One of the first riders Corey Nakatani befriended when he joined the Southern California jockey colony as a teenaged apprentice in 1988 was Fernando Toro, who was beginning to contemplate retirement from a career that began in 1956 and saw him win riding championships in his native Chile and a multitude of big races in North America, including the inaugural Breeders' Cup Mile in 1984 aboard Royal Heroine.
So when Nakatani learned he was going to be inducted into the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame alongside his old friend Toro, he said he felt “very, very blessed to be going in with him … it was overdue.”
Toro wasn't the only present or future Hall of Famer Nakatani competed against in Southern California when he broke in. There was Bill Shoemaker, Laffit Pincay, Chris McCarron, Eddie Delahoussaye, Sandy Hawley, Gary Stevens, and Alex Solis. And he more than held his own over the years, winning 3,909 races, 341 graded stakes (119 of them Grade 1), and 10 Breeders' Cup races.
In this week's Friday Show, Nakatani, 52, reflects back on his years in the saddle, including an unlikely story of how it all started, and on what being elected to the Hall of Fame means to him and to his family, including son Matt, who served as his agent at the end of his career.
Watch this week's episode of The Friday Show below:
There isn't much Frankie Dettori hasn't accomplished and his successes span far and wide, riding in Canada, France, Dubai, and, having found the majority of success in England, tracks like Newmarket and Ascot.
Since opening day at Keeneland in Lexington, Ky, and during the classic meet at Santa Anita in Southern California, American fans of Dettori got to see him work his magic live and in person, including a couple of his famed flying dismounts. The last time Dettori was in Kentucky was the Breeders' Cup in early November. Fans could never have imagined he'd be back, but he was.
For loyal Dettori followers, there are so many highlights. From the aptly-named “Wonder Mare” Enable and her many thrilling victories, to more than 40 victories at Royal Ascot, where he has claimed the jockey title seven times, to Golden Horn in the Epsom Derby in 2015, his multiple Breeders' Cup wins, to Dubai Millennium giving Dettori his first Dubai World Cup win in 2000, and his most recent World Cup win on the fantastic Country Grammar in 2021. There can be no question that, at 52, Frankie Dettori has truly done it all.
Dettori has absolutely nothing left to prove and is still finding the high levels of success he has enjoyed throughout his 35-year career, so he announced in December that this year would be his last year.
It was important to Dettori that he leave England, where he had found many of his greatest successes and give his global fan base a chance to say goodbye.
So with that, Dettori decided to retain one of the most stellar agents in the industry — Ron Anderson (who also represents superstar jockeys John Velazquez and Joel Rosario) — and head back to California, where he started riding and won his first race for trainer Richard Cross.
For the 2022-23 Classic Meet at Santa Anita, U.S. fans traveled from all across the country to see an icon ride, to see true mastery when it comes to racehorses, and maybe even to see an old friend return home to where he started his career at a mere 16 years old. On opening day, that's exactly what he delivered.
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His time here in the U.S. has certainly proved to be successful and shown he still has a strong enthusiasm and skill for the sport. But how did he feel about the American leg of his farewell tour?
I caught up with Mr. Dettori on April 16 in front of the jockeys' quarters at the storied and prestigious Keeneland Race Course prior to his final spring ride in the States, aboard Fadethenoise in the Palisades Stakes.
Though Dettori was doing well, he was “a bit sad” that he was leaving on Monday morning.
With much of his success, coming in England, I was curious to get his thoughts on how it compared to racing here in the U.S. and which he liked better.
He told me, as one could expect, that the two styles of racing are “very different.” He explained that while racing in England is more finesse and endurance-based, racing here in America is very “speed orientated,” which is similar to Canada.
While he's enjoyed wins on Irish and British-born horses like Enable, Lord North, Dubai Millennium, Moon Ballad, and others, he believes “quality of horses is probably generally better in America.”
Dettori won the 2021 Dubai World Cup aboard American Country Grammar, and collected many Breeders' Cup victories with horses born stateside, including Hootenanny, Raven's Pass, Wilko, and Fantastic Light.
When it comes to a geographic preference, for a decorated legend in the sport, it's like asking an ice cream lover to choose between chocolate and strawberry — it's impossible to choose.
Dettori wouldn't have it any other way.
“They are two very different types of racing and they've got their challenges in America and England,” he said.
I asked Dettori the burning question that has been on the mind of every single horse racing enthusiast globally – though this is his “retirement tour,” the success he's had so far in 2022-23 would seem to give him a lot of reasons to stick around. Is he really going to hang it up?
“I'll be 53 in December and I like to finish at the top,” he said.
He's got two dates that his mind and heart are set on calling his last.
In England, it'll be Oct. 21 at The Showcase at Cheltenham, a two-day festival of racing showcasing the best jockeys and the best horses. In the United States, he told me his last performances will be during the Breeders' Cup, where his career started.
Dettori has five children, three of whom – Leo, Ella, and Rocco – ride, though not yet at the scale of their father.
It's possible the Dettori farewell tour could reach new countries, too.
“There is a possibility I might ride in Japan or Hong Kong, but we'll see,” said Dettori.
With a special race coming up on the first Saturday in May, I had a chance to ask Dettori about that gap in his resume. Dettori had been on Derby hopeful Newgate, who is now off the trail with a hock injury.
Though he's been offered other mounts for the Kentucky Derby, he told me that the alternate choices are “potentially not good enough,” and when you've built up the resume that Frankie Dettori has, you've more than earned the right to pick and choose.
Unless something changes, Dettori is “sitting quiet” with regards to the Derby but is looking forward to “a good horse in the 2,000 Guineas.”
Dettori has previously piloted Andrew Balding-trained Guineas hopeful Chaldean.
I couldn't let Frankie go without asking him about his signature “flying dismount” which he says is inspired by Angel Cordero Jr.
How does he still manage to lift himself off a horse like that and fly through mid-air, if even only for a split second?
He told me that his mother worked in the circus, so he credits having her genes as part of the reason he has been able to stay youthful in performing his signature, jaw-dropping winning dismount.
“At the moment, the legs are still holding, so it's a bit of fun,” he said with a smile.
Since he was young, 27-year-old Jordan Freeman thoroughly enjoyed attending the races at his home track, Woodbine Racetrack in Toronto. After graduating Humber College in 2017 for broadcasting and journalism, he took his passion one step further. He worked as a hotwalker for various trainers including William Armata, Kevin Attard and Brad Cox, handling some extremely special horses like Monomoy Girl, Knicks Go, Essential Quality, and more. He is currently working for Phil and Matt Sims learning to groom and hot walking in the meantime. His pastimes away from the races include guitar, piano, photography, and fine dining. You can read more of his work at his blog, Racing Across The USA.
The final prep races have been run. Thoroughbreds from all corners of the United States (and Japan) are converging on Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky. Jockey commitments, with only a few exceptions, have been made.
All that's left are two weeks of closely analyzed training runs and the post position draw, then it's game on in the 149th running of the Kentucky Derby on May 6.
Handicapper Andrew Champagne, who authors The Derby Bubble for the Paulick Report, has been following all the top 3-year-olds on the road to the Triple Crown, providing rankings and rationale for why a horse can or can't win America's most famous horse race.
Which preps were the strongest? Which were the weakest? Who is best suited for the mile and a quarter distance? Who isn't? How much will post position matter? And what about those Japanese horses?
We get into those questions and more in this week's edition of The Friday Show. Join Andrew Champagne, Ray Paulick and Joe Nevills for a lively discussion ahead of this year's Kentucky Derby.
Watch this week's episode of The Friday Show below:
Japanese horsemen have made four previous attempts to win the Kentucky Derby going back to 1995 when trainer Hideyuki Mori sent Ski Captain out for a 14th-place finish behind Thunder Gulch. The closest they've come in the Run for the Roses was when Master Fencer closed from last to be seventh (and placed sixth upon Maximum Security's disqualification) in 2019.
A lot has happened since then, including two breakthrough victories by Japanese runners in the 2021 Breeders' Cup world championships and a host of triumphs in major international races in Hong Kong, Saudi Arabia, and Dubai. Most recently, Japanese horses scored multiple wins on the Saudi Cup and Dubai World Cup programs in 2023, including in the world's two richest races.
Japanese runners, led by Derma Sotogake, also finished 1-2-3-4 in this year's UAE Derby, and the UAE Derby winner and third-place finisher Continuar are now at Churchill Downs preparing for Kentucky Derby 149.
Kate Hunter, an American living in Japan who now recruits Japanese horses for major international races, including America's Triple Crown and the Breeders' Cup, joins Ray Paulick and bloodstock editor Joe Nevills to discuss the Japanese horses pointing for this year's Kentucky Derby. She also shares some insights on why horses from Japan are beginning to win on the international stage with such frequency.
Watch this week's episode of The Friday Show below: