Jockey James McDonald Honored As Longines World’s Best Jockey

James McDonald was honored as the 2022 Longines World's Best Jockey at the Longines Hong Kong International Races Gala dinner. The New Zealand-born jockey is the second Australian-based rider to win the Longines World's Best Jockey Award, following Hugh Bowman's victory in 2017. With a total of 142 points, McDonald beat Ryan Moore (96 points) and William Buick (78 points) to win the 2022 title by a wide margin. He was presented with an elegant Longines timepiece as well as a crystal vase by Winfried Engelbrecht-Bresges, Chair of the International Federation of Horseracing Authorities (IFHA), and Cecilia Kwok, Vice President of Longines Hong Kong and Macau.

James McDonald dominated the Longines World's Best Jockey competition throughout the 2022 racing season, ultimately winning the title by a wide margin. The New Zealand-born jockey is the second Australian-based rider to win the Longines World's Best Jockey Award, following Hugh Bowman's victory in 2017. McDonald was recognized at a ceremony held during the Longines Hong Kong International Races Gala dinner on Dec. 9, 2022, at the Hong Kong Convention & Exhibition Centre. Winfried Engelbrecht-Bresges, Chair of the International Federation of Horseracing Authorities (IFHA), and Cecilia Kwok, Vice President of Longines Hong Kong and Macau, presented McDonald with an elegant Longines timepiece as well as a crystal vase.

“It's been an amazing year,” said McDonald. “Consistency all the way through has probably been the biggest thing: getting on really good horses and having a great association with them. It's a massive honor to be named Longines World's Best Jockey, and I am extremely proud of it.”

McDonald won nine of the world's Top 100 Group or Grade 1 races, with his qualifying victories coming in the Black Caviar Lightning Stakes (Home Affairs), TAB Chipping Norton Stakes (Verry Elleegant), Sky Racing Active Rosehill Guineas (Anamoe), Furphy T J Smith Stakes (Nature Strip), Schweppes All Aged Stakes (Cascadian), Winx Stakes (Anamoe), Fujitsu General George Main Stakes (Anamoe), Neds Might And Power Stakes (Anamoe), and Ladbrokes Cox Plate (Anamoe).

After finishing third in the 2021 competition, McDonald won this year's award by an impressive margin of 46 points. The scoring process rewards jockeys for finishing in the top three, giving McDonald a total of 142 points on the year. Ryan Moore, who has won the Longines World's Best Jockey title three times, was second with 96 points, while William Buick was third with 78 points.

The awarding of the Longines World's Best Jockey title is based upon performances in the 100 highest-rated Group 1 and Grade 1 races as established for the year by the Longines World's Best Racehorse Rankings Committee. The scoring incorporates races from Dec. 1 of the previous year until Nov. 30 of the current year. Jockeys accrue 12 points for a win, 6 points for placing second, and 4 points for placing third.

The Longines World's Best Jockey Award was established nine years ago by Swiss watch brand Longines and the International Federation of Horseracing Authorities (IFHA) as a way to quantitatively recognise a jockey as the best among his or her global peers. It marked the first time a rider was honoured in such a way. Moore was the inaugural recipient of the Longines World's Best Jockey Award, which was established in 2014, and he also won in 2016 and 2021. Frankie Dettori has won the award four times, with his victories coming in 2015, 2018, 2019, and 2020.

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After Finishing Master’s Degree, 24-Year-Old Asmussen Ready For Opening Day At Oaklawn Park

Team Asmussen is scheduled to have fans seeing double in Friday's first race at Oaklawn. Not only does Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen own Bourbon On Fire, his son, Keith J. Asmussen, is named to ride the gelding in the maiden-claiming sprint.

It's the first scheduled Oaklawn mount for Asmussen, 24, who resumed riding this fall after earning a master's degree in professional accounting earlier this year from the University of Texas' McCombs School of Business.

“It kind of just went from there,” said Asmussen, who has seven victories from 75 career mounts. “I got out of school; I went straight to the racetrack. It's like I graduated, and I was at Lone Star the next week.”

Asmussen, of course, hails from one of the most prominent families in American Thoroughbred history. His grandfather, Keith I. Asmussen, helps oversee the famed El Primero Training Center near Laredo, Texas, where many of Steve Asmussen's greatest runners have been broken.

Steve Asmussen, inducted into the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in 2016, is the winningest trainer in North American history (9,957 through Wednesday) and has collected a record 12 Oaklawn training titles. He was honored with an Eclipse Award as the country's outstanding trainer in 2008 and 2009. Keith J. Asmussen's uncle, Cash Asmussen, won an Eclipse Award in 1979 as the country's outstanding apprentice jockey before becoming a champion rider in France.

So, when it came to an early career choice, Keith J. Asmussen quickly returned to his roots, rather than an office and a traditional 9 to 5 accounting gig, after graduating last May from Texas.

“I would probably be working for my father on the backside,” Asmussen said, when asked what he would doing if he wasn't riding. “I'm addicted to it, hopelessly. I'm infatuated with horses.”

Asmussen said he grew up riding before he began galloping horses on the racetrack at 16 and has gotten on many prominent runners for his father during that time, including Grade 1 winner Basin and Private Creed, third in the $1 million Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint (G1) Nov. 4 at Keeneland.

Asmussen has been galloping and working horses for his father since late November at Oaklawn in preparation for the 2022-2023 meeting that begins Friday. The jockey also spent much of early 2020 in Hot Springs getting on horses for his father after in-person classes at Texas were canceled because of COVID-19.

The switch to remote learning allowed Asmussen to get on horses in the morning and become fit enough to eventually ride. He debuted June 15, 2020, at Lone Star Park in Grand Prairie, Texas, which is minutes from his home.

Asmussen recorded his first career victory July 26, 2020, at Lone Star aboard the Steve Asmussen-trained Inis Gluaire. It was Keith J. Asmussen's 19th career mount. Father and son would strike again roughly two weeks later at Lone Star with future Arkansas Derby winner Super Stock, co-owned by Keith I. Asmussen, in the $113,647 Texas Thoroughbred Futurity Stakes for 2-year-olds. It remains the jockey's biggest career victory to date.

After graduating from Texas, Asmussen began galloping horses at Lone Star and followed his father to Saratoga, then Kentucky, before he resumed riding Oct. 27 at Keeneland. Asmussen has had 14 mounts this year, highlighted by a neck victory aboard Tonal Impact for his father Nov. 23 at Churchill Downs. The jockey's other six victories came in 2020 (five at Lone Star and one at Remington Park in Oklahoma City).

“I don't think I really wanted to go back to school after the first time I started riding,” Asmussen said. “My parents kind of set me down and it's like, 'Finish it out,' because I was close to going off the deep end and just not wanting to go back. Before I even started riding, I mean, my dad, he knew it was like once you start, you're not going to want to go back to school. So, he made me promise to finish my education.”

As far as his continuing equine education, Asmussen credits eight-time Oaklawn riding champion Ricardo Santana Jr. for helping him grow as a rider, adding he's “probably about 50 times better” than when he started. Santana has been among Steve Asmussen's go-to riders for several years.

“Lot better hands,” Keith J. Asmussen said. “I feel like I rate a lot better than I did. Honestly, even on top of that, finishing. But it had just come with a lack of repetitions. First time I rode, I don't think I'd worked a hundred horses out of the gate yet. It's what, 20 times past that now?”

Steve Asmussen collected 63 victories as a jockey before weight forced him to quit riding and turn to training in the mid-1980s. Keith J. Asmussen, 5-10, has his eyes constantly on the scales, too, already having waived his apprentice weight allowance.

“That's kind of why the rides have been sporadic,” he said.

Asmussen is named on five horses, all for Steve Asmussen, over the first three days at Oaklawn. All seven of the jockey's victories have come for his father. No pressure, the jockey said.

“I love the intensity of this barn,” Asmussen said. “It's the expectations. I don't think there's any other way to do it. Everything matters.”

Asmussen said he plans to generate additional business by riding for other trainers at Oaklawn, or possibly Sam Houston Race Park in Houston, which opens Jan. 6. In other words, he's crunching numbers for a living. Just not the way one might expect.

“I'm a jockey now,” Asmussen said. “Full time.”

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Riley Mott Ready To ‘Uphold The Standard’ Set By Hall Of Fame Father

Forest green, with a hint of white, dominates the south side of the Sunny's Halo barn at Oaklawn, from traffic cones that line bridle paths to feed tubs.

Based on the color scheme, one might assume they've stumbled into Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott's barn in New York, Florida or Kentucky.

There is one subtle difference.

The white outline of a diamond, framed by that dark green background – synonymous with Mott's career – has been reimagined and replaced by the white outline of two diamonds (one inside the other) on saddle towels, helmet covers, bandage holders, etc. Two diamonds. As in father and son.

Sunny's Halo is home in early December to approximately 20 horses for Mott's meticulous son, trainer Riley Mott, who went out on his own Nov. 1 after assisting his father for eight years.

Riley Mott, 30, said the logo tweak to his equipment – an additional diamond – was his idea and represents his past and future.

“There's some symbolism there, I guess, not to make a pun or anything,” Mott said. “It's been meaningful, almost like a family crest. The idea behind it was almost motivation to uphold the standard that my dad set.”

The standard, of course, is off the charts.

Bill Mott, 69, is a three-time Eclipse Award winner as the country's outstanding trainer (1995, 1996 and 2011) and in 1998 became the youngest trainer inducted into the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame. He was 45.

Mott's 5,267 career victories, including 35 when he topped the 1986 Oaklawn standings and another when he returned nine years later with the mighty Cigar for the $750,000 Oaklawn Handicap (G1), ranked eighth in North American history through Tuesday, according to Equibase, racing's official data gathering organization. His $322,507,574 in purse earnings ranked fourth.

Mott's familiar stable colors trace to the mid-1980s, when he began working for acclaimed owners Bert and Diana Firestone. Their silks – green with a white outline of a large diamond – were carried by such standouts as 1980 Kentucky Derby winner Genuine Risk and Honest Pleasure, another Eclipse Award winner (1975 champion 2-year-old male).

“His original colors were like brown and yellow,” Riley Mott said, referring to his father. “Those are a little different than what he has now. When he got the Firestone job, obviously, went to the diamond. And when his contract was finished, they agreed to let him keep all the tack.”

Asked if he's tried to replicate his father in other areas, Riley Mott was emphatic: It's the Bill Mott way.

“I'm not trying to reinvent the wheel,” Riley Mott said. “It's what I know. I was raised in a Hall of Fame barn my entire life and I've got what I think is a pretty good blueprint for how we do things. Like I said, I'm not going to deviate from what I know too much. I'm basically him, with a different symbol.”

Mott said he never had a timeline for going out on his own, but began to get the itch two years ago. He said his father told him the right opportunity would come, but it wouldn't necessarily be the first opportunity and to trust his gut.

“You can never stop learning in this game, but I thought I had a handful of years of experience under my belt and I was pretty confident in what I've learned to go do it on my own,” said Mott, whose namesake, Riley Tucker, won the $50,000 King Cotton Stakes in 2012 at Oaklawn. “A year ago last November, I sat down with my dad and had the conversation and said this is what I want to do. He gave me his blessing and support and I started planning for today about a year ago, so it's been a long time.”

Bill Mott actually revealed plans for his son to begin his career in Hot Springs in 2022-2023 during a trip last April to Oaklawn for its inaugural Hall of Fame Day, which honored members of the National Museum of Racing Hall of Fame.

Although Riley Mott graduated in 2014 from the University of Kentucky with a degree in economics, he said it was inevitable that he would make Thoroughbred racing a career.

His famous father agreed.

“Just watching him grow up, he was destined to,” said Bill Mott, who was in Hot Springs late last month to spend Thanksgiving with his son, daughter-in-law Megan and their young daughter, Margot. “I mean, he always liked it. He was ambitious and loved the competition and likes horses. I think anybody that grows up, whether you're in sports or whatever, you like that kind of atmosphere where you're competing. If you like horses and you like competition, it's a perfect combination.”

Riley Mott said the last year has allowed him to assemble a trusted support staff and secure a good base of older horses to run this winter in hopes of returning to Kentucky this spring and begin accepting 2-year-olds.

Mott, for example, hired recently retired jockey Ty Kennedy as an exercise rider. Kennedy, who won 347 races in 2015-2022, galloped for trainer Brad Cox last summer in Indiana and said he initially thought he would follow the two-time Eclipse Award-winning trainer to Oaklawn. Kennedy changed teams after one of his former agents, Scott Hare, told him that Mott would also be wintering at Oaklawn and sent him the trainer's phone number. Kennedy said he was quickly struck by Mott's patience and attention to detail.

“Really good people to work with and work for,” Kennedy said. “We've got an awesome crew here. I mean, I've been in some barns that it's straight chaos, 24/7, and some barns that are a well-oiled machine. The crew that Riley has here is very good, very hands on and we take our time with the horses. We'll spend 40, 45 minutes sometimes on a horse, just taking the time, taking it slow, doing it right. That's what Riley wants to do and I hope the results show come race day and I think that they will.”

Mott called Oaklawn the perfect location to truly launch his career, citing the country's richest winter purse structure and the opportunity to add quality stock through claiming.

“I never really thought about going anywhere else to start,” Mott said. “I think, obviously, the purse money is great, but one of the main things for me is the people are so friendly and welcoming. It's just like a really kind of homey type of feel. They act like they want you here. I sort of wanted that starting out. The people have been super nice and helpful and the racing's good and there's good horses that run here and I thought maybe it would be a good place to pick up some good owners.”

Mott said his stable is a mix of 2-year-olds and older horses. Some were previously trained by his father, while recent sales purchases have boosted numbers. Mott said the hope is to continue diversifying – colts, fillies, long, short, all class levels – through claiming.

Mott is scheduled to send out his first Oaklawn starter and fourth overall, Peace Cruiser, in Friday's third race, a 1-mile maiden special weight event for 2-year-old fillies. Peace Cruiser, by Violence, finished a close second in her first two career starts in New York for Bill Mott. Peace Cruiser adds blinkers for her two-turn debut.

“She looks pretty nice,” Riley Mott said.

Mott already trains for high-profile owners with strong Arkansas ties in Oaklawn President Louis Cella, Alex and JoAnn Lieblong of Conway and Frank Fletcher of North Little Rock. Alex Lieblong is chairman of the Arkansas Racing Commission.

Fletcher also has horses with Bill Mott and enjoyed a resurgence since reuniting with him in 2019. Fletcher and Mott campaign, among others, millionaire multiple graded stakes winner Frank's Rockette and Grade 3 winner Candy Man Rocket. Frank's Rockette won the $150,000 American Beauty Stakes for older female sprinters in 2021 at Oaklawn.

Fletcher said he had no qualms about sending horses to Riley Mott.

“My wife says he's the most polite young man she's ever met,” Fletcher said. “He takes his hat off when he's introduced to a lady. He comes from really good stock is what we like to say. We love his mother and dad. He's exactly like his dad – very deliberate, very quiet. Takes his time.”

Riley Mott has one career victory to date, that coming Nov. 10 at Churchill Downs when Unifying captured a maiden special weight sprint for 2-year-old fillies. It was his third career starter. Mott's other two starts also came last month at Churchill Downs, with his small string there under the care of Kenny McCarthy, Bill Mott's longtime Kentucky assistant. Unifying was previously trained by Bill Mott.

Riley Mott was already in Arkansas when his debut runner, American Tattoo, ran sixth Nov. 2, continuing a measured approach in the runup to saddling a horse for the first time in his name.

“I thought it was more important that I get here,” Mott said. “It was the same day we were setting up the barn and the horses were coming in, so I thought it was important for me to be here and oversee that. We've got a pretty good crew at Churchill. They can take care of running the horse.”

Mott said it was always his plan to start three horses at Churchill Downs before the focus shifted solely to Oaklawn. As a traveling assistant, Mott was at Oaklawn in 2017 to saddle future multiple Grade 1 winner Elate for his father in the $200,000 Honeybee Stakes (G3) and returned in 2020 to oversee several horses, including Tacitus for the $600,000 Oaklawn Handicap (G2). Earlier that year, Riley Mott also accompanied Tacitus to the Middle East for the $20 million Saudi Cup (G1).

Bill Mott, who came up under the likes of Hall of Fame trainer Jack Van Berg, and his protege, Robert L. Irwin, was roughly 20 when he started his first horse and recorded his first career victory in 1973, according to Equibase, racing's official data gathering organization.

“What's the right time?” Mott said. “I think (Riley) was ready. He knows enough. Look, it's like anybody else starting out. If you get the right horses, you're going to have a chance. He works hard and he's a good horseman. He has to learn to manage a business.”

Mott also has five stalls in Sunny's Halo, which will allow his son to care for horses he might ship in from south Florida's Payson Park, the Hall of Fame trainer's longtime winter base.

Father and son are scheduled to tangle for the first time in Saturday's eighth race at Oaklawn, a maiden special weight route for 2-year-olds. Parkway, previously raced in Kentucky, is trained by Bill Mott. Deluca is scheduled to make his career debut for Riley Mott.

May the best diamond win.

“I don't know,” Bill Mott said with a laugh. “I thought I was the big diamond.”

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Steeplechasing Stalwart Dick Ogden Passes At Age 92

Richard McAllister Ogden, a familiar face on the National Steeplechase Association circuit who went on to become a steward, passed away on Nov. 30 at age 92 at Paoli Hospital in Pennsylvania.

Known as Dick to his many friends, the West Chester resident was passionate about racing and spent many afternoons at Parx and Delaware Park. He enjoyed steeplechasing and was an NSA member who became a steward, officiating at many meets. Another one of his joys including watching his granddaughter Devon participate in horse shows. Golf was an avid interest, too, and Dick was a golfer of the year at Coatesville Country Club.

Born May 28, 1930 in Marshallton, Pa., Dick was the son of Even Lewis and Edith McAllister Ogden. He was married to the late Jane Ann Ogden for 58 years

He was a 1949 graduate of West Chester High School, then joined the U.S. Navy, serving aboard the USS Enrico. After the Navy he became a founding partner in Chester County Opticians, a career that lasted many years.

Dick is survived by his children, Diane Williams and her husband, Geoffrey; Susan Cappello and her husband, Paul; grandchildren Devon Arsalan, wife of Dr. Amir Arsalan; Afton Cordoba, wife of Tim Cordoba; Dana Cappello; Vincent Cappello; and great granddaughter, Carter Cordoba.

A celebration of Dick's life will be held in the Spring.

Read Dick's full obituary here: https://www.foundsferyo.com/obituaries/Richard-M-Ogden?obId=26502591

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