The Ocala Jockey Club International 3-Day Event organizers and the Florida Thoroughbred Breeders’ & Owners’ Association (FTBOA) have teamed up to announce a new award created to highlight the success of retired racehorses in second careers. The $1,000 award will go to the top-placed Florida-connected horse and rider competing in the Three-Day Event at Ocala Jockey Club on November 15 through 18. The Event presents a stepping stone for Ocala to the world stage of equestrian sports and three-day eventing, attracting world class riders to the Ocala Jockey Club International 3-Day Event as a qualifier for top level competitions, such as the just-completed 2018 World Equestrian Games.
“The FTBOA believes the care and support of retired thoroughbreds is a common sense responsibility shared by all who participate in the racing and breeding industry,” said FTBOA CEO Lonny Powell. “This high profile, award winning event is among several that support and promote the versatility and marketability of retired thoroughbreds.
Kicked off in 2016, the event provided $15,000 in prize funds to participating thoroughbreds, to attract the use of off-the-track Thoroughbreds (OTTB) in second careers. The FTBOA was involved from the inception. Staff consulted with organizers, helped connect organizers to community leaders, and volunteered onsite to ensure the 2016 event was a success. The concept worked. The 2016 event boasted that 27% of the horses competing were Thoroughbreds, compared to a 6.5% average for two other Ocala-based three-day events.
Since then, the Event has grown and was recognized with the 2017 Small Market Event of the Year award by the Florida Sports Foundation. The Florida Sports Foundation, the state’s leading sports promotion and development organization, created this award as one of six awarded annually to recognize Florida’s communities and sports commissions for their outstanding efforts in the state’s sports tourism.
“A goal of the competition is to attract equestrian sport competitors’ interest to own and value off-the-track Thoroughbreds,” said Pavla Nygaard, the owner and president of the Ocala Jockey Club and Thor-Bred Stables, along with her husband Erik. She continued, “Off-the-track Thoroughbreds need second careers and great owners. It’s win-win for both sides.”
The goal of attracting top equestrian sport competitors has been attained. It is a popular destination for top-level riders with four of the five 2018 U.S. Eventing World Equestrian Team members having ridden in one or both of the first two editions of this event. The CIC3* course and newly added CCI3* course is designed by Olympic Silver Medalist Clayton Fredericks, along with Mike Etherington-Smith, former head of British Eventing, and the course designer for the Sydney and Beijing Olympic Games, as co-designer. Having this talent onsite means Thoroughbreds are showcased to the elite sports set.
The retired Thoroughbred award is just the latest initiative that focuses on the versatility of thoroughbreds. In 2014, FTBOA began partnering with Run for the Ribbons Horse Shows that promote the retraining of Thoroughbreds in the state of Florida into second careers as hunters and jumpers. Horse show organizer, OTTB enthusiast, and Thoroughbred owner, Laurine Fuller-Vargas, expanded the program to add the Florida Thoroughbred Transformation Expo in 2017 held at the Florida Horse Park and Exposition Center. FTBOA has supported the program since its inception.
Almost two decades ago, the FTBOA partnered with the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation and the Florida Department of Corrections to establish Second Chance Farm at the Lowell Correctional Institute, a first of its kind in Florida and the only in the nation for women. Approximately 15 women are enrolled each session to earn an equine certification degree and upon release are considered for employment on horse farms across the state. Many of the participants had never worked with a horse before starting the program. Part of the experience is caring for the more than 50 retired Florida thoroughbred racehorses at the facility.
The event partnership is a perfect match, since Pavla Nygaard is a strong supporter of retired Thoroughbred opportunities. She serves on the board of the Retired Racehorse Project and the Ocala Jockey Club recently sponsored the National Makeover and Symposium hosting a large-scale silent auction to support OTTB programs.
The third annual Ocala Jockey Club International 3-Day Event will run November 15-18, 2018. $15,000 of the total prize fund will be allocated to top-placing Thoroughbreds in each of the four competition divisions (CCI3*, CIC3*, CCI2*, CCI1*).
About the Ocala Jockey Club International 3-Day Event
The inaugural Ocala Jockey Club Interntional 3-Day Event was run in November 2016 with the CIC3*, CCI2* and CCI1* divisions. The excellent footing, viewing opportunities, and stunning spectator-friendly rolling hill terrain have propelled the Ocala Jockey Club International 3-Day Event to quickly establish itself as a popular destination for top-level riders. Four of the five U.S. Team members chosen to represent the USA in the 2018 World Equestrian Games have ridden at the Event already. The Event and its featured Fall Family Festival has also already become a key event for the Ocala community, with it having brought $1 million of economic impact to Marion County in 2017 and having won the prestigious Florida Sports Foundation Small Market Event of the Year Award. In recognition of its sports tourism value, the Event has been generously supported with a grant by the Marion County Visitors & Convention Bureau (MCVCB). This year’s third annual Ocala Jockey Club International 3-Day Event is set to run November 15-18, 2018. This year’s event will feature an added prestigious CCI3* division, only one of five in the USA and the only one to be held in the Southeast. The CCI3* will be designed by Olympic individual silver medalist Clayton Fredericks along with Mike Etherington-Smith, the course designer for the Sydney and Beijing Olympic Games, as Assistant Course Designer. Shelley Page, the OJC Event Organizer, has also served as the eventing discipline organizer at 2018 Tryon World Equestrian Games. To learn more about the Ocala Jockey Club International 3-Day Event, visit www.ojc3de.com or contact the OJC Event organizer, Shelley Page, at [email protected] or (352) 266-3970.
About the Ocala Jockey Club
The Ocala Jockey Club (OJC) facility, with its rolling hills and showcase old-growth Spanish-moss-laden oak trees, is a crown jewel in the horse country of Ocala, Florida. About 200 acres of the 950-acre Ocala Jockey Club property serve as a Thoroughbred training farm and to stand stallions such as the royally-bred Del Mar track record holder, GS3W, and GS2P Irish Surf. The Ocala Jockey Club training program is headed by Benny Betts, a long-time respected horseman who was responsible for guiding the careers of industry greats such as Bernardini, Rags to Riches, and Afleet Alex. The OJC facility also includes townhouses and an iconic clubhouse, which serves as a unique venue for weddings, meetings, and other special events. The Ocala Jockey Club is owned by Erik Nygaard, MIT-educated engineer and co-founder of Fortress Investment Group, and Pavla Nygaard, former attorney and scientist trained in molecular biology and genetics. To learn more about the Ocala Jockey Club facility and its programs, visit www.ocalajc.com or contact (352) 591-1212.
Cornelia Fletcher (USA) and Daytona Beach 8 were the only pair to jump double clear in the B&D Builders CCI4*-L at The Event at TerraNova, claiming the win with a final score of 41.4 penalties.
Only two horse and rider combinations finished within the time allowed in the B&D Builders CCI4*-L Saturday at The Event at TerraNova. Canadian Jessica Phoenix on her 16-year-old Canadian Sport Horse mare Fluorescent Adolescent (Gaudi x Amelia II) made a huge leap from 14th place after dressage to take the lead on 39.1 penalties.
Mia Farley and Invictus, owned by Karen O’Connor, took the lead in the B&D Builders CCI4*-L at The Event at TerraNova at the completion of the dressage phase with 27.9 penalties, followed by Olivia Dutton on Sea of Clouds (29.5). Overnight leader Lauren Nicholson is now in third place with Jacqueline Mars’ Larcot Z (30.4).
Every now and then, a video goes viral on social media of a rider heroically going around a show jumping or cross-country course with one, or no, stirrups. There’s a great one of Mark Todd going around Badminton with a broken stirrup, and you just wonder how on earth a course that difficult could be jumped like that—because it’s hard enough with two stirrups!