BENSALEM, Pennsylvania -- A renowned jockey who was among the best in history died Thursday of injuries suffered in a racing accident.
Parx Racing announced the death of 56-year-old Jose Flores, who was racing Monday at the suburban Philadelphia track when his horse went down. Flores was thrown and hit the ground head first, suffering a massive trauma.
"He went down, hard, head first," agent Dave Yannuzzi said.
It was during the ninth of 10 races on Monday. Jose Flores saddled up on the same horse for the very same race he had won three weeks earlier, not knowing this time he would never make it around the Parx race track.
"I was in the grandstand watching the race, and I saw the spill," trainer Ned Allard said. "It's just hard to believe. Most riders that get injured have broken bones, not a death certificate."
The horse had broken its shoulder. Flores, a champion rider, was on life support for three days before he passed.
He was removed from life support Thursday afternoon.
Flores won 4,650 races in a career that spanned more than three decades. He was the top career earner at Parx, formerly known as Philadelphia Park.
Flores' mounts earned $64 million in nearly 29,000 career starts, according to the Equibase thoroughbred database.
Parx called Flores an "outstanding jockey" and expressed condolences to his family.
The Jockeys' Guild said Flores is the 157th jockey to die in a racing accident in unofficial records going back to 1940. The group said that before Flores, it had no record of a jockey ever being killed in an accident at a Pennsylvania track.
There will be a tribute for Flores when live racing returns to Parx on Saturday.
Funeral services will be held Tuesday.
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