‘Everyone Who Is A Jockey Wants To Ride At Oaklawn’: Apprentice Hannah Leahey Makes Hot Springs Debut Friday

In less than a year as a jockey, Hannah Leahey has already ridden in three time zones. It will soon become four when she makes her Oaklawn debut in Friday's first race aboard Spark for trainer Nathaniel Quinonez.

The well-traveled Leahey, 27, was scheduled to ride regularly at Oaklawn when the 2022-2023 meeting began Dec. 9. But during training hours Nov. 30, Leahey was involved in a spill and broke five ribs, her left shoulder and suffered a collapsed lung. Undeterred, Leahey began getting on horses again in early January at Oaklawn with the same goal she had before the accident. She wants to be Oaklawn's leading apprentice rider. Erick Medellin, four victories, tops the apprentice standings through the first 24 days of the scheduled 68-day meeting. Leahey hasn't ridden since Nov. 26.

“I put everything into coming here and it would take a lot more than that (injuries),” Leahey said. “Even if I could only ride here a month, I probably still would. So, I'm definitely behind track from what I originally thought, but anything's possible. I've overcome bigger obstacles.”

A native of Bloomington, Ill., Leahey has 23 victories from 223 starts and purse earnings of $416,254 in her brief career, according to Equibase, racing's official data gathering organization.

Before the injury, Leahey recorded 10 victories at Penn National in Grantville, Pa. (Eastern time zone), where she was previously based; eight at Turf Paradise in Phoenix (Mountain time zone); four at Arizona Downs in Prescott Valley, Ariz. (Mountain); and one at Delaware Park in Stanton, Del. (Eastern). Leahey has also ridden at two heavyweight venues in Southern California, Santa Anita and Del Mar (Pacific time zone).

Oaklawn will mark the first time Leahey has ridden at a track in the Central time zone. She has a 7-pound apprentice allowance.

“I started riding last March,” Leahey said. “At that time, my goal was to ride at Santa Anita. That wasn't happening, so I had to adjust.”

That gas-guzzling adjustment led Leahey to Turf Paradise, where she won seven races to become champion apprentice at the 2021-2022 meeting that ended in May. Leahey resurfaced at Penn National in late June because of its proximity to several other tracks, but quickly informed her agent there, Tony Kofalt, of her intention to ride at Oaklawn in 2022-2023.

“He knew that the whole five months I was there,” said Leahey, who has also ridden at Parx and Finger Lakes. “That's what I was aiming towards. But I told him the same thing as a I told my friend: 'If I'm not ready to leave here when it (Oaklawn) starts, I'm not going to leave.' I want to be more than ready because this track is no joke.”

That friend, Ricardo Santana Jr., has collected eight Oaklawn riding titles since 2013. Leahey said she reached out to Santana last fall and asked if he believed she was seasoned enough to ride at Oaklawn and recommend an agent.

Leahey received the green light from Santana, along with his endorsement of Jay Fedor, who is enjoying a successful run as the agent for Francisco Arrieta after previously representing high-profile talent like Hall of Famer Gary Stevens and Corey Nakatani at Oaklawn. Arrieta was Oaklawn's co-leading rider in 2021-2022. Now, Fedor is also booking mounts at Oaklawn for Leahey.

“It's the best place to be,” Leahey said. “Everyone who is a jockey wants to ride at Oaklawn.”

Although Leahey got a late start in her riding career, she has an extensive and eye-catching equine background.

Leahey said she started riding at 5 and moved to eventing at 9, hoping to eventually turn professional. After reaching what she termed a “semi-professional level,” Leahey made a career U-turn because “it's a lot of work for a little return.”

Leahey said she was around 20 when she began breaking Thoroughbred yearlings to pay for her event horses and transitioned into an exercise rider about four years ago.

Leahey said she began building her resume at two famed Kentucky farms, Juddmonte and WinStar, and also broke horses in Florida for prominent sales consignors Eddie Woods and Brandon and Ali Rice.

Leahey said the most accomplished horse she broke was Improbable, the flashy chestnut who was crowned the country's champion older dirt male of 2020 after capturing three consecutive Grade 1 events following a runner-up finish in the $150,000 Oaklawn Mile to begin his 4-year-old campaign. WinStar, in partnership, raced Improbable with Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert.

“He's amazing,” Leahey said of Improbable. “He just had so much power and movement under him. There's always a little bit of an eventer that resides inside me, so when I sit on these horses, even here, all these years later that have like that big, floating, nice movement, I'm just like, 'Wow!' That's what you look for in an event horse. All of us knew anything that horse ended up doing, if he didn't make it as a racehorse, which we thought was very unlikely, he would excel at whatever he ended up doing.”

Leahey said she also broke future Grade 3 winner Talk Veuve to Me, who later sold for $1.3 million at the 2019 Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale.

“I've been so lucky,” Leahey said.

After galloping horses in Kentucky for nationally prominent trainers Mike Maker, Joe Sharp and Kenny McPeek, Leahey relocated to Southern California in 2019 and was working as an exercise rider when she decided to take out a jockey's license early last year at Santa Anita.

Unable to generate any business at Santa Anita, Leahey launched her riding career March 9 at Turf Paradise and recorded her first career victory there nine days later. It was her third career mount.

Leahey said she rode Monday-Friday at Turf Paradise, then drove six hours back to Santa Anita in suburban Los Angeles to gallop horses and accept a handful of mounts Saturday and Sunday.

“Those are some long drives,” Leahey said. “I think I put about 30,000 miles on my car in two months. But it was worth it, and I still have a lot of connections in Phoenix and I kept going back there.”

Leahey returned to Turf Paradise Nov. 26 and guided La Castiglione – her last mount – to a one-length victory in the $60,000 Glendale Stakes at 7 ½ furlongs on the turf.

“It was amazing,” Leahey said. “That filly just leaves me speechless. I love her.”

The Glendale marked the most lucrative career victory to date for Leahey and her third career stakes triumph. She also won two stakes aboard La Castiglione last summer at Arizona Downs. Leahey is scheduled to return Saturday to Turf Paradise to ride La Castiglione in the $60,000 Molly P Stakes for older fillies and mares at 1 mile on the turf.

“If I had it my way, I wouldn't have started riding at (26),” Leahey said. “I would have made it at Santa Anita. I wouldn't have had to feel like I've backtracked a little after I had had so much success exercising and breezing horses there to go somewhere I had no legitimate business. But I know that in time everything will work out how it's supposed to. I feel behind right now. There's got to be a reason for it. I still have things I need to work on and once I start perfecting those things, I know the wins will just flood right in.”

Leahey said she hopes to parlay any success at Oaklawn into a return to Kentucky – this time as a jockey. She attended the University of Kentucky for two years before leaving to chase her eventing dream.

“That was home for six years for me,” Leahey said, referring to Lexington. “My parents are there and one of my sisters goes to UK. The older I get, the more I want to be close to family. I've been kind of this gypsy soul my whole life. I would just love to be closer to family and Kentucky's the place to be for racing. Right now, I am still a gypsy. I don't have a home base. That's why I have to get a U-Haul every time I go to a different track. But I'm hoping it'll be Kentucky.”

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Kentucky Equine Education Project Announces Three New Board Members

On Friday, Feb. 3, 2023, the KEEP Board of Directors voted to add three individuals to the board:

  • Hallie Hardy – Executive Director of Horse Country in Lexington, KY
  • Kim Smith – Founder and Executive Director of Second Stride in Crestwood, KY and Owner and Operator of Moserwood Farms in Prospect, KY
  • Rob Tribbett – Vice President of the Consignors and Commercial Breeders Association in Lexington, KY and General Manager of Watercress Farm in Paris, KY

Additionally, the KEEP Board of Directors elected Shannon Cobb to serve as vice chair of the board. Cobb is the COO/CFO of the Red Mile in Lexington, KY. Cobb joins returning Board Chair Case Clay in the leadership of the organization.

The KEEP Board of Directors also welcomed three new representative members:

  • Mindy Coleman, Jockeys' Guild
  • Conor Lucas, Revolutionary Racing
  • Gerry Duffy, Kentucky Thoroughbred Farm Managers' Club

The board also recently voted to amend the organization's by-laws to create an Emeritus Advisory Committee, comprised of original KEEP founding members. This committee will meet annually to review the work of KEEP, discuss industry challenges and continually evaluate the relevancy and direction of the organization. This committee will hold its inaugural meeting in June.

About KEEP

The Kentucky Equine Education Project, Kentucky's equine economic advocate, is a not-for-profit grassroots organization created in 2004 to preserve, promote and protect Kentucky's signature multi-breed horse industry. KEEP is committed to ensuring Kentucky remains the horse capital of the world, including educating Kentuckians and elected officials of the importance of the horse industry to the state. KEEP was the driving force in the establishment of the Kentucky Breeders Incentive Fund, which has paid out more than $177 million to Kentucky breeders since its inception in 2006, and pari-mutuel wagering on historical horse racing, which has been responsible for more than $40 million to purses and more than $24 million to the Kentucky Thoroughbred Development Fund.

KEEP works to strengthen the horse economy in Kentucky through our statewide network of citizen advocates. To learn more about how you can become a member or support our work, please visit www.horseswork.com.

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Renowned Track Superintendent Javier Barajas Returns To Canterbury Park For 2023 Season

Canterbury Park racing officials announced Wednesday that track maintenance expert Javier Barajas, whose consulting services are in demand around the world, will return to the Shakopee, Minn. racetrack as track superintendent for the 2023 racing season. Barajas previously held the position at Canterbury from 2013 to 2016. He will again oversee the conditioning and daily upkeep of the dirt and turf tracks.

Barajas' resume includes management of the surfaces at many of the world's most famous racetracks including Keeneland in Kentucky, Arlington Park in Chicago, Meydan Racecourse in Dubai, Fair Grounds in New Orleans, and Golden Gate Fields in the San Francisco Bay Area, while most recently working at Ellis Park. Barajas also operates a consulting service, traveling internationally to assist with the installation of new track surfaces, equine arenas and polo fields providing guidance on drainage, footing and material composition to ensure safety for horses and riders.

“We are thrilled and fortunate to bring Javier back to Canterbury Park to manage our racing surfaces,” company CEO Randy Sampson said. “He is recognized as one of the top professionals in his field and his record of racetrack safety is impeccable.”

Barajas, a native of Mexico, grew up in Chicago. He began accumulating his more than 40 years of experience at the age of 13, learning track maintenance from his father who tended to the turf course at Arlington Park. The role of track superintendent is akin to a groundskeeper in baseball, demanding long hours and constant supervision to keep the surface safe and viable throughout a summer that will include long hot spells and torrential rains. Barajas will oversee a track crew that often maintains and reconditions the dirt track 18 hours each day using tractors and harrows to fine tune the track for the racing programs as well as daily training of the horses.

“I look forward to returning to Canterbury Park to work with a racing team that is dedicated to safety and innovation,” Barajas said. “Canterbury Park has a great reputation in the industry.”

Canterbury Park's 2023 racing season consists of 54 race days May 27 through Sept. 16. More information is available at canterburypark.com .

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Kelly Armer Appointed Executive Director Of Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation

The Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation (TRF) Board of Directors has announced the appointment of Kelly Armer as Executive Director following the forthcoming retirement of Pat Stickney. She will assume her new role on March 1 and be based in the TRF administrative offices in Saratoga Springs, New York.

Kelly Armer brings many years of experience in an executive role with multiple successful non-profit organizations, including 24 years at the Saratoga YMCA where she served as chief operating officer for 15 years. More recently, she held the position of Development and Foundation Director for Saratoga Bridges, the largest nonprofit organization in New York State serving people with intellectual and developmental disabilities and their families.

“The TRF is fortunate to have someone with Kelly's breadth and depth of experience with such strong ties to our community, as well as a great passion for our horses and our mission,” stated outgoing executive director Pat Stickney.

After having retired twice, Stickney accepted the position of TRF's Executive Director in 2019 and is now stepping down to return to her previous role as TRF's Chief Financial Officer in a part-time capacity.

Armer was born in Newburgh, New York and spent her younger years in Gardiner. In 1980, her family moved to Saratoga Springs so that her father could follow his dream of training and driving standardbred horses. His dream soon became a family venture where Kelly, her mother, and siblings spent years caring for the stable of horses her father trained and raced. Armer currently lives with her family in Ballston Spa. She first became involved with the TRF when her son signed her up for the TRF's 5K Run for the Horses several years ago.

Armer and her husband support the community by serving on local boards, volunteering their time with civic organizations, and participating in local galas and events. Until recently, Armer served for more than a decade with the local Soroptimist organization, a global volunteer organization that provides women and girls with access to the education and training they need to achieve economic empowerment.

Regarding her new role as Executive Director of TRF, Kelly Armer stated, “I am excited to step into this role as Executive Director for the TRF as it is a perfect fit with my past career with the Saratoga YMCA and Saratoga Bridges. I look forward to capitalizing on the momentum that Pat Stickney has built, and to continue to develop relationships, resources, and awareness of the organization and its mission and programs throughout all the states where TRF provides services.”

Patrick H. Mackay, TRF's Board Chair, noted his excitement about the appointment: “Kelly is an ideal fit to lead the TRF, possessing strong leadership, marketing, and development experience to help us achieve our mission of saving retired racehorses from possible neglect, abuse and slaughter. Her powerful community involvement with disadvantaged populations models the compassion of our Second Chances Programs which provide vocational training to incarcerated individuals in caring for retired racehorses, allowing them to go on to careers as farriers, vet assistants, and caretakers after their release.”

Regarding outgoing TRF Executive Director Pat Stickney, Mackay noted, “TRF has thrived in every aspect under Pat's strong leadership, guiding us through the pandemic, working with our staff and volunteers to expand our financial support and activities, and growing our Second Chances Programs to impact more people. She has continually had a significant positive impact that has put us in an extremely strong position for which we are unendingly appreciative.”

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