Breeders’ Cup Presents Connections: Raised In Racing, Jordan Sisters Taking On The World Together

Teammates. Best Friends. Sisters.

When 19-year-old bug rider Kylee Jordan won her first race at her home track on May 29, her older sister, 21-year-old Taelyn, was the first to congratulate her with a giant hug in the Prairie Meadows winner's circle.

The moment brought tears to the eyes of family matriarch Christa, who said watching her daughters' close relationship and unwavering support of one another is the greatest feeling in the world.

“Taelyn is Kylee's biggest fan,” Christa said. “She is a true example of the best big sister; she isn't overshadowed by Kylee's success at all because she's always right beside her, encouraging her and cheering her on.”

“We always grew up riding together, and she's always been so good and made every single horse she's on look amazing,” Taelyn said. “I think I'm the most nervous out of everybody watching her ride, but I'm always just so happy for her and proud of her.”

Kylee went on to win another race the next evening, but the only way that weekend could have been better, all three women agreed, was if the win had come aboard a horse trained by the girls' father, Todd Jordan. So far, Kylee has earned a second and a third for her dad, but she's definitely looking forward to the winner's circle celebration when it's a “family” horse.

This coming Saturday at Prairie Meadows, the horse Monday Confession might be the one to take the Jordan family there. The 7-year-old gelding was given to Kylee last fall, and won his final race of the meet at the Altoona, Iowa racetrack. 

After wintering at the family's northern Iowa farm, Monday Confession was ready to run on May 1, but Kylee hadn't yet gotten her jockey's license. Alfredo Triana, Jr. stepped in to ride him to a fourth-place finish. For his second start on May 23, Kylee had procured a license, but she refused to take over the mount from Triana.

“That's just the kind of person she is,” Christa explained. “She said, 'Mom, you just don't do that to somebody,' even though Monday is her heart horse.”

Triana won aboard Monday Confession, and Todd made the executive decision that his youngest daughter would ride the gelding in his next race. This Saturday, that plan will come to fruition in Prairie Meadows' first race on the card.

Monday Confession will run under the Jordan Family Racing banner, and Todd is listed as his trainer. Kylee gallops him every morning, and Taelyn, who is certified in equine bodywork and massage, will have put the finishing touches on the gelding before his race and will likely pony her sister to the gate. Christa will drive down from the family farm on Friday night, as she does every weekend, to cheer them on.

“None of us could do it without my mom, I'll tell you that,” Kylee said. “And Taelyn has been awesome. It's pretty cool to have a sister that doesn't get jealous. She even goes into the jock's room with me and takes videos of me on the equicizer, and she's always supported me, even if she gets more nervous than I do!”

This past weekend, Kylee even had the opportunity to ride millionaire Welder in a rare appearance outside his home state of Oklahoma. Kylee had breezed and ridden a few horses for trainer Teri Luneack at Will Rogers Downs, and her quiet hands, professional demeanor, and unshakeable work ethic earned her a chance on the big gray. They finished third, pleasing the trainer.

“To ride a horse like that this early in my career, just wow,” Kylee said.

Taelyn and Kylee Jordan learning about horse racing

Of course, Christa wasn't surprised. Both of her daughters have had a strong work ethic instilled in them from the start, helping with chores at the family farm in both the heat of the summer and the minus 30-degree weather and giant snow drifts of a northern Iowa winter.

Additionally, ever since their daughters were born, Todd and Christa have been hauling them to racetracks on the weekends. Strapped into their car seats in the back of the truck, with the horses loaded on the trailer, the girls would entertain themselves on the way to small tracks like Fonner Park or the Lincoln County Fair, wherever the horses were running. They learned to read the racing program alongside their schoolwork, and maintained straight A's throughout their educations.

For a while, Christa quietly worried that the constant trips and life around the racetrack would have a negative effect on her daughters. She distinctly remembered asking Todd one Sunday evening, driving back from the races, if he thought they were messing up.

He didn't have an answer for that. Neither Todd nor Christa had grown up on the racetrack, themselves. In fact, each of their parents had tried to keep them away from the track, though both did grow up around horses. Nonetheless, they made their way to Prairie Meadows together, and now racing is the full-time family business.

Kylee and Taelyn Jordan

It was a few months after that late Sunday night question, when the girls were in third grade, that a parent-teacher conference finally validated all the choices the Jordans were making. 

“(The teacher) had had both Taelyn and Kylee in her class,” Christa remembered. “She said they were both the kindest, most inclusive kids in the group, and that their decision-making skills were well above that of their peers. Todd and I walked out of there, and just kind of looked at each other. He said, 'I guess we're not messing them up too bad!'”

From starting ponies and breaking babies on the family farm in their youth to arriving at Prairie Meadows at 5:30 every morning like clockwork to gallop horses for their dad, the Jordan sisters are incredibly dedicated to the sport of racing.

Kylee envisions herself spending another four to five years in the saddle, but is already taking classes online to pursue a college degree in accounting. Taelyn dreams of training her own horses one day, and especially loves seeing the difference she can make in them when she performs the bodywork she went to school for. 

Taelyn and Kylee Jordan racing ponies

Above all, though, the sisters plan to stick together. Their relationship has always been close, and neither wants to travel too far away from the other in the future.

Earlier this year, when Kylee was preparing to ride her first ever race at Will Rogers Downs on May 3, she believed that none of her family members would be able to make the trip to the Claremore, Okla. track, since they had horses in Iowa preparing to run. To Kylee's surprise, Taelyn was there outside the paddock, sitting on a pony and waiting to accompany her to the starting gate.

“Nobody told Taelyn to do that, she just wanted to do it for her sister,” Christa said. “These girls, they just make me so proud.”

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Japan Racing Association Takes A Long-Range View Regarding Retired Racehorse Care

Though Japan's Thoroughbred industry is smaller than that of the United States, both face similar issues, including the question of what to do with racehorses when they retire from racing. Japan has approximately 7,000 Thoroughbred foals born each year. Per the Japan Racing Association, any horse that hasn't won at least one race by the middle of their 3-year-old year must retire from racing.

The JRA has subsidies in place to support high-end retiring racehorses, but maintaining a retired racehorse still costs between $600 to $1,000 per month. The Japan Times reports that previously, those that did not qualify for these were “culled,” which often means they were sent for slaughter. Horse slaughter is legal in Japan.

In 2018, the JRA launched a program that focuses on finding retired racehorses second careers and improving their environment when they retire. The JRA is investigating new ways to support Thoroughbred aftercare, with particular focus on programs that allow children to learn from OTTBs.

The Japan Times notes that it remains difficult to find the physical facilities or skilled personnel to support a robust aftercare initiative in that country.

Read more at the Japan Times.

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Oaklawn Adds December Race Dates To Live Racing Season

In yet another historic move for the 117-year-old track, Oaklawn will now add December race dates to its calendar and host a 66-day season from Friday, Dec. 3, 2021 – Sunday, May 8, 2022.

“For many years, horsemen have wanted to race here in December to fill a gap in their racing schedule,” said Oaklawn President Louis A. Cella, who has guided Oaklawn through the most dramatic changes in its history over the past four years. “We have completed our resort expansion, including the opening of our luxury hotel, spa and event center. Therefore, the timing is right for another expansion – to our live racing season.”

The 66-day season will be conducted largely on a Friday-Sunday basis, with some exceptions. There will be no racing Dec. 24 through Dec. 26 during the Christmas holiday and also no racing on Easter Sunday, April 17. Racing will continue to be offered on Presidents' Day Monday, Feb. 21, 2022.

Oaklawn plans to present the new proposed racing schedule to the Arkansas Racing Commission at their next meeting for approval.

“We are looking forward to the new format,” Cella said. “The additional days will provide a huge economic impact for horsemen, Arkansas Thoroughbred breeders and tourism in Central Arkansas.”

“Oaklawn's decision to add racing days in December is wonderful news for Hot Springs and Garland County,” said Steve Arrison, CEO of Visit Hot Springs. The expansion of its casino and its addition of a world-class hotel this year already provided Hot Springs with an exciting new feature in its attractions menu. The additional live racing dates will further cement Oaklawn's status as a premier economic engine for our city. We all look forward to this great new reason for everyone to visit Hot Springs.”

Purses for the season are projected to be $45 million – $50 million; the highest in America at that time of year, with all allowance races starting at $100,000.

“To be able to offer six-figure allowance races for five consecutive months is a very strong statement,” Oaklawn Racing Secretary Pat Pope said. “Between the purses and all of our new amenities, we should be part of every horseman's annual calendar.”

The extended season and projected purse increases make it necessary for Oaklawn to restructure its stakes program, highlighted, by realigning Oaklawn's strong 3-year-old prep races.

“We will offer 2­-year-old racing in December,” Cella said, “and we anticipate additional exciting changes in our racing program, including an aggressive 2021-2022 stakes schedule. We are working on that now and will announce those changes soon. Suffice it to say that our stakes program will continue to be designed to attract the nation's best horses and best horsemen to Hot Springs.”

Trainers are also excited about the additional race dates.

“I love it,” Hall of Famer and 11-time Oaklawn leading trainer Steve Asmussen said. “The more Oaklawn, the better.”

“I've been an advocate for this for years,” Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas said. “I think it's a great addition and will keep our stables competitive. It's also going to be a popular time. People are already in a festive mood around the holidays and the weather in December is usually pretty good. I think there is going to be a strong fan base. I'm 100% for it.”

“Oaklawn's new dates allow us horsemen to participate in the most lucrative purse circuit in America without any interruptions,” trainer Ron Moquett said. “It's now a smooth transition between Oaklawn, Churchill, and Saratoga.”

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Flashback: Brooklyn Native Walter Blum Spoils Canonero II’s Triple Crown Bid

Much has changed in a half century at Belmont Park, from the amount of real-time information available digitally to increased purse money to the way most fans place wagers.

But the draw of a potential Triple Crown holds the same appeal as it did in 1971, when a then-record crowd of 81,036 came out to Elmont to witness Venezuelan champion Canonero II's quest to add the third jewel of the 3-year-old season to his collection in the Belmont Stakes.

But New York City native and jockey Walter Blum thwarted Canonero II's chance at becoming just the ninth Triple Crown winner in history at the time, guiding 34-1 longshot Pass Catcher to a three-quarters of a length win in the Belmont. Reflecting on the 50-year anniversary from his home in Florida, Blum said he is proud for earning his lone victory in an American Classic in a Hall of Fame career. Despite five decades flashing by, Blum said he still remembers feeling better about Pass Catcher's chances than the betting public did leading up to post time.

“When I walked out on the track, I felt confident,” Blum said.

A large portion of the crowd arrived at Belmont to cheer on the Edgar Caibett-owned Canonero II, who was bidding to be the first Triple Crown winner since Citation in 1948.

Canonero II, trained by Juan Arias and ridden by Gustavo Avila, rallied from 18th place to post a 3 3/4-length win over Jim French to win the Kentucky Derby, paying $19.40. In the Preakness, Canonero II was more forwardly placed and won again, defeating Eastern Fleet with Jim French in third to set up a potential history-making moment in the 1 1/2-mile “Test of the Champion.”

Pass Catcher readied for that test by being placed on trainer Eddie Yowell's self-professed “five-day plan,” where he ran second to Bold Reasoning in the Jersey Derby on May 31 at Garden State Park before wheeling right back to the Belmont on June 5. After winning two of his five races to start his 3-year-old campaign entering the Belmont, Blum said the effort in the 1 1/8-mile Jersey Derby gave him plenty of confidence when competing on a bigger stage.

“He ran a week before at Garden State Park and after the race, he came back so strong. I could see at the finish line he was just starting to run; another three jumps he was going to win,” Blum said. “I told everybody I knew that I was riding this horse in the Belmont who is a longshot, but I think he's going to win. I really liked his chances and sure enough, he won at 34-1 and won convincingly. It was a great time in my life.”

The popular Canonero II drew a large crowd from the area, who came out to view a colt who would go on to the Eclipse Award for Outstanding 3-Year-Old Male Horse. Instead, Pass Catcher stalked Canonero II's early speed before overtaking the leader when the field reached the top of the stretch.

Jim French, ridden by Hall of Famer Angel Cordero, Jr., closed late for second but Pass Catcher held on for the win, completing the course in 2:30 2/5 and returning $71. Canonero II finished fourth.

Blum said he was pleased with his effort but took no extra joy in playing spoiler to the heavy favorite.

“I was proud of myself in that I thought he would win and he ran as well as he did, but I wasn't proud of the fact that Canonero got beat for a Triple Crown,” Blum said. “That didn't mean much. I felt good about winning but I felt bad about him losing. They were all there to see Canonero and if I didn't win, I would have liked to have seen him win, too.”

Tackling the two wide turns on Belmont's Big Sandy, along with the marathon distance, are the signatures of the Belmont Stakes, though the race's unique circumstances set up well for Pass Catcher that day.

“It' not like any other race,” Blum said. “In this country, mile-and-a-half races are few and far between. But I was looking forward to a mile and a half with that horse because I knew he would rate easily and when I wanted to pull the trigger, he would fire, and that's exactly what happened.”

Cordero, Jr., who won three editions of the Kentucky Derby, tallied two Preakness wins and won the 1976 Belmont aboard Bold Forbes, said he wasn't confident initially that Pass Catcher would relish the distance.

“I didn't think he (Pass Catcher) wanted to go that far,” Cordero, Jr. said. “On paper, that was a little too fast for him – 2- and 3-year-olds can do things better than when they're older – and sometimes they don't want to go that far but they do. You get horses that outrun their pedigree.”

Cordero, Jr. said Canonero II's training regimen and previous accomplishments garnered the most attention leading into the Belmont, but added that Pass Catcher deserved the victory despite sending a vast majority of the crowd home disappointed.

“Pass Catcher was a real good horse. But that year, Canonero was probably the best horse … he trained at high altitude,” Cordero, Jr. said. “I didn't win it, but I always enjoyed being in those big races and knowing I had a chance. Every time you run in a race like that, and there's a real good horse that beats you, it's not like you're jealous. Every time you run a race like that and actually beat the big horses, it's like beating Muhammad Ali.”

Blum stopped riding in 1975, embarking on a 24-year career as a racing official and steward in New Jersey and Florida. He amassed 4,382 career victories in 28,673 starts, with only Hall of Famers Bill Shoemaker, Johnny Longden, Eddie Arcaro and Steve Brooks ahead of him on the all-time list for jockeys at the time of his retirement.

Blum said he did not view his lack of a victory in an American Classic to that point as a box waiting to be checked off, having established a reputation as one of the best riders in the sport by winning prestigious races such as the Whitney, Santa Anita Derby, Coaching Club American Oaks, and twice capturing the Metropolitan Handicap and the Frizette.

“It certainly didn't hurt getting to the Hall of Fame, but I think my career in general and my comradery with the people involved in the industry helped me get in,” said Blum, who led all North American jockeys in wins in 1963 and 1964 and was inducted in 1987. “Most of my career was behind me, and I had done almost everything I wanted to do, so it didn't do much as far as furthering my career, but I was just glad to win that race at that time.

“Everyone wants to win the Kentucky Derby, but I'll take the Belmont any time,” Blum said with a laugh.

Blum, now 86, grew up in Flatbush, Brooklyn, and attended Samuel J. Tilden High School. On July 29, 1953, at the age of 18, he won his first race at the now defunct Jamaica Race Course just 10 miles away from home, guiding a 36-1 longshot filly named Tusciana to a victory for Hall of Fame trainer Hirsch Jacobs.

Blum, who now lives less than a mile from Gulfstream Park, said he still follows racing and praised the competitive jockey colony in New York, where brothers Jose and Irad Ortiz, Jr. continue to reside at the top of the standings in a circuit that also counts Hall of Famers John Velazquez and Javier Castellano as regulars.

Blum's empathy for jockeys is something not every trainer shared during his career, though his success with Yowell partnered him with a conditioner who started his career as a rider. Yowell had trained a previous Belmont winner prior to Pass Catcher, with Hail To All winning the 1965 edition as well as that year's Jersey Derby and the Travers at Saratoga Race Course.

“Some of the trainers, I don't know if they could picture what a jockey's life was like with dieting all the time, keeping the weight down,” Blum said. “Living this kind of life is very difficult, in addition to the problems that can arise from the challenges of running a race. But when we're in the paddock, we're both thinking about the same thing as far as winning the race.”

While his win aboard Pass Catcher is near the top of his career ledger, Blum raced against some of the most notable names in the sport's history, including beating Hall of Famer Kelso while aboard fellow Hall of Famer Gun Bow in a photo finish victory in the 1964 Woodward. The next year, Blum piloted Priceless Gem to a win over Hall of Famer Buckpasser in the Futurity.

Blum even was part of history-making events that didn't result in winner's circle trips but still factored into the sport's lore. In 1973, he rode Royal and Regal in the Kentucky Derby that spring-boarded Secretariat's famed Triple Crown run.

“I was on a horse who had just won the Florida Derby, so I thought he had a shot,” Blum said. “I wasn't really that much aware of Secretariat at the time until he flew by me at the top of the stretch. He ran by me like a shot and I said, 'who the hell is that?'”

Blum, who twice rode six winners on a single card, stayed in racing upon the end of his riding career, first serving as an association steward at Atlantic City Race Course before becoming a state steward in Florida.

“I loved being a jockey but you can't do that forever,” Blum said. “I enjoyed being an official almost as much as riding. The people riding under me, I knew their problems and I knew them [as people]. They respected me for what I knew and how I acted. That's why I became a steward; I always respected the stewards I rode under and I always knew that it was something I wanted to do when I stopped riding. That helped me retire and it was one of the best things I ever did. I left with a good reputation as a jockey and a steward, and I'm very proud of both.”

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