‘I Love Making Doubters Believers’: Jockey Katie Davis Returns With Aplomb After Becoming A Mom

Horse racing is a family affair for jockey Katie Davis, the daughter of retired jockey-turned-trainer Robbie Davis and sister of horseman Eddie Davis and fellow riders Jackie Davis and Dylan Davis. She is married to fellow NYRA-based jockey Trevor McCarthy with whom she shares their 2-year-old daughter, Riley.

Davis, a 10-year-riding veteran, amassed just 17 mounts in 2022 while caring for Riley, but returned to the irons with aplomb this year by banking more than $2.3 million in purse earnings — a career-best figure — through a record of 421-28-34-41.

Davis made a memorable return to the stakes winner's circle in February at Aqueduct Racetrack by guiding the Ray Handal-trained Funny How to victory in the $100,000 Broadway. In addition, she posted her first career wins at Belmont Park with claimer Jester's Song and also at Saratoga Race Course, by guiding River Tay to victory in a maiden claimer for the first of seven wins at the meet. Davis also traveled to Delaware Park in October to capture the White Clay Creek aboard the Danny Gargan-trained Ringy Dingy.

Q. You recorded a number of firsts this year and along the way you eclipsed your 2017 purse earnings record [545-73-84-67, $2,128,231] set when you were riding on the Mid-Atlantic circuit. What does it mean to you as a rider to be successful here in New York?

“In 2017, I rode day and night and won 73 races and three or four stakes. I came here to ride and I feel I've accomplished a lot. I've won 28 races this year and destroyed my career earnings record and I had a life doing it. I feel blessed. It was a big goal of mine to come back after becoming a mother. It was a big challenge for me and I feel like I nailed it, especially doing it here.

“I really wanted to prove myself — ride horses people don't want to ride and challenge myself. I connected with a difficult horse like Daddy Knows. I had no idea until I got in the paddock what he was like, but I won three on him for Ray Handal. To win at every circuit here in New York is really amazing, but sometimes I don't see my accomplishments because I'm so living in the moment.

“I'm really thankful for all the trainers that have helped me along the way and still believed in me. To have trainers respect my talent and believe in me is important.”

Q. How did you stay in riding shape and earn the opportunities that ensured this success?

“My dad had a couple horses in Ray Handal's barn and I was coming in the morning and hotwalking horses when I was eight or nine months pregnant and getting ready to pop. I was just helping out because you still have a love for the game and you want that exercise as well.

“I lost my identity as a rider [while pregnant] — there was nothing wrong with me, I was just having a child. It's not like I was hurt or out on an injury. I had to sit out for six months but I stayed very busy. I did a lot of self-work, meditation and finding myself without the title, which is a beautiful thing because I feel that helped me along the way coming back to riding and not making that my whole life, especially as I have a child now.

“I also did a class called Pure Barre for little core muscles which ballerinas do. It's not an aggressive workout — you have the barre and you're just pulsing. I did that until I was seven month's pregnant and I loved it. It was very intense but kept me tight in my muscles. I took Dylan with us here to try it on Long Island — and he's ripped, solid – and he started doing this class and he was sweating! He said, 'What is this, my legs are burning!' It's a really intense class and that kept me really fit.

“I was also getting on the bike and I did a lot of swimming towards the last month of my pregnancy. I had Riley with an emergency C-section. I was off for a month and wanted to get out there to do something. Ray needed an exercise rider and said to come on in the morning.”

Q. You and Trevor have both spoke out regarding mental health issues for jockeys. How do you combat negativity and issues related to the stress of being a professional athlete?

“Everyone handles it differently – not everyone can do meditation. I've also tried mantras — rather than guiding mediations — which can keep you focused on a positive repeating mantra. I've done breath work and love it and also sound healing and positive energy.

“Trevor does ice baths, which helps you to breathe and relax because you can't think about anything else. It's really good for your mental health and they have a tub for it in the jocks' room. Not everyone can do that either!

“I love making doubters believers. I love to inspire anyone that might be down in the business. It's just part of the game and everybody gets down, but it's only if you let yourself get that far down. You're in control of your happiness and you need to balance that. People can talk but you know deep down inside you have your own voice and always go with your gut and what you're feeling. It helps to have good people around you, too, that you know you can trust.”

Q. What is your favorite racing moment of 2023?

“Riding Saratoga was a great moment for me. Whether I was on a longshot or the favorite, when I walked out of that paddock everyone was clapping and roaring, yelling, 'You go girl!' Trainers would look at me and say they'd never seen such a thing. That was something usually saved for big horses like when Cody's Wish comes through, but most every race I came out everyone was clapping.

“My goal coming to Saratoga was to grab everyone along the journey and have them be part of it. If I see a kid, I'll interact with them because we are the face of racing so for a jockey to interact with them, they love that. I handed out whips, goggles – here take 'em! I have videos on my Twitter and Instagram with kids and me dancing and just enjoying it.

“I asked my dad if people think I'm not taking it seriously because it's New York and he said, 'Your riding shows, so who cares. Julie Krone was outgoing and exciting, but as long as when those gates open you're serious and ready to come out with a fight. it's OK.' I loved every bit of it.”

Q. With so many athletes in the family, what is the atmosphere like at the holiday dinner table?

“We're all very competitive. There's a game called Phase 10 that we love. It's a card game and we get very intense with that game and everyone is screaming. Eddie's the best — he gets in everyone's head.”

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Constitution’s Legalize Too Much for Sugar Bowl Rivals

Taking home his first black-type win this Saturday at Fair Grounds, Legalize (Constitution) broke his maiden at second asking in gate-to-wire fashion by 1 1/2 lengths at Churchill Downs Nov. 25.

Sent on his way as the 8-5 second choice here, the chestnut raced to the outside of two others up the backstretch and clung to that spot around the far turn. At the top of the lane, the 2-year-old colt geared up, grabbed the lead at the eighth pole and never looked back to win by 2 3/4 lengths over 'TDN Rising Star' American Rascal (Curlin).

The winner's dam produced a yearling filly by Gun Runner and visited Munnings for 2024. Second dam Summerly (Summer Squall) won the GI Kentucky Oaks, was the runner-up in the GI CCA Oaks and was third in the GI Mother Goose S.

SUGAR BOWL S., $97,000, Fair Grounds, 12-23, 2yo, 6f, 1:10.56, ft.
1–LEGALIZE, 117, c, 2, by Constitution
                1st Dam: Allez Marie (GSP-Brz), by Unbridled's Song
                2nd Dam: Summerly, by Summer Squall
                3rd Dam: Here I Go, by Mr. Prospector
($250,000 Ylg '22 KEESEP; $500,000 2yo '23 OBSAPR). 1ST BLACK TYPE WIN. O-Twin Brook Stables, Belladonna Racing, LLC, Nice Guys Stables, West Point Thoroughbreds, Iapetus Racing, Hornstock, S., Runnels Racing, Perrine Time Thoroughbreds, R T R Stables, LLC, Peppermint Stables, LLC and Manganaro Bloodstock; B-Stud TNT, LLC (KY); T-Cherie DeVaux; J-Brian Joseph Hernandez, Jr. $60,000. Lifetime Record: 3-2-0-0, $131,775. *1/2 to Tomato Bill (More Than Ready), GSP, $152,575; Fouette (Nyquist), MSP, $303,845; and Workaholic (Sky Mesa), SW, $144,828.
2–American Rascal, 120, c, 2, Curlin–Lady Aurelia, by Scat Daddy. 'TDN Rising Star'. O/B-Stonestreet Thoroughbred Holdings LLC (KY); T-Steven M. Asmussen. $20,000.
3–Agoo, 116, c, 2, Munnings–Grandacious, by Grand Slam. ($72,000 Wlg '21 KEENOV; $190,000 Ylg '22 KEESEP). O-Graham Grace Stable; B-Forging Oaks LLC (KY); T-D. Whitworth Beckman. $10,000.
Margins: 2 3/4, 1 1/4, 1 1/4. Odds: 1.70, 1.60, 1.90.
Also Ran: The Donegal Clan, Triple Trea, Malibu Rain.
Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by FanDuel TV.

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Uncle Mo Colt Brings the ‘Energy’ Second Out at Fair Grounds

2nd-Fair Grounds, $55,000, Msw, 12-23, 2yo, 1 1/16m, 1:44.98, ft, 5 1/4 lengths.
ETHAN ENERGY (c, 2, Uncle Mo–Sass and Class, by Harlan's Holiday), a well-beaten sixth on debut sprinting at Keeneland Oct. 22, took a major step forward stretching to two turns at second asking here. Removing blinkers and adding Lasix for this, the 2-1 chance chased in fifth rounding the clubhouse turn. Racing under a tight hold by Florent Geroux, he began to settle down the backstretch in that same slot, made a flashy four-wide blitz approaching the quarter pole and leveled off nicely down the lane to win by 5 1/4 lengths over El Magnifico (Street Sense). Sass and Class, also responsible for Royal Charlotte (Cairo Prince), MGSW, $408,150; had a colt by Authentic in 2022 and a colt by Curlin in 2023. She was bred back to Uncle Mo for 2024. Sass and Class brought $350,000 from Stonestreet carrying Ethan Energy at the 2020 KEENOV sale. Lifetime Record: 2-1-0-0, $34,250. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by FanDuel TV.
O-Stonestreet Stables LLC; B-Stonestreet Thoroughbred Holdings LLC (KY); T-Brad H. Cox.

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Letter To The Editor: Nick de Meric

I just wanted to express my frustration and disappointment that we, as an industry, seem incapable of presenting a meaningful response to the negativity we are currently facing in the mainstream media. For example, when the 60 Minutes documentary aired several weeks ago, it elicited a wave of legitimate outrage. But the industry's side of the story was nowhere to be seen outside the trade press. We have a collective tendency, at times like this, to wring our hands and shuffle our feet, figuratively speaking.

Surely the Thoroughbred Racing Industry, with all the fine bodies encompassed within it, with all their titles and acronyms, should have a public relations/damage control body tasked with countering some of the misinformation and negative reporting circulating in the free press?

We have so many positives to present: the improvements to injury detection, increased out of competition testing, the monitoring of training and workouts, more pre race veterinary oversight, the dedication of Thoroughbred Retirement facilities and the huge success of the Thoroughbred Makeover Project, stricter drug testing and uniformity of rules through HISA and HWIU, more stringent protocols at sales and the resulting improvements to horse and jockey safety, all of which are clearly reflected in independent studies. And while with most of these we are playing off the back foot, playing defense, none of it takes into account the many 'feel good' stories from this year's racing, the magnificent spectacle of Thoroughbreds racing on a big race day, the euphoria of backing a winning combination or the sheer joy of owning a competitive racehorse.

We now face the fallout from another damaging 'documentary' on racing, titled, 'Broken Horses', this time from the Disney Company, in which we are told that Thoroughbred horseracing's social license to exist is to be questioned, among other things. How many more such exposés in the mainstream media can we survive? Yet more fodder for the abolitionists. At what point will the New York State legislature decide to scrap plans for Belmont's renovation and spend the funds elsewhere?

It seems we are in desperate need of an intelligently choreographed, sustained PR campaign stressing the love of the animals that is inseparable from our fine sport, the significant economic impact of the industry in racing states, of the beauty of the horses themselves or of the farms that nurture them, the rich traditions of its history, the international competition between owners, trainers and racing jurisdictions globally and the excitement associated with owning, or just betting, a winner. These are significant talking points, of which we could make far better use.

We have industry insiders loudly and publicly calling for an overhaul of the sport, of purging 'the evildoers' and of the rampant use of performance enhancing drugs, which only adds fuel to the firestorm of public criticism. Yes, we need constantly to raise the bar and continue to make ongoing improvements in every aspect the sport, which, by the way, we are doing. We all agree on this.

But it seems to me that it is past time to link arms and present a united front that gives a more accurate portrayal of our beautiful sport, and its fine athletes, than that which is fed to the public by certain factions of the mainstream media. With the many powerful intellects and social influencers among our participants, it defies credibility that we seem unable to create an entity whose sole task is to present the multitude of positives our sport has to offer.

Perhaps now would be a really good time to form such a body.

Respectfully,

Nick de Meric.

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