Leung, 29, earned his place among the acclaimed 12 who will contest Wednesday’s (6 December) annual glitz gig at Happy Valley Racecourse by virtue of being the local freelance rider – the Apprentice Jockeys’ School graduate – with the most wins on the board this season.
He has 16 in all and ranks inside the premiership’s top-five; behind his LONGINES International Jockeys Championship rivals Joao Moreira, Zac Purton and Karis Teetan. With Nash Rawiller one place and two wins ahead, he has behind him such achievers as Hong Kong’s 13-time champion Douglas Whyte, Brett Prebble, Neil Callan, Tommy Berry, Olivier Doleuze, Matthew Chadwick, Umberto Rispoli, and the young gun expats, Chad Schofield and Sam Clipperton.
This will be the local lad’s third consecutive appearance in the HK$800,000 IJC, an indication that Leung is establishing a position as the senior rider among his immediate peers – those that have passed through the Hong Kong Jockey Club’s apprentice programme. He ended last term with the Tony Cruz Award, given to the season’s winning-most from that group.
Fifth at his IJC debut in 2015, he is eager to better the dead-heat last place he shared with Gavin Lerena 12 months ago – hence the disappointment at Monday’s allocation. More than that, though, Leung’s unwavering belief in his ability means he is committed to proving he can be every bit as good as the next rider, be that Hugh Bowman, Ryan Moore, Keita Tosaki, Purton or Moreira.
“We all know that every rider I’ll face is a very good jockey with much success, but I’ve ridden against most of them before; some of them I ride against every week, we know each other well and we are very competitive,” he said.
Leung has maintained solid progress through his career so far, without much fanfare. After gaining mandatory overseas experience in New Zealand with Lance O’Sullivan, he was posted back at Sha Tin under the tutelage of that Kiwi former champion jockey’s brother, Paul O’Sullivan. The youngster missed out on the apprentice jockey title in 2009/10, falling five short of Keith Yeung. Before this season, he had only two Group race wins on his resume, the first aboard Inspiration in the 2009 Premier Bowl Handicap, the second more than six years later thanks to Flame Hero in the 2016 January Cup Handicap.