The Laffit Pincay Jr. Award
Jul 6, 2013 18:51:51 GMT -5
Post by racinggal on Jul 6, 2013 18:51:51 GMT -5
The Laffit Pincay Jr. Award is an honor given annually since 2004 by Hollywood Park Racetrack in Inglewood, California to someone who has served the horse racing industry with integrity, dedication, determination and distinction. Named for retired U.S. Racing Hall of Fame jockey Laffit Pincay, Jr., the award, designed by American sculptor Nina Kaiser, is presented on Hollywood Gold Cup Day, a racecard that features the premier race Pincay won a record nine times.
Winners of the Laffit Pincay Jr. Award
2012 - John Harris, CA owner and breeder
2011 - Jerry & Ann Moss, longtime owners, own Zenyatta
2010 - Oak Tree Racing Association
2009 - Merlin Volzke, jockey
2008 - Pete Pedersen, longtime California race steward
2007 : Ellwood W. "Bud" Johnston — Director and president of the California Thoroughbred Breeders Association for 25 years. He is the owner of Old English Rancho, breeders of more than 200 stakes winners and the leading North American breeder in 1971 and 1972
2006 : Mel and Warren Stute — Brothers who are longtime Thoroughbred horse trainers[2005 : Noble Threewitt — Thoroughbred trainer and humanitarian who trained for 75 years and who at age 95 became the oldest trainer to win a race in North America.
2004 : Bob Benoit — Employee and executive with Hollywood Park Racetrack for more than fifty years
2013 - Eddie Delahoussaye
Delahoussaye 10th Winner Of Laffit Pincay, Jr. Award
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (June 27, 2013)—Hall of Fame jockey Eddie Delahoussaye will be presented the 10th annual Laffit Pincay, Jr. Award during the Hollywood Gold Cup program Saturday, July 6 at Betfair Hollywood Park.
Pincay, a member of racing’s Hall of Fame since 1975, will make the presentation between the fifth and sixth races.
The Pincay Award is presented yearly to someone who has served the sport with integrity, extraordinary dedication, determination and distinction.
“Eddie is one of the very best jockeys I ever rode against and he was definitely the best I faced on horses that came from behind,’’ said Pincay. “If you heard him coming during a race, you knew you were in big trouble.
“He’s a very low-key guy who has always handled things the right way and that’s something I continue to admire about him.’’
A native of New Iberia, Louisiana, Delahoussaye won 6,384 races – making him one of 17 jockeys with at least 6,000 wins – during a career that spanned all or part of five decades, ending with his retirement in January, 2003.
Nearly a quarter of those victories came at Hollywood Park. Delahoussaye ranks fifth on the all-time list at the historic track with 1,535 wins. He is fourth with 170 stakes successes, including three Gold Cup victories – Go West Young Man (1980), Island Whirl (1983) and Desert Wine (1984).
Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1993, Delahoussaye won the Kentucky Derby in consecutive years – Gato Del Sol (1982) and Sunny’s Halo (1983) – and also captured the Belmont Stakes twice with Risen Star (1988) and A.P. Indy (1992) and the 1988 Preakness with Risen Star.
A member of the Fair Grounds Hall of Fame and the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame, Delahoussaye also won seven Breeders’ Cup events, including the Distaff with Princess Rooney in the inaugural Breeders’ Cup in 1984 at Hollywood Park.
Still active in racing as an owner-breeder and bloodstock advisor, Delahoussaye is a director on the board of the Edwin J. Gregson Foundation, a nonprofit established in 1998 to develop programs to benefit and enhance the quality of life of California’s backstretch workers and their families.
The foundation was renamed in 2000 to honor the memory of Gregson, the primary advocate for the creation of the foundation and Gato Del Sol’s trainer when the gray son of Cougar II won the Kentucky Derby.
The Pincay Jr. Award was introduced by Hollywood Park in 2004 with esteemed executive and racing publicist Bob Benoit the initial winner.
Trainer Noble Threewitt was the recipient in 2005, while the Stute brothers — Mel and Warren — shared the award in 2006.
Owner/breeder Ellwood W. “Bud” Johnston, whose Old English Rancho is one of the most storied names in California racing, won the award in 2007, while distinguished steward Pete Pedersen was the recipient in 2008. Merlin Volzke, who also had a noteworthy career as a steward, became the first former jockey to win the award in 2009.
The Oak Tree Racing Association was honored in 2010, Jerry and Ann Moss were the 2011 winners and prominent owner-breeder and former California Horse Racing Board chairman John Harris was the 2012 recipient.
BHP Site
Eddie was one of my favorite jockeys!
Winners of the Laffit Pincay Jr. Award
2012 - John Harris, CA owner and breeder
2011 - Jerry & Ann Moss, longtime owners, own Zenyatta
2010 - Oak Tree Racing Association
2009 - Merlin Volzke, jockey
2008 - Pete Pedersen, longtime California race steward
2007 : Ellwood W. "Bud" Johnston — Director and president of the California Thoroughbred Breeders Association for 25 years. He is the owner of Old English Rancho, breeders of more than 200 stakes winners and the leading North American breeder in 1971 and 1972
2006 : Mel and Warren Stute — Brothers who are longtime Thoroughbred horse trainers[2005 : Noble Threewitt — Thoroughbred trainer and humanitarian who trained for 75 years and who at age 95 became the oldest trainer to win a race in North America.
2004 : Bob Benoit — Employee and executive with Hollywood Park Racetrack for more than fifty years
2013 - Eddie Delahoussaye
Delahoussaye 10th Winner Of Laffit Pincay, Jr. Award
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (June 27, 2013)—Hall of Fame jockey Eddie Delahoussaye will be presented the 10th annual Laffit Pincay, Jr. Award during the Hollywood Gold Cup program Saturday, July 6 at Betfair Hollywood Park.
Pincay, a member of racing’s Hall of Fame since 1975, will make the presentation between the fifth and sixth races.
The Pincay Award is presented yearly to someone who has served the sport with integrity, extraordinary dedication, determination and distinction.
“Eddie is one of the very best jockeys I ever rode against and he was definitely the best I faced on horses that came from behind,’’ said Pincay. “If you heard him coming during a race, you knew you were in big trouble.
“He’s a very low-key guy who has always handled things the right way and that’s something I continue to admire about him.’’
A native of New Iberia, Louisiana, Delahoussaye won 6,384 races – making him one of 17 jockeys with at least 6,000 wins – during a career that spanned all or part of five decades, ending with his retirement in January, 2003.
Nearly a quarter of those victories came at Hollywood Park. Delahoussaye ranks fifth on the all-time list at the historic track with 1,535 wins. He is fourth with 170 stakes successes, including three Gold Cup victories – Go West Young Man (1980), Island Whirl (1983) and Desert Wine (1984).
Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1993, Delahoussaye won the Kentucky Derby in consecutive years – Gato Del Sol (1982) and Sunny’s Halo (1983) – and also captured the Belmont Stakes twice with Risen Star (1988) and A.P. Indy (1992) and the 1988 Preakness with Risen Star.
A member of the Fair Grounds Hall of Fame and the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame, Delahoussaye also won seven Breeders’ Cup events, including the Distaff with Princess Rooney in the inaugural Breeders’ Cup in 1984 at Hollywood Park.
Still active in racing as an owner-breeder and bloodstock advisor, Delahoussaye is a director on the board of the Edwin J. Gregson Foundation, a nonprofit established in 1998 to develop programs to benefit and enhance the quality of life of California’s backstretch workers and their families.
The foundation was renamed in 2000 to honor the memory of Gregson, the primary advocate for the creation of the foundation and Gato Del Sol’s trainer when the gray son of Cougar II won the Kentucky Derby.
The Pincay Jr. Award was introduced by Hollywood Park in 2004 with esteemed executive and racing publicist Bob Benoit the initial winner.
Trainer Noble Threewitt was the recipient in 2005, while the Stute brothers — Mel and Warren — shared the award in 2006.
Owner/breeder Ellwood W. “Bud” Johnston, whose Old English Rancho is one of the most storied names in California racing, won the award in 2007, while distinguished steward Pete Pedersen was the recipient in 2008. Merlin Volzke, who also had a noteworthy career as a steward, became the first former jockey to win the award in 2009.
The Oak Tree Racing Association was honored in 2010, Jerry and Ann Moss were the 2011 winners and prominent owner-breeder and former California Horse Racing Board chairman John Harris was the 2012 recipient.
BHP Site
Eddie was one of my favorite jockeys!