The Jockey Club Announces Recipients Of Five Academic Scholarships

The Jockey Club announced today the recipients of its five academic scholarships, which will be awarded for the 2021-2022 academic year. In November 2020, The Jockey Club announced the creation of three new scholarships to support individuals from diverse backgrounds who are interested in pursuing a career in the Thoroughbred industry: The Jockey Club Advancement of Women in Racing Scholarship, The Jockey Club Vision Scholarship, and The Jockey Club Benevolence Scholarship. These awards are in addition to The Jockey Club Scholarship and The Jockey Club Jack Goodman Scholarship.

Julie Corral has been selected to receive The Jockey Club Scholarship, which provides $15,000 ($7,500 per semester) to a student who is pursuing a bachelor's degree or higher at any university and has demonstrated interest in pursuing a career in the Thoroughbred industry. Corral, a veterinary student at the University of Pennsylvania, aims to become a racetrack veterinarian.

Eric DeCoster has been selected for the second straight year for The Jockey Club Jack Goodman Scholarship ($6,000; $3,000 per semester), which is awarded annually to a student enrolled in the University of Arizona Race Track Industry Program (RTIP). DeCoster, a sophomore in the RTIP, is interested in pursuing a career in bloodstock.

The inaugural winner of The Jockey Club Advancement of Women in Racing Scholarship ($20,000; $10,000 per semester), which is open to women pursuing a career in the Thoroughbred industry, is Elizabeth Galletta. Galletta, a student at Midway University and farm manager of Daisy Acres, a breeding farm in Paris, Ky., intends to make her career in the reproductive sector.

Jeffrey Mitchell Jr. is the recipient of The Jockey Club Vision Scholarship ($20,000; $10,000 per semester), which is open to students from a minority racial or ethnic group who are pursuing a career in the Thoroughbred industry. Mitchell is working toward his master's degree in veterinary science at the University of Kentucky and is a research assistant in the Maxwell H. Gluck Equine Research Center's Reproductive Health Laboratory. He aspires to become a veterinarian.

The Jockey Club Benevolence Scholarship ($15,000; $7,500 per semester) is a need-based award to enable a student to attend a full-time program at a college, university, or trade program and gives preference to children of backstretch and farm workers. The inaugural winner is Vanessa Sanchez, a student at Pace University in New York, who is interested in equine marketing.

“Our expanded scholarship offerings are part of The Jockey Club's strategy to address diversity in the Thoroughbred industry, and we were heartened by the response to this initiative, with more than 150 applications submitted,” said James L. Gagliano, president and chief operating officer of The Jockey Club. “We are proud to support these five outstanding individuals and are confident that they will make a positive impact in their areas of interest.”

Applications for the 2022-2023 academic year will open this fall.

The Jockey Club, founded in 1894 and dedicated to the improvement of Thoroughbred breeding and racing, is the breed registry for North American Thoroughbreds. In fulfillment of its mission, The Jockey Club, directly or through subsidiaries, provides support and leadership on a wide range of important industry initiatives, and it serves the information and technology needs of owners, breeders, media, fans and farms. It founded America's Best Racing (americasbestracing.net), the broad-based fan development initiative for Thoroughbred racing, and in partnership with the Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association, operates OwnerView (ownerview.com), the ownership resource. Additional information is available at jockeyclub.com.

The post The Jockey Club Announces Recipients Of Five Academic Scholarships appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Horses Fine, Jockeys Evaluated After Three-Way Spill At Belmont

A three-horse spill at Belmont resulted in no injuries to horses and evaluations for riders after a scary incident in the eighth race on Thursday. Sport Model, piloted by Junior Alvarado, clipped heels with rival Wish For Magic at the 5/16ths pole and tripped badly, dropping Alvarado. At the time, Sport Model was ahead of several horses. Undetectable, with Manuel Franco up, was bumped around the same time and then fell over Sport Model. Sailor's Treasure with rider Pablo Fragoso collided with the fallen horses and also fell.

All three horses got up quickly and were caught by outriders before being led off the track.

According to a NYRA spokesman, Franco was cleared by first aid at the track. Alvarado and Fragoso were taken to a nearby hospital for evaluation. Tests and scans on Alvarado to check for traumatic brain injury were negative and he was sent home. Fragoso is also believed to have escaped serious injury.

Several horses who remained upright during the incident had to check sharply and were eased through the final part of the race, according to the Equibase chart — New York Banker, Lass, and Madame Rose, who finished seventh, eighth, and ninth.

Earlier in the card, rider Jose Ortiz was unseated in the fifth race by Fast Getaway. He was cleared to return to work by first aid and the horse returned to his connections by the finish line.

The post Horses Fine, Jockeys Evaluated After Three-Way Spill At Belmont appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Aidan Green Celebrates Her First Stakes Winner At Oaklawn Park

Aidan Green has made a name for herself this year at Oaklawn. Emphasis on “her.”

In what has become a running joke, Green noted that some people have praised the trainer for “his” snowballing success during the 51-day meeting that ends May 1. Perhaps, the confusion abated somewhat last Friday when Green saddled her first career stakes winner (Blame J D) in the $150,000 Rainbow for 3-year-old Arkansas-bred sprinters.

“I hope so,” Green, 33, said with a laugh. “That might have been the win to do it.”

The Rainbow marked the eighth career winner for Green – all this year at Oaklawn – and placed her in a tie for 11th in the local standings through Sunday. She also had five seconds and seven thirds from just 31 starters.

Green began the meeting with four horses, but her stable has grown to approximately 10 through claims. Green saddled her first career winner recognized by Equibase, racing's official data gathering organization, Feb. 11 with one-time Triple Crown hopeful Kristo. It was the 21st recognized starter for Green, who saddled her first horse in 2020, according to Equibase.

Green's unquestioned star is Blame J D, a gelded son of champion Blame for local breeder/owner James W. Matheney Jr. Blame J D has a 2-0-1 record in four career starts at the meeting and bankrolled $155,050.

“He's as good as I've had so far,” Green said. “As an Arkie-bred, he hasn't shown any weaknesses, really.”

Blame J D was broken by Green's husband/assistant, Ike Green, who has 98 career training victories, the last coming in 2014, according to Equibase. Green also unearthed and broke multiple Grade 1 winner and 2018 Triple Crown hopeful Bolt d'Oro when working for former business associate Mick Ruis.

Green assisted trainer Robertino Diodoro the last two years at Oaklawn, helping him capture his first local title in 2020 and Diodoro's major client, M and M Racing (Mike and Mickala Sisk), set a single-season Oaklawn record for victories by an owner with 61 in 2019. Green, among other things, also breaks horses for a local pinhooking group and hauls horses for M and M.

Aidan Green's high winning percentage coincides with having three young children, handling administrative issues for Diodoro (licensing, reservations, etc.) and dabbling in professional photography (she's booked four weddings this year).

“Kids and horses, that's all we do,” Ike Green said. “That's it.”

Aidan Green grew up in Canada around Quarter-Horses and draft horses her family owned and was a star volleyball player. She signed with Texas Tech before transferring to Texas-El Paso, where she was a four-year letterman (2006, 2007, 2008 and 2009). Green said she met her future husband in 2010 when he was training at Sunland Park in suburban El Paso. They married in 2013 and have three children – Olivia, 5; Owen, 4; and Oakley, 6 months.

As many races as Aidan Green has won this year at Oaklawn, it might seem like she's raising her kids in the Larry Snyder Winner's Circle. Normally after each victory, Green has her picture taken holding Oakley, with Olivia and Owen standing directly behind her on a platform.

“Our kids are pretty infamous back here, but anybody outside of the backside probably doesn't know or think that I have three,” Green said. “The other day, Olivia and Owen were standing on the edge of the paddock rail and this lady walked up and said, 'Where is your guys' mom?' And they're like, 'In there.' She thought they were on their own.”

If she's not saddling a horse or visiting the winner's circle, you might see Aidan Green, between races, carrying Oakley or pushing him in a stroller. The spirited Olivia and Owen could be racing or playing on the first floor of the grandstand or grandstand apron, often interacting with Diodoro and some of his employees.

“Don't get wrong, they're good kids,” Diodoro said. “But they're wild suckers. They're not the typical kids, get them up early and make them play and then they'll get a nap. They've got energized batteries in them. I've never seen kids like this. They might get a little cranky, but they don't stop. It's just, 'Go. Go. Go.' It's nuts.”

Diodoro calls Ike Green, 41, “a very good horseman” and said his wife possesses the organizational skills of a “computer.” The Greens, in the past few years, have overseen divisions for Diodoro at Churchill Downs and Saratoga before opting to focus more on developing their own stock.

Aidan Green said Team Green is a Team effort.

“It wouldn't really matter either way, if they ran in Ike's name,” Aidan Green said. “He was going to do more the baby side of things on the farm and we didn't want any conflict of interest, Diodoro and Ike, since he was his assistant. We just went this way and I'm loving it. I really am. We always laugh that when I first started dating Ike, I said: 'I hire, I fire and I pay' because you're up at the track all morning and I'm at the barn and they don't listen to me if you pay them. That was our rule. We've come a long way since then.”

Except that part about Aidan being a “she” and not a “he.” Green pointed to a well-known national horse racing podcast as a recent comical example.

“My nephew was laughing at one video because he said they talked like they know you, but then they still call you a guy,” Green said. “One guy said, 'A lot of you don't know this about Aidan Green, but he is young and he is striving.' Somebody commented: 'You know, that's a girl, right?' ”

The Greens keep broodmares on their eight-acre farm about 15 minutes southwest of Oaklawn. Ike Green said they'll likely remain in the Hot Springs area this summer and send a handful of horses to his brother, trainer Greg Green, at Lone Star Park.

The post Aidan Green Celebrates Her First Stakes Winner At Oaklawn Park appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Lost And Found Presented By LubriSYNHA: Channing Hill May Not Be Done Riding Yet

Life for a jockey can change in an instant. For Channing Hill, unrelated events took him in a new direction and in hindsight could be viewed as setbacks or opportunities.

A 2005 Eclipse Award finalist as outstanding apprentice, Hill sees the proverbial glass as half full. A year after being sidelined by severe neck and back injuries, he is relishing time with family as he eases closer to a return to the saddle.

“I am lucky,” he said. “I have seen these same types of injuries and how much different it can turn out. I feel very fortunate.”

Hill was injured at Oaklawn Park when his mount went down on April 17, 2020. Three days later, he underwent surgery in Hot Springs, Ark., and shortly thereafter returned to his Louisville home. He has no timetable, but is optimistic for a return.

“I am just taking it as it comes,” Hill said. “I don't want to push myself now and maybe get worse later on. I am going to let my body and my doctors tell me when I am ready.”

Except for issues with his left hand, Hill said he is in great shape for looking after the three children he has with wife Shelbi, daughter of trainer Wayne Catalano. The youngest two — at ages 18 months and nearly three — have the usual age-related requirements, while their 7-year-old son gave him a surprise assignment he could not foresee. In addition to his role as a dad, Hill took on the job of educator when schools closed due to the pandemic. Like so many youngsters who were required to stay home and learn virtually, Waylon did not adapt well.

“I became his teacher,” Hill said.

Fortunately, that task concluded when schools reopened this spring after nearly a year. The Hill clan will summer in the Chicago area this summer while Shelbi works for Arlington Park in what is expected to be the track's final season.

“I will stay home with the kids and try to get better and healthier and see where the year takes me,” he said. “I feel really good. I have been doing some exercising on my own. I really can't use my left hand but the rest of me feels really good.”

Like father, like son

In some ways, Hill's lifestyle mimics his own upbringing in which he was closely connected to his father, Allan Hill, a Nebraska exercise rider and jockey.

When he was about 12, he began traveling the racing circuit with his father, who won 667 races from 8,520 mounts. The experience included working at odds jobs in the jockeys' quarters that inspired his interest in following his father's career. He had no personal knowledge of horses until he took lessons on ponies at the farm of a family friend. A natural talent, he quickly graduated to Thoroughbreds.

As soon as he turned 16, Hill obtained his jockey's license and rode his first three races at the track in Columbus, Neb., in 2003. By 2004, after competing at Columbus, Lincoln Park, and Prairie Meadows, he shifted his base to Aqueduct. He was a logical choice for the Eclipse Award when he closed 2005 with 135 wins and $5 million in purses. With slightly better statistics, the honor went to Emma-Jayne Wilson, who sat near Hill, his father and friends at the awards ceremony at the legendary Beverly Wilshire Hotel in Beverly Hills, Calif.

“The one thing that struck me as the biggest that night was Emma-Jayne,” he said. “She and her agent were the nicest, most gracious winners I have ever seen. They were so classy. That made me cheer for her even more.”

As Hill proceeds to his return to racing riding, his record stands at 1,204 victories and $51,355,057 in earnings from 10,987 mounts. His triumphs include the Grade 1 Forego Handicap in 2008 for Hall of Famer Bobby Frankel and owner-breeder Juddmonte Farms on First Defence. Other achievements include several graded scores aboard Catalano-trained Farrell and finishing third in the 2017 Preakness Stakes aboard Senior Investment.

As Hill looks forward to adding to his stats, he is capitalizing on his extended holiday.

“I am happy that I am able to be home and take this as an opportunity to be with my family,” he said. “This is the only way a jockey can get a long vacation. I am maximizing my time with my kids for however much time I have off.”

The post Lost And Found Presented By LubriSYNHA: Channing Hill May Not Be Done Riding Yet appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights