‘The Pace Is Quite Different’: Tom Marquand, Hollie Doyle Enjoying Successful Start To Japanese Stints

The Japan Racing Association is currently hosting five international jockeys for short-term licences: Christian Demuro, Ryan Moore, Damian Lane, Tom Marquand and Hollie Doyle.

Having both finished the British Flat Racing season with 91 wins each, Marquand and Doyle kicked off their riding stints on the JRA circuit in the week of the G1 Tenno Sho Autumn in October. The 24-year-old Marquand collected two wins on his first weekend aboard the Deep Impact-sired Catulus Felis and a 2-year-old Dawn Approach colt named Noisy Approach.

“Having a first win on the first day is incredible and I am very lucky. We are very honored to be here as individuals, and to be here together is more fantastic. We are grateful for this opportunity,” said Marquand after the race. He also finished 10th in the Tenno Sho Autumn aboard Ablaze, and then ran fourth in the G1 Japan Cup atop Daring Tact on Sunday, Nov. 27.

Marquand and Doyle are staying in Tokyo and drive to Miho Training Centre, the JRA training facility, on the gallop days – Wednesdays and Thursdays.

“We usually finish our tasks around noon and have lunch on the way back to Tokyo, and we do some training together in the afternoon. On Fridays, before going to the jockeys' room at the racecourse, we condition ourselves and do some research on the horses for the weekend,” Doyle said.

“Mondays and Tuesdays, we wake up a bit late and walk around and enjoy the food in Tokyo. I feel lots of differences in racing here, especially the pace is quite different. In Japan, the pace is sometimes picked up from early stages. And the other thing I need more time to get used to is the dirt surface.”

Marquand has acquired nine wins from 77 rides so far (as of Nov. 27) in Japan this year, meanwhile Doyle who has been hugely successful, winning four Group 1 races across three countries, has achieved another milestone, marking her first winner at ride number 42 in Japan on Nov. 20.

Competing alongside her husband, Doyle guided the 3-year-old filly Reveur to victory over 1600m dirt.

“It's been character building in these three weeks, but getting my first win in Japan is very special and big relief,” Doyle said.

Both of them also said, “We are very impressed that the Japanese jockeys are very talented and skillful, and the quality of the races here is very high. All schedules, and regulations regarding the horse racing in Japan have been quite established. Of course the quality of the horses is outstanding, so we are surprised with a lot of things here.”

Among the international jockeys who have the short-term stint in Japan at the moment, Marquand, Doyle and Moore have been confirmed for the LONGINES Hong Kong International Jockeys' Championship at Happy Valley next month (Wednesday, Dec. 7).

“We have joined the IJC for three consecutive years and we shared second place last year. I would really like to win this year,” Doyle said.

Marquand said: “I have not won the title yet, so hopefully I can get it this year.”

The post ‘The Pace Is Quite Different’: Tom Marquand, Hollie Doyle Enjoying Successful Start To Japanese Stints appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Travelogue: Southeast Asia, Day 2

Editor's note: Jockey and veterinarian Ferrin Peterson is traveling in Southeast Asia to help refugee groups with the veterinary care their animals need, helping humans to survive the refugee crisis in a war-torn area. Click here to read yesterday's blog post.

Once we reach the village, we set up camp which means successfully tying up your hammock between two sturdy trees to sleep in overnight. We bathe and wash our clothes in the river, and the pack animal team roams freely like a herd of wild horses. They always return at feed time, of course. The villagers cook for us, which consists of a rice dish with meat from one of their village animals and a vegetable. My past two trips were during my Christmas breaks from school, and on Christmas Day the villagers offered us their delicacy: cooked chicken feet. Thankfully there were always enough people around that I could nonchalantly pass that dish on to the next person.

I have an exciting, yet testing journey ahead of me. Veterinary medicine is challenging enough, working with patients who do not speak and amongst species that are so different from one another. A sedative that can relax one species can cause euphoria in another species. Each species has their unique Achilles heel: it is not always their feet and gut.

The pack team currently consists of seven mules and nine Mongolian ponies. I plan to vaccinate the pack animal team against rabies and Japanese encephalitis. I attempted this on my last trip, but when we reached our destination and I retrieved the vaccines from the transport cooler, I saw they had frozen, which ruined their efficacy. That was disheartening after packing them all that way and wondering when the next opportunity would arise for someone to vaccinate the herd. Hopefully I improve with temperature regulation this go-around.

Some of the training sessions I have planned for the pack animal handlers include: basic observations of a healthy versus a sick animal, checking vital parameters, body condition scoring, hoof care, wound care and bandaging, medication routes, nasogastric intubation for choke, and fecal flotation to detect parasites (the medical facility is equipped with a microscope).

Another important aspect I wish to address is selecting for their pack team. One or two of the village leaders travel to the city to select the Mongolian ponies and mules. In the past, they had introduced a gray mare with very poor conformation who could not stand up to the demands of her new job, and as a result she slowed down the entire team. They told me that in the city there is a Monkhood ceremony where the young monk rides in on a “white” horse. When the village leader saw this gray mare for sale, he assumed she must be a good deal. I just spent weeks looking at top Thoroughbreds going through the sales ring in Kentucky. I will have to readjust my lens for the type of horses best equipped to trek through mountains and thrive in jungles.

I also plan to teach the villagers to pass an orogastric tube down a water buffalo's esophagus and into its stomach to relieve bloat. I taught a village this technique on a past trip despite only learning it from a YouTube video. The entire village came to watch me do this crazy “magic trick.” To my relief, I successfully passed it into the rumen and then watched several villagers do it, too!

I have learned to go in with a plan but to be adaptable and always ready to rise to the occasion. I believe it is important to give back and share the knowledge a person has acquired, but to never underestimate the importance of local understanding about someone's culture and environment. Most importantly, I am going in with an open mind to see how the villagers and I can learn from and help each other.

The post Travelogue: Southeast Asia, Day 2 appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Beverly Park Grinds Out Continent-Topping Win No. 13

Beverly Park (Munnings), scored his 13th win of the year in his 28th seasonal start Monday in the sixth race at Mahoning Valley Race Course.

With a little more than a month left in 2022 and his next closest competitors all five victories behind him, Beverly Park has now assuredly clinched the title of North America's winningest Thoroughbred based on victories for the year.

Beverly Park's number of starts also leads the continent, and given this horse's penchant for performing well under a steady workload, the 5-year-old starter-allowance stalwart might not yet be finished racing before the condition books close on 2022.

In his typical force-the-issue, grind-it-out fashion, the 7-10 favorite hounded the pacemakers from the outside in the six-furlong sprint restricted to horses who have started for a claiming tag of $8,000 or less over the past two calendar years.

Beverly Park took over at the head of the lane under jockey Yan Aviles, got headed in midstretch, then dug in determinedly to power past a stubborn rival to win by a length in 1:12.28.

Beverly Park was claimed for $12,500 Aug. 5, 2021, by current owner/trainer, Norman Lynn Cash, whose horses race under the name Built Wright Stables.

Beverly Park has not started for a tag since being claimed, feasting exclusively on starter-allowances, optional claimers in which he was not entered for a tag, and in the $100,000 Ready's Rocket Express on the Claiming Crown card two weekends ago.

In the span between Cash's claiming him and Monday's win, Beverly Park is now 20-for-36 with $465,628 in purse earnings (roughly 37 times that original claim investment). His lifetime record stands at 23-7-4 from 45 starts.

Beverly Park has been eligible for some lucrative starter-allowance spots. But because improved horses who once ran for low claiming tags generally scare away entrants for those restricted races, Cash has had to hit the road his stable star to extend his winning ways.

So far in '22, Beverly Park has raced at Oaklawn, Charles Town, Turfway, Laurel, Mahoning Valley, Keeneland, Monmouth, Belterra, Churchill, Thistledown, Delaware, Colonial and Timonium.

No North American Thoroughbred had won more than 12 races in an entire calendar year since 2011, when Rapid Redux ran the table with a 19-for-19 record.

The post Beverly Park Grinds Out Continent-Topping Win No. 13 appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Emerald Downs Plans 52 Live Race Dates For 2023, Equal To 2022

Emerald Downs in Auburn, Wash., has announced a 52-day live racing season for 2023, with opening day Saturday, May 6, and closing day Sunday, Sept. 17. An equivalent number of dates was planned for the 2022 race season.

The 2023 season features 20 Saturdays, 19 Sundays, 11 Fridays, and two Mondays.

Opening Day shares billing with the 148th Kentucky Derby with a special 1 p.m. first post at Emerald Downs.

Post times are similar to recent seasons with Saturday post 2 p.m. May 13-June 24 and 5 p.m. July 1-Sept. 16. Sunday post is 2 p.m. throughout the meeting while Friday post (beginning June 9) is 7 p.m. Holiday racing is scheduled Monday, May 29, 2 p.m., and Monday, July 3, 5 p.m.

The 2023 meet—the 28th at Emerald Downs—features the 88th running of the Longacres Mile. The stakes schedule will be released in December.

Live racing dates were approved at last week's monthly meeting of the Washington Horse Racing Commission.

The post Emerald Downs Plans 52 Live Race Dates For 2023, Equal To 2022 appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights