Hall Of Fame Quarter Horse Trainer ‘Bubba’ Cascio Passes At Age 90

Legendary horseman and American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame member Charles W. “Bubba” Cascio died November 2, 2022.

Cascio was born in Houston in 1932 and was practically raised in the sport of horse racing. His uncle managed Epsom Downs until pari-mutuel wagering became illegal in Texas. The track was kept open as a training track. When he was 10 years old, Bubba was walking horses for trainer Will McKown. By 12, he was galloping them. At 16, he became a jockey. Cascio rode at Fairmont Park in East St. Louis, as well as many other tracks, and even rode American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame mare Garrett's Miss Pawhuska.

“When I got too heavy to ride, I took up cutting horses with trainer Matlock Rose of Gainesville, Texas. We had a lot of success,” Cascio said.

He rode in the final go of the first National Cutting Horse Association Futurity in 1962 and won at more than a dozen major stock shows.

Cascio also judged AQHA shows in Texas, Kansas, Washington and Ohio, but he is most famous for his work on the racetrack.

For more than four decades, Cascio trained American Quarter Horse racing's top money earners, including the American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame stallion Dash For Cash and Hall of Fame mare Dashingly.

He won the All American Futurity twice, with Three Oh's in 1968 and American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame stallion Rocket Wrangler in 1970. He trained Justanold Love, Indigo Illusion and sent out the talented filly Will Be Easy to hand the esteemed First Down Dash his only defeat as world champion in 1987.

Operating in an era where the purse money was miniscule compared to today, Cascio saddled horses that earned more than $13.8 million, leaving him in the top 30 all-time leading trainers, even before adjusting that value for inflation, which adjusted to his last full year of training, is equal to more than $22.3 million in today's money.

His achievements include being awarded leading trainer at 10 different racetracks, becoming the first trainer to reach $1 million in race earnings and training horses that won 15 world racing titles.

In 2001, he trained the Texas Thoroughbred Horse of the Year, Lights On Broadway, and went on to train Thoroughbreds that earned more than $4.4 million on the racetrack.

He and his wife, Judy, resided in Tolar, Texas, during his retirement.

Cascio was inducted into the American Quarter Horse Hall of Fame in 2008. He is also in the Texas Cowboy, Texas Horse Racing, Ruidoso Racehorse and National Cutting Horse halls of fame.

“All I ever wanted to do was be with horses,” Bubba said. “I never wanted to be a doctor or lawyer or run a store somewhere. I wanted to be a jockey. When I was a kid, I'd get in the old starting gate with a stick horse and have somebody ring the bell, and I'd come racing outta there.”

Further information will be shared when it becomes available.

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David Cabrera, Obed Sanchez Headed To Hospital After Remington Incident

Two jockeys, David Cabrera and Obed Sanchez, were involved in an accident when they were thrown from their horses in the fifth race at Remington Park on Wednesday night. Both horses, Dobbins G and Rockport Kat, respectively, crossed the finish line under their own power, without riders, and were uninjured.

The incident occurred in the turn for home when Dobbins G, Cabrera's mount, appeared to have clipped heels with a horse in front of him. Dobbins G fell, sending Cabrera sprawling to the track and Rockport Kat leaped over him, sending Sanchez high into the air before landing on the track. Rockport Kat managed to keep his feet after jumping a fallen Dobbins G.

Both jockeys were attended to by medical professionals as they lay on the track. Sanchez was transported to a local hospital, according to his agent Travis Church.

“We are at the hospital right now in the trauma center,” Church said of Sanchez around 11pm-Central. “He is awake and talking. Waiting for tests and X-rays.”

Cabrera's agent, Jose Santos, Jr., said his rider was examined in the ambulance and eventually walked back to the jockeys' quarters on his own. Santos added that Cabrera showered and headed to the hospital to get an X-ray “to make sure all is well.”

Santos later Tweeted that Cabrera's x-rays were clean, and that the rider was body sore and headed home to rest.

Live racing at Remington Park continues Thursday-Saturday, Nov. 3-5, with first post of 7:07 p.m. nightly.

The post David Cabrera, Obed Sanchez Headed To Hospital After Remington Incident appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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