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JERIKO, EMPRESSUM SECURE THE FINAL CHAMPION OF CHAMPION BERTHS

Z Wayne Directors Trial 1 - Jeriko outduels Empressum photo by Sylvia Gonzalez[69]
©Sylvia Gonzalez, Los Alamitos

With the pressure of this being the final opportunity to earn a return trip to the 2025 Grade 1 Champion of Champions, Jeriko and Empressum both brought their “A” game to their Z. Wayne Griffin Directors Trials on Sunday at Los Alamitos, as the two superstars left cleanly while racing side-by-side, picked up speed right away, hooked up at the midway point and flew in the final 100 yards to clinch the last two available berths to the prestigious Champion of Champions.

A total of 15 top Quarter Horses competed in the trials at 400 yards hoping to grab a Champion of Champions spot. It was never going to be an easy task, as the list of hopefuls also included Grade 1 winners Shakers No Secret, London Toby, Cattail Cove and Heavens Uncle plus All American Derby runner-up Ariatt and the undefeated sophomore OJD Jess A Bug. In the end, it was the seasoned warriors Jeriko and Empressum who got the job done, as they finished 1-2 in the second Z. Wayne Griffin Directors Trials. Bobby Cox’s Jeriko outfinished Steve Holt and Jeff Jones’ Empressum by a head while covering the distance in the fastest qualifying time of :19.493.  Empressum, a two-time Champion of Champions winners, finished with the second fastest time of :19.509. Michael McKell and Casey Whitaker’s RH Fouronthefloor chased Jeriko and Empressum to finish third, but he also finished with the third fastest time of :19.662. Oscar Diaz and Karla Diaz-Gomez’s OJD Jess A Bug improved his record to a perfect 13 for 13 after winning the opening trial with his time of :19.744 leaving him as the fourth fastest qualifier. 

Jeriko and Empressum will now join Stanley Cartel, FDD Dreams, Scoops Dynasty, Hott Temptation, RC Corona King, Unrelentless, Hooked N Gone and Norco in this year’s Champion of Champions to be held on Saturday, December 13. 

Sunday was Jeriko’s night to shine, as the son of One Famous Eagle broke closer than he usually does and from there he began to unleash his usual potent kick. Sixth at the start, Jeriko had moved up to second by the midway point and after taking over the lead from Rlh Fouronthefloor, he kept Empressum at bay to win his 11th race in 22 starts. Ridden by Jesus Rios Ayala and trained by Chris O’Dell, Jeriko will now start for the third time in the Champion of Champions after running fourth in both of previous appearances in the sport’s most prestigious race for older horses. It’s been a huge week for the 5-year-old Texas-bred gelding. 

Earlier this week, it was announced that Jeriko was newest AQHA Supreme Racehorse thanks to his great success on the track. Quarter Horses earn the Supreme Racehorse award after winning 10 races during their career, at least two of them being Grade 1 races, while also earning over $500,000. Jeriko’s 10th career victory came in his first start with O’Dell as trainer when winning an allowance race here on September 14. His two Grade 1 wins both occurred at Los Alamitos when winning the Los Alamitos Super Derby in 2023 and the Robert Boniface Los Alamitos Invitational Championship last year.  

O’Dell has a lot of experience training horses to the Champion of Champions. He qualified the outstanding Catchmeinyourdreams in 2003, 2004 and 2005 and also had Powerful Favorite in the race in 2020, 2021 and 2022. Bomb Cyclone was in the 2022 running as well, which was the year of Empressum’s first Champion of Champions wins. 

“When (Jeriko) steps away, he’s pretty tough,” O’Dell said. “What a tough race that was to begin with. I’m just so pleased to see him break at all because he hasn’t broke very many times, not as good as he did tonight, I think.  I got handed this runner. Heath Taylor did a great job with him over the years. It’s the same story. You just stay out of their way, these good horses. You stick to your guns, the old books, the old ways and just try to keep them fat and happy. Just by running him, this is my third time running him, I learn about him more and more.”

Ridden by Rodrigo Sigala Vallejo and trained by Elena Andrade, Empressum is back in the Champion of Champions for the fourth consecutive year. The 7-year-old gelding by Apollitical Jess now has a chance to join Refrigerator as the only three-time winners of the Champion of Champions. In addition to winning the 2022 running, Empressum also won last year’s running by a ½ length. 

Empressum’s runner-up finish in this race also helped one of the most exclusive clubs in Quarter Horse racing. Bred by his owners, the Oklahoma-bred earned $4,500 for this second place finish to take his career bankroll o $2,502,748. He joins KJ Desparado ($3,367,447) and Ochoa ($2,781,365) are the Quarter Horses with other $2.5 million in lifetime earnings. Empressum will enter this year’s Champion of Champions having lost all three of his starts so far in 2025. He has now finished second in all three of his starts this year, the other two being runner-up efforts to Scoops Dynasty in the Go Man Go Handicap and to Stanley Cartel in the Robert Boniface Los Alamitos Invitational. His winless 2025 season is reminiscent to Refrigerator’s 1994 campaign in which he lost his first four starts of the year, including a second-place finish in the Los Alamitos Invitational, before winning that year’s running of the Champion of Champions for a yet to be matched third time. 

It had to be a tad of a bittersweet night for the connections of OJD Jess A Bug. They enjoyed the thrill of seeing their homebred improve his record to a perfect 13 for 13 while beating Brazilian superstar Edberg Verde plus Grade 1 winners Shakers No Secret and London Toby. Ridden by Jose Nicasio for trainer Jesus Nunez, OJD Jess A Bud won his trial by ½ length but unfortunately was only the fourth fastest of the night. Nevertheless, owners Oscar and Karla Diaz-Gomez were mighty proud of their Idaho-bred. 

“He’s a great horse,” Oscar Diaz said. “Every time he starts here he gets better  and better. He was a little behind but he went and caught them. Even if he’s not (in the Champion of Champions) we know that he’s a good horse. He’s now running with the big guys.”

“I lost my voice,” said Karla Diaz-Gomez, a result of her cheering for her homebred. “It’s an amazing moment to be able to share this with my family. (The horse) has shown great progress from where he started to now. We’re excited to see what’s to come. I was there the day he was born. I remember his first steps. He was very mischievous (as a baby). It’s been an amazing experience to have him.”

OJD Jess A Bug is paid to the 2026 Grade 1 Brad McKinzie Los Alamitos Winter Championship. 

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©Susan Bachelor, Speedhorse

Elizabeth Logan, an inspirational figure in the American Quarter Horse industry, has passed away at the age of 99. She touched the lives of so many through her lifelong dedication to breeding, showing, and racing horses at Logan Ranch in Oklahoma. Alongside her late husband, George Logan, she helped develop a successful program that produced World Champion Palaminos, and they branched out to Quarter Horses as well. Elizabeth and her husband had shown horses for years, and Elizabeth showed until the age of 88.  Although she did not become deeply involved with horses until the mid-1990s, Logan quickly found success in the show ring before transitioning into Quarter Horse racing later in life.

When she decided to quit showing, her veterinarian, Dr. Jay Ross, suggested that she try her hand with race horses.  Dr. Ross introduced her to trainer Dee Keener, and the rest was history. Her first runner was DTL Batter Up, a Paint colt that earned nearly $60,000 on the track.  She bought a new car and put on a license tag that read ‘Batter Up’. Her racing stable achieved national prominence with major wins from standout runners such as EC Revenge, winner of the Oklahoma Futurity-G2 in 2019; Dreamsville, winner the Remington Park Oklahoma Bred Futurity-RG2 in 2022; and Tres Crystals, winner of the Oklahoma Futurity-G2 and the Heritage Place Futurity-G1 in 2022, the only horse to win both the Oklahoma and the Heritage Futurities in the same year.  Logan won the Oklahoma Futurity twice, captured the Remington Park Oklahoma-Bred Derby, and continued competing at the sport’s highest levels well into her late 90s. Beyond racing, she and her husband established a lasting legacy through philanthropy, donating their ranch to Oklahoma State University for agricultural research and creating scholarships for veterinary students.

Nothing excited her more than watching her horses run.  On Friday night, May 8, Dr. Ross visited her in the hospital so she could watch her horse, Valiant Sass, win the 2nd trial of the night in the Heritage Place Futurity trials.  That definitely put a smile on her face.  Her remarkable story reflects perseverance, passion, and a lifelong commitment to the Quarter Horse industry. She will be greatly missed.

By Speedhorse & Wendy Keener

ohrc-logo-full-color
©OHRC

OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla. May 11, 2026 

The Oklahoma Horse Racing Commission (“OHRC”), acting through the Board of Stewards at Remington Park, continues to enforce three Emergency Protective Orders issued on April 22, 2026, after evidence, video, and veterinary opinions documented an abnormal and materially elevated pattern of severe post-race distress among affected horses, including repeated incidents in which horses could not safely leave the track under their own power and required transport from the racing surface.

These orders are temporary, protective, and focused on one priority: horse welfare. The affected horses remain on the Stewards’ List and, where applicable, the Veterinarian’s List while they undergo individualized veterinary review, testing, records review, and monitored exercise protocols before any return to competition may be considered.

In the Alcala matter, the Oklahoma County District Court preserved the Emergency Protective Order, allowed entries to be accepted, and made clear that no horse may compete unless and until OHRC veterinarians and the Board of Stewards are satisfied that permitting the horse to run will not endanger equine welfare or compromise the integrity of racing. In the Garcia matter, materially identical agreed terms were reached. In the Vane matter, the Emergency Protective Order entered by the Board of Stewards was ordered to remain in place and Mr. Vane’s Temporary Restraining Order was dismissed. Accordingly those horses likewise remain subject to the Commission’s safety process.

“The protection of the horse comes first,” said Amanda English, Interim Executive Director of the Oklahoma Horse Racing Commission. “When the facts show a serious threat to equine welfare, the Commission will act. No horse will race until the safety review is complete and the horse is cleared through our process.”

OHRC’s removal protocol requires a separate application for each horse, full disclosure of relevant records, independent veterinary review, any necessary diagnostic testing, required sampling, and an observed work with post-work veterinary assessment. No horse is returned to eligibility based on assurances alone.

The Commission’s authority to take these actions is grounded in the Oklahoma Horse Racing Act and the Rules of Racing, which authorize OHRC and the Board of Stewards to protect horse welfare, determine eligibility, require examination and testing, and act when racing integrity is at risk.

OHRC will continue to evaluate each horse individually and will permit no horse to compete unless and until the Commission is satisfied, in writing, that the horse may safely and humanely race.

from OHRC

JESS SINFUL - Maiden Stakes Trial - 05-11-26 - R11 - Horseshoe Indiana - Finish 01
©Coady Media

SHELBYVILLE, Ind. (Monday, May 11, 2026) – The first set of trials were held Monday, May 11 featuring four to establish the final field for the $30,000 Maiden Stakes Final set for the first all Quarter Horse day of the year Saturday, May 30 at Horseshoe Indianapolis. Perrys Secret Gold and Eduardo Diaz earned top billing on the list of trial times with their win in the second of four trials in a time of :17.958.

Perrys Secret Gold was one of two winners in the trials for trainer Tim Eggleston and Jockey Eduardo Diaz, last year’s leading Quarter Horse trainer and jockey, respectively. Other trial winners on the day included Run Don’t Walk and Daniel Martinez, Jess Sinful, also ridden by Daniel Martinez, and Mi Blood Token, ridden by Eduardo Diaz.

Perrys Secret Gold was in contention the entire 350 yards for the lead, getting the advantage by a neck at the wire over stablemate Keep Her Off Tequila, ridden by Rolando Pina. Coyote Kiss and Daniel Martinez finished third.

Perrys Secret Gold is a four-year-old son of Racy Secret. The Indiana sired gelding is owned by Roger Cyrulik and was making his second start of 2026 and his fifth overall to break his maiden. 

The entire field for the Maiden Stakes Final, with jockey and time, includes: Perrys Secret Gold (Eduardo Diaz, 17.958); Run Don’t Walk (Daniel Martinez, 17.99); Keep Her Off Tequila (Rolando Pina, :17.99); Fav Streakin Cartel (Diego Villamil Bocanegra, :17.999); Coyote Kiss (Daniel Martinez, :18.03); Jess Sinful (Daniel Martinez, :18.069); Maleficent Dash (Erik Esqueda, :18.095); Jess A Favorite (Edgar Diaz, :18.114); Mi Blood Token (Eduardo Diaz, :18.206); and FA Lillys Of Wins (Erik Esqueda, :18.237). Trainers Tim Eggleston (Perrys Secret Gold, Keep Her off Tequila, Mi Blood Token) and Tony Cunningham (Run Don’t Walk, Coyote Kiss, Jess Sinful) have each qualified three for the finals while Trainer Caesar Esqueda will send two to the final (Maleficent Dash, FA Lillys of Wins).

The Maiden Stakes Final will join the Harley Greene Derby Final and the Horseshoe Indianapolis QHRAI Derby Trials Saturday, May 30 for the first all-Quarter Horse racing day. First post is 10:45 a.m.

The 24th season of live Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse extends through Friday, November 13. For more information on racing at Horseshoe Indianapolis, visit www.caesars.com/horseshoe-indianapolis/racing or find details on social media @HSIndyRacing.

By  Tammy Knox

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