Apprentice Eduardo Diaz Wins First Out At Horseshoe Indianapolis

It was an evening that won't be forgotten anytime soon during the lone Quarter Horse race Thursday, Sept. 7. Luis Eduardo Diaz guided AE Just Dale to victory in his very first start as a jockey. The win with the 2-year-old Indiana bred was also a first for owner Aydin Eggleston.

Diaz was scheduled to make his debut aboard CV Dashin Layne, but an early scratch gave Trainer Tim Eggleston the nod to move his other entrant, Togoodtobelieve, in off the Also Eligible list. Rolando Pina was named to ride both horses, so that gave Eduardo the opportunity to go ahead and get his first career start as a jockey aboard AE Just Dale.

Starting from post nine, AE Just Dale moved out of the gate ready for action. Diaz, who is 20 years old and the younger brother of Jockey Edgar Diaz, kept the grey gelding focused during the 330-yard dash. He was a clear winner at the wire by one and one-quarter lengths. MG Pilot Boi and L. Daniel Martinez and Togoodtobelieve and Rolando Pina finished in a dead heat for second.

AE Just Dale paid $16.60 for the win. The Indiana bred son of Cartels Feature was raised by Aydin, who now owns the broodmare, Blur of Furr. She also has a yearling and a weanling in line for future starters at Horseshoe Indianapolis.

Aydin is the daughter of Keli and Tim Eggleston. She has been active on the barrel circuit in the Midwest for several years with multiple wins, but AE Just Dale marks her first win as a Quarter Horse owner. The horse carries her initials “AE” as her signature brand for ownership. Prior to his win, the gelding had four starts, including a qualifying effort for the Jaguar Rocket Futurity in late July.

“This is her baby,” said Keli of Aydin's AE Just Dale. “She raised this horse and has worked with him all the way to the races. This is an exciting day for her.”

For Eduardo, he has worked and studied alongside Pina as a member of the Eggleston team for the past year. He assisted the Eggleston crew with breaking babies at their farm last winter and gallops many of their horses at the farm en route to the races at Horseshoe Indianapolis. He was greeted by the entire jockey colony outside the paddock to congratulate him on his win.

Before the race, Eduardo said, “I'm really excited about riding today. I'm ready.”

He proved that statement was correct.

The 21st season of live Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse racing extends through Friday, Nov. 17. Live racing is held Tuesday through Thursday with Saturday racing added in during the summer months. First post Tuesday and Wednesday is 2:30 p.m. Thursday and select Friday racing begins at 2:10 p.m. The Summer Saturday Racing Series includes three more all-Quarter Horse dates Aug. 12, Sept. 2, and Oct. 7 beginning at 10:45 a.m. For more information on live racing at Horseshoe Indianapolis, visit www.caesars.com/horseshoe-indianapolis.

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Jockey Of The Week: Junior Alvarado, Jose Lezcano Tied In Voting With Five Total Stakes Wins

Closing weekend at Saratoga always presents a multitude of stakes opportunities and Junior Alvarado and Jose Lezcano made the most of their jockey assignments.

With 10 stakes carded, Alvarado and Lezcano accounted for five stakes wins leading to a tie in voting for Jockey of the Week August 28 through September 4 by the panel of racing experts. The award recognizes jockeys for riding accomplishments and who are members of the Jockeys' Guild, the organization which represents more than 1050 active, retired and permanently disabled jockeys in the United States.

Alvarado began closing week on Wednesday riding for Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott aboard Magic Cross in the P.G. Johnson for 2-year-old fillies, which was originally scheduled for the turf but moved to the dirt. Off as the favorite in the scratched down field of four, Magic Cross broke a step slow but gained control along the inside and out dueled Takemetothebeach to post a powerful 4 1/2-length win in 1:40.15 for one mile.

On Saturday, Alvarado was honored with the Mike Venezia Memorial Award in a winner's circle ceremony. The award is presented annually by NYRA to a jockey who displays extraordinary sportsmanship and citizenship that personified Venezia, who died as a result of on-track injuries in 1988.

On closing day Monday, trainer Gary Contessa gave a leg up to Alvarado aboard Nutella Fella in the Grade 1 Hopeful for 2-year-olds at seven furlongs. Breaking last in the field of 10 after acting up in the gate, Nutella Fella took advantage of a hot pace to out finish race favorite Timberlake for the win by 1 1/2 lengths in 1:24.41.

On Saturday, Lezcano won his first stakes of closing weekend aboard Alva Starr for trainer Brent Brinkman in the G2 Prioress for 3-year-old fillies. Breaking from post position four in the field of five, Alva Starr pressed the pace through the opening quarter. Approaching the top of the lane, Alva Starr was confronted by race favorite Dazzling Blue but Lezcano asked his filly and she responded to post a powerful 8 3/4-length win in 1:09.14.

Also on Saturday, trainer David Donk gave a leg up to Lezcano on Thin White Duke in the Harvey Pack. Thin White Duke settled at the back of the compact field of six before wearing down the favorite Big Invasion to post a neck win in 1:02.18 for the 5 1/2-furlong sprint.

Lezcano posted his third stakes victory of the week on Monday with Pioneering Spirit for trainer Linda Rice in the Bernard Baruch. Pioneering Spirit raced within striking distance of pace setter Bring Me a Check before taking command a furlong from the finish edging clear to win by 2 3/4 lengths in 1:40.69.

Alvarado and Lezcano out polled Declan Cannon with two stakes wins at Kentucky Downs including the G3 Dueling Grounds Derby, Paco Lopez with 17 wins to lead all jockeys for the week including two stakes wins, and Flavien Prat who won the G1 Pacific Classic and the G2 Del Mar Mile.

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‘It’s More Than I Ever Dreamed Would Happen’: Latest Career Milestone ‘Huge’ For Trainer Kieron Magee

All things considered; Kieron Magee has done remarkably well at a job he never really wanted.

Nearly two decades ago, working as a salaried exercise rider for trainer Dale Capuano after having freelanced on the Maryland circuit for years since coming to the U.S. from Ireland, Magee knew a career change was coming.

Training horses? It wasn't at the top of his list. In fact, it wasn't even on his list.

“I galloped horses since I was a kid but my heart was running out. I broke my back twice and I was scared. I was 43 or 44, somewhere around there, and my heart was coming to an end quickly,” Magee, 62, said. “One of my owners, a guy called Bo Williams, said to me, 'Kieron, it's time you started training horses.' I said, 'Nah, I'm not going to do that.' He asked me what I was going to do and I said, 'I don't know, but it ain't training horses.'”

Williams and Magee's wife, Kelly, thought differently and their persistence in changing his mind paid off. What has followed is a career that includes multiple meet titles at historic Pimlico Race Course and Laurel Park, being Maryland's overall leading trainer three times, more than $20 million in purse earnings and, most recently, reaching the 1,000 victory mark.

Magee's latest milestone came Aug. 27 during the Maryland State Fair meet in Timonium when Moshe Mark's Viking Queen, ridden by Carol Cedeno, got up in the final strides as the 1-5 favorite. It was the sixth career win for the 4-year-old filly, who Magee claimed for $5,000 two starts earlier.

“It felt like it took forever, but I'm glad to put it behind me as they say,” Magee said. “It's more than I ever dreamed would happen, believe me. I didn't want to do this when it was presented to me. I'd watched so many people struggle doing this and I was like, 'I don't want to do this.' So, to hit the thousand mark is huge. Huge.”

His father was working for Anheuser-Busch in St. Louis when Magee was born, but after a few years they returned to County Wicklow in his native Ireland, where he passed the love of horses on to his son. Magee eventually came back to the U.S. and landed in Maryland where, starting at Timonium, he worked as an exercise rider for hire.

“[I rode for] everybody. Anybody who'd pay cash. I was a cash kind of guy. Toward the end I went on salary for Dale Capuano for four or five years. There were some others I galloped for along the way, but mostly I freelanced,” Magee said. “I started galloping here in 1983. It was $5 a head at the time. Times have changed.”

At the same time, Magee said, he was battling substance abuse issues that landed him in rehab more than once before getting clean. He saddled his first winner, Cry of the Loon, July 16, 1999 at Monmouth Park, but wouldn't turn to training full time for another eight years.

“I thought maybe I'd get a job driving a truck or something like that. I kept saying there's no sense in my doing this. I'd watched people struggle all their lives with this and not win many races and go broke along the way and I just can't do it,” Magee said. “[Williams] said, 'That doesn't mean you'll be like that.' I didn't want to do it. I had a wife and a daughter and didn't want to do it.

“Well, he talked me into it and my wife talked me into it. She said, 'You know what? It's time to do something. I'm tired of being married to an exercise rider.' So, I took one horse for him. I had one horse I was breaking for him and he told me to just keep the horse. Then a couple days later he sent me three more and I called him and said, 'What's with these horses?' And he said, 'You can't make a living on one horse.' That was the beginning. Then Helen Marshall, one of my oldest owners, was the next one to join me and it went from there.”

Magee saw his starters, wins and purse earnings steadily climb, topping $1 million for the first time in a season in 2014. He averaged 117 wins over the next three years capped by a high of 127 in 2017 to go along with more than $2.5 million in purses earned, also a career best.

From 2014-16 no trainer won more races in Maryland than Magee. He owns or shares 10 meet titles – four at Pimlico, which he has called home since the early 1980s, and six at Laurel including its spring stand that ended May 7.

Magee worked hard and paid attention as he worked his way up, particularly during his time with Capuano and Scott Lake. Between 1993 and 2010 Capuano, who retired this year, and Lake won nearly four dozen training titles in Maryland. Together they have combined for more than 10,000 wins.

“I have to say I worked for some good people and not so good people and sort of combined it all,” Magee said. “I learned a lot from Dale Capuano. I did a short stint and worked for Scott Lake for a little while. He's not a big galloper, he's a big jogger. When I worked for him, he was winning a lot of races. That was in the mid-90s when he was rolling.”

Though his success has primarily come with claiming horses, Magee has trained several stakes winners and multiple six-figure earners. His best was Artful Splatter, a mare he claimed for $16,000 in 2019 at Laurel who would go on to win Laurel's Geisha and Delaware Park's George Rosenberger Memorial in 2020.

Line of Best Fit won her first start after joining Magee in the spring of 2016 and the following year ran third behind two-time champion and 2023 Hall of Famer Songbird in the Delaware Handicap (G1). Two starts later, Line of Best Fit capture the Shine Again at Laurel.

Another of Magee's hard knockers was Struth, who he claimed for $20,000 out of a May 2017 win at Pimlico and later that year won the Hockessin at Delaware and the Howard Bender Memorial at Laurel.

“I claimed them all,” Magee said. “Artful Splatter we took for $16,000 and she won around $400,000 for us. She was a fun horse. She loved the mud.”

Currently, Magee's top horse is Super C Racing Inc.'s Classier, who he claimed for $40,000 out of a March 19 win at Laurel. At one time trained by Bob Baffert, for whom he won the 2021 Los Alamitos Derby (G3), Classier was a winner of an off-the-turf Henry S. Clark April 29 at Laurel and most recently ran seventh in the Aug. 25 Russell Road at Charles Town.

“He's made [$124,282] since the claim,” Magee said. “We won the stake and a couple allowance races. He's a nice horse.”

Magee continues the quest for the next 1,000 wins at home, during Pimlico's boutique nine-day fall meet that runs Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays from Sept. 8-24. Eight months into 2023, he had 54 wins and $1.4 million in purse earnings from 237 starters.

“When they're supposed to win it's not a big deal, but when you don't expect anything and something good happens, that makes it so much more fun,” Magee said.

“Let me tell you, there were many times along the way where we struggled to make payroll, pay our bills and everything else. It hasn't always been easy,” Magee said. “The only sad thing is that my mother is not here to watch it all. She would have loved to have been on this ride.”

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Hall of Fame Jockeys Among Celebrities To Participate In Lexington’s Hope Center Golf Classic

The Lexington Community, in partnership with The Hope Center, announced Wednesday a list of prominent sports and other celebrities who will be participating The Hope Center Celebrity Golf Classic & Gala Dinner. The two-day event will be held on October 15 and 16 in Lexington, Ky. to support The Hope Center Veteran & Housing Initiative.

The list of participating celebrities announced today includes:

  • Hall of Fame jockeys Steve Cauthen, Laffit Pincay, Jr., Sandy Hawley, Bill Boland, Jacinto Vasquez, Alex Solis, and Chris McCarron;
  • Additional jockeys, including: Robby Albarado, Shane Sellers, Corey Lanerie, James Graham, and Jesus Castanon;
  • Breeders' Cup Classic-winning trainer Ian Wilkes;
  • Former KY Derby announcer Mike Battaglia;
  • Former University of Kentucky basketball player Kyle Macy;
  • Former Cleveland Browns player and Lexington native Frank Minnifield; and
  • Actor Marc McClure, best known for his role as Jimmy Olsen in the “Superman” films.

The Hope Center Veteran & Housing Initiative has been designed to continue the mission of The Hope Center, of providing shelter, housing, recovery, and support services, and to raise funds for the completion of The Hope Center's new Transitional Housing Center, a premier substance recovery center that will focus on serving the veteran community.

“We are honored to have the involvement of so many accomplished celebrities in The Hope Center Celebrity Golf Classic and Gala Dinner,” said Julie Hamilton, a member of the Executive Committee of the Hope Center Veteran & Housing Initiative. “Addiction and homelessness are issues that impact so many veterans, individuals, and families throughout the Commonwealth, and we hope that our event can raise the funds needed to offer greater access to recovery and support, through The Hope Center's Transitional Housing Center. We are deeply grateful for the support of these generous and talented celebrities, and we're thrilled for what promises to be a wonderful event in October.”

The two-day Hope Center Celebrity Golf Classic & Gala Dinner will begin on October 15th with a dinner, a silent auction, and a live auction hosted at the Marriott Griffin Gate. Guests will have the opportunity to bid to play golf during the Golf Classic with their favorite Hall of Fame jockeys, athletes, and celebrities. Items available through the live auction include a one-week stay at a beach house on Abaco Island in the Bahamas, five nights on a luxury houseboat on at the Lee's Ford Marina on Lake Cumberland, and a one-week stay at a condo on the beach in Hilton Head, SC.

On October 16th, all registered golfers will enjoy a full day of golf at the University Club. Hole-in-one prizes – including four new cars – will be offered throughout the course. In addition to these prizes, the event will feature a ticketed, $1 million hole-in-one shootout.

More information about The Hope Center Celebrity Golf Classic & Gala Dinner, including sponsorship information, is available at www.HopeCenterClassic.com.

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