Dylan Davis Hopes to Keep Momentum Going at Saratoga

Jockey Dylan Davis was pretty much an afterthought at the 2021 Saratoga meet, where he won 18 races and finished tied for ninth in the standings. Expect that to change this year at the Spa. Davis, though winless through the first two days of the meet, may just be the most improved rider in the sport.

The 27-year-old jockey served notice that he had reached a new level in his career when winning the Aqueduct winter meet, his first-ever riding title, with 64 wins. He was second in the Aqueduct spring meet with 18 winners, finishing one victory behind Kendrick Carmouche.

But there have been plenty of jockeys over the years who have done well at the Big A only to have to take a back seat to the many top jockeys who return from other tracks for the Belmont Spring meet, the Ortiz brothers, Joel Rosario, Luis Saez, John Velazquez, Flavien Prat. Davis turned out to be an exception to what is more or less a rule. He won 47 races at Belmont, losing out on the riding title by one win to future Hall of Famer Irad Ortiz Jr. Davis had a four-win lead over Ortiz coming into the final weekend of racing at Belmont, but Ortiz finished up with six wins over the last two days to nip Davis for the title.

“It was the best meet I've ever had,” Davis said. “I had the leading rider in the country chasing me down. I was in a good position and I did the best that I could. Unfortunately, I finished second best, by one win. Still, it felt great.”

What's been the difference?

“Everything kind of came together this year and everything started going in the right direction,” he said. “I'm definitely improving every year and building up my confidence, which trainers and owners like to see. Also, I'm building relationships with more trainers. They have more trust in me to get the job done out there. My agent is Mike Migliore (whose brother is Richard Migliore) and we've been working hard every year and there have been a lot of stepping stones for us. I've been with him for about five full years now. He's done a tremendous job. On and off the track, he's been a big supporter of mine and always points me in the right direction. He wants the best for me and he's helped me become a better communicator and more confident. He's always telling me to be confident.”

Even with the momentum he has coming off the Belmont spring meet, Davis has fairly modest expectations for Saratoga. He knows he will not contend for leading rider, not against a group of rivals that makes up the best riding colony in the U.S.

“I was ninth in the standings at Saratoga last year and one goal is to finish higher up than that,” he said. “I'm shooting for top six, and I think that is realistic. It will be a tough meet, no doubt. But if I can finish in the top six, that would be a tremendous meet for me.”

The biggest obstacle facing Davis is that he hasn't worked his way into the very top barns on the New York circuit, a problem at Belmont but an even bigger problem at Saratoga where the likes of Chad Brown and Todd Pletcher dominate. Davis has been riding since 2012 and has never ridden for Pletcher in Saratoga and has ridden just one horse there for Brown. He normally gets the bulk of his mounts from the more blue-collar stables, like Ray Handal, Dave Donk and Charlton Baker.

“I'm not sure how much new business I will get here,” he said. “It's difficult because so many trainers have relationships with established riders. To be able to compete here and win races without the elite trainers, that feels great. Mike and I, we've established a good business and have won for a lot of people. It would be very nice to ride for the top trainers, but I'm doing ok without them.”

He has made some inroads into some of the top barns of late. Hall of Famer Mark Casse gave Davis the mount on Adora (Into Mischief) in the GIII Schuylerville S. on opening day. He will also ride Boppy O (Bolt d'Oro) for Casse in Saturday's GIII Sanford S. And Christophe Clement has been using Davis more often of late. He teamed up with Clement last year to win the GI E.P. Taylor S. at Woodbine with Mutamakina (GB) (Nathaniel {Ire}). The win was Davis's first and still only in a Grade I stakes.

Davis is the son of Robbie Davis, a top rider on the New York circuit in the eighties and nineties. He sister, Jackie, will also be riding at the Saratoga meet and another sister, Katie, the wife of Trevor McCarthy, was also riding in New York before giving birth to the couple's first child. Davis said his father is always there when he needs some help, but wonders if he's not too nice.

“Right now, he's telling me that I am riding great and to keep doing what I am doing because it is working,” Davis said. “I say, Dad, please tell me something, even if it is negative.' I'd love to hear that because I'm always trying to improve.”

Robbie Davis won 277 races at Saratoga, including 11 graded stakes. The list includes a pair of wins in the GI Hopeful S. Will the son eclipse his father? It looks like he's on his way.

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Jockey Dylan Davis Rides 1,000th Career Winner

Jockey Dylan Davis reached 1,000 career victories with a late-rallying finish aboard the Christophe Clement-trained Heels Together (Hard Spun) in Friday's fifth race at Belmont Park.

“It feels great. Obviously, I couldn't have done this without the horses, my agent Mike Migliore, and my supporters–countless trainers and owners to get me here,” Davis said. “It feels really special. I love doing this and I love the game. I wasn't really keeping track of the number I was at,” Davis added, with a laugh.

The son of accomplished jockey and current NYRA circuit trainer Robbie Davis, Dylan Davis began his riding career in 2012 at Saratoga Race Course. In 2021, he amassed record earnings of $9,493,444 when he visited the winner's circle 130 times from 927 starts.

Davis' first Grade I triumph came aboard Mutamakina in the E.P. Taylor in Oct. 2021, also trained by Clement.

“Christophe is a trainer that really pushed me along through the tougher circuit here,” Davis said. “He gave me a lot of opportunities. What I needed is someone with the support like him to help get the job done.”

This year, Davis earned his first riding title when he posted 63 wins at the 2021-22 Aqueduct winter meet, finishing nine clear of Trevor McCarthy. The meet included three four-win days for Davis and victories in six stakes races for total purse earnings of $3,411,574.

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Davis, Rodriguez Take Aqueduct Winter Meet Titles

Jockey Dylan Davis captured the first riding title of his career, posting 63 wins at the 2021-22 Aqueduct Racetrack winter meet that ran from Dec. 9 to Mar. 27. Rudy Rodriguez paced all trainers with 33 wins, while Klaravich Stables secured the owner's title with 10 wins.

Davis, who is represented by agent Mike Migliore, finished nine wins ahead of runner-up Trevor McCarthy and 10 wins clear of third-place Kendrick Carmouche.

“It's incredible. I'm grateful and honored. I've worked very hard for this,” said Davis. “I'm grateful I can have this success and get one of the titles. My agent Mike works very hard behind the scenes to get me the mounts. Thanks to the owners and the trainers and everyone on the backside, especially the horses. The horses are the main thing–they are running for me and putting up performances.”

The 27-year-old native of Manhasset, NY achieved three four-win days Jan. 23, Feb. 26 and Mar. 26, and completed the meet with a record of 301-63-58-36 for total purse earnings of $3,411,574.

Rodriguez won his second consecutive Big A winter meet title and 13th overall training title at NYRA, sending out 33 winners, eight wins more than second-place trainer Rob Atras and 13 ahead of third-place finisher Chad Brown. He earned top trainer honors at last year's Big A winter meet with 36 winners and has taken home a total of 11 titles at Aqueduct.

“It's unbelievable,” said an emotional Rodriguez. “All the credit goes to the people in the barn. Most of the people that work with me here have been with us since day one.”

Rodriguez started 151 horses for a record of 33-22-20 and $1,506,693 in earnings. His runners posted a win rate of 21.85% and a 49.67 in-the-money percentage.

Rodriguez said each of his wins this meet were memorable.

“They're all very special,” Rodriguez said. “It's a lot of hard work dealing with the winter cold.”

Seth Klarman's Klaravich Stables posted a 21-10-2-3 record with total purse earnings of $623,160. It was a three-way tie for second between Windylea Farm [38-8-8-2, $331,058], Repole Stable [31-8-4-2, $292,161] and Michael Dubb [33-8-4-2, $458,427].

Live racing continues Thursday at the Big A, Opening Day of the 15-day spring meet that runs through Apr. 24.

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Barese Returns From Layoff To Win Aqueduct’s Rego Park

Paradise Farm and David Staudacher's Barese came home the best of nine state-bred sophomores to win his first stakes in Sunday's 6 1/2-furlong $100,000 Rego Park at Aqueduct Racetrack in Ozone Park, N.Y.

Trained by Mike Maker, the son of Laoban was making his first start since a debut maiden special weight win at Belmont Park on May 21, taking a five-furlong sprint for state-breds by a half-length under Irad Ortiz, Jr. from just off the pace.

Eight months later, Barese, piloted by Dylan Davis, was kept a bit farther off the pace than in his debut, breaking last in the field of nine and unhurried by Davis to track in sixth behind pacesetter Unique Unions through an opening quarter-mile in 22.64 seconds over the good and harrowed main track.

Barese continued to hold in fourth going four-wide down the backstretch as Unique Unions held his lead a length the better of Daufuskie Island and 1 1/2 lengths ahead of Agility with Kendrick Carmouche up.

Barese began to kick into gear entering the turn with slight urging from Davis, who was still content to bide his time with plenty of horse underneath him. Swinging wide to the center of the racetrack, Davis showed Barese a right-handed crop and gave him one tap as the field straightened for the drive to the wire, grinding away to the outside of Agility as Unique Unions began to toil along the rail.

Matching strides with Agility and Daufuskie Island just before the sixteenth pole, Barese pulled away under left-handed encouragement from Davis and secured the second win of his career by 2 3/4 lengths, stopping the clock in 1:19.13. Agility held on to finish second by a neck over Daufuskie Island.

Davis, who rode Barese for the first time in the Rego Park, said the bay colt was full of run.

“He's a big boy and coming off the layoff, I was just trying to get a nice, comfortable break and that's what he got,” Davis said. “They ran away from him which I thought would happen, but he was handling the kickback well.

“Nearing the five-eighths pole, he started getting a little aggressive with me and I thought it was better to not keep him behind those horses,” Davis added. “I gave him a nice, clear spot in the four-path and just let him do his thing into the turn. Turning for home, he had plenty left and his big stride was able to keep going and going. He might want to handle more distance, but he handled this great.”

Davis, who currently sits in second behind Carmouche [22 wins] in the jockey standings at the Big A winter meet with 19 wins, gave credit to agent Mike Migliore for his success this meet.

“I'm doing the best I can. I want to win this title,” said Davis. “I've been top-three or top-four for the past five years and I really want to get this title. It would be a real accomplishment for me. Mike has been working really hard behind the scenes.”

The Jorge Abreu-trained Agility stayed on well for place honors, holding off a stubborn Daufuskie Island, who finished third a head in front of Unique Unions in fourth.

“The horse ran a great race,” Carmouche said of Agility. “He lugged in a little, but I think he needs blinkers. Maybe that will straighten him up and get him going, but I thought he ran a game race. The whole way I was in good position, just second best today.”

Completing the order of finish were Cut the Cord, Doin'ittherightway, G Munning, Always Charming, and Bali's Shade.

Bred in New York by Sequel Thoroughbreds and Lakland Farm, Barese earned $55,000 in victory and improved his record to a perfect 2-2-0-0. A $2 wager on Barese returned $11.

Live racing returns to the Big A on Thursday with a nine-race card. First post is 12:20 p.m. Eastern.

America's Day at the Races will present daily coverage and analysis of the winter meet at Aqueduct Racetrack on the networks of FOX Sports. For the complete broadcast schedule, visit https://www.nyra.com/aqueduct/racing/tv-schedule.

NYRA Bets is the official wagering platform of Aqueduct Racetrack, and the best way to bet every race of the winter meet. Available to horseplayers nationwide, the NYRA Bets app is available for download today on iOS and Android at www.NYRABets.com.

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