New York Fixture Jimmy Jerkens ‘Can’t Get Going Here,’ Takes Training Job In Saudi Arabia

Longtime New York-based trainer Jimmy Jerkens, 64, will head to Saudi Arabia next month to train for Prince Faisal bin Khalid Al Saud, reports the Daily Racing Form. The son of Hall of Famer H. Allen Jerkens has trained a pair of Breeders' Cup winners and multiple Grade 1 winners, but the younger Jerkens has only sent out 16 winners from 155 starters since the end of 2020.

Jerkens said his stable has been reduced to 10 horses.

“Can't get going here,” Jerkens told DRF. “Built up a lot of debt. Not enough happening fast enough. It's hard driving through the gates seven days a week knowing you're losing money. Hope can only last so long. It just hasn't been happening.”

Among Jerkens' top trainees are: Effinex, Shaman Ghost, Artie Schiller, Wicked Strong, Holy Helena, Corinthian, Preservationist, Delta Prince, and V.E. Day.

Read more at the Daily Racing Form.

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Group 3 Winner on Offer at Auctav Online

The second Auctav Flash Sale for April is set to take place on Friday, Apr. 28, from 6-6:30 p.m. and will offer a single lot in the 5-year-old listed winner Go Athletico (Fr) (Goken {Fr}).

Go Athletico most recently captured the Listed Prix Cor de Chasse at Deauville on Apr. 8. He also won the G3 Prix de la Rochette as a 2-year-old and has amassed a career line of 26-6-7-3 for earnings of £196,458 on both turf and all-weather surfaces. He hails from the female family of GII San Clemente H. winner Little Treasure (Fr) (Night Shift) and G3 Prix Allez France runner-up Harem Lady (Fr) (Teofilo {Ire}).

To view more information about Go Athletico, visit the Auctav website.

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Practical Move Breezes For Yakteen At Santa Anita, Will Work Once More Before Flying To Louisville

Practical Move returned to the work tab Friday following his win in the Grade 1 Santa Anita Derby April 8.

Pointed to the May 6 Kentucky Derby, Practical Move worked a half mile at Santa Anita Park in company with rising star Kangaroo Court shortly after the 6:30 a.m. renovation break for trainer Tim Yakteen. Both 3-year-olds were officially timed in 47.0 seconds. Yakteen clocked the drill in the same time with a strong gallop-out in “59 seconds and change,” the trainer said.

“They both worked well, very happy,” Yakteen added.

Practical Move is slated to be joined in the Kentucky Derby starting gate by stablemate Reincarnate. Yakteen said Reincarnate, who most recently was third in both the G2 Rebel Stakes and G1 Arkansas Derby at Oaklawn Park, is scheduled to work on Saturday.

Both Practical Move and Reincarnate will also have one additional work at Santa Anita next Friday before heading to Churchill Downs the following morning.

Practical Move figures to be among the top betting choices in the 1 ¼-mile Kentucky Derby. He is riding a three-race winning streak and has never been off the board for owners Leslie A. Amestoy, Jean Pierre Amestoy and Roger K. Beasley. Prior to his gutsy nose win over Mandarin Hero in the Santa Anita Derby, the son of Practical Joke won the G2 San Felipe here March 4 and the G2 Los Alamitos Futurity in December.

Practical Move and Reincarnate aren't the only two horses heading to Churchill Downs next week for Yakteen. Kangaroo Court and the ascending turf star Johannes will also make the trip to run on the Kentucky Derby undercard. Kangaroo Court is ticketed for the G2 Pat Day Mile while Johannes will contest the G2 American Turf at 1 1/16 miles.

“We have our fingers crossed,” Yakteen said.

Johannes has won all three starts since being switched to turf for his maiden win here on Dec. 31. The Nyquist colt followed up graduation day with a win in the March 5 Baffle Stakes here over the hillside turf course and a scintillating 3 ½-length score in the Pasadena Stakes when stretched to a mile. He is a homebred for Cuyathy LLC.

Kangaroo Court will be stepping out of the statebred ranks for the first time in the Pat Day Mile, which is open to all 3-year-olds. The gelding by Dads Caps was a 14 ¼-length maiden winner last August at Del Mar before heading to the sidelines. He returned March 4 to take down a statebred allowance here in a swift 1:08.75 for six furlongs. He then won the Echo Eddie for statebreds going 6 ½ furlongs on April 8.

Kangaroo Court was purchased for a mere $7,500 at the 2021 Arizona Thoroughbred Breeders' Association Fall Mixed Sale by owner George Sharp. He has banked $197,200 in four starts.

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Jimmy Jerkens Off To Saudi Arabia

Veteran New York trainer Jimmy Jerkens, 64, whose stable has been slumping in recent years, has agreed to train in Saudi Arabia for Prince Faisal bin Khalid Al Saud. Jerkens said he will likely start his new job in Saudi Arabia in mid-May.

The Daily Racing Form's David Grening was first with the story.

Jerkens, the son of Hall of Famer Allen Jerkens, has been around the New York tracks for nearly 50 years. After working for his father as an assistant, he went out on his own in 1997. By 2000, he had established himself as a steady winner on the New York circuit who had the type of stock that could compete in stakes. He won 59 races in 2000, good for a 28 percent winning rate, and won six stakes. His numbers stayed relatively stable and in 2018 he won 38 races with stable earnings of $2,922,392. But his fortunes declined every year thereafter and in 2022 he won just four races and had earnings of $365,995 .

“We've just been just existing the last three or four years,” he said. “It got to where I was losing money. This is a hard thing to do, seven days a week, when you're going nowhere.”

Jerkens trained 11 different horses that won Grade I races, including Quality Road (Elusive Quality). He won the GI Florida Derby with Quality Road, who was eventually turned over to trainer Todd Pletcher. Some of his other major wins came in the GI Woodward S., a race he won twice, the GI Santa Anita H., the Queen's Plate, the GI Metropolitan H., the GI Breeders' Cup Mile and the GI Travers S.

“I never had a big stable but I was always lucky to get a lot of good ones,” Jerkens said.

He blames himself for his career heading off in the wrong direction.

“It's probably my fault,” he said. “The game started changing and I probably wasn't proactive enough in keeping the stable going. I got entrenched in my father's era. Back then you could get a reputation of being thorough and doing a good job and you could sit back and the horses would come to you. You did the best you could. It's a different game now. You have to be proactive, you have to go to sales, you have to be on social media. I was never built like that. I never adapted and I'm paying the price.”

Jerkens said it was jockey agent Ron Anderson who recommended him to Prince Faisal. Jerkens left for Saudi Arabia on April 9 and spent five days there meeting with the Prince and his advisors.

“I wasn't interested at first but the more I thought about it it seemed to be an opportunity to get some nice stock to train and not have to worry about the bills and everything else.” he said. “You go over there and all you have to worry about is the training. You get your percentage, you can get bonuses, you can accomplish some nice things with some nice horses. So I bit the bullet and decided to go.

“Everyone I talked to, the Prince, his advisors, they couldn't have been any nicer. They made me feel comfortable, especially the Prince. He's got the warmest, kindest face you could imagine. You felt really at ease around him.”

Jerkens has signed a two-year contract and expects to have about 50 horses under his care. He added that the possibility of Prince Faisal opening a stable in the U.S. has been discussed and, if that happens, Jerkens would likely return to the U.S. to train them.

“That's the most appealing part of this.” he said. “It would be wonderful to be able to do that.”

He said he still has a lot to learn about his new horses, but, so far, he has been impressed.

“The pedigrees are good and they look the part,” he said. “I was really impressed with their condition. They looked really good and had good muscle tone. I didn't know what to expect when they started pulling them out. But I was really impressed with how they looked.”

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