翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Charles Lombaert
・ Charles Lombahe-Kahudi
・ Charles Lomberg
・ Charles London
・ Charles Long
・ Charles Long (ABSRA)
・ Charles Long, 1st Baron Farnborough
・ Charles Longbottom
・ Charles Longcroft
・ Charles Longley
・ Charles Longsworth
・ Charles Longuet
・ Charles Lonsdale
・ Charles Loomis Dana
・ Charles Loos
Charles LoPresti
・ Charles Loraine Smith
・ Charles Lord
・ Charles Loring
・ Charles Loring (judge)
・ Charles Loring Brace
・ Charles Loring Elliott
・ Charles Loring Jackson
・ Charles Lory
・ Charles Losper
・ Charles Lot Church
・ Charles Lott
・ Charles Loughlin
・ Charles Louis
・ Charles Louis Alphonse Laveran


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Charles LoPresti : ウィキペディア英語版
Charles LoPresti

Charles LoPresti (born September 21, 1957) is an American race horse trainer best known as trainer of two-time Breeders' Cup Mile winner and Eclipse Award for Horse of the Year champion Wise Dan, who was also American Champion Older Male Horse and American Champion Male Turf Horse. Unusual for modern American horse trainers, he is based year-round at Keeneland Race Course and does not move his training stable from track to track throughout the year.〔 He chooses to give his horses time off in the winter and does not race-year-round.〔
==Background==
Lopresti was born in Brooklyn, New York,〔 and grew up in Smithtown, a suburb of New York located on Long Island. His first exposure to horses were the pleasure horses of his uncle. LoPresti then spent time around hunters, jumpers,〔 and driving horses, only becoming interested in Thoroughbred racing as a young adult. At the age of 19,〔 he attempted to find work on a Thoroughbred farm in Virginia, but the job was taken already. However, the employer there recommended him for a job with trainer Joe Cantey, who was at Belmont Park back in New York.〔 Cantey was also the first husband of horse racing sports analyst Charlsie Cantey.〔 LoPresti stayed there for two years, and in 1978 moved to Lexington, Kentucky,〔 where he worked for Ted Carr at the Domino Stud and learned about the Thoroughbred industry from the ground up. He also worked for Carr for about six years as an assistant manager at Brookside Farm, then owned by Allen Paulson〔 While working at Domino Stud, he met his wife, then named Amy Featherston.〔
LoPresti next worked as a trainer at Calumet Farm, starting their young horses.〔 He then sent the young horses on to the track where they were further developed by people such as Bill Mott and Frank L. Brothers.〔 During his six-year tenure at Calumet,〔 he met race horse owner Bob Lewis, who asked him to help rehabilitate a horse named Competitive Edge who had undergone surgery in 1992. When that horse returned to the track a winner, the owner of Calumet, Henryk de Kwiatkowski, suggested that LoPresti begin to train some of Calumet's racing stock directly for the track.〔 As a result, LoPresti became a licensed trainer in 1993. When the management of Calumet changed,〔 the husband and wife team of Charles and Amy LoPresti went out on their own.〔 They originally established themselves with a very good reputation for starting yearlings as race horses.〔 Among the young horses they started in training was Lewis' horse Charismatic, winner of the 1999 Kentucky Derby.〔
Today, the LoPrestis run a 200-acre horse facility in Lexington called Forest Lane Farm. They start about 25 to 30 yearlings each year and house their race string there in the off-season.〔 Amy LoPresti continues to manage Forest Lane while Charles LoPresti handles their race horse training at Keeneland, which is about 15 miles from their farm.〔 In his spare time, LoPresti enjoys the western riding sport of team roping and working cattle with horses.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Charles LoPresti」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.