‘The Colors And The Silks And Their Name Speak For Themselves’: Trainer Riley Mott Follows In Father’s Footsteps With First Claiborne Farm Winner

Trainer Riley Mott's third and most lucrative career victory to date came with favored Traverse ($4) in a $106,000 second-level allowance for older fillies and mares at 1 1/16 miles Feb. 12 at Oaklawn under leading rider Cristian Torres.

The victory was noteworthy for another reason, too, since it marked Mott's first for Kentucky's famed Claiborne Farm, which also bred the 4-year-old daughter of 2007 Kentucky Derby (G1) winner Street Sense.

“The colors and the silks and their name speak for themselves,” Mott said. “That was an allowance race, but I think it could do a lot for my career down the line.”

Mott, 31, went out on his own Nov. 1 after assisting his father, Bill Mott, for eight years. Claiborne has had a long relationship with Bill Mott, campaigning, among others, graded stakes-winning homebreds Stroll, Watch, and Wend with the Hall of Fame trainer. Claiborne, in partnership with Adele Dilschneider, also bred and raced millionaire multiple Grade 1 winner Elate, who was also trained by Mott.

Riley Mott, as a traveling assistant, saddled Elate to a third-place finish in the $200,000 Honeybee Stakes (G3) for 3-year-old fillies in 2017 at Oaklawn.

Traverse began her racing career with trainer Reeve McGaughey, the son of Hall of Fame trainer Shug McGaughey. She was moved from trainer Tom Drury Jr. to Riley Mott following an entry-level allowance victory Nov. 16 at Churchill Downs. Traverse, in her first start for Mott, finished fourth in the $150,000 Pippin Stakes for older fillies and mares Jan. 7 at Oaklawn.

“That's the only one I have for Claiborne, but I'm meant to get some 2-year-olds,” Mott said. “They did me a favor by sending me a nice horse to start out with. Pretty cool.”

The Feb. 12 victory was the third in seven lifetime starts for Traverse and moved her earnings to $188,065. Mott said Traverse “possibly” could start again at the 2022-2023 Oaklawn meeting.

“We're looking at maybe some black-type races in the spring for her, so there's a 50-50 shot,” Mott said.

Traverse represented the second victory at the Oaklawn meeting for Mott, who is wintering in Hot Springs.

Claiborne recorded its first Oaklawn victory in a March 24, 1967, allowance race with a homebred, Monitor, who was trained by future Hall of Famer Harry Trotsek. Monitor won the Arkansas Derby 15 days later.

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Trainer Richard Hits 1,000th Career Win At Delta Downs

Trainer Chris Richard notched his 1,000th career win Friday when Freebritney raced to victory in the seventh race at Delta Downs.

Owned by James McIngvale, Freebritney pressed the pace from the two path before grabbing the lead at the quarter pole. With Joe Stokes at the reins, the Klimt filly drew off in the stretch and tallied by 4 1/4 lengths while covering the 7 1/2-furlong allowance race in 1:35.16. She returned $21.20.

Richard, a Louisiana native, earned a Master's degree in Equine Nutrition and Exercise Physiology in 1998 at Texas A&M, then worked as a private trainer for McIngvale. He gained valuable experience from going to sales, learning to select prospects, and overseeing  their development. Later, he worked for trainer Tom Amoss before going out on his own in 2005.

Richard's runners have made 4,695 starts, including 787 seconds and 637 thirds, and amassed purse earnings of more than $22.8 million.

Richard's standout runners include Grade 3 winner Outta Tune and $870,992-earner Underpressure.

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‘He’s Good For Another 20 Years”: Asmussen Goes To Work On Next 10,000 Wins

Preparing to watch his daughter, trainer Sherry Rhea, run Mister Snickers in the 13th and final race April 10, 2021, at Oaklawn, Stanley Roberts was more interested in talking about the trainer who won the 12th race.

“That Asmussen is something else,” Roberts, the semi-retired owner/trainer from Forrest City, Ark., said after Steve Asmussen won the $1 million Arkansas Derby (G1) with Super Stock. “He's the best I've ever seen – bar none. He is the best horseman that I've ever seen. He can go down there and there can be 15 bay horses, none of them with markings or anything, and he can walk by and tell you every horse and what he's eligible for. He's got a mind like … he's the best I've ever seen.”

Super Stock was a memorable victory for Asmussen since the horse is co-owned by his father, Keith, was ridden to his maiden score by the trainer's son, Keith James, and is a product of the family's famed El Primero Training Center in Laredo, Texas.

Steve Asmussen, of course, continues to make memories, the latest coming in Monday's fifth race at Oaklawn, when the Hall of Fame trainer saddled favored Bet He's Ready ($4) to win a $40,000 maiden-claiming sprint under Ricardo Santana Jr. It made Asmussen, 57, the first trainer to reach 10,000 career victories in North America, according to Equibase, racing's official data gathering organization.

Fittingly, the man known for a 24/7 work ethic had to work to reach the milestone. Asmussen notched his 9,998th and 9,999th career North American victories within a half-hour of each other Saturday at Oaklawn and Sam Houston Race Park, respectively.

Asmussen lost his next 33 starts, misfiring with heavy favorites and unable to script the storybook ending at Oaklawn – Keith James Asmussen riding a horse owned and trained by his father or one trained by his father and owned by the jockey's younger brother, Erik. It was the aptly named Bet He's Ready, owned by Texan and longtime Steve Asmussen client Mike McCarty, who finally delivered the milestone victory.

“I think if anything it just makes it that much more of a significant accomplishment, proving how hard it can be,” Asmussen said. “We obviously had several horses that I did not think could lose and obviously they did. Obviously, they're so sure of the outcome, they'll let you bet on it. That's how horse racing is.”

This weekend, Asmussen has eight runners Friday, 10 runners on Saturday and four on Sunday. Among his horses entered Saturday are Grand Love in the $300,000 Honeybee Stakes (G3) and Gun Pilot, Powerful and Red Route One in the $1 million Rebel Stakes (G2). He will be seeking his fifth Rebel victory following Snuck In (2000), Wayward Passage (2002), Curlin (2007) and Long Range Toddy (2019).

A former jockey, Asmussen turned to training in the mid-1980s after he became too heavy to ride. Asmussen's first career winner as a trainer (Victory's Halo) was July 19, 1986, at Ruidoso Downs in New Mexico, according to Equibase. The purse was just $2,600.

“I think I was 1 for 15, with like $2,200, $2,300 in earnings in 1986 as a trainer,” Asmussen said. “She won in the summer. And what was it, seven months before my second win? Rock Finder, I think, was my second winner ever. She was a filly that my dad ended up with and I think she gave us, probably, five, six different Texas-bred stakes winners out of that family. You think of how far so many things go back in horse racing.”

After a pedestrian start, Asmussen's training career began to soar in the mid-1990s, and his numbers have become staggering. He credits his first nationally prominent runner, Valid Expectations, a two-time stakes winner in 1996 at Oaklawn, for opening the doors to better stock. Asmussen, already managing a vast stable, was North America's winningest trainer for the first time in 2002 with 407 victories. He won a North American-record 555 races in 2004, then broke his record in 2008 (621) and again in 2009 (650).

Boosted by two-time Horse of the Year Curlin, Asmussen led North America in purse earnings for the first time in 2008 ($24,223,187). Curlin represented Asmussen's first Triple Crown victory in the 2007 Preakness. Asmussen repeated as North America's purse earnings leader in 2009 ($21,884,695) when he guided the filly, Rachel Alexandra, to a Preakness victory and Horse of the Year honors. Asmussen was honored with an Eclipse Award as the country's outstanding trainer in 2008 and 2009 and inducted into the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in 2016.

“He has the combination of being an outstanding horseman who reads his horses about as well as anybody's that's ever trained one,” said Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas, a longtime friend of the Asmussen family. “By that I mean he understands what they can do and can't do. He takes the reality of running them to an artform. If he thinks they're ($10,000 claimers), they run for ($10,000). You put all of that in a package with a great work ethic, unbelievably strong work ethic – don't ever think for one second that he's sleeping in because he's too competitive. He's too competitive to sleep in or back up one iota. His worst days are when he runs one or two.”

Asmussen surpassed the late Dale Baird (9,445) to become North America's all-time winningest trainer Aug. 7, 2021, at Saratoga, according to Equibase. After reaching 10,000, Asmussen now has his sights on South American trainer Juan Suarez Villarroel, who has more than 10,300 career victories. That figure is reportedly a world record.

“Honestly, it's very hard to keep track of it (victories) like it is over here, like on a daily basis or whatever,” Asmussen said. “I know I'm a long ways behind him.”

Bet He's Ready represented Asmussen's 10,002nd career worldwide victory. His North American total reflects victories in the United States and Canada. Asmussen also won two races in 2008 in the United Arab Emirates with Curlin, who captured Oaklawn's $300,000 Rebel Stakes (G3) and $1 million Arkansas Derby (G2) as a 3-year-old in 2007. Asmussen's 10,000th career worldwide victory came in Saturday's first race at Oaklawn with Canada's Customs.

Asmussen said he had no plans to stop at 10,000 and his final total likely will never be approached by another North American-based trainer. Hall of Famer Jerry Hollendorfer, 76, entered Friday with 7,759 career victories to rank third in North American history. Although Hollendorfer is still active, he hasn't won more than 47 races in a year since 2019. Asmussen, who trains hundreds of horses, already had 35 victories this year through Thursday.

“Actually, for a trainer, he's young,” said Keith Asmussen, who, along with wife Marilyn, run El Primero Training Center, where many of Steve Asmussen's best horses have been broken. “He's good for another 20 years.”

Asmussen entered Friday with 834 career victories at Oaklawn (No. 2 all time). The late Bob Holthus (867) is Oaklawn's all-time winningest trainer. Asmussen has collected a record 12 Oaklawn training titles (2007, 2008, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2021 and 2021-2022).

Based on Equibase statistics through Thursday, Asmussen had 10,001 victories from 49,215 starts and purse earnings of $405,958,033 in his North American career. Asmussen's purse earnings rank second in North American history.

In honor of Asmussen's achievement Monday, Oaklawn announced it would donate $10,000 to charity in his name, with $5,000 going to the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund and $5,000 to the Arkansas Thoroughbred Retirement and Rehabilitation Fund.

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Umberto Rispoli Hires Matt Nakatani As Agent, Effective March 9

Southern California-based jockey Umberto Rispoli has hired Matt Nakatani as agent, effective March 9, Nakatani said via text message on Friday.

“I'm extremely excited to represent a world-class jockey in Umberto Rispoli. He is a true professional on and off the racetrack,” said Nakatani, son of jockey Corey Nakatani, who won 3,909 races, including 119 Grade 1 stakes over a career that spanned three decades in Southern California.

“His competitive fire reminds me a lot of my Dad and personally I see so many similarities between the two of them,” Nakatani said. “Not only is this a great opportunity for me, it is a great opportunity for both Umberto and I to compete for leading rider titles and continue to compete at the highest of levels nationwide. We happily welcome the challenge ahead of us and look forward to making the most of our opportunities.”

Nakatani, who will continue to represent Mario Gutierrez, had served as agent for Joe Bravo since the latter relocated to Southern California in 2021. Rispoli recently announced that he was parting ways with agent Tony Matos but did not say at that time who would be replacing him.

A 34-year-old native of Naples, Italy, who won his first race in 2005 and broke fellow Italian rider Lanfranco Dettori's single-season win record there in 2009, Rispoli spent 10 years riding in France and internationally before coming to the U.S. at the start of the 2019-20 season at Santa Anita. He made an immediate impact, finishing third behind leading Southern California rider Flavien Prat in the jockey standings for the meet, then gave Prat a run for his money at Del Mar, finishing one win behind the perennial leader, 50-to-49, at the conclusion of that meet. Nationally, he finished in the top 20 in money won in 2020 and 2021. Rispoli's production declined in 2022 when he relocated to Kentucky briefly before returning to Southern California. He's won 353 races and nearly $26 million in purse earnings since arriving in the U.S. in December 2019.

Rispoli is currently 10th behind Juan Hernandez in the standings at Santa Anita, whose jockey colony has been enriched this winter through the addition of Dettori, Hall of Famer John Velazquez, leading Woodbine rider Kazushi Kimura, and a resurgent Hall of Famer in Kent Desormeaux.

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