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Date: 01/14/2003
On Monday, Hall of Fame jockey Eddie Delahoussaye announced his retirement from riding due to neck and head injuries suffered in a spill at Del Mar on August 30, 2002. He said of his injuries: "The doctors said I would have to do more therapy. It's just taking longer and longer. They said it's too dangerous, with the concussion and the neck fracture. It's a culmination of everything. I was hoping I was naive about it, but I guess this is the best thing for me. They said if I did fall and hit my head again, I could be walking around like Muhammad Ali, or end up in a wheelchair. The last couple of months, it's been setting in. This is the right thing to do. I'm disappointed, but I'm a realistic person."
Born in New Iberia, Louisiana, "Eddie D" first rode in match races in bush tracks in that state, working his way to his first recognized race at the Fair Grounds in 1967. His first win came six months later at Evangeline Downs. He became the Midwest circuit's premier rider, winning titles at Fair Grounds, Arlington, Churchill Downs, and Keeneland. In 1978, he led North American riders with 384 wins, capped off with a win in the All Star Jockeys competition at Hollywood, a result which made him decide to move to Southern California where he had remained till retirement. He has won titles at Santa Anita (both winter and Oak Tree), Hollywood, and Del Mar.
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His success earned him the George Woolf Memorial Award in 1981, a Hall of Fame induction in 1993, and last year an induction into the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame. He retires with 6,384 victories, 11th on the all-time win list, from 39,213 mounts, with earnings of $195,881,170, sixth all-time.
More info on Eddie Delahoussaye:
Photos ©2003, Cindy Pierson Dulay
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