NY Chaplaincy Sets Jockeys Vs. Horsemen Charity Basketball Game For August 4

The 13th annual jockeys versus horsemen charity basketball game, which benefits the programs of the New York Race Track Chaplaincy, will be played August 4 at the Saratoga Springs Recreation Center at 6:30 p.m. (ET).

The game is one of the most popular events on the Saratoga social calendar and it routinely attracts more than 300 fans. Admission is free.

The jockey team will once again be coached by Hall of Fame jockey Ángel Cordero Jr., with trainer Todd Pletcher and agent Kiaran McLaughlin coaching the horsemen team. Mitch Levites will serve as the announcer and provide lively commentary.

“This game is always immensely fun and beyond that, it raises much-needed funds to support our various programs,” said Humberto Chavez, the New York Chaplaincy lead chaplain and executive director. “Saratogians and so many of the fans who spend time in Saratoga have been great supporters of those who take care of the horses behind the scenes.”

Fans will be able to participate in raffles and one lucky fan will leave with a custom, autographed bobblehead of champion jockey Irad Ortiz Jr.

The NY Race Track Chaplaincy provides the backstretch community with children's enrichment, social service, and recreational programs, as well as educational opportunities, and non-denominational religious services.

Horsemen, individuals, or organizations who would like to sponsor the game may do so via the NY Chaplaincy website at www.rtcany.org or by contacting Eleanor Poppe at info@rtcany.org or 516-428-5267.

The post NY Chaplaincy Sets Jockeys Vs. Horsemen Charity Basketball Game For August 4 appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Figueroa Brothers Stage Family Reunion In Gulfstream Winner’s Circle

Brothers Nicky and Cesar Figueroa enjoyed a happy family reunion in the Gulfstream Park winner's circle Friday afternoon following The Great Kath's Race 4 victory.

Nicky Figueroa, who rode at the Hallandale Beach, Fla., track during a productive apprentice year in 2017 before returning to his native Puerto Rico to ride in early 2018, accepted his brother's invitation to ride for him at Gulfstream this weekend, and he made the most of the opportunity Friday. The 24-year-old jockey had to work hard in the 5 ½-furlong optional claiming allowance on Tapeta but managed to narrowly prevail aboard The Great Kath ($7.20), who is trained by his 22-year-old younger brother.

“This is a dream come true,” Cesar Figueroa said. “To come here from Puerto Rico and to bring my brother here to win today, I love it.”

“I'm happy that I did good for my brother, and I thank God,” said Nicky Figueroa, who is named to ride for Sweet Pearl (Race 2) and Starship Wizard (Race 8) for his brother on Saturday's card before returning to Puerto Rico's Camarero.

Cesar Figueroa was also able to celebrate the first victory of his training career with his brother at Camarero on March 12, 2020, when Nicky Figueroa scored aboard his brother's very first starter, Super Witch. While Nicky Figueroa continued to establish himself at Camarero, his younger brother ventured to Tampa Bay Downs with one horse in 2021 before moving east to Gulfstream Park and Palm Meadows Training Center, where he is currently training a stable of six horses with strong results.

Cesar Figueroa has saddled seven winners from 25 starters and is looking for more horses for his older brother to ride.

“I'm trying to get him to move here,” he said.

Nicky Figueroa said he doesn't have plans just yet to move back to South Florida.

“But when my brother calls, I'll be here to ride for him when I can make it,” he said.

The post Figueroa Brothers Stage Family Reunion In Gulfstream Winner’s Circle appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

‘Anxious To Get Back To Work,’ Kent Desormeaux Schedules Meeting With Del Mar Stewards

Hall of Fame jockey Kent Desormeaux is scheduled to appear before Del Mar stewards on July 29 in an attempt to resume his riding career, reports the Daily Racing Form. The rider has been suspended since March 4 for failing to appear before stewards to address alleged disorderly conduct and failure to abide by an agreement with the Winners Foundation concerning use of alcohol or other mind-altering substances.

The March 4 ruling says Desormeaux is suspended “pending an appearance at a hearing before a board of stewards to answer to charges alleging violation of CHRB rule No. 1874 (Disorderly Conduct – Causing a disturbance) and No. 1485(d) (License Subject to Conditions and Agreement – Failure to abide by an agreement with the Winners Foundation).”

Desormeaux has a history of alcohol-related issues, but attorney Roger Licht said the rider has undergone sobriety treatment in recent months.

“He sounds great and very anxious to get back to work,” Licht told DRF.

In the summer of 2020, Desormeaux was involved in a dispute at a Del Mar RV park that led to a 15-day suspension. He was reinstated after an in-patient rehabilitation program and received a conditional license after signing an agreement with the Winners Foundation to refrain from using “mind altering and mood changing substances” from Dec. 14, 2020, through Dec. 26, 2021.

The November 2021 incident, also at the Del Mar RV park and at which time Desormeaux admitted to consuming alcohol, was a violation of that agreement.

Desormeaux last rode on Jan. 23, 2022.

On Jan. 28, 2022, apparently unrelated to the issues in California, Desormeaux was arrested in Louisiana on charges of Domestic Abuse Battery/Strangulation, and later released on a $25,000 bond. No charges have yet been filed in that case, but Stronach Group officials said after the arrest that Desormeaux was “not welcome” to ride at their tracks, including Santa Anita Park and Golden Gate Fields in California.

Desormeaux's career includes 6,116 victories and over $290 million in earnings, with three Kentucky Derby wins and six Breeders' Cup victories.

Read more at the Daily Racing Form.

The post ‘Anxious To Get Back To Work,’ Kent Desormeaux Schedules Meeting With Del Mar Stewards appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

‘It’s All About The Horses’: Riley Mott Plans To Launch Training Career This Fall

Riley Mott, son of Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott, who has served as his father's assistant trainer for the past eight years, plans to go out on his own later this year. The younger Mott, who took out his training license in Florida this past winter, hopes to begin running horses in his name this fall.

Born in Hollywood, Fla., 30-year-old Mott grew up on the racing circuit his father traveled, spending springs and summers in New York and winters in Florida.

“I learned from an early age that training horses wasn't just a business, but a lifestyle,” said Mott. “I walked my first horse when I was six years old and immediately developed a love for the game.”

As he grew up, Mott continued to gain experience working in his father's barn, rubbing horses, walking hots and doing whatever he could to gain experience and responsibility. Eventually he was running the shed row and, in 2014, officially earned the title of assistant trainer, a position in which he still serves.

“Working my way from the ground up in our system was valuable experience for me because it allowed me to earn the respect of my coworkers,” said Mott, who attended the University of Kentucky and majored in economics. “One of the best pieces of advice I've ever received is not to ask someone to do something in the barn that you can't do yourself. It's important to show those you are leading that you're willing to jump in and work just as hard as they are.”

The elder Mott, one of the most accomplished trainers in North American racing history, has created a legacy that few can rival. Since taking out his trainer's license at age 15 and notching his first wins before he'd graduated high school, Mott worked his way up the ranks, exercise riding and working as a longtime assistant for fellow Hall of Fame trainer Jack Van Berg before going out on his own in 1978.

Over the years, Mott has logged wins in 10 Breeders' Cup races, as well as numerous Grade 1 races. His trainees have included Champions Cigar, Royal Delta, Tacitus, Yoshida, Elate, Close Hatches, Favorite Trick, Drosselmeyer, Theatrical, Tourist and Country House (among others), and he has received the Eclipse Award for Outstanding Trainer three times.

“Following in my dad's footsteps is something I think about every day. I hold him in such high regard both personally and professionally,” said the younger Mott of his father. “I often use his accomplishments as motivation to step up my game as both a horseman and a human.”

As Riley Mott has developed as a horseman under the guidance of his father, he has developed a keen eye and feel for soundness of equine athletes.

“We check every leg on every horse before training begins each day, and we put a big emphasis on jogging each horse up prior to training. Between that and monitoring closely how they're moving while on track, it gives us a great baseline on each individual horse and allows us to detect the slightest clinical changes in their legs or difference in their gait,” said Mott. “This has allowed me to develop a pretty well-trained eye.”

Mott says that several of his father's owners have offered to support him with horses and he has also started to pick up new clients as he prepares to venture out on his own.

“I have learned so much from working under the boss and everyone else in our operation, but by far the most important lesson I've learned from him is that no matter what, it's all about the horses,” said Mott. “You strive to look out for your owners' best interests and provide a healthy working environment for your staff, but to do that you must do right by your horses. You do that, and the rest will follow.”

Mott, along with his wife, Megan, and their nine-month-old daughter, Margot, live in Saratoga, N.Y. in the summer months but plan to move to Hot Springs, Ark., for the upcoming Oaklawn meet in November, and then move on to Kentucky for the rest of the year.

The post ‘It’s All About The Horses’: Riley Mott Plans To Launch Training Career This Fall appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights