Tony Cruz’s storied career as jockey and trainer has spanned almost every step of Hong Kong racing’s professional era. His name is woven into the very fabric of the sport here and in that respect he has commonality with one of the city’s oldest and most cherished races, the G1 Standard Chartered Champions & Chater Cup (2400m).
Cruz’s rise to ‘living legend’ status, through six champion jockey laurels, two trainer titles, countless major wins and his handling of the great Silent Witness, can be tracked from the day he was accepted among the very first cohort of apprentice riders back in 1972; that was the year after the dawn of professional racing at Happy Valley, when Sha Tin Racecourse was but a dream soon to be realised.
The Champions & Chater Cup was first contested back in 1870 and on Sunday, 24 May Cruz will saddle last year’s victor Exultant and his recently-acquired 2019 BMW Hong Kong Derby winner Furore – first and second in the G1 FWD QEII Cup late last month – in a bid to enhance his own impressive record in the historic contest.
Hong Kong’s greatest home-grown jockey snared the Cup three times as a rider. He sealed back-to-back wins on Co-Tack (1983 and 1984) but the most famous is perhaps the last, a rousing dead-heat finish in 1995 between the John Moore-trained pair Makarpura Star and Survey King. Cruz rode the former, Greg Childs was aboard the latter.
“It was neck and neck. I went past him halfway down the straight and he came back at me, but I got back and nailed him – I thought I’d won it but it was a dead-heat. Both of them were John’s horses and it was a great race,” he recalls.
Cruz hung up his racing saddle shortly after that victory and started out as a trainer in the 1996/97 campaign, but he had to wait 17 seasons for his first success in the race as a handler. He achieved that breakthrough victory with the popular pocket grey California Memory and has since made the race his own, winning six of the last seven editions.
California Memory (2013)