Jockey Hernandez Shows Amazing Horsemanship For Win At Santa Anita

If Juan Hernandez captures Santa Anita's jockey crown by one victory, he can point to Saturday's seventh race as the difference maker.

The 29-year-old native of Veracruz, Mexico, had all he could do to stay in the saddle after his mount, Fly the Sky, stumbled badly breaking from the rail at the start of the 1 1/8-mile turf event, let alone winning by a neck in a breathtaking display of athleticism and horsemanship.

As the Equibase chart reads: “Fly the Sky stumbled badly leaving the gate and almost unseated the rider, Hernandez recovered impressively and was able to regain his irons shortly after, settled inside, tipped out to the two path on the far turn, split foes in upper stretch, steered out in the final furlong, surged late outside the top pair and nailed Niles Channel in the closing moments.”

Words don't do it justice. You have to see it to believe it.

Click here for a video of the race.

“Juan was just about over the horse's head, but the horse got up quickly and kind of pulled him back onto him,” said Steve Knapp, trainer of Fly the Sky.

“When the horse took off, Juan had his left foot in the left stirrup but his right foot was all the way on the other side of the horse, and when he was about to fall over, his right leg was all the way on the left side of the horse, so he had both legs on the left side of the horse.

“He was very strong to pull himself up and get his foot back into the right stirrup. It was incredible. He said when the horse got up, he just took off and put himself into the race.”

Fly the Sky provided the 62nd win for Hernandez at the current meet, leaving him 10 behind departed leader Flavien Prat, currently riding regularly at Keeneland.

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Supplemented Disco Pharoah Launches 2022 MATCH Series With Whiteley Victory At Laurel

In a field of well-seasoned sprinters for the kick-off of the 2022 Mid-Atlantic Thoroughbred Championships (MATCH) Series April 16 at Laurel Park, it was the lightly raced Disco Pharoah who took the lead in the final furlong and pulled away to win the $100,000 Frank Y. Whiteley Stakes.

The seven-furlong Whiteley was the first of five stakes in this year's 3-Year-Olds and Up Sprint—Dirt division. MATCH will continue April 23 at Laurel with stakes in the other three divisions that make up this year's schedule.

Trained at Belmont Park by Raymond Handal, Disco Pharoah, who was supplemented to the Whiteley, won a maiden special weight event at Aqueduct by 19 1/2 lengths in his previous outing. The 4-year-old gelding by American Pharoah had raced only two other times in the fall of 2021.

Ridden by Jevian Toledo, Disco Pharoah raced just behind a duel between Borracho and War Tocsin before edging toward the lead nearing the top of the stretch. He quickly opened up by 3 1/2 lengths and finished 3 1/4 lengths in front at the finish in 1:23.64 on a track rated fast.

Saddled by Lacey Gaudet for Handal, Disco Pharaoh paid $5to win as the slight favorite in a seven-horse field.

Disco Pharoah was bred in Kentucky by Ralph Kinder and Erv Woolsey.

“I really didn't get much instructions on how to ride him,” Toledo said. “I placed him close because of the way he ran last time, and when I asked him, he just took off. I felt like I had a ton of horse.”

Ejetero LLC's Mohaafeth, who was last early in the Whiteley, rallied widest of all on the turn and in the stretch to nose out Threes Over Deuces for second.

Mohaafeth, a 4-year-old Tapit gelding, had eight starts coming into the Whiteley, including an entry-level allowance win at Laurel at the one-turn mile in his previous start. He broke his maiden at seven furlongs.

“I think he ran very well (given the jump in class),” said trainer Elvis Trujillo, who owns Mohaafeth. “I think he's better with a little more distance, but we'll try to keep him in the MATCH Series. We just need to make sure everything is good with him.”

The next race in the division is the $100,000 Chocolatetown Stakes at six furlongs on June 17 at Hollywood Casino at Penn National Race Course.

After the first leg at Laurel, the division standings by points are as follows: Disco Pharoah (10), Mohaafeth (7), Threes Over Deuces (5), Youngest of Five (3), War Tocsin (2), Sir Alfred James (1) and Borracho (1).

The MATCH Series offers $2.2 million in purse money and more than $400,000 in bonus money. The distribution offers up to $92,500 per division and $30,000 for the overall champion by points. For each division, first place pays $30,000 to the owner and $15,000 to the trainer; for second, $20,000/$10,000; and for third, $10,000/$7,500. For the overall champion, the owner receives an additional $20,000 and the trainer $10,000.

The 2022 participating organizations are the Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association, Pennsylvania THA, Pennsylvania Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association, Parx Racing, Hollywood Casino at Penn National Race Course, Pennsylvania Horse Breeders Association, 1/ST Racing, Maryland THA, Laurel Park, Maryland Horse Breeders Association, Colonial Downs, Virginia HBPA, and Virginia Thoroughbred Association.

The MATCH Series originally debuted in 1997 and ran for five years. It returned with great success in 2018 and was held in 2019 and 2021. The innovative regional racing series—the only one of its kind in horse racing—combines rich stakes and bonuses for participating owners and trainers who compete over a five- to seven-month span. Horses competing in MATCH earn points based on participation and order of finish in each series race, and the leading point-earners in each of the series divisions, as well as the owner and trainer of the overall points leader, win lucrative bonuses.

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Flightline ‘Moving Forward’ With Second Workout On Comeback Trail

Runhappy Malibu Stakes (G1) winner Flightline, who missed a scheduled start in the San Carlos Stakes (G2) March 5 due to a strained right hock, had his second workout on the comeback trail Sunday in preparation for the Metropolitan Handicap (G1) at Belmont Park June 11.

Trainer John Sadler had former jockey and current assistant trainer Juan Leyva aboard for the four-furlong drill, saying it was “routine and he went nice.”

Flightline was given a time of :47.20 by Santa Anita clockers. The $1 million son of Tapit had his first breeze upon his return last Sunday, going three furlongs in :37 flat.

The $1.2 million Metropolitan Handicap, or Met Mile, is a one-turn event.

“The horse is doing well, but it's a process to get him back to where he was,” Sadler said after his first breeze back.

“Step one was last Sunday, step two was this Sunday, so we're moving forward.”

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