‘Family Comes First’: Fernando De La Cruz Wintering At Tampa To Aide In His Brother’s Recuperation

After winning 67 races last season at Indiana Grand, Fernando De La Cruz had planned to shift his winter base from Oaklawn Park, where he'd competed the last four years, to Fair Grounds.

But when younger brother Walter De La Cruz, also a jockey, suffered a concussion and a neck injury last fall, plans changed. With Walter out of action for an unspecified length of time, Fernando decided to return home to Tampa Bay Downs, where he excelled for seven seasons.

Fernando, 35, invited Walter to live with him and his family – wife Rosa and their children, Brian and Norma – at their Tampa home during his recuperation. Walter, who is single, hopes to return to action soon (“he is about 90-percent recovered,” Fernando said), but in the meantime, the unexpected family reunion is working to everyone's benefit.

“Walter is enjoying time with the kids, taking them to the beach, the movie theater, Busch Gardens,” said Fernando, whose return to Oldsmar has resulted in him winning the Salt Rock Tavern Jockey of the Month award. “I ride horses to make a living, but family comes first, no matter what. He is excited to start riding again, and hopefully he will get a release from the doctor to start soon.”

Trainers, owners and fans have welcomed the return of Fernando, who has climbed to fourth in the Tampa Bay Downs standings with 20 winners, raising his career mark to 2,170. Included in that total are back-to-back victories in the Grade 2 Woodford Stakes Presented by Keeneland Select with Bucchero in 2017 and 2018.

“He fits a lot of my horses, and I'm happy to have him on my team at Tampa,” said trainer Anthony Granitz, who also employs De La Cruz at Indiana Grand.

De La Cruz and Granitz have combined for six victories at the meet, including today's second race with Bellarific, a 5-year-old mare owned by Tri County Stables. “He can get a horse to rate and relax, and he's a strong finisher,” Granitz said. “He rides the turf course well, he's patient and he listens to my instructions. Fernando is a hard worker in the morning. He's willing to get on any horse and work with you, and if he doesn't like a horse he'll tell me, which is important because horses are smart and they can sense that.”

At Indiana Grand, where he worked with agent Mike Moran last season for the first time, De La Cruz's victory haul included four stakes races. On Sept. 8, he won both the $150,000 Indiana Grand Stakes with (then)-3-year-old filly Burning Ambition and the $150,000 Caesars Stakes with 3-year-old colt Royal Prince. Both were trained by Brad Cox, best known as the conditioner of Longines Breeders' Cup Classic winner and presumptive 2021 Horse of the Year Knicks Go.

De La Cruz also won a pair of stakes with trainer Tim Glyshaw's 3-year-old filly, Pearl Tiara: the $150,000 First Lady Stakes on Aug. 4 and the $100,000 Hoosier Breeders Sophomore Stakes on June 23. And the rider also won two stakes for Cox at Prairie Meadows in Iowa.

Moran, who also represents defending Oldsmar jockey champion Samy Camacho, said De La Cruz's versatility is a big reason he is successful everywhere he goes. That trait was on display in his two victories Wednesday, when he won a 7-furlong sprint in gate-to-wire fashion on Himelstein and captured a maiden claiming race on the turf with a come-from-behind rally on Golden Rocket.

De La Cruz has won two meet titles at Indiana Grand and one at Hoosier Park, and is showing signs he could contend in Oldsmar.

“Fernando is always focused on riding and goes out and performs to the best of his ability every day,” Moran said. “He's competitive, he likes to ride every race and he wants to contend for leading rider. He's a hard worker who does whatever you ask him to do, and he's a good family man.

“He's the total package for a jockey.”

When De La Cruz returns to the jockeys' room after a winning effort, he is uplifted by bettors and well-wishers who make him feel as though he never left.

“Thanks to God, they remember me. I'm healthy, I'm winning races and I'm competing against a lot of the same guys, so I can't ask for more,” he said. “Tampa is home, and this is such a nice place to live and to ride horses.”

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Chasing Greatness: Woodbine ‘Just Feels Like Home’ For Leading Jockey Kazushi Kimura

The distance between Hokkaido, Japan, and the winner's circle at Woodbine Racetrack is approximately 9,461 kilometres, give or take a few horse lengths.

These days, Kazushi Kimura might be what seems a world away from Canada's Showplace of Racing, but his deep connection and affinity for the world-class horse racing facility, he shared, has never felt stronger.

There is a genuine sense of joy in the 22-year-old jockey's voice, the product of a hugely successful season in the saddle at Woodbine, home to one of Thoroughbred racing's most competitive riding colonies.

His 2021 Woodbine campaign produced a wealth of impressive numbers, punctuated by his leading 138 wins at the meet, putting him 54 victories ahead of nearest rival. He also topped the earnings chart with $6,360,203.

Kimura also became the first Japanese-born rider to win the Toronto oval riding title.

Soon after the curtain closed on the meet, Kimura headed back to his native land. Home to over 5.2 million people, Hokkaido, the northernmost of the four main islands of Japan, is bordered by the Sea of Japan (East Sea) to the west, the Sea of Okhotsk to the north, and the Pacific Ocean to the east and south.

It's the place where his horse racing journey began and where his family still resides.

In between watching movies, listening to music and grabbing a few naps, the 16-plus hour flight from Toronto to Hokkaido afforded Kimura plenty of time to reflect on the most impressive year of his career to date.

The more he recalled those moments, the bigger his smile grew.

“I had so many great memories with many trainers, owners, and horses,” Kimura said. “I'm very grateful for them.”

From catching up with his relatives, to seeing old friends, to enjoy home-cooked meals, Kimura is making the most of his time in Hokkaido, the place where his parents run a horse training center.

“I've been spending great time with friends and family, and I'm also enjoying Japanese foods,” added Kimura. “I've also been hanging out with friends, catching up on everything that is going on in their lives.”

Every year he returns to Japan, Kimura has new and exciting chapters to share with those he's closest to.

Questions about Woodbine have become commonplace.

“Everybody wants to know about Woodbine and that's why I am always happy to answer them,” he said. “Woodbine has so many nice people, it's a beautiful track and location with high-quality racing.”

It didn't take long for Kimura, who didn't speak any English when he arrived on the Woodbine backstretch, to realize any of that.

The man who had graduated from Japan's jockeys' academy joined the Woodbine jockey colony as a 19-year-old apprentice in 2018 and made a strong first impression. He finished his first Woodbine campaign sixth in the standings with 89 wins and his mounts totaled more than $2.3 million in earnings. His first victory came aboard 70-1 longshot Tornado Cat, and his first stakes win came aboard Speed Soul in the 2018 Muskoka Stakes.

Kimura earned Eclipse Award honors as North America's outstanding apprentice in 2019, and also won the Sovereign Award equivalent in both 2018 and 2019.

One of his most treasured memories was riding for Queen Elizabeth II when he teamed with Magnetic Charm to finish second in the 2019 edition of the Grade 2 Canadian Stakes.

Last year, Kimura won eight stakes at the Toronto oval, including Corelli in the G3 Singspiel Stakes, Our Secret Agent in the G3 Hendrie Stakes, Frosted Over in the G3 Ontario Derby, and Swinging Mandy in the Victorian Queen Stakes.

His own personal highlight came last August.

Teaming with Gretzky the Great, a bay son of Nyquist bred by Anderson Farms Ontario, Kimura guided the Mark Casse trainee to a thrilling score in the Greenwood Stakes, set at seven furlongs on the E.P. Taylor Turf Course.

“It's a special achievement, and it was one of my dreams,” said the 22-year-old Kimura. “Everybody wants to be a leading rider, but it's not easy. We just need great riding skills and good horses, good support from the trainers and owners for the whole season to be able to get the title. This year, I'd say I improved, and I got good support from trainers and owners. I appreciate that help for me to get the riding title.”

Canada's champion 2-year-old male in 2020 eked out a head score for owners Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners and Gary Barber.

“I would say that win was the top one for me last year,” Kimura said. “That was a perfect race.”

Still at his family's house in Hokkaido, Kimura will soon head back to Canada and Woodbine, places that have very much come to feel like home.

There is no hint of complacency in his demeanor as he readies to begin defense of his crown.

No doubt he's ready for that challenge along with the other goals he's lined up for 2022.

“I'm always thinking about horse racing,” he said. “I would like to get over 200 wins and winning a few Grade 1 races. Also, I want to win the Queen's Plate. Of course, I need first place once again, which means leading jockey.”

If he were to achieve those objectives, Kimura would, at some point, likely add a tattoo or two to his current collection of ink.

His tattoos, now standing at four, each symbolize something different, yet are connected on some level.

“I have one on the left wrist that reminds me to think positive, to always have a positive mind,” Kimura explained. “The second one is that everything happens for a reason, but like the first one, it is a reminder to keep a positive outlook. The third one is inside of my upper arm, which I call infinity luck. It's an infinity mark and horseshoe and four-leaf clover. The last one is sunshine and inside that is a human hand and horse leg, which is on my right shoulder. Sunshine means victory, passion and vitality. That's everything I need with horses.”

Before he considers adding more art, Kimura will put his energy into stamping himself as the top rider at Woodbine for the second straight year.

Nearly 10,000 kilometres away, he's already been envisioning the walk to the place he visited 138 times last year, the picture-perfect spot that is never far from his thoughts.

“I dream that I will be champion jockey again and win a few Grade 1 races,” Kimura said. “Unfortunately, that didn't come true last year, but I'm wishing for that in 2022. I'm going to do my best to achieve all of that in a place that feels just like home for me.”

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NYRA: Jockey Christian Ramos Tests Positive For COVID-19, Off Mounts Through Jan. 19

Jockey Christian Ramos tested positive for COVID-19 today and will remain off his mounts through Sunday, Jan. 16, the New York Racing Association, Inc. (NYRA) announced Thursday.

All members of the NYRA jockey colony are vaccinated and adhere to established protocols. In addition, the jockey quarters at Aqueduct Racetrack have been substantially altered to provide maximum physical distancing and reduce density.

Ramos sought testing today after experiencing mild symptoms. He received the test result early this morning and was not on-site at Aqueduct during today's card.

NYRA follows the most updated federal and state guidance regarding contact tracing, testing, required isolation, and quarantine. Accordingly, Ramos will be permitted to return to competition on Thursday, Jan. 20 should he remain asymptomatic.

In accordance with New York City requirements, anyone seeking to enter Aqueduct Racetrack in any capacity must demonstrate proof of COVID-19 vaccination. Facemasks are always required on NYRA property.

Live racing continues Friday at the Big A with a nine-race card. First post is 12:20 p.m. Eastern.

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Jockey Christian Ramos Tests Positive for COVID-19

Jockey Christian Ramos has tested positive for COVID-19 and will remain off his mounts at Aqueduct through Sunday, Jan. 16, the New York Racing Association, Inc. announced Thursday.

All members of the NYRA jockey colony are vaccinated and adhere to established protocols. In addition, the jockey quarters at Aqueduct Racetrack have been substantially altered to provide maximum physical distancing and reduce density.

Ramos sought testing Thursday after experiencing mild symptoms. He received the test result early Thursday morning and was not on-site at Aqueduct.

NYRA follows the most updated federal and state guidance regarding contact tracing, testing, required isolation, and quarantine. Accordingly, Ramos will be permitted to return to competition Thursday, Jan. 20 should he remain asymptomatic.

The post Jockey Christian Ramos Tests Positive for COVID-19 appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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