William Buick Storms To 100 Winners In Quest For First Jockeys’ Championship Title

William Buick has stormed to 100 winners faster than ever before as he heads towards his first ever Jockeys' Championship title, with victory aboard Lenormand, trained by Charlie Appleby, at Newmarket racecourse.

Buick is currently 31 winners ahead of nearest rival Hollie Doyle with just over two months of the season remaining, with the winner crowned at QIPCO British Champions Day at Ascot on Saturday, Oct. 15.

However, the 34-year-old is under no illusions of the size of the task ahead as he dreams of a first Champion Jockey title.

“It's always nice to reach 100 winners this early in the season. I am always aiming to ride as many winners as I can but hitting 100 is certainly nice. There is plenty left of the season, and I have to keep looking ahead,” Buick said.

“No matter the size of the margin, it doesn't change how competitive it is. You have to be focused on what you're doing, there is plenty of other important things going on and I just need to keep going and stay focused on trying to get more winners.”

At this stage of the season, Buick is comfortably ahead of how many winners he has had in previous years, while also retaining his best ever strike rate:

Rank: Year: No. of winners 12th August: Rides: Strike rate:
1 2022 100 402 25%*
2 2021 82 389 21%
3 2015 61 310 20%
4 2017 58 262 22%
5 2020 56 235 24%

*as of after 6.15pm race Friday at Newmarket racecourse

While he reaches 100 winners for the third time in the Jockeys' Championship, faster than ever before:

Rank: Year: Date on reaching 100 winners:
1 2022 12th August
2 2021 30th August
3 2020 3rd October

Last year's Champion Trainer Charlie Appleby said of Buick's milestone: “To get to 100 winners in the speed that he's done it in is an achievement in itself and I am delighted to be a part of it. Hopefully we've got a good bit of the season to go, but if he can keep pressing on the way that he is, he will be the man to beat in the Championship.

“It's not just his achievements here in the UK, it's what he does on the global stage as well, and it just shows the horsemanship and the talent that William has. But to be crowned Champion Jockey will be a great achievement by himself, and myself and everyone at Godolphin are very pleased for him.”

Recording 30 winners in the months of both June and July saw Buick pull away from his competitors, with a strike rate of 29% in July particularly impressive, including leading the top jockey standings at the Qatar Goodwood Festival with six wins.

You can see the latest Jockeys' Championship table here.

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‘I Always Wanted To Be Like My Dad’: Juan Hernandez Riding High Atop Del Mar’s Standings

There was a collective sigh of relief in the Santa Anita and Del Mar jockey colonies last spring when Flavien Prat moved his tack back east. Several established riders, sensing a golden opportunity, moved out to Southern California in hopes of filling the Prat void. Lost in all the commotion was a 30-year old rider who had quietly climbed to the top of the jockey standings with no intention of relinquishing his grip.

Juan Hernandez has kept the momentum going and jumped out to an early lead at the Del Mar summer meet, winning 19 races through the first 12 days, seven better than his closest competitor, Umberto Rispoli. He has a 23% win percentage and lands in the money 55% of the time. He's already exceeded $1 million in earnings at Del Mar with $1,371,096.

“I'm really happy for the people who have supported me a lot,” Hernandez said. “They've given me nice opportunities on these horses so, yeah, I'm just really happy right now.”

Through Thursday (August 11), Hernandez has compiled earnings of over $8.2 million in 2022, bringing his career earnings mark to over $57 million and making him currently the ninth-leading rider in the country. He had his best year in terms of earnings last year, collecting over $11 million in purses, good enough to rank 13th in the nation.

As is usually the case, Hernandez' success is the result of a lot of hard work behind the scenes. He credits his agent, Craig O'Bryan, with lifting him to consecutive riding titles. He clinched the crown at last year's Del Mar's fall meet and followed it up with an impressive run during Santa Anita's winter/spring session.

“My agent works hard,” Hernandez notes. “He's the one picking the good horses and he's (the one) asking for us to ride. I just get on them and do the rest.”

Hernandez won his first rider's title at Del Mar last fall when he unseated Flavien Prat from the top spot after finishing second to Prat during the summer meet. He won four graded stakes at Del Mar in 2021 and had 15 grade stakes victories overall last year. That exceeded the 11 he had collected from 2010 to 2020. This year, he won 15 graded stakes alone at Santa Anita. He says the keys to his success are quite simple.

“A lot of dedication,” he says. “A lot of work in the mornings and the support from the owners and trainers.”

Being a jockey has been a lifelong dream for Hernandez, who spent his early years growing up on a small ranch outside of Vera Cruz, Mexico.

“They had cows and donkeys and work horses,” Hernandez says. “My dad was galloping the Quarter horses on the ranch and sometimes he would bring me (with him). He would also take me to the match races in Vera Cruz when he was riding. After the first race I was in love with horses and I knew I wanted to be a jockey. I was little and I always wanted to be like my dad.”

When Hernandez was nine, his family moved to Mexico City.

“My dad got a job at the racetrack,” Juan says. “Sometimes he would take me to the track and throw me on a horse after the horse galloped and I'd just take a couple turns in the shedrow. That was a good feeling for me 'cause I was feeling like I was a jockey.”

As long as Hernandez can remember he dreamed of coming to the United States.

“Soon as I started riding in Mexico City, I was watching the races at Santa Anita and all over the USA because my dream was to come here and ride at these beautiful tracks,” he said.

Hernandez immigrated to the U.S. in 2009 and, had it not been for an understanding immigration official, his story could have been very different from the one we've seen play out over the past few years.

“I came here on December 24th,” Hernandez begins. “I went to Puerto Rico first. They have a big race over there for the Caribbean countries like Mexico, Panama, Puerto Rico and Venezuela. I got a visa for one month. So I went to Puerto Rico and rode there for two weeks. I finished second in the big race. I was a bug boy and won one race. A trainer I was riding for said: 'You should ride in the USA before your visa expires.' So I went back to Mexico and packed my things.”

Hernandez said he had a hard time getting into the U.S. because his visa was only for Puerto Rico. Finally, after four hours in an immigration office in San Francisco, amid threats of being sent back to Mexico, an officer allowed him entry.

“I told him: 'I don't have a job; I'm just here to find an agent who can help me with my papers' and (the officer) said: 'I'm going to give you one week.'”

The one week turned into two months and before long Hernandez had the papers and permission he needed to stay in the U.S. and pursue his riding career.

“I wanted to ride with the best riders here and when I told my parents I was coming here I was 17. My mom didn't want me to leave but I told her it was for just a couple of years. I would make money, save money and then come back. So they said: 'OK'.”

It's now been 12 years and Hernandez has married and has two boys. Before coming to Southern California to ride fulltime, he left his mark on the Northern California circuit with a couple of riding titles at Golden Gate Fields, winning the 2020 winter/spring meet by 78 victories.

It's not all hard work and no play for Hernandez. On his day off, he hits the gym in the morning and then might go play golf with some of the jockeys in the afternoon. But he mostly loves to spend time with his family. They're in San Diego for the summer.

“We went to the zoo the other day,” Hernandez says. “They're going to be here for another week and then they have to go back because my kids have school up in LA. I'm just trying to enjoy the time with them before they go back.”

He's been riding horses since he was 6-years old and first got up on a Thoroughbred when he was 14. With the way things are going, there are going to be a lot of fellow jockeys who will rue the day that happened.

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‘Just Devastating’: Amid Career Year, Ortiz’s Thoughts With His Eastern Kentucky In-Laws

John Ortiz is having a career year, his more than $3.5 million in purse earnings ranking No. 20 in America. His eight victories (out of 29 starts) matches Hall of Famer Steve Asmussen for the most this summer at Ellis Park. He is running romping debut-winner Justa Warrior in the $125,000 RUNHAPPY Ellis Park Debutante and Iowa Distaff runner-up Graysonsmacho Gal in the $125,000 Groupie Doll on the RUNHAPPY Meet at Ellis Park's signature card Sunday.

Ortiz was discussing his good fortunate on a post-card perfect morning at Ellis Park, the backdrop fluffy clouds against an azure-blue sky, when he noted the contrast to his wife Crystal's brother and sister in law in Breathitt County, which is reeling from the historic flooding in Eastern Kentucky.

Jason and Kayla Parks, like so many, had their home completely flooded. The water doesn't just go in and out. It stays there, wreaking further havoc.

“It's sad to hear that kind of news. I was talking to Reylu the other day,” said Ortiz, referring to jockey Reylu Gutierrez. “I said, 'We've got to stay humble. Here at Ellis, we're living the best meet we've had. We're winning races, doing well. We get to go home to our house and homes and apartments and our stuff. On the other side of the state, we have families in Eastern Kentucky – not just my family — who have lost everything they've worked so hard for. It's a small community. To lose just a little bit could be a lot for them.”

The Parkses are not connected to the racetrack. But Ortiz said his in-laws have been overwhelmed by the kindness and generosity that people in racing have shown them, including contributing to a GoFundMe account that Crystal Ortiz set up.

“Anything helps,” John Ortiz said. “And I've donated for other charities as well for other people, not just my own in-laws. But everybody in Eastern Kentucky needs a little hand right now, donating water or whatever we can. My wife went there the other day to help them clean up. She said it took a long time just scraping buckets and buckets of mud out of their cabinets. That's how high the water was.

“It's just devastating. You're going to get mold, and you ruin stuff, foundations. Just so much that can go wrong. It's just a humbling time right now where you understand that when we're doing well, we still can share that and help others.”

Meanwhile, business has to continue as usual at the track. Ortiz's stable has morphed from depending in large part on claiming horses to being populated with 2-year-olds. Justa Warrior, owned by Stone Bridge Farm, galloped to a five-length romp on July 22 at 5 1/2 furlongs at Ellis Park under Gutierrez.

“The barn and I were very high on her,” Ortiz said. “Physically looking at her, we always thought she was going to be a great horse. It was more like a workout for her. She just finished working this morning (Sunday) and she did the same thing: Sat three off and then goes by and opens up by two. She just likes passing. She likes the game. She enjoys what she's doing.”

Ortiz also has Boss Lady Bailey, who won by a head first time out at seven-eighths of a mile July 23. However, she'll await another stakes.

He acknowledges that he's thinking of the First Friday in May, when the Kentucky Oaks will be held at Churchill Downs.

“Every day you're going to wake up and think about something like that when you have a nice impressive filly,” he said of Justa Warrior, who drew post 12 in an overflow field for the Ellis Park Debutante. “You look at her, physically she looks great. She also has attitude to go with it, and I love a filly with attitude. They're just hungry. They're here to play the game. They want to be the alpha out there.”

Graysonsmacho Gal hadn't raced in nine months when she finished second by a head in the Iowa Distaff won by Jilted Bride, who also is running in the mile Groupie Doll. The 5-year-old Graysonsmacho Gal has raced at Ellis Park six times, winning three with a third. When she wins, she wins big. Her last three victories have been by 11 lengths, 17 (both at Ellis last summer) and 9 1/4 (at Keeneland's 2020 fall meet.)

“She's doing phenomenal,” Ortiz said. “She ran a tremendous first effort off the layup just to get beat a nose at the wire. Reylu knows her a little bit more now. She loves Ellis Park. I think that's the horse for the course.”

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‘Manny Has Really Come A Long Way With His Skill’: Chad Brown Grants Franco Two Grade 1 Mounts

Multiple Eclipse Award-winning trainer Chad Brown has been nothing short of dominant over the last decade with his trainees in the Arlington Million (Grade 1) and Beverly D. (G1). On Saturday, the veteran horseman will trust the riding services of New York-based rider Manny Franco with Sacred Life (FR) in the $1 million Arlington Million and Rougir (FR) in the $500,000 Beverly D.

“Manny has really come a long way with his skill,” Brown said Wednesday from Saratoga following Franco's victory aboard Inflation Adjusted in Race 5. “He really pays attention a lot, is always trying to get better at his profession and I see him at the best he's ever been right now. He has a really good agent with Jon Panagot who's really great to work with and he fits a lot of our horses well. He's willing to ride any level of horse. I find him equally effective on turf or dirt and he normally puts my horses in good positions.”

The 27-year-old Franco has five other calls on Saturday aside from Brown's duo. His other mounts are Intrigue (Race 2), Teepu (Race 3), Zeitlos (Race 4), California Twirl (Race 6) and Keystone Field (Race 10).

Brown will be in search of his of his record extending fifth victory in the Arlington Million. He first won the storied race in 2013 with Real Solution. Four years later he was victorious with Beach Patrol and followed up that win in 2018-19 with Robert Bruce (CHI) and the great Bricks and Mortar.

In the Beverly D., Brown is also the record holder for the most victories by a trainer with six. His first win the Beverly D. came in 2011 with Stacelita (FR). From 2015-19 he won the 1 1/8-mile race with Watsdachances (IRE), Sea Calisi (FR), Dacita (CHI) and back-to-back runnings with Sistercharlie (IRE).

Michael Dubb, Madaket Stables, Wonder Stables and Bethlehem Stables' recent $162,000 Monmouth Stakes (G3) winner Sacred Life was installed as the 9-2 fourth choice on the morning line in Saturday's Arlington Million while Peter Brant and Michael Tabor's Group 1 winner Rougir was tabbed as the 2-1 favorite in the Beverly D.

Saturday's first post at Churchill Downs is 12:45 p.m. (all times Eastern) and the Arlington Million will go as the Race 11 finale at 6:25 p.m. The Beverly D. will be staged six races early in Race 5 at 3:01 p.m.

The Arlington Million will be conducted in Lane 1 on the Matt Winn Turf Course while the Beverly D. will be contested in Lane 3, 24 feet from the inside rail.

Fans can still purchase tickets for Arlington Million Day. For ticket options and more information, visit www.churchilldowns.com.

Wagering is available for the Arlington Million and every race from Churchill Downs on www.TwinSpires.com, the official wagering provider of Churchill Downs Inc. and the Kentucky Derby.

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