause not one of 'em won.' But most of them probably weren't in the right spot. Every horse can win a race but they have to be in the right (race). That's where a good agent and a good jock come together and try to make sure your chess pieces are in the right place when the gates open.

Q. Beyond riding good horses, what are some of the intangibles that make a top rider?

A. It's the experience that comes from reading your horse. You know what wins or loses races? Tell me how much of a turn of foot the horse has. All horses are fast…But it's being able to read them. Some horses are big, long and lanky and you can't get 'em shut down in behind horses. 'Why did that jock lose ground?' Well look at (the horse), he's built like a basketball player and he needs to get rolling. Other horses are compact and if you put them outside, they're not going to sustain a long run. And that's where experience comes in and you know the animal before the race even starts.

Q. Let's talk now. You've won 22 riding titles in New Jersey. Thirteen titles at Monmouth Park and nine at the Meadowlands. You're forever going to be Jersey Joe. When the New Jersey Racing Commission instituted the radical change with the use of the whip last year, you voted with your feet and came to Southern California last summer.

A. That's pretty much how it was. Jersey will always be home. I'm blessed to be called Jersey Joe. I love it there. There's no better place to live in the summertime than the Jersey Shore and I love Monmouth Park. But with the change in conditions, it makes it tough. (Looking ahead), I'm just hoping that all states follow the same guidelines for safety, medication and riding crop rules. It's almost like watching football and every time you go to a different state, they (would) have different rules. Why should horse racing be any different? I think we should all abide by the same rules, state by state.

Q. Looking back to last summer, you hired Matt Nakatani as your agent and you caught on quick at Del Mar. You ended up fifth in the standings with 21 wins and three stakes. One of the reasons you got off to a fast start was your tremendous ability on the grass. It just seems like win or lose, you have your horses rolling late, when it counts.

A. I do agree, I can win a lot more races on the grass than on the dirt, especially at a big meet. It's being in the right spot at the right time. It's just having a horse with a good turn of foot, you can be last turning for home on the grass…As long as you can punch through pockets when you need to. That's where experience comes in, just being able to read all of that. I take my hat off to Matt Nakatani. He got things all set up and we had a great summer.

Q. As you know, the problem now, is inventory. It's gotta be tough on a guy like you, who's used to riding live horses and riding regularly.

A. I'm gonna be honest. I'm having a little mental problem, having four days off a week. I'm a part time jock again, three days a week, it's tough…Mentally, I just need to take a step back. I am 50 years old and I don't need to be riding 10 races a day, but to have a five-day schedule would be really wonderful in a perfect world.

Q. That said, have you made a decision about where you're going to ride full time for the remainder of the year?

A. For right now, here. I'm here and we're seeing how everything plays out. Like I say, I can't tell you what tomorrow's going to bring. But it's a good living, it's California…We're all looking for that one big, good horse. And there's a couple here…We're looking for the next, best horse.

Q. Speaking of top horses, one of your greatest moments came here at Santa Anita in the 2019 Breeders' Cup Distaff with a longshot named Blue Prize. You got the jump on the even money favorite, Midnight Bisou, what did that win mean to you?

A. That was my first Breeders' Cup winner after riding for 30 years and it really was the icing on the cake, but that will tell you what special horses do. I was able to ride her in a few starts leading up to the Breeders' Cup and she was a very erratic filly, very strong filly. I was able to channel all of that on that afternoon and it's just nice to be able to get on good horses like that.

Q. Finally, the Woolf Award has been presented by Santa Anita since 1950 and most of the greatest names in the history of our game have won it. At this stage of your career, what would it mean to you to win it?

A. A close friend of mine told me that your life's like a painting. Everything you do in life is on that painting at the end of it. Wow, having that award on it, would really make it one helluva career. I think there would only be one other honor that would be bigger, and that's the Hall of Fame. So we just have to go out there and everything we do, hopefully contributes to receiving those kinds of honors.

The 73rd George Woolf Memorial Jockey Award winner will be determined next month by a vote of jockeys nationwide. The winner will be announced in a Winner's Circle ceremony at Santa Anita sometime this spring.

The post Joe Bravo: ‘These Horses Don’t Talk, But You Gotta Listen To ‘Em’ appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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David McCarty Takes Early Lead In National Horseplayers Championship

David McCarty of San Diego leads after Day 1 of the three-day 2022 NTRA National Horseplayers Championship (NHC) presented by Racetrack Television Network, Caesars Entertainment, and Bally's Las Vegas. McCarty amassed a bankroll of $162.80, leading a total of 643 entries from 509 individual players in the richest and most prestigious handicapping contest. All players wagered on 18 races from around North America, including eight mandatory races.

McCarty, a biotechnology consultant, had his biggest score of the day with an optional play in Aqueduct's eighth race. Runningwscissors went gate to wire going six furlongs, paying $29.20 to win and $9.80 to place. He also had longshot winners with Miss Casey ($17.40) in Laurel's fifth and Crafty Princess ($14.20) in the Fair Grounds opener. Overall McCarty cashed with 20 of his 36 win and place plays.

McCarty is making his eighth NHC appearance.

For the complete TVG Leaderboard and other contest information, please visit NTRA.com.

The three-day NHC continues Saturday at the Bally's Event Center, which has been transformed into the world's largest race book. Day 1 bankrolls will carry over to Day 2, which will require mythical wagers on eight mandatory races and 10 optional plays. The top 10% of the field after Day 2 will continue on to the Semifinals round Sunday, and the top 10 will play at the Final Table presented by Caesars Race and Sportsbook and Global Tote, A BetMakers Company, to determine the ultimate rankings, including the $725,000 first-place prize, and Eclipse Award as Horseplayer of the Year.

In the last three years with 36 plays the cut line after Day 2 averaged $183.20 ($192.20 in 2020, $184.20 in 2019, and $173.40 in 2018). Last year there were only 35 races due to a weather cancellation on a mandatory race. This year's top 10 percent will include the top 64 players. The current 64th place spot belongs to Joseph Carnevale with a score of $81.10.

In addition to its three presenting sponsors―RTN, Caesars Entertainment, and Bally's Las Vegas―the NHC is supported by official partners Daily Racing Form, EquinEdge, FanDuel Group, Four Roses Bourbon, NYRA Bets, Race Lens, TVG, and 1/ST Bet. The Final Table, where only the top 10 players advance to determine final placings based on seven climactic races, is sponsored by Caesars Sportsbook and Global Tote, A BetMakers Company.

Tour Winner Costello Playing for $5 Million Bonus

NHC Tour winner Kevin Costello (who goes by his middle name, Kevin, but uses his given first name, Joseph, in tournaments to make his taxes easier) is playing for what would be the biggest single payday in handicapping contest history if he can win this weekend's 23rd NTRA National Horseplayers Championship (NHC) presented by Racetrack Television Network, Caesars Entertainment, and Bally's Las Vegas. On top of the $725,000 first-place prize that everyone is dreaming of, the NHC Tour winner is eligible for a $5 million bonus if he can be the first to pull off the sweep.

The bonus is covered by a policy the NTRA purchases each year via Insurance Office of America (IOA). However, the premium is established for one entry and Costello is double-qualified this year with the maximum two entries. As a result, Costello had to pick which of his entries would be eligible for the bonus. He went with his second entry, which shows on the leaderboard as “Joseph Costello- 2.”

“There's a running joke with my friends that it always seems my second entry does better than my first,” Costello said. “I guess I tend to wing it a little more with my second entry. I have an inkling that, statistically, when I do win tournaments more of them have come from that second entry.”

Costello is a 6-time NHC qualifier.

Costello led the entire field after his first optional play of the day paid $32.40. Unfortunately, the payoff came on Entry 1, which is not eligible for the bonus.

Defending Champion Mustari Aims for Repeat

Justin Mustari, who became the youngest NHC winner in history last August at age 26, is looking to make history again this year as the NHC's first repeat winner.

“It feels good to walk back in this room again after everything that happened in the final race last year,” Mustari said. “It still feels like a miracle.”

Mustari, of Des Plaines, Ill., said after taking down the $725,000 first-place prize at #NHC2021 that he planned to buy a house for himself and girlfriend Paulina. That hasn't happened just yet because Mustari, like the expert horseplayer he is, insists on getting the price he wants.

“We were under contract one time but the seller backed out and the market right now is just so hard,” Mustari said. “I'm not going to buy anything way overvalued so I'm still waiting for the right one.”

Of course, another big check this year could allow Mustari to increase the top of his price range.

“I'm just chipping away today but tomorrow there are a lot of opportunities on the Pegasus card,” Mustari said.

Remington Announcer Day Makes NHC Debut

Track announcer Dale Day of Remington Park is making his NHC debut this year after qualifying in one of the free online contests open to all NHC Tour members on Horseplayers.com. Other track announcers who have qualified over the years include Travis Stone, Vic Stauffer, John Curran, and Nick Tammaro.

“I've been around horse racing a long time but I've never seen anything like this,” Day said. “You come down here in the morning and you just feel the anxiety.”

Day started playing in qualifiers three years ago after trying the free contest presented by “At the Races with Steve Byk.”

“I joined the NHC Tour after that and I've only played the free contests but now that I've been here and seen it I already know I'm going to be playing a lot more to try to get back,” Day said.

Day regaled a gaggle of NHC regulars with a story about a long-ago visit to Las Vegas with NHC Tournament Director and NTRA COO Keith Chamblin, who once worked with Day at Remington.

“It was December 1994 and we had just finished our season,” Day said. “Chamblin suggested we go to Vegas and we ended up with a big group from Remington.”

The group stayed at Barbary Coast and had a great time. After the first two nights, though, one member of the crew noticed that their considerable supply of booze, cigars and Daily Racing Forms seemed to be diminishing faster than could realistically be expected. The rest of the group chalked it up to excessive consumption.

Day came back to his room on the third afternoon and noticed that it smelled like cigar smoke, even though the group had been out all day. And that is when he found a stranger trying to hide in the back of the closet with a lit cigar and a fifth of whiskey.

“I was just buzzed enough to not be as scared as I should have been,” Day recalled. “I just looked at him and said, 'What are you doing?' He said it was his room. I told him, 'No, this is my room.' And then he jumped up and elbowed me and ran for it.”

Hotel security nabbed the trespasser, who confessed that he had been breaking into the room each day and helping himself to the Remington stash. Police later learned that the suspect had collected keys (back in the day of actual room keys as opposed to cards) from dozens of local hotels and had been ransacking them regularly for months.

Barbary Coast did reimburse Day for his room.

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Rathasker’s Rising Tide

When standing a stallion there appears to be a defined path that most are destined to follow. Busy in year one, numbers drop in year two and three, and then your fate is sealed on whether their first crop can run or not. In the case of Bungle Inthejungle (Ire) and Coulsty (Ire), both have proven that their stock can run and can compete at the top level, with Winter Power (Ire) and Shantisara (Ire) having won Group 1 races for both sires, respectively. This gives Maurice and Madeline Burns of Rathasker Stud, where the stallions call home, every reason to be excited for the year ahead.

“Winter Power, who was a very good 2-year-old and progressed at three to win the G1 Nunthorpe S. at York, is very typical of Bungle's [stock],” says Maurice Burns. “They're precocious, they're strong, they have loads of speed and it's just another feather in his cap to produce a Group 1 winner. Because she showed how high a Bungle can go, his yearlings last year sold extremely well and have gone to some very, very good trainers.”

Last year's crop of yearlings made up to €125,000, which is 10 times the stud fee those horses were conceived on, and the “good trainers” who have a Bungle Inthejungle 2-year-old include Mark and Charlie Johnston, Michael Dods, and John Quinn among others. No doubt the icing on the cake for Bungle Inthejungle's 2021 season is the fact that Winter Power was bred by Maurice's brother Patrick Burns of Newlands House Stud.

Bungle Inthejungle's first crop were quick to suggest that he is a sire capable of getting precocious 2-year-olds, and in the first months of the flat season in 2018 there was hardly a juvenile maiden that went by without a Bungle Inthejungle either winning or catching the eye, most notably through Rumble Inthejungle (Ire) winning the G3 Molecomb S. at Goodwood. In his second crop, Living In The Past (Ire) won the G2 Lowther S. and so it was only fitting that a Group 1 winner should be found in his third crop.

“It is the same for everyone who has a stallion when they have the first runners,” Burns says. “You're praying that they are going to come out and be precocious, and win, and Bungle just did that. They came out, they ran, they won, he did exactly what we were hoping he would do. He did well the first year, then we filled him up well for the next year and things progressed on from there. Thank God Coulsty also had a good start.”

Boasting some of the best statistics in the book, Coulsty had smaller numbers to go to war with but those that have run have certainly made people stand up and pay attention to the young son of Kodiac (GB).

“He didn't have big crops on the ground but he took every opportunity he got,” said Burns. “The mares he got were bread-and-butter mares but he produced some very good horses and you know there is only one stallion from that crop who has two Group 1 winners and then you have New Bay (GB) and Coulsty with one apiece.”

The aforementioned Shantisara became Coulsty's first top-level winner in the GI Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup at Keeneland and her story has been well documented. A 10,000gns breeze-up purchase by agent Federico Barberini from breeze-up maestro Robson Aguiar, Shantisara's progression has certainly been a rags-to-riches tale and has helped to put a lot of people onto her sire.

Burns added, “On the stats, he's fantastic. A lot of the switched-on breeders are using him this year because last year we had over 100 mares to him. The more numbers you have the better chance you have of producing good horses so we'll see how high he can fly. If he keeps going on the way he's going, he's going to do very, very well.”

The third stallion to make up the Rathasker roster is Gregorian, who has returned to his place of birth and is by the stud's stalwart Clodovil (Ire), who is now retired. Gregorian's progeny have been flying the flag for him worldwide with Gregorian Chant (GB) winning graded races Stateside and his top performer being a Group 2 winner.

“He came up with a good filly in 2020 which was Plainchant (Fr) and she was the top-rated 2-year-old filly in France that year. He's got two stakes-winning horses in California so it means that he's internationally successful,” says Burns. “He's a very solid horse and he's one of those horses that has a very high winners-to-runners ratio.”

All three stallions have been kept at affordable fees for 2022 with Bungle Inthejungle spearheading the roster at €8,000. With their popularity you could hardly blame a considerable jump up in fees for each of their stallions but the patriarch of the family operation explains the decision behind the value to be found in his covering shed.

“We're a small family operation and we have a number of breeders who have used us for years,” says Burns. “You don't want to push them away, you want to keep them in the game with you. As the stallions progress, you take small steps forward and if you take a small step forward then the people who were with you at the start can stay with you. If take a large step you've got a new bunch of clients or maybe you don't have any clients at all.”

As breeders themselves the Burns family recognise the mutual benefits of stallions doing well.

“When you have successful horses on the farm everybody gets a lift from it,” Burns says.  “When you go to the market and people are asking to look at the Bungle or the Coulsty or the Gregorian it is good for us and it's good for our clients. Your farm is based on what stallion you have or what stallions you use, and if your stallions are doing well then it's good for everyone.”

As the breeding season inches ever closer and larger crops start running for the Rathasker stallions it will be no surprise if everyone involved starts taking bigger steps forward together.

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