Friday, February 27, 2026
Irish-born rider has ridden 18 winners at Gulfstream . . .

    HALLANDALE BEACH - Jockey David Egan made a winning return to Gulfstream Park Thursday after spending two weeks back in Europe, guiding Lea Farms’ Never Count Me Out ($4) to a popular victory in Race 4.

    The 26-year-old Irish-born and Great Britain-based jockey, has ridden at Gulfstream during Europe’s offseason the past few years, notched his 18th winning ride of the Championship Meet aboard the Jorge Delgado-trained 3-year-old Tacitus colt in the 5-furlong, $35,000 maiden claiming race. Making his second career start, Never Count Me Out stumbled early before making a four-wide sweep to the lead and drawing off to win by five lengths
.

    “This horse definitely wants longer,” Egan said. “The first jump was quick. The second step out of the gate he stumbled and went to his head, and I had to rush him down the backstretch, which was not ideal. But he’s was much the best. He’s a big strong horse.”

    Egan, the multiple Group 1 stakes-winning former British champion apprentice, is under contract with European sports agent Kia Joorabchian’s AMO Racing.

    “I was back in the U.K., riding some horses on the track. We have a lot of young horses coming through, so I was over there to breeze them at the farms,” Egan said. “It’s an important time of year getting these horses ready.”


    Egan has a busy riding schedule this weekend with six mounts today, 11 on Saturday’s 14-race Coolmore Fountain of Yout Day card, and nine on Sunday.

    “I’m here all of this week and next week anyway,” Egan said. “I’ve got some nice rides – a nice filly, Domino Vitali, for Jorge again for AMO Racing. I have lots of rides on Saturday, Fountain of Youth Day, not in the big one, but I’m in nearly all the other races.”

Champion Apprentice Moran Rides at Gulfstream Sunday

    Pietro Moran, who won the 2025 Outstanding Apprentice Eclipse Award, will begin riding at Gulfstream Sunday.

    The 20-year-old Irish-born jockey, whose meet-leading 140 wins at Woodbine included a $1 million King’s Plate victory aboard Mansetti, has been named on a pair of 3-year-old maidens by Canadian trainer Rachel Halden. He has the mounts on Magical Factor in Race 8, a 1 1/8-mile maiden special weight on turf, and Just In Touch in Race 11, a 1 1/8-mile maiden special weight race on turf for fillies.

    “I’ll ride here until April and head back to Woodbine,” said Moran, who lived in Ireland for six years before moving with his family to Canada. “I’m here for the experience. It’s a good room with a lot of good riders I can learn from and a lot of good trainers and owners.”

    Moran no longer qualifies for the five-pound apprentice allowance.

    “I’ve been very fortunate so far. I’ve had a lot of opportunities and support, and I hope to keep it going,” Moran said.

          

         

Saturday, February 21, 2026
Lady River Lily pays $21.20 . . .
    HALLANDALE BEACH - Cornelia Hartsmar, who had ridden 101 winners while campaigning in Sweden, Norway, Denmark and France, notched her first victory in North America Thursday at Gulfstream Park while guiding Lady River Lily to a front-running score in Race 8.

    “This is 102,” the 26-year-old native of Sweden said. “I feel amazing. I feel like I just won the Derby.”

    Douglas Seyler-owned and -trained Lady River Lily ($21.20), who had won one of her previous 18 starts, held gamely in deep stretch to prevail by three quarters of a length in the 7-furlong, $17,500 claiming race for fillies and mares on turf.

    “I love this horse. I rode her at Saratoga. Ever since then, she’s just 100 percent every time,” said Hartsmar after breaking through with her first North American win on her 26th mount. “I had a feeling about today.”

    Hartsmar, who rode at Saratoga in July and August before venturing to South Florida, plans to continue riding in North America for the foreseeable future.
Thursday, February 19, 2026
Lucky bettor hits entire Pick5 pool . . .

    OLDSMAR - It looked for all the world as if pair of longshot winners had helped to create a huge late Pick-5 carryover pool going into Friday’s action.

    Instead, 9-5 second choice Midway Vow staged a dramatic rally in the ninth and final on the turf under jockey Cipriano Gil for a victory that enabled one bettor to take home the whole Pick-5 shebang of $98,367.

    Earlier victories by 46-1 shot Curlin Gunner in the sixth race and 17-1 shot Keigs in the seventh had raised everyone’s hopes (well, almost everyone) of a carryover, but the 5-year-old mare Midway Vow proved best in sterling fashion, showing that sometimes a pot of gold does rest at the end of a rainbow for somebody.

Monday, February 16, 2026
Single-season record is within sight . . .

  OLDSMAR - Just past the halfway point of the meet, jockey Samuel Marin is on pace to eclipse the track’s single-season victory record of 147 set 11 years ago by Antonio Gallardo.

    Marin, a 24-year-old product of Trujillo, Venezuela, rode five winners Friday for the second time this season. He followed up that performance Saturday with three winners and two seconds from five mounts, capping the card in exciting fashion with a victory aboard trainer Mark Casse’s 5-year-old gelding My Boy Prince in the $100,000 Turf Dash Stakes.

    With 81 winners, Marin is on pace to ride 153 winners assuming he competes through the May 3 finale. He has a 28-victory advantage over five-time Tampa Bay Downs champion Samy Camacho in the standings. Marin added three more winners to his ledger Sunday.

    Friday’s card brought into clear focus some of the reasons Marin has been so dominant. His first four winners were all favorites – in some part, of course, due to trainers clamoring for his services because of his all-around skills. But having a target on his back hasn’t stopped him from making the right moves at the right time in a majority of races to get those “people’s choices” home in front.

    Then, in Friday’s final race at a mile on the turf aboard 5-year-old horse Son of a Slew, Marin angled over to the rail from the No. 5 post soon after the start and stayed there throughout while the pace-setters vied for the lead. Son of a Slew gave a strong response along the inside when summoned, posting a ¾-length victory.

    Saturday’s Turf Dash, although shorter at 5 furlongs, was decided similarly, as Marin got My Boy Prince to the rail right before the turn, a maneuver that proved decisive through the stretch as the winner outlasted hard-charging Rezasrolex by a neck.

    Marin’s winning percentage of 26.6 is the best of any jockey at the meet with at least 40 mounts.

    My Boy Prince’s victory was the fifth stakes triumph in a nine-day period for Casse, who also won Saturday’s Lightning City Stakes at Tampa Bay Downs with 5-year-old mare Creed’s Gold.
And, wouldn’t you know it: Less than an hour after the Turf Dash Stakes, the trainer’s 3-year-old filly French Friction won the Dixie Belle Stakes at Oaklawn Park.

    Little Thunder makes big noise. Although the main track was producing faster times than usual Saturday, plenty of horsemen and handicappers took notice when 4-year-old Florida-bred gelding Little Thunder won the seventh race in 1:08.95, .28 seconds off the track record set in 2012 by filly It’s Me Mom.

    Trainer Tim Hamm, who also owns Little Thunder under his Blazing Meadows Farm banner in partnership with the horse’s breeder, Thomas Equels, watched the allowance/optional claiming race from his Ocala training center after supervising a full schedule of 2-year-old breezes earlier in the day. By the time he was finished, he thought he’d be cutting it too close to make it to Tampa Bay Downs in time for the race, entrusting assistant Julie Hutchison with the saddling duties.

    What they witnessed in the horse’s third career start was awesome to behold. Despite only moderate encouragement from jockey Cipriano Gil, Little Thunder kept widening his lead through the stretch, posting a 7 ¾-length victory from Mor Spring Spirit.

    “He’s a horse that every single time he has done something, he has shown up,” Hamm said. “I told my son Shane that when you get a horse that shows up every time, that’s a horse.”
Hamm has been patient in developing the son of Noble Bird-Circular Rainbow, by Circular Quay, who he described as “a big, gangly horse” as a 2-year-old. He decided against running him up north last summer to start him at Tampa Bay Downs and take advantage of Florida-bred money opportunities.

    The plan has worked nicely thus far. Little Thunder broke his maiden here on Dec. 24 as a 3-year-old in 1:22.50 for 7 furlongs. On Jan. 31, he finished second by 3 ½-lengths to the Todd Pletcher-trained Disruptor in an 11-horse field. The 7-furlong time was 1:22.83.
Gil has ridden Little Thunder in all three starts.

    “I can’t say I expected that (kind of performance) Saturday,” Hamm said. “Once he got in front (rounding the turn), he just started to extend and (Gil) rode him out. After seeing those earlier times, I thought he had a chance to shade 1:09, but that was really impressive.”

Sunday, February 15, 2026
98 lucky bettors strike for $31,679 . . .
    HALLANDALE BEACH - A mandatory payout of the 20-cent Rainbow 6 today at Gulfstream Park yielded multiple payoffs of $31,679.

    There were 98 winning tickets.

    After going unsolved for 12 days following a mandatory payout, a jackpot pool of $557,100 was carried over to today’s mandatory payout. A total of $3,184,611 was wagered into the pool.

    In the Rainbow 6, the jackpot pool is only paid out when there is a single unique ticket sold with all six winners. On days when there is no unique ticket, 70 percent of that day’s pool goes back to those bettors holding tickets with the most winners while 30 percent is carried over to the jackpot pool. On mandatory payout days, the entire pool is disbursed to the bettor or bettors holding tickets with the most winners in the six-race sequence.

    Gallo de Fuego ($10.80) kicked off the winning sequence in Race 6, followed by Wit Storm ($21.20) in Race 7, Steeze ($5) in Race 8, Battle of Dover ($27} in Race 9, Eclatant ($11.80) in Race 10 and David Pepperman ($14.60) in Race 11.

    The winning combination was 6-5-3-12-8-3.

    The Rainbow 6 will start anew when live racing resumes on Thursday, when the sequence will span Races 5-10, featuring a six-furlong optional claiming allowance in Race 9 in which Team Valor International’s Isla Grande is scheduled to make her North American debut in a field of seven fillies and mares. Hall of Famer Bill Mott trains the 4-year-old filly, who raced once in her native Argentina – resulting in a 10-length debut victory. Her sire, Mask, won the 2018 Mucho Macho Man at Gulfstream by 8 lengths.

    Who’s Hot: Hall of Famer jockey Javier Castellano rode a trio of winners, scoring aboard No Other Like You ($3.40) in Race 2, Ripton’s Music ($3) in Race 4, and Eclatant ($11.80) in Race 10. Luca Panici rode a pair of winners, connecting with Gallo De Fuego ($10.80) in Race 6 and Battle of Dover ($27) in Race 9.

    Trainer Rohan Crichton saddled back-to-back winners, scoring with Ripton’s Music ($3) in Race 4 and Rachel’s Coach ($9.60) in Race 5.

Note: Jockey Mario Gutierrez was taken to nearby Aventura Hospital for further evaluation of soreness in a hip after being unseated from his mount in a Race 9 mishap. Tyler Gaffalione, who was also unseated, returned to the jockeys' room without apparent need for medical attention.