Posts Tagged ‘Rajiv Maragh’

EQUIBASE ANNOUNCES FINAL NORTH AMERICAN EARNINGS LEADERS FOR 2009

Friday, January 1st, 2010

Press Release

For the first time, female Thoroughbreds occupy the top two spots on the list of leading North American earners in 2009, according to final statistics released today by Equibase Company LLC, the Thoroughbred industry’s official database for racing information.
 
Zenyatta earned $3,330,000 in 2009 to become the fourth filly or mare, and the first since Dance Smartly in 1991, to top the leading earners list. Runner-up Rachel Alexandra earned $2,746,914.
 
In the other categories, Steven Asmussen, Garrett Gomez and Michael Gill head the individual lists of the leading trainers, jockeys and owners, respectively, by North American earnings in 2009.
 
The year-end compilations are distributed annually by Equibase and include results from Thoroughbred racing in North America only. The top 100 North American leaders in each category are accessible at equibase.com.
 
Asmussen, who previously topped the trainers’ list in 2003 and 2008, won a single-season record 650 races from 2,944 starts for North American earnings of $21,876,405 in 2009. Runner-up was Todd Pletcher, whose horses won 238 races from 1,108 starts for earnings of $15,454,429 in 2009.
 
Completing the list of top 10 trainers by North American earnings in 2009 were Bob Baffert, $9,574,394 (117 wins/504 starts); William Mott, $7,957,370 (116/689); Jerry Hollendorfer, $7,309,169 (273/1,210); Kiaran McLaughlin, $6,983,433 (113/555); Scott Lake, $6,928,884 (307/1,462); Christophe Clement, $6,849,013 (91/448); Robert Frankel, $6,586,098 (42/293); and John Sadler, $5,999,956 (132/637).
 
Garrett Gomez, with earnings of $18,571,171, topped the North American leading jockeys’ list for the fourth consecutive year in 2009. He rode the winners of 210 races from 967 mounts. Julien Leparoux finished second, with 247 wins from 1,284 mounts and earnings of $18,560,565.
 
Rounding out the list of top 10 jockeys by North American earnings in 2009 were Ramon Dominguez, $18,348,422 (391 wins/1,651 mounts); Kent Desormeaux, $13,262,760 (177/936); Joel Rosario, $13,073,777 (284/1,476); John Velazquez, $13,069,881 (204/1,160); Rafael Bejarano, $12,403,993 (240/1,129); Rajiv Maragh, $11,736,729 (236/1,479); Robby Albarado, $11,504,625 (204/1,148); and Alan Garcia, $11,280,481 (183/1,049).
 
Michael Gill won 370 races from 2,247 starts and earned $6,669,950 in North America in 2009 to lead all owners. Runner-up was Juddmonte Farms Inc., which won 27 races from 116 starts for earnings of $6,525,818. 
 
Completing the list of top 10 owners by North American earnings in 2009 were Zayat Stables LLC, $6,323,286 (113 wins/573 starts); Darley Stable, $4,977,513 (78/343); Heiligbrodt Racing Stable, $4,880,906 (151/819); Augustin Stable, $4,825,552 (57/244); Mr. and Mrs. Jerome S. Moss, $4,172,533 (31/128); Kenneth and Sarah Ramsey, $4,108,857 (140/521); Melnyk Racing Stables Inc., $3,991,368 (81/387); and Maggi Moss, $3,799,637 (193/716).
 
In addition to the official North American racing leaders’ lists available at equibase.com, Equibase also provides a second set of leaders’ lists that includes the results of the Dubai World Cup card from March 28, 2009, at Nad Al Sheba Racecourse. Including these international earnings, Well Armed was the leading Thoroughbred with earnings of $3,649,000 and WinStar Farm LLC was the leading owner with earnings of $7,145,236. Steven Asmussen remained the leading trainer with earnings of $21,876,405 and Garrett Gomez the leading jockey with earnings of $18,571,171.
 
Equibase Company is a partnership between The Jockey Club and the Thoroughbred Racing Associations of North America and serves as the Thoroughbred industry’s official database for racing information. In addition to year-end rankings of the top trainers, jockeys, owners and horses, the company’s website, equibase.com, features daily rankings of the top 100 by category for the current year as well as an ever-increasing menu of racing information and handicapping products for handicappers of every skill level.

A ROMPING VICTORY IN JAPAN

Sunday, December 6th, 2009
By Ray Paulick
OSAKA, Japan—Espoir City made it look easy in Sunday’s $2.9-million Japan Cup Dirt at Hanshin race course, wresting the lead after a quarter from the lone American-based runner, Tizway, then coasting to a 3 1/2-length victory under jockey Tetsuzo Sato. The win was the fourth in a row (third straight in a Grade 1 race) and ninth from 17 starts for the 4-year-old son of the Sunday Silence stallion Gold Allure out of Eminent City, by Brian’s Time.

Espoir City paid 310 yen to win (on a 100 yen bet) after covering nine furlongs in 1:49.90 on a fast track. Silk Mobius was second and Golden Ticket third in the 16-horse field. Tizway, who broke on top, wound up 12th under Rajiv Maragh after getting shuffled back on the last turn and caught behind a wall of horses.

The winner is trained by Akio Adachi and is owned by the Yushun Horse Club, one of the oldest and largest racing clubs licensed by the Japan Racing Association and boasting about 10,000 members.

Espoir City is the sixth consecutive Japanese-bred winner of Japan’s biggest dirt race and the ninth Japanese-trained horse to win the event in the 10 runnings since being inaugurated in 2000.

Trainer Adachi, who sent Bamboo Ere to Dubai to contest the 2009 Golden Shaheen sprint, where he finished fourth, said he would consult with the head of Yushun Horse to discuss a possible trip overseas for the Japan Cup Dirt winner. Adachi credited jockey Sato for helping turn Espoir City around from a runner who was too eager in the early portion of his races to one who now is more settled and mature. “Mentally, he’s still a baby,” Adachi said of Espoir City. The colt began his career racing on grass but has been much more successful since being switched to dirt racing.

Sato, who won the 2003 Japan Cup in similar wire to wire fashion aboard Tap Dance City, said his plan was to let Tizway take the early lead and wait to see if the American horse drifted out while rounding the first turn on the clockwise course (all of Tizway’s races have been run counter-clockwise in the United States). “I knew Tizway would be the early speed and would probably go off the rail on the turn, giving me a chance to take over,” Sato afterwards.

ALSO ON SUNDAY’S HANSHIN CARD were the final two races in the World Super Jockeys series. Norihiro Yokoyama, who was tied for the points lead going into Sunday’s finale, locked up the title when he guided Taghano Premiere to victory in the day’s 10th race. Yokoyama ended up with 47 points, well ahead of Hong Kong’s Douglas Whyte (38 points) and Ryan Moore (37) of Great Britain. Calvin Borel, who won one of the two Super Jockey races on Saturday, along with Garrett Gomez, were blanked in Sunday’s competition, though Gomez won an earlier race on the program on Yamanin Chasseur,  a huge longshot that paid 33,850 yen on a 100 yen bet (338-to-1). Borel finished fifth in the standings and Gomez was last of the 15 riders.

Several thousand of the 40,226 fans on hand for Sunday’s program stayed around for the World Super Jockeys awards presentation in the track’s walking ring. Each of the riders wore matching hats and warmup jackets and ran into the paddock under a spotlight after being introduced individually to the crowd. Following an Olympic Games type of ceremony, the jockeys doused Yokoyama with champagne, and many of them tossed their caps and jackets into the crowd for fans to keep as souvenirs. Many of them, including Gomez and Borel, waded into the crowd to sign autographs. They were the human stars on a day, but there’s no question that Espoir City was the equine celebrity.

The loss of Summer Bird from the Japan Cup Dirt to an injury sustained the prior weekend, undoubtedly had an impact on the gate. Attendance was down 17.5% from the 2008 Japan Cup Dirt. Handle on the Japan Cup Dirt was 15.2 billion yen (about $172 million), down 5.9% from 2008. Total handle on the day was 23.2 billion yen (about $264 million), down 3.4%. Only 3.4% of the total handle was wagered on-track.

THEY DON’T SPEAK CAJUN IN OSAKA

Saturday, December 5th, 2009

OSAKA, Japan—Calvin Borel won the opening race of the two-day World Super Jockeys Series at Hanshin race course on Saturday, but the victory was an eventful one. Borel, riding the favorite, the Australian-bred Red Ransom colt Oceana Boss, had to sweat out a lengthy inquiry after an incident at the top of the stretch.

Borel pleaded his case to the stewards after he swung out from a tight spot on the inside on the turn for home, causing another horse in the race to check in the seven-furlong turf contest. The horse directly in front of him, Borel said, had taken a bad step, and he was concerned that he was going to break down. The horse in question did finish the race but was vanned off.

The inquiry seemed to take forever, which oftentimes indicates a disqualification is coming. In this case, however, it’s more likely the translator didn’t speak Cajun, and had a difficult time explaining to the stewards in Japanese what the Louisiana native was saying. Don’t look for Borel to learn Japanese anytime soon, either. On a sightseeing trip in the Osaka area Friday, a tour guide was explaining how to read the Japanese kanji symbols. “How am I going to learn that?” Borel joked. “I can barely read English.”

After Borel’s winning race was made official, he quipped, “The trainer told me he had a horse that could run like Rachel Alexandra. I just tried to get him to relax early and he was much the best.”

He is learning Japanese customs, however, bowing on cue during the winner’s circle ceremony and the presentation of a gold medal.

The win gave Borel a brief lead in the competition, which consists of a total of four races Saturday and Sunday. All the horses in each of the races are weighted A, B, C or D by racing officials, and the jockeys ride one of each class. Oceana Boss was Borel’s “A” horse. A victory is worth 20 points, with 15 for second, 13 for third, 11 for fourth, 10 for fifth, and then 6, 5, 5, 3, 2, 2, 1, 1, 1, 1 for the remaining finish positions. A total of 15 riders are competing.

Japanese jockey Norihiro Yokoyama and Hong Kong-based Ryan Moore ended the day tied as the points leaders. Yokoyama finished second to Borel and fifth in the second leg of the competition behind Moore, who won aboard Charm Nadeshiko after finishing sixth in the first leg. Garrett Gomez was third in the final race following an 11th-place finish in the first leg. Borel could do no better than 12th of 15 horses in the second leg while aboard a 130-1 shot. For a minute, it looked like Borel was on Mine That Bird, trailing the field by a wide margin the early stages of the nine-furlong dirt race. But rather than taking the inside route like he did to win the Kentucky Derby, Borel rallied to the far outside and only passed a few horses.

Here are the leaders after day one of the World Super Jockey Series:

1-Norihiro Yokoyama, 26 points
Ryan Moore, 26 points
3-Yutaka Take, 23 points
4-Calvin Borel, 21 points
5-Shinji Fujita, 19 points
6-Douglas Whyte, 15 points
Mick Kinane, 15 points
Garrett Gomez, 15 points

New York-based Rajiv Maragh, in Japan to ride Tizway for trainer Jim Bond and owner William Clifton Jr. on Sunday, was the riding star of the day, winning two races earlier in the card—one on turf and one on dirt. The experience was a good for Maragh, who has never raced in a clockwise direction, as Hanshin races are run. (Neither had Borel or Gomez, for that matter.) Maragh also has some mounts on Sunday’s card before the Japan Cup Dirt.

Maragh won aboard the first-time starter Steal Pass (by Neo Universe)  going seven furlongs on dirt on the fifth-race of the card, then took the seventh aboard Meisho Jimmu going nine furlongs on turf.

 

 

Copyright © 2009, The Paulick Report

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WEEKEND STAKES: WHERE TO WATCH brought to you by KBC Horse Supplies

Thursday, November 26th, 2009

The upcoming long holiday weekend provides an opportunity for three tracks–Hollywood Park, Aqueduct and Churchill Downs—to run a combined total of 16 graded stakes, many with entrants coming out of the Breeders’ Cup Championships held earlier this month at Santa Anita.

Churchill Downs has carded the 1 1/8-mile G2 Falls City as the 11th of 12 races on Thursday. Unbridled Belle hopes to go out a winner before she heads for the breeding shed. The 6-year-old mare has accumulated almost $1.9 million in earnings and will face off against another millionaire, Swift Temper, who has gotten the best of Unbridled Belle in their three previous meetings this year.

Friday’s feature race, the G2 Clark Handicap, has attracted a stellar field of competitors, including Macho Again, Bullsbay, Etched, Blame and Einstein, the highweight in the 1 1/8-mile dirt event. The 7-year-old will start from the far outside post (14) in what will be the 30th and final race of his career. With regular rider Julien Leparoux in Japan, Rajiv Maragh will take over in the irons. The G3 River City Handicap (race 9) at 1 1/8 miles on the turf, is on the undercard.

Churchill’s meet closes on Saturday with the running of twin G2 stakes, the Golden Rod for fillies, and the Kentucky Jockey Club for colts and geldings. Sassy Image, winner of the opening weekend’s Pocahontas Stakes, as well as the runner-up in that race, Decelerator, are expected to start. The upset winner of the Iroquois, Thiskyhasnolimit, is the 2-1 favorite in the field of nine in the Kentucky JC. Both races are 1 1/16 miles on the main track.

Aqueduct hosts the G3 Fall Highweight on Thursday, the G2 Top Flight Handicap on Friday, and a quartet of graded stakes on Saturday, highlighted by the G1 Hill ‘n’ Dale Cigar Mile. Pyro, winner of the Forego and Kodiak Kowboy, victor of the Vosburgh, are co-highweights at 120 lbs. They will be facing DeFrancis winner Vineyard Haven, Bribon and Driven By Success. With the coupling of Pyro and Vineyard Haven, there will be only four betting interests.

Also on the Aqueduct’s Saturday card is the running of the 1 1/8-mile G1 Gazelle for 3-year-old fillies. Stardom Bound will be in the spotlight here; she had a string of five consecutive G1 wins to her credit, before finishing third in the Ashland in April. This will be her first start on the dirt. The other two graded stakes will focus on juveniles–the G2 Demoiselle for fillies, and the G2 Remsen for males, both run at 1 1/8 miles on the dirt. The winners of these races may be pointing to a race on the first Saturday in May next year.

The G1 Citation kicks off the three-day Hollywood Park Turf Festival on Friday and features a field of ten older horses going 1 1/16 miles. Cowboy Cal, winner of the Oak Tree Mile, will attempt to redeem himself in the Citation after a 10th-place finish in the Breeders’ Cup Mile. Proudinsky and Fluke, also entered in the Citation, will both be saddled by Bobby Frankel’s long-time assistant Humberto Ascanio, who is now the trainer of record for the late Hall of Famer’s starters.

Saturday’s Hollywood stakes are the G1 Matriarch for fillies and mares going a mile on grass, supported by the G3 Generous, for two-year-olds, also at a mile. The Matriarch pits two outstanding mares against each other—Ventura and Diamondrella. Both were last seen at the Breeders’ Cup; Ventura was second in the Filly & Mare Sprint, while Diamondrella ran a disappointing 11th in the Turf Sprint. Following the Breeders’ Cup, Diamondrella changed barns and is now with jockey-turned-trainer Gary Stevens.

Hollywood’s Turf Festival concludes on Sunday with the running of the G1 Hollywood Derby and the G3 Miesque (a mile for 2-year-old fillies). In the 1 ¼-mile Hollywood Derby, we can expect to see Take the Points square off against Battle of Hastings. Another intriguing entry is Black Bear Island. Now with Julio Canani, the son of Sadler’s Wells was previously conditioned by Aiden O’Brien.