Tag: racing

WOW – Pharoah donation! Victor Espinoza!!

Seen this?

American Pharoah to victory, then donated winnings to charity

When it comes to horse racing, we tend to remember the names of the horses more than the jockeys, but here’s a jockey you really should know.

On June 6, American Pharoah became the first horse to win racing’s Triple Crown in 37 years.

It’s just the 12th horse in history to win all of the three major racing events in a single year — the Kentucky Derby, Preakness Stakes, and Belmont Stakes.

But there’s another part of this story you might not have heard about: the jockey.
American Pharoah’s jockey, Victor Espinoza, donated all his winnings from the Belmont Stakes to charity.

All of it. Reportedly $80,000.

Wow.
The charity is City of Hope, and they fight cancer, HIV/AIDS, and other life-threatening illnesses.In an interview with ABC News, Espinoza casually mentioned his plans for the massive payday.”I won the Triple Crown right now, but I don’t make any money because I’m donating all the money to the City of Hope.”The group confirmed Espinoza’s plans to donate on their website, and included another statement from him:”Good health — that’s what I want for everyone. With good health, people can enjoy life and do those things that make them happy. By working to defeat cancer, City of Hope’s researchers and doctors are bringing a greater chance of health and happiness to people everywhere.”

American Pharoah’s trainer, Bob Baffert, also donated his Belmont winnings, splitting it between three charities.

Bob and Jill Baffert following American Pharoah’s win at the Belmont Stakes.

According to Louisville’s Courier-Journal, Baffert and his wife Jill will donate $50,000 to the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund, $50,000 to the California Retirement Management Account, and $50,000 to Old Friends Farm.

As the name would suggest, the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund provides financial assistance to former jockeys who have suffered severe on-track injuries. The California Retirement Management Account is a fund to care for retired racehorses. Old Friends Farm is a retirement facility for horses located in Georgetown, Kentucky.
Between Baffert and Espinoza, even those of us who aren’t fans of horse racing have quite a bit to cheer for.

Because at the end of the day, American Pharoah goes back to being a horse. A really cool horse and all, but still a horse.

Here’s a prime example of a cool horse.

His jockey and his trainer used their winnings to help save and improve some lives.
Years from now, when you think back on American Pharoah’s historic run, be sure to remember his team, too.

gotta love the ones that give!!!!

www.horstales.org

BELMONT STAKES! AMERICAN PHAROAH??

 

 Saturday, June 6, 2015: Post time for Belmont Stakes: 6:50 p.m. ET

ONLY EIGHT HORSES RUNNING… it this the year we finally get a Triple Crown?

OR IS IT ANOTHER “Chrome Year”? Bucephalus can bring you LUCK!

1. Mubtaahij / 10-1 / 15-1
2. Tale of Verve / 15-1 / 20-1
3. Madefromlucky / 12-1 / 15-1
4. Frammento / 30-1 / 20-1
5. American Pharoah / 3-5 / 1-2
6. Frosted / 5-1 / 5-1
7. Keen Ice / 20-1 / 16-1
8. Materiality / 6-1 / 7-1

History

For the third time in four years, Belmont Park will play host to a Triple Crown hopeful when American Pharoah attempts to add the 147th running of the Grade 1, $1.5 million Belmont Stakes on Saturday, June 6, the final and most demanding leg of the series, to his victories in the Kentucky Derby and in the rain-drenched Preakness.
 
It will mark the 14th time since Affirmed swept all three races in 1978 that a horse has had a chance to join the 11 Triple Crown champions; none have succeeded. Three of those attempts have been by American Pharoah’s Hall of Fame trainer, Bob Baffert, who won the first two legs in 1997 with Silver Charm; 1998 with Real Quiet and 2002 with War Emblem. Two previous attempts were also made by jockey Victor Espinoza, who rode California Chrome to a fourth-place finish in 2014, and was also aboard War Emblem.

 

Sir Barton Gallant Fox Omaha War Admiral
 Whirlaway  Count Fleet  Assault  Citation
Secretariat Seattle Slew Affirmed

 

 

The details;

WHEN: Saturday, June 6, 2015: Post time for Belmont Stakes: 6:50 p.m. ET
WHERE: Belmont Park – Elmont, N.Y.
HOW TO WATCH:
Belmont Stakes prep, NBC Sports Network, 2:30 p.m.-4:30 p.m.
Belmont Stakes, NBC, 4:30 p.m.-7 p.m.
Belmont Stakes post, NBC Sports Network, 7:00 p.m.-7:30 p.m.

Total Wagered : $4,042,699.00
Last Updated at 12:41:38 PM
1 – Mubtaahij [IRE] Jockey : Irad Ortiz, Jr.
Owner : Essafinaat
Trainer : Michael de Kock
15 – 1
$201,786.00
M/L 10 – 1

2 – Tale of Verve
Jockey : Gary Stevens
Owner : Fipke, Charles, E.
Trainer : Dallas Stewart
19 – 1
$165,048.00
M/L 15 – 1

3 – Madefromlucky
Jockey : Javier Castellano
Owner : Cheyenne Stables LLC and Nichol, Mac
Trainer : Todd Pletcher
14 – 1
$214,593.00
M/L 12 – 1

4 – Frammento
Jockey : Mike Smith
Owner : Mossarosa
Trainer : Nicholas Zito
20 – 1
$159,456.00
M/L 30 – 1

5 – American Pharoah
Jockey : Victor Espinoza
Owner : Zayat Stables, LLC
Trainer : Bob Baffert
1/2
$2,150,156.00
M/L 3-5

6 – Frosted
Jockey : Joel Rosario
Owner : Godolphin Racing LLC
Trainer : Kiaran McLaughlin
5 – 1
$554,177.00
M/L 5 – 1

7 – Keen Ice
Jockey : Kent Desormeaux
Owner : Donegal Racing
Trainer : Dale Romans
16 – 1
$197,911.00
M/L 20 – 1

8 – Materiality
Jockey : John Velazquez
Owner : Alto Racing, LLC
Trainer : Todd Pletcher
7 – 1
$399,572.00

Derby Day!

blackstallionscourage

 

Carpe Diem conformation1

Carpe Diem

Ladies and Gentlemen …
Place your bets!

The Kentucky Derby (GI)

Post time: 6:34 p.m. Saturday at Churchill Downs. Purse: $2,203,800. Distance: 1 1/4 miles. TV: NBC. Radio: ESPN 680 in Louisville or HorseRacingRadio.net; Sirius 93 and XM 208.

PP horse (weight) jockey/trainer odds

1. Ocho Ocho Ocho (126) Trujillo/Cassidy 50-1

2. Carpe Diem (126) Velazquez/Pletcher 8-1

3. Materiality (126) Castellano/Pletcher 12-1

4. Tencendur (126) Franco/Weaver 30-1

5. Danzig Moon (126) Leparoux/Casse 30-1

6. Mubtaahij (126) Soumillon/de Kock 20-1

7. El Kabeir (126) Borel/Terranova 30-1

8. Dortmund (126) Garcia/Baffert 3-1

9. Bolo (126) Bejarano/Gaines 30-1

10. Firing Line (126) Stevens/Callaghan 12-1

11. Stanford (126) Geroux/Pletcher SCR

12. International Star (126) Mena/Maker 20-1

13. Itsaknockout (126) Saez/Pletcher 30-1

14. Keen Ice (126) Desormeaux/Romans 50-1

15. Frosted (126) Rosario/McLaughlin 15-1

16. War Story (126) Talamo/Amoss 50-1

17. Mr. Z (126) Vazquez/Lukas 50-1

18. American Pharoah (126) Espinoza/Baffert 5-2

19. Upstart (126) Ortiz/Violette 15-1

20. Far Right (126) Smith/Moquett 30-1

21. Frammento (126) Nakatani/Zito 50-1

22. (AE) Tale of Verve (126) Hernandez Jr./Stewart 50-1

Don’t forget your Lucky Charms!!

Bucephalus Silver Pendant
Bucephalus Silver Pendant

Derby – California Chrome – remember?

Perry Martin (left) and Steve Coburn (right) spent less than $10,000 for the horse that won the Derby.

Photo: Bill Frakes/SI

Perry Martin (left) and Steve Coburn (right) spent less than $10,000 for the horse that won the Derby.

Here’s a nice article from Sports Illustrated I thought you’d find interesting. What happens after the music fades? A bit like winning the lottery and then finding out who your friends are, really.
by Tim Layden
Wed Apr. 29, 2015

LOUISVILLE — The story really was a fairy tale, even more remarkable through the lens of time than it was in the moment. It was a narrative about some very common people and their most uncommon horse, who won the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness a year ago, turning reason on its ear and racing off into some place where dreams alone are the currency of greatness. On Saturday afternoon, 20 more horses (and the people around them) will chase history at Churchill Downs, and the winner will briefly find a place in America’s heart—perhaps for two weeks or perhaps for five, but probably not for much longer. And no matter who he is or who his human connections are, he will be following one of the most unlikely acts in modern racing history.

You remember California Chrome: He was was the baby born when two guys who were dabbling in thoroughbred ownership at its lowest levels bought a skittish, slow-footed mare for $8,000 and bred her to an undistinguished stallion for a cut-rate $1,500. They sent their new baby, with four white feet and a white blaze on his face, to a 76-year-old former jockey who had been making a good living in the minor leagues of racing for nearly four decades, but who hadn’t been to the Kentucky Derby since he was teenager, when he slept in a railway car on bale of hay next to Swaps, who would go on to win the 1955 Derby.

California Chrome won only two of his first six races and showed little hint of what lay ahead, but then suddenly reeled off four victories in a row, including a dominant performance in the Santa Anita Derby. His owners were Steve Coburn, a big-talking guy with a Stetson and dirty boots, and Perry Martin, who was much less talkative but no less cocky. His trainer was Art Sherman, a likeable guy who could name-drop Eddie Arcaro on you just like that. Chrome become one of those irresistible, warm and fuzzy pre-Derby stories. I wrote a long story in Sports Illustrated in which Coburn and Martin—they named their operation Dumb-Ass Partners because that’s what people called them when they bought Chrome’s mother—said they had already turned down millions for the colt. So what if they thought they had figured out the game, when the reality was that they had gotten spectacularly lucky?
California Chrome became the first California-bred horse to win the Kentucky Derby since 1962.

Nearly a year has passed. California Chrome has run respectably since his Belmont loss, but has won just one of five races. After the colt finished a solid second in the Dubai World Cup on March 28, Martin, the majority owner, sent Chrome to England to work with trainer Rae Guest in preparation for turf (grass) races in May and June, a decision that surprised Coburn, Sherman and everyone else connected with the horse, and which has turned the whole Chrome family just a little dysfunctional. At California’s Los Alamitos Race Course, Sherman has put an unnamed 2-year-old in Chrome’s stall because the 2-year-old has three white feet. “I miss seeing Chrome in there,” says Sherman. “So this guy reminds me a little of Chrome and that helps. I saw some video of Chrome over there, and he looks to me like he’s lost weight. I worry about him.”

California Chrome isn’t the only member of the team missing from the barn. Sherman also fired Delgado after he missed some training sessions in Dubai. This sort of thing happens often on the racetrack, but here it feels just a little sadder. The horse continues to run, but the fairy tale lies in tatters.

The whole story here.

Don’t forget your lucky Bucephalus!!