Caribbean jockeys keeping horse racing alive in Winnipeg

Antonio Whiethall

Hearing the jockeys at Winnipeg’s Assiniboia Downs racetrack talking to one another in Barbadian, Jamaican and Trinidadian accents while they dress, it may be easy to think you’re standing somewhere in the West Indies.

In recent years, Caribbean riders have become a fixture in Winnipeg’s horse racing community.

Thirteen of the 17 jockeys at the racetrack this season are from the Caribbean.  A Caribbean rider has won the leading rider title six of the last seven seasons.

“We get treated fairly here,” said Antonio Whitehall, a Barbadian-born jockey who races at Assiniboia Downs.

“You work hard and you get rewarded. You get good clients here. It is nice and friendly, and they like us,” he said.

Rohan Singh

What may appear at first to be a random connection between two distant places is actually the result of strategic effort by Assiniboia Downs to sustain the sport in Winnipeg, while also providing the riders who choose to come the opportunity to grow in their craft.

“To be perfectly honest, without the participation from the jockeys in the Caribbean region, we wouldn’t be able to race,” said Darren Dunn, chief executive officer of Assiniboia Downs.

Since the track opened to the public in 1958, most jockeys have come from Canada and the United States.

But Dunn says changes in Canadian society have shrunk the pool of homegrown riders.

“The challenge we face in Canada is that with every year that goes by, it’s another generation that’s separated from the farm,” he said.

That means fewer people here with “access to the horses … to the opportunity to train, the exposure to the racetracks and/or the ability to horseback ride,” said Dunn, leaving Assiniboia Downs “to go outside of the border to look for talent in the saddle.”

 

Chavion Chow

Chavion Chow first came to Winnipeg from Jamaica in 2008, when he was in his early 20s. He topped his colleagues in 2015, winning the leading rider title, and is credited with having won 269 races and over $2.4 million in purses.

Chow says he’s glad to ride at Assiniboia Downs, because in Jamaica, there is only one track, but “so many riders.”

In Canada, he has more options, he says.

Fellow jockey Leroy Nelson said he “felt the riding bug” again after a five-year break from riding, which he mentioned to his cousin, Tyrone Nelson, another Jamaican who used to race at Assiniboia Downs.

Caribbean riders have done well at other venues across Canada. Patrick Husbands from Barbados, riding at Woodbine Racetrack in Toronto, has earned 3,285 victories and almost $160 million in purses.

Dunn says when Assiniboia Downs went looking for riders in the Caribbean, they were impressed with what they found.

“The success we’ve had in the Caribbean — the talent, the skill, year after year that continues to emerge from there — is certainly a testament to the roots of racing in the Caribbean,” he said.

Arthur Budhu

The first Caribbean jockey to come to Winnipeg was Vassell Najair, who came from Jamaica about 20 years ago, according to Dunn.

Since that time, the organization has been deliberate about recruiting Caribbean riders.

“I think we were a little bit more aggressive than most racetracks in reaching out directly, making the local contacts, and then reaching out directly to the talent in the saddle,” Dunn said.

He says his organization was deliberate about things like helping to arrange immigration, flights, and a place to live, and making it “very easy to … get settled and get back in the saddle very quickly.”

Fans don’t care where riders come from, Dunn says. What they do care about is “if their money is down, or they pick a name, pick a colour, that that horse is being safely cared for and safely rode.”

Whitehall has been crowned the leading rider twice, in 2018 and 2020. He also finished third among all jockeys in Canada in 2020 with 117 victories.

Like some of the other jockeys, he used to race in Canada for the season and then return to his home in Barbados in the fall. But facing the possibility of a lockout due to flight restrictions at the start of the pandemic, Whitehall decided to move to Winnipeg for good.

The community and the track “feel like home now,” he said.

“I see myself here. I like it here, I fit in here perfectly, like here is home,” said Whitehall.

“So I think here is the future.”