Jockey Junior Alvarado Hoping To Build On Last Winter’s Success At Gulfstream

Having exceeded his own expectations in his full-time return to Gulfstream Park last winter, jockey Junior Alvarado is going about putting together an even better encore performance.

Alvarado was off to a strong start at the Championship Meet, ranking third in the rider standings with $1.4 million in purse earnings and fourth with 22 wins entering Wednesday's card. The 35-year-old has been in South Florida since opening day Dec. 3, after not arriving last year until the meet was nine days old.

“Even a month, month and a half before I came here [this year] I was looking forward to getting here,” Alvarado said. “You get the nice weather and you get to ride a lot of nice horses, too. I'm definitely very excited to be here.”

A native of Venezuela where he won his first career race in 2005, Alvarado ranked sixth with 53 wins and seventh with $2,355,580 in purse earnings during the 2020-2021 Championship Meet. Eight of his wins came in stakes, including Grade 3 triumphs in the Sweetest Chant, Canadian Turf, Hurricane Bertie and Appleton.

Alvarado notched a dozen multi-win days last winter, including a five-win day March 20 and a four-win day last Dec. 31. This winter he registered a double Dec. 5, 23, 26 and Jan. 9 and a triple Dec. 11, and scored his first stakes win in the Dec. 18 Fort Lauderdale (G2) aboard $1 million Pegasus World Cup Turf (G1) candidate Doswell.

“I would have to say last year was really kind of an unknown for me, just to come here and try for the first time after a while,” Alvarado said. “I didn't know what kind of trainers would ride me and I knew I had to put in a lot of work to get some trainers to look for me and give me a chance. I think we did pretty good last year.”

A year-round force in New York, where he has been a regular since 2010, Alvarado has worked his way to being a go-to rider for Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott. He rode 65 of Mott's starters last winter at Gulfstream with 17 wins, 18 seconds and five thirds, taking the Sweetest Chant with White Frost and the Cutler Bay and Palm Beach with Annex.

Overall, Alvarado won for 23 different trainers last winter with multiple victories for Antonio Sano, Jose D'Angelo, John Kimmel, Juan Carlos Avila, Carlos David, Carlos L. Perez and Hall of Famer Mark Casse.

Other wins came for Michael DePaulo, Francisco D'Angelo, Danny Gargan, William Tharrenos, Mark Hennig, Ron Spatz, Barclay Tagg, Armando De La Cerda, Jeremiah O'Dwyer, Gail Cox, Tom Bush, Hector Rodriguez, Antonio Cioffi and Hall of Famer Roger Attfield.

So far this year, Alvarado has won for Hall of Famer Todd Pletcher, Matthew Williams, Tharrenos, D'Angelo, Gilberto Zerpa, Jane Cibelli, Mott, Tagg, Sano, David, Armando De La Cerda, Kathleen O'Connell, Chris Davis and Championship Meet leader Saffie Joseph Jr. Alvarado and Joseph are 6-for-12 together with two seconds and a third.

“With Billy Mott and with so many other trainers, I think [last year's meet] was actually beyond what I thought it was going to be,” Alvarado said. “It was definitely greater than I thought.”

Alvarado rode his first race in the U.S. at Gulfstream Feb. 2, 2007, and registered his first domestic win aboard Satira in a maiden claiming race two weeks later. He moved on to the Chicago circuit in 2008, winning the 2009 riding title at Arlington Park, before venturing to New York.

Approaching 1,900 career victories, Alvarado parlayed his strong winter showing at Gulfstream into a career-high 14 graded-stakes in 2021 including the June 5 Jaipur (G1) at Belmont Park aboard Mott-trained Casa Creed. His previous season high was 10 graded wins in 2020, 2019 and 2015.

“I might not get the number one, top horses year-round, but most of the time we're winning a lot of big races around the country. This year has been no exception. Hopefully we can keep picking up nice horses and winning big races,” he said. “Once you get the nice ones, we'll try to stay on them as long as we can and we'll go anywhere we have to go to keep the mount.”

One change from last winter is that Alvarado's wife and three children, ages 2, 6 and 10, were unable to spend the entire season with him in Florida.

“Last year, I brought them here and they did their schooling on-line,” he said. “This year we couldn't do that; they had to stay at school. So I just came by myself and I'll be going back and forth every other week to visit and they'll come on their [vacation] days off so we'll make it work.”

In the meantime, Alvarado is focused on the task at hand.

“My goal is to win at least the same amount of races and hopefully more,” he said. “A lot of people know me now. They weren't sure about my riding style. I gained confidence last year through the meet and showed that I can ride here and hopefully that will help a little bit to get more business going and win more races.”

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Woodbine’s 5 Furlongs With Steven Chircop: On Hockey, The Beatles And TVG

Each week until opening day of the 2022 Woodbine Thoroughbred meet (April 16), a familiar name in the sport will be in the spotlight, answering some fun, offbeat questions, giving readers a unique perspective into their personality.

Steven Chircop (twitter.com/chircopracing) launched his training career in 2009. Since that time, he's become a graded stakes-winning conditioner, and racked up nearly 160 victories. His biggest highlight to date came with Kara's Orientation, a dark bay son of Orientate who captured the 2011 running of the Grade 2 Sky Classic Stakes. A former hockey standout, Chircop has passed down his love of racing to his 2-year-old daughter, Ava, something he recently shared on Twitter.

You take on one NHL player in an all-star competition. Who do you choose and why?
“I'd go with [Edmonton Oilers superstar] Connor McDavid because he's Canadian and the best player in the world. But no chance that I'd be able to take him in any event I'd face him in. I played defense and I was a pretty good passer, but there's no way I'd be able to get the better of him in anything.”

You get backstage passes at any concert for a singer/group, past or present. Who do you choose?
“I'd have to go with The Beatles. So much of their music were classics and they had so many hits. That era was a great one for music. My favorite song by them would be 'I Wanna Hold Your Hand.' I sing along when I hear them in the car, but I don't want anyone, myself included, to have to hear me sing. That wouldn't be good for anybody.”

You get to star on any TV show. Which one do you choose?
“I would love to be on TVG. I really enjoying watching it. I would love to do commentary on any racing. The documentaries on TVG are amazing. There is so much more to horse racing that people have no idea about it. The documentaries on the Breeders' Cup that I would watch when I was growing up, they got me so hooked on horse racing. Maybe I could guest host with Jeff [Bratt] and Jason [Portuondo] this year on the Woodbine shows.”

What's your favorite distance and course to watch a race at Woodbine?
“I like long races. I would say a mile and an eighth to a mile and a quarter on the E.P. Taylor Turf Course. The thing about it is, for the most part, when it comes to those long races on the turf at Woodbine, usually the best horse wins. I do like the Inner Turf at Woodbine, but you have to get a trip. When it's the long distances on the E.P. Taylor, there is so much room for the horses to run and for the riders to maneuver. You have so much time to not get yourself into trouble. I love those kind of races.”

What is your most memorable win at Woodbine?
For sure, it has to be the 2011 Sky Classic when Kara's Orientation won. I think about it often. I watch the video of the race on YouTube every now and again. It's unbelievable. To think how far that horse came, how young I was, how great the horse was, and how he won the race – it still amazes me. Everything was happening so fast for me when I started training. You almost don't appreciate … I knew how fortunate I was, but the more time goes on, the more you cherish those moments. You look at the trainers that had a horse in that race, people like Graham Motion, Roger Attfield, Mark Casse – to be able to be in a race against them and show that you could run with their horses is an unbelievable feeling.”

Kara's Orientation winning the Sky Classic

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Veterinary Researcher Swerczek, Who Discovered Secretariat’s Large Heart, Dies

Dr. Thomas Swerczek, longtime researcher and professor at the University of Kentucky, died on Jan. 9. Swerczek was best known to many laypeople in racing as the veterinarian who performed a necropsy on Secretariat and discovered Big Red's abnormally-large heart, which has been credited by many as the reason for his dominance on the racetrack.

Swerczek received his bachelor's degree in 1962 from Kansas State University, with a DVM to follow in 1964. He got a master's degree and a PhD from the University of Connecticut before taking a job in 1969 at the University of Kentucky's Department of Veterinary Science, where he worked until his retirement in 2018. Much of Swerczek's focus as a researcher was the potential impacts of electrolyte changes, particularly potassium and nitrate in winter pasture, and excesses or imbalances of those electrolytes in commercial grain.

According to an interview he gave in 2020, Swerczek came to believe such seasonal changes were responsible for the worsening of Secretariat's laminitis and that they could play a role in fetal losses in broodmares.

Swerczek served as a reviewer for the AVMA's American Journal of Veterinary Research, and had been on the editorial boards for the Journal of Equine Veterinary Science and Journal of Modern Horse Breeding.

A funeral mass is scheduled for Jan. 14 at the Cathedral of Christ the King in Lexington, Ky., with a burial to follow at Calvary Cemetery.

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Samantha Smith Joins TOBA As Director Of Marketing And Education

The Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association announced today that Samantha Smith has been named as its Director of Marketing and Education, effective February 7, 2022.

Samantha was most recently the Marketing & Communications Director at the United States Pony Club. She is a graduate of the University of Kentucky and previously served in several capacities at The Jockey Club, including as its Industry Initiatives Specialist.

“I am honored to be joining TOBA and look forward to all aspects of this role,” Smith said. “I am thrilled to contribute to an industry I am passionate about.”

Samantha will oversee the association's marketing, communications, social media, seminars, clinics and special events.

“We are very excited to welcome Samantha to TOBA, as her commitment and knowledge of the sport will help shape our growth as a strong national advocate representing the economic and integrity interests of Thoroughbred owners and breeders,” said TOBA president Dan Metzger.

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