Lerena ready for Hong Kong

PUBLISHED: 18 February 2016

Gavin Lerena

South African Champion Jockey Gavin Lerena leaves for Hong Kong on Sunday where he will free lance as a Jockey Club rider.

Lerena will be up against the like of Joao “Magic” Moreira, commonly regarded as the best jockey in the world.

However, he confirmed it was every sportsman’s ultimate dream to test themselves against the best and added, “He is probably the best jockey the world has ever seen and there will never be another like him, but I am mentally and physically prepared to take him on.”

Lerena has proved his mental toughness and it is well documented how his darkest moment, when reflecting upon a Championship which had somehow slipped through his grasp, took just three years to erase. His winning of the Championship last year included an astonishing streak of form when the pressure was at its highest, including  a record-breaking 42 winners in one month.

Lerena is grateful to Felix Coetzee, a veteran of 16 seasons in Hong Kong, for the “fantastic advice” he has provided ahead of his sojourn. He has also received pointers from Weichong Marwing and Anthony Delpech.

He is thus aware not only of aspects pertaining to his profession but also of Hong Kong life in general, including the important role luck plays in Chinese Culture and of the need to conduct oneself in a manner acceptable to the Culture.

He said, “Luck is everything over there but you can also make your own luck.”

Lerena confirmed the strictness of the Hong Kong stipendiaries placed added pressure on jockeys, especially as the two racecourses were relatively tight.

He has never been short of confidence and quipped, “It’s very different over there and hard to adjust, but it took me three races to win so I think I adjusted quite well!”

He was referring to the International Jockeys Challenge he took part in last December, where he won both the third and fourth legs to emerge as overall winner.

His South Africa Championship combined with his Jockeys Challenge victory no doubt helped him secure the contract with the Hong Kong Jockey Club.

Lerena has only had four rides at Happy Valley but has already grasped the ins and outs. He said, “Its much faster than South African racing and you’ve got to ride the race from the jump and find the right position and the right passage. If you make one wrong move, or just one hesitation, it will be the difference between winning or running fifth, you must have the best passage and a flowing passage. Sha Tin also has a short straight but is fairer.”

Lerena will be provided with an interpreter for the first few weeks, but will otherwise be left on his own to secure rides.

However, trainers are unlikely to be slow in offering him mounts, considering his two winning rides in the Challenge were brilliant, and on the night he downed eleven of the best jockeys from around the world, including Moreira, Ryan Moore, Douglas Whyte, Brett Prebble, Victor Espinoza, Hugh Bowman, Silvestre de Souza, Derek KC Leung, Keita Kosaki, Maxine Guyon and James McDonald.

Furthermore, South Africans have a reputation in Hong Kong which dwarves all other nations considering the dominance of the Championship by Basil Marcus (seven times champion), Robbie Fradd (one championship) and Douglas Whyte (thirteen championships) since Bartie Leisher laid the foundation by winning it in 1988. Coetzee, Delpech, Marwing, Glyn Schofield, Jeff Lloyd, Piere Strydom, Anton Marcus, Richard Fourie and Karis Teetan, a Mauritian who learnt his trade at the South African Jockeys Academy, have also all made a big impact on Hong Kong racing.

Lerena will be accompanied by wife Vicky and young son Ashton on the venture.

In Hong Kong the jockeys and trainers all live together in an apartment block near Sha Tin racecourse, another factor which adds pressure.

He said, “Living side by side with your competitors and the people you ride for is not going to be easy, but luckily we’re a quiet family.”

Ashton currently attends nursery school in Gauteng, but Gavin and Vicky will play it by ear before rushing him into a new educational institution.

Gavin concluded, “It’s a big step in life but I’m mentally and physically ready for it, although obviously we going to miss the family, we’re a very close family.”

By David Thiselton