Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Saez handed 15-day suspension for Ky. Derby ride

- By Byron King

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Jockey Luis Saez has been suspended 15 racing days by Churchill Downs stewards for his ride in the Kentucky Derby aboard Maximum Security, who crossed the wire first before being disqualifi­ed for causing interferen­ce leaving the second turn of the race. Saez was cited for “failure to control his mount and make the proper effort to maintain a straight course,” the stewards cited in their ruling, which was released Monday on the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission website.

The suspension, five times longer than the typical threeday riding-infraction penalty for jockeys, covers a 15-day period of racing: May 23-27, May 30-June 2, June 6-9, and June 13-14.

Maximum Security led for much of the Derby at Churchill, but was placed 17th by the stewards after being ruled to have impeded a few rivals, including Long Range Toddy, the original 17th-place finisher, when he ducked out into their racing paths nearing the stretch. This decision promoted Country House, a 65-1 longshot, into first from his original second-place position.

Video replays and photograph­s show Saez steering Maximum Security back toward the inside after the incident by pulling on the left rein.

“I thought I never put anybody in danger,” Saez said after the Derby. “My horse shied away from the noise of the crowd and may have ducked out a little.”

Churchill’s three stewards – Barbara Borden, Tyler Picklesime­r, and Butch Becraft – met Friday with a representa­tive of Saez, Louisville attorney Ann Oldfather, who presented edited video to the stewards in defense of her client.

This video, which also circulated online, directed blame of the incident toward seventhpla­ce War of Will and jockey Tyler Gaffalione, arguing they caused contact by running up on the heels of Maximum Security, who then reacted by drifting out. The video further asserted that Country House, under Flavien Prat, drifted inward on the far turn, crowding rivals.

A jockey can appeal a riding-infraction ruling before the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission. The commission denied an appeal May 6 that was brought by Gary and Mary West, the owners of Maximum Security, regarding the Derby disqualifi­cation, though the Wests could still pursue the matter in court.

“Luis does intend to appeal this unsupporte­d suspension,” said Sean Deskins, an attorney in Oldfather’s law firm. “It’s very egregious.”

Borden, the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission steward, deferred comment on the ruling to Susan West, a spokeswoma­n for Kentucky’s Public Protection Cabinet.

A phone call placed to the Wests was not immediatel­y returned.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States