What are the height and weight "requirements" for jockeys in the US?
Becca
2010-11-12 11:02:01 UTC
I don't know if there are specific requirements, or just sort of standards of average riders, but I'm 5'5" and i waver between 115-120 lbs.
Three answers:
LauraRoss
2010-11-13 08:01:30 UTC
There are no height requirements, but most jocks are typically between 4'10" - 5'6". There are weight requirements, because a jockey must be able to make the race weight. Most jocks weigh between 108 to 115.
Major racetracks racing secretaries set the race weights between 115-126. The jockey's tack (saddle, saddle pad, etc.) also count towards the weight a horse carries. An apprentice jockey can carry up to 7 pounds less than the rest of the field, so if the rest of the field carries 115, the apprentice can carry 108. Obviously, the less a jockey weighs, the more mounts he/she can ride.
Many jocks face a daily struggle to keep their weight down and they can become prone to eating disorders and health issues.
anonymous
2016-10-15 16:42:26 UTC
No. you may want to weigh merely decrease than a hundred lbs. right this is why: once you initiate out as a jockey, you're given a ten lbs allowance, later 7 lbs, and a 5 lb allowance your finished first 3 hundred and sixty 5 days as an apprentice. maximum races have "situations" which furnish weight off for no longer having won races in the time of a particular quantity of time, or a decrease "value" in claiming races. top isn't a huge situation, merely which you're proportional along with your weight.
anonymous
2010-11-12 13:34:42 UTC
there is no height limitation only wight if you are tall but have the appropriate weight you can be a jockey but remember the taller you are the harder it is to keep the same weight.
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