Benno Yung’s training career will come to a close at the end of this season in Hong Kong and the 66-year-old horseman is proud to depart the official ranks with fond memories and cherished lifelong friendships after the 2024/25 Season Finale on 16 July at Happy Valley.
Yung retires after being licenced since the 2013/14 term. He’s trained 359 winners across the 12-season period and is admired for his stable’s consistency as well as his own resilience to return to racing amidst an acute myeloid leukaemia battle last year.
“I’m happy with it. I had some very good support, some long-time owners. Even during my challenging period. They supported me and it impressed me. They really wanted me to produce a good horse,” Yung said. “Aside from just having a trainer-owner relationship, it was a real friendship. It wasn’t just a working relationship but a friendship.”
Excluding this season, Yung is yet to dip below 20 wins in a campaign. Six times he has surpassed or matched the 30-win mark, while his stable stars were hulking grey Pingwu Spark, Hong Kong Derby-third Romantic Touch, Hinchinlove, Son Pak Fu and Precision King – triumphant over former champion Rapper Dragon early in his career.
Yung began his journey in racing as an apprentice jockey in the 1970s. He became an assistant trainer in 1991 to Christopher Cheung before spending two seasons with Tony Millard. He then transferred to the John Size stable in 2001, playing a pivotal role in Size’s first seven trainers’ championships, before embarking out on his own.