Oaklawn Legend Chindi Passes At Age 29

A millionaire on the racetrack, but even more popular as trainer Steve Hobby's longtime stable pony, Chindi (El Prado {Ire}) was euthanized Thursday. The snow-white gelding was 29.

Hobby said Chindi's physical condition had deteriorated for several weeks, adding he believes it was because of a neurological disorder triggered by his advanced age, rare to reach for a Thoroughbred racehorse.

“When he got bad, he went fast,” Hobby said on the trainer's stand Friday morning. “I noticed little things riding him, like he kept bearing left and I had to keep correcting him. He wasn't putting his hay in his water bucket. He's done that his whole life. Then he started losing his action in behind. I hadn't taken him to the track for four or five days. It was neurological. He was going to fall down and not get up. I had him out the day before yesterday, in the morning. I just took him out to clean his stall and I almost couldn't get him back in his stall. He was going to fall down.”

Campaigned by Hobby's most treasured client, Oklahoman Carol Ricks (Cres Ran LLC), Chindi had an 18-13-23 record from 81 lifetime starts and earnings of $1,000,838. Ricks, 93, learned of Chindi's death Thursday night from her grandson, Ran Leonard, who now manages Cres Ran's racing operation.

“She was very upset,” Leonard said Friday morning. “I mean, all of us were. But my grandma, she's obviously an amazing human in every way. But she has this really good knack of immediately turning anything like that around and just commenting on how fortunate we were for everything he gave us during his racing career and post-racing career. And, how much he gave to Oaklawn and how much he gave to just racing in general and as an ambassador for the sport. She said something about how he essentially gave us two lives. He had the one life as a racehorse that was amazing and then the whole life as a stable pony. We got more than we could have ever expected out of him. Twenty-nine years is a long time.”

Ricks' late husband, Ran, privately purchased Chindi on the advice of bloodstock agent Omar Trevino, who stumbled across the horse and his dam, Rousing, while looking at some land near Lexington, Ky.

A late-running sprinter, Chindi–the Navajo word for “ghost”– recorded seven career victories at Oaklawn, including the $125,000 GIII Count Fleet Sprint Handicap for older horses at 6 furlongs in 1998. Chindi trailed by 11 lengths after a quarter mile and was still seventh after a half-mile before unleashing his patented stretch kick to win by 1 1/2 lengths under Don Pettinger. Pettinger, now the agent for Oaklawn-based jockey Travis Wales, rode Chindi regularly early in his career.

“Pretty cool horse,” Pettinger said Friday morning. “He was a lot of fun. Got to where I would just let him fall back and he'd be way back there. When you asked him that last quarter mile, he'd kick it in and make up a lot of ground. Everybody would think: 'He's beat, he's beat' because he'd be so far back. He was pretty cool.”

Chindi debuted March 15, 1997, at Oaklawn and retired following a sixth-place finish in the $40,000 Better Bee S. July 3, 2005, at Arlington Park. Retirement at Ricks' Cres Ran Farm north of Oklahoma City didn't agree with the gelding and he quickly transitioned to Hobby's stable pony, a position he held for almost two decades.

“But again, he never really spent any time there (Cres Ran Farm) because he wanted to be at the racetrack with Steve,” Leonard said. “He was every bit as much Steve's horse as he was ours, if not more. They had a bond that was–can't put it into words. I really don't believe in this kind of stuff as a general rule, but my grandma has spent the last two weeks going through all these old Chindi photos and trying to organize them and stuff. And then this happened. It's just kind of like, 'Was something in the world telling grandma?' It's just crazy how things like that happen.”

As the years passed, Chindi's popularity grew, particularly at Oaklawn, where he made 24 career starts. Hot Springs Mayor Pat McCabe proclaimed March 15, 2020, “Chindi Day,” allowing fans at Oaklawn a chance to again see the gelding in the winner's circle and indoor paddock between races. He was already a morning fixture at Oaklawn, escorting Hobby's horses to and from the track.

“Absolutely,” Hobby said, when asked if Chindi was more popular after his racing career ended. “I don't know why. I think longevity is one thing. People got so used to him and he was just always around. It's like he was immortal. That's why it's kind of got everybody that he died. Like, 'Chindi can't die. He's Superman.' ”

Hobby said he may keep half of Chindi's ashes, possibly sprinkling some at Oaklawn's finish line. The other half, Hobby said, would go to Ricks.

“It was the right choice, had to be done,” Hobby said. “I did the humane thing. He lived a great life and I'm just going to look back on the all the great memories.”

In Chindi's honor, Leonard asks fans to donate to Thoroughbred retirement charities in their state.

The post Oaklawn Legend Chindi Passes At Age 29 appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Lost And Found Presented By LubriSYNHA: After 5,061 Wins, Tim Doocy Savoring Life In The Slow Lane

Tim Doocy was fastest to the finish 5,061 times in his well-traveled riding career but he has acclimated to a much slower pace these days. A self-described full-time husband, Doocy and his wife of 43 years, Terry, reside on the banks of Lake Catherine in Hot Springs, Ark.

“Life's good,” Tim Doocy said to summarize the couple's relaxed routines that include cruising the lake a few times a week and gardening.

He said he occasionally goes to the races at nearby Oaklawn Park to socialize with friends but prefers watching on television when the mood strikes.

“I was lucky enough to have 35 years (as a jockey),” he said. “I don't look back. There are little things I miss but to me it was a lifetime ago.”

Doocy rode mostly in the Midwest with plenty of profitable time in the late1980s and early '90s at Golden Gate Fields and Bay Meadows in Northern California. He shifted back to the Midwest where he has done some of his best work as evidenced by his inductions into the Nebraska, Prairie Meadows and Remington Park Halls of Fame.

Before the question is asked, Doocy is quick to note that his spouse is a key to his success and longevity in the saddle.

“Everything we have is because of her,” he said. “All I did was ride. She took care of everything else so that made it easy for me. I just showed up for work and she took care of all the stuff away from the track.”

They have a son, Trey, who lives in Florida with his wife Kelley and their two daughters, Hendrix and Swayze, both under age two. Venturing to Florida to visit them is on the radar to make up for the lack of travel in 2020. Plans also include going to Omaha this summer to see Tim's mother and then road tripping to see other family and friends.

Unplanned decision
Doocy grew up in Iowa, but frequently visited relatives in his native Minnesota where his cousins had small ponies on which he learned to ride bareback. His uncles were amateur boxers who were encouraged to transfer their stature and athleticism to race riding. Instead, they steered Doocy in that direction. Through that connection, Doocy obtained his first track job during a high school summer vacation as a groom and exercise rider at East Moline Downs, which had a short-lived Thoroughbred season in Illinois near Davenport, Iowa.

Tim Doocy (right) and Luis Quinonez after they dead-heated for the win in the 1998 Remington Futurity

After graduation, Doocy went to Commodore Downs, the long-shuttered facility in Erie, Pa., where he rode his first winner in 1974. From there he became productive at the major Midwest tracks and made his mark on the Northern California circuit. He compiled an impressive list of stakes wins including the 1990 Haskell Invitational Handicap (G1) at Monmouth Park on Restless Con and 2000 Ack Ack Handicap (G3) at Churchill Downs aboard Chindi.

“It is always fun when you are on a roll when you are riding good horses and things are going good,” he said. “There is probably no better feeling because you feel like there is nothing you can't do.”

While enjoying another steady season as 2009 was drawing to a close, retirement was far from Doocy's mind. But a morning training accident a few days before his 55th birthday resulted in several fractures and a damaged knee that ended his career. He is philosophical about the unexpected turn of events.

“It took a few years for me to get my head wrapped around a lot of stuff,” he said. “We have a lot to be thankful for. It was a chance to start over. I asked myself what I wanted to do with that chance. No job, but finances were good. It gave my wife and I a chance to be together full time, so that was different.”

With no need to travel the racing circuit, the Doocys left their Oklahoma residence to build their Lake Catherine abode in 2014.

“I wasn't going to live in the past,” he said. “All good things have to come to an end. Everybody says they want to go out on their own terms, well, sometimes I think it is easier when the decision is made for you.”

Doocy rides Restless Con to victory in the 1990 Simply Majestic Stakes

The post Lost And Found Presented By LubriSYNHA: After 5,061 Wins, Tim Doocy Savoring Life In The Slow Lane appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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