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2024 AQHA Champions

WorldChampionASSCHER_ChristianRamos_LanceBland_JimmyBarton_MarcJungers_SB_246A3772
©Susan Bachelor, Speedhorse

Republished from Aqha.com
Photos by Susan Bachelor, Speedhorse

The AQHA Champions Selection Committee convened at the end of June to determine the 2024 AQHA racing Champions. The contenders were those that have been deemed eligible by having met the criteria outlined in the AQHA Awards and Media Policy of 2024.

Eleven horses have been named as 2024 divisional champions, with the announcement of the 2024 World Champion Racing American Quarter Horse to be revealed later. The selection of the 2024 AQHA Racing Champions was delayed in December, due to delayed rulings on key races. This pause allowed the selection committee to access up-to-date information before their selections. The winners will be honored in a ceremony held for the award recipients on August 29, with the World Champion announced at that event.

Champion 2-Year-Old Lethal Cowboy 123 was also named Champion 2-Year-Old Gelding after winning six of eight starts in his freshman season and earning $1,238,267. The sorrel son of Flying Cowboy 123 is out of the First Down Dash mare Pretty Lethal. Bred by Veronica Gail Kawananakoa, Lethal Cowboy 123 is owned by Caliche Walls Venture LLC/A Isbell/LBland/J Barton and in his champion year won both the Golden State Million Futurity (G1) and Los Alamitos Two Million Futurity (G1). He was ridden during the year by Edwin Escobedo, Christian Ramos and James Flores, and trained by Marc Jungers.

Kempton was named Champion 2-Year-Old Colt. The bay colt by Kiss My Hocks is out of the Corona Cartel mare Charming Cartel, and was bred by Tyler Graham and Namgis Quarter Horses LLC. Kempton won his first three races for Mario Lozano-Cantu before being transferred to Ozaca Ranch LLC. The colt won six of seven starts during the year, led by the Heritage Place Futurity (G1) and Evangeline Downs Futurity (G2), and earned $639,903. He was ridden by James Flores and trained by James Gonzalez III.

The selection committee had the discretion to not award a given category, and could not come to a majority consensus to determine a Champion in the 2-year-old filly division.

Champion 3-Year-Old Asscher continues her family’s proud history of champion titles and also secures the Champion 3-Year-Old Filly title. Bred by MJ Farms, she is by FDD Dynasty and out of the Jesse James Jr mare Astica. Asscher, who is raced by Lance Bland and Jimmy Barton, won six of 10 starts and earned $440,224. Her achievements are headed by wins in the Los Alamitos Oaks (G1), Dash For Cash Derby (G2) and Purina Feeds Texas Classic Oaks, as well as a second in the Rainbow Oaks (G1). She was ridden by Christian Ramos and Noe Garcia Jr., and trained by Marc Jungers.

William Harned’s Mystic Paint is the Champion 3-Year-Old Colt after a season where he won three of eight starts and earned $223,227, with a win in the Adequan Will Rogers Derby Challenge and second-place finishes in the Ruidoso Derby (G1) and Adequan Derby Challenge Championship (G3). Bred by Cavenaugh Quarter Horses LLC, he is by PYC Paint Your Wagon and out of the Mr Jess Perry mare Jess So Sixy. Mystic Paint was ridden by Ramiro Garcia and Edwin Escobedo, and trained by Jason Olmstead.

Relentless Eagle is the Champion 3-Year-Old Gelding after a perfect 4-for-4 year in which he earned $208,851. Racing for Lance Bland, Relentless Eagle won the Texas Classic Derby (G1) and Dash For Cash Derby (G2). Bred by George P. Mitchell II, the gelding is by Hes Relentless and out of Volcoms Delight by Volcom. Trained by Marc Jungers, the horse was ridden by Christian Ramos.

Champion Aged Horse Out Of The Way is also the Champion Aged Stallion for Leslie and Pierre Amestoy and Roger K. Beasley, who campaigned the stallion before selling him to the partnership of Zapata, Blanca Varela and Amanda Sweeten at the end of the season. The sorrel stallion was bred by Silver Racing Farm LLC and is by First Moonflash and out of the Corona Cartel mare Coronas Fast Honey. He won two of five starts and earned $269,632. His record was led by a victory in The Downs at Albuquerque Fall Championship (G1) and John Andreini Memorial Stakes, a second in the Mr Jet Moore Stakes (G2) and a third in the All American Gold Cup (G1). He was ridden by Christian Cardenas, Christian Ramos and Adrian Ramos, and trained by Wes Giles.

Gary Laramie’s Jessica Cruz collects Champion Aged Mare honors after a year in which she won two of eight starts and earned $111,463. Bred by Double Bar S Ranch, she is by FDD Dynasty and out of the Mr Jess Perry mare Jess Cuz. The consistent mare won the Las Damas Handicap (G2) and Azure Three Handicap, was second in the Abigail Kawananakoa Stakes and third in the Mildred N. Vessels Memorial Handicap (G1). Trained by Elena Andrade, Jessica Cruz was ridden during the year by Oscar Andrade Jr., Diego Herrera, Rodrigo Aceves and Cesar Franco.

Empressum was named Champion Aged Gelding. Bred and raced by Jeff Jones and Steve Holt, the gelding by Apollitical Jess and out of the First Down Dash mare Crazy Down Corona won three of five starts and earned $504,750. The horse’s wins include the Champion of Champions (G1), Vessels Maturity (G1) and Go Man Go Handicap (G1). He was ridden by Rodrigo Vallejo.

Had To Be Fabulous is the Canadian Champion for breeders and owners Carol and Jaime Robertson. The bay filly is by One Fabulous Eagle and out of the Hadtobenuts mare Had To Be Fandango. In 2024, she won five of six starts and earned $49,806. Ridden by Josh Scott and Cassandra Jeschke, and trained by Bryn Robertson, the mare’s wins are highlighted by the Alex Picov Memorial Futurity and QROOI Bonus Futurity.

BR Chivali Nazareno is the Mexican Champion. Bred by Maximiliano Perez Castaneda and owned by Jimy Jonathan Maqueda Gomez, the 2021 sorrel stallion is by Southern Corona and out of the Gone To The Man mare Chivali Go. In 2024, the stallion won 11 of 12 starts, winning $129,413 for the year. His wins included the Clasico Hector Roldan Espinosa and the Clasico J. Merced Gomez Orozco. In all of his races, he was ridden by Miguel Angel Rodriguez and trained by Jorge Alberto Ruiz Periban.

Volcoms Favorite is the Distance Champion after winning three of seven starts and earning $117,440, with his wins highlighted by the Distance Challenge Championship (G1) and Albuquerque Distance Challenge (G2). The second champion of the year bred by George P. Mitchell II, Volcoms Favorite is by Jess Good Candy and he is also the second champion of the year out of the Volcom mare Volcoms Delight. He was trained by James J. Gonzales III and ridden by Irwin Rosendo and Francisco Calderon.

MJ Farms is the Champion Breeder, with their horses led by homebred Asscher. Proving that life is better in partnership, the group Caliche Walls Venture LLC/Aisbell/LBland/J Barton is the Champion Owner, as they saw their Lethal Cowboy 123 lead their stable to $1,234,967 in earnings. Champion Trainer Marc Jungers had a breakout year in 2024, with his horses earning $3,040,057 on the racetrack, including Lethal Cowboy 123, Asscher and Relentless Eagle. Christian Ramos is the champion jockey for a year in which his mounts earned $4,486,462, including Champions Lethal Cowboy 123, Asscher, Relentless Eagle and Out Of The Way.

On August 29th, 2025 Asscher carried on her family tradition and was named the 2024 World Champion Racing American Quarter Horse. 

Asscher races for Lance Bland and Jimmy Barton of San Angelo, Texas, and in her sophomore year won six of 10 starts while earning $440,224. She was also named the champion 3-year-old. Her achievements include victories in the Los Alamitos Oaks (G1), Rainbow Oaks, Dash For Cash Derby (G2) and Purina Feeds Texas Classic Oaks, as well as a runner-up effort in the Rainbow Oaks (G1). The partners purchased the filly at the 2022 Ruidoso Select Sale for $350,000.

Bred by AQHA Champion Breeders MJ Farms of Veguita, New Mexico, the daughter of FDD Dynasty is out of Astica, who was the sport’s champion 3-year-old filly in 2015. Astica is out of Alice K White, who was the sport’s champion 3-year-old filly in 2009.

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Delta Downs
WINNER of the 2026 Old South Derby
CHILLEY (#5)
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Trainer: Ponce, Josue
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Remaining Order of Finish: Sheza a Whirlawaytoo (#4), Hi Octane (#6), Eyes So Gray (#3), Jess Telling Beau (#1), Cm Dashing Cartel (#2), Prey N Corona (#8), Ivorys Cartel (#10), Syms Sin Tacha (#9), Aj Big Cash (#7)


Association Of Racing Commissioners International (RCI)


PRESS RELEASE – MAY 14, 2026 –
Racing regulators from across North America who are members of the ARCI met today to
consider a new aggressive approach being utilized in Oklahoma to safeguard horses
utilizing “Emergency Protective Orders” to temporarily exclude horses in the care of
trainers whose horses have demonstrated an abnormal and materially elevated pattern of
severe post-race distress, including repeated incidents in which horses were unable to
safely leave the track under their own power.


To date three trainers have received such orders effectively excluding 171 horses by putting
them on the “Stewards List” temporarily. Affected horses are subject to testing, veterinary
examination, record production, and individualized regulatory review before they may be
considered for removal from that status. The orders provide for the nomination of a
“guardian ad litem” to conduct an independent investigation concerning the welfare of the
affected horses.


ARCI President Ed Martin said that “using the Stewards or Vets list to exclude a horse from
competition is not new, but Oklahoma’s use of “Emergency Protective Orders” to
temporarily exclude all horses managed by a particular trainer is.”
“This is an important new approach that all racing regulators should consider utilizing,”
Martin told the regulators.


In Oklahoma such orders are only issued after the Stewards reviewed evidence, reports,
video recordings, veterinary opinions, and other information concerning horses that
appeared in extreme distress after racing and have determined that there is an abnormal
and materially elevated pattern. Each Order states that the pattern was repeated,
documented, and sufficiently serious to require immediate regulatory intervention.


The regulators were briefed by Amanda English, Interim Executive Director of the Oklahoma
Racing Commission and the commission’s General Counsel Michael Copeland.
Ms. English told her colleagues that the Stewards relied on veterinary opinions from three
veterinarians who concluded that the condition shown by the horses was extreme,
unusual, not a normal post-race recovery pattern, materially adverse to equine welfare,
and inconsistent with the safe and humane participation of such horses in racing absent
further investigation and clearance.


“When horses show signs of extreme distress, we will not look away, we will not minimize
it, and we will not wait for another incident before taking action. These emergency
measures are designed to protect horses immediately, secure the evidence, and ensure
that no horse connected to this matter returns to competition unless and until the
Commission is satisfied that it is safe and humane for that horse to race,” she said.


The Order requires mandatory pre-race and out-of-competition testing, mandatory
veterinary examinations, immediate post-race examination of any horse showing abnormal
recovery or distress, production of veterinary and treatment records, and inspection of
relevant barns, stalls, tack rooms, treatment areas, and other enclosure locations. The
Order also preserves the Commission’s authority to pursue additional remedies if
warranted.


Under the Order, affected horses are subject to testing, veterinary examination, record
production, and individualized regulatory review before they may be considered for
removal from that status.
The Emergency Protective Order states that the Stewards found an abnormal and
materially elevated pattern of severe post-race distress among the affected horses,
including repeated incidents in which horses were unable to safely leave the track under
their own power and required transport from the racing surface. The Order further states
that the pattern was repeated, documented, and sufficiently serious to require immediate
regulatory intervention.


The Stewards also relied on veterinary opinions from three veterinarians who concluded
that the condition shown by the horses was extreme, unusual, not a normal post-race
recovery pattern, materially adverse to equine welfare, and inconsistent with the safe and
humane participation of such horses in racing absent further investigation and clearance.
“The protection of the horse comes first, and the Commission will act decisively when the
facts show a serious threat to equine welfare,” said Interim Executive Director Amanda
English. “When horses show signs of extreme distress, we will not look away, we will not
minimize it, and we will not wait for another incident before taking action. These emergency
measures are designed to protect horses immediately, secure the evidence, and ensure
that no horse connected to this matter returns to competition unless and until the
Commission is satisfied that it is safe and humane for that horse to race.”

by ASSOCIATION OF RACING COMMISSIONERS INTERNATIONAL

_06 MY ROYAL SWINGER RC06
© New Image Media

AJAX DOWNS, MAY 14, 2026 – The equine star of Ajax Downs‘ card of racing on a crisp, windy May 13, Had to Be Ivory, won for the 34th time while later in the afternoon, jockey Corry Beland won his first race of his young career.

The second day of Ajax Downs‘ 2026 Quarter Horse season, which followed a record-breaking wagering opening day, May 6, featured the return of multiple champion HAD TO BE IVORY, the richest Canadian bred Quarter Horse in history. Now 11 years old, the big bay Ontario bred gelding was as quick and slick as ever, winning the featured Gridiron Gallop dash at 110 yards by three-quarters of a length over another champion, Snow Moose.

Ridden by Ismael Mosqueira for owners Carol and Jaime Robertson, Had to Be Ivory raced the distance in a quick 6.855, just shy of his own track record of 6.761.

“He was just so happy, bouncing and on his toes” said Mosqueira, last year’s High Point Jockey at Ajax Downs. “He was so relaxed walking to the gate and just walked in ready to go. The way he runs, he’s like a three or four-year-old.” Had to Be Ivory’s young half sister, Had to Be Fabulous, was the 2025 Horse of the Year and won her 2026 season debut last week.

*Jockey CORRY BELAND earned his first career race when he guided My Royal Swinger to victory in race six for owner and trainer Joe Tavares. The Alberta-born son of former jockeys Stu Brown and Carole Beland was riding in only his seventh career race including his first three races late last season.

©New Image Media

“I just got beat a nose in the race before so that gave me some motivation,” said Beland. “I just tried to not override him and just sit chilly and let the horse do the work.”

Fellow Ajax Downs jockeys awaited Beland to return from the winner’s circle before dousing him with buckets of water, the typical initiation for a jockey when they win their first race.

Corry also hopes to also ride Thoroughbreds at Woodbine this year.

Racing continues at Ajax Downs on Wednesday, May 20 with a first race post time of 3:30 p.m. Admission is always free and you can watch and wager on the races from trackside tables or at www.HPIBet.com.

Be sure to visit www.ajaxdowns.com for the racing schedule and list of events coming up.

By Ajax Downs

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