- D. Wayne Lukas
Darrell Wayne Lukas (born September 2, 1935 in Antigo, Wisconsin) is an American Hall of Fame Thoroughbred race horse trainer. Lukas began training quarter horses in California in 1968 and after ten years of considerable achievement that saw him train 23 world champions, he switched to training thoroughbred race horses where he has become one of the most successful in history. The first trainer to earn more than $100 million in purse money, … - Patrick Biancone
Patrick Louis Biancone (born June 7, 1952 in Mont-de-Marsan, Landes, France) is a Thoroughbred racehorse trainer. He is currently based in the United States, but has enjoyed success in both Europe and Hong Kong earlier in his career. He was the head trainer for the Daniel Wildenstein stable in France where his horses won numerous important races including back-to-back victories in the 1983 and 1984 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe. - Henry Cecil
Henry Cecil (born January 11, 1943) is a successful English horse racing trainer who has had many winners in the Epsom Derby, One Thousand Guineas Stakes and Two Thousand Guineas Stakes, Epsom Oaks and the St. Leger Stakes. Cecil took out his licence in 1969 and has since developed one of the most prolific racing stables in England. He is now something of a legend in the racing community and has been Champion Trainer 10 times. - Woody Stephens
Woody Stephens (September 1, 1913 - August 22, 1998) was an American thoroughbred racehorse trainer. Born Woodford Cefis Stephens in Stanton, Kentucky, he first started as a jockey at age 16 but within a few years switched to training horses. After working as an assistant for several years, in the late 1930s he started training on his own, taking on horses from various owners. - Leroy Jolley
LeRoy Jolley (born 1937 in Hot Springs, Arkansas) is an United States Hall of Fame Thoroughbred horse trainer. The son of horse trainer Moody Jolley, LeRoy Jolley has been around horses all his life at age nineteen received a New York State trainer's license. In 1961, the twenty-four year old LeRoy Jolley was the trainer of the colt Ridan who at age two went undefeated in seven races including wins in the Arlington Futurity and the Washington Park Futurity. - Matt Winn
Colonel Martin J. "Matt" Winn (1861 - October 6, 1949) was a prominent personality in American thoroughbred horse racing history and president of Churchill Downs racetrack, home to the Kentucky Derby race that he made famous. A Louisville, Kentucky, businessman, Matt Winn had been a racing enthusiast since the day his father brought him to see the first running of the Kentucky Derby in 1875. - Randy Romero
Randy Romero (born December 22, 1957 in Erath, Louisiana) is a retired American Thoroughbred horse racing jockey. Born into a family involved with horses, his father Lloyd J. Romero was a Louisian state trooper who trained American Quarter Horses and later, after a drunk driver crashed into his police car and permanently disabled him, he began training Thoroughbreds for flat racing. The 1978 movie "Casey's Shadow" is based on Lloyd Romero and his family. - Braulio Baeza
Braulio Baeza (born March 26, 1940 in Panama City, Panama) is an American Thoroughbred horse racing Hall of Fame jockey. He began racing in 1955 and in 1960, at the urging of agent Camilo Marin, moved to compete in the United States where at the Keeneland Racecourse he won the very first he competed in. Braulio Baeza's success in America was instantaneous. He was the leading money winner in American racing from 1965 to 1969, … - Francois Boutin
François Boutin was a leading French Thoroughbred horse trainer. The son of a farmer, he was born in the village of Beaunay in the northerly Marne département. He began riding horses at a young age and competed in show jumping and cross-country equestrianism. He began his professional racing career driving horses in harness racing then after serving as a flat racing apprentice, obtained his license as a trainer in 1964. - Freddy Head
Freddy Head (born June 19, 1947, in Neuilly, France) is a retired champion jockey in Thoroughbred horse racing and currently a horse trainer. Known also as "Freddie", his grandfather was a jockey as was his father Alec Head who also became a successful trainer and owner of Haras du Quesnay near Deauville. Alec Head's horses won the Epsom Derby and the Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe. In the 1976 Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe, … - Johnny Loftus
John P. Loftus (October 13, 1895 - March 23, 1976) was an American thoroughbred horse racing Hall of Fame jockey. Born in Chicago, Illinois, Johnny Loftus was the first jockey to win the United States Triple Crown of Thoroughbred Racing. During his career, between 1909 and 1919, he won 580 races out of the 2,449 he competed in, for a very notable 23.7% success rate. - Maine Chance Farm
Maine Chance Farm was an American thoroughbred horse racing stable in Lexington, Kentucky owned by cosmetics tycoon, Elizabeth Arden. During the nineteen forties and fifties, Maine Chance Farm was a major force in American horse racing. Among the stables many champions and stakes race winners were the colt Star Pilot and the filly, Beaugay, both 1945 Eclipse Award champions. The Beaugay Handicap at Aqueduct Racetrack is named in the filly's honor. - William Walker
William "Billy" Walker (1860 - September 20, 1933) was an African American jockey. Born a slave in near Versailles, Kentucky, Billy Walker was the leading rider at Churchill Downs in the fall racing season of 1875-76 and the spring campaigns of 1876 through 1878. He was the winning rider aboard Ten Broeck in a famous July 4, 1878 match race at Louisville, Kentucky against the great California filly, Mollie McCarty. - James G. Rowe Sr.
James G. Rowe, Sr. (1857 - August 2, 1929) was an American thoroughbred race horse jockey and trainer. James Rowe was born in the environs of Richmond, Virginia and went to work at a racetrack as a boy of ten. He went from apprentice rider to leading jockey in the U.S. from 1871 to 1873 that included his winning the Belmont Stakes twice. However, with age came weight, and Rowe turned to the training of horses for the Dwyer Brothers Stable. - Angel Penna Sr.
Angel A. Penna, Sr. (September 30, 1923 - January 15, 1992) was an Argentine-born U. S. Racing Hall of Fame Thoroughbred horse trainer. Penna was an international trainer, who worked and raced on three continents. He conditioned more than 250 graded stakes race winners during a career that began in 1950 and lasted for more than forty years. Born into a racing family, Angel Penna's father, father-in-law, and an uncle were all horse trainers. - Nat Flatman
Elnathan "Nat" Flatman (1810-1860) was a British Champion flat racing jockey. He began his thirty-four-year racing career as an apprectice jockey at age fifteen. By 1840 he was dominating British racing, winning the Champion Jockey title thirteen years in a row. During his career, Nat Flatman won many important Thoroughbred horse races in England including ten Classics. Often recorded as "E. - Eugene James
Eugene James (1913 - June 10, 1933) was an American Thoroughbred horse racing jockey. Born in Louisville, Kentucky, James was a very promising young jockey who began racing in 1930 at age seventeen. According to TIME magazine, he "made a sensation" in his first season of racing. Although he didn't start until June, his 138 wins that year ranked him fourth among all North American jockeys. - Yolanda Perez
Yolanda Perez (born May 20, 1983) is an American singer who specializes in banda music. She is sometimes known by the stage name "La Potranquita", (Spanish: "little filly"), a name taken by her father from his home city of Zacatecas, Mexico. Perez was born in Los Angeles, California. When she was 11 years old, Perez won a music contest held in the Los Angeles-area Lynwood. As part of the prize package, she recorded an album that launched her musical career. - Job Dean Jessop
Job Dean Jessop (December 4, 1926 - January 30, 2001) was an American Thoroughbred horse racing jockey. Born in Utah, Job Jessop was just eighteen years old when on August 9, 1944 as an apprentice jockey he won six races in one program at Ellis Park in Henderson, Kentucky. The following year, he won more races than any other jockey in the United States finishing the year with 290 victories, 103 more than his closest rival. - William Hurley
William "Bill" Hurley was an American horse trainer in Thoroughbred horse racing. He is best remebered for his more than two decades as a trainer for Col. Edward R. Bradley's Idle Hour Stock Farm. Among Bill Hurley's early victorys was a win with Kalitan in his first Preakness Stakes in 1917, a race he would win again twenty-three years later. He trained Bagenbaggage, who won the 1926 Latonia and Louisiana Derbys and was second in the Kentucky Derby to stablemate, … - Filly Filly
- Filly Bell
- Fily Keita
- Willy Silly Willy Banana Fo Filly}
My name is caiti im 13 i have a sista i go to kaneland middle school in illinios GO KNIGHTS!!!! i have 2 cats and a hamster. - Esther Filly
- Lilly Filly
- Marcus Filly
- Christopher Filly
- French Of Filly
- Adam D Filly
- Dr Anthony Latham Filly MD
- Marie Filly
- Marcus Filly
- Rocky Filly-
hi.my name is rocky.i am a 2 month old paint horse.my mom died when she got bit by a snake when i was only 1 month old.i never knew my dad so i couldnt go to him for help.so it been just me just wondering around.i am not asking for a whole new family just for a friend.to wacth my back. - Kevin Filly
- Nellie Filly
- Felicia Smith Aka Filly
- French Of Filly
- Filly
Wellll people think that i have Alot of problem Evn if they don't know me Its my uglyness that tricks them lol But I have no prob though if u get to know me! I hope that peeps wiillll get to understand me! I'm soooo shy also And I respect any human being in the earth though and give them all my love! If you love me I love you If you hate me I adore you so thats my rule of being in my world! Hope you like it!!!!! - Filly
Halfcast (African, Asian, European), 5ft 6inch tall, medium size, others later. Second born in family of 5 children, 3 bros & 1 sis.
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