Frankie Dettori: Jockey’s Room At Royal Ascot ‘A Timeless Place – You Never Feel Old’

Frankie Dettori was presented with a bespoke number cloth and Moet Nebuchadnezzar following his final Royal Ascot ride in the Golden Gates Handicap.

The 52-year-old rode his first Royal Ascot winner in 1990 and signed off with another four victories this year, headed by a ninth Gold Cup on Courage Mon Ami, bringing his total at the meeting to 81 winners.

After his final ride, Dettori said: “I had lunch today with the King and the Queen, then to ride in the Royal carriage procession was amazing, one of the best things I have ever done.

“To watch the crowds from the procession, and the cheers for the King and Queen throughout, the whole way from Windsor Castle was incredible. The love people have for the Royals, children with flags and banners – it is amazing. I was told not to wave when in the procession, which I found really, really hard.

“And then I got here and rode five races back-to-back, some disappointments, but overall I enjoyed the day. I didn't have time to reflect on any emotions because I was so busy. Of course I feel sad, but I've had a really good run at it. I probably will cry tomorrow, but at the moment I'm too tired.

“I'm pleased that I finished ahead of Ryan Moore [with more career Royal Ascot winners] because next year he will pass me. At the moment I'm second behind Lester Piggott and that is an honor.

“I've been so busy this week, and that's been good because it kept my mind off sulking too much or getting too emotional. Five days has gone like a flash, but I have another four months of riding. America, Hong Kong and Melbourne Cup after the Breeders' Cup.

“I would say my Royal Ascot highlight was when I won the first four races in 2019. I thought the grandstand was going to come down.

“It's funny, when I walked into the room [weighing room] today I thought I was 16 again. When we are in there it's like a timeless place – you never feel old. Ascot has been a lucky place for me – I've ridden some wonderful horses for great owners and trainers. I've been very lucky.

“It was probably a good thing that I didn't win on my final ride because I don't think I would have handled all the razzmatazz. I was able to walk back and be more relaxed and talk to Mark and Charlie Johnston. They said 'bad luck and it wasn't the fairytale you wanted', but nevertheless I've had a great week with my family in this beautiful weather at this beautiful track.”

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Rodriguez Pilots Four Winners On Laurel’s Sunday Card, Moves To Top Of Standings

Journeyman Jaime Rodriguez continued his sizzling summer by riding four winners Sunday at Laurel Park to hit the century mark and take over the lead in the summer meet jockey standings.

Rodriguez, 32, entered Sunday tied with Sheldon Russell and five-pound apprentice Axel Concepcion with eight wins apiece, then took the opener with 4-year-old gelding Vocalize ($10.20), trained by Horacio DePaz.

Russell won Race 2 Sunday aboard Kellan ($3), a 2-year-old filly making her second career start, before Rodriguez reeled off wins on Afandi ($6.60) in Race 5, Stern Chaser ($3.80) in Race 7 and Biogenic Babe ($4.80) in Race 8, the latter trained by Jamie Ness.

“I thought Jamie's filly ran really good,” Rodriguez said. “Everything was running good today and I'm very happy. Everything worked out right for me. It's a good day.”

It was the third multi-win performance for Rodriguez through the first nine days of the summer meet, which began June 9. He registered a hat trick June 23 and rode two winners June 18.

Laurel's winter meet riding champion, Rodriguez leads Russell, 12-9, in the standings. Rodriguez is also the leading rider at Delaware Park, 15-11, over Daniel Centeno. Rodriguez has topped the Delaware meet each of the past two years.

A native of Puerto Rico, Rodriguez has enjoyed a memorable first half of 2023. In addition to his first riding title in Maryland, he tied a Laurel Park record by riding seven winners on a single card March 17. Rodriguez also notched his 2,000th career victory June 15 at Delaware aboard Strugar, another Ness trainee.

Rodriguez now has 100 wins from 445 starters this year with $3.6 million in purse earnings.

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Coolmore Partnerships, O’Brien, Moore Secure Royal Ascot Titles

Coolmore partnerships consisting of Sue Magnier, Michael Tabor, Derrick Smith, Peter Brant, and Georg von Opel's Westerberg operation took the leading owner title at Royal Ascot for a fourth time when the meet closed Saturday, following an exceptional week that yielded four winners. Trainer Aidan O'Brien claimed a 12th leading trainer title while jockey Ryan Moore landed his 10th jockey title at the Royal meet.

The quartet of winners were all trained by O'Brien, with River Tiber and Paddington both scoring on the opening day in the Coventry Stakes (G2) and St. James's Palace Stakes (G1) under Ryan Moore. Warm Heart captured the Ribblesdale Stakes (G2) for Moore on Thursday, with the Wayne Lordan-ridden Age Of Kings taking Saturday's Jersey Stakes (G3).

Georg von Opel said: “It has been a fantastic week. We are blessed with a very, very good team and I am proud to be part of it, but there's a lot of people doing all the work. It's an incredible team and we're very lucky.

“Royal Ascot is the greatest event for horses in the world. Particularly from Germany, we have a production of 500-600 foals only, so this is huge for us. Of course, I've been living in England for 23 years with the family, who are all English, so I'm getting used to it a little bit, but it's still fantastic.

“It's not only the winners, but again it's a team effort – there have been a lot of seconds, a lot of thirds – so if you look at the whole armada of horses, it's an amazing effort by everybody who is involved with them. I'm proud of that.”

O'Brien's had four wins – the same total as John and Thady Gosden – and six seconds. The master of Ballydoyle was joined on the winners' list by both of his sons, with Joseph sending out two victories and Donnacha recording a first Royal Ascot success with Porta Fortuna in Friday's Albany Stakes (G3).

O'Brien said: “It's very special for the two lads [Joseph and Donnacha] to have winners as well. We know how difficult it is – we came here a lot of years with a lot of horses and didn't have any winners. It's very, very competitive, fiercely competitive. When you come here and have a winner, it's such a privilege.

“We came with a lot of horses this year and we hoped, but we never expected. We are so delighted to get the winners we got. Ryan [Moore] was brilliant, Wayne [Lordan] rode a winner today and a lot of people have put in a lot of hard work.

“The lads – John and Sue [Magnier], Michael and Doreen [Tabor], Derrick and Gay [Smith], Georg and Emily [von Opel] and Peter and Stephanie [Brant] – are the people that make it happen for us. They supply the horses and everything for everybody at Coolmore and Ballydoyle, who work very hard. So many faces that I won't mention because I would be here for a long time, but there are so many people that go into making it happen. It comes down to Ryan on the day. It's a difficult job but he is a superstar and we really appreciate that.

“I would think Paddington would be the highlight. He looks very different – he is progressing with every run and he travels and quickens. I know Ryan (Moore) was always taken by him and I think he was really blown away.”

Moore ended the week with six wins to secure a 10th leading jockey title at Royal Ascot. In addition to his wins on River Tiber, Paddington and Warm Heart, the rider also enjoyed success on Vauban for Willie Mullins in Tuesday's Copper Horse Handicap.

His two other wins were provided by Joseph O'Brien, with Okita Soushi taking Friday's Duke Of Edinburgh Handicap and Dawn Rising scoring in the meeting's final contest, the Queen Alexandra Stakes.

Moore said: “I had good rides, and I would have liked a few more. Aidan's horses have been in great form. I'd like to think it has been, and hope it has been, a good week for racing.”

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‘They Made Me Their Adopted Son From Peru’: Retiring Edgar Prado Grateful For Maryland Launchpad

In the days since announcing his retirement earlier this week, Edgar Prado has spent time reading, listening and answering a seemingly endless number of texts, phone calls and social media posts and tributes to his long and successful Hall of Fame riding career.

The thanks and well wishes came, and are still coming, from around the racing world including Maryland, where the recently turned 56-year-old native of Peru rose to national prominence in the 1990s and still considers home.

“It really touched my heart. I have a lot of friends still in Maryland. The phone was ringing off the hook. I'm sorry that I couldn't answer everyone,” Prado said. “It was a great feeling that I had some people that took the time to wish me happy retirement. I really enjoy the good memories together, either as a fan, as a trainer, groom, hotwalker. They still text me, so that was a great feeling. It's not only the cream of the crop, it was all the way from top to bottom. That makes me feel good.”

Though Prado launched his career in South Florida, debuting in April 1986 at Hialeah and bagging his first U.S. winner that June at Calder Race Course, then spent a short but successful time at Suffolk Downs in Boston, it was Maryland where his career took off and catapulted him to stardom.

Riding first call for trainer Bob Klesaris, who initially brought him from Florida to Massachusetts, Prado scored his first Maryland victory aboard $42 long shot Long Allure May 14, 1989 at Laurel Park. Equibase statistics show he would go on to win 2,098 more races at Laurel, another 1,241 at historic Pimlico Race Course and three at the Maryland State Fairgrounds in Timonium.

His 3,343 Maryland wins account for 46.9 percent of his career total of 7,119, which ranks him eighth all-time among North American riders and makes him one of just 10 to reach the 7,000 mark. He is ninth overall in purse earnings at $272,008,849, with $58,808,451 (21.6 percent) earned in Maryland, according to Equibase.

“Definitely, Maryland was my starting ground. It launched my career forward. The people received me so well over there and I was able to accomplish a lot and get to win a lot of races and put my name on the map,” Prado said. “It wasn't only one year or two years. I did it for 10 years, 11 years, and I'm proud of that.

“I'll always be so thankful that Maryland opened the door and gave me the opportunity. They made me their adopted son from Peru, and I was able to do my job and we did it great,” he added. “It was very sad to leave Maryland to test the waters and try something different, but by the same token if I wanted to go to the next level I had to do it when I did. This sport is getting younger and younger so I decided to try and see if I could do it in New York.”

Prado won 33 graded-stakes in Maryland including his first of 83 lifetime Grade 1s in the 1991 Washington D.C. International at Laurel aboard Leariva. He would add another Grade 1 Maryland triumph in the 2007 Frank J. De Francis Memorial Dash, also at Laurel, on 2008 male sprint champion Benny the Bull.

In addition Prado won multiple editions of races such as the Dixie (G2), General George (G2), Selima (G3), Laurel Turf Cup (G3), Gallorette (G3), Carousel (G3), Laurel Futurity (G3) and Martha Washington (G3), and also captured the 2007 Black-Eyed Susan (G2) with Panty Raid and 2005 Barbara Fritchie (G2) on Cativa.

During his time in Maryland, Prado led the state in wins six times and topped all North American jockeys in wins from 1997-99, recording more than 400 victories each year including an incredible 535 in 1997. He captured 14 riding titles at Pimlico and another 10 at Laurel before moving his tack to New York starting in the summer of 1999 at Saratoga.

A winner of 343 career graded-stakes, Prado is best known for his success with 2006 Florida Derby (G1) and Kentucky Derby (G1) winner Barbaro, chronicling their journey together in the best-selling book My Guy Barbaro. Prado won five Breeders' Cup races and two other Triple Crown events, ending the Triple Crown bids of War Emblem on 70-1 long shot Sarava in 2002 and Smarty Jones with 24-1 Birdstone in 2004.

The Eclipse Award champion jockey of 2006, when he earned a career-best $19.76 million in purses, Prado was elected to the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in 2008, choosing Klesaris to present him his plaque. He was also selected for the George Woolf (2003) and Mike Venezia (2006) memorial awards in voting by his peers.

“I think the biggest day or the highlight of my career is winning the Kentucky Derby with Barbaro. I've known [trainer] Michael Matz for a long time. I had been riding for him. I think every jockey's dream is winning the Derby. The Kentucky Derby is global. It's an international race. If you're from Peru and you don't have a chance to travel everywhere, that's going to be your dream.

“It's the same thing for jockeys all over the world. It was a blessing. It was one of the greatest experiences of my career, to ride that kind of horse in front of so many people and be so impressive. I had part of my family there,” he added. “And the things that he horse went through after that, it shows you that this game can take you to the highest level and make you humble the next day. I had to continue and make the best out of that. You can't let the lows keep you low. The sun is bright out there.”

Prado returned to the Mid-Atlantic circuit with Maryland as his home base in May 2016, winning the Laurel Dash and Safely Kept that year. In 2018, he became the all-time winningest jockey in Maryland Million history with his 18th victory, breaking a tie with fellow Hall of Famer Ramon Dominguez in the Classic aboard Saratoga Bob.

Nearly two decades after he left, Prado was touched by the reception he received from everyone upon his return to Maryland.

“Especially the fans,” he said. “All the trainers and owners, they give me the opportunity. Sometimes you're feeling great, you want to do great things and you're working hard, but a lot of the owners and trainers that I used to ride were gone, so you have to prove yourself. You have to be on top of that every day. I was lucky to win a couple stakes for [trainers John] Salzman and Katy Voss in the Maryland Million. It's my record for now, until someone else breaks it.”

Ultimately, Prado ended his career where it began, in South Florida. He had fewer than 100 mounts for the first time in 2022 and only two starts this year, finishing seventh on maiden Miss McBride Jan. 6 in his final mount.

“It was a tough decision to make in the beginning. My son just graduated from school, that's another accomplishment in my career as a father and a family. He's the last one out of three. I turned 56 June 12, so that was two reasons,” Prado said. “The older I get the less chance I will have to ride. If I go down, I have more of a chance to get hurt, too. Don't get me wrong, I'm not afraid to ride, but my kids are afraid I'll get hurt.

“I plan to spend some time with my wife, the grandkids. The family's getting big. Take care of the things I couldn't do when I was riding,” he added. “I see my family come for my birthday and we have fun and laugh and all that. I said, 'Look at all these things that I missed because I was trying to accomplish something.' That's the price you have to pay to be successful, I guess. The territory is not easy. It comes with ups and downs, and you have to just continue to go.”

Prado is on the go this weekend, taking part in Saturday's Jockeys and Jeans, a fundraiser for the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund in its ninth year and first in Las Vegas. After that he plans to head to California to visit his son, and he's been getting inquiries about visiting Old Friends in Kentucky.

“It's where Sarava and Birdstone are. I went to see them last year,” Prado said. “Sarava's getting old; they're both getting up there. They want to make it a big retirement party.”

As for the future, Prado plans to sit back and enjoy the ride – for now.

“I'm trying to take it easy, travel a little bit, me and my wife, go see my kids here and there, and I'll go from there. We'll see what happens,” he said. “Maybe something will show up. Maybe a steward or a bloodstock agent or a jockey agent. It's a very competitive world out there now.”

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