Apprentice Suspended 30 Days for ‘Extremely Careless’ Riding in Delaware Race that Caused Equine Fatality

Eighteen-year-old jockey Axel Concepcion, who is Maryland's top apprentice this year, has been suspended 30 days for “extremely careless” riding in a Sept. 21 race at Delaware Park that resulted in the euthanization of a rival horse that had fallen.

The Sept. 28 Delaware stewards' ruling stated that Concepcion failed “to control and guide his mount, Backwoods Boogie (Red Rocks [IRE]), leaving the starting gate, impeding several horses, and causing the horse Trumpence (Eskendereya) to fall, which resulted in a fatal injury to Trumpence. Due to the fallen horse, the race had to be immediately suspended, all horses pulled up, and declared a no contest.”

The Paulick Report first broke the news, quoting Concepcion's agent, Tom Stift, as saying the penalty will be reduced to 21 days because the ruling was not appealed.

The Sept. 21 report for race seven submitted by Delaware stewards Joelyn Rigione, Robert Colton and William Troilo stated that Trumpence, ridden by Kevin Gomez, “clipped heels past the finish the first time” and that “horse and rider were down and not moving.”

The warning lights and siren were activated, and the stewards ordered the outriders to have the jockeys pull up their mounts.

“The gate crew was out on the track also, diverting the field to the outside. Horse was euthanized on the track when he couldn't get up. Jockey Kevin Gomez after some time was able to stand and be escorted to the ambulance,” the report stated.

Gomez resumed riding the next afternoon at Delaware, winning with his first mount after the spill.

Trumpence was a 9-year-old gelding trained by Dan Ward and owned in partnership by George Todaro, Robert Blanchard, and Brad's Equine Adventure. He didn't start racing until age five at Will Rogers Downs, but won his first three races there before eventually compiling an 8-4-3 mark from 25 starts while competing at Canterbury, Remington, Sam Houston, Oaklawn, Monmouth and Delaware.

Concepcion turned pro Jan. 1 in his native Puerto Rico. He won 21 races there before earning his first mainland U.S. victory Feb. 19 at Fair Grounds. He shifted his tack to Laurel a week later, and has since been among the leaders at the Laurel Park and Pimlico Race Course meets while also picking up mounts at other mid-Atlantic region tracks.

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NY Passes Suspension Restrictions, Takes Aim at Mutuel Uncoupling of Married Jockeys

Without any public discussion among commissioners and in quick succession by unanimous voice vote, the New York State Gaming Commission (NYSGC) Monday enacted a new rule designed to keep jockeys from stalling via filing appeals to get out of serving riding suspensions during the lucrative Saratoga Race Course meet.

In similarly brisk fashion, the NYSGC also set into motion Feb. 28 the advancement of a proposed regulation to lift controversial pari-mutuel restrictions related to married jockeys competing in the same race. This measure must come back for a final vote after publication in the state register and a presumably final round of public commentary.

It's now been 14 months since newlywed spouses Katie Davis and Trevor McCarthy made unwanted headlines when an antiquated NYSGC rule requiring the mounts of married jockeys to be treated as a single betting interest forced confusing pari-mutuel couplings in 41 races in which they competed against one another.

Between Jan. 1 and Mar. 21, 2021, McCarthy and Davis's mounts in common races at Aqueduct cost an estimated $4.2 million in handle loss.

The regulation in question, rule 4025.10 (f), states, “All horses trained or ridden by a spouse, parent, issue or member of a jockey's household shall be coupled in the betting with any horse ridden by such jockey.”

The application of that little-used rule was widely bemoaned by the betting public and termed as sexist by some critics. But the NYSGC did not address the controversy during any open, public meetings in 2021 while a piece of legislation to update the regulation sailed unanimously through both the Assembly and Senate.

But on Oct. 25, that bill was surprisingly vetoed by New York Governor Kathy Hochul, who explained that she would instead be directing the NYSGC to review the “continued need for mandatory coupling and the circumstances under which such a requirement might be relaxed.”

That directive resulted in a Jan. 11, 2022, commentary-seeking pow-wow of Thoroughbred industry stakeholders, regulators, and track officials, during which not a single person advocated in favor of keeping the antiquated rule as written.

Monday, the matter was finally up before the NYSGC to put in motion the process of changing the old regulation by simply deleting the word “shall” from rule 4025.10 (f) and replacing it with the phrase “are not required” to be coupled.

'Saratoga' rule changed

The so-called “Saratoga rule” dates to an initiative from June 2021 in which the NYSGC sought to end the resource-draining practice of jockeys appealing riding infractions during big-money race meets like at Saratoga, then withdrawing those protests once the meet was over for the sole purpose of delaying a suspension until it was more convenient for the penalized rider to serve the days.

The resulting re-write gives the commission discretion to instead make the jockey sit out a suspension at a subsequent meeting at the same track, meaning a rider's Saratoga penalty might not be able to get pushed back to, say, Aqueduct in the winter, if the stewards opted to make the days instead carry over to the start of the next year's meet at the Spa.

The measure voted in on Monday reads: “If a jockey commits a riding infraction and the penalty of a suspension or revocation is not served during the same race meeting, then the commission in its discretion may order that the penalty be served, in whole or in part, at a subsequent race meeting at the same track.”

According to a brief written by NYSGC general counsel Edmund Burns, only one entity, the Jockeys' Guild, filed a public comment on the proposed rule change. Burns summed up the opposition as such:

“The Jockeys' Guild opposes codifying this policy as a regulation. Instead, the Jockeys' Guild suggests that hearing requests brought in bad faith should subject a jockey to sanctions if the appeal is found to have been brought frivolously.

“The Jockeys' Guild also suggests that the regulation allow for jockeys who are suspended for minor riding violations for 10 days or less be permitted to ride in “designated races” during the suspension, serving a day of suspension at a later time to make up for the designated race day. The Jockey's Guild suggests that such a policy may decrease the number of jockey challenges.

“In the alternative, the Jockeys' Guild states that if the rule is adopted, the rule should retain the provision allowing for discretion in whether a penalty should be served at the same track.”

The NYSGC staff responded in writing to the Guild's suggestions. But the response was redacted in its entirety from Burns's brief, so it can't be published here.

Other proposed rules

Also advancing to publication in the state register and the required public commentary period on Monday were:

a.) An amendment to the regulation governing licensing for a jockey agent that removes the requirement for an applicant to have been previously licensed as an exercise person, apprentice jockey, jockey, assistant trainer or trainer for at least one year. The proposed change would instead allow the stewards to determine whether an applicant is qualified. TDN first reported on this seemingly restrictive practice back in 2020.

b.) Amendments to the jockey equipment weighing rules that would eliminate the need for jockeys to be weighed with muzzles, martingales and breastplates, like in Florida, Kentucky, California, and other states.

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Irad Ortiz Jr. Gets 30-Day Suspension For Careless Riding At Aqueduct

Three-time Eclipse Award-winning jockey Irad Ortiz Jr. received a 30 calendar- day suspension from the board of stewards at Aqueduct on Sunday for two careless riding incidents at the South Ozone Park, N.Y., track on  Friday and Saturday, Daily Racing Form's David Grening reported. Grening reported Ortiz Jr. does not plan to appeal and will begin serving the ban this week after signing a waiver.

Ortiz Jr.'s mount Gran Casique was disqualified from second and placed last after causing apprentice Omar Hernandez Moreno to be unseated from his mount, Ragtime Blues, in Friday's eighth race.

On Saturday, his winning ride aboard Mo Donegal in the Grade 2 Remsen Stakes survived a stewards inquiry and his win on Nest in the G2 Demoiselle faced an objection from jockey John Velazquez, who rode the second-place finisher Venti Valentine. Stewards upheld the order of finish in both cases. Ortiz Jr. won three graded stakes on Saturday's card and wrapped up the riding title for the fall meet.

Ortiz Jr. rode in his native Puerto Rico Sunday and had been named to ride at Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach, Fla., on Wednesday.

The 30-day ban for causing Friday's spill is consistent with the suspension jockey Paco Lopez received from Gulfstream Park stewards in 2019 for his role in a two-horse accident that left two riders injured. A second incident at Gulfstream Park led to Lopez being banned 60 days.

Neither Hernandez Moreno nor Ragtime Blues suffered serious injury.

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Irad Ortiz Jr. Suspended for 30 Days

Jockey Irad Ortiz Jr. has been handed a 30-day suspension by the Aqueduct stewards for his ride aboard Gran Casique (Algorithms) in the eighth race on Friday. News of the suspension was confirmed late Sunday by NYRA spokesman Pat McKenna. McKenna said the suspension would begin “some time this week.”

Aboard Gran Casique, Ortiz came over several paths toward the rail on the run down the backstretch and cut off Ragtime Blues (Union Rags) and apprentice jockey Omar Hernandez Moreno. The infraction was so egregious that the Equibase chart caller wrote: “Gran Casique angled in with reckless abandon and bumped Ragtime Blues at the five-eighths and bumped him hard which caused that foe to lose his rider…” Moreno was not seriously hurt.

Gran Casique was disqualified and placed last.

The stewards apparently agreed with the chart caller, handing Ortiz a suspension that went well beyond the normal five or seven-day penalty usually given to jockeys for careless riding.

Calls to Ortiz's agent Steve Rushing were not returned Sunday. David Grening of the Daily Racing Form reported that Ortiz will not appeal the ruling.

The suspension came on the same day that Ortiz wrapped up the riding title at the 15-day Aqueduct fall meet with 21 wins from 76 mounts. He was not at Aqueduct Sunday and was instead was riding at Hipodromo Camerero in his native Puerto Rico, as was his brother, Jose. Irad Ortiz won three races on the Camerero card.

Ortiz's ride in the GII Remsen S. Saturday at Aqueduct, which he won with Mo Donegal (Uncle Mo), also resulted in controversy. Crossing the wire a nose in front of Zandon (Upstart), he came over, bumped with that rival in deep stretch and put him in tight quarters. The stewards let the result stand.

Social media took notice of the rides by Ortiz, who is often accused of “herding” other riders.

“Aggressive riding is one thing but constantly riding the edge, and sometimes crossing it, is another,” NYRA's Andy Serling wrote on Twitter after the Remsen. “Upon reflection, and further viewing, I think there should have been a DQ in the Remsen. @iradortiz is a great rider but he needs to reflect on his tactics going forward.”

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