Jockey Drayden Van Dyke, 26, was a fixture on the Churchill Downs backstretch as a kid but started his riding career in California, thanks to the influence of trainer Tom Proctor. With lots of palm trees but diminishing opportunities, Van Dyke has relocated to his birth state – with three-time Kentucky Derby winner and Hall of Famer Gary Stevens as his agent.
“There was a little bit of musical jockeys out in California with his agent Brad Pegram, who had both Mike Smith and Drayden since he started riding,” Stevens explained during a video shot by Jennie Rees on behalf of the Kentucky HBPA. “I'd actually spoken to Drayden about a month before that had happened about a possible move here to Kentucky.
“I really wasn't interested in hustling book for anybody unless the right guy came along. Drayden's been in me and Mike's corner since he started riding. We've watched him develop as a rider, and he's become part of the family. It's a good opportunity for me, and I think a good opportunity for Drayden.”
While both acknowledged that it can be difficult to gain a foothold in Kentucky, especially at the Keeneland meeting, they believe Van Dyke's familiarity with the local horsemen and his skill in the saddle will be major assets in the coming months.
“Everybody here in Kentucky, they've known Drayden since he was a kid,” Stevens said. “It's pretty cool for me to see the guys that he had relationships with when he was a young kid. Jim Baker, we worked one for him at Trackside the other morning. Everybody at the barn, you could tell it was like a long-lost son just came into the barn.”
Van Dyke will also have a Kentucky Derby mount this year aboard the Wesley Ward-trained Like The King (Palace Malice), with whom he partnered to win the G3 Jeff Ruby Steaks at Turfway Park.
“I think he's peaking at the right moment,” said Van Dyke. “In my eyes, the race is wide open. I'm actually really excited. I was telling Gary the other day, I was dreaming about the Derby! I don't dream that often, and he was telling stories about Chris Antley dreaming about the Derby.”
“Wesley, he does things his own way,” Stevens added. “He said as a 2-year-old, (Like The King) just would not work well on the dirt; he didn't have an affinity for it. He put him on the turf and the synthetic, and he liked it. Obviously, over the wintertime, his last two workouts prior to the Jeff Ruby, when he worked on the dirt over there, he worked in 59 and change. They were black-letter works. So he is showing an affinity for Keeneland's dirt track. Now that's not the same as Churchill's is, but I've seen a lot of really good turf horses be able to transfer that turf form here at Churchill Downs, for whatever reason. If you want to try a turf horse on the dirt, Churchill Downs has been the place to do it.”
The post Drayden Van Dyke, Agent Gary Stevens Return To Kentucky With Derby Shot On Like The King appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.