Jockey Of The Week: Javier Castellano ‘So Thankful’ For First Kentucky Derby Win

Did that really happen or was it a dream,” asked Javier Castellano after winning horseracing's most coveted prize, the Grade 1 Kentucky Derby.

Castellano also won the G2 American Turf on Saturday, leading the panel of racing experts to unanimously vote him the honor of Jockey of the Week for May 1 through May 7. The award recognizes jockeys for riding accomplishments and who are members of the Jockeys' Guild, the organization which represents more than 1050 active, retired and permanently disabled jockeys in the United States.

Castellano's “dream” day began with the win in the G2 American Turf aboard Webslinger for Hall of Fame trainer Mark Casse. Racing in sixth on the outside after the half, Castellano launched his rally and caught Far Bridge in the final strides to win by a nose in 1:41.54 for the mile and one-sixteenth turf test and returning $47.34.

“I am so grateful that Mark (Casse) gave me the opportunity to ride this horse today,” said Castellano. “At Keeneland, he learned a lot when he finished third, and he broke so well coming out of the gate today.”

That race was just the prelude to the feature race of the day, the G1 Kentucky Derby. Breaking from post position eight in the field of 18, Mage had only three horses beaten heading into the backstretch. Castellano began to weave his way through traffic as Two Phil's with Jareth Loveberry raced along the rail leading the way on the far turn. Mage started to roll entering the stretch with dead aim on the leader. Mage took over leaving the eighth pole and carried Castellano to his long-overdue first Kentucky Derby victory in 2:01.57 for the mile and one-quarter. Two Phil's finished second with Angel of Empire completing the trifecta. Mage returned $32.52 to his believers.

“I'm so thankful for the opportunity to ride this horse,” the four-time Eclipse Award winner Castellano said, clearly emotional. “The whole team gave me the opportunity to ride this horse in the biggest race in the world. I had a lot of confidence in myself this year would be the year. This horse was unbelievable today. It's such a great feeling.”

Making the victory all the more satisfying is the fact that both the trainer of Mage, Gustavo Delgado, Sr. and Castellano are natives of Maracaibo, Venezuela.

“Javier is almost family; his father rode for (Delgado, Sr.), said Gustavo Delgado, Jr. “The exercise rider (J.J. Delgado) rode with Javier's dad. It felt like our own little family in this.”

Mage is scheduled to travel to Baltimore for the second leg of the Triple Crown, the Preakness Stakes at Pimlico on Saturday, May 20.

Other contenders for Jockey of the Week were Junior Alvarado who won the G1 Churchill Downs Stakes with Cody's Wish, Tyler Gaffalione who won the G1 Kentucky Oaks with Pretty Mischievous, Irad Ortiz, Jr. with three graded stakes wins including the G1 Turf Classic, and John Velazquez who won the G1 La Troienne.

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Long-Time Trainer, NJTHA President Pat McBurney Named 2023 Recipient Of Monmouth’s Virgil ‘Buddy’ Raines Award

Long-time trainer Pat McBurney, a fixture at Monmouth Park for more than four decades and the current president of the New Jersey Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association, has been named the 2023 recipient of the Virgil “Buddy” Raines Distinguished Achievement Award, it was announced today by Monmouth Park.

The Raines Award, currently in its 28th year, is presented annually just prior to Monmouth Park's season opener. The track's 78th season of live racing gets underway on Saturday, May 13.

“It's a tremendous honor to receive this award because of what it means to Thoroughbred racing in New Jersey,” said McBurney. “It's an impressive list of past recipients so it's a great honor to join them.”

McBurney, who spent the first half of his career as an assistant to the late John Forbes (the 2006 Raines Award winner), went out on his own full-time as a trainer in 2007. He saddled his first winner on May 13, 2007 when Cable Boy won at Monmouth Park.

“Pat's tireless efforts on behalf of New Jersey horsemen and racing in general in the state, and his success as a trainer, make him a worthy recipient of this year's Buddy Raines Award,” said Dennis Drazin, Chairman and CEO of Darby Development LLC, the operators of Monmouth Park. “It's a fitting honor for someone who has done so much to promote thoroughbred racing in New Jersey.”

McBurney has won 333 races overall, with the versatile Golden Brown and Just Call Kenny – both Grade 3 winners – being his top runners. Golden Brown, still racing as an 8-year-old, has won 10 of his 40 career starts with earnings of $821,080. Just Call Kenny's top achievement was winning the 2019 Philip Iselin Stakes at Monmouth Park.

“Golden Brown is just a special horse,” said McBurney. “He does everything – he can sprint, he can race long, he races on the dirt or turf. To this day I am not sure what he is best at. He's a horse who loves to race and distance or surface don't matter to him.”

McBurney, who resides in nearby Fair Haven, will have nearly three dozen horses stabled at Monmouth Park this summer in anticipation of the 51-day meet.

The list of previous Raines Award winners:

1996: J. Willard Thompson

1997: Danny Perlsweig

1998: Warren A. “Jimmy” Croll

1999: Joe Pierce Jr.

2000: Peter Shannon

2001: Dennis Drazin

2002: Sam Fieramosca

2003: Charles and Marianne Hesse

2004: Janet Laszlo

2005: Richard Malouf

2006: John Forbes

2007: Ben Perkins Sr.

2008: Gerald and Carolyn Sleeter

2009: Joel Kligman

2010: John Tammaro III

2011: Frank Costa

2012: John Mazza

2013: Ebby Novak

2014: Chuck Spina

2015: Bob Baffert

2016: Ed Barney

2017: Bob Kulina

2018: Mike Musto

2019: Tim Hills

2020: Leonard Green

2021: Bill Anderson

2022: Millie Fleming

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Gulfstream: ‘Pioneer’ Ward Paved Way For American Runners At Royal Ascot

Nearly a decade and a half has gone by since his first horses arrived at Royal Ascot to compete on the famed English racecourse founded by Queen Anne in 1711, but trainer Wesley Ward's memory of the maiden voyage is crystal clear.

At the time, American-based Thoroughbred trainers rarely, if ever, made the trip overseas to take on Europe's best horses. And they never won.

“When we got there everybody went, 'Hey! All right! Good luck!'” Ward recalled with a laugh, “and as I turned my back and walked away, they were like, 'What is this boy doing?'”

His gamble was rewarded when 2-year-old colt Strike the Tiger captured the 2009 Windsor Castle Stakes to make Ward, then 41, the first American trainer to win a race at Royal Ascot. The next day Jealous Again, a 2-year-old filly he also owned in partnership, won the Queen Mary (G2).

“The racing gods came together,” Ward said, “and we've been able to get the Americans over there at least knowing they have a chance now.”

This weekend, for the first time ever, horses will have the opportunity to earn an automatic berth plus a $25,000 equine travel stipend to England for one of the six 2-year-old races Royal Ascot when Gulfstream Park hosts the $100,000 Royal Palm Juvenile and $100,000 Royal Palm Juvenile Fillies, both scheduled for five furlongs on the turf May 13.

This year's Royal Ascot meet runs June 20-24. Overall, Ward owns 12 wins at Royal Ascot, eight of them with 2-year-olds, and he not only points for the races each year but his success has encouraged other American-based horsemen to make the pilgrimage, as well.

“A lot of it is thanks to Wesley,” Hall of Fame trainer Mark Casse said. “We've gotten a lot more press, so you have more owners seeing and wanting to try it.”

Casse is the only other American trainer to win a race at Royal Ascot thanks to two-time champion mare Tepin, who in 2016 beat males in the meet's signature opener, the Queen Anne (G1), considered Europe's most prestigious one-mile race.

“I have to be honest with you, when we took Tepin over there I didn't realize what a big deal it is. My wife calls it the Kentucky Derby on steroids,” Casse said. “It was just amazing. As a trainer, it was one of the highlights of my career. To meet the Queen was so special. It's the experience of a lifetime, it truly is, and hopefully someday I'll be able to do it again.”

Graham Motion, a Maryland-based native of England that won the 2011 Kentucky Derby (G1) and 2013 Dubai World Cup (G1) with Animal Kingdom, is also quick to credit Ward with being a catalyst for other American trainers.

Motion has never won at Royal Ascot but finished second in the Coronation Cup (G1) with Sharing in 2020 and Spendarella in 2022. He brought Miss Temple City over three times and saw her run fourth in the 2015 Coronation Cup and 2016 Duke of Cambridge (G2) and 13th in the 2017 Queen Anne.

“I think if Wesley hadn't been the pioneer of showing that it could be done, we probably wouldn't be jumping on the bandwagon. It always seemed, to me, certainly pretty daunting to go over there,” Motion said. “And I still think it is unless you do the right races, because you can definitely get in trouble if you take them out of their own game.

“For me personally, having grown up in England, I really want to go and win one of those,” he added. “But it is a huge undertaking and credit to Wesley, he found his niche and he's done remarkably well at it. I also think when Mark Casse went over with his filly, I don't think she probably got enough credit. When you know how difficult it is, you appreciate it even more.”

Ward won the Eclipse Award as champion apprentice jockey of 1984 but weight issues forced his retirement in 1989. The Selah, Wash. native went to work as an assistant to his father, trainer Dennis Ward, before going out on his own in 1991.

By the time of his Royal Ascot debut, Ward had won nearly 800 races including 13 graded-stakes and had forged a reputation for early developing 2-year-olds that continues today.

“I was just looking at races. I kind of got going as a trainer by getting going early with my 2-year-olds and winning some early 2-year-old races when some of the better 2-year-olds didn't come out until mid-summer. When I started in California, in March and April they'd have quarter-mile races at Santa Anita for big purses. It was tough to kind of break in at that time in southern California. You had Charlie Whittingham and all these great trainers. You had D. Wayne Lukas when he was at the height of his career. You can just go on and on and on. Then you go down to the claiming races and you had Mike Mitchell and all these big claiming trainers. For a young guy trying to break in, it was almost impossible.

“So I got to looking and found a little niche where they had 2-year-old races. I thought if I bought some inexpensive but physical, fast-looking 2-year-olds, they'd be able to start early and I'd be ready to go, and it worked out,” he added. “Each and every year when they started racing, I'd have my 2-year-olds ready to go and when all the better 2-year-olds came out at Del Mar, I had already won my races and the big purses and I was able to either sell them or run them in the claiming $50,000 or whatever, and people would claim them off me. So, I was able to kind of profit and get clients.”

Ward eventually got married and relocated with his young family to the East coast, setting up shop in South Florida over the winter and setting the stage to ultimately move his primary base to Kentucky.

“I was able to utilize the good weather in the wintertime and have [the 2-year-olds] ready. When we started going up to Kentucky I thought they'd win, and then we looked for a secondary spot and I thought, 'Why not Ascot?' They have this big, huge meeting there and maybe they're a little bit the same way. The 2-year-old races are in June and maybe some of their trainers aren't getting going with their better stuff until the summer, so I figured I'd take a chance with some of my precocious 2-year-olds that had already won.

“Every horse that I've been successful with, from my very first winner, has come back to be a really good horse. It's not like you can have a horse break his maiden and go over there and be successful. I've tried that many, many times and the horses that are successful end up coming back here and are graded-stakes horses eventually,” Ward said. “They end up to be true quality. Not one horse that I won with was like, 'Well, I got lucky.' They all came back and they were serious horses.”

Among Ward's other Royal Ascot winners are Undrafted, the first American horse to win a Group 1 at the meet in the 2015 Diamond Jubilee; Lady Aurelia, the first American horse to win twice at Royal Ascot in the 2016 Queen Mary and 2017 King's Stand; and Campanelle, who matched Lady Aurelia's feat in the 2020 Queen Mary and 2021 Commonwealth Cup, the latter via disqualification.

“I guess I kind got lucky in hindsight, because the first year I went over I had some real quality 2-year-olds, for my standards anyway. They were good and we caught weather – because that's the big factor over there, the weather – that was like a heat wave. It was like 80 degrees, so the ground was just really, really fast,” he said. “My horses had already won wire-to-wire and so when I got them in the races, they just kind of broke and were in front and they had such a big advantage. They just couldn't catch me. Looking back now, everything kind of came together. If it was rainy and soggy like it can be there at Ascot where you get deluge rain, I'd probably have run last in every race and never went back again.”

Another benefit of Royal Ascot was having the privilege of meeting the late Queen Elizabeth II, an avid horse racing fan and owner who died in September 2022 at the age of 96.

“Having grown up in England, for me I never imagined I'd meet the Queen,” Motion said. “I sat with her in the Royal box the year we took Miss Temple City the first time, which was something I'll never forget. It was quite special.”

Ward found the Queen warm, inviting and inquisitive.

“A few years into it she requested my presence a few times, and I met her and my kids met her. When No Nay Never won, she invited me to sit with her for 30 minutes and watch a race. That was just unbelievable,” Ward said. “I had a great talk with her, and she did most of the talking, actually. She had such a keen interest in racing. She was asking me all these different questions of what I do and how I prepare and how I tell the jockeys to ride the races. She just kept firing questions at me and about 15 to 20 minutes into the conversation you sit back and realize, 'Hey, I'm having a conversation with the Queen of England, just me and her.' It was wild.”

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Jockey Declan Carroll Creates New Video Series On ‘Life Inside And Outside Of The Racetrack’

Declan Carroll is taking racing fans along for the ride.

The idea, one where he would provide viewers with a unique, inside track-type look at the life of a jockey, first came to Carroll last fall.

“I enjoy watching YouTube videos, and I'm always watching horse racing-related videos from Europe,” said Carroll, who began his riding career in fall 2018 and scored his first win at Keeneland during the fall meet. “There is a company, M3 Media, which does a lot of behind-the-scenes videos, where they show different things, like jockey cams and other interesting things. It's great, but I didn't see any jockeys doing something like that on a regular basis.

“So, it was about six months ago when I started thinking, 'Why don't I give it a shot?' Maybe it would be something where people enjoy seeing what we do in the mornings, how we prepare for the races, and things like that. But I also wanted to show what I do on the off days, almost a blog of life inside and outside of the racetrack. People enjoy watching those types of videos these days.”

In late April, Carroll, the son of former trainer David Carroll, who currently works as assistant trainer to Mark Casse, released his first video.

The 46 second video, which includes Carroll narrating over a series of clips, received rave reviews on social media.

“I was talking to my sister, and I told her I went into this with zero expectations, that maybe a few people would like it and others wouldn't really care. It's great to see the support and I really do appreciate it. It's outside of my comfort zone, which I expressed in a video. The more support, the better.”

One of Carroll's primary objectives is to bring more attention to the sport, an opportunity for him to help introduce new fans to racing.

Growing up in Kentucky, Carroll, who rode at several Midwest tracks during the pandemic before taking his tack to Arlington for its 2021 meet, sought out as much horse racing content as he could find. ​

“I remember when I was a kid, I always looked up to jockeys and it's always what I wanted to be. I'd watch every interview I could, just to catch all the small things here and there. I feel like today, with the technology everyone has, that I can pump out a lot of good things that weren't available when I was a kid. Whether it's things around the barn, nutrition, what you like to do away from racing, I want to showcase things people might be interested in. If that can help bring in new fans, that's great.”

The 23-year-old won't be focusing his content solely on his time at the racetrack.

Carroll, who started riding full-time at Woodbine in 2022, and won last year's Breeders' Stakes with eventual Sovereign Award winner (3-year-old male category) Sir for Sure, intends to share footage of his life outside of the irons.

“I'm not just going to make it about going to work, going to the room, working out and riding a horse. I want to give some insight into what I like to do in my off time. I think if I was just to pump out my daily routine for racing, it's going to get repetitive and it's going to get boring. I don't want that, I want to keep it fresh, and I want to keep it new. I want to bring other people in, interview people. Some of my best friends in Kentucky who ride, they're going to do some stuff for me for this. I'm looking forward to that, to showing other riders and their lives too.”

He's already reached out to others in the sport for their feedback and the offer to share their stories as well.

While his videos don't have the same polish and production as a company like M3 Media does, Carroll is looking at ways to improve what he films and how he films it.

“I've talked to people, and I will continue to do that, to get their perspectives and their input, and maybe how they can be a part of it. That's what this is all about. I don't have a fancy camera or people following me around. For now, this is what it is, and I hope people enjoy it. Hopefully, we can grow the audience and get more eyes on our sport.”

With new offerings for those who attend the races at Woodbine, including the Stella Artois Terrace, which overlooks the finish line from the third-floor grandstand, Carroll sees opportunities to engage and enlighten a new generation of racing fans. ​

“There are so many new people that are coming to our racetrack. Maybe we can help put some more attention on our sport through things like this and give those people more incentive to come back. Anything I can do to help draw attention to our great sport, I'm happy to do it. I want to play my part in that.”

While Carroll is the face and voice of the videos, he isn't interested in making any of it about himself.

“Hopefully, it will be good for everyone, for our sport, my fellow riders, and anyone who watches them, and that they are able to take something away from it.”

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