
Donna Brothers didn't just grow up around horses, she grew up as the daughter of one of the first licensed female jockeys in the United States. From learning to ride before she could remember to becoming one of the winningest female jockeys of the late 80s and 90s, Donna's path was never a straight line.She spent eleven years in the saddle before trading in her silks for a microphone, joining NBC Sports in 2000 and covering everything from the Kentucky Derby to dressage at the World Equestrian Games.After 25 years as one of horse racing's most recognizable on-track voices, Donna called her final Preakness Stakes in 2025 and retired on her own terms.How Donna's mother became one of the first six licensed female jockeys in the US in 1968, and how a workers' comp calculation literally launched a family legacyThe story behind her decision to retire: why she left at the top, and what it felt like to say "riders up" one last time on NBCThe art of the post-race interview, how to keep a winning jockey in their heart instead of their head, and why she never writes out questionsThe Mind That Bird Kentucky Derby win, Calvin Burrell's raw emotion, and the Southwest New Mexico thread that connects Sunland Park to the Triple CrownWhat she thinks horse racing media gets right, what it gets wrong, and her honest advice on building a content-driven podcastDonna Brothers has been in the sport long enough to have ridden with Mike Smith as a kid in El Paso, interviewed Jose Ortiz seconds after he beat his own brother in a Kentucky Derby photo finish, and watched an entire generation of young women grow up wanting to do what she did. This conversation covers what 40 years in horse racing actually looks like from the inside, and why she's finally okay stepping out of the spotlight.@donnabrothers | Subscribe and follow Horse People for more cross-discipline content and stories.
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