Veteran Jockey Edwin Gonzalez Steps Into The Spotlight, Rides All Three Pegasus Races

Jockey Edwin Gonzalez left behind the night life for the beach life 10 months ago, venturing to Gulfstream Park at the tail end of the 2020-2021 Championship Meet after dominating under the radar at Penn National.

The 29-year-old jockey has walked out of the shadows of night racing in Pennsylvania to further his career at the Hallandale Beach, FL racetrack where he will step into the spotlight to ride in all three Pegasus World Cup Invitational races on Saturday's spectacular 12-race program.

“I've come from the bottom,” Gonzalez said. “I got lucky with my agent and all the people who have helped me. I love to win races. I keep working hard. When I got here, I got a lot of opportunities.”

Gonzalez and agent Kevin Meyocks have made the most of their opportunities while based year-round at Gulfstream, so much so that Gonzalez has been named to ride Tracy Farmer's Sir Winston in the $3 million Pegasus World Cup Invitational (G1) presented by 1 S/T BET, Live Oak Plantation's March to the Arch in the $1 million Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational (G1) presented by Baccarat, and Pedigree Partners LLC's Shifty She in the $500,000 TAA Pegasus World Cup Filly and Mare Turf Invitational presented by PEPSI.

Sir Winston and March to the Arch are trained by Hall of Famer Mark Casse, while Shifty She is conditioned by Saffie Joseph Jr., who is currently atop the 2021-2022 Championship Meet trainer standings.

“I started winning races for everybody, Casse, Saffie, so many trainers gave me opportunities,” said Gonzalez, who is sitting sixth in the Championship Meet jockey standings with 19 winners. “I kept giving 100 percent to the horses to make everybody happy and keep working hard.”

Gonzalez got off to a fast start at Gulfstream, winning 59 races, including the 1500th of his career that started in his native Puerto Rico, during the Spring/Summer Meet before going to the sidelines for two months after sustaining a hairline fracture in his right leg July 3. He rode three winners on his first day back and has continued to entrench himself at Gulfstream.

Gonzalez will ride Sir Winston, the 2019 Belmont Stakes (G1) winner, for the first time in the Pegasus World Cup, in which he will face defending champion Knicks Go and Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile (G1) winner Life Is Good.

“I think he has a good chance because you have those two horses that will be in front. I'll be put my horse behind them and then make a run,” Gonzalez said. “My horse is working good. He worked the other day in 47 [seconds] and it was like he was galloping.”

After riding March to the Arch, a multiple graded-stakes winner with more than $980,000 in earnings in the Pegasus Turf, Gonzalez will seek his second graded-stakes victory aboard Shifty She in the Pegasus Filly and Mare Turf. Gonzalez guided the daughter of Gone Astray to victory in the Noble Damsel (G3) at Belmont Park Oct. 23. Gonzalez has gone 3-for-3 aboard Shifty She before finishing second last time out at Gulfstream in the Suwannee River (G3), in which she held gamely to finish a half-length behind Sweet Melania.

“She's a nice filly. I think she has a good chance to win. In her last race, I don't think she was 100 percent. This race, she'll be 100 percent,” Gonzalez said. “She's here. She doesn't have to ship, which is in her favor.”

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Hall Of Fame Jockey Kent Desormeaux Arrested For Domestic Abuse In Louisiana

Hall of Fame jockey Kent Desormeaux has been arrested on charges of Domestic Abuse Battery/Strangulation in Louisiana, according to a post on the Breaux Bridge Police Department's Facebook page.

The 51-year-old was arrested, booked, and transported to the St. Martin Parish Jail on those charges. He was booked on Friday, Jan. 28 at 11:19 AM central time, and released later the same day, according to a jail representative.

Desormeaux, who last rode at Santa Anita on Jan. 23, was booked to ride Stilleto Boy for trainer Ed Moger, Jr. in Saturday's Grade 1, $3 million Pegasus World Cup Invitational at Gulfstream Park.

The Daily Racing Form's Mike Welsch reported that Jose Ortiz would replace Desormeaux on the mount.

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The Toboggan First Ignited Richard Migliore’s Desire To Become A Jockey

When asking an aspiring jockey what races they dream of winning, marquee events like the Kentucky Derby and Belmont Stakes often top the list. But Brooklyn-native Richard Migliore had his heart set on winning the Toboggan, which will celebrate its 129th renewal on Saturday, at Aqueduct Racetrack.

Migliore, 57, was a multiple Grade 1-winning jockey with 4,450 career victories and earnings in excess of $160 million through a riding career that spanned three decades. Today, he serves as a racing analyst for the NYRA-produced America's Day at the Races.

As a kid, Migliore accompanied his father on frequent trips to Aqueduct where he would admire pictures on the second floor wall of the horses who had won the Wood Memorial.

While trips to the Big A were instrumental in shaping Migliore's dreams of becoming a jockey, it wasn't the Wood Memorial or even any Triple Crown race that encouraged Migliore to pursue his goals – it was the Toboggan.

Migliore's connection with the historic sprint began in 1976 when Harbor View Farm's homebred Due Diligence captured the Toboggan by 4 3/4-lengths under Hall of Famer Jorge Velasquez.

“My father and I would catch the train right off Avenue U in Brooklyn. There was a bakery that had the best Boston cream donuts right by the station,” Migliore recalled. “My father took me to Aqueduct one day in 1976 to watch the Toboggan. On the train ride home, I remember telling my father, 'Pop, I'm going to be a jockey and I'm going to win the Toboggan Handicap one day.'

“I already had it in my head that I wanted to be a jockey,” Migliore continued. “I grew up in Brooklyn maybe nine miles from Aqueduct. I didn't think about the Kentucky Derby, that might as well have been Mars. But Aqueduct was in my backyard pretty much and the Toboggan had meaning to me.”

Migliore proved to be a man of his word. In 1981, the 17-year-old was the leading rider on the NYRA circuit and awarded honors for Outstanding Apprentice Jockey in only his second year of riding.

But it wasn't until 1985 that Migliore achieved his childhood dream of winning the Toboggan, piloting Jerome Moss' Fighting Fit to a narrow victory over regally-bred stakes-winner Entropy for the late Hall of Famer Bobby Frankel.

Migliore expanded on his success at Aqueduct that winter by guiding Eternal Prince to victories in the Gotham and Wood Memorial en route to his first Kentucky Derby mount aboard the son of Majestic Prince, finishing 12th in the first leg of the Triple Crown won by Spend a Buck.

“I can vividly remember being on the train telling my father I was going to win the Toboggan Handicap. It was about nine or ten years after the conversation, but it was definitely on my mind,” Migliore said. “It felt really cool. A couple of months later I won the Wood Memorial. I just remembered being that kid staring at the wall of all the pictures of Wood Memorial winners. I could have told you every trainer, owner, and jockey that had ever won it. Aqueduct has always been meaningful to me and obviously the Toboggan was important because some of my first memories are attached to it, knowing that I wanted my life to go in the direction it went.”

Migliore said winning the Toboggan aboard a Frankel-trained horse was extra special as the Hall of Fame trainer was a first cousin of his former teacher, Joe Rodlitz.

“Fighting Fit was a big deal because Bobby Frankel was shipping a horse from California and tapping me to ride him,” Migliore said. “Ironically enough, my sixth grade social studies teacher Mr. Rodlitz was Bobby Frankel's first cousin. I remember one day he caught me reading a racing form in class and made me stay after class. I thought I was in trouble. But then he told me who his cousin was, which was really cool.”

Migliore went on to win the Toboggan five more times in his 30-year riding career, including back-to-back wins aboard fan favorite Affirmed Success [2002-03] for trainer Rick Schosberg.

“What a cool horse,” Migliore said of the multimillionaire who raced until age 9. “I got him later in his career. In 2002, it was a prep for the Carter and he ended up winning the Carter as an 8-year-old. Winning a Grade 1 as an 8-year-old was just remarkable.”

The following year, Affirmed Success arrived at the Toboggan off a third-place finish as the beaten favorite in an Aqueduct allowance race. Migliore, who said he was critical of his own ride in the allowance effort, was named back on the horse and guided him to a win in the 2003 Toboggan.

The win marked the final career victory for Affirmed Success, who produced triple-digit speed figures in all but 4-of-42 starts.

“Rick Schosberg had been so supportive and gave me confidence,” Migliore said. “People don't realize that when a jockey makes a mistake, they'll never make that mistake again if they're left on the horse – not if they're any kind of a rider. So, him leaving me on the horse and being rewarded with another Toboggan was like redemption for a ride I wish I could have had back the start before.”

Schosberg said Migliore and Affirmed Success developed a strong bond.

“To win the Toboggan twice at eight and nine was really special and the two of them had a really great relationship,” Schosberg recalled. “When we put him on the horse the first time, they really got along. The horse had a tremendous personality, like Richie does. Sometimes, he would be warming up before a race and just stare at an airplane. I told Richie, 'He's trying to figure out how that works'. He was a smart horse. He wasn't just looking at it, he was trying to figure out how something flies while warming up for a Grade 1. The three of us were a little long in the tooth, but it was fun.”

With a total of six Toboggan victories, Migliore is the winningest jockey in the race's rich history. In addition to Fighting Fit and Affirmed Success, Migliore also rode Royal Haven [1997], Wouldn't We All [1999] and Kazoo [2006] to Toboggan wins.

Migliore would usually stay in New York for the winter rather than heading to warmer climates to ride. He attributed his success in the Toboggan to his familiarity with the Big A oval.

“I always liked to stay in New York. First, I'm a native New Yorker. Second, I have kids and when I was riding, I didn't want to move them around too much and disrupt their lives,” Migliore said. “Riding at Aqueduct was great. The purses were great, you're done by 4:30 or 5:00 and you can go home and have dinner with your family. It was the perfect balance of professional and personal life.”

The Toboggan isn't the only race in New York with sentimental value for Migliore. He grew up in the Gravesend area of Brooklyn and won the neighborhood's namesake race at Aqueduct in 1997 aboard Royal Haven in a dead heat with Stalwart Member.

“I won that race which I thought was pretty cool, and then I won the Brooklyn twice and I grew up in Brooklyn,” Migliore said of his Brooklyn Handicap scores with Iron Deputy [2003] and Seattle Fitz [2004]. “Those things are not lost on me. I appreciate them a lot.”

Through Migliore's outstanding riding career, he won the Mike Venezia Award in 2003 and the George Woolf Memorial Award in 2008, the latter the same year he rode Desert Code to victory in the Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint.

Crowned as the leading rider in New York in 1981 and 1985, Migliore also has either won or tied as leading rider at 10 different NYRA meets. But the veteran rider said few races connect to him as closely as his affection for the Toboggan.

“It has personal meaning to me since it was a race that helped fuel or fan the flame that helped me become a rider,” Migliore said. “There's other races in New York that I have the most wins in as well. But personally, the Toboggan means a lot to me.”

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‘Dream Come True’: Two-Time Pony Racing Champion Harry Davies Enjoys Flying Start To Professional Jockey Career

Berkshire-based Harry Davies has had a flying start to his career as a jockey, at just 17-years-old he took two wins from four rides in his first week of riding against the professionals.

No stranger to success, Davies previously achieved 28 wins on the Pony Racing circuit and was crowned winner of the Charles Owen Racecourse Series in 2018 and 2019. Now he has moved up into the horse racing ranks and has quickly proven his immense talent.

He had his first ride at Southwell on Jan. 11 and quickly bounced back from his sixth position finish to find a winner a Lingfield with Coolagh Magic in the same week. Not resting on his laurels of enjoying his maiden win, Davies secured another victory three days later at Wolverhampton.

Speaking on his first win, Davies said: “I thought on the day the horse had a chance of going close. My instructions were to come late and thought I had left it too late, but he did it. When I pulled up, I thought I'd won but I wasn't completely sure, I just had to get back in one piece and wait for the tannoy. It was a really great atmosphere on the day and it was nice to have my mum and step-dad there.”

The two-time Pony Racing champion appears destined for success, coming from strong racing roots combined with his own passion and determination. His father Stephen was Champion Apprentice jockey in 1994 while working for the great Sir Henry Cecil's yard and his mother Angie works as assistant trainer at Palmer's Newmarket stable.

The 17-year-old now rides at the famed Andrew Balding stable, Kingsclere, that has been integral in launching the career of racing stars such as Oisin Murphy, William Buick and David Probert, but none of these top flat jockeys can say they had their first win from only their second ride.

Davies continued: “Training is going really well, the whole team is so supportive, and Andrew [Balding] is very easy to work for. He understands my goals and what I want to achieve as well as what we want to achieve together. Even if I don't ride a winner that day, I'll come back and the other lads are there to lend a helping hand.

“I first started coming to Andrew's [Balding] at 12-years-old and try to show my face whenever I could, I would try to come down in the summer holiday and I really devoted all my time to being at Kingsclere. In my final year of pony racing I'd ridden out for Andrew a few times and I was ready to make the move [to horse racing].

Commenting on making the step up, Davies added: “One of the differences from pony racing is that the professionals are harder to race against. You have to race a lot tighter, have to be sharper and on your toes. You have to prepare by watching racing as much as can when you're not racing, really watch and pick it apart. Watch the top riders and think, why are they doing that? And try to learn. You can't overthink when you're in the [race] situation, you need to go with your gut and trust yourself.”

Davies will still ride with a 7lb allowance for his next 18 winners but has made an impressive start to his apprentice jockey career.

He returned to Lingfield on Saturday for the inaugural Winter Million where he raced against top jockeys such as Tom Marquand and Hollie Doyle.

Davies added: “They [Marquand and Doyle] are both obviously massive figures in the racing world. They both came from pony racing as well and they are where I want to be.

“Racing against them is great because you can learn so much. I saw Tom in the weighing room the other day and asked him to watch a race back with me and I learnt so much- it's a dream come true.”

Davies will look to continue his outstanding start to life against the pros, which equates to two wins from seven rides, on Wednesday at Kempton Park in the Unibet Extra Place Offers Every Day Fillies' Handicap (7pm), where he will ride the Archie Watson-trained Notoriously Risky.

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