Hollie Doyle, Rachel King Vying To Become First Female Winners Of International Jockeys’ Championship

Had life worked out differently, Rachel King and Hollie Doyle might have been familiar contemporaries in the jockeys' rooms around Britain.

Instead, the pair – who are among the dozen invitees to Wednesday's LONGINES International Jockeys' Championship (IJC) – have established their positions among the Group 1 elite but have done so on opposite sides of the planet.

Back in 2014, just as Doyle was beginning her extraordinary journey in the saddle, King made what proved to have been the inspired decision of moving to Australia.

Her career had failed to ignite and even included a few rides over jumps for English-based trainer Alan King, who ironically is responsible for the horse that has had the most profound effect in Doyle's story, the top-class stayer Trueshan.

King has not looked back since finding her feet on the Sydney scene with the legendary Gai Waterhouse, taking the champion apprentice title and becoming one of the leading names on the city's competitive circuit. This will be her first time in the LONGINES IJC.

“Last time I was here I went and watched some races at Happy Valley, I'd just ridden in an amateur ladies' flat race in Macau,” King said with a laugh. “So, it's been a bit of a journey to where I am now.

“I'm really looking forward to it, hopefully I'll have a few decent rides in there as well. Zac (Purton) was giving me a few little pointers, there are plenty of good people to learn from. I'll just try to get as much information as I can.”

Although King's accent certainly carries an Aussie twang after nearly a decade Down Under, she recognizes that it is still quite surreal to be competing under that flag.

“It's funny because obviously (Australian-based) James McDonald is representing New Zealand, I'm representing Australia – but I'm English – so it's a little bit mixed up but it's nice to get the privilege to do that. There's plenty of good jockeys in Australia so it's nice to be able to come and represent.”

Doyle, six years King's junior, has gone close in this competition already, her best being dead-heating for second in 2021.

King, meanwhile, was even more unlucky in a similar event in the World All-Star Jockeys Series in Japan in late August, losing out by a point to Mirai Iwata.

“This is a different group of jockeys, a different style of racetrack, but Japan was amazing, the first big competition I'd done,” she said. “I've only got to go one better and I can win. I led the whole way until the last race and then my horse broke down, so I'll try and do better!”

There are certainly similarities between the pair, who each stand at little over 1.5m tall but are deceptively strong, disciplined and tactically astute.

The likes of Hayley Turner and Michelle Payne have paved the way to Doyle and King's respective success in Britain and Australia and the conversation shifted to both being regarded simply as top-class jockeys a long time ago.

A victory for either as the first female rider in the history of the IJC would be a novelty for one year only; it will surely be followed by many more.

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Former Dallas Stewart Assistant Jade Cunningham In Pursuit Of First Training Win At Oaklawn

Jade Cunningham has returned to Oaklawn for the fourth consecutive season, but now she's the boss and seeking her first career training victory during the 2023-2024 meeting that begins Friday.

Cunningham, 27, hails from a racing family and struck out on her own last summer in Kentucky after spending the 2021 Oaklawn meeting working under her mentor, Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas, and running trainer Dallas Stewart's Oaklawn division the past two seasons.

Cunningham started her first horse Sept. 3 and has had four other starters to date, with her best finish a fourth by Seize the Night in a $148,000 turf allowance Nov. 5 at Churchill Downs.

“Of course, I want to produce for my owners and have a really good meet and make some money, but I feel like if you keep the horses happy and healthy that they're going to produce for you and that's the biggest thing for me,” Cunningham said. “Keep them happy and healthy and having owners really just enjoy what we're doing.”

Cunningham said she has four stalls at Oaklawn. Seize the Night, a two-time allowance winner last season at Oaklawn for Lukas and owner Kevin Horton of Marshall, Ark., and The Princess Says have been at Oaklawn since late November.

Cunningham said she's pointing Seize the Night for Oaklawn's $200,000 Tinsel Stakes Dec. 16 .

Both Lukas and Stewart, a former Lukas assistant, had long business relationships with owner Willis Horton, Kevin Horton's late father.

Lukas and Willis Horton campaigned Eclipse Award winners Will Take Charge (2013) and Take Charge Brandi (2014). Stewart and Horton teamed to win the Kentucky Oaks, the nation's biggest race for 3-year-old fillies, in 2006 with Lemons Forever. Cunningham saddled the Horton-owned Last Samurai to win the $1 million G2-Oaklawn Handicap in April 2022. Horton died in October 2022.

Cunningham said her connection to the Horton family, through Lukas and Stewart, led Seize the Night to her barn.

“Wayne has been super supportive of me going on my own,” Cunningham said. “He and Dallas have been top supporters for me.”

Cunningham, on behalf of owner Charles Jennings, claimed The Princess Says for $30,000 out of a Nov. 19 victory at Churchill Downs. Jennings owns the Back Porch Grill restaurant in Hot Springs.

Cunningham grew up near Nashville, Tenn., but now considers Hot Springs home after purchasing a house late last year adjacent to Oaklawn property.

“Literally, if you stand at the end of my old barn (Victory Gallop), you can see my house,” Cunningham said.

As a teenager, Cunningham worked as a veterinary technician at Remington Park in Oklahoma City. She later was a hot walker for Danny Pish, then worked as an exercise rider for the Texas-based trainer before becoming his assistant at 19 at Lone Star Park in suburban Dallas, helping manage a 50-horse string.

Cunningham is the stepdaughter of retired jockey Rob Williams, whose 4,254 career victories rank 67th in North American history, according to Equibase, racing's official data gathering organization. Cunningham, who gallops and breezes her horses, graduated in 2019 from the University of Oklahoma with a bachelor's degree in communication.

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Jockey Mike Luzzi Officially Retires, To Serve As Agent For Son Lane

Jockey Mike Luzzi has officially retired from the saddle, reports the Daily Racing Form. The winner of the Eclipse Award for Outstanding Apprentice Jockey in 1989, Luzzi won a total of 3,539 races over the course of his career.

Now, 54-year-old Luzzi will serve as the agent for his son, Lane, who has been riding at Aqueduct Racetrack since October.

“It was [my son's] idea,” Luzzi told DRF. “Reluctantly, I'm going to finish my career. It's tough, I still felt like I had a comeback in me.”

Born Oct. 27, 1969, Luzzi was raised in-part by his grandfather, legendary trainer Buddy Raines, who also trained one of Luzzi's biggest early stakes winners—Timely Warning, with whom Luzzi won the 1991 Maryland Million Classic at Pimlico and Grade 1 Brooklyn Handicap at Belmont Park.

Luzzi was named the winner of the 2015 George Woolf Memorial Award, as well as New York's prestigious Mike Venezia Memorial Jockey Award in 2001.

Read more at the Daily Racing Form

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Hernandez, D’Amato Take Respective Jockey, Trainer Titles At Del Mar Fall Meet

Juan Hernandez rode 11 winners over the Thanksgiving weekend, vaulting him past Del Mar's defending titleholder, Flavien Prat, and into a lead in the jockey standings that he would never relinquish. He took the Bing Crosby Season title with 21 victories when the fall meet concluded Sunday.

Prat finished second with 19 wins.

Hernandez notched his second fall meet riding crown and fourth title overall at the seaside oval.

Phil D'Amato clinched the trainer title with 14 wins, including four stakes victories. He earned his third straight fall meet title and fourth straight Del Mar trainer title overall.

Peter Miller and Bob Baffert were the closest to D'Amato with eight wins apiece.

Klaravich Stables of Seth Klarman of Boston, Mass. secured the owners title based on earnings thanks to Surge Capacity's run up the rail to win the Matriarch (G1) Sunday. Klaravich and trainer Chad Brown won both Grade 1 races on closing weekend and $360,500 during the Bing Crosby Season.

Reddam Racing had the most wins by an owner with three.

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