24 October,2010 06:25 AM IST | | Malesh Narredu
When I look back on my life and career today, I feel satisfied. But more than that, I wonder at what fate allowed me to accomplish despite the odds being steeply stacked against me when I started out.
u00a0
Can you believe that a jockey who rides 1,665 winners in his career was struggling to ride his first winner for two long years? You better believe, because that's me.
u00a0
I studied at St Patrick High School in Pune. There was a funny thing about this schoolu00a0-- unlike other schools' students, who dreamt of becoming doctors or engineers, most St Patrick boys aspired to become jockeys! They studied harder for the jockey school entrance exam than the school exams. Then, how could I be an exception, especially when my elder brother, Satish was already riding in races at Mumbai & Pune?
u00a0
Getting into jockey school was not difficult, but the real test started when I was apprenticed to trainer CA Kuttappa. He was a real taskmaster--a martinet! But thanks to him, a lazy boy like me, whose favourite pastime was catching sleep anytime and anywhere, learnt the value of hard work and discipline.
u00a0
To say that I was slowly out of the gates would be an understatement. I was stuck in the gates, and looked like I would stay there forever.
My batchmates, I Pasha and T Bernard were marching ahead, piling wins after wins, and however hard I tried, I was unable to get off the mark. Nothing seemed to work, and after two years I was almost convinced my career was finished. Then came Amiable Lady.
Amiable Lady was owned by Chhatrapati Shahoo Maharaj Of Kolhapur, and she finally gave me my first taste of victory. Soon there was a horse named Harvestime, owned by Diwan Arun Nanda, who was yet to win a race despite being tried out with almost all top riders. Somehow, the horse paired wonderfully with me and won five races on the trot! There was no looking back.
It was also Nanda's horse, Ashwamedha, with whom I won my first Pune Derby in 1990. Nothing succeeds like success, really. The boy who was written off and ridiculed by one and all suddenly started getting offers to ride at different centres in India.
My technique was getting better thanks to valuable inputs from my elder brother Satish, and I was soon riding winners at every centre I was called to ride. Satish was then riding for Dr MAM Ramaswamy, the biggest horse owner in those times, and I too started getting some mounts.
Thanks to Dr Ramaswamy's legendary horse sense and his passion to win races, I got a chance to partner some very fine horsesu00a0-- Star Supreme, being the one with whom I won my first Bangalore Derby in 1997. My status as a big league rider was confirmed when KN Dhunjibhoy retained me to ride horses owned by him. It was in his colours that I finally won my first Indian Derby with Indictment trained by Vinayak.
Indictment later went on to win the Indian Triple Crown. I was associated with the Dhunjibhoys for 20 years. It must be a record of sorts and it explains what level of mutual trust is possible in a world where jockeys are hired and fired after one bad ride. I really feel blessed to have had such understanding owners.
I give very simple advice to budding jockeys who consult me: Be honest and work hard, nothing pays like hard work and honesty. This is a profession where people may accuse you and abuse you for no fault of yours. Look at my own case. I have been maligned like no Indian rider has ever been.
But in a career spanning 28 years, I have had only one suspension for a questionable ride in western India. Doesn't this speak louder than the vicious noise made by my detractors?
Every jockey makes mistakes, I made, you too will. No jockey can escape criticism. Take it in your stride and let your results speak.