Pegram To Receive Chairman’s Award From Thoroughbred Owners Of California

Mike Pegram has been selected by the Thoroughbred Owners of California (TOC) to receive the 2022 Ed Friendly Industry Service Award, also known as the Chairman's Award. The award is presented annually to recognize outstanding contributions and service in the Thoroughbred racing industry. Among former recipients are some of the most prominent names in California racing, including Mace Siegel, John Harris, Bob and Beverly Lewis, Jerry and Ann Moss, and Clement Hirsch.

Pegram served on the TOC board from 2010 to 2019 and as Chairman of the Board from 2012 to 2016. During his tenure as chairman, he successfully steered the organization through tumultuous times, leaving TOC in a strong operational and financial position. He was incredibly committed to the future of our racetracks, our purse structure, and the health of our sport.

In 2010, TOC successfully supported passage of SB 1072, which provided for a takeout increase with all of the additional revenue going to purses. Over the next several years, Pegram led the board in fending off attacks from within the industry to repeal or modify the legislation, standing firm in his commitment to protect the 1072 purse contributions, which have since provided tens of millions of dollars in much needed purses to California horsemen.

Widely known for being one of the friendliest and most fun-loving horsemen in the sport, Pegram credits much of his success in racing to the fact that he put his trust in long-time trainer Bob Baffert, who Pegram supplied with many of the trainer's biggest stars.

Pegram has campaigned many outstanding runners, including champions Real Quiet and Silverbulletday, and Dubai World Cup winner Captain Steve. He has also campaigned many graded stakes runners with his two longtime partners, Karl Watson and Paul Weitman, including champion sprinter Midnight Lute, champion Lookin At Lucky, Cave Rock, Hoppertunity, Pretty N Cool, Midnight Lucky, Fiftyshadesofhay, Executiveprivilege, and Coil.

“Mike is an exceptional leader who continues to make a lasting impact on both this organization and California racing,” said TOC Chairman Gary Fenton. “His dedication, hard work, and commitment are an inspiration to all of us, and we are proud to honor him with this well-deserved award.”

Pegram will be recognized at TOC's Southern California Annual Meeting at Del Mar on Aug. 12.

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Jaime Rodriguez Hits 2,000-Win Milestone With Delaware Park Victory

Two-time defending Delaware Park leading rider Jaime Rodriguez notched career victory 2,000 at Delaware Park on Thursday.

The milestone win came in the fourth race when Morris Kernan Jr., Yo Berbs & Jagger's Strugar posted 1 ½-length triumph in a $22,000 starter allowance.  The 7-year-old Kentucky-bred son of Hard Spun was trained by Jamie Ness.

Rodriguez, a  32-year-old native of Puerto Rico, notched his 1,000th winner at Mahoning Valley on February 21, 2018 after moving to the mainland U.S. in 2010. He came to the Midatlantic after riding at New York Racing Association tracks and Finger Lakes in New York, where he dominated the standings.

He won the winter meet riding title at Laurel Park earlier this year.

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NBA Finals MVP Nikola Jokic Has A Passion For Horse Racing

It seemed like all of harness racing was rooting for the Denver Nuggets to win their first NBA championship on the night of June 12, and the reason is Nikola Jokic.

Jokic, considered by just about everyone who knows basketball to be the best player on Earth, led his Nuggets to a 94-89 victory over the Miami Heat, giving Denver a four-games-to-one win of the best-of-seven NBA Finals.

Maybe Jokic can now dedicate a bit more time to his other passion, harness racing.

“He told me, 'My job is basketball, but my passion is horse racing,'” driver/trainer Tim Tetrick told the New York Daily News' Stefan Bondy. “[Jokic] said, 'I would trade jobs with you in a heartbeat if it paid better.'”

Jokic and Tetrick met several years ago on Facebook.

“Just a down-to-earth kind of dude. Low-key,” said Tetrick. “You wouldn't know he gets paid $40 million a year to play basketball. He shows up with sweats to the barn. Then he's got his training suit and jumps in and he just loves to hang out.”

Jokic visited The Big M in December of 2021 and checked out the action in the back paddock. When he was in town to play the Brooklyn Nets and New York Knicks in March of this year, 'The Joker' spent some time at Brett Pelling's barn.

“He stopped in the barn earlier this spring,” said Pelling. “He came at six in the morning. He has good knowledge of the horses. He's very eager to listen, and wants to talk about horses, not basketball. He's really into learning. How do you train? How do you feed? Very good questions. He has a real base understanding. He was definitely absorbing information.”

Jokic, 28, grew up on a farm in Sombor, a city in the northern part of Serbia, where as a teenager he fell in love with horses, specifically trotters, at the track in his hometown and even worked there for six years cleaning stalls. He owns his own farm with a training track and, when HRU did a feature about the triple-double King a year-and-a-half ago, he owned about nine trotters.

Jokic is a two-time NBA MVP, and now, has added NBA champion and NBA Finals MVP to his resume. Maybe he's now setting his sights on a Meadowlands Pace or Hambletonian trophy.

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At Long Last, Kravets Has Big Chance For Graded Stakes Win

Bruce Kravets has started 23,375 horses in a training career that began in 1977. He's won 3,756 races but has never won a graded stakes race.

That could change Saturday for the 67-year-old Kravets when he sends out the streaking Nimitz Class, riding a five-race winning streak, in Saturday's Grade 3 Salvator Mile at Monmouth Park – one of four stakes races on Haskell Preview Day at the Oceanport, N.J., track.

The Salvator, the Grade 3 Eatontown Stakes, the Grade 3 Monmouth Stakes and the Pegasus Stakes for 3-year-olds, the local prep for the TVG.com Haskell Stakes on July 22, highlight the 14-race card.

“It would mean the world to me to win this race,” said Kravets. “I've been at Penn National since 1979. I've had a lot of good horses but I've never had a horse like this. It's exciting.

“It was exciting to win four straight stakes races at Laurel. But to win this race would be something special.”

A 4-year-old son of Munnings–Five Diamonds, by Flatter, owned by Tom Coulter, Nimitz Class is 4-for-4 this year and 10-for-16 over a career that has made him Kravets' highest-money winner ever with $464,880 in earnings.

He started his five-race winning streak with a win in the Robert Manfuso Stakes at Laurel on Dec. 22 and then won three straight races at Laurel before winning an allowance race in his last start at Parx on May 22. The distances of those victories have varied from a mile to a mile and 70 yards to a mile and a sixteenth to a mile and an eighth.

The Salvator Mile has attracted a field of 10.

“I think blinkers and a route of ground have been the key for him,” said Kravets. “He's been pretty unstoppable since we stretched him out and put blinkers on him.

“Everything together has led to him being this good now – getting mature, blinkers and definitely running longer. His first couple of starts I sprinted him and he did win going three-quarters of a mile. But that's not him. He's a big horse with a big stride. He just wants to do his own thing.”

The Salvator Mile serves as the local prep for the Grade 3, $400,000 Monmouth Cup on the Haskell Stakes undercard, but Kravets isn't looking that far ahead yet. He has a major goal in front of him Saturday that he is focused on.

“When you're at Penn National you know what to expect with what people send you,” said Kravets. “They're not giving you stakes horses or allowance horses. I'm used to the cheap claimers. So to have a horse like this means a lot to me.”

Jevian Toledo is listed to ride.

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