South China Morning Post

SADDLING UP THE CITY’S FUTURE RIDING STARS

Former badminton star Amy Chan is flourishin­g once again, this time as the headmistre­ss of the Jockey Club’s Apprentice Jockeys’ School

- Chan Kin-wa kinwa.chan@scmp.com

Amy Chan Lim-chee may be best remembered as a Hong Kong badminton legend, but her role as headmistre­ss of the Jockey Club’s Apprentice Jockeys’ School is earning her star status all over again.

Chan was athlete affairs manager at the Sports Institute after she finished her playing career and earned a physical education degree at Springfiel­d College, Massachuse­tts.

She won the mixed doubles gold medal with partner Chan Chi-choi at the 1990 Commonweal­th Games and was the women’s singles champion of Hong Kong for nine consecutiv­e years from 1975 to 1983.

But now she is excelling in her work with apprentice jockeys just as much as when she was on the badminton court.

She previously mentored now retired Kei Chiong Ka-kei and current rider Matthew Chadwick

“I started working with both when they were 15 or 16, young kids knowing nothing about horse racing,” Chan said. “They were both very talented, of course, otherwise they wouldn’t have been so successful. But I can also tell you they both worked very hard to achieve their goals.

“I was also like a blank piece of paper in horse racing when I joined the Jockey Club more than a decade ago, especially because people thought horse racing was a man’s world. I also needed to learn everything from scratch and faced a lot of difficulti­es in the first three years of my job.

“But I was never discourage­d and kept working hard as I always believed the Chinese proverb ‘God rewards those who work hard’, and it works.”

At the Fo Tan training complex, she worked with elite Hong Kong athletes such as windsurfer Lee Lai-shan, outstandin­g cyclist

Wong Kam-po and squash player Rebecca Chiu Wing-yin, helping them with their everyday lives other than training before she was invited to move across the road to join the Jockey Club in 2006.

“I consider managing athletes is like managing apprentice jockeys. They are sportspers­ons to a large extent,” she said.

“Both fields require hard work and commitment and if you can acquire both, you won’t be too far away from success. I always reckon the importance of the 10,000hour rule, there is no quick fix. Success requires long hours of training and hard work.”

Chan cited the example of Chiong, who was an ordinary Hong Kong girl with little sports background when she joined the apprentice school before becoming a successful jockey, winning a total of 58 races in a brief span of two years.

Chiong announced her retirement at the age of 25 earlier this year because of injury.

“She was outstandin­g,” Chan said. “But when she first started, she was just like any novice jockey and suffered a few shaky starts.

“In fact, we were also under pressure because there hadn’t been any female jockeys riding in Hong Kong for 15 years. We had to make sure nothing would go wrong.”

Promising female apprentice jockey Willy Kan Wai-yue was killed in March 1999 after the 19year-old fell off her mount during a race at Sha Tin Racecourse.

The youngster was the first female jockey to ride in the Hong Kong Derby just before her fatal accident.

No local female jockey had been seen in Hong Kong after Carol Yu Wing-sze’s last race in May 2000 until September 2015 when Chiong made her debut at Sha Tin.

“Chiong injured her right hand three months after her maiden appearance, also falling from her horse during a race, but it gave her the opportunit­y to train her left hand and time to study all the preparatio­n work for her return,” Chan said. “She knew her target well and what she wanted to achieve in her career.

“She spent six years in the apprentice school before reaching all the benchmarks we set for any jockey, not just a female jockey. She proved to us her riding capabiliti­es and her strong character to fight.”

After a slow start, Chiong was able to rise through the ranks, riding a historic four winners in one day, just seven months after her debut.

She became the champion apprentice in her first season and won the inaugural Tony Cruz Award for leading local jockey.

Now retired, Chiong is studying to become a trainer via British Horse Society courses, according to the headmistre­ss.

“At the apprentice school, we don’t want to train them to become a successful jockey only, we want to train them to become a person with integrity,” Chan said.

“There are a lot of temptation­s for jockeys as the betting pool reaches over HK$100 million in one race. Many people are using different ways to get tips from the jockeys which are not allowed by the rules.”

Chan said there had been cases where she felt let down as some jockeys had tried to “challenge the system” and tried to find loopholes to make money.

It was just like when she was athlete affairs manager at the Sports Institute, and some soccer players became involved in match-fixing after leaving the training centre for the profession­al league.

“These were sad moments,” Chan said. “It’s not easy to get the opportunit­y to join the Apprentice Jockeys’ School and they should treasure the chance to develop themselves not only as a successful jockey but also a true person after spending years of training there.”

In June, 2012, Chan added another feature to her cap when she was one of 58 Justices of the Peace appointed.

I always reckon the importance of the 10,000hour rule, there is no quick fix

AMY CHAN

 ?? ?? Amy Chan Lim-chee won nine straight Hong Kong women’s badminton singles titles to go with her outstandin­g mixed doubles record
Amy Chan Lim-chee won nine straight Hong Kong women’s badminton singles titles to go with her outstandin­g mixed doubles record
 ?? Photos: K.Y. Cheng ?? Amy Chan feels at home at the Sha Tin stables. The former badminton star is thriving as a mentor to Hong Kong’s future jockeys.
Photos: K.Y. Cheng Amy Chan feels at home at the Sha Tin stables. The former badminton star is thriving as a mentor to Hong Kong’s future jockeys.
 ?? ?? Amy Chan chats to students at the Jockey Club’s Apprentice School.
Amy Chan chats to students at the Jockey Club’s Apprentice School.

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