Former Jockey Gerry Olguin Owning His New Racing Role

Gerry Olguin racked up 42 stakes scores during his days in the saddle. Now, he's hoping his most memorable win comes from the Woodbine owner's box.

It's been four-and-a-half years since the highly respected jockey rode in his final race, a memorable triumph for a multitude of reasons.

Not only did it signal the end of 29 years in the irons, but the victory aboard Dumont in the final race of the card at Golden Gate on January 15, 2017, was the 2,000th of his career, with his father Roger and mom Norma proudly cheering him on.

“It's something I'll never forget,” said Olguin, who was born in California and raised in Tijuana, Mexico. “I was very fortunate to ride a lot of very nice horses over my career.”

All told, Olguin rode in more than 16,000 races dating back to his first win aboard Light The Tote in 1988 at Aqua Caliente in Tijuana when he was only 15. He won the Hastings Park rider championship in 1997 and 1998 before heading to Woodbine in 1999.

Over the years, he partnered several standouts, including Stunning Stag, Paladin Bay and Ablo, the latter to a 19-1 win in the 2004 Coronation Futurity, and an 8-1 victory at Fort Erie in the 2005 Prince of Wales Stakes, second race in the Canadian Triple Crown series.

And then there is Lorena.

A dark bay daughter of Souper Speedy, Lorena is co-owned by Olguin, Brent and Russell McLellan, and trainer Stuart Simon.

Olguin, who gallops for Simon, became a partner in the filly after a trip to the 2019 CTHS Canadian-bred Yearling Sale.

While the ex-rider is an admitted neophyte when it comes to picking out horses, his trust in Simon and desire to join the ownership ranks was more than enough motivation to get involved.

“After I retired from riding, I wasn't sure what I wanted to do, so I started galloping. When I started doing that, I wanted to own a horse. I figured I'd try it. Stuart picked her out. We looked at so many yearlings on that day and I wasn't sure which one stood out. It was only the second sale I had been to, and we saw so many. I knew Stuart would have great insight and know what to do.”

Bred by Dr. Liam Gannon, Lorena debuted last November at Woodbine in a 5 ½-furlong main track event.

Sent postward as the 5-1 second choice in the field of 12, Lorena, under Rafael Hernandez, was 3 ½-lengths in front at the stretch call, going on to an easy 7 ½-length romp in 1:04.26.

“Before that race, she indicated she could be good first-time out,” recalled Olguin. “You had the sense from the mornings works. She was always very calm and when she ran that first race, she ran very impressively.”

Simon was understandably thrilled with the head-turning debut.

Just prior to the start of the 2021 Woodbine Thoroughbred campaign, he spoke glowingly, yet cautiously, about Lorena's future.

“She's Ontario-sired and Ontario-bred, so she's Canadian-bred eligible for everything, and I think she has a lot of upside if she takes those steps forward,” offered Simon.

On June 19 in a 6 ½-furlong trek over the Toronto oval Tapeta, Lorena did just that.

This time, as the 2-1 choice, she converted a head advantage at the stretch call into a sharp three-length score in a time of 1:15-flat.

Olguin believes the best is yet to come for the filly whose dance card could include the $500,000 Woodbine Oaks presented by Budweiser on August 1, and perhaps a spot in the $1 million Queen's Plate starting gate on August 22.

There are still question marks – she's yet to test two turns – ahead of those high-profile engagements, which has prompted Olguin to take a measured approach when speaking of Lorena's future.

“I try not to think about those races, to be honest. She's nominated to the Fury [July 10, at Woodbine, a seven-furlong main track test on the road to the Oaks] and if everything goes well, she'll go in there. After that, we'll just have to see. I just want to take one race at a time. My goal is to take her to work every day and come home safe with her. That's always my goal with any horse.”

All of that said, he likes what he sees.

And Olguin's viewpoint is well informed, considering he has an inside track in the mornings.

“When I gallop her, I like her stride and I like that she's calm. Nothing much upsets her and she has a very good mindset. She's nice to gallop. She's what you want in a horse. If you upset her, she can be feisty, but once I gallop her, she's all business. She goes out and does her thing.”

Should Lorena contest the Oaks and possibly, the Plate, Olguin will look the part.

He'll let those in silks chase glory while he fashions a suit and silk tie from the owner's box.

It's a decidedly different view from the one he had for a big part of his life, a perspective that can brings its share of new challenges.

“The other day when she ran, my hands were so sweaty that I couldn't even open my phone. I was so nervous and I didn't know why. I never got like that when I was riding. I had butterflies in my stomach sometimes – that happened lots of times – but never anything like her first race this year.”

Olguin wouldn't mind experiencing that reaction again, perhaps when she contests one or two of the biggest races on the Woodbine stakes calendar.

“If she moves forward from her first two races, she's going to be okay. I'm really enjoying being an owner. It's still a big rush when you see your horse cross the wire first.”

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South Africa: Trainer Snaith Chasing Fourth Straight Win In Historic Durban July Handicap

With Independence Day right around the corner, start your holiday weekend off right with some International horse racing on Saturday Morning, starting with the first post at 5:15am ET. Sky Racing World, the Louisville, Ky.-based distributor of International Thoroughbred racing content, is excited to announce coverage of the historic 125th Durban July Handicap at Greyville Racecourse in South Africa, The race will also be broadcast on TVG and be available on our new Sky Racing World App, which you can find here.

Justin Snaith is going all out with four entries among the 18 runners carded for Greyville on Saturday. He is coming off a hat-trick of wins, having saddled Belgarion to win last year and prior to that Do It Again to back-to-back victories. Both horses are in the line-up again this weekend and will spearhead Snaith's attempt to win Africa's greatest horse race for a fifth time, chasing the seven successes of the legendary Syd Laird and the six of Terrance Millard.

Raced on turf, the Durban July Handicap is open to horses of all ages, but all of them will be chasing after Rainbow Bridge from the off, as the gelding and rider Luke Ferraris have changed their running tactics, won their last three races, and claimed pole position for the upcoming race. Top weight Rainbow Bridge will be looking to win this one for owner Mike Rattray, who been competing in this prestigious race for over four decades.

Despite Rainbow Bridge's pole position, he isn't currently trading as the favorite with 5-1 odds, as it's Got The Greenlight who leads the way with 5-2 odds. The 4-year old was runner-up to Belgarion last year where he was beaten by just shy of one length. Trainer Joey Soma has had the Vodacom Durban July in his sights since Got The Greenlight's loss last year and the colt does appear to have had the ideal preparation. On the other hand, weight could be an issue and Ferraris will need to avoid traffic in a notoriously rough race from his pole position draw.

Even with the number 14 draw, Got The Greenlight's jockey, Muzi Yeni, said, “I was extremely happy with Got The Greenlight's gallop, which was outstanding. He gave me the feel that he has strengthened up even further and he is really in a good space, so it's all positive from my side. I am not too concerned about his No 14 draw as I would prefer not to be caught up in the scrimmage for position in the early stages. All the major players seem to have put up good gallops and all looked very well within themselves so it's going to be a great spectacle.”

Speaking of Belgarion, last year's winner is back again looking for the double, but this time with a different rider. This year he will be going for the win with S'Manga Khumalo, who won the race with steed Heavy Metal back in 2013. Belgarion is a 9-1 favorite to win and fans will be hoping he can go back-to-back.

Make sure not to forget about Do It Again, as he'll be in the race as well, with stable rider Richard Fourie. He'll be looking to make history as the only horse to have won the race three times, after winning in back-to-back years before losing to Belgarion last year. Currently at 8-1 odds, Do It Again last won the race two years ago, but can he follow his name and get it done again?

Also in the field is the three-year-old Linebacker, winner of the Grade 2 KZN Guineas and Grade 1 Daily News 2000, who is the clear second favorite at 7-2. Three-year old horses have an outstanding record in this race over the recent years, so maybe Linebacker can make his mark on the proceedings. Another factor going in the favor of three-year old horses is that they will all carry the minimum weight for their age group going into the race.

Who will win this historic event in 2021? Will it be favorite Got The Greenlight or another one of the horses in the field? Find out on July 3rd on Sky Racing World, our app and on TVG!

The Greyville card will be broadcast live on TVG this Saturday morning (First Post: 5:15 AM ET / 2:15 AM PT). All races will be live-streamed in HD on the new Sky Racing World Appskyracingworld.com and major ADW platforms such as TVG, TwinSpiresXpressbet, NYRABets, WatchandWagerHPIbet, and AmWager. Wagering is also available via these ADW platforms. Fans can get free access to live-streaming, past performances and expert picks on all races at skyracingworld.com

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Catalogs For Fasig-Tipton July Selected Horses Of Racing Age, July Breeding Stock Sales Now Online

Catalogs for Fasig-Tipton's July Breeding Stock and July Selected Horses of Racing Age sales may now be viewed online.

Both auctions will be held on Monday, July 12 in Lexington, Ky., and precede Fasig-Tipton's July Sale of selected yearlings to be conducted the following day on Tuesday, July 13.

The July 12 sale day will begin with July Breeding Stock at 2 p.m., which includes the Far From Over/Fountain of Youth dispersal. The catalog currently features 51 initial entries and is comprised of broodmares – many of which will be sold alongside their 2021 foals at foot – and broodmare prospects.  Covering sires represented are Catalina Cruiser, Catholic Boy, Connect, Country House, Dialed In, Echo Town, Far From Over, Goldencents, Gun Runner, higher Power, Honor Code, Lord Nelson, Maclean's Music, Midnight Storm, Mshawish, Mucho Macho Man, Omaha Beach, Sky Mesa, Tom's d'Etat, Vekoma, Vino Rosso, and Violence.

The catalog may be viewed here.

Once the July Breeding Stock sale has concluded, Fasig-Tipton will then immediately begin the July Selected Horses of Racing Age sale. The nation's leading source of horses of racing age, Fasig-Tipton has cataloged 163 initial entries for this year's sale.

Since first established in 2013, the auction has produced nearly 100 stakes wins, 27 percent stakes horses, and more than $51 million in earnings by its graduates. This year's catalog cover features the sale's most recent graded stakes winners in Fast Boat, winner of the 2021 Grade 2 Twin Spires Turf Sprint, and Fearless, winner of the 2021 G2 Gulfstream Park Mile Stakes. Also featured are 2020 graded stakes winners Biddy Duke, Cool Arrow, and Cross Border.

Entries may now be viewed via the sale's user-friendly enhanced online catalog, which offers pedigrees, race replays, statistical links, Ragozin “sheet” numbers, and continuously updated Daily Racing Form and Thoroughmanager past performances.

Prospective buyers may also sign up for email alerts by clicking here, or by texting FASIGHORA to 22828 to receive pedigree and race-record updates, as well as notifications of new sale entries.

“We are very excited with how these initial catalogs have come together for July Breeding Stock and Selected Horses of Racing Age,” said Fasig-Tipton president Boyd Browning. “With these two auctions on July 12, followed by the July Sale of Selected Yearlings on July 13, we're offering buyers in every segment of the market a bonanza of mid-summer opportunities.”

The July Breeding Stock and Selected Horses of Racing Age catalogs will also be available via the equineline sales catalogue app. Print catalogs will be available on the sales grounds by July 9.

Fasig-Tipton will continue to accept approved entries for both the July Breeding Stock and July Selected Horses of Racing Age sales up until sale time.

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Foundation Byerley Turk Sire Line Drying Up In Australia And Beyond

The diluting of the Thoroughbred gene pool is not a concern restricted just to the U.S., with the foundation Byerley Turk sire line in danger of vanishing in Australia, TDN Australia/New Zealand reports.

The Byerley Turk is one of the three foundation sires of the Thoroughbred breed, to which all modern Thoroughbreds can directly trace back to through their sire lines, joined by the Godolphin Arabian and Darley Arabian. Like most horses born in the mid-1600s, formal records on the Byerley Turk can be spotty and contradictory, but history has generally settled on the horse being born in Serbia in 1682 before shipping to Turkey, England, and Ireland as a battalion horse, and eventually becoming a stallion for Capt. Robert Byerley.

From his sire line came names as big as the mighty Eclipse. The Byerley Turk line first set roots in Australia in the mid-1950s with Better Boy, 20 generations on from the taproot stallion, who was a stakes winner on the continent, then became its leading sire on four occasions.

The sire line peaked in Australia with Better Boy's son, Century, who was born in 1969 and won three races that would come to be classified as Group 1 events in the future. He was Australia's leading sire of 1978, and his runners included Rubiton, winner of the Group 1 Cox Plate in 1987.

Though Century was an abundant sire of runners, he died in 1994 without a significant son at stud. That failure to preserve the bloodline has put the Byerley Turk's presence on the continent in jeopardy, to the point where no significant commercial stallions from the line reside in Australia.

Dunaden, winner of the G1 Melbourne Cup, from a separate branch from Century, was another potential contender to pick up the baton, but he died after just four seasons at stud.

Though Australia was the focus of the piece, Suzi Prichard-Jones, author of the book Byerley: The Thoroughbred's Ticking Time Bomb, noted that the disappearance of the Byerley Turk line is a global issue. The line all but dried up in the U.S. by the 1990s, and Prichard-Jones could find only two stallions of any commercial significance residing in Europe: Irish 2,000 Guineas winner Indian Haven, who stands in Ireland, and Group 2 winner Pearl Secret, who resides in England.

Prichard-Jones warns in her book that losing diversity in the breed to the level of an entire foundation line's elimination could have long-term ramifications to the soundness of the Thoroughbred. She theorized that the sunset of the line has been expedited by breeders lacking knowledge of the line's importance to the overall makeup of the Thoroughbred breed, instead chasing the next hot sire to appeal to the auction market.

Read more at TDN Australia/New Zealand.

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