Star jockey Danny Beasley won’t ride again, after succumbing to injury.
Beasley will undergo a second round of surgery on Wednesday and doctors have advised he will need at least six weeks to recover.
This means Beasley is unable to ride at the Wodonga meeting on Saturday, which he had planned to be his last day of race riding.
“I wanted to ride at Wodonga one last time because that is where I had my first race ride in 1992,’’ Beasley said.
“But the doctors have told me I will not be able to have any sort of contact for six weeks and I definitely won’t be riding a horse during this period. So, that’s it as a jockey, I’m officially retired.’’
Beasley was injured when dislodged from his mount and struck in the face at Wagga Wagga trackwork last week.
“It’s disappointing but when I reflect on my riding career and what I have achieved, I’ve been very fortunate and privileged, and there’s a lot of great memories,’’ he said.
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Beasley retires from the saddle after an outstanding career where he rode nearly 2000 winners with 14 at Group 1 level including the 2003 Golden Slipper on Polar Success and six Group 1 wins on champion Grand Armee including the 2003 Doncaster Mile and 2004-05 Queen Elizabeth Stakes.
He also rode with success on the international stage, particularly in Singapore where he rode more than 600 winners.
“When I first started as an apprentice, my heart was in the Riverina and I would have been happy to win a Wagga (Wagga Gold) Cup,’’ Beasley said.
“That was my big goal and eventually I was lucky enough to win one for Gai Waterhouse on Regal Touch.
“But to have won races like the Golden Slipper, Doncaster Handicap and Newmarket Handicap, is very humbling.’’
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Beasley won six Group 1 races on Grand Armee and, not surprisingly, rated that horse as the best horse he rode during his career.
“Grand Armee competed in an era where there were so many good weight-for-age horses like Lonhro and he was able to beat most of them,’’ Beasley said. “His win in the Doncaster was the most satisfying win of my career.’’
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Beasley won’t be lost to racing as he has held a jockey-trainer licence for six months and will now train full-time out of Wagga Wagga.
“I’ve got four horses in work and another five in pre-training,’’ Beasley said.
“I’m hoping to eventually get back to riding trackwork but I am going to focus on training now.
“I’ve harboured ambitions to be a trainer for quite sometime and I’m not doing this as a hobby, I want to be successful.’’
DANNY BEASLEY
Age: 49
First ride: Wodonga, 1992
First win: Power Street, Corowa, 1993
Career: 1877 wins
Group 1 wins: 14
Major wins
Golden Slipper – Polar Success (2003)
Doncaster Handicap – Grand Armee (2003)
Queen Elizabeth Stakes – Grand Armee (2004-05)
Newmarket Handicap – Miss Pennymoney (2000)