logo
Much-loved jockey Justin Potter ends 25-year riding career to pursue training partnership

Much-loved jockey Justin Potter ends 25-year riding career to pursue training partnership

The Australian6 days ago
Justin Potter has long been one of the great characters of South Australian racing, and the retiring hoop is excited for the next phase as he turns his hand to full-time training.
Potter, 48, has called time on a 25-year career as a jockey, riding his final race at Balaklava on Wednesday.
• PUNT LIKE A PRO: Become a Racenet iQ member and get expert tips – with fully transparent return on investment statistics – from Racenet's team of professional punters at our Pro Tips section. SUBSCRIBE NOW!
It's a journey that has yielded 1309 winners, three at Group level and seen 'Pottsy' remain a stalwart of SA's jockey ranks since 2000, when he made his debut in the Jamestown Cup aboard Valstocrabar.
A first race win came aboard Bonnie Gollie at Gawler the following month, two years later he was named Dux of the Apprentice Academy in 2002.
Retirement didn't come calling overnight.
Potter still has that innate drive and competitiveness, but when an exciting opportunity arose through a friend, he couldn't knock it back.
'It's been a great career, and very fruitful, but it's time for the next journey,' Potter said.
'David Jolly approached me to come into partnership on the training side of things with him.
'I've probably still got more to give (riding), but an opportunity like this – I can't knock it back.
'With David's knowledge, I think together, we'll make an awesome combination.'
Potter steers home Anecdotal for his last winner at Morphettville earlier this month. Picture: Makoto Kaneko
Potter is hitting the finish line hard, he's scored 100 winners over the past two seasons, including two stakes wins.
'It had a bit of thought. I'm still competitive, I've had a really good twelve months, David has backed me and put me on some nice horses,' he said.
'I will miss a lot of the banter and camaraderie with the boys and girls (jockeys), I am good mates with all of them.
'But it's a great time to step away because I'm still able to ride good work, and feel a horse – rather than being over the hill so to speak.'
• Meeting abandoned, Gawler rescheduled following rainfall
Potter has purchased a 75-acre property at Finniss, and has six to eight horses in work under a dual-license he took out in early 2022.
'I would like to have about 24 yards available, a couple of day yards and spelling yards, so horses that race can go out for the next few days,' he said.
'David has about nine (horses) at the Goolwa property, we'll have a good 12-18 horses in work.
'My daughter and my wife will help out as well, we can get a nice team going and make it profitable hopefully.'
Potter's wife, Katrina, and daughters Lucy and Sophie, have been a huge support.
Lucy rides trackwork, and does eventing, while Sophie is an apprentice jockey to the Phillip Stokes stable.
'Katrina has been amazing, we've have some great memories and there's many more to come,' he said.
'(Lucy) she's probably the smartest one out of all of us, she's going to be a primary school teacher.
'(Sophie) is incredible, hopefully she keeps the Potter name going in the saddle, I'm super proud, she's really put her head down and that's what you've got to do in this game.
'Take the knocks, there's plenty of them, and just work hard.'
• Rising mare ready to make Splash in Aurie's Star
Potter's most cherished moment in racing came this month, when Sophie won on Sun Flipper, a horse he trains, at Murray Bridge.
'That would have to be the best moment, it was pretty emotional, I got a little bit of hayfever that day,' Potter laughed.
As for the best horse he's ridden? A Leon MacDonald-trained filly, who later won a TJ Smith Stakes.
'I've ridden some lovely gallopers, the standout that always come to my mind is a horse called Dilly Dally,' he said.
'What she done was incredible, she got stood on her head at the 800m mark at Cheltenham over 1000m, and picked herself up.
'I half pulled her up but she was all right underneath me and ended up winning by two lengths – she was an amazing horse.'
As Potter strode to the mounting yard for his final ride at Morphettville on Saturday, he was greeted by a guard of honour made up of fellow hoops. It was confirmation of how widely admired Potter is among his peers.
'I just enjoy every moment, I treat people like I would like to be treated,' he said.
'I'm an emotional person, you get the knocks and everything but the excitement, it outweighs everything.
'I was pretty chuffed when I walked out and the cheeky buggers gave me a guard at honour, that was a bit of hayfever again.
'It makes you reflect, you're doing something right to get that respect from people.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Port champion Boak hangs up boots shy of 400-game milestone
Port champion Boak hangs up boots shy of 400-game milestone

The Australian

time24 minutes ago

  • The Australian

Port champion Boak hangs up boots shy of 400-game milestone

Port Adelaide veteran Travis Boak won't join the rare 400-game club after opting to retire as his club's games record holder at the end of the season following an elite career. Boak, 37, has racked up a mammoth 384 games but has called time with the prospect of joining the 400 club not enough to keep him going on for another year. The three-time All Australian, two-time club best and fairest winner and Port's longest-serving captain sits seventh on the all-time VFL/AFL list for matches played. He broke Port Adelaide legend Russell Ebert's club games record, which were all played in the SANFL, earlier this year. 'After 19 years at AFL level, it feels like now is the right time to finish my career,' Boak said. 'I'm incredibly grateful to have had the career I've had and at a club I truly love. Being a one-club player is really special to me, and it's certainly not lost on me how lucky I have been. Travis Boak has announced is retirement. Picture: Sarah Reed/AFL Photos via Getty Images 'I have played alongside some of the greatest footballers, and people, I could have hoped to meet. From Robbie Gray to Ollie Wines, Sam Powell-Pepper, to the new generation in Connor Rozee, Zak Butters and Jason Horne-Francis, it's been an incredible ride. 'Thank you to the club, to my family, my teammates and my coaches for the memories over the years. The highs and lows are what makes footy exciting, and those moments are what connect a group in a significant and authentic way. 'More than football, I hope to be remembered as someone who always carried myself in the right way and gave people my time. A human being first and an athlete second. 'The Port Adelaide fans are loud, passionate, and supportive. They demand success. And while I haven't been able to help deliver them an elusive second AFL premiership, I can't wait to sit back and watch on as this club does that for them. 'I'll forever be a Port Adelaide person, and I'll forever be grateful for this part of my life.' Port coach Ken Hinkley said Boak was 'a person and leader who embodies everything Port Adelaide stands for'. 'He's someone who is selfless, caring, courageous and never satisfied,' Hinkley said. 'Coaching Travis has been one of the great privileges of my career. He's taught me as much as I've taught him. Watching him grow from player to captain to a modern-day club legend has been a privilege, and I feel incredibly fortunate to have been part of that journey.' Read related topics: Adelaide

Claim to fame: Winning wave has Vitler riding high
Claim to fame: Winning wave has Vitler riding high

The Australian

time25 minutes ago

  • The Australian

Claim to fame: Winning wave has Vitler riding high

Speaking to trainers in the know in southeast Queensland, 'confidence' is the buzz word when it comes to appraising rising apprentice Cobi Vitler. The 25-year-old Englishman is impressing the right people in the region and he's being rewarded with more rides in the city. Of course his 3kg claim helps, but Vitler is showing enough promise to suggest he will still be well in the mix for the better rides when his apprenticeship ends. Deagon trainer Jack Bruce heaped praise on Vitler after he patiently steered eight-year-old Galifianakis to victory in a Benchmark 78 (1600m) at Eagle Farm last Saturday. • PUNT LIKE A PRO: Become a Racenet iQ member and get expert tips – with fully transparent return on investment statistics – from Racenet's team of professional punters at our Pro Tips section. SUBSCRIBE NOW! And in an extraordinary sidenote, Vitler became the ninth different jockey to win on Galifianakis from nine victories since the gelding broke his maiden status in February 2023 at the Gold Coast, with Corey Bayliss onboard. Read: Stable switch: Exciting Queensland filly bound for Victoria 'He's riding really well, he's got confidence and he's being utilised by different trainers,' Bruce said about Vitler, who has been working in Australia for seven years under astute trainers such as Brett Cavanough in Scone and Lindsay Hatch in Toowoomba. 'I thought he rode Galifianakis confidently and patiently. He did a really good job. 'While he's got that good claim, it's particularly helpful. He first came on to my radar when he became an apprentice to Lindsay Hatch and started riding up here.' Vitler rode two winners on a Saturday meeting at Eagle Farm last month - Lead Me On for Chris Anderson and mare Wanda Rox for his mentor Hatch. 'He had to throw instructions out the gate when she was slow to go and he rode her good, I was very happy with him,' Hatch said about Vitler's effort on Wanda Rox. And then the critical word that all athletes need for success is mentioned again. 'He's riding with confidence and that helps,' Hatch added. 'When you ride winners, you ride with confidence. He's a good kid.' Read: Jockeys' reunion will get 'bigger and better' Vitler has six rides, all with different trainers, at a mid-week meeting at Doomben on Wednesday as demand for his services climbs. 'Like any apprentice, when they have a claim that makes them particularly valuable and often at that stage of their career when they're riding well and with confidence, they're certainly worth utilising,' Bruce said. 'For example Galifianakis at 63kg, I basically ran a Benchmark 85 horse in a 78 race and met at fairly level weights so that's the appeal of utilising his services. 'Obviously you take the risk that they'll make mistakes because they're learner drivers but if they don't (make errors) then you can run the horse six rungs below what it could've been racing.' Emily Lang is the undisputed queen of the Queensland apprentices but youngsters such as Cody Collis and 183cm-tall Corey Sutherland are making their marks, while Tasmania's Chloe Wells has joined Rob Heathcote's stable on a three-month loan. 'Like Emily Lang said this week, it's once you stop claiming that it gets hard but while you can claim you're very fashionable,' Bruce said. 'It's your opportunity to get out there and ride winners and learn what works and what doesn't. 'Cobi's got to use that opportunity to be valuable when he claims 2kg, then 1.5kg and eventually enough when he has to meet Ryan Maloney at level weights.' Horse Racing Astute trainer David Vandyke has picked out a Group 1 Victorian spring carnival goal for exciting mare Philia after she lit up the Queensland winter carnival. Horse Racing Private Harry has strengthened significantly for his spring carnival assault on The Everest where the unbeaten sprinter will wear a specially designed set of silks.

Port Adelaide great Travis Boak announces retirement from AFL
Port Adelaide great Travis Boak announces retirement from AFL

ABC News

time3 hours ago

  • ABC News

Port Adelaide great Travis Boak announces retirement from AFL

Port Adelaide great Travis Boak has announced he will retire at the end of the AFL season. A former captain of the club and three-time All-Australian, Boak sits seventh on the all-time V/AFL games list with 384. Drafted by the Power in 2006, Boak has played in the previous 19 AFL seasons, kicking 214 goals. Playing most of his career in the midfield, Boak was named an All-Australian in 2013, 2014 and 2020, and was runner-up in the 2020 Brownlow Medal. Boak was captain of the Power from 2013-2018. Boak debuted for the Power in 2007, playing 14 matches, including that year's grand final loss to Geelong. The Power has not made it to a grand final since 2007, but has played in four preliminary finals.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store