zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
Watch his ride on Know No Fear in the last then !!!!
Another typical top jock who won't ride to orders and doesn't give a flying fcuk unless he is riding for a big yard or connections, front runner told to go handy and commit 7f out and kick on, bloody Buick went handy for 1f then broke his jaw reigned him back to nearly last before getting stuck behind horses and then hit him 5 times in the space of ten yards and gave up and stood up on him. Bloody awful ride and probably the worse ride one of mine has ever been given. I would rather use Ann Stokel than him, he's only interested in big races or big yards.
I think the above points are fair and agree but as an owner who is paying the jockey to ride surely it's your prerogative to tell them how to ride YOUR horse regardless of whether it ends in tears or not. In a business if the owner tells an employee to do something even if they disagree it gets done generally otherwise there are repercussions.
In this case the jockey is not the employee of the owner. If I hire a tradesman to do a job he is not my employee. I'm paying for a service and hoping for the best. If it doesn't work out I have to figure out how to deal with it. I think that's what we have here. If the jockey was being paid a retainer in effect tying him to a stable that would be a different scenario.Then I as an owner would be asked to pay a monthly fee for this purpose and then could demand whatever I wanted from the jockey regarding instructions, and it could then have repercussions if the "employee" failed to adhere to them. In this case what are the repercussions. Buick wont ride for Beek anymore and will move on without thinking much about it, as he most likely rode the horse to the best possible placing. Sounds harsh maybe but as they say it's a tough game.
So you're saying because an owner doesn't pay a retainer the jockey is at liberty to ignore instructions? There's a difference as well with paying for a service say a dry cleaner you know what you're expecting and if they balls it up you have course for complaint and probably not paying that's not the case here.
I'll open this out to one of the most famous rides..Dancing Brave in the Derby. I haven't read what Starkey had to say about that day..maybe one of you guys may know.
My question re that is do people think that Starkey alone made the decision to hold him up off a slow pace or was he told to hold him up no matter what speed they went. I can't see how that decision was purely Starkey's...but who gets the blame since that day?
Good post EC. Never understand why anyone would book a top jockey and then want to slavishly tie them down to a specific set of instructions. By all means, have a plan, but if the race doesn't pan out as anticipated, you must allow the jockey to adapt to the individual circumstances of a rac