Before he ever picked up the phone, Gary Stevens probably could have predicted the answer he would get. The retired Hall of Fame jockey wanted to talk with his brother Scott, who had been winning races for four decades, about whether he should get back in the saddle after seven years away.
In 2010, Gary had urged Scott not to ride again after a terrible spill at Canterbury Park nearly took his life. Scott's unquenchable love for horse racing lured him back to the track, and he advised Gary — who ended his career in 2005 because of chronic knee pain — to let his desire guide him.
"I always wanted to emulate whatever he did,'' Gary said. "He told me, 'If you're feeling it, if you want to do this, don't take that away from yourself.' ''
That led Gary to follow his brother into racing again, just as he did more than 35 years ago. Saturday, Gary will ride Oxbow in the Belmont Stakes, three weeks after winning the Preakness in the biggest victory of his five-month-old comeback. Scott will ride four races at Canterbury Park, where he is the second-winningest jockey in the history of the Shakopee track.
The Stevens brothers — Scott, 52, and Gary, 50 — carved very different career paths after butting heads for two years at Les Bois Park in their native Idaho. Gary left for the glamorous Southern California circuit and has won three Kentucky Derbies, nine Triple Crown races and eight Breeders' Cup events, compiling nearly $224 million in purse earnings. Scott opted for a lower tier of racing that allowed him the family time he craved, winning more than 4,300 races and $33 million in purses at tracks such as Canterbury and Arizona's Turf Paradise.
Though both are grandfathers now, neither their enthusiasm nor their skill has waned. Three weeks ago, after completing an afternoon of racing at Canterbury, Scott watched on TV in the jockeys' lounge as his brother won his third Preakness — a victory that Gary said was the most emotional of his career.
"The best advice I could give him was to follow his heart,'' said Scott, who has ridden 924 winners at Canterbury and holds the track record with 6,014 starts on thoroughbreds and quarter horses. "I thought he was nuts at first, because he gave up some good jobs. But he's always been a very determined person, and I knew when he set his mind to it, it was going to be good. I'm very proud of him.''
Following his brother's lead again, Gary sent the compliment right back.