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1 References  














Tim Ice: Difference between revisions






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'''Tim A. Ice''' (born June 6, 1974 in [[East Liverpool, Ohio]]) is an American [[Thoroughbred horse race|Thoroughbred horse racing]] [[horse trainer|trainer]]. While in his early teens his family moved to [[Louisiana]] where he lived near [[Louisiana Downs]] in [[Bossier City, Louisiana|Bossier City]] where he now makes his home. However, Tim Ice began his career in racing at tracks in the [[American Midwest]]. He worked as an assistant to Keith Desormeaux for five years throughout the midwest. After a short hiatus he then worked for Cole Norman in Louisiana and Arkansa. He the followed that with two years under Morris Nicks.

'''Tim A. Ice''' (born June 6, 1974 in [[East Liverpool, Ohio]]) is an American [[Thoroughbred horse race|Thoroughbred horse racing]] [[horse trainer|trainer]]. While in his early teens his family moved to [[Louisiana]] where he lived near [[Louisiana Downs]] in [[Bossier City, Louisiana|Bossier City]] where he now makes his home. However, Tim Ice began his career in racing at tracks in the [[American Midwest]]. He worked as an assistant to Keith Desormeaux for five years throughout the midwest. After a short hiatus he then worked for Cole Norman in Louisiana and Arkansa. He the followed that with two years under Morris Nicks.



2009 marked the first time Tim Ice was on his own and he earned his first stakes win with Affirmed Truth in the March 28 Rainbow Miss Stakes at [[Oaklawn Park]]. [http://74.125.95.132/search?q=cache:Qz7NN1E4EQgJ:www.kentuckyderby.com/2009/racing-information/contenders/summer-bird/connections+Rainbow+Miss+Stakes,+Affirmed+Truth&cd=6&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=ca]

2009 marked the first time Tim Ice was on his own and he earned his first stakes win with Affirmed Truth in the March 28 Rainbow Miss Stakes at [[Oaklawn Park]]. [http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:Qz7NN1E4EQgJ:www.kentuckyderby.com/2009/racing-information/contenders/summer-bird/connections+Rainbow+Miss+Stakes,+Affirmed+Truth&cd=6&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=ca]

By far his greatest success came with the three-year-old colt [[Summer Bird]] who won four of his nine starts and earned $2,323,040. In the third leg of the 2009 [[United States Triple Crown of Thoroughbred Racing|U.S. Triple Crown]] series, on his 35th birthday Tim Ice won the [[Belmont Stakes]] with Summer Bird. The colt went on to win two more Grade 1 races, the [[Travers Stakes]] and [[Jockey Club Gold Cup]], and was voted the [[American Champion Three-Year-Old Male Horse]] of 2009.

By far his greatest success came with the three-year-old colt [[Summer Bird]] who won four of his nine starts and earned $2,323,040. In the third leg of the 2009 [[United States Triple Crown of Thoroughbred Racing|U.S. Triple Crown]] series, on his 35th birthday Tim Ice won the [[Belmont Stakes]] with Summer Bird. The colt went on to win two more Grade 1 races, the [[Travers Stakes]] and [[Jockey Club Gold Cup]], and was voted the [[American Champion Three-Year-Old Male Horse]] of 2009.




Revision as of 20:14, 7 August 2013

Tim Ice
OccupationTrainer
BornJune 6, 1974
East Liverpool, Ohio, United States
Major racing wins
Belmont Stakes (2009)
Travers Stakes (2009)
Jockey Club Gold Cup (2009)
Significant horses
Summer Bird

Tim A. Ice (born June 6, 1974 in East Liverpool, Ohio) is an American Thoroughbred horse racing trainer. While in his early teens his family moved to Louisiana where he lived near Louisiana DownsinBossier City where he now makes his home. However, Tim Ice began his career in racing at tracks in the American Midwest. He worked as an assistant to Keith Desormeaux for five years throughout the midwest. After a short hiatus he then worked for Cole Norman in Louisiana and Arkansa. He the followed that with two years under Morris Nicks.

2009 marked the first time Tim Ice was on his own and he earned his first stakes win with Affirmed Truth in the March 28 Rainbow Miss Stakes at Oaklawn Park. [1] By far his greatest success came with the three-year-old colt Summer Bird who won four of his nine starts and earned $2,323,040. In the third leg of the 2009 U.S. Triple Crown series, on his 35th birthday Tim Ice won the Belmont Stakes with Summer Bird. The colt went on to win two more Grade 1 races, the Travers Stakes and Jockey Club Gold Cup, and was voted the American Champion Three-Year-Old Male Horse of 2009.

Off to a slow start in 2010, on February 9, owners K.K. and Vilasini Jayaraman decided to transfer their stable from Tim Ice to other trainers. Summer Bird, along with five other horses, were sent to trainer Tim Ritchey.

References

Template:Persondata


Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tim_Ice&oldid=567587140"

Categories: 
1974 births
Living people
American horse trainers
People from East Liverpool, Ohio
 



This page was last edited on 7 August 2013, at 20:14 (UTC).

This version of the page has been revised. Besides normal editing, the reason for revision may have been that this version contains factual inaccuracies, vandalism, or material not compatible with the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.



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