Cabrera Out For Rest of Oaklawn Meet

Oaklawn leading rider David Cabrera likely will miss the remainder of the 2021-2022 meeting after sustaining upper back, neck and head injuries from a spill in Friday's first race, his agent Joe Santos said.

Santos said Cabrera has compressed C5 and C6 vertebrae, crushed cheekbones and suffered a concussion in the accident, which occurred in the upper stretch after his mount Mostly Awesome (Fusaichi Pegasus) clipped heels when in tight and fell, throwing the jockey to the ground. A trailing horse jumped the fallen Mostly Awesome near the three-sixteenths pole, unseating apprentice jockey Chel-c Bailey. Both horses involved in the accident were captured without incident and with no initial signs of distress. Bailey wasn't seriously injured and fulfilled her remaining engagements on the card. Cabrera was unconscious for approximately 20 minutes post-fall.

“It's really kind of dependent on the cognitive aspect of it, when he kind of grasps everything mentally,” Santos said. “He's a lot more active today and it's mainly just from the concussion. There's just some confusion there.”

Cabrera was the runaway leader in the Oaklawn rider standings with 62 victories through Friday, Day 53 of the scheduled 66-day meeting. Francisco Arrieta was second with 49 victories, two more than Santana, an eight-time Oaklawn riding champion.

The post Cabrera Out For Rest of Oaklawn Meet appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Luis Saez Voted Jockey Of The Week With Three Stakes Wins At Gulfstream

Leading Gulfstream Park rider, Luis Saez won three of the five graded stakes for 3-year-olds Saturday on Holy Bull Day to earn Jockey of the Week for Jan. 31 through Feb. 6. The honor, which is voted on by a panel of racing experts, is for jockeys who are members of the Jockeys' Guild, the organization which represents more than 1,050 active, retired and permanently disabled jockeys in the United States.

The seven-furlong, Grade 3 Swale was the first graded stakes of the day with Saez in the irons for Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher on My Prankster. Off as the even-money favorite in the field of six and breaking from the rail, My Prankster raced near the back of the field. On the backside, Saez angled My Prankster to the outside and challenged the leaders at the top stretch. My Prankster gained command from Dean Delivers down the lane and posted a one-half length win in 1:23.13.

“He got a good break today,” said Saez. “We knew they had a lot of speed in the race so the plan was to get him in the clear and go from there…he always tries, he tried pretty hard today and he got the job done so it was a good race for him.”

Riding for trainer Brad Cox, Saez was aboard Louisiana invader Girl With a Dream in the filly counterpart to the Swale, the G3 Forward Gal. Breaking from post position six in the field of seven, Saez and Girl With a Dream lead throughout the seven furlongs while holding off the favorite Radio Days to post a one-length victory in 1:23.42.

“She broke from there pretty sharp,” said Saez. “She went and she was pretty comfortable all the way. We came to the top of the stretch and I felt like I had a lot of horse. She kept battling, and she beat them. I felt like every step, when the other filly (Radio Days) came close, she responded more.”

Trainer Roderick Rodriguez gave a leg up to Saez on Opelina in the G3 Sweetest Chant at one mile and one-sixteenth on the turf. Off as the co-second choice in the field of nine, Saez and Opelina settled in fourth. Leaving the backstretch, Saez gave Opelina her cue swinging three wide to quickly pass the leaders and holding on to win by three-quarters of a length in 1:41.56.

“When she took the lead in the stretch, she kind of waited for the other ones, but when she got on the left (lead) she gave me another gear,” said Saez.

Saez's weekly statistics were 43-7-9-7 with total purse earnings of $396,620.

Other nominees for Jockey of the Week were Jose L. Ortiz with two graded stakes wins at Aqueduct, Flavien Prat with a stakes win at Santa Anita, Jaime Rodriguez who tied for number of wins for the week with nine and Tim Thornton who also posted nine wins for the week.

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Pegasus Double Nets Irad Ortiz Jockey Of The Week Title

In the days leading up to the Pegasus World Championships, it was touch and go as to whether Irad Ortiz, Jr. would be released to ride following a knee injury at Gulfstream Park on Jan. 7. But the three-time Eclipse Award-winning Ortiz, Jr. was medically cleared and rode into the winner's circle in both Grade 1 events of the day. With the wins, Ortiz, Jr. was voted Jockey of the Week. The honor, which is voted on by a panel of racing experts, is for jockeys who are members of the Jockeys' Guild, the organization which represents more than 1,050 active, retired and permanently disabled jockeys in the United States.

Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher gave a leg up to Ortiz, Jr. on defending champion, Colonel Liam in the G1 World Cup Turf Invitational. Despite a layoff of nearly eight months, Colonel Liam went off as the favorite in the field of 12. While racing off the pace, Ortiz, Jr. and Colonel Liam crept steadily closer to the leader, stablemate, Never Surprised. The pair took command at the eighth pole and drew clear to win by a length in 1:47.48 for the 1 1/8-mile distance. Ortiz, Jr. has now won three of the four runnings of the World Pegasus Turf Invitational.

“He didn't lose a step,” said Ortiz, Jr.. “He's healthy and he's strong. He did everything right. I asked him a little early and when I asked him to go, he just went on.”

The G1 Pegasus World Cup was thought to be a match race between presumed Horse of the Year Knicks Go with Joel Rosario in the irons for trainer Brad Cox and Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile winner Life Is Good ridden by Ortiz, Jr. for trainer Todd Pletcher.

Off as the slight favorite, Life Is Good took control a sixteenth of a mile into the race and was never seriously threatened, covering 1 1/8 miles in 1:48.91 to post a winning margin of 3-1/4 lengths.

“I respect the other horse a lot,” said Ortiz, Jr. “I thought it was going to be a match race. But going into the first turn, my horse was so fast so I just let him do this thing. I felt like a lot of horse and I couldn't wait to let him run. I just wanted to get to the second turn. But when I let him go, he kept going.”

Ortiz, Jr.'s statistics for the week were 27-6-6-6 for an in-the-money rate of 66 percent and total purse earnings of $2,508,970 to lead all jockeys.

Other nominees for Jockey of the Week were Victor Carrasco with three stakes wins at Laurel. Harry Hernandez who won two stakes races at Sunland and led all jockeys for the week in wins with 11, Jose Ortiz who won the G3 Pegasus Filly and Mare Turf, and Joel Rosario with two stakes wins at Gulfstream Park and two stakes wins at Sam Houston.

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Joe Bravo: ‘These Horses Don’t Talk, But You Gotta Listen To ‘Em’

With more than 5,500 wins to his credit in a career dating back to 1988, Joe Bravo, a third generation jockey, enters 2022 as a full-time member of the Santa Anita jockey colony and perhaps the early favorite to win the 73rd George Woolf Memorial Jockey Award as one of five finalists along with Glenn Corbett, Julien Leparoux, Rodney Prescott and Tim Thornton.

Bravo, 50, a 13-time leading rider in his native New Jersey, made national news when he decided to shift his tack to Southern California this past summer. “Jersey Joe” sat down for an extensive Q & A to address his past, present and racing's future Friday morning.

Q. Your father and grandfather were both jockeys. Being around the business your entire life, when did you know this is what you were going to do?

A. Really, before I could walk, I kinda knew I was going to be a jockey. There was no way at anytime in my life I was going to be a basketball player, I'll put it like that. I was kind of built for this game. All I ever wanted to do was learn about horse racing. Not too many people know this, but between the ages of 10 years old and 16, I spent that time in Texas. That was kind of my schooling, riding match races and that's where I kind of learned all my skills before I was legal age to start riding.

Q. Would you agree, that for any young jockey, there is no substitute for riding races?

A. It's the experience you get. It's like going out and doing any job, every day you learn something. That's one thing my grandfather told me, 'You can be a 100 years old in this game, and every day, you're going to learn.' You gotta be a sponge. These horses don't talk, but you gotta listen to 'em.

Q. As a young guy coming up in the business, was there any one jock or several jocks that you really admired and respected?

A. Yeah, my father (George Bravo). He really took me by the hand and took me to the right place. Every day, you learn from all these guys. The Hall of Fame riders, the Bill Shoemaker's, the Pat Day's, the Jerry Bailey's, Mike Smith…But one thing you gotta know, jockeys don't make horses go faster. There's no jock that can make a horse go quicker but a jock can make mistakes and you gotta learn by each one you ride out there. You go out there, give it your best, learn to read your animal, that's how you get the most out of 'em.

Q. You're approaching your 34th year in racing. You don't appear to be a big self-promoter. Safe to say you're a guy that likes to let his work, morning and afternoon, speak for itself?

A. The real start to the game is the horses. We're just blessed to be able to be a part of their team when they go out to race. What makes you a great rider is sitting on good horses. So if you go out there and try to ride 10 horses a day that are 30-1, some people might think, 'That's a really bad jockey cause not one of 'em won.' But most of them probably weren't in the right spot. Every horse can win a race but they have to be in the right (race). That's where a good agent and a good jock come together and try to make sure your chess pieces are in the right place when the gates open.

Q. Beyond riding good horses, what are some of the intangibles that make a top rider?

A. It's the experience that comes from reading your horse. You know what wins or loses races? Tell me how much of a turn of foot the horse has. All horses are fast…But it's being able to read them. Some horses are big, long and lanky and you can't get 'em shut down in behind horses. 'Why did that jock lose ground?' Well look at (the horse), he's built like a basketball player and he needs to get rolling. Other horses are compact and if you put them outside, they're not going to sustain a long run. And that's where experience comes in and you know the animal before the race even starts.

Q. Let's talk now. You've won 22 riding titles in New Jersey. Thirteen titles at Monmouth Park and nine at the Meadowlands. You're forever going to be Jersey Joe. When the New Jersey Racing Commission instituted the radical change with the use of the whip last year, you voted with your feet and came to Southern California last summer.

A. That's pretty much how it was. Jersey will always be home. I'm blessed to be called Jersey Joe. I love it there. There's no better place to live in the summertime than the Jersey Shore and I love Monmouth Park. But with the change in conditions, it makes it tough. (Looking ahead), I'm just hoping that all states follow the same guidelines for safety, medication and riding crop rules. It's almost like watching football and every time you go to a different state, they (would) have different rules. Why should horse racing be any different? I think we should all abide by the same rules, state by state.

Q. Looking back to last summer, you hired Matt Nakatani as your agent and you caught on quick at Del Mar. You ended up fifth in the standings with 21 wins and three stakes. One of the reasons you got off to a fast start was your tremendous ability on the grass. It just seems like win or lose, you have your horses rolling late, when it counts.

A. I do agree, I can win a lot more races on the grass than on the dirt, especially at a big meet. It's being in the right spot at the right time. It's just having a horse with a good turn of foot, you can be last turning for home on the grass…As long as you can punch through pockets when you need to. That's where experience comes in, just being able to read all of that. I take my hat off to Matt Nakatani. He got things all set up and we had a great summer.

Q. As you know, the problem now, is inventory. It's gotta be tough on a guy like you, who's used to riding live horses and riding regularly.

A. I'm gonna be honest. I'm having a little mental problem, having four days off a week. I'm a part time jock again, three days a week, it's tough…Mentally, I just need to take a step back. I am 50 years old and I don't need to be riding 10 races a day, but to have a five-day schedule would be really wonderful in a perfect world.

Q. That said, have you made a decision about where you're going to ride full time for the remainder of the year?

A. For right now, here. I'm here and we're seeing how everything plays out. Like I say, I can't tell you what tomorrow's going to bring. But it's a good living, it's California…We're all looking for that one big, good horse. And there's a couple here…We're looking for the next, best horse.

Q. Speaking of top horses, one of your greatest moments came here at Santa Anita in the 2019 Breeders' Cup Distaff with a longshot named Blue Prize. You got the jump on the even money favorite, Midnight Bisou, what did that win mean to you?

A. That was my first Breeders' Cup winner after riding for 30 years and it really was the icing on the cake, but that will tell you what special horses do. I was able to ride her in a few starts leading up to the Breeders' Cup and she was a very erratic filly, very strong filly. I was able to channel all of that on that afternoon and it's just nice to be able to get on good horses like that.

Q. Finally, the Woolf Award has been presented by Santa Anita since 1950 and most of the greatest names in the history of our game have won it. At this stage of your career, what would it mean to you to win it?

A. A close friend of mine told me that your life's like a painting. Everything you do in life is on that painting at the end of it. Wow, having that award on it, would really make it one helluva career. I think there would only be one other honor that would be bigger, and that's the Hall of Fame. So we just have to go out there and everything we do, hopefully contributes to receiving those kinds of honors.

The 73rd George Woolf Memorial Jockey Award winner will be determined next month by a vote of jockeys nationwide. The winner will be announced in a Winner's Circle ceremony at Santa Anita sometime this spring.

The post Joe Bravo: ‘These Horses Don’t Talk, But You Gotta Listen To ‘Em’ appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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