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The average jockey height is between 4’10” and 5”6,” and they weigh between 108 and 118 pounds.
Each horse in a race has to carry a certain amount of weight. To make sure that it does so, all jockeys must weigh out before a race to make sure they and their kit (including the saddle) are the right weight. … After the race the jockey must weigh in with all his kit, to confirm that the horse carried the right weight.
7-foot-7. No, really. Well, kind of. Manute Bol technically became the tallest jockey ever licensed by the Indiana Horse Racing Commission when he suited up in jockey gear in a fund-raising effort at Hoosier Park in Indiana back in 2003 (Bol also experimented with hockey and boxing).
Yutaka Take
The country’s top jockey, Yutaka Take has been riding horses since 1987. In his career of more than 30 years, Take has prized himself around £649.8m.
It will not surprise you to learn that it is not uncommon for jockeys who struggle with their weight to starve themselves and spend hours in the sauna to lose a few pounds to be able to make a big-race ride. Of course it has happened, but it cannot be good for these riders in the long term.
250 lbs.
Jockeys are paid on a per mount (race) basis. … The jockey of the winning horse receives an amount equal to 10% of the winning owner’ s share of the total purse. (The winning owner in most states receives 60% of the total purse.) The second place jockey receives 5% of the owner’ s share of the second place purse money.
A horse can lose up to 5% of his body weight in a one-mile race; for an average-sized Thoroughbred, this calculates to more than 50 lbs. The majority of weight loss in a race is fluid.
Jockeys “don’t follow the movement of the horse but stay relatively stationary,” says co-author Alan Wilson. By, in effect, floating above his mount, the jockey saves the energy the horse would otherwise expend to shove him back up after each bounce down into the saddle.
1.4 – 1.8 mAdult, At the withers
It’s simply a matter of genetics meeting physics. Jockeys have to be smaller than the average person to stay under the weight. Smaller people tend to have vocal chords that are shorter than taller people, and those shorter vocal chords, like shorter strings on a piano, produce a slightly higher pitched sound.
Kenneth Glover
Russell A. Baze
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