Mike Joyce’s ‘Unequivocally Good’ Work For PDJF: Difference Makers Presented By Avion Law

Mike Joyce is that cigar-smoking, selfie-taking guy on FanDuel TV with a seemingly endless string of wisecracks. He's a Southern Californian by way of Chicago and Wyoming whose irreverence on social media has prompted some high-brow horseplayers to go screaming not so gentle into that good night. Sans mutton chops and a deerstalker hat, Joyce is the closest thing American racing television has to the late John McCririck, who was a legend in the United Kingdom for his sometimes outrageous on-air antics.

Putting all of that aside, however, Joyce has made a serious commitment toward one of the most important causes in our sport: the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund, a 501(c)(3) charity offering financial support to  60 former Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse riders whose lives have been changed forever by an accident on horseback.

As a member of the PDJF board of directors since 2015, Joyce has helped elevate the charity's national profile, bringing a jockey karaoke fundraiser – a popular annual event in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. – to Del Mar. He's also played a major role in the success of the PDJF Telethon, an event inaugurated in 2018 that has raised more than $1.5 million in five years, thanks to the broadcast support of FanDuel TV (formerly TVG) and more recently the New York Racing Association's FOX Sports telecast, “America's Day at the Races.”

Joyce, the youngest of 13 children, is the son of Joe Joyce, a New Yorker who came to Chicago in 1977 to run Arlington Park for then-owner Madison Square Garden Corp. and its successor, Gulf & Western. It was Joyce who conceived the idea for the Arlington Million, inaugurated in 1981, and two years later would put together the investor group – himself, Ralph Ross, Sheldon Robbins, and Richard Duchossois – to buy the track.

Following the fire that destroyed Arlington Park in 1985, Duchossois bought out his partners, and a couple of years later Joe Joyce moved the family to Wyoming, a seemingly odd change of scenery for a big city guy. Joyce bought struggling Wyoming Downs and an off-track betting network in the state, and the Evanston, Wyo., track was where Mike Joyce began his professional career in racing.

Born in 1977, shortly after the family moved to Chicago, young Mike was put to work at Wyoming Downs by his father at the age of 12, earning $5 a night for running the photo finish strip up to the stewards' room and then posting the print on a bulletin board for the public to see.

“Three years later I got promoted to shoveling (manure) in the paddock,” he quipped. “Over the years, I did just about every job you could do on the front side except selling pari-mutuel tickets. But it wasn't until I worked in the racing office that I began to better understand the game.”

Joyce wanted to get into television work after graduating from the University of Colorado-Boulder. He got his foot in the door at TVG in 2001, not long after the Los Angeles-based racing network was launched.

“I was hired as a production assistant and took home $1,200 a month,” Joyce said. “Rent was $900. There were a couple of nights at Los Alamitos when I hit the Pick 4 and it paid my rent.”

He worked his way up the ladder and eventually landed an on-air position co-hosting The Quarters at Los Alamitos with Dave Weaver. At the time, TVG did not have rights to broadcast races from Santa Anita, so Quarter Horse racing from Los Alamitos was a key part of their West Coast schedule.

That led to additional on-air opportunities as analyst, host, or reporter. In 2023, Joyce said with no small amount of pride, he was at Churchill Downs to help cover his first Kentucky Derby.

PDJF board member and all-time leading Quarter Horse jockey G. R. Carter Jr. nominated Joyce to the organization's board of directors in 2015, and he's been a member ever since.

“It always struck me, whenever something tragic happens in our game, so much of the attention goes to the horse – which is just, don't get me wrong,” said Joyce. “Oftentimes what happened to the rider is an afterthought. It seems like everybody's immediate reaction is, 'Oh, my God, I can't look at that horse.' For me it was always, 'What about this rider?'

“There's been some incidents, especially in Quarter Horse racing when Hector Cuevas went down, or Sam Thompson, who was a friend of mine, died one night on a horse,” he said. “Those things are very poignant with me. There's only so much protection the jockeys can get – a helmet and a flak jacket.”

Joyce said Nancy LaSala, who has served as PDJF president since the all-volunteer charity was created in 2006, is “an absolute hurricane of activity. … I've never seen anyone juggle more tasks and do as much as she does.

“It's a cast of people who do it out of kindness, because they care,” he said of the volunteers who devote much of their free time to PDJF. “When you get to know some of the recipients and see how they live, you wish you could do more. We don't give our recipients as much as we'd like to. We're trying to get our fund-raising to a point where we can provide them a stipend that equals the poverty level – we're trying to bring it up to the poverty level. Right now we're well below that.”

To help get there, Joyce said, the Del Mar karaoke night for which he's been a driving force has been a “six-figure” fund raiser, and the annual Telethon, which began in 2018 and he's hosted several times, has averaged over $300,000 a year in its first five events.

Terry Meyocks, president and CEO of the Jockeys' Guild, and FanDuel's Jeff Lowich came up with the idea for the PDJF Telethon, Joyce said.

“When they first laid this in our lap,” Joyce said, “my first thought was, 'C'mon, a Telethon? What year is this, 1964?' We just kind of laughed at the idea but thought if we make a few bucks with it, great. Nancy and I were not expecting anything big. But that first year we made so much money, well into six figures, I was blown away.”

Tom Cassidy hosted the first Telethon but Joyce has been the host in the following years.

“One of the reasons it has done so well is we get the cooperation from Hall of Fame riders, and a lot of them are in Kentucky or California (where the phone banks and cameras are set up),” he said. “So people call in and they want to talk to Sandy Hawley, or they want to talk with Eddie D, or want to talk to Laffit or Mike Smith or Gary Stevens. That part of it really does go a long way. I could never have imagined how successful that Telethon has been.”

Joyce admits that much of what he does on FanDuel TV and on social media is ego-driven, but his volunteer work with PDJF falls into a different category.

“It's the one thing I do that I know is unequivocally good,” Joyce said. And that makes him a difference maker.  If you would like to make a difference, please consider a donation to the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund.

Difference Makers is presented by Richard Pearson's Avion Law, a Newport Beach, Calif.-based firm specializing on the aviation industry. Avion Law has a “giving back” program supporting awareness campaigns and donating to charitable organizations in and outside of horse racing.

The post Mike Joyce’s ‘Unequivocally Good’ Work For PDJF: Difference Makers Presented By Avion Law appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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‘Potential Group Filly’ Uluru Provides Explosive Start For Atomic Racing

Against the backdrop of one of the most eagerly anticipated King Georges in recent history on Saturday, bloodstock agent Sean Grassick and trainer Kevin Coleman enjoyed something of a red-letter day of their own when Uluru (Ire) (Zoffany {Ire}) ran out a taking debut winner at Gowran Park. 

Uluru was one of eight yearlings that Grassick purchased on behalf of Atomic Racing at the sales last year and was considered just about the most talented juvenile the commercial syndicate had to go to war with this season. 

Despite showing signs of greenness, the €40,000 purchase from the Tattersalls Ireland Yearling Sale picked up in the style of an above average filly under Colin Keane to win going away at the line, and that performance put Uluru firmly in the shop window. 

Grassick said, “Uluru is likely to be sold and there is going to be loads of improvement in her because she was still very green at Gowran and a lot went wrong for her in the race. She has loads of natural ability and there is a huge amount of improvement in her. If she is sold, we think she can potentially go on and be a Group filly and hopefully she is very lucky for her new connections.”

A son of the well-known Ronan Grassick, who runs a successful bloodstock transport business, Sean is also the cousin of Curragh trainer Michael Grassick. The 28-year-old has worked closely with legendary bloodstock agent Demi O'Byrne in recent years and, despite once harbouring dreams of training, has decided to put his experiences working at the sales to good use. 

He explained, “I set up Atomic Racing a couple of years ago and we had our first two-year-old runners last year. Before that, I had helped Kevin source a couple of yearlings at the sales and they turned out to be Queens Carriage (Ire) (Mehmas {Ire}) and Lolly Yeats (Ire) (Lawman {Fr}), who did well for him. 

“When I set up officially as a bloodstock agent, Kevin was my first client and Coumshingaun (Ire) (Fastnet Rock {Aus}) was the first horse I bought for him in that role. She has won three times now for him and was a relatively cheap purchase, as are the majority of our yearling purchases.”

Uluru: potentially classy on the evidence of her debut win for Kevin Coleman | Racingfotos.com

He added, “It was off the back of those horses that I said to Kevin, 'look, let's try and get a bit of investment into the yard to go and buy some yearlings,' and that's how Atomic Racing came about. 

“We got a few guys in and we have done reasonably well. Catherine Of Siena (Ire) (US Navy Flag) cost £13,000 at Tattersalls Ireland and she won twice at Dundalk and was Listed-placed. With Love (GB) (Territories {Ire}) cost 35,000gns at Book 3 and she won at Leopardstown before we sent her to Phil D'Amato in America to try and win a Stakes race.”

Uluru's Gowran success was a timely one for everyone connected to the Coleman yard. It is less than a month since the stable lost flagbearer Catherine Of Siena and Grassick explained how the excitement generated by Uluru has gone some way to lift the spirits in the County Tipperary operation. 

He said, “That was a tough blow. We lost Catherine after her last run and she was very much our headline horse this year. I spend a lot of time in the yard with Kevin and you get quite attached to them so it was nice when Uluru went and won, especially when we thought she was talented, so that gave everyone a much-needed boost.”

Grassick and Coleman are more than just business partners. The latter, a talented Galway Plate-winning jockey whose career was cut short through injury, took out his trainer's licence in 2018 and Grassick has never been far away.

“I met Kevin when he was riding out for my cousin Michael on the Curragh,” Grassick recalled. “We kept in touch from that point on and, when he started training, he asked if I'd give him a hand at the sales to buy a few fillies. That's how it started. We've been helping each other ever since. He got me going as a bloodstock agent and now I'm helping him to get going as a trainer with a few nice horses. We work very well together and it seems to work.”

He added, “We will try and buy more horses next year and there is a good level of interest. We actually ran out of horses for the syndicate last year and could have filled more if we wanted to. “We will keep our budget to a similar level but just try and buy more horses. There's a level there that we can buy to that you can still trade on but, when you get into spending between fifty and one hundred grand on yearlings, it gets much harder to get a return on those horses. 

“We bought eight yearlings last year for an average of thirty grand. We are going to try and buy between 10 and 15 yearlings this year and raise the average slightly but we will basically be trying to do the same thing again.”

With that in mind, Atomic Racing are open to new investors ahead of the yearling sales and there should be no shortage of such off the back of recent results. 

Grassick explained, “We are looking for more investors and we've had a good bit of interest in the past month especially. Our main selling point is that we like to get people involved on a bunch of horses rather than just one or two. 

“Every investor is involved in at least four horses while the majority of people are involved in six or seven. Those people might have five or 10 per cent of five or six horses and, that way, one or two could end up paying for them all. It spreads the risk and it means that the owners will always have something running for them.”

He added, “We had an instance there recently where one owner had four runners in the one week. They get plenty of excitement that way and, if one horse is a bit more backward and needs more time, at least they will have a few others who will be running for them. The most important thing for us is that our owners get something out of it. We don't want anyone to miss out on the fun if they're only in one horse so we think spreading it out between four or more horses is a good idea.”

It's not just the Ulurus of this world that help keep a commercial syndicate ticking over. That filly is likely to net her connections a major payday and has generated interest from some of the top agents who buy for many different jurisdictions but it is Colemen's placing of the lesser talented two-year-olds that proves he's equally as adept at trading to the middle to lower tier markets. 

Grassick explained, “Pretence (Ire) (Make Believe {GB}) was unplaced in three Irish maidens. We knew she was a very genuine filly but I suppose you could say that she was of average ability. We like to move them on no matter what the level so Kevin decided to run her in a seller at Chester. 

“She ended up winning the race and bagged us €10,000 in prize-money. We also got her sold in the ring afterwards for £20,000. That was a great result for a filly who cost 21,000gns at Book 3 and was rated in the mid-60s.”

He added, “Kevin has always been a very good judge. He's a very good rider himself and knows what he has. He's particularly good with the two-year-olds and educates them well and is always thinking of the future with them which is why they improve from run to run.

“Seamie Heffernan is also a huge help to us. He came on board last year when we had more two-year-olds and he rides a lot of work for us. He would have sat on them all and his opinion is second to none. To have Seamie advising us on where to go is invaluable. It's a pity that he missed out on riding Uluru at Gowran Park because he was riding in the King George on Saturday. He always had a high opinion of her and told us she was well above average so he's a major help to us as well.”

Grassick continues to work alongside O'Byrne, a man who needs no introduction in the bloodstock sphere having purchased household names like Montjeu (Ire), Camelot (GB), Thunder Gulch, Rags To Riches and more. In fact, it was one of the horses that O'Byrne bred that played a role in the development of Atomic Racing.

Grassick said, “I still work with Demi and he is a huge help to us at the sales. Demi actually bred Coumshingaun and, after Kevin and I bought her off him, he got to know Kevin and the relationship developed from there. Demi could see the talent that Kevin has for training and has helped us at the sales ever since. 

“My Dad is in the horse transport business and my uncle Michael trained and now his son Michael Jnr has taken over the licence. I actually wanted to be a trainer myself and going down the bloodstock route was never really the intention. I spent a summer with Wesley Ward to do something different and gain some experience in the USA. I was then introduced to Demi at the sales in Saratoga by Charlie O'Connor. I then started going to the sales with Demi and learning from him. With the knowledge I learned from Demi, I felt it would be a waste not to put it to good use.”

He added, “It's very good when you find a horse that's up to a level because there is a good market place to be selling out of Ireland. We've run six two-year-olds this year; two have won and two have placed. Even when you don't win, if you can get placed it's almost as good as a winner when you are reselling. Take for example Bladon (Ire) (Churchill {Ire}). He finished seventh at Killarney, albeit a good seventh in that he was an eye-catcher the way he kept on to the line. He is now sold to go to Joseph O'Brien. We got three or four different phone calls from different agents about him straight after the race. 

“We prefer to try and buy the seven furlong-plus type of horse at the sales. I pull up a lot quicker on the earlier types at the sales because, unless you sell those speedier horses before Royal Ascot, there is no market. We never had a solid offer for Catherine Of Siena and she was rated 97 and had black-type. You need to buy those horses who get seven furlongs-plus if you want to appeal to the international market.”

Despite the results Grassick and Coleman have enjoyed through Atomic Racing in a short but successful period, there is no danger of anyone's feet leaving the ground, according to the shrewd young agent. 

He said, “Kevin is the most unassuming guy that you'd ever meet. There's a house I always stay in when I go to the sales at Newmarket and, for one reason or another, I couldn't go to one of the sales last year and Kevin went instead. 

“He stayed in the house all week and never even mentioned to the landlady that he was a trainer. I know her quite well and was speaking to her after Kevin stayed. She told me she just assumed he was a lad working at the sales or maybe a box driver. 

“She said he was the most unassuming fella she's ever met. But that's Kevin, he's some worker and he deserves everything he gets.” 

Doubtless there will be many more red-letter days for this burgeoning operation.

 

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Weekly Stewards and Commissions Rulings: July 25 – 31

Every week, the TDN publishes a roundup of key official rulings from the primary tracks within the four major racing jurisdictions of California, New York, Florida and Kentucky.

Here's a primer on how each of these jurisdictions adjudicates different offenses, what they make public (or not) and where.

The TDN will also post a roundup of the relevant Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) related rulings from the same week. These will include decisions from around the country.

 

CALIFORNIA

Track: Del Mar

Date: 07/27/2023

Licensee: Ed Carroll, owner

Penalty: Restoration of financial good standing

Violation: N/A

Explainer: Owner Ed Carroll (DBA: Carroll Boys Racing) having satisfied a financial complaint filed by Veterinarian Melinda Blue for $491.76, is restored to good standing and California Horse Racing Board ruling LATS Ruling #03 dated March 3, 2023, is set aside.

 

Track: Del Mar

Date: 07/27/2023

Licensee: Thomas Varney Reeve, owner

Penalty: Suspended license

Violation: Failure to appear for steward's hearing

 

Explainer: Owner Thomas Varney Reeve lll, having failed to respond to written notice to appear before the Board of Stewards at Del Mar Race Track on July 26, 2023, is suspended for violation of California Horse Racing Board rule #1547 (Failure to Appear), pending an appearance at a hearing before the Board of Stewards to answer to charges alleging violation of CHRB rule #1876 (Financial Responsibility $486.34 to Veterinarian Melinda Blue). Suspension to commence August 3, 2023.

 

Track: Del Mar

Date: 07/29/2023

Licensee: Juan Hernandez, jockey

Penalty: Three-day suspension

Violation: Careless riding

Explainer: Jockey Juan Hernandez, who rode Wide West (IRE) in the seventh race at Del Mar Race Track on July 28, 2023, is suspended for 3 racing days (August 5, 6, and 10, 2023) for altering course without sufficient clearance in the stretch, causing interference resulting in the disqualification of his mount from sixth to seventh; a violation of California Horse Racing Board rule #1699 (Riding Rules – careless riding).

 

NEW YORK

Track: Saratoga

Date: 07/28/2023

Licensee: Jeffrey Englehart, trainer

Penalty: Fourteen-day suspension and $2,000 fine

Violation: Medication violation

Explainer: Mr. Jeffrey Englehart as responsible trainer under 9 NYCRR , 4043.4 (a) , violated Commission rules in that Mr. Jeffrey Englehart trained horse ” Victory Built” , that finished 2nd in the 2nd race at Aqueduct racetrack on March 11th 2023, and having received a report from the New York State Drug Testing and Research Program that a race-day blood sample taken from horse “Victory Built” had the substance Phenlybutazone present at a concentration, including an assement of the measurement uncertainty and imprecision of the quantitative threshold, in excess of 0.3 mcg/ml in plasma in violation of 9 NYCRR 4043.3 (a) (26). Having waived your right to an appeal trainer Mr. Jeffrey Englehart is hereby suspended 14 Calendar days August 3rd 2023 through August 16th 2023 inclusive and fined the sum of two thousand ($2,000) dollars.

Furthermore, horse “Victory Built” is disqualified from any part of the purse and the stewards order the purse redistributed as follows:

  1. # (6)  Gandy Dancing
  2. # (2)  Bronx Bomber
  3. # (3)  Doin'ittherrightway
  4. # (1)  Uno
  5. # (5)  Double Shot

 

Track: Saratoga

Date: 07/30/2023

Licensee: Irad Ortiz, jockey

Penalty: Three-day suspension

Violation: Careless riding

Explainer: For having waived his right to an appeal Jockey Mr. Irad Ortiz Jr is hereby suspended three (3) NYRA racing days August 9th 2023, through August 11th 2023 inclusive. This for careless riding during the running of the 7th race at Saratoga racecourse on July 27th 2023.

 

Track: Saratoga

Date: 07/30/2023

Licensee: Jose Ortiz, jockey

Penalty: Three-day suspension

Violation: Careless riding

Explainer: For having waived his right to an appeal Jockey Mr. Jose Ortiz is hereby suspended three (3) NYRA racing days August 9th 2023, through August 11th 2023 inclusive. This for careless riding during the running of the 10th race at Saratoga racecourse on July 26th 2023.

 

NEW HISA/HIWU STEWARDS RULINGS

The following rulings were reported on HISA's “rulings” portal and through the Horseracing Integrity & Welfare Unit's “pending” and “resolved” cases portals.

This does not include the voided claim rulings which were sent to the TDN directly. Some of these rulings are from prior weeks as they were not reported contemporaneously.

One important note: HISA's whip use limit is restricted to six strikes during a race.

 

Violations of Crop Rule

Canterbury Park

Harry Hernandez – violation date July 26; $250 fine and one-day suspension, 7 strikes

 

Colonial Downs

Jorge Ruiz – violation date July 27; $250 fine and one-day suspension, “excessive use of the riding crop”

 

Saratoga

Jose Ortiz – violation date July 26; $522.50 fine, 7 strikes

Jaime Alexis Torres – violation date July 27; $250 fine and one-day suspension, 7 strikes

 

Pending ADMC Violations

 

Date: 07/20/2023

Licensee: Natalia Lynch, trainer

Penalty: Provisionally suspended

Alleged Violation: Medication violation

Explainer: For the possible presence or possession of Levothyroxine, a banned substance. This is a possible violation of Rule 3214 (a)—Presence of a Banned Substance or a Banned Method.

 

Date: 07/01/2023

Licensee: Nestor Cascallares, trainer

Penalty: Pending

Alleged Violation: Medication violation

Explainer: For the presence of Phenylbutazone—Controlled Medication (Class C)—in a sample taken from Irazu, who won at Tampa Bay on 7/1/23. This is a possible violation of Rule 3312—Presence of Controlled Medication Substance.

 

Date: 06/02/2023

Licensee: Bernard Dunham, trainer

Penalty: Pending

Alleged Violation: Medication violation

Explainer: For the presence of Albuterol—Controlled Medication (Class B)—in a sample taken from Afandi, who finished second at Pimlico on 6/2/23. This is a possible violation of Rule 3312—Presence of Controlled Medication Substance.

 

Date: 05/29/2023

Licensee: John Pimental, trainer

Penalty: Provisionally suspended

Alleged Violation: Medication violation

Explainer: For the presence of Methamphetamine—a banned substance—in a sample taken from Golovkin, who finished sixth at Monmouth Park on 5/29/23. This is a possible violation of Rule 3212—Presence of a Banned Substance and/or its Metabolites or Markers.

 

Resolved ADMC Violations

Date: 05/31/2023

Licensee: James Acquilano, trainer

 

Penalty: Disqualification of Covered Horse's Race results, including forfeiture of all purses and other compensation, prizes, trophies, points, and rankings and repayment or surrender (as applicable); a fine of $500; imposition of 1.5 Penalty Points.

Alleged Violation: For the presence of Methocarbamol—Controlled Medication (Class C)— in a sample taken from Sabreen, who finished second at Finger Lakes on 5/31/23. This is a violation of Rule 3312–Presence of Controlled Medication Substance.

 

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Yorkshire Oaks An Option For Classic-Placed Bluestocking

G1 Irish Oaks runner-up Bluestocking (GB) (Camelot {GB}) is likely for the G1 Yorkshire Oaks on Aug. 24, Barry Mahon, European racing manager for owner/breeder Juddmonte, confirmed on Wednesday.

Trained by Ralph Beckett, the daughter of 2011 G1 Matron S. heroine Emulous (GB) (Dansili {GB}) has never been off the board in four starts. After breaking her maiden at Salisbury in September, she ran second in a listed at Newbury behind Warm Heart (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) making her 3-year-old bow, and was third behind that filly in the G2 Ribblesdale S. at Royal Ascot in June.

Mahon said, “Whilst we thought the world of her, her form before the Irish Oaks wouldn't have suggested she was going to put in a run like that, but we sort of always felt she had that in her.

“We'll look towards York for her. It will more than likely be the Yorkshire Oaks, but because she hasn't won yet this year she has the option of the race we won with Haskoy (GB) (Golden Horn {GB}) last year [Listed Galtres S.].”

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