Jerry D. Bailey (born Aug. 29, 1957, Dallas, Texas, U.S.) is an American Thoroughbred racing jockey who won 5,893 races over a career that spanned four decades.
He was the son of a prominent dentist who dabbled in racing as a horse owner. Bailey had ambitions to participate in team sports, but his diminutive stature (5 feet 5 inches [1.65 metres]) eventually led him to the racetrack to pursue a career as a jockey. He began his professional riding career at New Mexico’s Sunland Park, where in November 1974, at age 17, he won the first race in which he rode, on a horse named Fetch. Bailey enjoyed considerable success around the country prior to establishing his presence as a rising star on the New York state circuit in 1982. He solidified his national stature with victories astride Hansel in the 1991 Preakness and Belmont Stakes, won his first Kentucky Derby in 1993 with Sea Hero, and was inducted into the National Racing Hall of Fame two years later. Bailey won his second Kentucky Derby riding Grindstone in 1996, added another Preakness win in 2000 with Red Bullet, and captured the 2003 Belmont on Empire Maker. In July 1996 he guided Cigar, a two-time Horse of the Year, to a 16th consecutive victory, equaling the modern era record set by 1948 Triple Crown champion Citation. On May 6, 2001, at Aqueduct Racetrack in New York, Bailey recorded his milestone 5,000th career win, and later that year he became the first rider to reach $20 million in purse earnings for a single season.
When the 2003 Thoroughbred racing Eclipse Awards were handed out on Jan. 26, 2004, Jerry Bailey was proclaimed the outstanding jockey in North America for an unprecedented seventh time (1995–97 and 2000–03); in 1997 he had been the first jockey to win three consecutive Eclipse Awards. Bailey had recorded more victories in the prestigious Breeders’ Cup World Thoroughbred Championships than any other rider in the 20-year history of the competition (13; he was to add 2 more victories before his retirement in 2006) and had led the country’s riders in total purse earnings seven times, including a record $23,354,960 in 2003. Although he was perhaps not as universally recognized as such legendary jockeys as Johnny Longden, Eddie Arcaro, Bill Shoemaker, and Bill Hartack, the intensely competitive Bailey’s dominance of Thoroughbred racing over the previous decade earned him a historic place in their company.
In later years Bailey established personal limits on the number of horses he rode based on criteria that emphasized quality rather than quantity. When Bailey retired from racing on Jan. 28, 2006, he had accumulated 5,893 career wins and ranked second on the all-time earnings list at that time with a total of $296,104,129. His autobiography, Against the Odds: Riding for My Life, was published in 2005.