Jockey Matthew Straight, twin brother of apprentice jockey Michael Straight
“Mike is completely off the sedatives and the doctors are expecting to remove
“He’s doing well. He’s stable and he’s hanging in there. It’s going to be a
Matthew Straight returned to the saddle for the first time since his
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“There wasn’t a lot of pace in the race but he came running when I asked
him,” Matthew Straight said after the race. “We just couldn’t get the job done
for Mike.
“I came up here the other day to be by my brother’s side, so I wanted to get
back in the saddle and see how I felt,” he explained. “I’m riding a horse that
Mike has ridden the past four times and recently won on.”
The connections of More Than Able indicated they would donate a portion of
the horse’s earnings to a fund established to help the Straight Family defray
medical costs for Michael. Arlington’s jockeys all donated a losing mount fee to
the fund and participated in a day-long autograph signing session that earned
$5,000 for the fund.
“All the jockeys (around the country) have been asked to donate one (losing)
mount fee for Mike through the Don MacBeth Memorial Fund, and hopefully we can
raise a little more awareness and a little more money (toward the medical
expenses),” Matthew Straight said. “It’s very generous what the Jockeys’ Guild and the PDJF put together
for today.
Matthew has recently started working horses in the morning at Arlington Park
and plans to ride here for the remainder of the meet, which ends September 27.
“Once you get out there and get on the horses, you kind of clear your mind of
everything,” Matthew Straight said in regard to getting back on horses.
“Obviously, there were a few butterflies at first and I’m sure there will be
today, but it’s what I want to do. It’s what me and my brother both love to do.
We all know what we are signing up for when we start riding.”
Michael Straight was riding Im No Gentleman (Whadjathink) in the 8TH race at
Arlington on August 26 when his mount appeared to clip heels with another horse
in the vicinity of the quarter-pole and fell, sending his rider to the track.
Straight suffered injuries to the spine, including four broken vertebrae, as
well as a head injury.
Straight, a native of East Greenbush, New York, graduated from Chris
McCarron’s North American Racing Academy in 2008. He won the first race of his
career at Tampa Bay Downs in March 2009 and has ridden a total of 39 winners in
372 races.
A fund to support Michael Straight and his family has been set up through the
Don MacBeth Memorial Jockeys Fund. Donations earmarked for Michael Straight
should be sent to P.O. Box 18470, Encino, CA, 91416.