New York Fixture Jimmy Jerkens ‘Can’t Get Going Here,’ Takes Training Job In Saudi Arabia

Longtime New York-based trainer Jimmy Jerkens, 64, will head to Saudi Arabia next month to train for Prince Faisal bin Khalid Al Saud, reports the Daily Racing Form. The son of Hall of Famer H. Allen Jerkens has trained a pair of Breeders' Cup winners and multiple Grade 1 winners, but the younger Jerkens has only sent out 16 winners from 155 starters since the end of 2020.

Jerkens said his stable has been reduced to 10 horses.

“Can't get going here,” Jerkens told DRF. “Built up a lot of debt. Not enough happening fast enough. It's hard driving through the gates seven days a week knowing you're losing money. Hope can only last so long. It just hasn't been happening.”

Among Jerkens' top trainees are: Effinex, Shaman Ghost, Artie Schiller, Wicked Strong, Holy Helena, Corinthian, Preservationist, Delta Prince, and V.E. Day.

Read more at the Daily Racing Form.

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Nancy Knott’s Two-Horse Stable Has Potential For Big Saturday At Oaklawn

Trainer Nancy Knott's one-horse stable has grown to two in recent months and both Sunset Paynter and Navy Seal are scheduled to run Saturday at Oaklawn.

Sunset Paynter is entered in the ninth race, the inaugural $150,000 Valley of the Vapors Stakes for 3-year-old fillies at 1 mile, and top Arkansas-bred Navy Seal is entered against open company in the 12th race, a $105,000 allowance sprint for older horses.

Lightly raced Sunset Paynter will try to give Knott, 57, a former jockey turned trainer/exercise rider/groom/equine massage therapist, her first career stakes victory.

“It would be really cool,” Knott said Tuesday morning. “I'm just hoping the distance will even make her better than she is.”

Knott has already had a noteworthy 2022-2023 Oaklawn meeting, going 28 years and two days between her first career training victory in Hot Springs – Budman Dude, Feb. 3, 1995 – and her second when Navy Seal toppled Arkansas-breds in a Feb. 5 allowance sprint. Knott's horses were running under her maiden name, Steenhuis, in 1995.

“It's very satisfying to do it yourself,” Knott said. “You can pay close attention to every single thing, pick up everything right away. So, you're right on top of everything. But it's very physically demanding and you have to wait, even if you win, another four weeks, five weeks until you run again. With a big stable, it's not as physically demanding. It's more managing everything. You've got your payroll and the issues that go along with owners, insurance and everything else. All of that is not so fun.”

Knott grew up in Atlanta, fox hunting and steeple chasing, before enrolling in Sweet Briar College in 1983. Sweet Briar, a private women's liberal arts school in Virginia, is known for its show jumping program. After two years at Sweet Briar, Knott decided to transfer to Louisiana Tech for its equine science program.

“I wanted to go the racetrack, but I didn't even know what the racetrack was, except for watching the Kentucky Derby and the Triple Crown,” Knott said. “My father said I could go to the racetrack, but I had to get a degree. When I went through that program at Louisiana Tech, it's an animal science degree with an equine specialty, but it was just like the track. You were at the barn at 5 o'clock in the morning and then you would go to classes at 8 and then you would go back and do horses up. Then I would break horses after that.”

Knott said she earned a trainer's license through the program – she graduated in 1987 – and had an internship in Pennsylvania with soon-to-be Hall of Fame trainer Jonathan Sheppard. Knott moved to the racetrack in the late 1980s, initially galloping horses for trainer Carl Bowman. She later worked as an exercise rider for Hall of Fame trainer Jack Van Berg and trainers Tom Bohannan and Edward I. Kelly Jr.

Knott, then Steenhuis, had two stints as a jockey. She rode nine races in 1992 and four in 1998, according to Equibase, racing's official data gathering organization.

“In the morning, I was working horses great,” Knott said, recalling her early experiences as a jockey. “But in the afternoon, I didn't feel good. I wasn't doing the horses justice. I got my feelings hurt and it was hard to reduce. Gave it up. Thought I gave it up.”

Knott said she was working as an exercise rider/assistant for trainer Britt McGehee when she decided to make a riding comeback in 1998. Her final career mount marked her only career victory when Jondalar ($52.60) beat $17,500 claimers in a Nov. 22, 1998, sprint at Hawthorne for McGehee.

“That was my 13th race and my last race, so I went out a winner,” Knott said. “We went to New Orleans (Fair Grounds) the next winter and it was like, 'Ride me or Julie Krone?' It just didn't pan out.”

Knott said she and McGehee took a small string of horses to Southern California in the summer of 1999. There, Knott said she “learned people massage” and believed those techniques could benefit horses. Knott said she traveled to Virginia to study equine massage.

“It's weird because my life took a different direction, toward massage,” Knott said. “Like I felt I was good enough at that point to get an agent. Instead of getting an agent and continuing to ride, my life took a different path.”

Knott said massage helps a horse's general health and can lengthen its stride because it “frees up their muscles.” Knott treats horses in their stalls. Navy Seal, for example, normally receives a massage after he works and before and after he runs.

“The massage definitely helps him,” Knott said. “Sometimes he gets a tender back, so it definitely helps him a lot.”

In addition to Navy Seal and Sunset Paynter, Knott said she's treated horses for trainers Tom Amoss and Mike Puhich at the 2022-2023 Oaklawn meeting. Knott's most famous massage subject, millionaire Grade 1 winner Cloudy's Knight, was honored with a Sovereign Award as Canada's champion grass horse of 2007. Cloudy's Knight now resides on a 51-acre farm two hours west of Chicago owned by Knott and her husband of 20 years, Oaklawn starter William “Blue” Knott.

Nancy Knott, in two training stints, has 13 career victories, according to Equibase. She had two victories in 1994 and 1995 and added 11 since she resumed training in 2015.

“Probably four horses is the most I've ever had,” Knott said. “I'm definitely hands on. I do it all.”

Knott trains Sunset Paynter and Navy Seal for Chicago-based KEM Stables. KEM privately purchased Sunset Paynter following a Jan. 21 career debut victory at Golden Gate. She ran fourth in her only other start, a starter/optional claiming sprint March 25 at Oaklawn.

Navy Seal, a half-brother to Oaklawn stakes winners Weast Hill and Usual Suspect, is using Saturday's race as a prep for the Arkansas Breeders' Championship Stakes May 6 at Oaklawn, Knott said. The Arkansas Breeders' Championship is for state-breds, 3 and up, at 1 1/16 miles.

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Ron Walker Appointed The Jockey Club Steward At Finger Lakes

Ron Walker has been named The Jockey Club steward for Finger Lakes Racetrack. He takes the place of Samantha Randazzo, who was appointed as The Jockey Club steward for The New York Racing Association tracks.

The appointment was announced by Stuart S. Janney III, chairman of The Jockey Club.

“Ron's many years of experience in the racing industry make him an excellent candidate to fill the role of steward at Finger Lakes,” Janney said.

Walker's appointment was official on April 20, 2023, and his duties as steward will begin on April 24, the opening day of the race meet.

Walker has been involved with horse racing since 1981 and has been an owner, breeder, trainer, and racing official. Prior to becoming steward at Finger Lakes, he was the state steward for the Oklahoma Horse Racing Commission. Before that position, Walker spent nine years as the presiding steward for the New Mexico Racing Commission. He also worked as a steward at Mahoning Valley Race Course and Calder.

Walker is a Racing Officials Accreditation Program certified steward.

The Jockey Club, founded in 1894 and dedicated to the improvement of Thoroughbred breeding and racing, is the breed registry for North American Thoroughbreds. In fulfillment of its mission, The Jockey Club, directly or through subsidiaries, provides support and leadership on a wide range of important industry initiatives, and it serves the information and technology needs of owners, breeders, media, fans and farms. It founded America's Best Racing (americasbestracing.net), the broad-based fan development initiative for Thoroughbred racing, and in partnership with the Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association, operates OwnerView (ownerview.com), the ownership resource. Additional information is available at jockeyclub.com.

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Wilcke, 79, Passes; Led Maryland Million, UofL Equine Industry Program

Richard W. “Rich” Wilcke, instrumental in the 1986 launch of the Maryland Million and who later served as director of the University of Louisville Equine Industry Program, died April 18 at Shelbyville Hospital near his residence in Pleasureville, Ky.

Born in 1943 in Albany, N.Y., and a graduate of Kansas State University with a degree in agriculture, Wilcke served  in the Marine Corps Forces Reserve, then held a number of positions in education, broadcasting, and communications before being named president and CEO of the Washington, D.C.-based Council for a Competitive Economy. He was there from 1979-'84.

In 1986, after the late broadcast legend and horseman Jim McKay created the Maryland Million, an event modeled after the Breeders' Cup, Wilcke was hired as executive vice president of the Maryland Horse Breeders Association and executive director of Maryland Million prior to its first running. The Maryland Million is the longest-running racing event devoted to the promotion of regional or state breeding programs.

Wilcke left Maryland in 1995 and spent nearly 20 years at the University of Louisville, first as a faculty member in the College of Business and later as director of the Equine Industry Program. He retired to his Quarter Horse and Hereford Cattle farm in Bethlehem, Ky., in 2014.

Former students remembered Wilcke for his joy of teaching, keen insights, sense of humor and infectious laugh. One student shared a poem, written and published by Wilcke (see below), expressing the eternal optimism of horsepeople

Rich Wilcke with Equine Industry Program students in Louisville, Ky.

During his career, Wilcke volunteered his time and expertise helping numerous organizations, including the Kentucky Equine Education Project, American Quarter Horse Association, American Youth Horse Council, and Kentucky Horse Council, among others.

Wilcke and his high school sweetheart, Janny Nyquist, were married in 1966 and they had five children. He is survived by his wife, daughters Ardith, Caroline and Madlen, eight grandchildren, and one great-granddaughter. Sons William and Benjamin preceded him in death.

Arrangements are being handled by Prewitt Funeral Home of New Castle and Eminence, Ky., which said a private memorial service will be held later this spring.

The family asks that, in lieu of flowers, donations be made to the Brown Cancer Center at UofL Health.


Any Year Could Be Your Year

By Richard W. Wilcke

If your horses are your passion
But they don't bring too much cash in,
And you're wondering if there's hope within your range,
If when buying, bids go higher,
But when selling, there's no buyer,
And you're just about convinced your luck won't change.

***

If your money hole is drying,
But you can't win a race for trying,
And those training bills keep piling up sky high,
If you've paid some high stud fees,
But all your foals have crooked knees,
And it's getting to the point you want to cry.

***

If you've bought some stallion shares,
But the horse just can't get mares,
And his 2-year-olds are shin-bucked on the shelf,
If “pay these bills” is all you're hearing,
But folks owing you keep disappearing,
And you're feeling pretty sorry for yourself.

***

Don't give up! Consider this,
You're one big horse away from bliss,
And that champion may already be on your place,
Every year we start all over,
With a chance to be in clover,
Any horse can burn your mortgage if he can race.

***

True, you're sorry that you got 'em,
When the market's at the bottom,
And the problems get you feeling kind of blue,
But don't forget, not for a minute,
And you shouldn't, since you're in it,
Any year could be the year your dreams come true.

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