‘I Always Wanted To Be Like My Dad’: Juan Hernandez Riding High Atop Del Mar’s Standings

There was a collective sigh of relief in the Santa Anita and Del Mar jockey colonies last spring when Flavien Prat moved his tack back east. Several established riders, sensing a golden opportunity, moved out to Southern California in hopes of filling the Prat void. Lost in all the commotion was a 30-year old rider who had quietly climbed to the top of the jockey standings with no intention of relinquishing his grip.

Juan Hernandez has kept the momentum going and jumped out to an early lead at the Del Mar summer meet, winning 19 races through the first 12 days, seven better than his closest competitor, Umberto Rispoli. He has a 23% win percentage and lands in the money 55% of the time. He's already exceeded $1 million in earnings at Del Mar with $1,371,096.

“I'm really happy for the people who have supported me a lot,” Hernandez said. “They've given me nice opportunities on these horses so, yeah, I'm just really happy right now.”

Through Thursday (August 11), Hernandez has compiled earnings of over $8.2 million in 2022, bringing his career earnings mark to over $57 million and making him currently the ninth-leading rider in the country. He had his best year in terms of earnings last year, collecting over $11 million in purses, good enough to rank 13th in the nation.

As is usually the case, Hernandez' success is the result of a lot of hard work behind the scenes. He credits his agent, Craig O'Bryan, with lifting him to consecutive riding titles. He clinched the crown at last year's Del Mar's fall meet and followed it up with an impressive run during Santa Anita's winter/spring session.

“My agent works hard,” Hernandez notes. “He's the one picking the good horses and he's (the one) asking for us to ride. I just get on them and do the rest.”

Hernandez won his first rider's title at Del Mar last fall when he unseated Flavien Prat from the top spot after finishing second to Prat during the summer meet. He won four graded stakes at Del Mar in 2021 and had 15 grade stakes victories overall last year. That exceeded the 11 he had collected from 2010 to 2020. This year, he won 15 graded stakes alone at Santa Anita. He says the keys to his success are quite simple.

“A lot of dedication,” he says. “A lot of work in the mornings and the support from the owners and trainers.”

Being a jockey has been a lifelong dream for Hernandez, who spent his early years growing up on a small ranch outside of Vera Cruz, Mexico.

“They had cows and donkeys and work horses,” Hernandez says. “My dad was galloping the Quarter horses on the ranch and sometimes he would bring me (with him). He would also take me to the match races in Vera Cruz when he was riding. After the first race I was in love with horses and I knew I wanted to be a jockey. I was little and I always wanted to be like my dad.”

When Hernandez was nine, his family moved to Mexico City.

“My dad got a job at the racetrack,” Juan says. “Sometimes he would take me to the track and throw me on a horse after the horse galloped and I'd just take a couple turns in the shedrow. That was a good feeling for me 'cause I was feeling like I was a jockey.”

As long as Hernandez can remember he dreamed of coming to the United States.

“Soon as I started riding in Mexico City, I was watching the races at Santa Anita and all over the USA because my dream was to come here and ride at these beautiful tracks,” he said.

Hernandez immigrated to the U.S. in 2009 and, had it not been for an understanding immigration official, his story could have been very different from the one we've seen play out over the past few years.

“I came here on December 24th,” Hernandez begins. “I went to Puerto Rico first. They have a big race over there for the Caribbean countries like Mexico, Panama, Puerto Rico and Venezuela. I got a visa for one month. So I went to Puerto Rico and rode there for two weeks. I finished second in the big race. I was a bug boy and won one race. A trainer I was riding for said: 'You should ride in the USA before your visa expires.' So I went back to Mexico and packed my things.”

Hernandez said he had a hard time getting into the U.S. because his visa was only for Puerto Rico. Finally, after four hours in an immigration office in San Francisco, amid threats of being sent back to Mexico, an officer allowed him entry.

“I told him: 'I don't have a job; I'm just here to find an agent who can help me with my papers' and (the officer) said: 'I'm going to give you one week.'”

The one week turned into two months and before long Hernandez had the papers and permission he needed to stay in the U.S. and pursue his riding career.

“I wanted to ride with the best riders here and when I told my parents I was coming here I was 17. My mom didn't want me to leave but I told her it was for just a couple of years. I would make money, save money and then come back. So they said: 'OK'.”

It's now been 12 years and Hernandez has married and has two boys. Before coming to Southern California to ride fulltime, he left his mark on the Northern California circuit with a couple of riding titles at Golden Gate Fields, winning the 2020 winter/spring meet by 78 victories.

It's not all hard work and no play for Hernandez. On his day off, he hits the gym in the morning and then might go play golf with some of the jockeys in the afternoon. But he mostly loves to spend time with his family. They're in San Diego for the summer.

“We went to the zoo the other day,” Hernandez says. “They're going to be here for another week and then they have to go back because my kids have school up in LA. I'm just trying to enjoy the time with them before they go back.”

He's been riding horses since he was 6-years old and first got up on a Thoroughbred when he was 14. With the way things are going, there are going to be a lot of fellow jockeys who will rue the day that happened.

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August Debut for Haras de Beaufay

DEAUVILLE, France — Haras de Beaufay is one of the new names on the list of consignors this August at Arqana and its debut draft of two yearlings is in line with the farm manager's ambition to take things “step by step” as the new team carves out a reputation in a competitive field.

The stud, based near Gace in Normandy, was bought in 2016 by Czech breeder Jiri Travinicek, who set about turning it into a semi-commercial broodmare farm for his own mares and those owned by clients. Three years ago that dream became reality when Haras de Beaufay became fully operational under the management of Emmanuel Talvard, who grew up nearby on his family's famed Haras du Cadran.

“Our main target now is improving the quality of the broodmares and welcoming new clients,” said Talvard during a quick break between showing yearlings at Arqana on Friday. “We have some German, French, and Czech clients. This is just the beginning. We have been in operation for three years but we are taking it step by step.”

From the original farm purchase, Travinicek, has subsequently added two new parcels of lands to expand Haras de Beaufay to 160 hectares spread across two separate farms. 

“This is a new place and it is a lovely farm with nice barns and good pasture,” Talvard added. “We have 100 hectares for broodmares and 60 for yearlings. Mr Travinicek has a real passion for it. He visits regularly from Czech and he loves his horses. We are in touch every week.”

Talvard's own education in the thoroughbred business came not just under his father, Pierre, the breeder of dual Group 1 winner Qemah (Ire) (Danehill Dancer {Ire}), but also at Haras du Logis.

“I worked for my father for 14 years; he was my mentor and he taught me everything I know,” he said. “He's a hard worker so you have to be a hard worker to work for Pierre. I also worked for Julian Ince for three years and it was great to see the stallion side of the business. They were two good schools for me.”

Haras du Cadran is one of the bigger consignors at Arqana, and is selling 25 yearlings over the next three days, but Beaufay will be starting with a more modest draft of two. Lot 80, a colt from the final French-conceived crop of Wootton Bassett (GB), is being sold on behalf of his breeders Gonzague Baijot and Jean-Jacques Rahier and is out of the winning Harbour Watch (Ire) mare Paradise Cove (GB), herself out of a half-sister to the Arc winner Peintre Celebre. The colt's half-brother Sheer Rocks (GB) (Iffraaj {GB}) has added a third win to his tally since the catalogue was printed. 

Beaufay is also selling a homebred daughter of Australia (GB), the only yearling by the stallion in the catalogue, as lot 301. A daughter of the listed-placed treble winner Holly Polly (Ger) (Dylan Thomas {Ire}), she is a half-sister to two multiple winners from the mare's trio of racing age offspring, including the twice listed-placed Qaiser (Fr) (Charm Spirit {Ire}).

“The Wootton Bassett colt we have prepped for a client and the filly by Australia is homebred and she has always been my favourite since the beginning,” said Talvard, who foaled the bay filly himself. “They are both really good movers so fingers crossed for both of them. We'll see what happens tomorrow.”

He continued, “Right from Wednesday we have had lots of people looking. I thought that might have been a quieter day but it was not the case. It's really good news though for everybody, and the market is really high at the moment.

“It's a nice challenge and it is good to have been involved with Haras de Beaufay from the beginning. To be here in August after only three years is just very exciting for us. We know we have to find our place. There are so many big consignors here but we have to start somewhere and try to do a good job, and hopefully it will work.”

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The Friday Show Presented By Woodbine: Should HISA Be An ‘Open Book’?

Joe Gorajec, retired after a lengthy career as executive director of the Indiana Horse Racing Commission, wrote in a commentary earlier this week that the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority has failed to operate with the same transparency shown by state agencies that historically have regulated the sport.

Since Gorajec's call for more transparency from HISA, the Authority has posted additional staffing and budget information on its website that previously was not available to the public.

Gorajec, who lobbied for the legislation that created HISA and is now  an unpaid adviser to Animal Wellness Action and its watchdog website, is this week's guest on the Friday Show to discuss the issue further.

Paulick Report publisher Ray Paulick counters that HISA is not a government agency but a private entity that is not required to conduct open board of directors meetings or release detailed notes or transcripts from those meetings. Paulick adds that a number of other industry organizations – including the Breeders' Cup, National Thoroughbred Racing Association and The Jockey Club – operate largely behind closed doors.

Gorajec points out that none of those organizations act as regulators.

Watch this week's episode of the Friday Show below:

 

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This Side Up: Oasis or Mirage?

In this instance, you really can't say that the grass is any greener on the other side of the fence. Take your dystopian pick: the floods of Kentucky, or the desiccation of Europe, where I've just returned from a vacation that seamlessly united the city parks of England and Italy in the same wasteland, with just a few bleached spikes still protruding from the baked, ashen earth.

However illusory, then, it's a relief to find enough recognizable vegetation salvaged Stateside at least to host all three of Saturday's Grade I races. True, it evidently hasn't been at all straightforward doing so at Churchill, where they have resuscitated the Arlington Million and Beverly D. on an oasis card otherwise contested entirely on the main track.

After breaking so many hearts by closing its cherished Chicago home, Churchill have not only restored the Million but also a commensurate prize. It would be interesting to learn the duration of this commitment; and indeed to have some update about the funds generated in Arlington's final year, exceeding $750,000, in principle reserved for its 2022 purses. The last I heard, Illinois horsemen were pretty vexed about the idea that Churchill could sit on that dough pending some “successor” investment.

Even if Churchill might this time be credited with vaguely altruistic intentions, this feels like a pretty uncomfortable sanctuary for the races evicted from Chicago: a turf track that has evidently been a nightmare to bed down, and can't accommodate a 10th furlong anyway. That certainly seems to have been the conclusion of most European stables. Even domestically, the races appear to have fallen somewhat between stools: on the one hand, their abbreviation has put off the stayers; on the other, they've now had to compete with the GI Fourstardave H.

The true refugees, of course, aren't the races themselves, but those Illinois horsemen who for so long worked at one of the jewels of the American Turf. That's why there will be plenty of horsemen at Colonial Downs and elsewhere raising a glass, this weekend, to the memory of Noel Hickey.

Hickey's loss could not have been more poignantly timed–evoking, as it did, memories of a heyday (above all in grass racing) that Irish Acres shared with Arlington itself. Never mind the big guy, Buck's Boy, how about Bucks Nephew, another son of Hickey's beloved stallion Bucksplasher, who was still winning stakes at eight? And some of the other stalwarts, at a lower level, were still more indefatigable: Plate Dancer (16-for-69) and Classic Fit (23-for-76), for instance, both kept going to 11.

Their breeder resolved to buy Bucksplasher, despite a mediocre race record, after discovering that only eight Northern Dancer mares were ever bred to Buckpasser. Hickey was a colorful character, a gifted athlete himself in his youth before building up a payroll of 940 employees as a broker. But he does now seem to belong to another era, which makes it all the more remarkable that a near-contemporary should be extending such an exhilarating rejuvenation.

Wayne Lukas will be 87 a couple of days before the GI Spinaway S., where he now hopes to saddle Naughty Gal for a captivating showdown with another daughter of Into Mischief, Prank–herself yet another credit to the extraordinary work of the Lyster family at Ashview Farm. Having found a potential heir to Secret Oath (Arrogate) in last weekend's GIII Adirondack S. winner, Lukas has meanwhile eagerly commenced the next turn of the carousel by crossing the road to Fasig-Tipton and spending nearly $2.7 million on five yearlings, half of it devoted to a single Medaglia d'Oro colt.

Lukas apparently predicated this spree on a theory he has developed, over the years, “on angles and skeletons [and] the way they're put together.” If he wants to cover his costs, he could just jot the details down on a piece of paper and offer it to the highest bidder.

I am always bewildered by the way owners stampede to fashionable young trainers, especially in Europe where neglect of seasoned operators tends to be even more bovine. With horses, you would have thought that all the enthusiasm and energy in the world will never measure up to sheer experience. If you owned the Kentucky Derby favorite, and he came up with a problem on the eve of the race, would you rather the decisions were being made by someone dealing with the issue for the first time, or someone who has done so hundreds of times over several decades?

We associate youth with audacity, but we're really talking about a form of naivete. It's experience that truly fortifies your nerve. And that can also be true of jockeys. (At least, that is, until the poignant parting of the ways after they suddenly figure that there must be jobs out there where you don't have to be followed all day by an ambulance.) It took an insight and assurance years in the making, for instance, for Mike Smith to show such glaring restraint with Life Is Good (Into Mischief) at Saratoga last summer that the Equibase comment baldly states: “overconfident handling.”

Never mind that running Jackie's Warrior (Maclean's Music) to a neck over seven furlongs shows the kind of generosity that simply doesn't require coercion. This was one of those occasions–returning from a six-month lay-off, and for a new barn–when the jockey's top three priorities were: the best interests of the horse, the best interests of the horse, and the best interests of the horse.

People seldom dare to say so, because so much of the sport's funding comes through the windows, but there are times when even the wagering dollar has to step in line. After all, the kind of handicapper who thinks he or she deserves the homage of horsemen should reciprocate with a little respect the other way; should understand (and be reconciled to) the possibility that a prudent jockey, in these quite particular circumstances, might want to avoid giving his mount an experience that could cause him to regress.

They can cope with that idea when a horse makes its debut, and here was another case that blatantly called for their absolution. Whether or not connections share this view–and the fact is they have named other jockeys ever since–I feel pretty certain that Life Is Good is only as good as he is because Smith rode him that day with such length of perspective.

You very rarely see a horse break with quite the gusto that suffused Life Is Good last weekend. He was practically airborne, so eager has he remained for his vocation. And, however innate his competitive instinct, Smith certainly made sure that it was not soured.

If only more American jockeys could show corresponding conviction when riding a route on grass. On the same card last weekend, War Like Goddess (English Channel) won the GII Glen Falls S. off a halfway split of 1:17.51. And this was scalding, compared with her previous win at the Keeneland spring meet, where they had staggered along in 1:19.88.

These numbers condemn American horsemen just as instructively as the dismal averages of most turf stallions at the yearling sales. A mile and a half of grass gives these guys a nosebleed. War Like Goddess is by a wonderful stallion–and all this ties in pretty obviously with our lament a couple of weeks ago, over the crisis in Kentucky turf breeding now that Kitten's Joy is also gone–but these glacial splits show a community that cannot come to terms with the perplexing combination of grass and distance.

The fact is that hardly anybody takes these horses seriously. That's nearly always the case at the sales ring, while jockeys ride them as though indulging some kind of niche, semi-humorous weirdness. But do you remember Highland Reel (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), under a proper Irish horseman, being rushed into a clear lead to win the GI Breeders' Cup Turf? He reached halfway in 1:12.7. That's over seven seconds faster than in that Keeneland race! And they couldn't lay a glove on him.

As I'm always saying, there's no less of a cultural logjam on the other side of what should always be a two-way street, with Europe's disastrous detachment from dirt blood. But all you guys who have flown from Saratoga to Deauville, if you want to import serious grass blood, then please get your teams to wake up and import some serious grass attitude, as well.

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