Jockey Gonzalez Notches 1,000th Career Winner at Del Mar

Jockey Ricky Gonzalez has a lot to be thankful for this Thanksgiving. He's healthy, he has a lot of family support and he just won his 1,000th career victory.

The milestone came Thanksgiving Day in the third race at Del Mar when he booted home 47 Roses LLC's Spiritist to a 2 ¾  length win for trainer Kristin Mulhall. It comes nine years, nearly to the day, since he rang-up his first victory at Golden Gate Fields.

The 27-year-old rider won race #999 last Saturday at Del Mar, so he didn't have to wait long to get to 1,000. Gonzalez said he tried not to think about it.

“But people kept mentioning it to me,” he says. “I'm glad that it finally happened especially here at Del Mar with my family here. I'm very thankful, very blessed. Thankful to all the trainers and owners.”

Gonzalez is a native of Sinaloa, Mexico.

“It started as a dream as a 6-year-old boy,” Gonzalez recalled. “My grandfather's friend is a breeder. One of his people told my dad he looks like a jockey. My dad said 'No, I'm too old but I have a son.' He introduced me to horses and I fell in love with them.”

Gonzalez came to the United States in 2013, starting at Turf Paradise, but within the year he had moved his tack to Golden Gate Fields where he won his first race. Then in the summer of 2020 he decided to make the jump to Southern California.

The move paid off a few months later when he won his first graded stakes on Fair Maiden in the 2020 La Brea (G1) on opening day at Santa Anita. He would go on to win the 2021 San Juan Capistrano (G3) and the 2022 an Luis Rey (G3) aboard Acclimate and the 2022 Buena Vista (G2) with Leggs Galore.

Following his win Thursday, his fellow jockeys pounced as he approached the jockeys' room, showering him with water and wood-chip ground cover. It made quite a mess, but Gonzalez was all smiles.

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Trainer Moysey Gearing Up for Oaklawn’s 2022-2023 Meet

The last horse trainer Chelsey Moysey started in 2021 was Red Hot Mess in an allowance race for 2-year-old fillies New Year's Eve at Oaklawn.

That $120,000 allowance race was really masquerading as a stakes.

Secret Oath, winner by 8 1/4 lengths of the one-mile event, subsequently dominated newly turned 3-year-old fillies in Oaklawn's Martha Washington Stakes and Honeybee Stakes (G3) before capturing the $1.25 million Kentucky Oaks (G1) last May at Churchill Downs. 

Matareya, a distant runner-up to Secret Oath in the Oaklawn allowance, developed into a multiple graded stakes winner, highlighted by the Acorn (G1) last June at Belmont Park.

“Isn't that crazy?” Moysey said during training hours Sunday morning at Oaklawn. “This is the thing. When (Red Hot Mess} ran first off her layoff at Delaware, when you looked at her form, it was Secret Oath, Nest. Just the horses that had hit the board in the two races that she had ran in, we were like 'Oh, my God.' At the time, you really didn't know who those horses were.”

Red Hot Miss, prior to finishing eighth in the Dec. 31 Oaklawn allowance race, had run against Nest in Belmont's $150,000 Tempted Stakes for 2-year-old fillies at one mile. Nest emerged as the country's top 3-year-old filly of 2022 after winning three Grade 1 races and finishing second against males in the Belmont Stakes (G1), the final leg of the Triple Crown.

A year later, Moysey is preparing another 2-year-old filly to run on New Year's Eve at Oaklawn in Fabulous Candy, who is pointing for the inaugural $150,000 Year's End Stakes. The one-mile Year's End, which evolved from the allowance race won by Secret Oath, is a major local prep for the $200,000 Martha Washington Stakes at 1 1/16 miles Jan. 28.

Fabulous Candy, like Red Hot Mess, is owned by Lewis Mathews of Bismarck, Ark., best known for campaigning millionaire multiple stakes-winning sprinter Ivan Fallunovalot. Fabulous Candy, by Twirling Candy, has won two of our career starts, including a two-turn allowance race Nov. 2 at Delaware Park. Fabulous Candy also finished fourth in her stakes debut, the White Clay Creek at one mile Oct. 14 at Delaware Park. Red Hot Mess won the 2021 White Clay Creek to give Moysey her first career stakes victory.

“Honestly, I think she has a lot more talent,” Moysey said, comparing Fabulous Candy to Red Hot Mess. “I think she's every bit of a two-turn horse. She's a little bit smaller, so has a little bit of growing up to do. That filly has a lot of heart and a lot of talent.”

As for Red Hot Mess, Moysey said a knee issue sidelined the daughter of Shackleford for more than eight months following the December allowance race. Red Hot Mess returned to win her Aug. 24 allowance comeback at Delaware Park and ran second and fourth in allowance races last month at Delaware Park and Laurel, respectively.

“We kind of shortened her back up this year and kept her that way,” Moysey said. “I know she won the stake at a mile, but I think we asked a lot of her to stretch out. I think she's definitely a much better sprinter than she is a route horse. She kind of proved that this summer and fall in the races that she ran in.”

Moysey said Red Hot Mess is being pointed for the $150,000 Poinsettia Stakes for fillies and mares at 5 ½ furlongs Dec. 17 at Oaklawn.

A former assistant under now-retired trainer Buff Bradley, Moysey recorded her first career victory in 2019 and has already set a career high this year for purse earnings ($626,134), according to Equibase, racing's official data gathering organization.

Moysey won three races at the 2021-2022 Oaklawn meeting and 13 more this year at Delaware Park to finish 11th in the standings. Moysey returns to Oaklawn with 27 horses, roughly twice as many as last season, including seven for Mathews and two for prominent Arkansas owner Frank Fletcher. Among Moysey's best horses is Chief Ron, who has bankrolled $103,385 in 11 starts this year.

“It's growing,” Moysey said of her stable. “I had around 35 this summer at one point. It kind of stayed that way, between 30 and 35, at Delaware. There's a lot of horses that stayed there, went other places and then I picked up some clients to come here. Bought some more horses at a sale. So, we do have quite a few more than last year.”

Moysey is among several up and coming female trainers with stalls at Oaklawn this season. In addition, Lindsay Schultz, who earned her first career victory at Oaklawn last year, is back with a larger stable and Rachael Keithan, a former assistant to Christophe Clement and Danny Gargan who went out on her own in 2021, is at Oaklawn for the first time. They join veterans Lynn Chleborad, the winningest trainer in Oaklawn's history with 132 victories, and Ingrid Mason, a close second with 127 wins.

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‘This Is The Greatest Game In The World’: Vietnam Veteran Tom Knust Found Solace In Racetrack Life After Harrowing Tour Of Duty

If you've been around Del Mar for any length of time, you've probably run into—and maybe even met—Tom Knust. He has been coming out to Del Mar since he was a teenager and has made a lifetime career out of his love for the horses.

Knust is now 75 years old and currently the agent for jockeys Victor Espinoza and Edwin Maldonado. But his journey to this place in his life has been filled with peaks and valleys and, had a Vietnam corpsman's diagnosis been correct, there wouldn't be a story to tell.

“I moved with my family to Arcadia (California) when I was a junior in high school,” Knust said. “I only lived a few blocks from the track (Santa Anita). The first time I went to the track I went with my best friend. We had to sneak in because you had to be 21 at that time. I made two bets, had two hot dogs and a coke, and I left with 80 cents more than I came with and I thought 'This is the greatest game in the world.' From that time on I've been stuck with it.”

That was in 1964. A few years later he found himself on his one and only tour in Vietnam and, like so many others, it changed his life.

“I was with the Second Battalion, Ninth Marines,” Knust said. “We were an infantry battalion up in the DMZ. I had only been in Vietnam for less than a month and one time we were out in the field for nine days. Usually you go in the field for two or three days at the most. We were in a lot of firefights and when you're out in the jungle sometimes you'll find a path and it's your job to go up that path and see what's there and then come back. This one time we got ambushed and I got shot in the head.”

Corpsmen conducting triage at the site where several Marines had been wounded, passed over Knust, believing at the time he was past the point of being saved.

“I heard one of the guys conducting the priorities,” Knust said. “I remember it vividly he said: 'Oh, he's a vegetable. We'll just leave him until later.' It wasn't very good bedside manner.”

Knust defied the medic's best judgment and survived the ordeal, though the road to recovery was difficult.

“I was paralyzed on my right side for about six months,” Knust remembered. “I spent the time at the hospital down in San Diego, the Balboa Naval Hospital (now known as the Naval Medical Center San Diego). I couldn't move anything on my right side and the doctors didn't know what would come back or how much would come back. Then one day I moved my little finger and eventually everything came back but my foot. I have drop foot. I can't move my ankle on my right side. All in all, I was pretty lucky.”

Lucky indeed. Since then Knust got married to his now bride of 49 years. They have a daughter, and Knust has a son he just found out about a few years ago. Both have given Tom a total of four grandkids.

“This past Veterans Day I was at a restaurant and there was a guy wearing a Vietnam Veteran hat with his daughter and grandkids,” Knust said, “and I thought to myself, for the first time, I could have been killed and then I wouldn't have any grandkids. That made me emotional.”

When he left the Marines and went looking for a life, Knust turned to horse racing and he's been involved it for over 50 years now.

“I started walking hots for trainer Joe Dunn,” Knust recalled. “Then I got a job as a groom for Reggie Cornell. I went on the fair circuit and was an assistant trainer for a while and then I got my trainers' license.

“I got married and we were going to have a baby,” he said. “I went to see Mr. (Jimmy) Kilroe. He was the head of Santa Anita and the dean of racing at that time; probably the most respected person in racing. I wanted to try and get a job in the racing office. He told me if I go back to the University of Arizona and get a degree in their racetrack management program, he promised to get me a job.”

So he went to the U. of A. and got a degree in Animal Science with an option in racetrack management.

“I went back to Kilroe and he gave me a job in the stable office as a clerk,” Knust said, “and that's where I started. I moved over to the racing office. I moved up from being a clerk there to being a placing judge, then an assistant handicapper to assistant racing secretary.”

That's when Knust started taking jobs as a racing secretary at smaller tracks around the state.

“I was racing secretary at some fair tracks,” Knust said. “Victorville in Imperial was my first job. Then I was racing secretary up at Valley Racing in Fresno. It worked out because then I could still come back to Del Mar in the summer.”

Knust's days at Del Mar date back to before the new grandstand was built in 1991. He fondly remembers the old wooden grandstand and the black top where fans could bring their coolers filled with beer.

“My wife used to come with our baby and sit on the old brick wall just inside the main entrance,” Knust said, “right where the grandstand would be. There was a lot of history in the adobe grandstand. I liked it. I thought it was really cool.”

Knust landed his first big gig in Minnesota where he became racing secretary at Canterbury Downs when it was first built. But after five years he came back to Southern California to be racing secretary at Santa Anita and Del Mar, a job that lasted 10 years. And then the ax fell.

“When Frank Stronach bought Santa Anita I worked for him for one year,” Knust said “Cliff Goodrich was the general manager and when he retired they brought in a new GM who fired everybody; myself, Tom Robbins, Craig Dado, all of the department heads.”

That new GM lasted a year and then he was gone. As for Knust, as one door closed, a new one opened.

“I needed something to do,” Knust said. “Tom Robbins made a deal with Del Mar that he would work here year round so that made me the odd man out. I had to do something to make a living. I didn't want to go out of state and there was an opportunity to pick up Kent Desormeaux, so I became a jocks agent and I've been an agent ever since.”

That was 22 years ago. He's had about 16 jockeys since he started, some he's let go and some who have let him go.

“I like it a lot,” Knust said. “I had Corey Nakatani, P. Val (Patrick Valenzuela), Kent Desormeaux. I've had Richie Migliore, Kevin Krigger, David Cohen, Abel Cedillo. I had Jose Valdivia Jr. for a while. We won the Santa Anita Derby (G1) together and then he fired me after that. I had Jon Court for two years.”

Knust has learned you have to grow a thick skin in his line of work and not take anything personal.

“They're all good people,” he said, “but with everybody, if they're not doing good, they want to make a change whether it's me or them. I don't mind somebody firing me. But when I have to tell somebody I'm going in a different direction, that's the hard thing. I'd rather they just fire me, it makes it a lot easier.

“It is a competitive job,” Knust continued. “You have good times and bad times. I had Patrick Valenzuela four different times; I had Nakatani twice. A lot of good riders but there's a lot of things that go along with it that are not good. You can't blame them when they're riding, their lives on the line every day. But you start out good and everybody's happy and then things start to go south and everybody wants to change.”

He said in his line of work it's all about relationships.

“You try to have relationships with trainers who have some good horses or a lot of horses,” Knust said. “Then there are trainers who have only a few horses but you want to ride them. So you try to balance it out. You work horses for the big stables then, when you can, you work horses for the smaller stables.

“Then you keep track of the horses you've ridden,” Knust said, “and when the (condition) book comes out, you mark the horses you want to ride back and fill in the other races with new horses. It's a continuous thing from day to day. You also have to set up (morning) workers for your jockeys which is very important in this game because, again, relationships. You might work horses you don't ride and somebody might work the horses you ride. It all balances out.”

Knust has seen many changes in the game of horse racing over the years. So what does he think about the state of horse racing in 2022?

“I still think it's a game that can survive,” Knust said “I just don't think there will be as many racetracks in the future. We have to compete with the tracks back east that, number one, have casino money and number two, you can race in two or three places within a two-hour drive. So that puts us (West Coast racing) on an island.

“For 50 years we've tried to get stables to come out here and stay,” Knust said, “and none of them do. I think a lot of it has to do with the competition. It's very, very tough out here.”

Knust's involvement in racing has afforded him the opportunity to meet some interesting people over the years.

When I worked at Hollywood Park, I used to ride up on the elevator with Cary Grant all the time,” he said. (Country music singer) Dwight Yoakum had horses. I was good friends with (Spendthrift Farm owner) B. Wayne Hughes before he passed. I'm really good friends with Marty Wygod and Paul Reddam. Now we're riding for Lee Searing. He puts a lot of money into horse racing. Jed Cohen, of Red Baron's Racing, he's a good friend and he's put millions into the game. Gary Barber is a good friend.

“You also have opportunities to be with people who aren't so famous, don't have a lot of money but they're good people,” Knust said. “The track gets you in a situation where you can meet a variety of different people.”

Colorful and interesting people…like Tom Knust.

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Breeders’ Cup Presents Connections: ‘I Don’t Really Care If I Can’t Walk. I Just Want To Ride Racehorses’

This Thanksgiving, I want to bring you an inspirational story that's a little bit different from this feature's usual fare.

It's a story about perseverance, about the power of perspective, and above all, about the generosity of the horse racing community.

Bryce Bordieu is a 19-year-old horseman who had been plying his trade in Texas, galloping horses at a local training center in the mornings and working as an assistant starter at Retama Park in the afternoons. On Aug. 11, 2022, Bordieu's life changed forever when a filly he was riding flipped over and fell on top of him.

He suffered severe injuries to his spine which required multiple surgeries to stabilize, but the biggest trauma came later when Bordieu developed compartment syndrome in his left leg. Every attempt was made to save the limb, but after 13 surgeries doctors were eventually forced to amputate his leg below the knee.

Bordieu could have let that sudden loss devastate him; it wasn't just his lower left leg that was gone, but his entire career path and way of life were now permanently changed.

Instead, the wise-beyond-his-years young man never allowed his courageous mindset to falter. Bordieu never lost hope, and remains determined to rehabilitate his body and return to the saddle and the industry he loves.

Bryce Bordieu

“He never once said, 'Why me?'” recalled Bordieu's mother, Julie Farr. “His attitude has inspired everyone who meets him… Even though it was horrific, I felt like I was really watching something special as he went through this.”

Bordieu said: “I just told myself to keep fighting, keep going. Everything was going on around me, and I just put my head down and kept going.”

He suggested that it was his mother's influence, sleeping on a bench outside his hospital room for 10 weeks, that helped Bordieu keep such a positive attitude throughout the ordeal.

“I was a single mom raising him and his brother, but he's always been that way,” Farr deferred. “He blew out his left knee playing football in 2018 and was strong through that, too. There's a determination there, and I can honestly tell you he's the strongest human being I've ever met in my life. There's a focus and a determination there that he just has. I'd like to think that my being there probably helped him, but I can't take credit for it.”

Beyond Bordieu's strength of character, the camaraderie of the horse racing industry has been a buoyant force during his recovery.

Multiple surgeries were required to repair Bordieu's spine

“We have been so humbled by the outpouring of support from so many,” Farr said. “When I say that, people automatically think of money, and that's great because we can use it to pay bills. But I really want to make this profound statement: it's the prayers and the statements and the cards and the messages on Facebook, those mean everything. It is truly humbling what this racing community has done for him. The racing community are such fierce competitors on the racetrack, but they are a true family off the track.”

Farr works as a racing analyst and a racing administrator in New Mexico, and was at Ruidoso Downs when she got the call that her son had been seriously injured. The remote racetrack would have made it difficult for her to make it to Texas very quickly, but horse owner Scott Bryant sent his private jet to the runway at Ruidoso and got her to her son's bedside just a couple hours later.

“He paid for it and everything,” Farr said. “It was like that through this whole thing. There would be these moments where you would just look at it and think, 'Dear God, what next?' But then something beautiful would happen. It kept us going.”

Retama Park chaplain Michael Bingaman traveled up to the hospital twice a week to spend time with Bordieu, helping to keep his spirits up. Jockeys Mike Smith, Pat Day, Gary Stevens, and James Flores, as well as rodeo community members Tuff Hedeman and J.B. Mauney, have all reached out to Bordieu and offered well-wishes and support.

Janet VanBebber, chief racing officer with the American Quarter Horse Association, purchased jockey Flores' 2022 All-American Futurity-winning helmet to help benefit Bordieu's recovery at an auction held at Heritage Place sale in September.

Brad Bolen (LipChipLLC) organized a fundraiser and prayer that was a surprise for Bordieu on Labor Day weekend. Eric Halstrom and Rachel McLaughlin from Horseshoe Indianapolis held a fundraiser at their venue. Laura Joiner from the Sam Thompson Memorial Foundation spent countless hours taking care of fundraising, as well.

(https://samthompsonfoundation.org/2022/09/bryce-bourdieu-in-need-of-support/)

“The racing industry has been so incredibly supportive and encouraging during this unfortunate tragedy,” Farr summarized. “We are incredibly humbled by this experience.”

Julie Farr was a constant presence during her son's hospitalization

A little over three months after the accident, Bordieu is already back home in El Paso and working hard on his outpatient rehab. He is awaiting one more revision surgery in three to six months, after which he'll be able to begin learning to use a prosthesis.

Bordieu's physical therapist is optimistic that he'll be able to ride again, Farr said.

“There's so many different combinations of legs that you can put together,” she explained. “They told us the last 30 years, especially the last 10 years, that in this side of medicine there has just been so much development; every day they're coming up with something new. They've made great strides in it.”

Bordieu said: “I told the therapist the other day: 'I don't really care if I can't walk. I just want to ride racehorses.'”

With his positive attitude, a little perseverance, and a lot of help from his horse racing family, Bordieu will have all the ingredients he needs to make that dream a reality.

The post Breeders’ Cup Presents Connections: ‘I Don’t Really Care If I Can’t Walk. I Just Want To Ride Racehorses’ appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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