Gulfstream: Fernando Jara, Regular Rider Of Invasor, Returns To U.S. For First Time Since 2015

Fernando Jara is scheduled to ride in his first race in the U.S. since 2015 Saturday at Gulfstream Park, where he is named to guide Jeremiah O'Dwyer-trained Unabated for his debut in Race 8, a maiden optional claiming event on Tapeta for 2-year-olds.

Jara, who enjoyed international success aboard 2006 Horse of the Year Invasor, has been riding in Dubai for the past several years. The 36-year-old jockey, whose last U.S. graded-stakes win came aboard Fort Loudon in the 2012 Carry Back (G3) at Gulfstream, is being represented by agent Jose Santos Jr.

Jara, who has two mounts on Gulfstream's Sunday card, will be based primarily at Tampa Bay Downs during the winter with the hope of picking up mounts on shippers from Gulfstream Park and Palm Meadows, its satellite training facility in Palm Beach County.

“The driving force behind that is that he's trying to get back in and ride for some of the barns he had so much success with,” Santos said. “We know how tough Gulfstream Park is in the winter with Irad (Ortiz Jr.) and (brother) Jose and all of the riders. He hoping to find a rhythm again.”

Jara has been working horses locally for the past two weeks in preparation for his U.S. return.

“He's been working for a lot of people who ship back and forth over there,” Santos said.

Jara began riding in Panama at age 14 before venturing to North America, where he has ridden 691 winners from 6295 mounts. He became a riding sensation in his late teens while guiding Kiaran McLaughlin-trained Invasor to six Grade 1 stakes victories in a row, including a 2007 Dubai World Cup (G1) win to close out the Shadwell Stable star's career. Jara rode Invasor to victory in the 2007 Donn Handicap (G1) at Gulfstream prior to his Dubai World Cup triumph.

Jara also achieved Triple Crown success with a winning ride aboard McLaughlin-trained Jazil in the 2006 Belmont Stakes (G1). Jara was 18 at the time.

Racing returns to Gulfstream Friday with a 12:10 p.m. first race post.

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Prominent Owner/Breeder, Minnesota Thoroughbred Supporter Bob Lothenbach Passes At 64

Longtime Thoroughbred owner and breeder Bob Lothenbach has passed at the age of 64, officials at Canterbury Park in Minnesota confirmed on Wednesday. Funeral arrangements remain pending at this time.

Lothenbach has raced both in Minnesota and nationally at the highest levels for decades. He won his first Canterbury Park leading-owner title in 2002. Two years later Mayo On the Side, bred in Kentucky by Lothenbach, won the 2004 Grade 1 Humana Distaff at Churchill Downs with trainer Carl Nafzger. Lothenbach has owned nine graded stakes winners including additional Grade 1 winners Bell's the One and Vacare.

A 2023 inductee into the Canterbury Park Hall of Fame, Lothenbach's familiar royal blue silks with red diamonds began appearing in the Canterbury winner's circle on a regular basis in recent years. He has been the leading owner the past three seasons, setting an earnings record in 2022 with $1,521,176 in purses. Lothenbach won more than 200 races at Canterbury with earnings in excess of $5.2 million.

In fact, Lothenbach has been supporting Minnesota horse racing since Canterbury Park in Shakopee first opened in 1985. The longtime racing fan called on three of his friends, each of whom put in $1,000 to claim a horse. The partners made money with that first claim, and Lothenbach was hooked.

Lothenbach is known outside of racing for his contributions to the printing industry. He worked 40-hour weeks during his senior year of high school and built his own major printing company from the ground up.

“I started 30 years ago out of my garage with $1,800 to my name,” Lothenbach told the Paulick Report in 2021. “Back then, the printing industry was pretty old school, and it could take several weeks to process an order. With my company, I told people, 'When you need it, I'll get it for you.' It single-handedly changed the printing industry in Minnesota.”

The company grew to over 1,300 employees, and Lothenbach was inducted into the Printing Impressions/RIT Printing Industry Hall of Fame in 2013. He sold a majority share in 2016, and now focuses much of his time on other investment projects as well as his Lothenbach Family Foundation.

“I'm really big on literacy for kids, because when I was a kid I really struggled with school and reading; in fact I still do today,” Lothenbach said. “So the foundation supports literacy programs for kids, as well as veterans and a few other charities.

“People helped me get where I'm at, so I try to return the favor.”

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Returning From 10-Year Hiatus, ‘Old Veteran’ Jockey Larry Reynolds Continues Comeback Tour

Journeyman Larry Reynolds, a winner of nearly 3,400 career races who returned from a 10-year absence in mid-September, will continue his comeback tour Thursday at Laurel Park.

Reynolds, 53, is named to ride Champagne Please for trainer Anthony Farrior in the opener, a maiden special weight for 2-year-old fillies sprinting six furlongs on the main track. Post time for the first of nine races is 12:25 p.m.

“He's ridden a couple for me,” Farrior said. “He came down and worked her and he liked her. He's an old veteran; he knows what to do.”

Champagne Please, by Maximus Mischief, is owned by Reynolds' brother-in-law, Tim Freitag, and his sister, Denise. Bred in Kentucky and purchased for $60,000 as a 2-year-old in training at Fasig-Tipton's post-Preakness (G1) sale in May at Timonium, she will be making her career debut.

“I worked her once. We went fairly easy from the gate,” Reynolds said. “First-timer, you never know how they're going to handle everything, but she seems like she's got ability. We're hoping for a good trip and see what happens.”

It will be the first mount in Maryland for Reynolds since finishing fifth on Busy Listening for trainer Tim Grams Feb. 6, 2013. Six months later, the Williamsport, Md. native retired due to lingering pain in his hip, which he injured and ultimately had replaced following an on-track mishap in 2011.

“I had the spill and broke my hip bad. I came back and rode for a little bit, but there was too much pain, so I had to get it replaced,” Reynolds said. “I did come back and ride for maybe five or six months after the replacement and I think I rushed it. It was hurting too much.”

At the time of his retirement, Reynolds had won 3,368 races and more than $46 million in purse earnings. Though much of his career was spent at Charles Town in West Virginia, where he now lives, Reynolds enjoyed much success and rode some of his biggest winners in Maryland, where his time as an apprentice coincided with that of future Hall of Famer Kent Desormeaux.

Five of Reynolds' eight career graded-stakes wins came at Laurel – the 1998 Barbara Fritchie (G2) with J J's Dream, 1996 Martha Washington (G3) with Silent Greeting, 1994 and 1996 Carousel (G3) with Miss Slewpy and 1995 Snow Goose Handicap (G3) with Smart 'N Noble.

Reynolds owns three riding titles in Maryland. He led the fall standings at historic Pimlico Race Course in 1995 with 57 wins and was leading rider at Laurel's 1993 summer and 1993-94 winter meets with 45 and 135 wins, respectively.

“I have a lot of good memories at Laurel. I rode a lot of good horses,” he said. “I rode for Graham Motion and Hammy Smith. Between Graham Motion and Ronnie Cartwright, they were my big outfit. I love Laurel.”

Reynolds hasn't been a stranger during his time away from riding. His son, Austin, has ridden at Laurel this summer and fall and has two wins from 44 career mounts.

“When my son was riding I would go down and watch him ride and hang out in the jock's room,” he said. “I've been back I want to say maybe 10 times since I quit riding. A couple times I would go down and watch my sister's horses run.”

In fact, it was his sister and brother-in-law's deeper investment in racing starting in 2022 that first sparked Reynolds' interest in making a return.

“The past year, a friend here at Charles Town, we have a mechanic shop where we've been working for three years just messing around with cars, and everything was feeling good,” Reynolds said. “When my sister got horses I told her, 'I'd love to come back and ride and win a couple races for you.'

“I kept saying that and then one day I went to the [jockeys'] room here at Charles Town for movies and I decided I'm going to ask the trainer that I rode for before Tim Grams if I could come out and get on some horses, see how my hip's holding up and how I feel,” he added. “So I did, and I've been riding since.”

Reynolds has two wins, one second and two thirds from 22 mounts this year, returning to be third on Farrior-trained Ragtime Riches Sept. 16 at Charles Town – his first race in 10 years, one month and 13 days.

“I want to say it's a comeback,” he said. “I'm not looking to go out and ride six or seven a day. I think I'm too old for that. If the opportunities are there and I get that many in that day or something, so be it. I am out every morning galloping horses at Charles Town. I'm kind of doing it as a comeback, full-time. We'll see how it goes.”

Champagne Please is the 5-1 fourth choice on the morning line in a field of nine led by another first-timer, Independence Way, a Sycamore Hall Farm homebred daughter of Constitution trained by Brittany Russell that is the 2-1 program favorite.

Race 7 Thursday is a wide-open entry-level allowance for 3-year-olds and up sprinting six furlongs on the main track where Take a Hint, never worse than third in eight starts, goes after his third win from Post 8 of 12.

The co-feature comes in Race 8, a one-mile optional claiming allowance for 2-year-olds scheduled for the Kelso turf course that drew an overflow field of 15 including three for main track only. Respect the Valleys' late-running homebred Massif, second to Air Recruit in the 1 1/16-mile Laurel Futurity on the grass Sept. 30, is favored at 9-5.

There will be carryovers of $5,209.12 in the 20-cent Rainbow 6 (Races 4-9) and $5,103.94 in the $1 Jackpot Super High Five (Race 6).

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Grand National-Winning Jockey Suffers ‘Very Serious’ Spinal Cord Damage In Newcastle Fall

Jockey Graham Lee has suffered “very serious” damage to his spinal cord after a fall at Newcastle on Friday, reports The Telegraph. The 47-year-old rider, winner of the 2004 Grand National on Amberleigh House, remains in intensive care at the Royal Victoria Infirmary.

The Injured Jockeys Fund released the following update on his condition over the weekend: “Jockey Graham Lee's MRI scan has shown that he has suffered an unstable cervical fracture causing damage to the spinal cord, as well as damage to blood vessels in the mid-cervical region.

“He remains in intensive care with respiratory support at the Royal Victoria Infirmary Hospital in Newcastle, but it has been possible to reduce his sedation.

“This is a very serious injury and at this early time it is not possible to predict the extent of long-term recovery. Graham's family are very grateful for the many messages of support they have had.”

Lee was unseated from his mount Ben Macdui just after the starting gate opened. The jockey rode over 1,000 winners over jumps, and transferred his focus to flat racing in 2012. He has ridden two Group 1 winners on the flat: 2015 Ascot Gold Cup, and the 2018 Nunthorpe.

Read more at The Telegraph.

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