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Cherie DeVaux made history as the first female trainer to win the Kentucky Derby with her horse Golden Tempo. She celebrated her achievement in the winner's circle at Churchill Downs.
Cherie DeVaux, trainer of Golden Tempo, celebrates with the trophy in the winner's circle following the 152nd running of the Kentucky Derby on Saturday. - Michael Reaves/Getty Images
In the moments before the Kentucky Derby began, two incredible women â one stepping off the grandest stage in horse racing and another about to step onto it â strode together to Churchill Downsâ paddock.
Donna Brothers, a former jockey with 1,130 career wins, was working her final race as a commentator on NBCâs coverage of the Derby. As the pageantry kicked into high gear, she walked with Cherie DeVaux â the daughter and granddaughter of horse trainers â to discuss her familyâs legacy and her first-ever start in the Kentucky Derby.
When Brothers asked DeVaux what it would mean to make history as the first female trainer to win the Derby, DeVaux said she couldnât conceptualize such a thing as the duo walked together, but then turned the moment around on Brothers.
âWomen like you are what made it easy for me and, by the way, my career started 22 years ago at Churchill and Iâve always admired and respected you and it is an honor that you get to do your last walkover with me,â DeVaux told Brothers.
It seemed like a nice compliment at the time, a nod to Brothersâ historic role in the sport as DeVaux readied to watch her long-shot horse, Golden Tempo, run for the roses. It ended up being a passing of the torch for women in horse racing.
DeVauxâs 24-1 underdog ended up being the horse draped in roses with an incredible come-from-behind victory that saw him and jockey JosĂ© Ortiz charge from dead last after three-quarters of a mile to waltzing into Churchill Downsâ winner circle. The weaving, lung-bursting charge down the home stretch will be long remembered as one of the most impressive kicks in Derby history â and it was just the way his trainer drew it up.
Cherie DeVaux is a horse trainer who made history as the first female trainer to win the Kentucky Derby with her horse Golden Tempo.
Cherie DeVaux expressed that she couldn't fully conceptualize the significance of being the first female trainer to win the Derby.
Cherie DeVaux comes from a lineage of horse trainers, being the daughter and granddaughter of trainers, which contributes to her legacy in the sport.
The 152nd Kentucky Derby took place on Saturday, May 2, 2026.

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Golden Tempo, with jockey Jose Ortiz aboard, wins the 152nd running of the Kentucky Derby on May 2, 2026, at Churchill Downs. - Jeff Moreland/Icon Sportswire/AP
Golden Tempo runs past the finish line in front of Churchill Downs' famous twin spires after winning the 152nd Kentucky Derby. - Abbie Parr/AP
âHeâs a dead closer. And the thing that the Louisiana Derby really solidified (was) that he was getting there, from the eighth pole (to) home. If he had a little bit extra, extra ground, he was going to make it,â DeVaux said. âSo, you know, itâs just one of those things. We just have to have faith in the process, faith in the horse and faith in Jose. Lot of faith. Gotta have faith.â
Faith is what got DeVaux to this history-making point, the trainer of the horse that wins Americaâs most famous race.
Though her family has long been involved in racing, she was planning to become a doctor. She was studying pre-med in college when she found herself in need of a job and gravitated toward her familyâs business.
âMy mother says, âWell, thereâs a farm across, and all you have to do is walk the horses. And thatâs how I started,â DeVaux told reporters. âAnd then I thought, âWell, I can ride them.â And I had this advisor my last year, and sheâs telling me to take organic chemistry, which no pre-med student wants to take. And I just looked at her, I said, âNo, Iâm gonna go work on the racetrack. And sheâs like, âAre you sure?â I was like, âYeah, Iâll just go see how it works.ââ
Cherie DeVaux trainer of Golden Tempo celebrates after becoming the first female trainer to win the Kentucky Derby on Saturday. - Michael Reaves/Getty Images
She worked under the tutelage of Chuck Simons for six years in upstate New York at Saratoga Race Course before moving to Chad Brownâs operation at the same track.
She eventually came to a crossroads in her career, DeVaux said. Thatâs when the next moment of faith came.
âIn the summer of 2017, I was kind of at a crossroads in life, and he told me that I owed it to myself to at least try, and he had the faith in me, and he saw what I didnât see and believed in me,â DeVaux told NBC after the race, referring to her spouse David Ingordo, who helps owners purchase thoroughbreds that can go on to win races such as the Derby.
He just told me, âJust give it three years. Letâs just give it three years and see if it works out.â And I could always go and do something else,â DeVaux said.
Safe to say â after racking up more than $32 million in earnings since obtaining her license in 2018 â it worked out.
DeVaux knew her horse was a âdead closer.â Ortiz put it a different way.
âWe always knew this horse had a lot of ability, but heâs very lazy,â the jockey told reporters afterward.
Maybe the nicer way to say that is Golden Tempo is a slow starter. In a shrunken Derby field â only 18 horses took off after The Puma was scratched on Saturday morning and Great White flipped over on his way to the starting gate, tossing his jockey and being scratched by race officials â Golden Tempo was at the very back about three-quarters of the way through the race.
Dead last going into the final turn. And then he woke up.
Starting multiple lengths behind the next closest horse, Ortiz and Golden Tempo started weaving their way through the field. As the pack broke up and the pace started to drop, Ortiz guided Golden Tempo to the outside and suddenly the horse had a ton of room to operate.
But even as the crowd roared and Golden Tempo had no one blocking his path, there were still 11 horses ahead of him. Then he kicked.
In a split-second, Golden Tempo passed the main chasing pack. As Renegade â guided by Ortizâs brother, Irad Ortiz Jr. â looked to have the race there for the taking, Golden Tempo suddenly turned up on his right flank.
That set off a sprint between the two horses and the brothers riding them, striding toward the finish line. In the end, Golden Tempo won by that most official of measurements in horse racing: A neck.
âItâs just (an) ability you have. Been riding here now more regularly, and I know the track better, and I know this track point that I had to make my move today. I think I time it right,â Ortiz said after the race.
When Golden Tempo crossed the finish line, DeVaux said she blacked out.
NBCâs cameras caught her wildly hugging her family, her team, anyone who was in close proximity. In the post-race interviews, she was clearly overwhelmed by the moment â her horseâs run, the history of the race and now her place in it.
âI honestly donât know,â DeVaux told NBC when asked what the moment means to her. âIâm just Iâm glad that I could be a representative of all women everywhere, that we can do anything to set our minds to.â
Cherie DeVaux celebrates after becoming the first female trainer to win the Kentucky Derby on Saturday. - Andy Lyons/Getty Images
After the adrenaline of the winnerâs circle faded and she reached the relative calm of the press conference, DeVaux joked that â for the first time in this Derby cycle â her plans were going to be upended.
âI couldnât believe it. None of us really can believe it. There was a joke that Iâm going to be a one-and-done, but now I think I have to do this again,â she said.
The hard-scrabble life in horse racing attracts a certain type of person. There are absurdly early wake-up times, an enormous amount of time surrounded by horse manure, incredible effort invested in protecting and prodding enormous animals who having their own ideas on how theyâre going to perform on any given day. Itâs a tough life and Cherie DeVaux said she hasnât really given a lot of thought to her newly found status as a trailblazer for women in the gritty world of training thoroughbreds.
âBeing a woman or my gender has never really crossed my mind in this journey of mine,â she said. âI have to say â the race trackâs a tough place. Itâs a tough place if youâre a man, itâs a tough place if youâre a woman.â
But she always carried that quiet faith â the belief that things will work out. And that tough life on the backside of race tracks, whether Saratoga, her home at Keeneland or Churchill Downs, has given her a mental strength that reflects in her work.
Cherie DeVaux speaks to the media after becoming the first female trainer to win the Kentucky Derby. - Andy Lyons/Getty Images
Golden Tempoâs win is a victory for DeVauxâs team, her family, the horseâs owners and Ortiz. But itâs also a win for women looking to make history.
âThe thing that really has become apparent to me is that not everyone has the same constitution as I have mentally,â she said, âand it really is an honor to be able to be that person for other women or other little girls to look up to.
âYou know, you can dream big and you can you can pivot, you can come from one place and make yourself a part of history.â
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