Jockey Of The Week: Flavien Prat’s Six-Win Sunday Leads To Del Mar Riding Title

Flavien Prat returned to the west coast for Del Mar's Fall Meet and proved once again he is one of the preeminent riders in the country. Prat put on a riding clinic on Del Mar's closing weekend with three graded stakes wins and a six-win day on Sunday which vaulted him to the riding title.

Prat was voted Jockey of the Week for Nov. 28 through Dec. 4 by a panel of racing experts. The award honors jockeys for riding accomplishments and who are members of the Jockeys' Guild, the organization which represents more than 1050 active, retired and permanently disabled jockeys in the United States.

On Saturday, riding for trainer Chad Brown, Prat was in the irons for the second time on east coast invader, Liguria in the G3 Jimmy Durante Stakes for 2-year-old fillies at one mile on the turf. Using his experience from that previous win, Prat guided Liguria to the front entering the stretch to win by 2 1/4 lengths as the favorite in 1:36.16.

“In her previous race, she showed a good turn of foot,” said Prat. “I expected her to run a good race.”

On Sunday, Del Mar's closing day, Prat won on his first four mounts including the G3 Cecil B. DeMille for 2-year-olds aboard Speed Boat Beach for Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert. Sent off as the favorite in the field of seven, Speed Boat Beach tracked the leader Game Time before taking the lead with a furlong to go and posting a half-length win in 1:35.38 for the one mile turf test.

“I got him to relax on the backside and he kicked home very well,” said Prat. “Two turns, that was no problem.”

For his fifth win of the day, Prat was aboard Regal Glory for trainer Chad Brown in the G1 Matriarch. Off as the overwhelming favorite in the field of eight, Regal Glory raced in fourth behind Hamwood Flyer (IRE) who was loose on the lead. Regal Glory rallied with a spectacular turn of foot to finish 5 1/4 lengths in front in 1:33.60 for the one mile on the turf. The Matriarch was Prat's sixth stakes win of the meet.

“I had great respect for Mike's (Smith) filly (Hamwood Flyer) but there was nothing I could do about it then,” said Prat. “My mare had to run her race. Once we got going, I knew we were going to be alright.”

Prat next won the day's final race for his sixth win of the day propelling him to the riding title over Juan Hernandez. It marked the seventh time he has won or tied for a title at Del Mar. Prat plans to ride in California until early spring.

Other contenders for Jockey of the Week were Gerardo Corrales with 11 wins for the week, Juan Hernandez who won the G1 Hollywood Derby, Irad Ortiz, Jr. who set a new single season mark for stakes victories with 77, and John Velazquez who won the G1 Cigar Mile.

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Javier Castellano, Terry Houghton, Edwin Maldonado Among Finalists For George Woolf Memorial Award

A distinguished group of five veteran jockeys have been selected as finalists for 2023 George Woolf Memorial Jockey Award, presented annually by Santa Anita Park since 1950. One of the most prestigious awards in American racing, the Woolf Award, which is determined by a vote of jockeys nationwide, can only be won once. Once ballots have been tabulated, the 2023 Woolf Award winner will be announced in February.

Representing a broad cross section of racing jurisdictions, jockeys Daniel Cedeno, Javier Castellano, Terry Houghton, Edwin Maldonado, and Willie Martinez will soon be considered via a vote of their peers. Excepting Castellano, all other finalists will appear on the Woolf Award ballot for the first time.

Named in honor of the legendary late jockey George Woolf, who rose to national prominence as the winner of the inaugural Santa Anita Handicap in 1935 with Azucar and later as the rider of fellow Hall of Famer Seabiscuit, whom he rode to victory over reigning Triple Crown Champion War Admiral in a nationally broadcast match race at Pimlico Race Course on Nov. 1, 1938, the Woolf Award trophy is a highly coveted replica of the life-sized statue which adorns Santa Anita's Paddock Gardens area.

Affectionately known as “The Iceman,” Woolf was regarded as one of the greatest big money riders of his era and was revered by his fellow riders, members of the media and millions of racing fans across America as a fierce competitor and consummate professional.

A native of Maracaibo, Venezuela, Javier Castellano, 45, was America's leading money-winner and Eclipse Award winning jockey for four consecutive years, from 2013 through 2016 and was inducted in the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in 2017.

Castellano rose to national prominence in 2004, when he guided the Frank Stronach owned and bred and Bobby Frankel-trained Ghostzapper to victory in the Breeders' Cup Classic at Lone Star Park. Based primarily in New York, Castellano and his wife Abby have three children. The son of a jockey, Castellano has 5,582 career wins through Nov. 30. Married with three children, Castellano's father-in-law is Terry Meyocks, who serves as the National Director of the Jockeys' Guild.

Tampa Bay Downs' all-time leading rider, Daniel Centeno is also a Venezuelan native, as he was born Dec. 18, 1971 in Caracas, where he began riding at age 18 in 1990. A six-time leading rider at Tampa Bay Downs, he was that track's leading rider through four consecutive years, from 2006-2010.

A winner of a then Tampa Bay record 144 races at their 2007-08 meeting, Centeno has 3,203 career wins through Nov. 30 and currently rides a circuit that includes Tampa Bay Downs, Laurel Park, Pimlico, Monmouth Park and Delaware Park. Most recently seventh at Delaware with 39 winners, Centeno is engaged to Brooke Sillaman and has a daughter named Jazmyn.

Despite horrific injuries in recent years, Terry Houghton, a 52-year-old Denver, CO native, is still going strong with more than 6,000 career victories to his credit. A long-time mainstay in the state of Michigan and at Tampa Bay Downs in Florida, Houghton got his 6,000th career victory at Thistledown near Cleveland, Ohio on Sept. 15, 2020 and currently has 6,135 career wins through November 30.

A leading rider at the now-shuttered Detroit Race Course (DRC) from 1995 until its closing in 1998, Houghton won 300 races per year on four different occasions from 1995-2001 and has also garnered leading rider titles at Tampa Bay Downs, Mountaineer Park, Pinnacle Race Course and at Mahoning Valley Race Course.

The son of a jockey, Houghton was sidelined for more than 15 months following a brain injury sustained in a spill in 2003. On March 1, 2014, Houghton sustained multiple breaks to a collarbone and a fracture of his T9 vertebra in a horrific spill at Mountaineer Park and was subsequently voted Comeback Rider of the Year by the Jockeys' Guild following his 2014-15 season.

On April 10, 2021, Houghton was again seriously injured as the result of a three-horse spill at Mahoning Valley which resulted in multiple facial fractures. Aided by his daughters Alyssa (20) and Ashley (24), Houghton, who is one of only seven active jockeys with more than 6,000 wins, made a full recovery and is back in the saddle again.

A Southern California regular since 2010, Edwin Maldonado, who turned 40 on Dec. 1, appears poised to have perhaps his best year in the saddle as a result of hard work, positive thinking and staying injury-free. Unusually tall for a jockey at five feet, eight inches, Maldonado, a native of Columbus, Ohio, broke his maiden at age 18 at Assiniboia Downs near Winnipeg, Canada in August of 2001.

Although 2012 appeared to be breakout year for Maldonado, as he displaced perennial kingpin Martin Pedroza as that year's leading rider at the now shuttered Fairplex Park meeting, then took the Hollywood Park Fall Meet title and went on to tie with Rafael Bejarano as Hollywood Park's leading Spring/Summer rider in 2013.

However, a serious injury sustained in a morning training incident at Del Mar later that summer derailed his rise to the top as he was sidelined for more than six months and had difficulty regenerating what had been a growing customer base.

The road back has been long and hard for Maldonado, who has long been regarded as the top “gate rider” on the circuit, but with his first Grade I victory coming this past Oct. 1 aboard the Bob Baffert-trained Defunded in the Awesome Stakes at Santa Anita, Maldonado, who recently hired veteran agent Tom Knust, is quick to credit his psychological approach as a key factor in his resurgence.

“Your thoughts are very powerful and writing down goals, thinking about what you want instead of focusing on the negative,” said Maldonado in a recent interview with Art Wilson of the Southern California Newspaper Group. “One of the things I wanted was to win a Grade I and I said, 'Okay, this is going to be one of my goals.'

“…I'd been riding for 20 years and I hadn't won a Grade I, so accomplishing that was very exciting.”

Nicknamed “The Candyman,” Maldonado is one of the most popular riders on the circuit and with 1,456 career winners through Nov. 30, says that he'd like to continue riding for another 10 years.

Puerto Rican native Willie Martinez, respectfully known as “Chilly Willie” in acknowledgment of his unflappable demeanor in the heat of battle, brings an outstanding career resume to the 2023 Woolf ballot that includes a record nine riding titles at Northern Kentucky's Turfway Park.

Born March 3, 1971, Martinez emigrated to the U.S. in 1988 and began working as a hotwalker and groom at Finger Lakes Race Track in Farmington, New York. Quick to transition to the saddle, Martinez bagged his first winner in 1989 at Tampa Bay Downs.

A winner of seven races in one day at Turfway in 1993, Martinez has also won riding titles at Ellis Park, Tampa Bay Downs, Keeneland and Hialeah.

A winner of 3,606 career races, including 150 stakes, Martinez has also sought to promote jockey rights, speaking out on issues such as health insurance, the scale of weights in various racing jurisdictions and other issues.

Ranking high among Martinez's 38 career graded stakes wins is his victory in the 2012 Breeders' Cup Sprint at Santa Anita aboard longshot Trinniberg, who paid $29.40 to win.

Last year's Woolf Award was won by Joe Bravo, who became the 73rd Woolf recipient, dating back to the inaugural winner in 1950, Gordon Glisson.

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2023 George Woolf Award Finalists Announced

Jockeys Daniel Cedeno, Javier Castellano, Terry Houghton, Edwin Maldonado, and Willie Martinez have been named by Santa Anita Park as finalists for the 2023 George Woolf Memorial Jockey Award. Determined by a vote of their fellow riders nationwide, the Woolf Award can only be won once in a lifetime. It has been presented annually by Santa Anita since 1950. All of the finalists, except Castellano, are appearing on the ballot for the first time.

The Woolf Award was named in honor of the late George Woolf, known as “The Iceman,” who passed away due to a racing accident at Santa Anita in 1946. The first recipient of the award was Gordon Glisson in 1950, while Joe Bravo was the 73rd recipient this past year. The Woolf Award trophy is a replica of the life-sized statue which adorns Santa Anita's Paddock Gardens area.

The 2023 Woolf Award winner will be announced in February.

The post 2023 George Woolf Award Finalists Announced appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Bloodlines Presented By Mishriff: Was The Foundation Sire Race Decided Decades Ago?

The historical record on different lines of descent in the Thoroughbred shows that the winnowing out of male lines has gone on from the beginnings of the breed. And the great majority of male lines disappeared in the first 75 to 100 years of the formation of the Thoroughbred. By the late 1700s, there were only three principal male-line ancestors, each coming through only a handful of sires, even at that point.

By the late 1800s, the three main male lines were swelling out of equal proportion to signal that the Darley Arabian through Eclipse was becoming overwhelming in its domination, and that situation has compounded through the 20th century.

In 1957, to take a year, there were 24 stakes winners in the U.S. from stallions of the Herod line. That seems like a decent number until you consider that stakes winners descending from the Godolphin Arabian-line sire Fair Play alone numbered 31 that year.

The 1950s pointed out some interesting things about the two lesser male lines of Byerley Turk/Herod and Godolphin Arabian/Mathem. Most importantly at mid-century, the statistics showed a continuation for Herod through two sources. First was The Tetrarch (by Roi Herode). A foal of 1911, The Tetrarch was the best of Roi Herode's quite numerous good horses. The Tetrarch was notably special among the lot, however, and he was little less amazing at stud. The generously proportioned gray sired racers of exceptional speed, as well as unexpected stamina, including three winners of the St. Leger at Doncaster among his offspring.

There would have been more and greater honors for The Tetrarch if only there had been more foals. Had he possessed even average fertility, The Tetrarch might well have resurrected the Herod line in his own image. Slim fertility, at best, doomed the great gray's opportunities of turning the tide.

The other line of significance for Herod was that descending from Tourbillon. Marcel Boussac's son of the great French racer Ksar sired a mighty brood of athletic racers who possessed speed and durability, plus enough class to vie for the classics and great all-age prizes.

Ten of those 24 stakes winners for Herod in 1957 descended from Tourbillon, including three from the Claiborne stallion Ambiorix and four from the Almahurst Farm sire Nirgal.

For the Godolphin line, 31 of its 32 total 1957 stakes winners came through Fair Play, and 16 of those were through Man o' War. Those numbers sound pretty good, at least at first glance.

Even 65 years ago, however, the writing was on the wall. The two male lines of more scarce representation were represented by too few individuals, and the opportunities to breed to these was too narrowly focused on a handful of superb sires like Tourbillon and Man o' War. Some of their stock has continued in the male line at the highest level through the ensuing decades, resulting in champions like Precisionist (Crozier back to Tourbillon) and Desert Vixen (In Reality back to Man o' War), as well as Tiznow (Cee's Tizzy back to In Reality and Man o' War).

The stats for the Eclipse line, however, tell the tale of inevitability.

In 1957, some 65 years ago, there were 410 stakes winners tracing to Eclipse. Primarily these came through Bend Or (Doncaster), with 165, but the vast spread of them virtually guaranteed that some of these would breed on to become the overwhelming lines of today.

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Among the lines of Eclipse operating with high success at the time were the branches of Swynford and his classic-siring sons St Germans (Kentucky Derby winners Twenty Grand and Bold Venture, the latter the sire of Triple Crown winner Assault) and Challenger, the sire of Horse of the Year Challedon and champion Gallorette; of Vedette and his successors, including St. Simon, to such international champions as Ribot; of Bay Ronald and his descendants, especially Hyperion, who had sons as leading sires in North and South America, as well as in Australia; and then there were also the “American” lines of Domino, Ben Brush, and Broomstick, whose point of importation in the male line came back in the 19th century.

All these are Eclipse, and there are more.

The irresistible push from Bend Or's typhoon of genetic success was first seen to great effect in the States through Bend Or's greatest son: Ormonde through Flying Fox to Teddy and his early- to mid-century sons Sir Gallahand III and Bull Dog, as well as grandson Bull Lea; additional importations came through Phalaris, with his sons Sickle (Preakness winner Polynesian and multiple classic winner Native Dancer) and Pharamond (Horse of the Year Tom Fool, classic winner Tim Tam, and Horse of the Year Buckpasser), then Pharos's son Nearco provided the next wave with his sons Nasrullah and Royal Charger.

Now, several of those lines in male descent are no longer with us, or they are very rare at the higher levels of competition, including all the old American lines and such familiar stalwarts of mid-century breeding as Teddy and Hyperion.

The Bend Or line possessed and enlarged upon the volume required for a stallion or a sire line to have a realistic chance to continue, despite the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune that horses inevitably encounter, and today their percentage of the male-line representation continues to grow.

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