Born in Brighton on the South Coast of England, he was home schooled from 13 but horses and racing were what mattered, with Ryan Moore fast becoming Watson’s role model. Appropriate then that his first job and first winner came from Ryan’s trainer father Gary Moore.
But the real lift came when he joined Andrew Balding’s stable, a place where many a top jockey – including William Buick and Oisin Murphy – kick started their careers.
Watson says: “It was close to a weighing room scene with about five other apprentices also there. It was very competitive and put you in the right frame of mind. To succeed you had to be determined and driven. There was no other option.”
He embraced those attributes, unashamedly: “You can ask my parents, I always had my career mapped out and becoming champion apprentice was part of that.”
Coached by Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe-winning jockey John Reid, he started to get known as a ‘Saturday’ jockey, in other words a jockey capable of winning on the big days, not to mention a terrific 111-winner tally for the calendar year of 2018.
This all led relentlessly to the connection with Charlton and both trainer and jockey enjoy the story that the deal was virtually sewn up before the two had ever met.
Over breakfast at Sha Tin this week Charlton was as full of praise for the jockey as the jockey is for the trainer.
“Jason positions himself well in races, gives good feedback and he’s very mature for someone of his age with the success not going to his head,” he says. “I had to persuade some of our big owners but confidence from a stable is crucial for a jockey.”
And with that confidence, Watson was wearing the famous Khalid Abdullah silks for all three starts this year of the potentially brilliant two-year-old filly Quadrilateral, most recently when guiding her to G1 victory in the Fillies’ Mile at Newmarket in October, having bagged Cologne’s G1 Preis von Europa on Aspetar the previous month.
Watson is well aware of the success that another role model – Britain’s recently anointed 2019 champion jockey Oisin Murphy – is having in Asia, including last month’s Japan Cup win aboard Suave Richard, and sounds distinctly as though he wants to be part of that action, especially Hong Kong.
“It’s always been a place I’ve wanted to go, and maybe ride for a season one day. I’m really excited to be part of Sunday,” he says.
Aspetar will be an outsider but given another reputation Watson has earned – winning on his first ride in a new country including France, Germany and Italy – maybe the gelding shouldn’t be ignored.
Words from the rising star jockey – who arrived in Hong Kong on Friday fresh from gaining plenty of new fans after riding three winners in Mauritius last weekend – are also positive: “Aspetar is a horse that you can’t always predict but if he’s right on the day he’s might be hard to beat.”