Arnold, Steven
Toledo - Sprint |
Australian Steven
Arnold, 27, has ten years of riding experience winning more
than 700 races with 2001 VRC Oaks and the 2001 and 2002 Australian
Stakes amongst his haul of six Group 1 winners. Arnold has
also had short riding stints in the Malayan Racing Association circuit
and in Macau in 1997. He also rode in Dubai during the World Cup
Carnival last year. |
Cassidy, Larry
Bocelli - Cup |
New Zealander
Larry Cassidy, aged 32, is currently riding on a local permit
in Kranji. Cassidy received his apprentice¡¦s licence at the age
of 15 and rode his 1,200th winner in June 1998. His numerous Group
1 winners include the 1994 AJC Derby, the Queensland Oaks, the Sydney
Cup and the Queensland Derby. Cassidy won the Sydney Jockeys¡¦ Premiership
in the 1997/98, 1998/99 and 1999/2000 seasons. |
Chavez, Oscar
Trillion Win - Sprint |
Panamanian jockey
Oscar Chavez, 27, was riding with plenty of success back
home when he decided to ride in the MRA circuit in 1994. He is now
a permanent resident in Singapore and he won the MRA Jockeys¡¦ Championship
in 1996 with 81 winners. His numerous big race winners include Noble
Spirits in the 1994 Emirates Singapore Derby, Golden
Glory in the 1995 Lion City Cup and Bold Explorer in
the 2000 Silver Cup. |
Childs, Greg
North Boy - Sprint |
Greg Childs,
born in New Zealand on February 6, 1962, has more than 20 years
experience in the saddle. Apart from his homeland and Australia
he also ridden in Singapore, Hong Kong, America and Dubai. He has
ridden over 40 Group 1 winners including two Cox Plates, the AJC
Derby, the VRC Derby (twice), the Hong Kong Mile, the Australian
Cup (twice), the Doncaster Handicap and the VRC Oaks to name just
a few. Childs will down in racing folklore as the regular partner
of Sunline, one of the greatest names in Australasian turf
history. |
Dettori, Lanfranco
Grandera - Cup |
Born in Milan
on December 15, 1970, the son of Gianfranco, a former multiple champion
jockey in Italy, Lanfranco "Frankie" Dettori arrived
from his homeland to join Luca Cumani's Newmarket yard as an apprentice
in July, 1985, and rode his first winner on Lizzie Hare in
1987. He has since captured the hearts of racegoers with his flamboyant
style, phenomenal riding successes, and charisma in and out of the
saddle. Britain's champion jockey in 1994 and 1995, Dettori created
history when riding all seven winners on the first-day card at the
Ascot Festival in September, 1996. While victory in the Epsom Derby
still eludes Dettori, he has won virtually all other major honour
with over 100 Group 1 successes. Last Sunday he won the 1000 Guineas
on Kazzia for Godolphin. |
Doleuze, Olivier
Indigenous - Cup |
Olivier Doleuze,
born 19 April 1972, started his career apprenticed to Criquette
Head-Maarek and was the champion apprentice of France in 1989.
After the completion of his apprenticeship, Doleuze continued to
ride for Ms. Head and he is retained as her stable rider. Doleuze
has also ridden with success in Singapore. He has had a total of
6,379 race rides for 726 winners (11.3%), of which 55 have been
in Group races. Doleuze has ridden 13 Group 1 winners including
the 1999 French Oaks on Egyptband. International race success
came in the 2001 Singapore KrisFlyer Sprint on Iron Mask.
Doleuze was a huge hit during a winter stint in Hong Kong when he
rode 26 winners from more than 140 rides - an excellent strike-rate
of almost 18.5%. |
Du Plessis, Mark
Tit For Taat - Sprint |
Mark Du Plessis,
25, from Zimbabwe where was a former champion jockey and apprentice,
is currently licensed by the New Zealand Thoroughbred Racing Inc.
To date he has around 400 winners to his credit. Apart from riding
to a high degree of success in homeland, he has tasted victory in
New Zealand, Melbourne and Mauritius. He is presently riding on
a visiting permit in Singapore. |
Dunn, Dwayne
Charming City - Sprint |
Dwayne Dunn,
28, was South Australia's dominant jockey before taking up the offer
to ride in Hong Kong last season. A bad fall at Happy Valley, however,
after just a handful of rides put paid to any initial chances of
success. However, he recovered back home and returned to Hong Kong
for the current term and has notched up a very respectable 30 winners,
including his first ever Group 1 victory on Charming City
in the Chairman's Sprint Prize last April. |
Geroudis, Johnny
Palace Line - Cup Blizz Bless - Sprint |
Johannesburg-born
Johnny Geroudis, 30, is riding in Singapore on a visiting
permit. The lightweight jockey completed his course at the famed
South African Jockey's Academy and rode his first winner at 16.
He then teamed up with trainer Patrick Shaw for whom he booted home
numerous winners including ten in Group 1 races and the prestigious
July Handicap. The 30-year-old is currently second in the jockeys¡¦
table with 22 winners. His big-race wins include Palace
Line in the Singapore Classic. |
Innes, Leith
Tapildo - Cup |
New Zealander
Leith Innes, 23, rode his first winner astride Ad Alta
in 1995 and steered the same mare to win a Group 1 race back home.
Innes was first indentured to his trainer-father at the age of 16.
He then joined trainer Jimmy Gibbs in Matamata where he scored 180
winners. After spending four years as a rookie, more winners came
his way both in New Zealand and in Australia. The Kiwi rider ranked
fourth in his native country before his current Singapore sojourn.
Last season, Innes finished eighth in the New Zealand Jockeys' Championship
with 66 winners. To date, he has ridden more than 300 winners including
16 in Listed and Group races. |
Lao, Weng-hong
Yorick - Sprint |
Weng-hong,
Lao, 27, from Macau, is a familiar face to Singapore racegoers
having ridden in the local circuit on several short stints between
1996 to 2000. In Singapore on a local permit, Lao is currently ranked
sixth in the Macau Jockeys' Premiership with 38 winners. Three
times the champion apprentice back home, Lao¡¦s big-race wins include
the 1999 CTM Cup, the ATV Cup and the Macau Gold Cup in 2000 and
the Winter Trophy and the Summer Trophy in 2001. He has ridden a
total of around 500 winners. |
Marwing, Weichong
Olympic Express - Cup Firebolt - Sprint |
Weichong Marwing,
born April 14 1970, won over 1800 races including six Derbies in
his native South Africa where was champion jockey in 1996/97. Marwing
was also the regular partner of Horse Chestnut, one of the
greats of recent South African racing history. He lit up the latter
part of the 1999/2000 campaign in Hong Kong with 31 wins from 162
rides - a winning strike-rate of 19%. The following season he was
retained as first jockey by trainer Tony Millard but the partnership
was dissolved midway through the term. However, he was named not
long afterwards as the new jockey for the dual Horse of the Year,
Fairy King Prawn, and he returned to win the Group 1 Chairman's
Sprint Prize on the APQE II Cup supporting card. Marwing is now
a Club Jockey again and, buoyed by further Group 1 glory on Olympic
Express in the Hong Kong Classic Mile and the Hong Kong Derby,
he is challenging for a first Hong Kong jockey's title. |
Saimee, Jumaat
Saddle Up - Cup Superb Effect - Sprint |
Jumaat Saimee,
30, Singapore's champion jockey, is regarded to be on par with some
of the world¡¦s best. In all his 11 years in the saddle, the
Singaporean has won the jockey¡¦s championship four times. He also
won more than 20 features among some 800 winners to date and is
once again leading the Singapore jockeys' ranks. In 1998,
Saimee won his first jockey¡¦s premiership with 111 winners and in
the process broke the record set 29 years ago by expatriate jockey
Glynn Pretty. Saimee is best remembered for his victory in the inaugural
Singapore Airlines International Cup aboard Ouzo. He has
also participated in international events in Hong Kong, Australia,
South Africa, Macau and Japan. |
| Sanchez, Frédéric Western
Pride - Cup |
Frédéric
Sanchez, born September 1 1974 in France has won more than 500
races in native country, California, Hong Kong, Dubai, Japan and
now Singapore, among which are 19 Listed and three Group races.
In his seven season's riding in France he has finished in the top
10 of the French championship on five occasions.
|
Shea, Kevin
Hoeberg - Cup |
Kevin Shea
is a top jockey in South Africa where he has consistently finished
in the top three of that country's jockeys premiership for several
seasons and is currently in second place behind jockey M. Khan with
128 winners. Shea has previously partnered SAIC mount Hoeberg
in South Africa on nine occasions, winning six times. |
Sheehan, Justin
Universal Prince - Cup |
Justin Sheehan,
born May 9, 1972, from Queensland, rode - and won - his first race
aged 14. He lost his claim by the time he was 18 and he has well
over 1000 career winners to his name. His first Group 1 win was
the AJC Oaks in 1996 and the smart miler Adam landed him
the Group 1 George Main Stakes in 2000. Universal Prince,
however, is the best horse he has ridden. Together the pair have
won four Group 1s, including last year's AJC Australian Derby. |
Soumillon, Christophe
Terre A Terre - Cup |
Christophe
Soumillon was born June 4 1981 in Brussels. In 1996 he moved
to Chantilly to become apprentice to Cedric Boutin. His first winner
arrived in 1997 and he has made rapid progress since then, becoming
champion apprentice in 1999. In April 2000 he won five races in
one day (equalling the French record) at Saint-Cloud, including
the Group Two Prix du Muguet aboard Fabre¡¦s Dansili. He rode
at Hollywood and Santa Anita last winter, returning to France to
win his first Group 1, the Prix du Jockey-Club on Anabaa Blue
for trainer Carlos Lerner. He finished 5th in the French Jockey¡¦s
Championship last season with 88 wins from 773 rides when he also
took over from Gerald Mosse as the Aga Khan's retained rider in
France. He has enjoyed Group 1 wins in France and Dubai on Terre
A Terre, on whom he finished a close third in the Hong Kong
Cup last December. |
Stevens, Gary
Hawkeye - Cup Caller One - Sprint |
Gary Stevens,
born March 6, 1963, began his riding career aged 16 and he won on
his first ride, Lil Star. Not far off 5,000 winners later,
including eight Triple Crown and eight Breeders' Cup successes,
he has become one of the most successful jockeys in the history
of the sport. He was voted into America's Racing Hall of Fame in
1997 and earned an Eclipse Award as the outstanding rider of 1998.
He shocked the racing world in December 1999 when he announced his
retirement from the saddle owing to persistent knee problems. However,
he made a dramatic comeback just ten months later and, typically,
won on the big stage shortly afterwards, landing the Breeders' Cup
Mile on War Chant. Last year he was Point Given's
regular pilot before the Preakness and Belmont Stakes winner was
retired. He has won the Kentucky Derby three times and the Dubai
World Cup once. In 1994/95 during a short stint in Hong Kong, Stevens
rode 20 winners from 89 rides - an excellent 22.5% strike-rate.
|
Suborics, Andreas
Paolini - Cup |
Andreas Suborics,
born August 11, 1971 in Vienna, won his first race in 1988. His
first Group 1 success was on A Magicman in the 1996 Prix
de la Foret, and he rode Peter Schiergen¡¦s Tiger Hill to
victory in the 1998 Grosser Preis von Baden. Suborics is stable
jockey to Bremen based trainer Andreas Wohler, and he has enjoyed
much success on Wohler¡¦s Silvano, winning the AP Queen Elizabeth
II Cup, the Singapore Cup and the Arlington Million in 2001. He
also partnered Wohler¡¦s Paolini to dual Group 1 success in
Italy in 2001. He finished the season in 2nd place in the German
Jockey¡¦s Championship with 93 wins from 492 rides. |
Take, Yutake
Atlantis Prince - Cup Air Thule - Sprint |
Yutake Take,
born March 15, 1969, has been the darling of the Japanese racing
scene for a long time now and it's no wonder with ten champion jockey
titles to his credit and over 2,000 winners in the bag. He has won
practically everything in Japan although it did take him a while
to win the Japan Cup. He finally filled the one major domestic omission
in his CV last season when Special Week defeated Indigenous
in 1999. With hardly anything left to conquer at home, he moved
to France last year where he rode over 30 winners including the
Group 1 Prix de l'Abbaye for the second time having won the race
in 1999 aboard Agnes World. Take rode Stay Gold
to success in the Dubai Sheema Classic and the Hong Kong Vase
last year. |
Thulliez, Thierry
Danger Over - Sprint |
Thierry Thulliez,
born in Paris in 1974, joined top French jumps trainer Jean-Paul
Gallorini at Maisons-Laffitte and won 17 races over obstacles before
moving to Chantilly to ride flat horses. A freelance jockey, Thulliez
rides regularly for Maurice Zilber, Jean de Roualle, Pascal Bary
and, more recently, Francois Doumen. His greatest success to date
came in 1995 when he won the Group 1 Prix de Diane Hermes and the
Prix Vermeille on Carling for Corinne Barbe. 2001 had been
a good year for him. He finished 8th in the jockeys championship
with 74 winners from 720 rides. |