A 90 -year-old retired jockey, Abdul Latiff, rode in the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s in nearly all the race tracks from Skeldon Corentyne to Durban Park Georgetown. In August last he enjoyed a day at the Guyana Cup races at Rising Sun Turf Club, West Coast Berbice. On this day as his excitement grew, he got out of his seat, stood up and leaned forward to oversee the tracks and could be heard hollering, βload the stallsβ¦ the fly the gatesβ¦ β It is no wonder Mr Latiff returned to Rising Sun on October 1st 2017 for the Presidentβs Cup race. He donated a trophy for the 5 and one half furlongs race which was won by Guyana bred βSeven Dustβ ridden by jockey Colin Ross owned by Rising Sun Racing Stables and trained by Mr Fazal Habibulla. In interviews with reporters, Mr Latiff beamed with pride as he recollected his own humble beginnings as a stable hand at Skeldon estate before getting his jockeyβs licence. Today as he sits on the sidelines in the stands his advice to jockeys is βfor every mount in competition ride to win.β About the sport itself Mr Latiff said some people call horseracing a sport fit for kings but he sees it as the king of sports. Mr Latiff had no shortage of stories with vivid recollections and minute details when he met Mr Cecil Kennard. The two reminisce when Cecil raced Mr Bisnauthβs horse βHavanaβ and gave jockey Latiff the mount that won him a Cup. They shared many stories and recounted many horse names, jockeys and past experiences. Mr Latiffβs 1st mount as a professional jockey was at Brighton Corentyne race track. Reliving one of his Brighton experiences Mr Latiff fondly remembers racing βSagaboyβ owned by Mr Hanoman. It was the 5 furlongs race and sprinter βCrossroadsβ owned by Mr Bhagwandas was also entered to compete. Sagaboy was a stayer or distance runner for the 1 mile race. As Mr Hanoman approached Jockey Latiff to take the mount on Sagaboy, Mr Latiff shook his head and said to Mr Hanoman, βHow can you beat Crossroad?β To this Mr Hanoman replied, βI am not betting on the horse I am betting on YOU.β Jockey Latiff took the challenge and won the race. On the Bush Lot race track, jockey Latiff rode βNever Say Dieβ owned by Mr Zainoor. As the horse and jockey passed the finish line, a drunken fan who had betted on winning jockey Latiff, ran across the tracks in jubilation, was knocked over by the horse in an impact that sent jockey airborne towards the fence. Fortunately, other fans pushed the jockey away from the fence to avert serious hurt. Mr Abdul Latiff has enjoyed an outstanding career in the horseracing circle and the chance to reminisce at the track could be considered priceless. We salute this son of the soil.
When you block a person, they can no longer invite you to a private message or post to your profile wall. Replies and comments they make will be collapsed/hidden by default. Finally, you'll never receive email notifications about content they create or likes they designate for your content.
Note: if you proceed, you will no longer be following .
Welcome to the Original Guyanese Discussion Forums, first established in 1996. Here you can discuss, ask questions or generally debate anything related to politics, movies, music, health or just gyaff away your day/night here. A note of warning, the Political forum is not for the faint of heart. We do have some rules, so please adhere to them .
Welcome to the Original Guyanese Discussion Forums, first established in 1996. Here you can discuss, ask questions or generally debate anything related to politics, movies, music, health or just gyaff away your day/night here.
Please note while you do have free access to our Forums, the Political Forum will now be a Paid Membership Forum. What does this mean? To write in the Political Forum you must be a paying member. The fee is $25.00 US per year and is non refundable. Payment can be done through PayPal. Membership is not automatically renewed and you can cancel anytime We do have some rules, so please adhere to them.