Not Enough Jockeys For ‘Quality Racing Product’ Causes Del Mar Cancellation

On Wednesday, when Del Mar Thoroughbred Club (DMTC) announced the cancellation of this weekend’s three days of racing in the aftermath of 15 asymptomatic jockeys there testing positive for COVID-19, the chief reason listed in the track’s press release was “to help ensure the safety of all workers at Del Mar and our surrounding community.”

But in a Thursday teleconference organized by the Thoroughbred Owners of California (TOC) that featured Del Mar executives explaining their decision not to race, the focal point centered not so much on preventing the spread of the disease, but on whether or not there would have been enough qualified replacements to take the mounts vacated by the quarantined jockeys.

“We felt it was the prudent thing to do,” said Josh Rubinstein, the president of Del Mar Thoroughbred Club, at the outset of the call. “We just wouldn’t have enough riders to put on a quality racing product that you as owners are used to in California and that our customers are used to wagering on.”

A few minutes later, when the teleconference was opened up to questions from the 141 participants listening in, the very first query was from owner Billy Koch, who asked Rubinstein to clarify whether the primary reason for the cancellation “wasn’t that we couldn’t find other jockeys, it was that we were more concerned with how it would actually look.”

Rubinstein’s reply was “That’s partially accurate. We debated several scenarios [like] bringing in northern California riders. That was challenging, as they had been named on horses up north.”

Rubinstein also explained that after the 15 positive tests, the Del Mar pool of regular riders was down to about 12. And when track management announced on July 15 that a new health protocol will prohibit jockeys from entering the backstretch to exercise horses, three of those “not big-name riders” opted to keep working as per-diem exercise riders in the mornings rather than accept mounts as in the afternoons.

“So that took the number down from 12 to about nine, so it would have been very challenging to try to put together a card with jockeys of the quality that you owners need and what our players need to wager on.”

Several subsequent teleconference participants wanted to know why other racing jurisdictions haven’t had jockeys testing positive en masse for the coronavirus and why Del Mar only began testing riders after the outbreak was detected.

“We’re very confident of the protocols that we have in place,” Rubinstein said, alluding to “some challenges” that occurred before riders got to Del Mar.

Greg Avioli, the president and chief executive officer the Thoroughbred Owners of California, interjected with a more pointed response.

“Let me be more direct,” Avioli said. “What Josh is not saying is a number of these jockeys showed up at Del Mar having almost certainly picked up this virus when they were at Los Alamitos. So it didn’t really matter what the Del Mar protocols were at that point [because] asymptomatic jockeys showed up with the virus. I think this should be a one-time issue.”

Avioli was referencing a cluster of five jockeys who all rode at Los Alamitos Race Course on July 4 then subsequently tested positive for the virus. Those riders have been publicly acknowledged as Luis Saez, Martin Garcia, Victor Espinoza, Flavien Prat and Eduard Rojas Fernandez. Of the 15 jockey positives from the July 14 testing at Del Mar, 14 of them have been contact-traced to Los Alamitos.

“The good news is they are all currently asymptomatic,” Rubinstein said of the 15 positive-test jockeys, whom Del Mar is not naming out of respect to privacy rights.

“And based on our conversations with the county and with [the San Diego health care provider] Scripps Health, as long as they remain asymptomatic, and we’ve had contact with all 14 of the [Los Al] jockeys, they will be able to quarantine for 10 days and they will be able to ride when we resume racing next Friday, July 24.”

The starting gate crew and pony riders who accompany Thoroughbreds to the gate are scheduled to undergo COVID-19 testing on Friday, Rubinstein added. Exercise riders are not currently scheduled for testing.

When pressed by another call participant about why Del Mar did not plan for testing jockeys prior to the meet, Rubinstein explained it this way:

“We received guidance from both the county and Scripps Health. And their guidance to us [was] that there are challenges with asymptomatic testing. And their recommendation to us was to allocate resources to other things we’re doing with facial coverings, sanitizing, reconfiguring the jockeys’ room. But obviously, if somebody [shows] symptoms, you get them tested right away. That thinking changed [when] five jockeys tested positive from Los Alamitos. Then we immediately tested the riders on Tuesday.”

When a member of the media inquired as to whether the valets, who work in close quarters with the jockeys, were also tested and if any of those results came back positive, Avioli, who was moderating the teleconference, was quick to say that “this isn’t really a media call.” But he said he would “make an exception” if the DMTC executives wanted to answer the question.

A woman who did not identify herself prior to speaking then answered that all of jockeys’ room personnel were tested on Tuesday along with the riders. But she did not answer the part of the query that dealt with the results of those tests, and Avioli quickly called for the next question.

In addition to the list of new health protocols Del Mar announced on July 15 (read them here), Rubinstein said that out-of-state jockeys will not be allowed to enter the Del Mar riding colony this meet. And if they leave Del Mar to ride elsewhere, they won’t be allowed back.

With one notable exception.

“It starts when the colony is back together next week,” Rubinstein said. “So the question that you may be asking is ‘[What about] Mike Smith?'”

Smith, the in-demand Hall-of-Fame jockey, is booked to ride five graded stakes mounts Saturday at Monmouth Park, including heavily favored Authentic (Into Mischief) in the GI Haskell S. for trainer Bob Baffert.

“We had actually had conversations with Mike,” Rubinstein explained. “Mike is riding Saturday in New Jersey. If we were to [have had races] this weekend, we had Mike scheduled for a quick test at Scripps on Sunday. He would be isolated until we got the results of that test. If it was clean, then he [would have been] able to ride on Sunday. So we’re doing the same thing with Mike [but] we’re just moving it a week forward. So when Mike gets back from New Jersey we will set up a test for him at Scripps. Hopefully, it’s negative, and he will be a part of the colony.”

Other jockeys won’t have that privilege.

“They can leave, they just can’t come back–[like in the song by the Eagles] Hotel California,” Rubinstein said.

“In reverse,” quipped someone on the call more familiar with the haunting lyrics that warn, “You can check out any time you like, but you can never leave.”

Because of the July 17-19 cancellations, Rubinstein said Del Mar has a request pending with the California Horse Racing Board to allow the track to add a race date on Monday, July 27. In addition, Del Mar will seek to card additional races on some Fridays and Sundays.

“We don’t think it will be an issue to get approval, but we want to let folks know…that we intend to do our best to make up for the races that were lost from this weekend,” Rubinstein said.

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‘It Was A Ride, All Right’: Serrano Gets Himself Out Of Sticky Spot In Mountaineer Ride

Keivan Serrano is not someone who panics when he finds himself in a tight spot.

“One thing I learned is not to panic, because panic can make it a lot worse,” said the young jockey. “I go out there and there's no fear. The day that I'm scared to do what I do, is the day I need to stop.”

That's why, when he saw Side Tracked drift to the right out of the Number One gate in Sunday's third race at Mountaineer, he began weighing his options. At first, Serrano thought he could steer his colt, a maiden named Bungalow Flash, to the right to avoid the domino effect. Then he saw Just Doing to his outside, wandering toward him, and found himself squeezed between two horses and forced out of the tack.

“I thought I was going to fall,” he said. “To be completely hoenst with you, this is one of my main stables and I knew we had a really good shot to win the race. I was going to do everything I could to stay on this horse. The only thing I felt behind me was the eight horse, so I just sort of pushed off him and pushed back in[to the saddle].

“It was a ride, all right.”

Serrano said he was able to work his feet back into the stirrups while remaining mindful of the colt's mouth, not wanting to balance against the reins and check the horse.

In the end, his patience paid off – Serrano finished third, just a nose behind runner-up Juliano.

“I came into the race with all the confidence in the world in this horse,” he said. “Up until we did finish the race, I thought I was going to get the second.”

It isn't the first time he's used this move of pushing off a rival to pop himself back in the tack – just last year, he found himself in a similar position out of the gate in a turf race at Mountaineer and got himself righted again.

Cheating gravity is all in a day's work for Serrano, 22, who said he's living out a longtime dream of becoming a professional jockey. Growing up in Puerto Rico, Serrano said he always had horses and had hoped to go through the island's popular Escuela Vocacional Hípica, but found he ultimately didn't qualify. He moved to New York at the age of 18 and wandered the backstretch looking for someone to give him a job as an exercise rider. He had never galloped a horse before, but didn't mention that.

“I had never touched a racehorse in my life,” he said. “I went around telling people, 'Yeah, I'm an exercise rider.' I'd ridden horses before, just not racehorses. I'm 18, I'm thinking it's the same thing. I remember getting on horses and the first one I got on was a tank – big, tall. I had never been that high off the ground. Of course, it ran off with me. I didn't know what I was doing.”

That was in September 2016. Serrano later went to Ocala, as many aspiring jockeys do, to sharpen his skills with young horses just learning themselves. He got his license and began riding in March 2017.

Serrano said he learned to ride Thoroughbreds by feel. Horses were not a foreign language to him. As a kid, he studied jockeys on television and picked up a $100 horse to practice riding, honing his position as best he could from what he saw. By the time he got to New York, his sense of balance was well-developed, as was his sense of horsemanship.

Serrano said he still maintains contact with one particular four-legged teacher back home in Puerto Rico – a filly out of a mare he rescued when she was pregnant. The mare foaled uneventfully, but not long after that, things started to get complicated.

“At about two and a half months old, the mare started rejecting the foal and I had no idea why,” he said. “I finally pulled her away and started bottle feeding her until she could nibble on grass, on grain. She'd follow me around my hometown like a puppy. I could take her to the beach and run around, she'd jump in the water with me. That was pretty cool.

“Before I left Puerto Rico, I had five horses. I sold them all except her. I donated her to this place in San Juan where they could use her as a therapy horse for kids with special needs. I thought that was something she could fit perfectly in. I get updates on her — she's three now and she does her job very well.”

These days, Serrano can be found predominantly at Mountaineer, where his unconventional route to the saddle is paying off — he's the meet leader by earnings.

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Louisiana Downs Announces Updated COVID-19 Protocols for Riders

Officials at Harrahs Louisiana Downs in Bossier City, Louisiana, have released updated protocols as it regards its jockey leaving and returning to the track.

The track has announced that any rider accepting a mount at another track will be asked to self-quarantine for a period of 14 days and will be required to submit a negative test for COVID-19 before being allowed to return. Inbound jockeys who have ridden at other facilities will be asked to do the same. The policy will be in effect until further notice.

“After careful consideration, we felt it was necessary to implement these restrictions at Harrah’s Louisiana Downs,” said David Heitzmann, Director of Racing. “The health and safety of everyone involved must be protected; we join other racetracks in North America by enacting these measures.”

Live racing at Louisiana Downs, which began June 6, continues Saturday, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday through Sept. 23.

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Louisiana Downs Announces Updated Jockeys’ COVID-19 Protocols

Harrah's Louisiana Downs announced an updated policy, effective Wednesday, July 15, regarding riders leaving and entering the racetrack.

The following restrictions have been implemented. If a rider accepts a mount at another racetrack, he or she must quarantine for a 14-day period and submit a negative COVID-19 test prior to returning to Harrah's Louisiana Downs. Jockeys who have ridden at other racetracks must self-quarantine for 14-days and present a negative COVID-19 test before gaining access to Harrah's Louisiana Downs. This policy will be in effect until further notice.

“After careful consideration, we felt it was necessary to implement these restrictions at Harrah's Louisiana Downs,” said David Heitzmann, Director of Racing. “The health and safety of everyone involved must be protected; we join other racetracks in North America by enacting these measures.”

Harrah's Louisiana Downs has continued to follow the policy set by Governor John Bel Edwards and protocols regarding COVID-19 on the OpenSafely.la.gov website. Prior to the opening of the meet, the jocks room was expanded to ensure proper social distancing. Additionally, patrons are required to enter via a specially marked designated entrance and temperature checks are conducted. Face masks are required and no more than three people are permitted in the saddling paddock.

The 64-day Harrah's Louisiana Downs Thoroughbred meet began on Saturday June 6. Live racing continues Saturday, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday through September 23.

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