Horse Racing Love Story: Hall Of Fame Jockey Celebrates Golden Anniversary At Woodbine

It's a horse racing love story going on 50 years.

When they sit down to lunch with their children, grandchildren and other family at the Woodbine Club this Saturday, Hall of Fame jockey Robin Platts and his wife, Deb, will take a moment to look beyond the racetrack, the toteboard and pristine Toronto oval infield, to gaze upon the expansive Toronto oval backstretch.

“I asked to Deb to marry me on the backstretch back in 1971,” recalled Robin, a four-time Queen's Plate-winning jockey who was inducted into the Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame in 1997. “I can still remember that moment. She said yes right away. And now here we are, 50 years later, celebrating our wedding anniversary at the place where it all started.”

They both know Woodbine well.

Born in Leicester, England, on April 27, 1949, Robin, who came to Canada when he was eight, chased his dream of a life in the irons riding his first winner, 42-1 shot Lily, at Greenwood Racetrack in Toronto's east end on November 18, 1966.

Deb Bruce, the daughter of Thoroughbred trainer Robert Bruce, was part of the local racing scene too, often helping her father at his barn while her mother Fredie worked as a messenger bettor in the grandstand.

Robin and Deb's relationship began courtesy of a question from Doug Anderson, a jockey valet who went by “Cricket.”

Was it love at first sight?

“I guess it was for her,” said Robin with a laugh. “I knew her dad way before I knew Deb. I knew her as Bobby Bruce's daughter… she was 13 when I first met her. I would say hello to her. One day at Greenwood, this was in 1971, I found out that Deb needed a ride home. Cricket asked me if I could give her a lift and I said, 'Sure, no problem at all.' We started going out that spring.”

Deb had her eye on Robin well before that car ride.

“I spent a lot of time on the backstretch when I was young. When I was a little older, I started going to the races more and I'd see the jockeys. There was just something about Robin that I liked, so I had a bit of a crush on him. I would say hi to him at the track whenever I saw him. When he took me home that day it just kind of went along from there.”

Their first date included another car ride, a romantic dinner and the gift of music.

“We went out on his birthday, April 27, and he brought me a couple of albums,” recalled Deb. “One of them was The 5th Dimension and the other, I think, was Creedence Clearwater Revival. Needless to say, he brought me a present. We continued on and one day he brought me to his house to meet his family. I remember I walked in and there was one black and white photo of Robin in Gardiner Farms' silks. He was standing on a set of stairs in the photo, without his helmet on, and I just loved it. I have it here with me now.”

By the time the two were engaged on September 13, 1971, Robin had already risen up the ranks of a Woodbine riding colony featuring some of the sport's biggest names, a list that included Sandy Hawley and the late Avelino Gomez.

Robin's career, one that included those four Queen's Plates – tying him with Hawley and Gomez as the most by a rider – yielded 3,245 wins, with his mounts nearly topping the $40-million mark. The recipient of the 1979 Sovereign Award as Canada's Outstanding Jockey, he won the coveted Avelino Gomez Memorial Award in 1992 for contributions to the sport in Canada.

His Plate triumphs came with Victoria Song in 1972, Amber Herod in 1974, Sound Reason in 1977 and Key to the Moon in 1984. Stakes stars included Overskate, Izvestia, Frost King, Norcliffe, Carotene, Runaway Groom and champions Charley Barley, Play The King, Grey Classic and Thunder Puddles.

In an eight-year span, from 1976 to 1983, Robin was the leading stakes-winning rider on seven occasions. He was the leading race winner at two Woodbine meets and five times led all jockeys at Greenwood during the track's spring meets.

But he was far from just a local standout.

Robin represented Canada in numerous international competitions, riding in South Africa, Bahrain, Japan, and across Europe.

Deb was always along for the ride.

“Everywhere I went, she went with me. I think that was a big thing for us. Being a rider is a very demanding life and to have Deb along with me, to get to enjoy those experiences together, was a really good thing for both of us.”

Deb and the couple's three boys were fixtures at Woodbine on weekends.

“When Robin couldn't be home on Saturday or Sunday to play with them or spend time with them, I told the boys, 'This is your father's job, so we can go there to watch him.' They got see him in action. I tried to go everyone weekend to support Robin and the kids would get to see them.”

Those remembrances, among countless others, will be talked about on Saturday at Woodbine when more than a dozen people, including their sons, Rob, Director of Broadcast with Woodbine, Kris, Manager of Broadcast Operations with the company, and Jeff, who worked at the racetrack for years, gather for the golden anniversary celebrations.

“Three kids, five grandchildren… it really is amazing,” offered Robin. “I quit riding when I was 50, galloped until I was 60 and hotwalked until I was 70. And here I am now, at 72, married for 50 years. It's been a great ride on and off the racetrack for me. I've had a pretty good life and I have a lot of great memories at Woodbine. It's a place where so many great things happened for me.”

It's a sentiment shared by Deb.

“To have our family with us, to be able to share this day with them, it's going to be really special,” she said with an unmistakable emotional tone. “We'll be back at the place where we met, where Robin asked me to marry him and where we all have an attachment to.”

The perfect setting for a half-century of racetrack romance that's still running strong.

The post Horse Racing Love Story: Hall Of Fame Jockey Celebrates Golden Anniversary At Woodbine appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Weekend Lineup: Female Sprinters Highlight Saturday’s Action, Mighty Heart Returns On Sunday

A quartet of graded stakes races highlight this weekend's racing action across North America, but Saturday's highlight is the $300,000 Dream Supreme Stakes at Churchill Downs featuring the rematch of top female sprinters Bell's the One and Sconsin. Both skipped a trip to the Breeders' Cup World Championships last weekend, and return in this spot to renew their rivalry.

Saturday

3:56 p.m. – Grade 3 Maple Leaf Stakes at Woodbine

Ten fillies and mares will travel 1 ¼ miles on the Tapeta in Saturday's Maple Leaf Stakes. Starters include the Mark Casse-trained foursome of Art of Almost, Broadway Lady, Crystal Glacier and Skygaze. Graham Motion will send out Sister Otoole, a 4-year-old Florida-bred daughter of Amira's Prince (IRE), who sports a 2-3-3 record from 10 starts.

Maple Leaf Entries

4:36 p.m. – Grade 2 Bessarabian Stakes at Woodbine

The seven-furlong main track feature for fillies and mares, three-years-old and upward, has drawn nine starters, including Juxtapose. Trained by Steve Owens, the Kentucky-bred heads into her second straight stakes date after notching a third in the Grade 3 Ontario Matron on Oct. 10 at Woodbine.

Bessarabian Entries

5:36 p.m. – $300,000 Dream Supreme Stakes at Churchill Downs

Bell's The One and Sconsin will face one another for the sixth time in their careers on Saturday beneath the Twin Spires, this time over six furlongs. The last time they met, Sconsin bested Bell's the One by a half-length in the Open Mind Stakes on Sept. 18. However, Bell's the One came back to win the G2 Thoroughbred Club of America Stakes at Keeneland, and Sconsin hasn't raced since the Open Mind, so recent form could give Bell's the One the edge.//

Dream Supreme Entries

Sunday

4:35 p.m. – Grade 2 Autumn Stakes at Woodbine

Eight hopefuls, including multiple graded stakes winner Special Forces, reigning Canadian Horse of the Year Mighty Heart, and 2019 Belmont Stakes champ Sir Winston, are set to contest Sunday's Autumn Stakes. Special Forces will chase his second Autumn score, having won the 1 1/16-mile Tapeta event for 3-year-olds and upward two years ago.

Autumn Entries

7:00 p.m. – Grade 3 Bob Hope Stakes at Del Mar

Bob Baffert has three of the five 2-year-olds in the lineup for the seven-furlong headliner, including Messier, Kamui, and Winning Map. Also in the lineup are Rock N Rye and Forbidden Kingdom, though trainer Walther Solis plans to scratch Rock N Rye in favor of entering him in a state-bred stakes later in the meet.

Bob Hope Entries

The post Weekend Lineup: Female Sprinters Highlight Saturday’s Action, Mighty Heart Returns On Sunday appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Maclean’s Music Filly ‘Nose’ Her Way Home

1st-Del Mar, $71,500, Msw, 11-12, 2yo, f, 5fT, :57.37, fm, nose.
UNBRIDLED MARY (f, 2, Maclean's Music–Bauble, by Tale of the Cat) amassed a very imposing worktab, capped by a strong half-mile gate move in :47 4/5 (3/37) at Santa Anita Nov. 7, and was off right at her morning-line odds of 4-1. Hustled along early by Joe Bravo, the bay traveled sweetly inside on the turn and was angled out sharply into the three path on the swing for home. Whether by design or not, Unbridled Mary dropped back down to the rail with an eighth of a mile to race and closed off powerfully to find the line just to the good of Pammy's Ready (More Than Ready). A $39,000 graduate of last year's KEESEP sale, Unbridled Mary breezed a furlong in a steady :10 3/5 (see below) and was hammered down for $155,000 at this year's Fasig-Tipton Santa Anita 2YOs In Training Sale. The last listed produce for her dam, Unbridled Mary is out of a half-sister to GISW Persistently (Smoke Glacken). Sales history: $39,000 Ylg '20 KEESEP; $155,000 2yo '21 FTSANA. Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $42,000. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.
O-West Point Thoroughbreds, Pearl Racing & Mark Pine; B-Merriebelle Stable LLC (KY); T-John W Sadler.

The post Maclean’s Music Filly ‘Nose’ Her Way Home appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Jockey Kyle Frey Nearing 1,000-Win Milestone At Del Mar

Jockey Kyle Frey enters Friday's program at Del Mar with 998 wins from 5,903 career starts according to Equibase statistics. He's scheduled aboard three mounts in the eight-race program and is booked for three more on Saturday and six on Sunday.

The 29-year-old from Tracy, Calif., said he has been aware of his proximity to the milestone 1,000th victory for “a week or two,” but is approaching it philosophically.

“I embrace it, but I'm not thinking about it or paying attention to it that much,” Frey said. “I've noticed that sometimes when guys near a milestone they slow down – I don't if it's because they're too aware or nervous or what. I'm not nervous, I'm just trying to go out and do my best to win every race.”

Frey has 157 wins from 759 mounts with purse earnings of $4.1 million and ranks 50th among jockeys nationally for money won this year. He came to the summer meeting with plans to ride a few days at Del Mar and then return to Golden Gate Fields in San Francisco, where he was among the top riders.

He won two races the second day of the local meeting, then the Fleet Treat Stakes on I'm So Anna for trainer Steve Sherman on the second weekend and tabled the notion of returning to Northern California. He notched 14 wins from 145 mounts with purse earnings of nearly $1 million and finished eighth in the rider standings for the 31-day session, a breakthrough time in what has become the best season of his career, topping $4 million in purse earnings for the first time since 2011.

“That (summer meeting) meant everything,” Frey said. “I owe it to the trainers who gave me a chance on good horses. I was able to execute to their plans early and things worked out well.”

With 12 mounts over the next three days, Frey estimated chances are “pretty good” he'll be able to put 1,000 wins in the rearview mirror.

“Anytime you're in a race, you've got a chance,” Frey said.

The post Jockey Kyle Frey Nearing 1,000-Win Milestone At Del Mar appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights