Temperence Hill Win By Carlos L. Gives Canchari Needed Emotional Lift

Not only was the $150,000 Temperence Hill Stakes for older horses March 13 at Oaklawn in Hot Springs, Ark., the most lucrative victory for jockey Alex Canchari, it may have been the most emotional of his 10-year riding career.

Canchari raised his right arm and acknowledged the grandstand crowd after long shot Carlos L., who is trained by one of the jockey's biggest supporters, Mac Robertson, flashed across the finish line to capture the Temperence Hill in a track-record 2:29.87 for 1 ½ miles.

Winning a marathon race was fitting because of Canchari's on-going long stretch of personal pain. Canchari's older Patrick, also a jockey, was severely injured in an automobile accident last March. Then late last year, their father, Luis, died.

“It was such a high when the rest of the year has been so low,” Alex Canchari said Thursday morning in Robertson's Oaklawn office. “My dad always loved Oaklawn. He always wanted to see me did good. I just felt like he was riding with me. He was watching over me.”

Luis Canchari rode and trained after emigrating from Peru and became a fixture at Canterbury Park in suburban Minneapolis, where Alex and Patrick were raised. Alex Canchari said his father became seriously ill last year and was hospitalized with what doctors believed was a respiratory-related condition. Luis Canchari, 64, died Dec. 9.

“They said it wasn't COVID, but he was hooked up to a ventilator,” Alex Canchari said. “It was an enigma, basically, a medical enigma. At first, they thought it was bad pneumonia. They treated it like that and it kept getting worse.”

Following the death of his father, Canchari, 27, resumed riding Dec. 26 at Turfway Park and was 3 for 59 at the northern Kentucky venue when he decided in February to rekindle his business relationship with Robertson, who annually winters at Oaklawn.

“I was looking for somebody and he was available,” Robertson said. “A lot of these guys, they just ride riders who they trust. I can trust Alex.”

Canchari recorded his first career stakes victory aboard the Robertson-trained Devil and a Half in the $60,000 Arkansas Breeders' April 7, 2013, at Oaklawn. Canchari and Robertson also won two stakes races at the 2019 Oaklawn meeting ($100,000 American Beauty and $100,000 Spring Fever) with the recently retired Amy's Challenge.

Glacken's Ghost, a hard-hitting Arkansas-bred, represented Canchari's first mount in his Feb. 26 return to Oaklawn. Like old times, Canchari and Robertson immediately teamed for another winner at Oaklawn, this one a little more than a month after the meet opened. They also captured the $100,000 Arkansas Breeders' Stakes with Glacken's Ghost in 2018 at Oaklawn. 

“Staying here for good,” said Canchari, Oaklawn's leading apprentice jockey in 2012 and co-third-leading rider in 2017. “Mac called me. He's helping me out a lot.”

Canchari rode Carlos L. for the first time in the Temperence Hill, which honors the 1980 Eclipse Award winner (3-year-old male) and multiple Oaklawn stakes winner. Carlos L. was a standout in Panama, but had just one United States victory, that coming in a Dec. 12 allowance sprint at Hawthorne, before the Temperence Hill. In his local debut, Carlos L. finished a tiring seventh in a Feb. 4 allowance race at a mile.

“I had a lot of confidence in him,” Canchari said. “He was training really good. Mac told me that Rene Douglas, who was one of my childhood idols, owns this horse. So, I just wanted to impress him, too, and do a good job for him.”

Douglas, a Panama native, was a highly successful jockey in the United States before a career-ending riding accident in 2009 at Arlington Park.

Carlos L. ($97.40) led at every point of call in the Temperence Hill, opening a four-length advantage after a half-mile and repulsing a challenge from eventual runner-up Lone Rock on the outside through the stretch. Canchari lost his whip with about a furlong remaining when he said it inadvertently struck the whip of jockey David Cohen, who was riding Lone Rock. Canchari was hitting right-handed, Cohen left-handed.

“It was crazy,” Canchari said. “It was just weird timing because when I was coming up, Cohen was coming down and our whips just collided and it went flying out of my hand. I just went to Plan B – win by any means. My animal instinct kicked in and I ended up having to use my hands the rest of the way.”

Carlos L. finished a neck ahead of Lone Rock and shattered the previous track record (2:31.60), set March 30, 1957, by Dapper in the meet's final race, which was for older $2,000 claimers. The Temperence Hill, inaugurated in 2020, marked Canchari's 164th victory for Robertson and 15th in a stakes race.

“He's always tried hard for me,” Robertson said. “I never have a problem riding Alex. I think he rides all horses hard.”

Canchari rode his first race Dec. 26, 2011, at Hawthorne. According to Equibase, racing's official data gathering organization, Canchari entered Saturday with 930 career victories, including 194 at Oaklawn, with his mounts collecting $24,846,153 in purse money. Canchari's only career graded stakes victory to date came in the $122,200 Iowa Oaks (G3) July 5 at Prairie Meadows with the recently retired Flat Out Speed. Canchari's most lucrative to date came on the heels of his father's death and the birth of the jockey's second child, a daughter, Penelope, Dec. 21.

“That was the light at the end of the tunnel, Penelope,” Canchari said.

Canchari, who doesn't have an agent, said he plans to ride at Prairie Meadows and Canterbury Park after the Oaklawn meeting ends May 1.

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Letter To The Editor: The Place Of The Whip In Horse Racing

The whip in horse racing:

Reading this letter, one is entitled to ask: 'Who are you, to pass comment on such a contentious issue, when you have never ridden in a race?'

This is a fair comment. But as many sportsmen, whether they are golfers, tennis players, or gymnasts know, it's a bit of a not seeing the wood for the trees conundrum: because a jockey, like a boxer in a frantic fight, is often consumed in the moment of a tight finish, driven on by adrenalin, not rational thought. And invariably, when confronted with video evidence, they are most contrite.

Twenty-five years ago, I won an Eclipse Award for a radio broadcast on this very subject. And, listening to the words of Frankie Dettori, Sandy Hawley and Ted Walsh, at that time, it is evident that little has changed in the debate, even though animal rights' activists are far louder in their criticism, these days.

They say that great jockeys have great hands. Hands that immediately convey calm and confidence to any horse that they alight upon. These same hands send messages. Relax. Time to get going. And a whip, for them, is much like a balancing bar for a tight-rope walker: they wave it rhythmically in time with pumping the reins, driving their mounts to the wire.

The whip can get attention. It can steer. Now and again, it can convey urgency. And anyone who has stood at the three-eighths pole, as a field of horses leaves the backstretch and the race gets serious, will hear all manner of chirping, whistling, shouting, and the smacking of whips as riders urge their mounts on. This is natural. This is competition. But what is not acceptable is flogging horses that are well beaten, and/or striking them in the ribs (behind the girth) or even worse, around the sheath or teats.

Having worked as a traveling head lad in a top stable in France many years ago I would see horses returning after races with shocking welts that would put them off their feed and often not disappear for days. And today, at every racetrack, I strongly believe that commission veterinarians should inspect every horse after each race for signs of abuse, taking photos as evidence, and then hand out suspensions and fines based upon what they see, rather than what videos actually show.

As the great Willie Shoemaker once said, 'More horses are beaten out of the winner's circle than into it.'

Every jockey should be reminded of this. And perhaps, remembering what a great jockey he was, they will think twice before beating up an animal that is responsible for their bread and butter.

–Robin Dawson

If you would like to submit a letter to the editor, please write to info at paulickreport.com and include contact information where you may be reached if editorial staff have any questions.

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The Friday Show Presented By Diamond B Farm’s Rowayton: Whip Reform

Few subjects in racing are more divisive than whip use. In fact, we can't even agree on what to call it. Is it a riding crop or a whip? If it's the former, how do you describe a jockey's actions when he or she strikes the horse: cropping?

In this week's edition of the Friday Show, Ray Paulick and bloodstock editor Joe Nevills review a race from Oaklawn last weekend that saw jockey Ramon Vazquez striking his mount, Rated R Superstar, at least 30 times in the stretch run while finishing second in the Essex Handicap. Vazquez was fined $500 by stewards at the Arkansas track for “striking his horse excessively while not allowing a proper response time.” His cut of the purse was $10,000. Three years ago, the same jockey was fined $1,000 for striking a horse 48 times in the final 3 1/2 furlongs of a race at Prairie Meadows in Iowa.

Racing regulators in various states are beginning to adopt much stricter rules and penalties regarding use of the whip, and the devices themselves are now cushioned and much less likely to leave welts. While some horseplayers and horsemen feel that repeatedly striking a horse to get maximum effort is necessary, the ethics and optics are troubling to many others.

Watch this week's edition of the Friday Show that also includes our Star of the Week and a Toast to Vino Rosso that focuses on one of the 2019 Breeders' Cup Classic winner's first foals.

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Irad Ortiz Bobblehead Promotion Brings In $22K For PDJF

Jockeys and Jeans in conjunction with Uncle Louie G's Italian Ices, an onsite Gulfstream Park vendor, raised over $22,000 for the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund Saturday March 13 through sales of the masked Irad Ortiz bobbleheads at the track and online.

Ortiz personally signed hundreds of the bubbleheads and Klaravich Stables, whose colors the bobblehead wears, made a substantial donation.

“To say this promotion was a success would be an understatement,” said Jockey and Jeans President, Barry Pearl. “Irad Ortiz is not only a champion rider but a first-class guy who truly cares about his fallen brothers and sisters. He spent a lot of time with us preparing for this event. And the entire team at Gulfstream Park really came through for us as they have in the past, and we know they will in the future.”

Jockeys and Jean Committee member Kenny Katz, who owns Uncle Louie G's Italian ices which sells at the track, birthed the idea and worked closely with track staff to make it a success. Last year he also oversaw the Tyler Gaffalione Bobblehead sale at the same track.

“I'm always amazed and truly touched when racing fans everywhere spend their hard-earned money to help disabled former jockeys,” said Katz.

Pearl and committee member Leah Whitsell, along with paraplegic former jockey Roger Blanco, were also on hand.

“I want to thank all who helped and especially every one of those many hundreds who purchased a bobblehead,” said Pearl. “We are still getting orders from around the world.”

You can still order a Irad Ortiz bobblehead at JockeysandJeans.com

Jockeys and Jeans was founded in late 2014 by five former jockeys, and the all-volunteer group has since raised over $1.6 million for the PDJF, which makes monthly payments to over 60 former jockeys who suffered career ending racing injuries.

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