‘I’ve Grown Up And I’m Ready’: Sebastian Saez Returns To Aqueduct For Fall Meet

Jockey Sebastian Saez, the younger brother of prominent New York-based rider Luis Saez, will make his return to riding at the Aqueduct fall meet which kicks off on Friday, Nov. 6, and runs through Sunday, Dec. 6.

The 21-year-old Saez said he wants to uphold the highly-regarded riding talents of his family, including 28-year-old brother Luis and his late brother Juan, an apprentice rider who died tragically at the age of 17 from injuries sustained in a spill in October 2014 at Indiana Grand.

Saez last rode in January 2019 at Gulfstream Park before returning to his native Panama to spend time with family and look inward as an act of mindfulness before resetting course to his goal of becoming a successful rider.

“I went back to Panama for a year to clear my head and find myself,” said Saez. “But I realized how much I missed riding here in the States and I knew that I had to give it a shot again. I was just a kid then. Now, I've grown up and I'm ready.”

As a teenager, Saez won five races in New York at the 2016 Belmont spring/summer meet, including a frontrunning half-length score with the Bruce Levine-trained Foxy Posse on the inner turf where he held off a game bid from Luis aboard Maybry's Conquest.

“It was a great finish,” recalled Luis. “He has a lot of talent. I think when he first came here he was a little too young, but now he's grown and he's ready.”

“Most important for him is to be patient and to try and do his best and always be here to work horses in the morning, see everybody and work hard,” he added. “The main thing is to work hard. I wish all the best for him.”

The up-and-coming rider lived with his brother Luis in Florida before launching his career in 2015 at Churchill Downs, where he picked up his first win in May 2015 aboard Bob's Gone Wild.

The elder Saez, a multiple Grade 1-winning veteran with more than 2,500 career wins, said his younger sibling has the talent to make it in New York.

“When he was living with me in Florida, I was teaching him every day about how to ride. He learned a lot,” said Saez. “When he went to Churchill he was doing great over there but we had a bad moment when we lost our brother. I think that hurt him and that's why he had to take time off. Now, he's in the right spot and I have a good feeling about him coming back to ride.

“He's a strong rider, too,” Saez added. “He can ride horses anywhere – from the front, from behind. He has a good left hand and I think he has the talent.”

With 1,093 starts to his credit, the younger Saez owns a modest record of 121-137-138, good for purse earnings in excess of $2.6 million. For the last two months, Saez said he has been riding out for Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen in Kentucky.

“I was working in Kentucky getting fit and ready to ride. I was breezing a lot of horses,” said Saez.

Saez will be making his return and Big A debut on Opening Day of a fall meet that offers 29 stakes, including 11 graded events, worth $3.41 million in purse money.

The good-natured young rider said he brings a few familiar Saez family traits to the table.

“I think I am very strong and I finish well,” said Saez. “I try to watch and learn as much as I can from my brother Luis. I also have good hands and I know how to get a horse to relax.”

When asked what he would choose if he could borrow a skill or strength from each of his brothers, Saez said, “From Luis, I would like to borrow his knowledge of the game and how he is loved by everyone. And from Juan, he rides with me. I will ride with the passion he rode with and smile and enjoy riding like him.”

All three Saez brothers graduated from Panama's famed Laffit Pincay Jockey School. Juan went on to earn honors as the leading rider at the 2014 Ellis Park meet and Luis has ridden on the biggest stages of the sport and guided his mounts to more than $126 million in purse earnings.

Saez, however, said he credits his older brother as his role model and mentor.

“I went to the school of Luis Saez,” said Saez with a laugh. “I think I had a really great teacher. He is one of the best in the country.”

Racing fans can follow Saez, who will be represented by agent Shawn Klotz, on his Twitter account @Jockeyssaezpty.

“I just want a shot to prove that I'm a good rider and I can make it here in New York,” said Saez. “This is the major leagues of horse racing and it's an honor to ride with the best riding colony in America. I'm going to work so hard to be the best I can be.”

America's Day at the Races will present daily television coverage of the Aqueduct fall meet with coverage to air on FOX Sports and MSG Networks.

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Empire 6: Mandatory Payout Scheduled For Nov. 1 Closing Day At Belmont Park

The New York Racing Association, Inc. (NYRA) announces that the Sunday, Nov. 1 card at Belmont Park will feature a mandatory payout of the Empire 6, which boasts a jackpot of $299,827.81 heading into the start of the racing week on Thursday at Belmont.

Live coverage of all the races in the sequence will be available with America's Day at the Races on FOX Sports and MSG+. Free Equibase-provided past performances will be available for races that are part of the America's Day at the Races broadcast and can be accessed at https://www.nyra.com/belmont/racing/tv-schedule.

Sunday's live racing program at Belmont, which closes out the 27-day Belmont fall meet, will be highlighted by two stakes races, each with an $80,000 purse: the Chelsey Flower at 1 1/16 miles for 2-year-old fillies on the turf; and the $80,000 Pumpkin Pie, a 7-furlong test on the dirt for fillies and mares 3-years-old and up.

Closing Day of the Belmont fall meet will also feature mandatory payouts for both the Early Pick 5 and Late Pick 5 wagers.

Live racing will then move to Aqueduct Racetrack for the 18-day fall meet, featuring 29 stakes, including 11 graded events, worth $3.41 million in purse money, which will kick off on Friday, November 6 and run through Sunday, December 6.

The Empire 6 requires the bettor to select the first-place finisher of the final six races of the day's card. On non-mandatory payout days, if one unique ticket exists, then 100 percent of the net pool, plus the jackpot carryover if applicable, will be paid to the winner. If there is no unique wager selecting the first-place finisher in all six races, then 75 percent of the day's net pool will be distributed to those who selected the first-place finisher in the greatest number of races. The remainder will be added into the jackpot and carried to the next day's Empire 6.

For more information on closing week of the 2020 Belmont Park fall meet, please visit NYRA.com.

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James C. Brady, Longtime Thoroughbred Owner And Breeder, Passes At 85

James C. Brady, a longtime Thoroughbred owner and breeder and officer of The Jockey Club, passed away at his home in Bedminster, N.J., on October 22, 2020. He was 85.

The Brady family has been involved in Thoroughbred racing for more than 100 years, beginning with Brady's grandfather, financier James Cox Brady, who developed the 5,000-acre Hamilton Farms in New Jersey and bred and raced the champion War Feathers.

Brady's father, also James Cox Brady, was a steward of The Jockey Club and bred and raced 16 major stakes winners, including classic winners in England and Ireland and a champion in America. He was chairman of the New York Racing Association for eight years, during which Belmont Park was built, and also a founding director of the Monmouth Park Jockey Club.

On behalf of his brother, Nicholas Brady, a former chairman of The Jockey Club, U.S. Senator, and Treasury Secretary, and sisters Lisa Richards and Eliot Stewart, Brady managed Mill House Racing Stable, which raced prominent runners America Alive, Brilliant, Trappe Shot, and Rattlesnake Bridge.

Born in New York, N.Y., to parents James C. and Eliot (nee Chace) Brady, Brady was general partner of Mill House Associates, successor to Brady Security & Realty Corporation. He began work at Bankers Trust Company in 1957, resigning to take a position in New Jersey Governor William T. Cahill's Cabinet as commissioner of banking, where he helped plan the transformative development of the Meadowlands Sports Complex, including Giants Stadium and the Meadowlands Racetrack.

In 1983, Brady was appointed secretary-treasurer of The Jockey Club, joining newly elected chairman Ogden Mills Phipps and vice chairman William S. Farish. Together they led a three-decade period of substantial growth of The Jockey Club, establishing new commercial business, including Equibase Company and several technology-based service and data businesses. Proceeds from the commercial subsidiaries fueled increasing investments in the marketing of Thoroughbred racing and research and advocacy for improved safety and integrity of the sport. Brady's nephew, Ian Highet, succeeded him as secretary-treasurer of The Jockey Club in 2010, and Brady remained on the board of stewards until 2013.

Brady attended St. Paul's School in Concord, N.H., and Yale University in New Haven, Conn., where he played varsity ice hockey.

He is survived by his wife of 63 years, Joan Babcock Brady; his siblings; son James C. Brady III and his wife, Anne Lusk Brady; daughter Joan “Nonie” Brady and her husband, Wilhelm Merck; and daughter Kerry Chace Brady and her partner, Brock Dolman. He had two granddaughters, Audrey Slade Brady and Millicent McKay Brady.

A private family funeral was held at St. Brigid's Church in Peapack, N.J. A memorial service celebrating his life is to be held in the spring of 2021. In lieu of flowers, donations in Brady's memory may be made to LifeCamp, a summer camp for inner city youth, long supported by the Brady family (greaternewarklifecamp.org).

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Thoroughbred Safety Coalition Adopts New Reforms

The Thoroughbred Safety Coalition has added eight medical and operational reforms to its platform. The group’s Steering Committee, made up of executives from the Breeders’ Cup, Churchill Downs Incorporated, Del Mar Thoroughbred Club, Keeneland Association Inc., the New York Racing Association (NYRA) and The Stronach Group, voted unanimously to adopt the reforms with the ultimate goal of uniform implementation across racing jurisdictions.

The following reforms have been added to the Coalition’s platform:

  • Strengthen race entry and eligibility requirements;
  • Work with state racing commissions to apply racing regulations surrounding prohibited substances and restrict selected therapeutic substances in proximity to high-speed works;
  • Prohibit the administration of external treatments, therapies and musculoskeletal manipulation within at least 24 hours of a race;
  • Work with state racing commissions to implement a clenbuterol prohibition in racing and training along with reporting/procedural requirements as outlined by the RMTC;
  • Strengthen requirements for removing horses from the Veterinarians’ List;
  • Adopt a waiver claiming option for horses coming off an extended layoff;
  • Require implementation of an emergency track warning system; and
  • Modify racetrack on and off gaps to increase horse and rider safety.

“As today’s announcement and recent progress make clear, the Coalition’s important work to ensure the well-being of our athletes has continued despite the challenging circumstances our industry and our nation have faced this year. The new reforms will go a long way toward increasing our collective ability to identify at-risk horses before they set foot on a track and protect the integrity of our sport,” said Coalition Strategic Advisor Donna Brothers.

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