Kent Desormeaux

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Kent Desormeaux
Image:Replace this image male.svg
Occupation: Jockey
Birthplace: Maurice, Louisiana, U.S. Flag of the United States
Birth date: February 27, 1970 (1970-02-27) (age 38)
Career wins: 4,984 (thru 6-8-08)
Major Racing Wins & Honours & Awards
Major Racing Wins
San Diego Handicap (1990)
San Juan Capistrano Handicap (1990, 1993, 1999)
Turf Classic Stakes (1990)
Del Mar Breeders' Cup Mile (1991, 1996)
Oaklawn Handicap (1992, 1994)
Pacific Classic Stakes (1992)
Eddie Read Handicap (1993, 2000)
Super Derby (1994)
San Felipe Stakes (1994, 1995)
Santa Anita Derby (1997)
Woodward Stakes (1997, 2006)
Arkansas Derby (1999)
Spinster Stakes (1999)
Pimlico Special (2000)
Wood Memorial Stakes (2000)
Del Mar Oaks (2002)
Delta Jackpot Stakes (2002)
Las Cienegas Handicap (2002)
Maker's Mark Mile Stakes (2002)
Jenny Wiley Stakes (2002)
Arlington Million (2004)
John C. Mabee Handicap (2004)
Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup Stakes (2004)
Hollywood Futurity (2006)
Clark Handicap (2006)
River City Handicap (2007)
Tropical Turf Handicap (2007)
Tropical Park Oaks (2007)

American Classics / Breeders' Cup wins:
Kentucky Derby (1998, 2000, 2008)
Preakness Stakes (1998, 2008)
Breeders' Cup Turf (1993)
Breeders' Cup Sprint (1995)

International race wins:
Queen's Plate (1998)
Woodbine Mile (1998, 2003)

Racing Awards
Eclipse Award for Outstanding Apprentice Jockey (1987)
Eclipse Award for Outstanding Jockey (1989, 1992)
United States Champion Jockey by wins
(1987, 1988, 1989)
United States Champion Jockey by earnings (1992)
George Woolf Memorial Jockey Award (1993)
Honours
United States' Racing Hall of Fame (2004)
Significant Horses
Real Quiet, Best Pal, Fusaichi Pegasus, Free House, Kotashaan, Sweetnorthernsaint, Stormello, Big Brown

Kent J. Desormeaux (born February 27, 1970, in Maurice, Vermilion Parish, Louisiana) is an American thoroughbred horse racing Hall of Fame jockey who holds the U.S. record for most races won in a single year.

From a Cajun family, Desormeaux grew up on a farm where he was first introduced to horses through 4-H[1]. He first raced American Quarter Horses and was only sixteen years old when he began working as an apprentice jockey at the Evangeline Downs racetrack in Lafayette, Louisiana. He won his first career stakes race on December 13, 1986, riding Godbey in the Maryland City Handicap at Laurel Park Racecourse.

His immediate success led to him moving north to compete on the Maryland racing circuit in 1987 where his performance earned him the Eclipse Award for Outstanding Apprentice Jockey. In each of his first three years racing in Maryland, Kent Desormeaux won more races than any other jockey in the U.S. He is one of only four jockeys to have won three national titles in a row. No longer an apprentice, in 1989 he won his the Eclipse Award for Outstanding Jockey and another in 1992. Desormeaux, along with Chris McCarron and Steve Cauthen, are the only jockeys to win the Eclipse Award in both the apprentice and overall categories.

In 1989, Desormeaux set the current record for most wins in a year with 598. In the early 1990s he moved to southern California and in late 1992 at the Hollywood Park racetrack he was thrown by a horse and trampled, suffering multiple skull fractures and permanent deafness in one ear. Despite the severe setback, he rebounded to his old form, riding Kotashaan to victory in the 1993 Breeders' Cup Turf and at the end of the year his peers voted him the prestigious George Woolf Memorial Jockey Award. In 1995, he scored his second Breeders' Cup title when he beat the "boys" in the Breeders' Cup Sprint with the filly Desert Stormer.

In 1998 Kent Desormeaux rode Real Quiet to victory in the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness Stakes. Desormeaux lost his bid to win the U.S. Triple Crown, and racing immortality, when Victory Gallop beat his horse by a nose in the final stride in the Belmont Stakes. He then went on to ride the Canadian 3-year-old champion colt Archers Bay to victory in the Queen's Plate. In 2000, Desormeaux won the Wood Memorial Stakes and his second Kentucky Derby aboard Fusaichi Pegasus. Desormeaux, in 2008 won his third Kentucky Derby aboard Big Brown, in a time of 2:01 4/5. Big Brown won by just under five lengths. Amongst his other major stakes race victories he became the first foreign jockey to win a Classic race in Japan.

In 2004, Kent Desormeaux was inducted into the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame.

In 2008, Desormeaux rode Big Brown to victory in the Preakness Stakes at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, MD in a time of 1:54 4/5.

In 2008, Desormeaux was forced to pull up Big Brown in the Belmont Stakes after a valiant effort. The three-year-old colt was unable to respond on the final turn, prompting Desormeaux to sacrifice his Triple Crown bid in an attempt to spare the career of the stellar colt.

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