OwnerView Accepting Nominations For ‘New Owner Of The Year’ Award

OwnerView announced Thursday that it is accepting nominations for the 2022 New Owner of the Year Award, sponsored by 1/ST RACING, which honors a new Thoroughbred owner who has been successful in the sport and has had a positive impact on the industry.

Nominees for the New Owner of the Year Award must have made their first start as a Thoroughbred owner in the past four years (2019), had an ownership stake in a horse at the time it won a stakes race in the past 12 months, and had a verifiable owner license in 2022. Thoroughbred performance as well as a nominee's promotion of the sport will be considered.

Anyone, including current owners, can nominate an owner who meets the criteria for the award. A selection committee that includes industry personnel and established owners will choose the winner.

To submit a nomination, please contact Gary Falter for a nomination form at (859) 224-2803 or gfalter@jockeyclub.com. The deadline to receive nominations is November 6.

The New Owner of the Year Award has been previously presented to Boat Racing, MyRacehorse, Larry Best, the Churchill Downs Racing Club, Charles and Susan Chu, Sol Kumin, and LNJ Foxwoods.

OwnerView is a joint effort spearheaded by The Jockey Club and the Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association to encourage ownership of Thoroughbreds and provide accurate information on aspects of ownership such as trainers, public racing syndicates, the process of purchasing and owning a Thoroughbred, racehorse retirement, and owner licensing.

The need for a central resource to encourage Thoroughbred ownership was identified in the comprehensive economic study of the sport that was commissioned by The Jockey Club and conducted by McKinsey & Company in 2011. The OwnerView site was launched in May 2012.

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‘It Just Comes Down To Hard Work’: Hector Diaz, Jr. Hopes To Finish On Top At Monmouth-At-Meadowlands

After a solid showing at Monmouth Park this summer, jockey Hector Diaz, Jr. was looking for more of the same for the Monmouth-at-Meadowlands meet. Turns out the 33-year-old from Puerto Rico undersold himself.

Entering the final weekend of the all-turf meet, Diaz sits atop the rider standings with seven winners from 23 mounts. He is listed to ride all six races on Friday, with closing day for the abbreviated meet on Saturday.

First race post time both nights is 7 p.m.

“I tried to take some momentum from the meet I had at Monmouth Park. I think I had a good meet at Monmouth this year,” said Diaz, who finished fifth in the jockey standings at the Jersey Shore oval with 33 winners. “It was a tough meet because it was such a good jockey colony this year. But I think I held my own.

“I was looking forward to the Meadowlands because I always seem to do well on the turf there.”

Diaz, who started riding in 2016, says there is something about riding on the grass that seems to bring out the best in him.

“I think I'm better on the turf because you can win races even if you aren't on the best horse,” he said. “If you pay attention, are smart tactically and take advantage when other riders make mistakes, you can win. It's more about giving your horse the best trip on the turf.

“I didn't want to set my goals too high for the Meadowlands because you never know what can happen. But I have been happy so far.”

A year after posting a personal best with 104 wins, Diaz sits at 75 for 2022. But he doesn't put surpassing last year's total beyond his reach.

He has been riding at Parx, Delaware, in Maryland and at the Meadowlands since the end of the Monmouth Park meet and will head to Florida following the conclusion of the Monmouth-at-Meadowlands meet to ride at Tampa Downs. That meet starts Nov, 23.

“I still have a chance to do it,” he said of setting a new personal best. “The main thing is staying healthy. When you are healthy it just comes down to hard work.”

Diaz' summer at Monmouth included a pair of stakes victories (the Presious Passion and the Oceanport Stakes) for trainer Chad Brown.

And let there be no doubt: If he winds up as the leading rider during the Monmouth-at-Meadowlands meet, despite just seven full racing cards, he will call that a riding title earned.

“There are some good riders at this meet so finishing on top would mean a lot,” he said. “For me, it would count as a riding title.”

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Scaling Everest: 27-Year-Old Former Jockey Saddles Giga Kick To Upset Top-Ranked Nature Strip

Trainer Clayton Douglas told anyone who would listen in the build up to the TAB Everest that his unbeaten 3-year-old Giga Kick was a star in the making, and he was vindicated with the biggest win of his career at Royal Randwick on Saturday.

And the 27-year-old former jockey, who has only been training a couple of years, says the best is yet to come from Giga Kick who was only having his fifth race start but performed on the big stage before 46,221 people.

“I've ridden a lot of good horses in my time, and this horse just does things that people haven't seen,'' Douglas said.

“I noted that on Tuesday and people probably thought I was being a bit cocky, but Craig Williams had a lot of faith in this horse.

“He's a star and I'm so rapt for the owners, rapt for Jonathon Munz and (slot holder) James Harron, he put his neck on the line to take a three-year-old and do what he's done. It's great.

“There's a massive team behind me, I work very hard and I've got a great bunch of staff. To be honest, it's a bit of a whirlwind at the moment, but I'm very happy.”

It was a big punt by Harron to select Giga Kick on the back of a narrow, and on the face of it unimpressive, win in the Danehill Stakes a few weeks earlier but as he did in 2017 with Redzel his judgment was spot on.

The gelding settled well off a frantic pace and Craig Williams timed his run to perfection as Giga Kick rounded up Private Eye to win by a long neck with Mazu a half length away in third, just ahead of Nature Strip who for a fleeting moment looked the winner as he strode up after working at the 400m.

But the story of Nature Strip's defeat can be seen in the work he had to do early, running 10.37 between the 1000m and 800m, wide on the track.

“He's such a professional and you can see today, with the 53 kilos when ridden like that, he's electric,” Douglas said.

“It's a bit of a whirlwind, but he wasn't in the race to make the numbers up and I had a lot of faith in him. He's a star.

“Watch out, the new kid is on the block.”

Craig Williams turned down a ride in the Caulfield Cup to come to Sydney and partner Giga Kick keen to add an Everest to his trophy cabinet having run second on Vega Magic in the inaugural running in 2017.

Giga Kick reeled off the race's fastest last 600m of 34.34 (Punter's Intelligence) and his last 200m of 11.97 was clearly superior, and Williams was full of praise for how the young trainer prepared the horse.

“Clayton Douglas, you talk about how young of a trainer he is but he's well before his time,'' Williams said.

“I'm just lucky to have been part of the ride. My team around me, my family, thank you for everything throughout the years.

“This is a really big thrill. The inaugural running of it five years ago I finished second on Vega Magic and I thought we had unfinished business.

“He planned to give him a gap between his first and his next run into the Danehill at Flemington, he told me to come down and jump on him and Clayton said 'Craig this horse has absolutely improved four lengths. Come down and trial him'.

“'Actually we might not be 12 months behind schedule at all.' Then what he did the other day in the Danehill, and trusting Clayton as the horseman that he is, with a horse that he's got and given the opportunity from Pinecliff (connections) and of course James Harron (slot holder) who had a tough decision.

“Thanks for his support in our confidence in the horse but, again the equine athlete, the legend on this track today is Giga Kick.”

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Frequent Flier: John Velazquez Named Jockey Of The Week After Graded Wins At Keeneland, Aqueduct

Hall of Fame jockey John Velazquez shuttled between Keeneland Race Course and Belmont at the Big A for racing engagements winning Grade 2 and Grade 3 stakes races which led to Jockey of the Week honors for October 10 through October 16. The award, which is voted on by a panel of racing experts, honors jockeys who are members of the Jockeys' Guild, the organization which represents more than 1050 active, retired and permanently disabled jockeys in the United States.

Logging frequent flyer miles is not unusual this time of year for Velazquez with major stakes races around the country and last week was an example. The week started at Keeneland Race Course on Wednesday with an allowance win for trainer H. Graham Motion. On Thursday, Velazquez rode for trainers Wesley Ward and Brendan Walsh.

On Friday at Keeneland, trainer H. Graham Motion gave a leg up to Velazquez on Highland Chief (IRE) in the G3 Sycamore Stakes for 3-year-olds and up at 1 1/2 miles on the turf. Breaking from post position four in the field of 12, Highland Chief (IRE) raced close to the pace before slipping through an opening on the rail to take command as the field straightened for home, posting a one-length win over Temple in 2:28.87 and returning $15.32 for the win. The connections are considering the Breeders' Cup Turf as Highland Chief's next start.

“I just tried to stay right behind horses, save some ground and hope he would come running,” said Velazquez. “I was just looking for some sort of space down at the quarter pole and once I got it, he was there for me.”

Next, it was off to Belmont at the Big A on Saturday for the mount on Skims for Hall of Fame trainer Shug McGaughey in the G2 Sands Point for 3-year-old fillies. Breaking from the inside post in the field of eight, Skims sat just behind the leaders in third and outside of rival Vergara. Skims took over into the final turn while being chased by Vergara but there was no catching Skims who posted a one-length victory in 1:51.14 for the 1 1/8-mile turf test, returning $11.20 for the win.

It was a record-equaling third Sands Point win for Velazquez who won the inaugural running with Perfect Sting (1999) and six years later on Melhor Ainda.

It was back to Keeneland for mounts on Sunday's card and a win for trainer Wesley Ward in an allowance race.

Weekly statistics for Velazquez included five wins and $490,510 in total purse earnings.

Other contenders for Jockey of the Week were Jeiron Barbosa who won 10 races during the week, Hector I. Berrios who won a stakes race at Santa Anita, Tyler Gaffalione with a graded stakes win at Keeneland, and Flavien Prat who won the Grade 1 Queen Elizabeth II Challenge at Keeneland aboard Gina Romantica.

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