‘It’s Okay To Say You’re Not Okay’: Drayden Van Dyke Nearing Return To Riding

Jockey Drayden Van Dyke is nearly ready to return to riding races, he told the Daily Racing Form this week, following a three-month hiatus from the sport. Van Dyke, the Eclipse Award-winning apprentice jockey of 2014, took the time to focus on his mental health.

“Toward the end of Del Mar, I felt it really strong,” Van Dyke told DRF. “I knew I needed to get myself right or I'd go further and further down. It was all mental. It was not drug-related or drinking too much. It was my mental approach. It took a while to get a hold of it.”

During his time away from the track, Van Dyke focused on physical fitness and learning to deal with the death of his father, Seth Van Dyke, a former jockey turned exercise rider who committed suicide in 2014.

“I never really had time to process that. I kept working and I kept riding races. I learned to block it out,” Van Dyke said. “When it first happened, in the first four or five years, I would cry all the time. I finally feel at peace with it. I haven't seen his grave since I went to the funeral. The funeral was a blur. I don't remember any of that time.”

Van Dyke returned to Santa Anita on Monday and was greeted warmly by the local horsemen.

He told DRF: “It's a cliché, but it's okay to say you're not okay and take the time you need.”

Read more at the Daily Racing Form.

The post ‘It’s Okay To Say You’re Not Okay’: Drayden Van Dyke Nearing Return To Riding appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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‘A Very Good Horseman’: Late Trainer Tommy O’Keefe ‘Will Be Missed’ At Woodbine

Like many others, Steve Roberts will remember longtime horseman Tommy O'Keefe for more than just his time as a multiple graded stakes winning trainer.

A lifetime winner of 245 races, 13 of them stakes, with over $6 million in career purse earnings, O'Keefe passed away on Dec. 22 after a courageous battle with bone cancer.

“Tommy was a great horse person who truly loved the game,” said Roberts, himself a long-time racing participant, who is currently a jockey agent working out of Woodbine. “In the days since he passed, I've heard so many great stories about Tommy from other trainers and horse people. He had the respect of so many people.”

Born in Waterford, Ireland, in 1941, O'Keefe would eventually land in Canada. After a short attempt at becoming a jockey – he was too heavy to make weight – in his homeland, he found a treasured life in horse racing at Woodbine.

He galloped several high-profile horses, a list that includes Kennedy Road, a Canadian champion with a fearsome reputation in the mornings and afternoons.

“Tommy told me that he would work the ones that were bad actors,” said Roberts. “I wasn't around during his galloping days, but it's something he enjoyed and did until he was around 60.”

Roberts would, however, get to know O'Keefe well. The friendship developed through Roberts' father, Les, a Thoroughbred owner who raced under the name Wings of Erin Farm, after the property he owned northwest of Woodbine.

“My dad bought that farm in 1998 and Tommy moved into the cottage that was there. I had quit my job and moved into the house a year later, to help after my stepmother Helen had passed away from pancreatic cancer. I had known Tommy since 1983 when he started training horses for my dad, but living there allowed us the chance to get to know one another better. I was helping turn out the horses and mucking the stalls, so it was a time where I got to hear lots of stories from Tommy – he had a lot of them.”

O'Keefe also had several standout horses who flourished under his watchful eye.

Some of his top performers include graded stakes winner Mulrainy, four-time stakes winner Wings of Erin, four-time stakes winner Inspired Kiss, and two-time stakes winner Masada. He won the 1978 Niagara Handicap (G3) with Tuxedo Mac.

“We tried our hand at breeding with mixed results,” said Roberts. “We did have a nice mare, Foxy Fiddler, who threw all winners. She produced Foxy Jean, Taranaki, Fiddler's Green, and Curve of the Moon. We had a small farm operation compared to most, but we had a great run. In 2011, my father sold the farm and got out of the business. Over the last 12 years, Tommy trained a few of his own.”

O'Keefe's adoration for the sport would have made him a natural in other roles, noted Roberts.

“I had told Tommy that he should become a bloodstock agent because he had such a keen eye in buying yearlings. He loved the sales. Every year, he'd buy that one diamond in the rough and turn it into a multiple winner. He enjoyed matching young stallions with first or second foal mares.”

O'Keefe's top season, by wins, was 13, which he reached in 1976 and 1999. His top season, by earnings, was in 2002 when his starters totaled $560,994.

On September 16, 2012, champion rider Emma-Jayne Wilson guided D'Wildcat Gold, a horse trained and owned by O'Keefe, to victory in the afternoon's race. It was the 1,000th win of Wilson's career.

His last training win came on July 1, 2022, with Ingordwetrust, a son of Flashback-Messageinabottle he also owned. He recorded 16 career wins as a sole owner.

“Tommy continued to train one or two horses every year, right up until this past spring,” said Roberts. “I'd always pass by his barn and talk horses and soccer, something we both enjoy. He was in a lot of pain the last few years, but he would be at the barn each day and leading his horses to the track to train.”

Roberts has an abundance of happy recollections of O'Keefe, including the bond he shared with his father.

“My dad and Tommy were great friends. They both loved English football. Tommy supported Manchester United, and my dad supported Liverpool, which led to many debates at the local pubs when they would watch matches with other friends.

“Tommy was very upset when he heard that my dad passed away suddenly in October 2022. Even though Tommy was quite ill at the time, he still came to his celebration of life and raised a few jars. They both had a great run.”

Roberts was grateful to have a trackside view to see most of their shared successes.

“One of my fondest memories was watching Tommy develop the horses and then seeing the success he would have for my dad. Seeing the horses start at our farm and then seeing them go on to be in the winner's circle will always be special. Tommy had a big impact on a lot of people's lives.”

That list would extend beyond the racing world.

When Les Roberts sold Wings of Erin, the new owners were happy to let O'Keefe maintain his residence there.

“Nadia, the woman who bought the farm from us, made sure Tommy was taken care of. He lived in the same cottage when my father owned it, and she was kind enough to allow him to continue to stay there. Over those 10 years, they got to know and love Tommy, seeing him as a grandfather figure. She did so much for him. He made his final arrangements through her.”

There are plans for a memorial service in January. Details will be announced once a date and time are set.

Roberts expects to see a large outpouring of support from the Woodbine racing community.

“He was a very good horseman, who was well thought of. He taught me a lot. I watched and learned a lot from Tommy. It's been great to hear horse people and others talk about him. You hear those stories, and you realize just how much he will be missed around the racetrack.”

The post ‘A Very Good Horseman’: Late Trainer Tommy O’Keefe ‘Will Be Missed’ At Woodbine appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Knicks Go Yearling Brings Moore Full Circle at Keeneland January

Sabrina Moore's GreenMount Farm will offer its final consignment during next week's Keeneland January Horses of All Ages Sale and, fittingly, the consignment's three offerings kick off with a short yearling from the first crop of the champion who put the Maryland farm on the map, Knicks Go.

“It's a little bittersweet that this is going to be my last consignment,” Moore admitted. “But it will kind of come full circle, hopefully.”

Moore and her mother Angie co-bred Knicks Go and sold the son of the late Paynter for $40,000 as a weanling at the 2016 Keeneland November sale. He sold to the Korea Racing Authority for $87,000 at the following year's Keeneland September sale.

Knicks Go went on to win five Grade I races, including the 2021 GI Breeders' Cup Classic, GI Pegasus World Cup Invitational, and GI Whitney S., as well as the 2018 GI Claiborne Breeders' Futurity and the 2020 GI Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile. The gray was named Horse of the Year and champion older male in 2021 and retired to Taylor Made Farm the following year.

Knicks Go had 18 weanlings sell last November for an average of $64,611 and a high of $220,000. With the turning of the year, the stallion's first yearlings sell at Keeneland next week and Moore's GreenMount will offer the first of the group as hip 69 during the auction's first session Monday.

“He has this tenacious attitude,” Moore said when asked if she saw similarities between the yearling and his famous father. “He is a little hard-headed, but in the best way possible. He definitely has his own opinions and he is a very confident colt. I foaled him at my farm [in Maryland] and he came out brown and I thought, 'oh no!' I just had this dream in my head that I would get this little gray Knicks Go baby. But other than that, body style, they are pretty similar. He is a stout individual and he carries good body.”

After foaling the colt in Maryland, Moore picked up roots and moved to Kentucky last fall.

“We moved him down here and I can't believe how much he's progressed in the last two months,” Moore said. “He is really coming on. If a pinhooker picks him up, I think they will be thrilled with him in the next few months. He is really headed in the right direction.”

Of her move to Kentucky, Moore admitted it was a transition that just made sense.

“It had been on my radar the last few years,” Moore said. “I bred a really nice horse, but at the end of the day, that didn't get me far, at least financially. The Maryland circuit was really struggling and I had a lot of clients who were really struggling. It felt like it was going in a direction that I didn't think was going to benefit me long term. So I just had to try to think about my future and where I wanted to be. And owning a farm in a regional market was just not going to do it.”

The decision to make the move to Kentucky was made easier when some Maryland clients, Steve and Denise Smith, encouraged her to join them as their farm manager.

“They just bought a really nice farm,” Moore said. “It's the old Fort Blackburn Farm on Old Frankfurt Pike. They were looking for a manager and I was looking for a job. We've had this relationship for a long time, so I was really comfortable. I was scared to come down here and get lost in the mix, but it's been a really smooth transition. It's been great.”

Now renamed Mesingw Farm, the operation is home to some 40 horses, as well as a racing stable of some 20 horses in training. Among the stable, the Smiths are co-owners of graded stakes winner Danse Macabre (Army Mule), who is trained by Kelsey Danner.

“[Smith] is getting close to retiring and this is his passion and he's always had his eye on doing this,” Moore said. “They aim to keep the fillies and sell the colts. But if they bring them through the ring and it's not what he wants, then he will race them, too. He is aiming to try to build a really nice broodmare band.”

As for Moore, she's settling into a more relaxed way of life.

“I thought I wanted an office job for a while–I didn't realize how much I would miss working with horses,” Moore said. “I was so burned out. It was so hard to find help in Maryland. I had 50 horses for the last year and a half and it was me and one other girl and sometimes another part-time person. It was unrealistic and exhausting.”

Of her final GreenMount consignment, Moore said, “I will miss it, but I am a little relieved to be done with it and to focus on my current job right now full force. And go on from there.”

Moore retained one broodmare, a half-sister to Knicks Go, and she is looking forward to seeing what the champion's first offspring can do on the racetrack.

“They are falling into the hands of a lot of really nice professionals,” she said of the stallion's first crop. “It will be really exciting to watch them develop and hopefully they go on and do big things.”

The Keeneland January sale will be held next Monday through Thursday with sessions beginning each day at 10 a.m.

The post Knicks Go Yearling Brings Moore Full Circle at Keeneland January appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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2024 Kentucky Derby Prospect Profiles: Catching Freedom

Welcome to 2024 Kentucky Derby Prospect Profiles, where we’ll take a look each week at a recent winner on the Triple Crown trail, usually from the Road to the Kentucky Derby prep series that offers qualifying points for the first leg of the series. The 1 ¼-mile Kentucky Derby Presented by Woodford Reserve will be held May 4, 2024, at Churchill Downs.

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