Jockey Rafael Hernandez has returned to riding after being sidelined for four months by injuries sustained in a spill. He finished eighth Sunday in the seventh race at Gulfstream Park aboard Ozymandias in his first race back. Hernandez was named on one mount for Thursday, and on Friday he will be aboard the 2-year-old first-time starter Timeiseverything in the sixth race. Hernandez had nothing but time after breaking his collarbone and ribs and having a kidney removed as a result of a spill aboard Brandy’s Girl in a race at Gulfstream on Feb. 20. “For the last 10 or 11 years, I’ve been riding, riding – just working,” Hernandez, 31, said in a Gulfstream Park media release. “This is the first time I was hurt bad. I was out for four months, but I got to spend time with my family – that’s the one good thing.” :: Bet Gulfstream Park with DRF Bets and get FREE access to this article and all of DRF Plus, including Gulfstream selections, video, and real-time analysis. According to the release, Hernandez got fit for his return by exercising horses at Fairmount Park in Collinsville, Ill., where he was the leading rider for several years. Timeiseverything, a gelding by Graeme Hall, enters the five-furlong sixth race with a light work tab comprising four breezes, none longer than a half-mile. He is trained by Mark Casse, who has been winning at a 14 percent rate with his debuting runners and 20 percent with 2-year-olds. Casse was third in the trainer standings at Gulfstream going into Thursday’s races. Timeiseverything breaks from the rail, and his uncoupled Casse stablemate, Down in the Holler, breaks from post 9 in the field of 10 special-weight maidens. Down in the Holler finished third as the even-money favorite in a 4 1/2-furlong maiden special weight at Gulfstream on May 12, his only start. Francesco Appeal ran away to win that race by 7 1/4 lengths, but Down in the Holler was beaten only a half-length by Draft Beer, who returned two weeks later to romp over Florida-bred maidens. Trip handicappers will take a long look at D’Kingfish, who hit the gate at the start of his only race and rallied greenly up the rail to finish third. D’Kingfish, a D’wildcat colt trained by Phil Gleaves, made up nearly nine lengths in that five-furlong maiden special on turf and was beaten 1 3/4 lengths by My Third Eye and three-quarters of a length by Diddley, both trained by 2-year-old whiz Wesley Ward. Tyler Gaffalione rode Down in the Holler in his debut but is named Friday aboard D’Kingfish. Jose Caraballo rides Down in the Holler.