Manuel Ycaza
Manuel Ycaza (born Carlos Manuel Deycaza on February 1, 1938 in Panama) is a retired United States Racing Hall of Fame jockey who led the way for Latin American jockeys in the United States.
The son of a bus driver, Deycaza began riding ponies at age six and by age fourteen was riding professionally in Panama. He went on to race in Mexico City before emigrating to the United States in 1956. Within a few years "Manny Ycaza" was winning major races at tracks all over the country. However, the hard-riding, fiery-tempered Ycaza was frequently in trouble with racing officials and despite his unquestioned ability, after major suspensions many owners and trainers were reluctant to hire him. However, stable owner Harry F. Guggenheim took a chance on Ycaza, hiring him for the 1959 racing season. Guggenheim's Cain Hoy Stable was one of the major Thoroughbred racing operations in the U.S. and Ycaza's ten-year affiliation with them saw him become one of the country's top jockeys and be voted the 1964 George Woolf Memorial Jockey Award by his peers.
An icon in his country of birth, Manuel Ycaza's success inspired other diminutive Panamanian youngsters to pursue a career as a jockey. In 1962, Sports Illustrated magazine published an article about the "Spanish invasion" of American Thoroughbred horse racing led by Ycaza.[1]
In 1962, Manuel Ycaza married Linda Bement, Miss USA and Miss Universe of 1960. The couple had two children before they divorced in November 1969.
Major race accomplishments
In his first year with Cain Hoy Stable, Ycaza won the 1959 Washington, D.C. International aboard Bald Eagle then came back the following year to become the only back-to-back winner in the history of the prestigious international race. In the American Classic Races, Ycaza was second aboard Ridan in the 1962 Preakness Stakes,[2][3] and in 1963 earned a second-place finish on Never Bend in the Kentucky Derby. Hired by prominent Canadian owner/breeder E. P. Taylor to ride for his Windfields Farm in the 1963 Queen's Plate, Ycaza won Canada's most prestigious race aboard the colt, Canebora. A year later, he ended E. P. Taylor's bid for the U.S. Triple Crown when he rode Quadrangle to victory in the 1964 Belmont Stakes over Derby and Preakness winner, Northern Dancer. In 1968 Manuel Ycaza rode Dark Mirage to the first ever Filly Triple Crown when they won the Acorn Stakes, Mother Goose Stakes and the Coaching Club American Oaks.
In 1971, injuries forced him into an early retirement but in 1983 he returned to competition, retiring for good the following year. During his career, Manuel Ycaza rode some of the great Thoroughbreds in American racing history and was a winner of 2,367 races with a 22.4 winning percentage. He was inducted in the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in 1977.
A resident of Forest Hills, Queens, Ycaza is a longtime Major League Baseball fan and often attends New York Mets home games.[4]
References
- ↑ Leggett, William. "The Latin Invasion," Sports Illustrated, February 5, 1962.
- ↑ Tower, Whitney. "The Preakness: Courage Beats Gall," Sports Illustrated, May 28, 1962.
- ↑ McCardell, Paul. "Preakness Photo," A Century in The Sun (The Baltimore Sun blog), Thursday, May 14, 2009.
- ↑ Staff. "Manuel Ycaza" Archived 2007-07-06 at the Wayback Machine., National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame. Accessed June 18, 2009. "But trips out to Shea Stadium are nothing new for Deycaza, a resident of Forest Hills, N.Y."
External links
- Manuel Ycaza at the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame
- Linda Bement/Manuel Ycaza article
- TIME magazine April 25, 1960 article on Manuel Ycaza
- Jun. 16, 1967 TIME magazine article titled Vacation for Manny