Represented By Hall Of Famer Cordero, Jose Gomez Led All Apprentice Riders On NYRA Circuit In 2022

Apprentice jockey Jose Gomez, who rode his first mount in June 2021, closed out his 2022 campaign as the leading apprentice rider on the New York Racing Association, Inc. (NYRA) circuit and finished in ninth-place in the overall jockeys standings. Gomez, 22, posted a NYRA record of 917-98-95-117 with total purse earnings of $5,803,684.

“It all came by surprise. I didn't expect to start out here in New York,” said Gomez. “I'm thankful for all the trainers, everybody who is a part of the team, and all the people who taught me and gave me a chance to learn even before I started riding.”

Gomez celebrated three stakes victories on the NYRA circuit, earning two starter stakes coups on the March 26 New York Claiming Championship card and a breakout score in the NYSSS Statue of Liberty aboard Golden Rocket in August at Saratoga Race Course, the first black type stakes victory of his career.

Gomez, who was born in Muskegon, M.I., moved to Pennsylvania when he was a child and spent much of his youth at Penn National Race Course, where his mother groomed horses and his father was an exercise rider. It was there that Gomez fell in love with horses and the sport.

“My mom would take me to the barn with her when I was seven and I would dump the buckets and the wheelbarrows and all that,” said Gomez. “I saw all the hard work my mom would put in and it just really spoke to me. I just have it in my blood.”

After learning the basics of riding aboard his childhood Shetland pony named Lucky, Gomez worked his way up to thoroughbreds with trainer Richard Lugovich and began galloping young horses for him. Gomez recounted several of the trainers and mentors that helped him grow to where he is now.

“Lucky taught me riding is a balance and that it's not a battle between you and them,” said Gomez. “I started getting on Thoroughbreds with Lugovich and then I started breaking babies with Jose Flores and my love of horses grew from there. I was at Arlington Park for a little before they closed and then went to Ocala and worked for Nick de Meric. I finally wound up in New Jersey with Skip Einhorn and then Kelly Breen.”

Gomez is represented by agent Angel Cordero, Jr., the Hall of Famer who won over 7,000 races, five Triple Crown events and over $164 million in purses.

Gomez said having such a legendary jockey as an agent has been a privilege.

“I want to thank Angel and Kelly Breen, who introduced him to me,” said Gomez. “Angel taught me a lot and I'm thankful for that. It gives me confidence to learn from someone like him. The biggest thing he's taught me is to come out of the gate running and to get early position.”

This summer, Gomez rode his first Saratoga meet, posting a record of 128-11-15-11 and over $927,000 in earnings. Gomez said he has enjoyed the challenge of working and learning in the most competitive jockey colony in the country.

“Honestly, I wasn't sure if I was going to go to Saratoga or not, but Angel told me if I want to be good, I've got to go where the big guys go,” said Gomez. “We went and it was a lot of work, but I'm grateful for the wins I had up there and the learning experience.”

Gomez said one of the highlights of his year at NYRA was riding two winners for Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas at Saratoga.

“Riding for 'Coach' was special,” said Gomez. “I won two races for him and that was a great feeling. Angel rode for him a lot, and now I've ridden for him. It's surreal. I was a little nervous when I found out I was riding for him, but I just gave it my best effort at the end of the day.”

Beyond his NYRA record, Gomez posted an overall record of 1,312-152-163-156 in 2022, and it is likely his name appear will appear on the ballots of Eclipse Award voters as he eyes a chance at the prestigious Champion Apprentice title.

“It's been a great year for many apprentices – Jeiron Barbosa in Maryland and Vicente Del-Cid in Louisiana are great riders,” said Gomez. “Whoever wins, wins, and I'm just happy to be mentioned in the conversation.”

Finalists for the Eclipse Awards will be announced Saturday at 11:30 a.m. with the 52nd annual Eclipse Award winners' ceremony to be held Thursday, January 26 in Palm Beach, Florida.

Among Gomez's upcoming mounts at the Big A are stakes engagements on Saturday aboard Valenzan Day [post 3, 10-1] in the $150,000 Jerome for sophomores and Forewarned [post 1, 20-1] in the $150,000 Queens County for older horses. The former race will award the top-five finishers 10-4-3-2-1 qualifying points, respectively, towards the Grade 1 Kentucky Derby on the First Saturday in May.

“I've galloped Valenzan Day and it's nice to ride him,” Gomez said. “Hopefully, we get lucky. Just seeing my name on the overnight for a race like the Jerome is a good feeling.”

Gomez has already started the year off on the right foot, guiding O'Trouble to victory in a New Year's Day claiming event at the Big A for trainer Antonio Arriaga. Gomez said his main goals in 2023 are to continue learning and improving with each mount.

“O'Trouble is my boy and I love him,” said Gomez, with a laugh. “I'm just hoping to keep going and learning – to try to win, to get better, and to make a name for myself.”

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Two Graded Stakes Wins Net Junior Alvarado Jockey Of The Week Title

Jockey Junior Alvarado ended 2022 on a high note with two Grade 3 stakes wins at Gulfstream Park on Saturday, Dec. 31, earning Jockey of the Week for Dec. 27 through Jan. 1 by the panel of racing experts. The award honors 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.

Gulfstream Park presented a New Year's Eve card with 11 races, five of which were graded stakes. Trainer Shug McGaughey gave Alvarado a leg up on Stolen Holiday in the G3 Suwannee River, a one mile turf test for fillies and mares three-years-old and up. Stolen Holiday raced well back in the field of nine, encountering traffic trouble before unleashing a determined stretch run to overtake Lady Rockstar to win by a length in 1:34.32.

“She broke good,” said Alvarado. “I was getting in there behind the speed horses and somebody on the rail squeezed through, pushed me out, make me clip heels and after that it was Plan C or D to come from behind. Turning for home, she just gave me a beautiful kick and I knew at the eighth pole that I was going to get there.”

In the next race, Alvarado was aboard Sibelius for trainer Jeremiah O'Dwyer in the G3 Mr. Prospector for three-year-olds and up. Sibelius stalked the early pace from the inside and drew away in the stretch to win by 2 1/4 lengths in 1:23.04 for seven furlongs on the turf.

The win moved Alvarado to within five of career win 2,000.

“I know it's there because they remind me every time I win a race now,” said Alvarado about the career milestone. “I just try to do my job. I don't try to worry about it, eventually it will come. I just go race by race and try to do my best and it will eventually come.”

Alvarado, 36, won his first Breeders' Cup race, the Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile, in 2022 aboard fan favorite Cody's Wish trained by Bill Mott. Alvarado was also the regular rider of the Mott-trained Olympiad who won five graded stakes in 2022.

Alvarado out-polled Jose Ortiz who won a stakes race at Gulfstream Park, Irad Ortiz, Jr. with a graded stakes win at Gulfstream and registered his 50th graded stakes of 2022, DeShawn Parker who won two stakes races at Fair Grounds, and Maryland-based Jevian Toledo who was the leading rider for the week in wins with eight.

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Hamilton Retires As Jockey Club Information Systems President

The Jockey Club Information Systems (TJCIS) today announced that Carl Hamilton retired on Dec. 31, 2022. Hamilton will maintain his role as chairman of BloodHorse and continue to represent The Jockey Club on various national and international committees related to the International Federation of Horseracing Authorities and the Society of International Thoroughbred Auctioneers.

Matt Iuliano will be nominated for election as president of TJCIS and continue as executive director and executive vice president of The Jockey Club.

“Carl's leadership of TJCIS has been exceptional,” said James L. Gagliano, president and COO of The Jockey Club. “The advancements to our information services and evolution of technology systems to meet the demands of a global marketplace are a tribute to Carl's deep understanding of the industry. Carl will continue to be available as a consultant to the many important initiatives of TJCIS in 2023.”

Hamilton was appointed president of TJCIS in 1994 after joining the company in 1990 as vice president of the consulting division. He previously owned Hamilton Software, a software consulting firm that developed industry-leading farm management software packages and provided consulting services to Thoroughbred-related organizations.

In 2015 TJCIS purchased a majority interest in Blood-Horse, at which time Hamilton was appointed chairman.

Tim Leith was promoted to senior vice president of TJCIS in January 2023. Leith will execute short- and long-term plans for the company and continue to oversee product development efforts of the company's growth initiatives.

Tim Leith

The Jockey Club Information Systems Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of The Jockey Club, is an industry leader in the areas of technology and information services for industry professionals, including owners, breeders, trainers, veterinarians and farm personnel. TJCIS utilizes state-of-the-art technology to enhance the services it provides through equineline.com as well as its cataloguing and software sales and consulting divisions.

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Longtime Horse Industry Lobbyist Tad Davis, 84, Passes

Thomas A. “Tad” Davis, 84, passed away on Dec. 28, 2022, from complications related to Parkinson's Disease at his home in Alexandria, Va., surrounded by his family.

Davis was involved with the formation of the American Horse Council (AHC) in 1969 and served as its attorney and lobbyist for 50 years in Washington, D.C.  He also represented the National Thoroughbred Racing Association upon its formation.  He was involved in all federal legislation affecting the horse industry during that period.

Most notably, Davis played a formidable role in the passage of the Interstate Horse Racing Act of 1978 that enabled simulcasting as well as an amendment in 2000 to clarify that interstate electronic wagering on horse racing was legal.

Through the years, he was also prominently involved in the enactment and protection of three-year depreciation for race horses and other horses; ensuring that horses were eligible for the Section 179 expense deduction and bonus depreciation; making horses eligible for Federal assistance after disasters; and making horses and farms eligible for emergency relief after disasters.

He was well known by horse owners and breeders throughout the country, often preparing syndicate agreements for prominent stallions and racing and breeding partnerships.  He was particularly well-known for his knowledge of how the federal tax laws applied to the horse industry and successfully represented many prominent horsemen in IRS audits.

His Horse Owners and Breeders Tax Handbook was the premier text in this area.  His monthly AHC Tax Bulletins kept the industry up-to-date on legislation, regulations, and court decisions affecting the industry for decades.  Both were published by the AHC.

“He was really the dean of equine attorneys,” said his longtime colleague and friend, Jay Hickey, the former president of the American Horse Council. “He loved the horse industry and the people in it. Beyond all his legislative achievements, he was widely admired for his honesty, integrity, and loyalty to his friends and his fun-loving spirit.”

Davis was born in Birmingham, Ala., and grew up in Jacksonville, Fla. He attended the University of Florida, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts and Doctor of Jurisprudence degrees.  He received his LLM in Taxation from the Georgetown University Law Center.

After graduation, he served with the U.S. Army in Washington, D.C., as a strategic Intelligence Officer with the Defense Intelligence Agency.  Following his Army service, he was an attorney in the Chief Counsel's Office of the Internal Revenue Service.

There he became an expert in the taxation of life insurance and companies.  These areas served as an anchor for the legal and legislative practices of Davis & Harman LLP, the firm he founded in 1986 with William Harman.

He is survived by his wife, Jerri, his children, Denra and Reilly (Himaja), and his new grandchild, Rishaan Thomas.

A service and reception will be held at a later date following his inurnment at Arlington National Cemetery.

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