OLDSMAR - Since her horses were sidelined for seven racing days in December, Tampa Bay Downs trainer Kathleen O’Connell has been making up for lost time.
O’Connell sent out four winners on Jan. 2, tying a track record she established in 2003. It is shared by Gerald Bennett (three times), Jamie Ness (twice) and Chad Brown. That performance was instrumental in O’Connell earning the Martin’s Italian Trainer of the Month Award.
It also kindled hopes for a third consecutive Oldsmar training crown and fifth overall for O’Connell, who first won the title in 1998-99 and captured it again in 2009-10, tying with Ness. O’Connell has nine victories, trailing Juan Carlos Avila (18), Juan Arriagada (13) and Bennett (12).
More on O’Connell in a moment. With $817,003 funneled into today’s late Pick 5 carryover pool, the potential for a huge payoff seemed likely, and victories in the first two legs by 17-1 and 20-1 shots seemed to assure it. At the end of the card, the winning 4-11-10-6-2 combination paid $21,765 apiece to 35 lucky ticket holders.
\ The Ultimate 6 was also hit, with one bettor correctly selecting the winners of the final six races – the old 8-4-11-10-6-2 combination – to the tune of $33,093.
Back to O’Connell, one of the track’s most popular trainers due as much to her humility as her winning ways. “Four in a day doesn’t happen too often,” she said Wednesday from Gulfstream Park, where she is overseeing her south Florida string this week. “We felt they were all in good spots and drew good post positions, but you still need to get a good trip to win. “I’m very happy for everyone in our crew and the owners – it was very hard for them to watch races their horses were supposed to run in.”
Her record-tying afternoon began when the 5-year-old mare Fullmoonmagic won the first race for owner Joseph Capriglione, with Sonny Leon in the saddle. O’Connell and Leon teamed to win the sixth race with Stonehedge-bred and owned 3-year-old filly Justamomentplease, who was claimed from the race for $16,000 by trainer Ralph N. Baez.
O’Connell added the eighth race with DiBello Racing homebred 6-year-old mare Princess Britni, ridden by Jose Ferrer, and the ninth on the turf with Katies a Lady, a 7-year-old mare owned by Double D Stable and ridden by Ademar Santos.
O’Connell’s barn was one of two sidelined last month by a quarantine imposed after a horse was confirmed to have the neurological form of EHV-1 (Equine Herpesvirus Type 1), which is highly contagious. No other horse on the grounds tested positive or displayed any signs of having the virus.
Tampa Bay Downs established numerous safety measures to keep the virus from spreading, including requiring workers at both barns to wear protective footwear and clothing and adopting a temporary training schedule for the affected barns – after the rest of the track’s horse population had already been out and galloped or breezed.
“It was a very tough thing to go through, but everyone on our team pulled together and did a great job. It was a total group effort,” O’Connell said. “Horses are creatures of habit who want structure and routine, and we had to break that up and go to a different routine that was hard on everybody, including the horses. I am a firm believer in schooling a horse at the starting gate and we didn’t have gate-schooling for 21 days, so everything needed to be revamped and we did the best that we could.”
On Sundays during the quarantine, when there was no racing, the track maintenance department dragged the racetrack after horses from other barns had worked to provide O’Connell’s horses a smooth surface. O’Connell cited that as one example of track officials working closely with her to ensure she could keep her horses as race-ready as possible.
“I thought they did a great job of accommodating our needs wherever possible,” she said. “Everybody worked together and tried to do things in a safe manner while helping us with what we needed to get back into action.”
That is when O’Connell and her charges are at their best. Since joining the training ranks in 1981, she has sent out 2,606 career winners, briefly holding the No. 1 spot all-time among North American female trainers in 2023 before being passed by Linda Rice. O’Connell’s national profile skyrocketed in 2015 as the trainer of exciting 3-year-old filly Lady Shipman, who finished second by a neck to Mongolian Saturday in the TwinSpires Breeders’ Cup Turf Sprint at Keeneland after winning six stakes and setting two course records.
O’Connell has also trained the likes of 2011 Gr. II Tampa Bay Derby winner Watch Me Go, her lone Kentucky Derby starter; Blazing Sword, a winner of three graded stakes from 1997-2000; 2019 Gr. III Sam F. Davis Stakes winner Well Defined; Stormy Embrace, winner of back-to-back runnings of the Gr. II Princess Rooney Stakes in 2018-19; and Ivanavinalot, who won the Gr. II Bonnie Miss Stakes in 2003 and is the dam of Hall of Fame member Songbird.
HALLANDALE BEACH - Three-time leading rider and former track record-holder Luis Saez made a triumphant return to Gulfstream Park Thursday, riding a winner to open the card in his first mount of the 2025-2026 Championship Meet. The 33-year-old Saez guided 3-year-old colt Fuoco Vivo ($13.60) to a front-running 3 ¾-length triumph in a five-furlong maiden sprint that was rained off the grass to the all-weather Tapeta course. The winning time was :57.62 seconds. “I’m so grateful to be back here at Gulfstream,” Saez said. “This horse broke pretty well from the outside and he took me to the lead. He’s very fast and he took me all the way to victory.” Saez added a second winner with Sound of the Beast ($) in Race 6. Both horses are trained by Rohan Crichton. Saez won back-to-back Championship Meet riding titles in 2016-2017 and 2017-2018, the latter with 137 victories, a single-season record that was broken by Irad Ortiz Jr.’s 140 three years later. Saez also finished first with 122 wins in 2021-2022.
Last winter, Saez ranked second with $4.38 million in purse earnings and third with 70 wins from 422 mounts, including a victory aboard Tappan Street in the $1 million Curlin Florida Derby. He is based this winter at Oaklawn Park, which does not resume racing until Dec. 30.
At Oaklawn, Saez sits second in purse earnings ($1.12 million) and third in wins (14) from 73 mounts, four wins behind leader Christian Torres.
“It always feels great to be back,” Saez said. “I miss this place. I had to move my tack to Oaklawn, but I’ll be around.”
Approaching 3,900 career victories, Saez said he plans to ride at Gulfstream through the end of the month. Among other mounts on Pegasus World Cup day, he will back aboard Tappan Street for the $3 million Pegasus World Cup Invitational on Jan. 24.
“I was off for two weeks and took the time to see my mom and dad in Panama,” he said. “I start here today for the Pegasus and all those big races, just getting ready.”
OLDSMAR - After jockey Vernon Bush fractured his back in three places and broke a rib last August when his mount flipped over in the post parade at Belterra Park, some relatives and close friends began planning a retirement party.
But the 64-year-old Bush, who began riding in 1978 at River Downs in Ohio, asked them to hold off until he got to Tampa Bay Downs and won one more race. “I wanted to go out on top and be able to hold my head high and say I did it my way. There is no better way to go out than on a winner,” Bush said Thursday, still savoring his victory on 18-1 shot Protest in Wednesday’s seventh race, a 7-furlong maiden claiming event.
Bush had ridden the (now)-6-year-old gelding to a decent fourth-place finish on Dec. 31 for owner Carla March and her husband, trainer William March. “He made a good run and got a little tired, but I knew he had to improve off that race,” Bush said. “When I got to the winner’s circle, Bill March told me ‘I knew you were going to do this.’ ”
For Bush and the Marches, Protest’s victory brought things full circle. Bush had won numerous races for the couple on their horse Well Connected, including a starter/optional claiming race for them two years ago at Tampa Bay Downs.
Bush, the brother of Midwest trainer George Bush, retires with 3,288 career victories and total purse earnings of $25,212,469. Best known for his success in New England, he won six riding titles at Suffolk Downs in Boston and four at Rockingham Park in New Hampshire. He rode six winners on a card at both Suffolk and Northampton Fair in Massachusetts.
Among almost a half-century of racing-related memories, Bush also notes a piece of trivia: He was moved up from third to first in two separate races when the top two finishers were both disqualified.
“I’ve ridden so many nice horses through my career. I won stakes at Rockingham, Suffolk, all the Ohio tracks and New Jersey. I’ve won races at almost every track on the East Coast and the Atlantic Seaboard from Saratoga to Gulfstream and Hialeah. I’ve been very lucky and had a very good career,” said Bush, whose late father Vernon Bush was also a jockey.
Bush did not ride from the summer of 2018 until March of 2022 due to a broken femur, a broken ankle and two hip surgeries, including a hip replacement. He worked at Belterra Park as a jockeys’ room supervisor and entry-taker in 2019 and 2020 before his love for racing inspired him to return to the saddle.
Bush rode 47 winners after his comeback. He was honored three years ago with the Randy Romero Pure Courage Award, given to a jockey who has overcome serious injuries and/or adversity. Romero, a member of the sport’s Hall of Fame who died in 2019, incurred an abundance of racing-related injuries, requiring more than 20 surgeries.
“I’m honored just to have my name next to his on something, and I hope it gives other people inspiration that they can overcome things in their life and go forward. Anything can be achieved when you put your mind to it,” Bush said.
Bush created another lifetime memory last August, shortly before he was injured. He had found a saddle used at least 40 years earlier by jockey Al Herrera, the father of Bush’s close friend Marilee. Bush cleaned and polished the saddle and used it to ride 5-year-old mare Whiskey Diamond – owned and trained by George Bush, his brother – to an 18-length victory in a claiming race at Belterra Park.
Bush plans to continue to exercise horses in the mornings (he was on four Wednesday). He hopes to continue working in the industry, possibly as a racing-office employee, and may try to become accredited as a steward.
Wherever he winds up, Bush will be forgiven for occasionally reflecting on the thrills, the big wins, the occasional setbacks and the friendships he has made throughout his career.
“It’s that time for me. I have to step away. I know I can still ride a race and not interfere with a horse, but I’d rather go out on top than ride a lot of races not knowing if I would win again. I can say that I enjoyed every moment of my career and I’m happy the way it ended,” he said.
Norman Stables and Saints or Sinners’ So Happy (Runhappy-So Cunning, by Blame) made a successful leap into graded company when he prevailed in the Gr. II, $200,000 San Vicente Stakes at Santa Anita Park, leading the slate of stakes-winning OBS graduates for the week. Bred by Leverett Miller and trained by Mark Glatt, So Happy’s victory kicked off a banner weekend that saw OBS graduates sweep all three graded stakes scheduled. The son of Runhappy surged to the lead inside the final furlong and held off a late charge from 1-2 favorite and fellow OBS grad Buetane to score by two lengths. “I was really happy with the way he handled the seven-eighths because usually that’s a pretty good indication they will go two turns,” winning jockey Mike Smith said. “He was well within himself running underneath the wire. I was really happy with the way he did things.” So Happy was purchased by Glatt, agent for $150,000 at the 2025 OBS March Sale out of the First Call consignment after breezing in :10 flat. So Happy’s triumph set the stage for an outstanding couple of days for Glatt and Saints or Sinners. The following day’s Santa Anita card saw the connections enjoy more success with another OBS grad when Margarita Girl (Twirling Candy-My Day, by Uncle Mo) was victorious in the Gr. III, $100,000 Las Flores Stakes to notch her first career graded win.
A 4-year-old daughter of Twirling Candy, Margarita Girl joined Glatt’s barn as a juvenile with high expectations after being purchased by Saints or Sinners for $575,000 at the 2024 OBS March Sale from the Wavertree Stables consignment after breezing in :9 4/5. The Jan. 11 card at Santa Anita also saw Queen Maxima (Bucchero – Corfu Lady, by Corfu) earn her fifth stakes and third at the graded level when prevailing in the Gr. III, $100,000 Las Cienegas Stakes for older fillies and mares on the hillside turf course.
A 5-year-old daughter of fellow OBS grad Bucchero, Queen Maxima is owned by Dutch Girl Holdings and Irving Ventures and trained by Jeff Mullins. Consigned by Blue River Bloodstock, she was purchased by Michael Pender, agent, for $40,000 from the 2023 OBS June sale after breezing in :20 3/5. At Fair Grounds, Blue Fire (Aurelius Maximus – Mystic Blue, by Maimonides) proved too much in the $100,000 Bob F. Wright Memorial Stakes, winning by 2 1/4 lengths. Owned by Stonestreet Stables and Peter Leidel and trained by Steve Asmussen, Blue Fire was purchased for $32,000 by Fast Horses out of the 2023 OBS Winter Mixed Sale from the Kaizen Sales consignment.
OLDSMAR - One of the track’s most popular promotions, the “Live It Up Challenge” handicapping contest, begins Saturday, running through the March 7 Festival Day 46 card highlighted by the Gr. III ESMARK Tampa Bay Derby and the Gr. II Hillsborough Stakes on the turf.
Players may register for the contest free of charge at www.liveitupchallenge.com any time before 9:30 a.m. on Saturday.
All wagers are mythical, with players required to make selections each racing day in any two of the three randomly selected “Challenge Races.” A player’s bankroll is based on the payoffs for their selections based on a $2 win, place and show wager.
Participants start the contest with one free lifeline. If a player’s selections in both of a day’s “Challenge Races” do not hit the board, they lose a lifeline. Players may purchase up to eight additional lifelines for $5 each upon signup; up to eight more for $10 each on Jan. 31; and up to four more for $25 each on Feb. 14.
Once a player loses all their lifelines, they are eliminated. Players can only lose a maximum of one lifeline per day.
The player with the largest bankroll will be declared the Grand Prize winner and will receive two seats in the High Rollers Contest in February of 2027 at Tampa Bay Downs, a $2,000 value. The second, third and fourth-place finishers will receive one High Rollers Contest seat apiece in February of 2027 at the Oldsmar oval, a $1,000 value.
A bonus prize of $500 will go to the player who selects the most winners during the contest. The recipient of the “Most Winners” bonus may have been eliminated and does not have to remain active by the close of the contest period.
If all players are eliminated before the conclusion of the contest, the four players with the highest bankrolls will win the prizes.
To register and for a complete set of contest rules, visit www.liveitupchallenge.com on the Internet.
MORRISTON - Pleasant Acres Stallions has announced the arrival of MR FISK’s first foal, a healthy filly out of NY-bred Brass Cat, a daughter of Gr. I-winning millionaire BLUEGRASS CAT. “Our beautiful Brass Cat has blessed us with another big, athletic baby,” said breeder Martine Britell. “Paired with MR FISK’s amazing bloodlines and triple-digit speed, we are excited for this filly’s future!” “A stallion’s first foal is always a milestone, and this filly is exactly the kind of start you hope for,” said Christine Jones, Director of Stallion Services at Pleasant Acres Stallions. “MR FISK has the race record, the physical and the pedigree depth we believe Florida breeders deserve. He was a multiple graded stakes winner with triple-digit Beyer ability, and he brings the rare opportunity to access ARROGATE’s line along with a deep successful European female family. This first foal is a great start, and we can’t wait to see what his first crop delivers for Florida breeders.” MR FISK (Arrogate / Plein Air (IRE), by Manduro (GER)) delivers proven graded stakes class and consistency to the Pleasant Acres Stallions roster. Trained by Bob Baffert, he broke his maiden at Santa Anita, then returned to place second in the Affirmed Stakes at 1-1/16 miles on dirt. He went on to win the Shared Belief Stakes and the Gr. III Native Diver Stakes at Del Mar, and at four captured the Gr. III Californian Stakes and G. II Hollywood Gold Cup Stakes at Santa Anita, earning a triple-digit Beyer. MR FISK hit the board in seven of 11 starts, finishing in the money 64% of the time while facing deep, high-quality fields. On pedigree, MR FISK offers a rare continuation of ARROGATE’s line, as the four-time Gr. I winner stood for only three breeding seasons. The ARROGATE résumé includes victories in the Travers Stakes, Breeders’ Cup Classic, Pegasus World Cup, and Dubai World Cup, with earnings of $17.4 million.
MR FISK’s dam, PLEIN AIR (IRE), is a two-time black-type winner on two continents and is by world champion MANDURO (GER), a multiple Gr. I winner who was ranked the IFHA’s top horse in the world for 2007 and later secured by Sheikh Mohammad for a reported $25 million in breeding rights. MANDURO is by MONSUN – four-time champion German sire who is considered the most successful stallion in the history of Germany. The female family is stacked with black type through multiple generations, reflecting the kind of speed, soundness, stamina, and durability that has repeatedly produced stakes performers in Europe and around the world.
OLDSMAR - Drexel Hill, who finished a determined second to Good Cheer in last year’s Longines Kentucky Oaks, heads a six-horse field for Saturday’s $125,000 Wayward Lass Stakes for fillies and mares 4-years-old-and-upward at Tampa Bay Downs.
The 42nd edition of the Wayward Lass, to be contested at a distance of a mile-and-a-sixteenth, is one of two stakes on Saturday’s 10-race Skyway Festival Day card, with the other the 42nd running of the $125,000, 7-furlong Gasparilla Stakes for 3-year-old fillies. Both races will be run on the main track.
Post time for the first race Saturday is 12:30 p.m.
The $125,000 Pasco Stakes for 3-year-old males drew an insufficient number of entries to be run Saturday as originally scheduled and has been “brought back” as an extra race on the overnight sheet by the track’s racing office in an effort to attract enough horses to run it on Sunday or another future date.
Drexel Hill, who has earned more than $500,000 in her nine-race career, is owned by Legion Racing and trained by D. Whitworth Beckman. She will be ridden by Ben Curtis. Drexel Hill followed her Kentucky Oaks performance by finishing second in the Gr. II Mother Goose Stakes at Aqueduct.
Trainer Saffie A. Joseph has entered three fillies in the Wayward Lass, the most accomplished being 4-year-old Andrea, a multiple stakes-winner who finished third last summer in the Gr. II Charles Town Oaks.
Another Joseph entry, 4-year-old Early On, finished second by a nose in the Gr. III Gazelle Stakes at Aqueduct, earning her a trip to Churchill Downs for the Kentucky Oaks, in which she finished eighth.
Bettors will also take a close look at trainer Michelle Hemingway’s 5-year-old mare Runaway Diva, who was the runner-up on Sept. 28 in the Gr. III Delaware Handicap. The Wayward Lass is the seventh race on Saturday’s card.
Meanwhile, six promising 3-year-old fillies are well-prepared to begin building on their 2025 foundations Saturday in the 42nd edition of the $125,000, 7-furlong Gasparilla Stakes. The Gasparilla is the sixth race.
Topping the Gasparilla field are a pair of Florida-bred stakes-winners in Tessellate and Gerrards Cross. Tessellate, who is trained by for a partnership, won the Juvenile Fillies Sprint Stakes by 13 lengths on Nov. 15 at Gulfstream Park. Tessellate will be ridden by Edgard Zayas. Gerrards Cross, bred and owned by James Chicklo and trained by Kathleen O’Connell, won the Colleen Stakes on the turf on July 27 at Monmouth Park. Sonny Leon has been named to ride.
Five horses who are graduates of Ocala Breeders’ Sales Company auctions were announced as finalists for the 2025 Resolute Racing Eclipse Awards, which honors excellence in Thoroughbred racing.
Morplay Racing’s Shisospicy (Mitole – Mischief Galore, by Into Mischief) is a finalist for three divisional honors: champion 3-Year-Old Filly, Female Sprinter, and Female Turf. The daughter of Mitole won three graded stakes in 2025 with the highlight coming when she became the first 3-year-old filly to win the $1 million Breeders’ Cup Turf Sprint at Del Mar. Trained by Jose D’Angelo, Shisospicy was offered at the 2024 OBS April Sale by Hartley/DeRenzo Thoroughbreds where she was an RNA after breezing in :9 3/5.
Fellow OBS April grad Nysos (Nyquist – Zetta Z, by Bernardini) is also up for multiple honors as a finalist for Older Dirt Male and Male Sprinter. Trained by Bob Baffert for owner Baoma Corp and lessees Susan Magnier, Derrick Smith and Michael B. Tabor, Nysos earned four graded stakes victories in 2025 including the Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile at Del Mar. He was purchased for $550,000 out of the Best A Luck Farm consignment by Donato Lanni, agent for owner Baoma Corp, at the 2023 OBS April Sale after breezing in :9 4/5. Swinbank Stables, Medallion Racing, Joey Platts, and Mark Stanton’s Cy Fair (Not This Time-Remarqued, by Arch), a graduate of the 2025 OBS April Sale, is a finalist for champion 2-Year-Old Filly on the strength of her victory in the $1 million Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint at Del Mar. Cy Fair became the second filly to win the race, joining Twilight Gleaming (IRE) in 2021. The daughter of Not This Time was purchased by Swinbank for $185,000 at this year’s OBS April Sale out of the Niall Brennan Stables consignment after breezing in :9 4/5. Leon King Stable Corp. and Julia and Michael Iavarone’s Bentornato (Valiant Minister-Her Special Way, by Put It Back), is a finalist for champion Male Sprinter after scoring a 2 ¼-length victory in the $2 million Breeders’ Cup Sprint at Del Mar. He is a two-time OBS graduate, having been sold by Stuart Morris at the 2022 October Yearling Sale and then purchased by Champion Equine for $170,000 out of the Golden Rock Thoroughbreds consignment at the 2023 March Sale after breezing in :20 4/5. Zedan Racing Stables’ Brant (Gun Runner-Tynan, by Liam’s Map), who set an all-time OBS record when he sold for $3 million at the 2025 March Sale of Two-Year-Olds in Training, is a finalist for champion 2-Year-Old Male following a three-race campaign that saw him earn a victory in the Grade 1, $300,000 Del Mar Futurity before finishing third in the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile. Brant was consigned to the OBS March Sale by Eddie Woods and lit up the board in record-setting fashion after breezing in :9 3/5, the fastest time of any horse in the March catalogue. The Eclipse Awards are voted upon by the NTRA, represented by member racetrack racing officials and Equibase field personnel, NTWAB, and Daily Racing Form, and are produced by the NTRA.
Winners in each category are determined by who receives the most first-place votes and will be announced at the 55th Annual Eclipse Awards ceremony to be held on Thursday, Jan. 22, at The Breakers Palm Beach in Florida beginning at 7:30 p.m.
OLDSMAR - Sunday racing is set for its 2025-26 season debut today with a nine-race card beginning at 12:32 p.m. Course conditions permitting, there are three turf races on tap – the fifth, seventh and ninth – all at a distance of 1 mile.
Sunday racing was first conducted at Tampa Bay Downs on Dec. 7, 1986. It arrived a little more than a year after the Florida State Supreme Court had overturned a lower court ruling that would have allowed Sunday racing, upsetting fans eager for more entertainment options on the weekend.
The Supreme Court justices had ruled that a Sunday ban on gambling on horse racing was constitutional because it limited the opportunity for “mischief” and encouraged people to spend their leisure time in “more healthy recreational pursuits” and had a legitimate purpose: protecting the public “health, safety, morals or general welfare.”
Many in the crowd of 5,893 those 39 seasons ago viewed things differently, and Sunday racing has remained an Oldsmar oval staple, introducing a new fan demographic appreciative of the grandeur and thrills of Thoroughbred racing.
Tampa Bay Downs will race each Wednesday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday through the duration of the meet except for Easter Sunday, April 5, when the track will be closed. Beginning Sunday, Jan. 25, the track will hold a series of “Mouse’s Kids & Family Days” on various Sundays in the Backyard Picnic Area, with pony rides, bounce houses, games and special activities, a food truck and visits from the track mascot, Mouse the Miniature Horse. Sounds like a lot of fun – the good, old-fashioned family kind that draws entertainment lovers from all walks of life.
Juan Carlos Avila saddled three winners Saturday, extending his lead in the trainer race to 16-11 from Juan Arriagada. Avila won the third race with Midnight Onyx, a 6-year-old Florida-bred gelding owned by Establo Heluce and ridden by Samy Camacho. Avila added the fourth race with Homer Jones, a 5-year-old Florida-bred gelding owned by Nigale Racing Group and ridden by Cipriano Gil.
With rain falling, Avila’s 4-year-old Florida-bred colt Gianluca Be Lucky played “catch-me-if-you-can,” going gate-to-wire in the ninth race under jockey Daniel Centeno. The speedster is owned by Julian De Mora, Jr.
Camacho scored again in the fifth race on the turf aboard heavy favorite French Mistress, a 4-year-old filly owned by Martine Head and trained by Miguel Clement. That conditioner has been red-hot at the Oldsmar oval, with five victories and a second from his last seven Tampa Bay Downs starters – closer to perfect than it might appear, considering his entrants Willpowered and Duty finished 1-2 in Friday’s seventh race.
Crump remembered for chasing her dream.
The Tampa Bay Downs community and racing fans across the country were saddened to learn of the passing Thursday of jockey Diane Crump, who made history in 1969 at Hialeah Park by becoming the first woman to ride in a parimutuel race and again the following year as the first woman to ride in the Kentucky Derby. She was 77.
While most of the reports of her career focused on those two groundbreaking feats, Crump was a highly visible presence at the outset of her career at the track then known as Florida Downs. Her father, Walter Crump, owned a marina in Oldsmar, and horse-crazy Diane got a job at Lake Magdalene Farm in Tampa while attending Chamberlain High School.
Crump set her sights on a career as a jockey despite facing widespread resistance in an era when many male jockeys believed women had no place on the racetrack, an opinion shared by a large segment of the betting population. Among a group that included fellow pioneers such as Kathy Kusner, Penny Ann Early, Barbara Jo Rubin, Patti Barton, Mary Bacon and Robyn Smith, Crump became the first to compete in a race, finishing 10th on Bridle ’n Bit at Hialeah Park on Feb. 7, 1969.
On March 1, 1969 at Florida Downs, Crump was first across the finish line on Bridle ’n Bit, entering the winner’s circle for what appeared to be her first career triumph (Barbara Jo Rubin had won a race at Charles Town the previous week to become the first female jockey to score a victory). But Crump’s win was reversed by the Florida State Racing Commission because of a rule that prohibited a horse claimed at Hialeah from running elsewhere before the conclusion of the south Florida track’s meeting.
The 20-year-old Crump would have to wait almost three more weeks before earning her first official victory on Tou Ritzi – but at Gulfstream Park, not Florida Downs. A year later, Crump rode a horse named Fathom in the Kentucky Derby, finishing 15th in the race won by Tampa Bay Downs jockey Mike Manganello on Dust Commander.
Crump rode 228 winners from 1976 onward, according to Equibase statistics, and also saddled 14 winners as a trainer. She rode her final race at Tampa Bay Downs in 1998, a few weeks before turning 50, finishing second on the aptly-named Glory Days, a 3-year-old filly she also trained. Crump – who attended the inaugural “Jockeys and Jeans” fundraiser on March 29, 2014 at Tampa Bay Downs to raise money for the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund – always handled the intense glare from the media and public with grace and composure.
“I never felt like a pioneer or trailblazer,” she told writer Liane Crossley in 2019. “I just wanted to live my dream and I most certainly did.”And, in the process, helped make it possible for countless other young women athletes to pursue theirs.
HALLANDALE BEACH - C2 Racing Stable, La Milagrosa Stable and Gary Barber’s White Abarrio, who captured the 2025 Pegasus World Cup Invitational, is prominent among the list of invitees for the 10th running of the $3 million stakes scheduled for Jan. 24 at Gulfstream Park.
The Pegasus World Cup Invitational, a 1 1/8-mile stakes for 4-year-olds and up, will headline a program with 10 stakes, seven graded, including the $1 million, Gr. I Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational and the $500,000, Gr. II Pegasus World Cup Filly & Mare Turf Invitational.
Saffie Joseph Jr.-trained White Abarrio, the winner of the $1 million Curlin Florida Derby at Gulfstream in 2022 and the 2023 Breeders’ Cup Classic at Santa Anita, rolled to a 6 ¼-length victory in the 2025 Pegasus World Cup. The son of Race Day, who has earned $7.1 million, has not raced since finishing fourth in the Jockey Club Gold Cup at Saratoga on Aug. 31. Joseph-trained Skippylongstocking, who captured the Gr. III Harlan’s Holiday on Dec. 20, is also on the Pegasus World Cup invitation list. Daniel Alonso’s son of Exaggerator has earned $3.775 million in purses. Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert is represented on the invitation list by Goal Oriented, who won Sunday’s Gr. I Malibu at Santa Anita. The son of Not This Time is owned by SF Racing, Starlight Racing, Madaket Stables, Stonestreet Stables and partners. Baffert has saddled an unprecedented three winners of the Pegasus World Cup. The Hall of Fame trainer visited the Gulfstream Park winner’s circle with Juddmonte’s Arrogate, who won the inaugural 2017 running by 4 ¾ lengths; HRH Prince Faisal bin Khaled’s Mucho Gusto, who scored by 4 ½ lengths in 2020; and SF Racing and partners’ National Treasure, who held on win by a neck in 2024. Trainer Brad Cox, who saddled Knicks Go for a 2 ¼-length front-running victory in the 2021 Pegasus World Cup, is represented by Tappan Street, Disco Time and Bishops Bay on the invitation list for the 2026 renewal. WinStar Farm, CHC Inc., Cold Press Racing and Qatar Racing’s Tappan Street captured the $1 million Curlin Florida Derby last March at Gulfstream. The son of Into Mischief, who had been sidelined since his Florida Derby triumph, returned with an optional claiming allowance victory at Gulfstream Dec. 19. Disco Time, a Juddmonte homebred son of Not This Time, is undefeated in five career starts, including the Gr. III Lecomte at Fair Grounds last January. Sidelined following the Lecomte for eight months, Disco Time came back to win the St. Louis Derby at Fairmont Park and the Dwyer at Aqueduct. KAS Stables’ Bishops Bay, a son of Uncle Mo who has won nine of 13 career starts, is coming off victories in the Gr. III Forty Niner (G3) and the Gr. II Cigar Mile at Aqueduct. Hall of Fame Trainer Todd Pletcher, who saddled Life Is Good for a 3 ¼-length triumph over a defending Knicks Go in the 2022 Pegasus World Cup, is represented on the 2026 Pegasus World Cup invitation list by St. Elias Stable’s Captain Cook. The son of Practical Joke is coming off back-to-back runner-up finishes in the Gr. I H. Allen Jerkens Memorial at Saratoga and the Gr. III Perryville at Keeneland. Sharif Mohammad Alhariri and Lucky Seven Stable’s Rattle N Roll, a Gr. I stakes-winner with $3.6 million in earnings, is invited to seek his eighth graded stakes victory in the Pegasus World Cup. The battle-tested son of Connect is trained by Kenny McPeek. Terry L. Stephen’s Chunk of Gold, a 2025 Kentucky Derby starter coming off a close-up third in the Gr. II Clark at Churchill Downs, represents trainer Ethan West on the 2026 Pegasus World Cup invitational list. The son of Preservationist earned his way into the Kentucky Derby with runner-up finishes in the Gr. II Risen Star and Gr. II Louisiana Derby at Fair Grounds. Chunk of Gold captured the Gr. III West Virginia Derby at Mountaineer Park in August. Godolphin’s Poster, who came up a head short after a stretch-long battle with Skippylongstocking in the Harlan’s Holiday, represents Eoin Harty on the Pegasus World Cup invitation list. The son of Munnings captured the Gr. II Remsen at the 1 1/8-mile distance to complete a 2-year-old campaign. He was knocked off the 2004 Kentucky Derby trail by injury but came back strong from an eight-month layoff to win a Churchill Downs allowance prior to turning in a sharp performance in the Harlan’s Holiday. Hronis Racing’s Full Serrano, the 2024 Breeders’ Cup Mile winner at Del Mar, is also prominent on the list of invitees for the Pegasus World Cup. The John Sadler-trained gelding is coming off a fifth-place finish in the 2025 Breeders’ Cup Mile following a very rough trip. Set-Hut’s Touchuponastar, a graded stakes-winner with $1.6 million in earnings, is invited to seek his 20th career victory in the Pegasus World Cup. Set-Hut LLC is co-owned and managed by former NFL quarterback Jake Delhomme, whose brother, Jeff, trains the Louisiana-bred gelding.
HALLANDALE BEACH - Graded stakes-winners from the barns of trainers by Mark Casse, Graham Motion, Roger Attfield, Miguel Clement, Chad Brown, and Kevin Attard are part of a group of 19 fillies and mares invited to participate in the fifth running of the $500,000 Pegasus World Cup Filly & Mare Turf Invitational (G2) Jan. 24 at Gulfstream Park.
The $500,000 event, at 1 1/16-mile on the turf, is part of the 10th anniversary of Pegasus World Cup Day that will offer 10 stakes worth $5.55 million in purses. The 1 1/8-mile Pegasus World Cup Invitational (G1), the richest dirt race in the U.S. for older horses outside of the Breeders’ Cup Classic (G1), and the Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational (G1), a 1 1/8-mile stakes for 4-year-olds on the turf, are among seven graded stakes on the program. The four previous winners of the Pegasus World Cup Filly & Mare Turf continued to excel, with three of the four winning Grade 1 races. Inaugural winner Regal Glory won the Jenny Wiley (G1) and Matriarch (G1), 2023 winner Queen Goddess was Grade 1 stakes placed, 2024 winner Didia won the New York Stakes (G1), while last year’s winner Be Your Best won the Gamely (G1). And One More Time is one of three Casse-trained invitees. The daughter of Omaha Beach won last year’s Natalma (G1) at Woodbine before returning from a year off and winning an allowance optional claimer at Woodbine in September and finishing second at Gulfstream Dec. 13 in the Tropical Park Oaks. Also invited from the Casse barn is Candy Quest and Classic Q. Classic Q was third in the Mrs. Revere (G2) at Churchill Downs in November and second in the Lake George (G3) at Saratoga and Valley View (G2) at Keeneland earlier in the year. Candy Quest won the Colleen (G3) at Woodbine in July and was second in the Dueling Grounds Oaks (G2) at Kentucky Downs in September and fifth in the Queen Elizabeth II (G1) in October at Keeneland. Breath Away earned her way into the Pegasus Filly & Mare by winning the ‘Win & In’ Dance Smartly (G2) at Woodbine Oct. 4. The mare has since finished second in the Goldikova (G3) and fourth in the Matriarch (G1), both contested at Del Mar. Clement trains for Qatar Racing. Ready for Shirl, third in the Dance Smartly, has also earned an invitation. The Attfield-trained mare won the Canadian (G2) in July before finishing third in the E.P. Taylor (G1), both at Woodbine. Caitlinhergrtness, trained by Attard, had a successful campaign in 2025 winning the Ontario Matron (G2) and My Charmer at Turfway Park. The daughter of Omaha Beach was fifth in the E.P. Taylor (G1) and second in the Dance Smartly (G2) and Bessarabian (G3). Destino d’Oro, who defeated And One More Time in the Tropical Park Oaks, has been invited. Trained by Brad Cox, Destino d’Oro won the Pucker Up (G3) at Ellis Park over the summer. Crevalle d’Oro enters the race off a victory in the Suwannee River here Dec. 20. The Jose D’Angelo trained daughter of Constitution was fourth in the Goldikova in November. Gulfstream’s leading trainer Saffie Joseph Jr. could saddle two in Movin’ On Up and In Our Time. Movin’ On Up finished second Dec. 20 in the Suwannee River while finishing third earlier in the year in the Churchill Distaff Turf Mile (G2) and Mint Julep (G3), both at Churchill Downs. In Our Time, a daughter of Not This Time who comes off a pair of second place finishes in the Franklin (G2) at Keeneland and Matriarch. She finished third in last year’s Pegasus Filly & Mare Turf. Trainer Chad Brown, who won the inaugural Pegasus Filly & Mare Turf with Regal Glory, has two invitees in Whiskey Decision and Oversubscribed. Whiskey Decision won the Eatontown Stakes (G3) at Monmouth in June and most recently the Athenia at Aqueduct. Oversubscribed was second in November in the Pebbles (G3) at Aqueduct and second over the summer in the Lake George at Saratoga. Heredia, a daughter of Dark Angel trained by Graham Motion, won the Yellow Ribbon (G2) at Del Mar over the summer before finishing sixth in the First Lady (G1) at Keeneland and fifth in the Matriarch at Del Mar. Motion’s Warming, winner of the Autumn Miss (G3), also earned an invitation. Medoro, trained by Peter Eurton, would arrive from California where she finished second in the John Mabee (G2), third in the Goldikova and sixth in the Matriarch. Awesome Czech comes from the barn of trainer Horacio De Paz. Awesome Czech won the Yaddo at Saratoga and Ticonderoga at Aqueduct. Other fillies and mares invited include Ramsey Pond, third in the Tropical Park Oaks, Cardinal winner Proctor Street, and Noble Damsel winner Aussie Girl.
Michael Pegram, Karl Watson and Paul Weitman’s Usha (Tiz the Law- Animal Appeal, by Leroidesanimaux) uncorked a powerful performance under jockey Juan Hernandez to prevail in her Gr. 1 debut in the $300,000 La Brea Stakes on opening day at Santa Anita Park, leading the slate of stakes-winning OBS graduates for the week. Usha raced in mid-pack down the backstretch, split horses near the quarter pole and then drew off in the stretch to romp by 5 ¼ lengths for trainer Bob Baffert, becoming the first Gr. 1 winner for her sire, Tiz the Law. “Usha showed up today,” Baffert said. “She came back here and that worked well. We expected this when I shipped her to Kentucky, and didn't win a race, but today she showed up.”
Usha was purchased by her owners for $600,000 at the 2024 OBS April Sale from the On Point Training & Sales consignment after breezing in :9 4/5. The opening day card at Santa Anita also saw Nysos (Nyquist – Zetta Z, by Bernardini) edge stablemate and fellow Gr. 1 winner Nevada Beach by a head in the Gr. II, $200,000 Laffit Pincay Jr. Stakes going 1 1/16 miles on dirt. Both are trained by Baffert. The victory added to a banner year for Nysos, who prevailed in last month’s Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile at Del Mar and now has won seven of eight career starts with $1,238,500 in earnings. He was purchased for $550,000 out of the Best A Luck Farm consignment by Donato Lanni, agent for owner Baoma Corp, at the 2023 OBS April Sale after breezing in :9 4/5. Also listed on the owner’s line for Nysos as lessee’s are Susan Magnier, Derrick Smith, and Michael B. Tabor.
Also on the Santa Anita card, Kretz Racing’s veteran gelding Cabo Spirit (Pioneerof the Nile-Fancy Day (IRE), by Shamardal) earned the sixth stakes win of his career when rolling to a front-running victory in the Gr. III, $100,000 San Gabriel Stakes.
Trained by George Papaprodromou, Cabo Spirit has earned five wins at the graded level and improved his career bankroll to $1,356,836. Cabo Spirit was consigned to the 2021 OBS April Sale by Eddie Woods, Agent, and purchased for $575,000 by Gayle Van Leer, Agent, after breezing in :20 4/5. At Aqueduct, Tristar Farm’s Doc Sullivan (Solomini-Queen Frostine, by Giant’s Causeway) earned a determined win over fellow OBS grad Quick to Accuse in the $125,000 Alex M. Robb Stakes for New York-breds.
Trained by John Ortiz, the 4-year-old son of Solomini won the rubber match with multiple stakes-winner and fellow OBS grad Bank Frenzy, who finished third. Doc Sullivan has now won 3-of-5 matchups between him and Bank Frenzy, including last out in the seven-furlong NYSSS Thunder Rumble.
Doc Sullivan was a $59,000 purchase by Glen Lostritto from the consignment of Omar Ramirez Bloodstock at the 2023 OBS June Sale after breezing in :21 1/5.
At Oaklawn Park, West Point Thoroughbreds’ Counting Stars (Honor A.P.- Paynterbynumbers, by Paynter) wheeled back on short rest to score an eye-catching victory in the $150,000 Year’s End Stakes.
Trained by dual Hall of Fame trainer Mark Casse, Counting Stars was running back in 13 days after earning a four-length win in the $135,000 Astral Spa Stakes at six furlongs. She was purchased by her owners at the 2025 OBS April Sale for $150,000 from the Wildheart Thoroughbreds consignment after breezing in :10 flat.
OLDSMAR - The majority of bettors who came to Tampa Bay Downs yesterday to focus on the mandatory Ultimate 6 jackpot payout saw their hopes evaporate in the fourth race (the first race of the wager) when Noble Annie, the second-longest shot in the 10-horse field at 34-1, defeated 11-5 favorite Mistrial Wind by a nose in the 1-mile turf event.
Those dreams out of the way, it is hoped investors got over their disappointment quickly enough to enjoy the latest in a series of picture-postcard afternoons that have postponed any signs of winter’s chill until at least next week.
Others who used Noble Annie might not have paid as much attention to the weather. Things settled down for Ultimate 6 bettors sticking more closely to the form, with two of the remaining five races won by a betting favorite – Elusive d’Oro, who won the fifth race at odds of 9-5, and Real Savvy, who won the ninth at even-money – and two others by the second choice.
Ultimately, 14 “survivors” selected the 2-1-1-5-4-4 combination on their tickets, earning $14,026 apiece.
A pair of longshot winners made the early Pick-5 wager highly profitable for four bettors, including one on-track, who correctly nailed the 6/2/2/2/1, 7 combination to collect $27,564 each. The key longshots on the ticket were 5-year-old gelding St. Louie Louie, who paid $52 to win in the second race, and the aforementioned 2-year-old filly Noble Annie, who returned $71.20 for her victory in the fourth.
Noble Annie was the only horse claimed from the race, with trainer Carlos Narvaez paying $16,000 for the juvenile lass for new owner Ladycaroly Stable. In the featured seventh race, a 1-mile conditional allowance/optional claiming race on the turf, Britain’s Kitten, a 7-2 shot, overcame some bumping at the start to secure good position on the inside, then responded to jockey Israel Rodriguez’s urgings to post a head victory from betting favorite Tok Tok in a time of 1:35.24 for the distance.
It was the first start in more than two years for Britain’s Kitten, a 6-year-old gelding who is owned by Bella Mia Stables and trained by Kevin Rice. The conditioner also won today’s third race with Kuku, a 3-year-old filly competing under his Rice Racing banner and ridden by Rosario Montanez.
Leading jockey Samuel Marin won the final two races on Litigant and Real Savvy, surviving a claim of foul by Samy Camacho aboard runner-up Persisten in the finale. Around the oval. The Oldsmar oval’s highly anticipated Calendar Giveaway Day is Friday. The gates will open at 11 a.m. The 2026 calendars, which celebrate the 100th anniversary season of Tampa Bay Downs, are free of charge (with paid admission) to the first 5,000 fans through the turnstiles. Friday’s nine-race card begins at 12:35 p.m. The first race is a $56,500, 6 ½-furlong allowance/optional claiming event, with trainer Gerald Bennett’s 5-year-old Florida-bred gelding Chrome Ghost the 6-5 morning-line favorite. Samy Camacho has the riding assignment. Saturday’s program features the opening legs of the popular Tampa Turf Test starter handicap series, with both the fifth race for fillies and mares 3-years-old-and-upward and the seventh race for males 3-and-up being contested at a distance of 1 mile on the grass course. Full fields of 10 are expected for both races.
The feature Saturday is the ninth, a $55,000, mile-and-a-sixteenth maiden special weight event on the turf for 2-year-old fillies. With two entries apiece from trainers Chad Brown and H. Graham Motion, the race should be a corker. Post time for Saturday’s first race is 12:35 p.m.
As previously reported, Sunday racing at Tampa Bay Downs will begin on Jan. 4. Starting next week, there will be racing on a Wednesday-Friday-Saturday-Sunday schedule, with Thursday cards on Feb. 5 and Feb. 12 added to make up for the originally scheduled Sunday programs on Dec. 21 and Dec. 28.
HALLANDALE BEACH - Robert Cotran’s Rezasrolex collected his eighth straight victory Friday at Gulfstream Park with a front-running performance in Race 5, a five-furlong optional claiming allowance on turf. The 4-year-old son of multiple Gr. II winner Bucchero entered the race off seven consecutive victories over Gulfstream’s all-weather Tapeta surface. “Today was the turf test. He’s by Bucchero. He’s a stallion I love. I knew he’d turf. He’d run one time [on turf] at Belterra with a 40 Beyer. It’s apples and oranges,” trainer Joe Orseno said. “The horse is doing great. He’s keeping himself together. I stop when it’s time to stop on him. I’ve given him time off before. He’ s doing great.”
Rezasrolex ($4.60), a Florida-bred gelding who was claimed for $18,000 by his current connections out of his Gulfstream debut in December of 2023, went right to the front under Edgard Zayas and held off a late drive from favored Poseidon’s Law by a neck in the non-winners-of-one optional claiming allowance. “We’re going to have to figure out his next step. Now he’s a two-other-than. There’s some stakes coming up,” Orseno said. “He’s just a neat horse and we’re keeping him happy.” Since being claimed out of a winning Gulfstream debut for trainer Bill Morey in his third career race, Rezasrolex has won 10 of 13 for Cotran and Orseno.
OLDSMAR - A pair of familiar names are off to quick starts in the training ranks this season.
Tom Proctor, who trains for Ocala's Glen Hill Farm, sent out his fourth winner from seven starters in Wednesday’s sixth race on the turf as 4-5 favorite Wrigleyville posted a front-running, 3 ¼-length victory over Expecting a Winner. Wrigleyville, a 4-year-old daughter of Into Mischief out of Glen Hill’s multiple-Gr. I winner Marketing Mix, toured the 1-mile distance in 1:37.58. She was ridden by leading jockey Samuel Marin.
Proctor, the son of the late training great Willard Proctor, has saddled more than 1,400 winners. He is perhaps best known as the conditioner of Glen Hills' One Dreamer, upset winner of the 1994 Breeders’ Cup Distaff at Churchill Downs.
J. David Braddy, a two-time leading trainer at Tampa Bay Downs in 1983-84 and 1986-87 (tied with Norm Wismer), is 4-for-6 with one second after Rancho Vista’s runner-up effort to Unicycle in Wednesday’s seventh race, a 7-furlong claiming event. Rancho Vista was claimed from the outing, as was Braddy’s two-time winner Long Gone Sally on Dec. 12. Each of Braddy’s winners was owned by Joel W. Sainer. Braddy is closing in on 1,100 career victories.
Marin and Ademar Santos each rode two winners on the card. In addition to his victory on Wrigleyville, Marin captured the eighth race aboard Blaze of Color, a 4-year-old Florida-bred gelding owned by JC Racing Stable and trained by Jose M. Castro.
Santos won the fourth and fifth races back-to-back. He scored in the fourth on Pando, a 5-year-old gelding owned by Happy Tenth Stable and trained by Tony Wilson. Pando was claimed from the victory for $5,000 by owner-trainer Ron G. Potts.
Santos won the fifth with Battle Warrior, a 3-year-old gelding owned by Mellon Patch Inc., and trained by Michael Campbell.
OLDSMAR - Tampa Bay Downs has tweaked its 2025-26 racing calendar, while maintaining a 90-day schedule.
Sunday racing, originally scheduled to begin Dec. 21, will get underway Jan. 4. The “lost” dates (Dec. 21 and 28) will be made up on Thursday, Feb. 5 and Thursday, Feb. 12.
Tampa Bay Downs currently races on Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays. With the exception of Christmas, Dec. 25, when the track will be closed in its entirety, Tampa Bay Downs is open every day for simulcast wagering, no-limits action and tournament play in The Silks Poker Room and golf fun and instruction at The Downs Golf Practice Facility.
Friday, Dec. 26 is Calendar Day, with the first 5,000 patrons through the gates receiving the 2026 edition free of charge (with paid admission). The theme is the track’s centennial celebration, and a sneak peek reveals the calendar is an artistic triumph, with pictures from the track’s beginning years blending into more recent yet similar photographs. Gates will open at 11 a.m.
Racing continues Wednesday with a nine-race card beginning at 12:20 p.m.
HALLANDALE BEACH - Steve Landers Racing’s Destino d’Oro, benefitting from a brief freshening and some class relief after three straight graded stakes attempts, dueled with favored Gr. 1 winner And One More Time through the stretch before edging clear late for a hard-fought head victory in the $125,000 Tropical Park Oaks at Gulfstream Park. The 31st running of the Tropical Park Oaks for 3-year-old fillies shared top billing with the 50th renewal of the $125,000 Tropical Park Derby for 3-year-olds, each going 1 1/16 miles on the grass. Ridden by Edgard Zayas for trainer Brad Cox, Destino d’Oro ($9.60) covered a firm turf course in 1:40.02 to earn her fourth win from seven career starts and second in a stakes following the Aug. 3, Gr. III Pucker Up at Ellis Park, her most recent victory. Destino d’Oro was unhurried early settled near the back of a 12-horse field as 60-1 shot Miss Mary Nell was hustled to the lead from her outside post and was in front through a quarter-mile in :23.34 seconds and a half in :46.60, with Souper Zonda chasing two wide in second and It Ain’t Two saving ground along the rail. When And One More Time and Hall of Fame jockey Javier Castellano began to make their move from mid-pack rounding the far turn on the outside, Zayas gave Destino d’Oro her cue and tipped her to the center of the track. He was able to find room straightening for home and set his sights on And One More Time, who had forged a short lead, and the two favorites hooked up for a drive to the wire. “I thought it was an ideal trip and what it looked like she would get based off the form. It looked like there was speed in there, and there was,” Cox said. “Edgard was able to let her break well, kind fo let her find her way through the first turn and she settled well for him. It looked like going into the turn he kind of had his eyeball on the favorite and was able to get by late in the stretch.” And One More Time, who drifted out noticeably in deep stretch, was 1 ¾ lengths ahead of Ramsey Pond in third. Previously undefeated stakes-winner Souper Zonda, Souper Williwaw, Brown Sugar, Supa Speed, Miss Mary Nell, Smart Union, Nosleeptilbrooklyn, Mischief in Motion and It Ain’t Two completed the order of finish.
“She ran huge. I was trying today to be not that far behind and not give her too much to do. My plan was to follow [And One More Time] the whole way and it worked out perfect,” Zayas said. “[And One More Time] at the end kind of like came out a little bit and bumped into me, but it didn’t bother her to win the race.” Destino D’Oro graduated in her debut last August at Kentucky Downs and was third, beaten a head, in the Gr. II Jessamine at Keeneland before going to the sidelines and missing the Breeders’ Cup. The Bolt d’Oro filly returned off the layoff in mid-August with a last-to-first rally over older horses at Churchill Downs to set up her run in the Pucker Up. From there she ran sixth in the Gr. III Dueling Grounds Oaks at Kentucky Downs and eighth in the Gr. I Queen Elizabeth II Cup on Oct. 11 at Keeneland. “We think she’s got a world of talent. She showed that last year as a 2-year-old with two really good starts,” Cox said. “We were pointing to the Breeders’ Cup and we had a setback. Her two runs off the layoff were really, really impressive and then we kind of hit a brick wall.
“It was a little bit of not a clean trip at Kentucky Downs and just maybe not doing as well as we needed her to do to go into the Keeneland race. She wasn’t doing bad, just maybe not as sharp as she normally is. She ran a flat race,” he added. “We brought her down to Payson [Park] after the Keeneland meet and she’s done very well since. I think she showed that today.”
OLDSMAR - Tampa Bay Downs has imposed a quarantine on Barns 25 and 26 after a horse was confirmed to have the neurological form of EHV-1 (Equine Herpesvirus Type 1), a contagious virus that causes Equine Herpes Myeloencephalopathy, a neurological disease.
The horse was sent to the University of Florida on Monday.
No other horse on the grounds has tested positive or shown signs of having the virus. Tampa Bay Downs is taking numerous precautions for the immediate future, including not allowing any horses from the two barns to compete through Dec. 27.
Workers at both barns must log in and out and wear protective footwear and clothing while they are working. All horses on the grounds must have their temperatures taken twice daily, and temperature logs are required to be kept for each horse. Beginning on Friday, a 24-hour health certificate will be required for any horse entering the barn area.
The track is also adopting a temporary training schedule to help ensure each horse’s health and safety. The main track will open at 5:30 a.m., with a break for maintenance from 8-8:30. The track will then close at 9:15 and reopen immediately afterward for horses in Barns 25 and 26, closing at 10:30 a.m.
“Our main concern, as always, is the health and safety of our horse population,” said Vice President and General Manager Peter Berube. “All necessary precautions are being undertaken to prevent the spread of the virus.”
Tampa Bay Downs has also announced there will be no live racing on Dec. 21 or Dec. 28, with the first Sunday of the meet now scheduled for Jan. 4. The track has added live racing on Thursday, Feb. 5 and Thursday, Feb. 1.
HALLANDALE BEACH - Live Oak Plantation’s Souper Forces will bring an unblemished record into Saturday’s $125,000 Tropical Park Derby at Gulfstream Park with little fanfare.
“He’s one of those kind of horses that blends into the crowd,” trainer Michael Trombetta said. “He just does his job and when he races, he gives it his best.”
Souper Forces will seek his fourth victory in as many career starts in the 50th running of the Tropical Park Derby, a 1 1/16-mile turf stakes for 3-year-olds that will co-headline Saturday’s 11-race program with the $125,000 Tropical Park Oaks, a 1 1/16-mile turf stakes for 3-year-old fillies.
The homebred son of Laoban has won his three races at three different racetracks. After breaking his maiden in his debut over Presque Isle Downs’ synthetic surface at six furlongs with a late rally on Aug. 5, he stretched out to a mile on turf to capture an entry-level allowance with an off-the-pace performance at Colonial Downs a month later. In his stakes debut in the Nov. 1 Showing Up at Gulfstream Park, he surged from well off the pace at the top of the stretch to register an 18-1 upset victory in the 1 1/16-mile turf stakes.
“The only thing I can say about this guy is: everything I’ve asked him to do, he’s done very, very well,” Trombetta said. “He’s been a very pleasant surprise.”
Souper Forces, who drew the far-outside post position in a field of 12 and an also-eligible, is rated at 8-1. Trombetta, who saddled Live Oak Plantation’s Souper Blessing for a 12-1 upset victory in the 2023 Tropical Park Derby, has awarded the return mount aboard Souper Forces to Cipriano Gil.
Arindel’s Tank will make a highly anticipated return to Gulfstream, where he won back-to-back races before shipping to Saratoga for his last three starts. The son of Adios Charlie followed up a victory in the Sophomore Turf Stakes at Tampa Bay with forwardly placed turf victories in the English Channel and Not Surprising during Gulfstream’s Royal Palm Meet.
The homebred colt was shipped to Saratoga, where he set the pace in the Aug. 4 Belmont Derby before finishing fourth, beaten by just 1 ½ lengths. He followed up with off-the-board finishes in the Hall of Fame and Saranac without displaying his usual early speed. “He was going really good, but in the last race, he broke really bad for Jaramillo. He can rate, but he needs to be close. He needs to break,” trainer Carlos David said. “Those were really tough races against open company. I figured I’d give him a break and bring him back for this meet.”
Emisael Jaramillo, who was also aboard for Tank’s English Channel and Not Surprising wins, has the return mount on the Florida-bred colt, who is 8-1 on the morning line and who will break from the gate one stall inside Souper Forces.
Late-developing Chapman’s Peak is favored on the morning line at 5-2 after finishing second in the Nov. 22 Commonwealth Turf at Churchill Downs, where he dueled from the start of the 1 1 1/6-mile stakes for 3-year-olds only to come up just a head short of winning.
The Brad Cox-trained Godolphin homebred had won his two prior starts, graduating at Kentucky Downs in his fourth career start before winning a Keeneland allowance with a front-running performance. Tyler Gaffalione is scheduled to ride Chapman’s Peak for the first time Saturday.
Sackatoga Stable’s Tiz Dashing is rated second on the morning line at 7-2. The son of 2020 Florida Derby (G1) and Belmont Stakes (G1) winner Tiz the Law is coming off a victory in the 1 1/8-mile Hill Prince (G3) at Aqueduct. Trainer Barclay Tagg has given the return mount aboard Tiz Dashing to Hall of Famer Javier Castellano.
Dominic Dilalla’s Church and State, a multiple-stakes winner at Woodbine, will take on Tiz Dashing again after finishing third in the Hill Prince, beaten by 1 ¾ lengths. Micah Husbands is slated to ride the Steve Owens-trained son of Caravaggio for the first time.
Calumet Farm’s Candytown, rated at 8-1 on the morning line along with Church and State, Souper Forces and Tank, enters the Tropical Park Derby off a troubled fourth-place finish in the Showing Up, in which he encountered traffic before rallying to finish fourth, beaten just over a length. Edgard Zayas, who was aboard the son of Speightstown for a turf allowance victory at Saratoga as well as fourth-place finishes in the Gio Ponti at Aqueduct and the Showing Up, has the return mount on the Calumet homebred who is trained by Hall of Famer Todd Pletcher.
Kevin Doyle’s Layabout (10-1), who came up a half-length short of holding off Souper Forces after building a two-length lead in the Showing Up; Adele Dilschneider and Claiborne Farm’s Simulate (12-1), who has made his last three starts in graded company at Colonial Downs, Kentucky Downs and Keeneland; and James Conner’s Day and Age (20-1), who was a troubled seventh in the Showing Up after capturing a Churchill Downs allowance: are also entered in a highly competitive Tropical Park Derby.
“I don’t know where he fits in there,” said Day and Age’s Hall of Fame trainer Mark Casse. “It’s a great race. He ran great in Kentucky. He didn’t have a great trip in his last start. He needs to have a great trip. It’s a strong field, so the trip can make the race.”
Dastur Racing’s Thundering, (20-1), Lawson Racing Stables’ Roar of the Beast (20-1), and Eduardo Soto’s Discreet Dancer (30-1), round out the field. Joseph Allen’s McRavin (20-1) is also-eligible.
OLDSMAR - Samy Camacho was a forgotten man for the first three weeks of the Tampa Bay Downs meet – which makes perfect sense, since he has been riding at Gulfstream Park.
Returning to the racetrack where he has enjoyed much of his success, Camacho rode one winner from seven mounts Wednesday with two seconds in a belated beginning to his Oldsmar oval campaign after serving the remainder of a suspension that had carried over from the 2024-25 season.
His victory came in the fifth race, a mile-and-40-yard maiden claiming event that was taken off the turf, aboard 2-year-old Florida-bred filly Parlaypauline, owned by Julian De Mora Jr., and trained by Juan Carlos Avila. (Parlaypauline was claimed from the victory for $32,000 by trainer Jose A. Gallegos for new owner Amaty Racing Stables).
“It’s very exciting to be back. This is the place I race, and I’m truly happy to be back here riding,” said Camacho, a five-time Tampa Bay Downs champion. “I’ll go home with my family and be happy tonight, and I’ll go back to work in the morning with my agent (Mike Moran) and a smile.”
Camacho, a 37-year-old product of Caracas, Venezuela, has ridden 1,550 winners in North America. He rode a couple of winners at Gulfstream Park while his suspension played out. Moran is also the agent for Samuel Marin, who ended Camacho’s streak of four consecutive titles last season. Marin is off to a fast start with 15 winners and there are numerous jockeys currently between him and Camacho, who plans to stay laser-focused in an effort to gradually close the gap. “I’m working very hard to do my best and win races,” Camacho said. “I’m going to try to win the title again, but I know it will be tough. The competition is going to be good all season, but I believe a lot in myself and I have a lot of business moving forward. “I just pray to God to stay healthy.”
Parlaypauline’s victory was one of two for the owner-trainer combination of De Mora and Avila, who also won the seventh race with Chacarera, ridden by apprentice Noel Herman.
Around the oval - Cipriano Gil rode two winners Wednesday. He captured the fourth race aboard Peace Cloud, a 2-year-old gelding owned by Patricia Pavlish and trained by Tim Hamm. Peace Cloud was claimed from the race for $8,000 by trainer Gregg Sacco for new owner Elliot Mavorah. Gil added the ninth and final race with Icelander, a 4-year-old colt owned by Ladycaroly Stable and trained by Carlos Narvaez.
OLDSMAR - Chris Fountoukis was about 90 minutes from Tampa Bay Downs Saturday morning when his new truck broke down, forcing him to call a tow truck and summon an Uber driver to take him back home to Miami. It wasn’t long before his day turned into seashells, balloons and rainbows.
Fountoukis, a retired contractor, watched on his cell phone as his 2-year-old colt Solitude Dude demolished five opponents in the 40th running of the $125,000 Inaugural Stakes at Tampa Bay Downs, contested as the second race. Under jockey Edgard Zayas, Solitude Dude defeated runner-up Max Capacity by 8 lengths in a time of 1:09.07 for 6 furlongs, breaking the stakes record of 1:09.13 set last year by Donut God.
The Tampa Bay Downs track record is 1:08.67, set by It’s Me Mom in 2012. Solitude Dude paid $2.20 to win.
The Inaugural was one of two stakes races on a 10-race card consisting of nine races for 2-year-olds. In the co-feature, the 48th edition of the $125,000 Sandpiper Stakes for 2-year-old fillies, Sneaky Good rallied from off the pace under jockey Antonio Gallardo, collaring Evolution at the sixteenth pole and withstanding a late charge from Blazing Brat to win by 2 ¾ lengths. Evolution held on for third, a head in front of My Miss Mo. Sneaky Good paid $4.80 to win as the betting favorite.
As impressive as Sneaky Good looked, the day’s headlines were reserved for Solitude Dude. “He’s awesome. I’m all excited,” said Fountoukis, who purchased Solitude Dude through trainer Saffie A. Joseph, Jr., for $300,000 at the Ocala Breeders’ Sales Company’s June Sale. “Saffie loves this horse. He thinks he has a good future.”
Joseph isn’t the only one holding that opinion after the son of Yaupon-After the Party, by Into Mischief, improved to 2-for-2 in his career. Both Joseph, who watched the race from back home in south Florida, and Zayas began the day with guarded optimism that was realized about as well as could be hoped for.
“He had a very encouraging workout (Nov. 28, 4 furlongs in :46.75 seconds at Palm Meadows Training Center), but he was facing winners for the first time today,” said Joseph, who also trains the third-place finisher, Langvad. “He moved a little early into a fast pace, but he still quickened away when (Zayas) asked him. I think he has a lot of ability and hopefully he will continue to build on it.”
Joseph said he will consider the Jan. 10 Pasco Stakes at 7 furlongs at Tampa Bay Downs for Solitude Dude’s next start (and first as a 3-year-old), so there is sufficient time for the connections to savor this race (and get Fountoukis up and running again).
Solitude Dude’s flirtation with the track record “tells a lot about what kind of horse he is,” Joseph said. “He has a lot of gears. That he can go into a fast pace and quicken like he did, we’re grateful to have him. He relaxes very well. His mind is probably his best attribute.”
Indeed, Solitude Dude appeared to be unfazed as Super Kick broke to a 2-length lead, running the opening quarter-mile in "21.68 seconds. The half went in :44.31, but it didn’t seem to tax Solitude Dude.
“He’s an amazing horse, a very nice horse,” said Zayas, who was aboard him for the first time. “I’m very excited to see how he runs in the future. It looks like he has a lot of ability. He broke good and I could tell he was a classy horse. He sat second and was on cruise control the whole time until I asked him about the 3/8 pole.
“Once he got momentum, he opened up a couple of lengths and I let him go all the way to the wire. (The time) was without even using the whip on him. He probably would have broken the track record, but we’re not looking at that. We’re just saving it for the bigger races.”
A brief rainstorm began about five minutes before post time for the Sandpiper, but had let up by the time the race went off. Sneaky Good, who is owned by NK Racing and LNJ Foxwoods and trained by Brad Cox, asserted her superiority late to improve to 2-for-2.
Less than an hour earlier, Cox won the Gr. II Cigar Mile at Aqueduct with 5-year-old horse Bishops Bay.
Sneaky Good’s time of 1:10.70 was 1.35 seconds off Dorth Vader’s 2022 stakes record. “I had a lot of confidence in her, and the race set up perfect,” Gallardo said of the daughter of Into Mischief-Gale, by Tonalist. “There was a lot of speed, and I think the outside (No. 9) post position helped because she had enough speed to be close but she didn’t have to go to the lead.
“I pushed the button a little early because the track has been playing fast, but not as much for this race because of the rain. I asked her with my mouth,” he said, making a smooching noise, “and she gave me a little kick, so I knew I had a lot of horse left.”
Around the oval - Leading Oldsmar jockey Samuel Marin rode three winners for the second consecutive day. He captured the first race on Teddy Bear, a 2-year-old Florida-bred gelding owned by Robert Cotran and trained by Joseph Orseno. Marin and Orseno doubled up in the fifth race with Hades, a 4-year-old Florida-bred gelding owned by D. J. Stable and Robert Cotran. Marin then won the seventh with Lightscape, a 2-year-old filly owned by Glen Hill Farm and trained by Tom Proctor.
HALLANDALE BEACH - Two-time defending leading rider Irad Ortiz Jr., fellow Eclipse Award winner Tyler Gaffalione and British champion David Egan will make their first appearances of the 2025-2026 Championship Meet when the country’s premier winter stand resumes with a nine-race program today. First race post time is 12:20 p.m. Ortiz, fresh off topping the Churchill Downs fall meet standings, is named in four races today and seven on Friday to begin the quest for his record-extending seventh Championship Meet title, having broken the mark set by Hall of Famer Javier Castellano, who won five in a row from 2011-2012 to 2015-2016. Ortiz also surpassed Castellano’s single-season standard with 140 wins in 2020-2021. A 33-year-old native of Puerto Rico and five-time Eclipse Award winner (2018-20, 2022-23), Ortiz ranked first with 109 wins and $6.6 million in purse earnings last winter at Gulfstream with 12 stakes wins led by White Abarrio in the Ghostzapper (G3) and $3 million Pegasus World Cup (G1) and Mindframe in the Gulfstream Park Mile (G2).
Gaffalione, born and raised in Davie, Fla., is named in three races today and Friday and six on Saturday including Summer Cause for trainer Miguel Clement in the $100,000 H. Allen Jerkens Memorial Handicap scheduled for two miles on the grass.
Last winter the 31-year-old Gaffalione, the champion apprentice of 2015, was second at the Championship Meet with 74 wins and third with nearly $4.2 million in purse earnings whose stakes wins were highlighted by Spirit of St Louis in the $1 million Pegasus World Cup Turf (G1). Based in England, where he was the champion apprentice of 2017, Egan was born in Kildare, Ireland and returns for the third straight winter. He is named in five races today, four races Friday and five on Saturday including stakes-placed I Know I Know in the Jerkens for 3-year-olds and up.
Egan, 26, won 18 races and $707,450 in purses from 149 mounts at the 2024-2025 Championship Meet before returning for the British season. The winner of several major international Group 1 races including the Saudi Cup, Dubai Sheema Classic, Irish St. Leger and the St. Leger in England, he is a contract rider for Kia Joorabchian’s AMO Racing through 2028. Soon to arrive at Gulfstream are Hall of Famer John Velazquez, North America’s all-time leader with more than $513 million in purses earnings, and Corey Lanerie, a lifetime winner of 5,150 races. Jockey Rajiv Maragh sits one win shy of 2,000 for his career. He is named in two races today, five on Friday and six on Saturday.
OLDSMAR - Two-year-olds of both sexes will vie for the spotlight Saturday as Tampa Bay Downs launches its 2025-26 stakes schedule with the 40th running of the $125,000 Inaugural Stakes for males and the 48th edition of the $125,000 Sandpiper Stakes for fillies.
All but one of Saturday’s 10 races are for 2-year-olds, who like all Thoroughbreds will become a year older on Jan. 1 for record-keeping purposes. Both the Inaugural and the Sandpiper will be run at the sprint distance of 6 furlongs. Post time for the first race is 12:30 p.m. The Inaugural is the second race and the Sandpiper is the ninth race
The Inaugural has drawn a field of seven. Much interest surrounds Solitude Dude, whose lone career start on Nov. 1 in a maiden special weight race at Gulfstream Park resulted in a 9 ½-length victory in a time of 1:16.40 for 6 ½ furlongs. The Kentucky-bred colt is owned by Chris Fountoukis and trained by Saffie A. Joseph, Jr.
Edgard Zayas, who was the leading jockey at Gulfstream’s recently concluded fall meet, has been named to ride Solitude Dude, who breaks from the outside No. 7 post.
Handicappers are expected to take a close look at Joseph’s other Inaugural entry, Langvad, who broke his maiden in his second career start on Nov. 8 at Gulfstream in a 7-furlong maiden special weight and will start from the No. 2 post. Leading Tampa Bay Downs jockey Samuel Marin has been named to ride the Florida-bred colt for Joseph and owners Steven Friedfertig and Shining Stables.
Thunder Chuck, who breaks from the No. 3 post, is another Inaugural entry expected to merit serious consideration among bettors. Six-time Tampa Bay Downs riding champion Daniel Centeno will be aboard the gelding for owner Lea Farms and trainer Jorge Delgado. The son of outstanding sire Good Magic finished second in his most recent start, the Juvenile Sprint Stakes on Nov. 22 at Gulfstream.
Super Kick is another with solid credentials, including a maiden victory on Sept. 18 at Churchill Downs in 1:10.39 for 6 furlongs. Jesus Castanon will be aboard from the No. 4 post for owner Calumet Farm and trainer Eoin Harty.
The Sandpiper has attracted 10 fillies, including two from the barn of Joseph. His duo includes My Miss Mo, who broke her maiden on Nov. 9 at Gulfstream by 12 lengths in 1:24.39 for 7 furlongs. Zayas will ride the Florida-bred daughter of Uncle Mo, who will break from the No. 5 post. She is owned by Averill Racing, Mathis Stable and Tristan De Meric.
Joseph’s other entrant is the maiden filly Tahlequah, who will start from the No. 3 post under Micah Husbands.
Sneaky Good, who drew the No. 10 post position and will be ridden by Antonio Gallardo, has run only once, but it was a performance that turned some heads. She broke her maiden on Oct. 5 at Keeneland, winning a 6-furlong sprint by 4 ¾ lengths. Sneaky Good is owned by NK Racing and LNJ Foxwoods and trained by Brad Cox.
Summer Winner, who drew the No. 2 post position, was a perfect 3-for-3 at Canterbury Park during the summer, including a victory on Sept. 6 in the Northern Lights Debutante Stakes. Bred and owned by Peter D. Mattson and Tim Padilla, and trained by Padilla, Summer Winner will be ridden by Alonso Quinonez.
Four-time leading Tampa Bay Downs trainer Kathleen O’Connell, who won back-to-back runnings of the Sandpiper Stakes with Lindsey Lane and Shananie’s Beat in 1993 and 1994, has entered Gerrards Cross, who will start from the No. 7 post under Sonny Leon.
Bred in Florida by her owner, James M. Chicklo, Gerrards Cross is 2-for-2 and won the Colleen Stakes on the turf at Monmouth Park on July 27 in her last start.
The No. 4 filly is Techstar, a maiden trained by Orlando Rose and owned by Von A Stables who has two seconds and a third to her credit and could be the pacesetter
Around the oval: Leading Oldsmar jockey Samuel Marin scored his 400th career victory in yesterday's sixth race aboard Poiema, a 6-year-old Florida-bred mare by Florida's second-leading sire, Neolithic, owned by JC Racing Stable and trained by Jose M. Castro. Poiema defeated the betting favorite, U Lite Up My Life, by 6 ½ lengths.
Spendthrift Farm’s Further Ado (Gun Runner- Sky Dreamer, by Sky Mesa) drew away late to win the Gr. II, $400,000 Kentucky Jockey Club at Churchill Downs by 1 ¾ lengths and lead the slate of stakes-winning OBS grads for the week. Further Ado verified his 20-length, two-turn maiden win 50 days ago at Keeneland. He earned $242,470 and collected 10 points as part of the “Road to the Kentucky Derby” series, which offered points on a scale of 10-5-3-2-1 to the top five finishers. “This was a really good test for him,” trainer Brad Cox said. “He won very impressively last time. Today he had to show a different dimension and really dig down late to get by. It’s very important to get a horse like this started early on the Road to the Kentucky Derby. Hopefully he can bring us right back here in the spring.” Further Ado was purchased by Spendthrift at the 2025 OBS April Sale for $550,000 from the Six K's Training & Sales consignment after breezing in :21 1/5. At Churchill Downs, Moonlight (Audible- Sundown, by Tapit) rallied past 6-5 pacesetting favorite Dragoon Guard in deep stretch to win the second running of the $249,835 Cherokee Mile by 1 ½ lengths. Moonlight, a 4-year-old son of Audible, earned his first stakes win and third win in five starts at Churchill Downs for trainer Chris Block and owner Kiki Courtelis’ Town and Country Racing. Moonlight was purchased at the 2023 OBS April Sale by his owners for $285,000 from the Eddie Woods consignment after breezing in :21.
At Zia Park, Lookinforbargains (Practical Joke-Mixed Up Kid, by Lemon Drop Kid) won the $100,000 Zia Park Distaff Stakes in her second stakes attempt. Owned by Paul Jenson and trained by Todd Fincher, Lookinforbargains was purchased by H & R Bloodstock for $85,000 at the 2022 OBS April Sale from the Scanlon Training & Sales consignment after breezing in :10. The Nov. 25 Zia Park card also saw Bryon Seymore’s A Thousand Miles (Thousand Words – Swiss Army Wife, by Colonel John) take the $300,000 Zia Park Oaks for trainer Bart G. Hone. The daughter of Thousand Words was purchased for $27,000 by Dennis O’Neill out of the Pick View consignment at the 2024 OBS March sale after breezing in :10 3/5.
HALLANDALE BEACH - Gulfstream Park’s mandatory payout of the 20-cent Rainbow 6 had 98 winning tickets, each worth $13,268. There was $1,393,379 of new money bet into the Rainbow 6, and a carryover of $184,136. The winning sequence was:
Race 6: Prevent ($8.40)
Race 7: Itsallcomintogetha $5.40
Race 8: Diamonds N Thrills Race 9: Biz Biz Buzz $8 Race 10: Strategic Risk $14.60 Race 11: Bulldoze $12.20 Prevent Wins Sabal Palm: Approximately 30 minutes after going gate-to-wire to win the $300,000 My Dear Girl with Mythical, jockey Emisael Jaramillo ran it right back aboard Prevent in the $100,000 Sabal Palm.
Breaking on top in the seven-horse field, Jaramillo guided BC Racing LLC’s Prevent past fractions of :24.95, :48.62 and 1:11.79 before covering the mile and 70-yard Tapeta course in 1:38.92 to prevail over favorite Private Thoughts by a half length. Brawn was third.
A son of Neolithic who BC Racing’s Brian Cohen bought at the 2022 OBS Winter Mixed Sale for $15,000, Prevent has earned more than $400,000 while winning six of 13 races across Tapeta. The second and third-place finishers are also by Pleasant Acres Stallions' Neolithic. “He tries so hard and he’s getting the lead no matter what, he’s so competitive,” Cohen said. “If he can get his lead he will be super tough. If someone wants to contest, he’s not going to give up the lead. And when he gets his setup on Tapeta he’s super, super tough.”
HALLANDALE BEACH - John Oxley’s Strategic Risk took advantage of a dream trip under Hall of Famer Javier Castellano to capture Saturday’s $300,000 In Reality at Gulfstream Park, breaking though with a performance Hall of Fame trainer Mark Casse always thought he had in him. Strategic Risk ($14.60), who won at first asking at Gulfstream Park by 8 ¼ lengths before disappointing in his next three starts, appreciated every inch of the 1 1/16-mile third and final leg of the Florida Sire Stakes, scoring by nine lengths in the race for 2-year-olds sired by accredited Florida-bred stallions. The son of Noble Bird settled well off the pace set by Roger That Dana and closely attended by 6-5 favorite Khozalite and Trelawny past fractions of :23.54 and :47.98 seconds for the first half-mile. As Roger That Dana and Khozalite hooked up on the turn into the homestretch for the stretch run, Strategic Risk hit his stride with a menacing run a few lengths back before sweeping to the lead at the top of the stretch and drawing clear. “He was very relaxed early in the race. I knew when I asked him, he was going to explode. I was waiting for the best opportunity to ask him, and he did it. He did an amazing job. He handled everything very well,” Castellano said. Strategic Risk followed up his winning debut at five furlongs with a distant fourth-place finish in the six-furlong Sanford (G3) and a sixth-place finish in the 1 1/16-mile With Anticipation (G2) on turf at Saratoga. He returned to South Florida to finish an even third in the Oct. 18 Affirmed, the seven-furlong second leg of the Florida Sire Stakes series won by Khozalite. “We thought early on he was a really good horse. He broke his maiden. I thought he was about 80 percent at that time. We took him to New York and he just didn’t do great there. He didn’t train that great. He worked on the grass and I tried him on the grass. I brought him home and gave him a little break in Ocala,” Casse said by phone from his Ocala farm. “I said, ‘You know what? He’s trained well enough, I think I’ll try him in the [Sire] Stakes,’ the last one. He ran OK. I told Mr. Oxley, ‘I think this horse is better than he ran.’ He trained well into this race. Mr. Oxley asked me how I thought he’d run, and I said, ‘I think he’ll run really well.’ I didn’t know he’d win the way he won, but it was nice.”
Casse was hardly surprised that Oxley’s homebred colt made great strides forward while stretching out two turns on dirt for the first time. “I trained his dad. I trained his mom, too, but I don’t think she ever ran. She was by Afleet Alex. His dad held a track record at Pimlico. He won the Pimlico Special at a mile and 3/16ths. He was a multiple Grade 1 winner for Mr. Oxley,” Casse said. “There’s no reason this horse shouldn’t run all day.” Brad Cox-trained The Town, who entered the In Reality off a late-closing second in his Oct. 24 debut at Keeneland, recovered from a disastrous start to finish second. Roger That Dana held on to finish third, 1 ¼ lengths back. Casse has no specific next-out plans for Strategic Risk, who ran the 1 1/16-mile distance in 1:44.85. “This was impressive. We don’t have a lot of options after this, so we’ll try some open company,” he said. “The only think I can tell you for sure, it will be around two turns.”
HALLANDALE BEACH - It didn’t come the way her connections intended, but in the end it didn’t matter.
Arindel’s Gr. III-winning homebred, Mythical, making her two-turn debut, shook off early pace pressure from Love Like Lucy and had enough left to withstand a late run by 30-1 longshot Dare Greatly for a popular 2 ½-length victory in Saturday’s $300,000 My Dear Girl at Gulfstream Park.
The My Dear Girl for fillies and $300,000 In Reality, each going 1 1/16 miles, concluded the 44th edition of the $1.2 million Florida Sire Stakes series for 2-year-olds by accredited Florida stallions.
It was the fifth win from six starts and fourth in a stakes for 1-9 favorite Mythical ($2.20), who bounced back from her first career loss to register a resounding victory in the second leg of the series, the Oct. 18 Susan’s Girl, her first time facing state-breds when she was able to rate early before closing with aplomb.
The My Dear Girl unfolded differently, with Mythical breaking sharply and going straight to the lead pressed by Love Like Lucy through a quarter-mile in :22.81 seconds while under a snug hold from regular rider Emisael Jaramillo.
“I didn’t want to be in front. I think her best race was the previous race when she was relaxed and closed. That’s kind of what I wanted to see today,” winning trainer Jorge Delgado said. “She had too much pressure from the beginning and she was getting a little tired, but she was the best horse.
“I think if she got through a little bit easier in the first quarter, she would have closed a little stronger. But that’s part of racing,” he added. “I knew she was the class of the race and I knew she was the best filly in the race. Something would have to happen really bad for her to lose.”
Jaramillo was able to slow things down and go a half-mile in a still snappy 46.58 seconds, as Love Like Lucy began to wilt from the effort. Meanwhile, Dare Greatly was revving up on the far outside under Rajiv Maragh to get into contention midway around the far turn. “I think she was so keen at the start, 22 and change, he was trying to settle her and it looks like he did,” Arindel’s Brian Cohen said. “They almost got 24 that second quarter. I don’t think that’s what she wants to do, but she was the class and was able to do it today.”
Mythical remained firmly in control once straightened for home and the outcome was never in doubt, completing the distance in 1:45.39 over a fast main track. Dare Greatly was 15 ¼ lengths ahead of Win Bet Only, followed by Love Like Lucy, Bayou Brigid and Lady Chance.
Jaramillo has been up for all of Mythical’s starts, including her 4 ½-furlong graduation April 17 at Gulfstream, a win over boys in the 5 ½-furlong Tremont and fillies in the 6 ½-furlong Adirondack (G3) at Saratoga, and Susan’s Girl. Her five wins have come by 26 combined lengths. “We had two plans,” Jaramillo said. “The first was if another filly took the lead, we would run from behind her. But she had a very good jump, so I went with Plan B which was to take the lead from the beginning. It was a bit difficult because she was going so fast into the first turn. I was trying to slow her down a bit, but she has such speed. That was a tough part of the race.”
Mythical will be pointed to make her 2026 debut in the $150,000 Forward Gal (G3) sprinting seven furlongs Jan. 31. It is the first stakes for 3-year-old fillies on the dirt at the Championship Meet, followed by the $200,000 Davona Dale (G2) going one mile Feb. 28 and the $250,000 Gulfstream Park Oaks (G2) at 1 1/16 miles March 28.
“I’m going to talk to Brian and to his dad and see what the best direction is with the filly and go from there,” Delgado said. “I do believe she can go two turns. She’s a filly that’s still learning. Like any horse when they have the good trip, they run better. I don’t think she had the best trip.
“When they have pressure from the beginning, not too many horses can run 22 and 46 and finish,” he added. “Two years ago, Bentornato, who was a special horse, he ran two turns here and he got beat. These things can happen when you have 2-year-olds going for the first time two turns. I’m just grateful that she passed the wire first and came back healthy.”
HALLANDALE BEACH - After declaring a dead-heat for first in the $100,000 Pulpit, the stewards at Gulfstream Park proclaimed Centurion Thoroughbreds Club’s Glorious Boy the sole winner of the Friday’s stakes for 2-year-olds.
Before finishing on even terms with Bronze Bullet at the wire, the Carlos Martin-trained Glorious Boy ($19.20) bumped with the 2-1 favorite, who was found responsible for the contact nearing the completion of the mile-and-70-yard feature on Tapeta and placed second.
“I objected because there was some contact that I felt impeded my horse. In the moment, it was so close I wasn’t sure if I won, so I made sure I claimed foul,” Glorious Boy’s jockey Rajiv Maragh said.
Shipmate set the pace in the Pulpit, originally scheduled to be renewed at 7 ½ furlongs on turf, pressed by A Million Dreams and Behold the King past fractions of 23.40 and 47.57 seconds for the first half-mile. Bronze Bullet, who rated kindly in fourth for jockey Emisael Jaramillo, made a four-wide sweep on the turn into the homestretch to take the lead turning for home. Meanwhile, Glorious Boy put in his run to loom as the sole threat to Bronze Bullet, who drifted out in mid-stretch before dropping down toward the inside rail. Glorious Boy had shifted to the inside to make his stretch run and was put in tight quarters by the favorite nearing the wire. “I wasn’t sure about the DQ because it seemed like there was some incidental contact both ways,” winning trainer Carlos Martin said. “But Stacy Prior, trainer Joe Orseno’s assistant who helped us with the horse – Joe and her have been great the whole time we’ve been here, about 10 days – she said to watch it again because the second time our horse’s [behind] kind of went out from underneath him, maybe just enough. A tie is great, but it’s better to have the win.” Three Diamonds Farm’s Bronze Bullet had run on Tapeta in his two starts, breaking his maiden at five-furlongs first time out before finishing second in a 5 ½-furlong optional claiming allowance.
“It was a tough call,” Bronze Bullet’s trainer Jose D’Angelo said. “I think he was tired. They are babies going two turns for the first time.” Glorious Boy was coming off a second-place finish in the six-furlong Awad Stakes on turf at Aqueduct after breaking his maiden in his third start. “He’s a nice horse. Anytime you stretch them out…we were talking about it a couple days ago and were a little bit leery. Is he just going to be a good closing sprinter, or is he going to stretch out?” Martin said. “My uncle, Greg, did a great job buying this horse as a yearling. The owners are new in the business so it’s exciting. To get the horse to relax and settle [helps] and now you can go turf and Tapeta. There’s a good series of races here. Initially I was thinking I was going to give him a break but if he runs good, I may have to rethink that. Maybe now I’m going to rethink it.” Glorious Boy, as well as Bronze Bullet, ran the mile and 70-yard distance in 1:40.74. “This horse ran a really great race today. We were expecting a top performance. This hit the point or exceeded the expectations,” Maragh said. “To win the Pulpit Stakes – there’s never been a bad horse that’s won this race. He seems like he still has room to improve and mature.” Friday’s Pulpit score moved Maragh within two victories of the 2000-win milestone. “I’m chipping away, and I have some really good mounts this weekend, so I’m really sweating it,” Maragh said.
A Million Dreams finished third, 3 ½ lengths behind the dead-heated Glorious Boy and Bronze Bullet.
HALLANDALE BEACH - As good as Arindel homebred Mythical has been through her first season of racing – three stakes wins, one over the boys, one in a Gr. III and the best Beyer Speed Figure of any 2-year-old filly in 2025 – her connections are even more excited about what is still in front of her. Mythical will take another step toward reaching that potential when she tries two turns for the first time while looking to keep her perfect local record intact in Saturday’s $300,000 My Dear Girl at Gulfstream Park. The My Dear Girl for fillies, and the $300,000 In Reality, each going 1 1/16 miles, co-headline an 11-race program that concludes the 44th edition of the $1.2 million Florida Sire Stakes series for 2-year-olds by accredited Florida stallions. Trained by Jorge Delgado, Mythical indicated her ability early on and translated that into her April 17 unveiling at Gulfstream, where she romped by 8 ½ lengths in front-running fashion sprinting 4 ½ furlongs in :51.37 seconds.
“Amazingly, she’s been one of those horses that from the first time you saw her she showed you how good she is,” Delgado said. “She’s been showing signs of getting better, which is very exciting. She’s been good so far, but it looks like she can get really good.” Mythical spent the summer with Delgado’s northern string at Monmouth Park and raced three times at Saratoga, beating males by 3 ½ lengths in the 5 ½-furlong Tremont on Belmont Stakes weekend and earning a 93 Beyer. Back against fillies for the 6 ½-furlong, Gr. III Adirondack four weeks later, she cruised by 3 ¼ lengths, leading again from gate to wire. Stretched out to seven furlongs for the Gr. I Spinaway, Mythical dueled for the lead but faded to be fifth behind two-time Gr. 1 winner Tommy Jo. Delgado brought her back to Gulfstream for the FSS Susan’s Girl, also at seven-eighths, which marked her first time facing fellow state-breds.
“She had a little bit of class relief last time,” Delgado said. “She had a very busy summer in Saratoga. She won against the boys, then she won the graded-stakes and then she ran in the Grade 1. She needed some time to come back and do less.” Under regular rider Emisael Jaramillo, up for each of her races, Mythical showed a new dimension by settling off the pace early before taking command after a half-mile and powering home a 12 ¾-length winner as the 2-5 favorite. “She was ready for the race, and she loves this track,” Delgado said. “She’s been doing better and better every day. We’re excited to see how she does around two turns and what we can do with her from there.” Mythical has breezed three times since the Susan’s Girl, most recently going four furlongs in :49.46 seconds Nov. 22. Jaramillo returns to ride from Post 3 at topweight of 122 pounds, two to four pounds more than her rivals. “We have confidence that she’ll be fine,” Delgado said of the two-turn test. “Every gallop and every race she’s been showing that she should have no problem doing that, but it’s not until the races when you really find out.” While not looking past the My Dear Girl, Arindel and Delgado would like to see Mythical show enough to keep her on track to what they hope is a start in the Kentucky Oaks next spring. During Gulfstream’s 2025-2026 Championship Meet, the Jan. 31, Gr. III Forward Gal, Feb. 28, Gr. II Davona Dale and March 28, Gr. II Gulfstream Park Oaks all award points toward the Kentucky Oaks.
“Hopefully we can go to the Oaks. I think that’s a goal we have in the back of our minds,” Delgado said. “We want to find a race where we can get some points here, but we are focusing on this race first.” Delgado said Mythical has a special nickname around the barn, one inspired by the filly that won the 2024 Oaks – one of her seven career Gr. 1 victories – en route to Horse of the Year honors. “We are calling her the little Thorpedo Anna,” Delgado said. “We’ll see. She’s a very talented horse but she also has a very good mind and I think that’s what matters in the end.” MyRacehorse, Thoroughbred Acquisition Group and Miller Racing’s Love Like Lucy is the only horse in the field to have run in the previous two legs of the FSS filly series, finishing third to multiple stakes-winner and English Group 2-placed Lennilu in the six-furlong Desert Vixe and a distant second behind Mythical in the Susan’s Girl. Love Like Lucy’s debut victory came over a pair of next-out winners – twice stakes-placed Vita Mia and William Law Jr. homebred Lady Chance, runner-up in the Juvenile Fillies Sprint and who returns in the My Dear Girl. Bayou Brigid, owned by Sea Warrior Stables and trainer Heather Smullen, is entered to make her dirt debut after four races on turf and one on Gulfstream’s all-weather Tapeta course. She is the only horse with two-turn experience – graduating on Aug. 8 going a mile and 70 yards on the synthetic, finishing sixth in the 1 1/16-mile P. G. Johnson on Aug. 27 at Saratoga and running third in the one-mile Our Dear Peggy on Oct. 25 at Gulfstream. Completing the field are Mary Lightner-owned and trained Dare Greatly, fourth in the Susan’s Girl, and Robert Cotran’s maiden Win Bet Only.
OLDSMAR - The Tampa Bay Downs stakes schedule kicks off Saturday, Dec. 6 with the 40th running of the $125,000 Inaugural Stakes for 2-year-olds and the 48th edition of the $125,000 Sandpiper Stakes for 2-year-old fillies. Both races will be contested at a distance of 6 furlongs on the main track.
The Inaugural drew 29 nominations – 27 colts and geldings, plus a ridgling and a filly – while the Sandpiper drew 30 nominations. The Inaugural is a prep race for the 7-furlong Pasco Stakes on Jan. 10 for newly-turned 3-year-olds, while the Sandpiper is a prep for the 7-furlong Gasparilla Stakes for 3-year-old fillies on Jan. 10.
Among the nominees for the Inaugural is Kentucky-bred colt Hammond, whose two victories include the Juvenile Sprint Stakes at Gulfstream Park. Hammond is trained by Saffie A. Joseph Jr., who will determine whether two weeks is sufficient time between starts for the son of Charlatan. Joseph has nominated three other horses for the Inaugural: Langvad, a maiden winner on Nov. 8 at Gulfstream; Solitude Dude, whose lone start on Nov. 1 at Gulfstream produced a 9 ½-length victory; and stakes-placed Strategic Reserve.
Trainer Brian Lynch, who won last year’s Inaugural with Donut God, has nominated two colts. Both are owned by Flying Dutchmen Breeding and Racing, the owners of Donut God and last season’s Gr. III Tampa Bay Derby winner Owen Almighty. The Lynch nominees for the Inaugural are Mob, who captured his career debut on Sunday at Churchill Downs, and Roger That Dana, an easy winner in his debut on Oct. 25 at Gulfstream.
Top trainer Brad Cox has two Inaugural nominees. His colt Commandment broke his maiden on Nov. 1 at Churchill in his second start, while his other nominee, Zun Day, broke his maiden on Nov. 5 in Louisville.
Tampa Bay Downs’s leading trainer the last two years, Kathleen O’Connell, won back-to-back runnings of the Sandpiper Stakes with Lindsey Lane and Shananie’s Beat in 1993 and 1994, and has nominated breeder-owner James Chicklo’s filly Gerrards Cross to this year’s race. The Florida-bred is 2-for-2 and won the Colleen Stakes on the turf at Monmouth Park on July 27 in her last start.
Joseph is represented by five Sandpiper nominees. That quintet includes Tessellate, who won the Nov. 15 Juvenile Fillies Sprint Stakes at Gulfstream by 13 lengths, and My Miss Mo, who broke her maiden by 12 lengths on Nov. 9 at Gulfstream.
Lynch, who won last year’s Sandpiper with Mrs Worldwide for Flying Dutchmen Breeding and Racing, has nominated two fillies: Flying Dutchmen’s Slay the Day, who broke her maiden on Nov. 16 at Churchill, and owner William K. Werner’s maiden Betty’s Pearl.
Cox has nominated three, including two-time winner On Time Girl, second in her last start on Oct. 24 at Keeneland in the Dean Dorton Myrtlewood Stakes.
Around the oval.
Long known for his success with 2-year-olds, trainer Wesley Ward sent out Augustin Stables’ gelding Distinct to win the fifth race on the turf by 3 ½ lengths from Giulio Cesare. Pablo Morales rode the winner, who completed the 1-mile distance on the firm course in his first career start in 1:37.25. Distinct was claimed from the race for $16,000 by trainer Jose A. Gallegos for his new owner, Amaty Racing Stables.
Morales also won the seventh race on the turf on 4-year-old gelding Chicago Theatre. The Glen Hill Farm homebred is trained by Tom Proctor.
Another impressive performance was turned in by 3-year-old Florida-bred gelding El Chispazo in the second race on the main track. Owned and trained by Juan Arriagada, he won by 13 lengths under jockey Ademar Santos in a time of 1:39.47 for the mile-and-40-yard distance, 1.33 seconds off the track record.
Tampa Bay Downs is closed in its entirety today. Racing continues Friday with a nine-race card beginning at 12:45 p.m. The fifth, seventh and ninth races are slated to take place on the turf.
HALLANDALE BEACH - On the cusp of his annual sojourn to Gulfstream Park for its prestigious Championship Meet and approaching a 30th year of riding professionally in the United States, Hall of Fame jockey Javier Castellano has no shortage of sources for inspiration. There’s the looming milestone of 6,000 career wins, now less than 100 away; the never-ending search for a promising newly turned 3-year-old and the prestige of competing with the best collection of riders assembled at a winter race meet. Then, there’s family. Brady, his only son and the youngest of Castellano’s three children with wife, Abby, is starting to recognize dad’s cool job and how much he has accomplished in the game. And for the first time, the Venezuela native has partnered since early this month with his brother-in-law, Kevin Meyocks, to work as his agent. “It’s exciting, because Kevin always tried to help me in the winter in South Florida the last two or three years,” Castellano said. “My son, he’s 13 and getting to the age where he’s starting to pay attention. He’ll say, ‘Daddy, what horses are you riding?’ He wants to see me at the high level, and it motivates me more when your children and your family look up to you and they’re excited when you win races. “I still have that fire, that motivation to win races, especially at Gulfstream. It’s the Championship Meet with all the best jockeys. All the top riders in the country end up in South Florida. It’s the best feeling in the world when you’re competing with them. Where better to be in the wintertime than South Florida and Gulfstream Park? All jockeys dream of wanting to compete there at that level,” he added. “I just turned 48 and I’m not ready to retire. The biggest advantage of our sport is as long as you can do it, you can continue. I’m very fortunate to be in great condition. I feel good and I’ve been training good to be ready for the races.” Castellano will be on hand Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 27, for the opening of the 2025-2026 Championship Meet, his earliest arrival since being in the midst of five consecutive leading rider titles from 2011-2012 to 2015-2016. Irad Ortiz Jr., who broke Castellano’s single-season record with 140 wins in 2020-2021, surpassed his overall record by leading the jockey standings for a sixth time last winter and will be favored to add a seventh.
The opening day program has Castellano named in five of eight races for five different trainers including Brad Cox-trained debut winner Amberglen in the $100,000 Wait a While for 2-year-old fillies scheduled at 7 ½ furlongs on the turf. “We decided to go the first weekend and start from the beginning,” Castellano said. “The last few years I stayed in New York and then [went] later on, spend Christmas with my family. But the kids are getting older, they are having activities at school and we decided I might as well go early and start getting momentum, start getting business and looking for the right horses.” The year-round partnership has seen Castellano off to a strong start with Meyocks, who also has the jockey’s book in New York. Their first weekend together they won the Nov. 8 Hill Prince (G3) for Sackatoga Stable and trainer Barclay Tagg with Tiz Dashing, Castellano’s seventh graded-stakes triumph this year. The following weekend, he won the Key Cents on George Weaver-trained She’s Country and was third in the Notebook aboard Funny Factor. Meyocks also represents Emisael Jaramillo at Gulfstream. The opportunity to add Castellano came about when the agent’s other local rider, Cipriano Gil, relocated to Tampa Bay Downs for the winter. In late summer Meyocks picked up the book for Kentucky-based Francisco Arietta, who is returning to make his title defense at Oaklawn Park. “Everything has started falling in the right direction, and who better than Kevin. He lives in Florida and he knows a lot of people and he’s a great guy. Not just because he’s my brother-in-law; everybody likes Kevin. He likes joking around with people. He’s got a big sense of humor,” Castellano said. “I know how he works. He has a lot of connections, he knows a lot of people and we’re looking forward to it.” Castellano averaged 114 wins during his time atop the Championship Meet standings with a then-record high of 132 in 2013-2014. Except for his first winter of 2004 and 2020-2021, when injuries and the coronavirus pandemic limited him to just 66 starts, Castellano has topped $1 million in purse earnings. Last winter, he had 25 wins and a meet bankroll of $1.35 million. Fellow Hall of Famer Jerry Bailey (2000-03) and Castellano (2013-16) are the only jockeys to win the Eclipse Award as champion jockey four consecutive years. A total of 21 riders have won 6,000 or more races; Castellano sits at 5,910 and counting. His career earnings of more than $413 million are second only to another active Hall of Famer, soon-to-be 54-year-old John Velazquez, who also calls the Championship Meet his winter home. “I love my job,” Castellano said. “It seems to me every stage in your life is a challenge. When you are in the beginning of your career, you work hard because you’ve got to make your name to get to that high level of competition. You want to be there. Then when you’re at the high level, you have to work double because you want to maintain your place. You have to be demanding and work hard. “I’m past the first stage and I’m past the second stage. I won four Eclipse Awards, almost five. I won the Kentucky Derby, two Preakness, the Belmont Stakes, 12 Breeders’ Cup races and seven Travers, which is unbelievable. I’m still competing at the high level and the high competition with the best jockeys in the country” he added. “I feel like it’s not ending. No way. I think I have five years ahead. That’s my goal. I feel great. I’m looking forward to the opportunities. I’m still hungry.” Winner of the 2006 and 2017 Preakness (G1), Castellano completed his personal Triple Crown in 2023 with wins in the Kentucky Derby (G1) and Belmont (G1) respectively aboard Mage and Arcangelo, two horses he rode during the winter that helped reestablish Castellano after some lean years. Mage was fourth with Castellano in the Fountain of Youth (G2), two starts prior to the Derby, and he was aboard Arcangelo for four straight wins starting with his Gulfstream graduation and continuing with the Peter Pan (G3) and Travers (G1). “A couple years ago I can’t believe I won the Kentucky Derby and the Belmont Stakes. Those two horses I found in South Florida at Gulfstream Park,” Castellano said. “I rode Mage over there and then Arcangelo, I broke his maiden. I ended up winning two Triple Crown races the same year. It’s amazing.” Gulfstream’s series of stakes for 3-year-olds starts with the Mucho Macho Man Jan. 3 and continues with the Holy Bull (G3) Jan. 31 and Fountain of Youth Feb. 28 leading up to the Florida Derby (G1) March 28. The Florida Derby has produced 47 starters that have gone on to win a remarkable 63 Triple Crown races – 26 in the Kentucky Derby, 19 in the Preakness and 18 in the Belmont.
“I look forward to riding the young horses of the new generation. That’s what keeps you excited and motivated, looking for the nice 3-year-olds in January,” he added. “The Holy Bull, the Fountain of Youth, the Florida Derby – that’s more motivation [for] me to continue and have success at the high level."
Klaravich Stables’ Fully Subscribed (Tiz the Law-Sweetbaby, by Candy Ride (ARG)) showed her class in her stakes debut, entering the stretch and drawing away for a 4 1/2-length victory in the Gr. 2, $300,000 Mother Goose Stakes at Aqueduct to lead another slate of stakes-winning OBS graduates for the week.
Fully Subscribed, who won her local debut in October 2024, used her late-closing speed, drawing away from Kentucky Oaks (G1) runner-up Drexel Hill in what was a tight field of contenders. “I think she’s a horse with a bright future,” trainer Chad Brown told NYRA publicity. “She’s a horse we’ve always thought a lot of.” Fully Subscribed was purchased at the 2024 OBS April Sale by her owner for $300,000 from the Caliente Thoroughbreds consignment after breezing in :10 flat. At Woodbine, True North Stable and Bloom Racing Stable’s (Jeffrey Bloom) Dresden Row (Lord Nelson-Elle Special, by Giant’s Causeway), Canada’s champion 3-year-old male, powered to the lead midway down the lane to win the $150,000 Autumn Stakes (G3). Trained by Lorne Richards, the 4-year-old colt earned his first stakes success in the Durham Cup (G3) in September of 2024 and, one race later, he took the Ontario Derby (G3). Consigned by Little Farm Equine, Dresden Row was a $70,000 purchase by True North Stable at the 2023 OBS April Sale after breezing in : 21 2/5. The Woodbine card also saw Sultana (Always Dreaming- Private Offering, by Pulpit) get up in the final jumps to take top prize in the $150,00 Maple Leaf Stakes (G3). Trained by Kevin Attard for Lou Donato, Theodore Manziaris, Paul Borrelli and Lanni Bloodstock, the 4-year-old daughter of Always Dreaming was contesting her first stakes affair. She was a $50,000 purchase by Harbour 60 Club at the 2023 OBS June Sale from the New Hope consignment after breezing in :21. At Aqueduct, Gold Square’s Throckmorton (Caracaro- Whatarocket, by Goldencents) made a successful stakes debut by wiring the $150,000 Awad Stakes. Trained by Jose D’Angelo, the son of Caracaro was trying turf for the first time and continued a run of winning form for D’Angelo, who captured last week’s Grade 1 Breeders’ Cup Sprint with OBS grad Bentornato and Turf Sprint (G1) with fellow OBS grad Shisospicy at Del Mar. Throckmorton was a $250,000 purchase at the 2025 OBS April Sale by Chad Summers, agent, from the Global Thoroughbreds consignment after breezing in :20 3/5. At Laurel Park, Michael Golden’s Golden Lion Racing’s Complexity Jane (Complexity –Bestinthebusiness, by Ghostzapper) broke well from her far outside post position en route to victory in the $100,000 Thirty Eight Go Go Stakes. Trained by Brittany Russell, Complexity Jane was purchased by Sycamore Hall Thoroughbreds for $170,000 at the 2024 OBS March Sale from the Scanlon Training & Sales consignment after breezing in :10 1/5. At Aqueduct, Klaravich Stables’ Deep Learning (Cairo Prince- Dovima, by Union Rags) sat a patient trip before pouncing in the lane to score the victory in the Listed $150,000 Chelsey Flower Stakes. Trained by Chad Brown, Deep Learning was purchased by her owner for $325,000 at the 2025 OBS April Sale from the Eddie Woods consignment after breezing in :20 4/5.
HALLANDALE BEACH - Peachtree Stable homebred Spirit Doll, dominant in her grass debut last month, is among seven last-out winners and one of three entries from four-time defending Championship Meet leading trainer Saffie Joseph Jr. in the $100,000 Wait a While on Thursday’s opening day program at Gulfstream Park. The eight-race Thanksgiving Day holiday program has a special post time of 11:15 a.m. For 2-year-old fillies on Gulfstream’s newly refreshed turf course, the 7 ½-furlong Wait a While going two turns is the first of 68 stakes, 27 graded, worth $15.2 million in purses during an 84-day Championship Meet that runs through March 29. Spirit Doll, by Tiz the Law, graduated in debut sprinting six furlongs Aug. 7 at Saratoga, where she next endured a troubled trip finishing sixth in the seven-furlong Spinaway (G1). Joseph brought her back to Florida, stretched her out to a mile and put her on the turf for the Oct. 25 Our Dear Peggy, where she came from off the pace to win by 6 ¼ widening lengths. “I ran her back quick in the Spinaway but I actually thought she was going to be competitive in that and she didn’t run. I think it was just too quick after the first race,” Joseph said. “She was very impressive the other day and I feel she goes in there, in my opinion, a deserving favorite. Spirit Doll drew Post 7 with jockey Edgard Zayas at topweight of 122 pounds and is rated the 5-2 second choice on the morning line. “She has grass pedigree from the dam [Pakhet] and the Tiz the Laws have run on the grass,” Joseph said. “You’re just kind of hoping she takes to the grass but you never envision that kind of performance, especially the way she quickened. I thought it was very, very impressive so the future is very bright for her.” Averill Racing’s R Slew of Cash (12-1) already owns a win at the course and distance, graduating by 1 ¼ lengths on the same card as Spirit Doll’s stakes victory. She pressed the early pace in her one-mile unveiling before fading to eighth Sept. 4 at Kentucky Downs. "I thought at Kentucky Downs she ran a good race. She looked like she was going to run good and she got tired,” Joseph said. “Last time she tracked and she quickened nicely. It’s the right race for her. I think the distance is ideal, but she’ll have to show she’s good enough. She’s going to need to improve to be competitive but I think she is eligible to improve.” Micah Husbands, up for the maiden win, rides back from Post 3. C2 Racing Stable, BAG Racing Stables, Barry Fowler, Charles Deters and Mark Taylor’s Day to Day (12-1) is winless in three tries since joining Joseph over the summer with one grass start, beaten 5 ½ lengths when eighth in the 1 1/16-mile Miss Grillo (G2) Oct. 4 at Aqueduct. Fourth in the Spinaway, she has Edwin Gonzlaez named to ride from Post 8. “Her grass race wasn’t that bad in the Miss Grillo. She broke well and then kind of lost position and ended up out wide and kind of ran even,” Joseph said. “We’re going to decide closer to the race if we’re going to run.” The 2-1 program favorite for the Wait a While is Woodslane Farm homebred Sister Troienne (Post 5), the Brian Lynch trainee that joins Spirit Doll and French import Special Wood as two-time winners in the field. Sister Troienne, by Munnings, has won back-to-back starts since being moved to the turf by eight combined lengths, the latter around two turns, and will have the services of regular Kentucky-based rider dual Derby-winning jockey Mario Gutierrez. Brody Racing’s Devilish Grin (20-1) is another horse with stakes experience, having run third in the Aug. 27 P.G. Johnson at Saratoga third time out before graduating in an Oct. 4 maiden optional claimer at Aqueduct, both going 1 1/16 miles. JSM Equine’s Haute Diva (10-1) has three seconds from five starts with a lone win coming at one mile Sept. 27 on the Gulfstream turf. Both Amberglen and Slippers step up to stakes company off impressive debut victories. Stonestreet Stables’ Irish-bred Amberglen (Post 1, 8-1) overcame somewhat of a slow start to rally for a three-quarter-length triumph Oct. 23 going one mile on the Keeneland turf for trainer Brad Cox. Following the race she was sent to South Florida where she shows three breezes at Payson Park.
DJ Stable’s Slippers (Post 4, 9-2) fetched $225,000 as a yearling last fall and didn’t launch her career for more than a year, rallying for a popular three-length maiden special weight triumph sprinting five furlongs Oct. 18 on the Gulfstream turf. “She had always shown talent,” DJ’s Jon Green said. “She was a little slower developing than the rest of the group. Thankfully, the way [Hall of Fame trainer] Mark Casse has his farm set up, they can go in tranches so she didn’t have to get rushed or get ahead of where she was mentally. But once she put it together at the farm, it took her the matter of a month or two before she really started showing it on the racetrack. “So, going into that first race we were pretty confident,” he added. “Mark is a two-time Hall of Famer. He doesn’t do too much to get a horse ready first time out because as he likes to say, he’s training a horse for its career not its maiden win. Whenever we win first time out it is kind of a pleasant surprise, but we were pretty confident that she had talent going into that first race.” Slippers has breezed twice over the all-weather Tapeta course since her race, and will have Miguel Vasquez back in the irons. “We’re going against winners and winners that have run two turns, so it’s a little different scenario than her first asking,” Green said, “but she’s also had that first experience, she’s a little more mature, and we don’t have to ship her anywhere. For all intents and purposes the majority of the field is in the same boat as we are … a-other-than allowance types running for black-type on opening day.” Casse also entered Lighthouse Racing’s Backgammon (Post 9, 30-1), a front-running maiden winner going one mile Oct. 18 at Keeneland in her fifth start. Completing the field are Special Wood (Post 10, 20-1), making her North American debut after winning two of three starts in her native France; and the also-eligible Girvana (Post 11, 30-1).
OLDSMAR - Based on the first two days of the 2025-26 Tampa Bay Downs meet, Samuel Marin isn’t going to have a whole lot of spare time this season between races.
Last season’s leading jockey, who won two races from eight mounts on Wednesday’s Opening Day card, competed in all nine races today, winning four. With six victories the first two days, he’s off to the kind of start his agent Mike Moran hoped for.
“He’s in the zone. He’s riding awesome, and it seems like he’s just out in the right spots on the track and gives every horse he’s on a chance to win,” Moran said after the 24-year-old Venezuela product rode four winners today. “His timing is good and it just seems like he’s having fun out there. “You can just tell he has so much confidence,” Moran added. “And he wants to ride all of the (races). Hey, he’s young. I’m 65 and I’m tired watching him, but he’s doing awesome. We just have to keep him healthy and get him pretty decent horses, and he does the rest.”
Over the first two days of the meet, which resumes Wednesday, Marin has ridden in 17 of the 18 races. The only race he sat out was the second on Opening Day, when his mount Answer the Call was scratched after failing to draw into the field from the also-eligible list. Marin will travel to Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach on Sunday morning to ride six races and is named on seven horses back in Oldsmar on Wednesday.
“Hopefully my agent keeps me real busy,” Marin said. “I love riding, I’m fit and I want to ride a lot more races. Today was a great day. I thank God for everything, and I’m grateful for all the support I’m getting from everyone here.”
After finishing second in today’s first race, Marin won the second on favorite Top Pocket Pick, a 3-year-old Florida-bred filly who paid $5.20 to win. He then won the fourth, fifth and sixth races in succession. He captured the fourth on 8-year-old gelding Bear Creek, who paid $11.80; the fifth race on the turf on 3-year-old filly Curlaine, who paid $6.20; and the sixth on Long Gone Sally, a 3-year-old Florida-bred filly who paid $7.40.
Marin’s streak was snapped in the seventh race on the turf when he finished second on 2-year-old filly Mappy, who was passed late by trainer Mark Casse’s juvenile lass Greatest, ridden by Pablo Morales.
Marin will be back to try to continue his winning ways Wednesday. “It’s always good to ride good horses,” Marin said. “This is an amazing beginning to the meet, and I just say thank you to everyone who has been involved.”
Register for “10 Days of Festivus.”
The “10 Days of Festivus Challenge” Handicapping Contest begins Friday, Dec. 5, and runs through Wednesday, Dec. 24. There is no charge to enter, but players must register by 10:30 a.m. on Dec. 5 to be eligible. The winner receives a $1,000 cash prize and the runner-up earns $500.
Each day, players are required to select one of two designated CHALLENGE RACES, with results determined from a mythical $2 win-place-show wager on their pick. Players begin with a free lifeline and have an opportunity throughout the contest to purchase five more. Players lose a lifeline if their choice does not finish first, second or third, or if they fail to make a selection on a contest day.
A full set of rules is available at www.festivuschallenge.com , which is also the place to register.
HALLANDALE BEACH - Gulfstream Park’s fall Sunshine Meet will lower the curtain this weekend with Edgard Zayas looking to reclaim his spot atop the jockey standings and trainer Saffie Joseph Jr. chasing a remarkable 14th consecutive track title. Closing weekend kicks off today with a nine-race program starting at 12:20 p.m. Eleven races are on tap for Saturday, including the $75,000 Juvenile Sprint for 2-year-olds on the main track and the $70,000 Chasie Artie overnight handicap for 3-year-olds and up on Tapeta, with 11 more on Sunday. Joseph holds a 30-26 lead over Jose D’Angelo in the race for leading trainer with entries in 12 races over the weekend to D’Angelo’s 13. Joseph, a 38-year-old native of Barbados, has won 13 straight meet titles at Gulfstream including last four Championship Meets, the country’s premier winter racing destination that gets under way Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 27. Zayas tops the rider standings with 40 wins, closely chased by Miguel Vasquez (38) and Emisael Jaramillo (34). Zayas is named in 26 races on the weekend including the entire Saturday program, while Vasquez is named in 22 and Jaramillo in 20. A finalist for the 2013 Eclipse Award as champion apprentice, Zayas, 32, has been a year-round force in South Florida since his arrival from Puerto Rico. He owns nine riding titles at Gulfstream including the Sunshine Meet in 2021 and 2023 as well as the 2024 and 2025 Royal Palm Meet.
Joseph has both Strategic Reserve and Hammond entered in the Juvenile Sprint, with Zayas named on the latter. Vasquez is set to ride Thunder Chuck for trainer Jorge Delgado with Jaramillo on Camigol for Antonio Sano. Neither leading trainer entered a horse in the Chasie Artie. Zayas will ride And Uwish for trainer Joe Orseno, Vasquez is named on Full Disclosure for Mohamed Jehaludi, and Jaramillo has the call on Roar Ready for Victor Barboza Jr. Jockey Rajiv Maragh enters closing weekend with 1,997 career victories. He is named in three races Saturday and five races Sunday. Jose Castro’s JC Racing Stable leads the Sunshine Meet owner standings with eight wins, two more than Michael Yates’ Shadybrook Farm. Castro has entries in four races over the weekend, while Yates has none. Bruno Schickedanz, Arindel, D. J. Stable and In Front Racing Stables have four wins apiece. Rainbow 6 Jackpot Pool Estimated at $150,000 The 20-cent Rainbow 6 jackpot pool is estimated at $150,000 when the Sunshine Meet resumes today with a nine-race program to kick off closing weekend. First race post time is 12:20 p.m. The multi-race wager has gone unsolved for six racing days following multiple mandatory payouts of $7,316 on Nov. 2.
HALLANDALE BEACH - Winless in seven starts this year that included three tries on turf and a trip to the Middle East, Michael and Jules Iavarone’s Steal Sunshine swept past fellow multiple stakes winner Lure Him In in mid-stretch and edged clear by a length in the $70,000 Finallymadeit overnight handicap at Gulfstream Park.
Ridden by Edgard Zayas for trainer Bobby Dibona, 6-year-old Steal Sunshine ($4.40) completed 1 1/16 miles over a fast main track in 1:44.59 for his fourth career stakes win and eighth overall, pushing his purse earnings over $800,000 in 32 starts.
“It’s great to get him back in the winner’s circle,” Dibona said. “I got a chance to prepare him for this like I have since day one. I know my horse, and he was ready today.”
Steal Sunshine ran sixth in the $3 million Pegasus World Cup (G1) and second in defense of his 2024 victory in the Gulfstream Park Mile (G2) to open this year before finishing fourth in the Godolphin Mile (G2) at Meydan Racecourse. After more than two months away he returned in mid-June to be second behind Beach Gold in an optional claimer on the Gulfstream turf, then was back home after an unsuccessful trip to Kentucky Downs for the Mint Millions (G3).
“We got faked out a little bit because he ran big on the turf coming back from Dubai. The horse that beat me a neck went on to win a Grade 2. He probably was better that day, so we thought we found a new home,” Dibona said. “We went to Kentucky and that’s a tough place. Things came a little unwound.” Steal Sunshine got shuffled back breaking from Post 4 and Zayas shifted to the rail on the first turn, tracking in fifth as 21-1 longshot Swashbuckle and Lure Him In battled up front through a quarter-mile in 23.50 seconds and a half in 47.17. Zayas tipped outside to launch their rally midway around the far turn and Steal Sunshine responded, moving up on even terms with Lure Him In at the head of the lane before surging past.
Lure Him In held second, a length on front of Lightning Tones, followed by Awesome Train, Swashbuckle, Single Dot Yaht and Virginia City.
“I got bumped out of there. I wanted to be a little closer,” Zayas said. “I kind of used him a little on the first turn and not leave him too much to do. He got in a perfect spot. The longer distance is good for him. He loves the two turns.”
Florida homebred Finallymadeit won 16 of 47 starts and more than $1 million in purse earnings from 2006-09. Among his victories were 12 stakes including the 2008 Fred Hooper Handicap (G3) and 2009 Memorial Day Handicap (G3) and Skip Away (G3). Friday’s Rainbow 6 Jackpot Pool Estimated at $150,000
The 20-cent Rainbow 6 jackpot pool is expected to grow to an estimated $150,000 when racing resumes Friday. The multi-race wager went unsolved Sunday the sixth racing day following a mandatory payout. Notes: Jockey Joe Bravo doubled Sunday aboard Justin Smiles ($9.60) in Race 2 and Racing Driver ($8.60) in Race 7 … Jockey Rajiv Maragh picked up career win No. 1,997 with Flying Liam ($4.80) in Race 4 … Trainer Saffie Joseph Jr. strengthened his hold on first place in the Sunshine Meet standings with Drama ($2.60) in Race 3 and Mystical Belle ($6.40) in Race 8, giving him a 30-26 advantage over Jose D’Angelo with three racing days remaining … Mystical Belle pushed Edgard Zayas past Miguel Vasquez in the jockey standings, 39-38. Zayas made it a two-win cushion with Steal Sunshine in the $70,000 Finallymadeit overnight handicap.
HALLANDALE BEACH - Don’t call it a comeback. Rajiv Maragh stepped away from racing a few years ago knowing he was leaving some unfinished business – such as riding his 2000th winner. After making a successful foray into the world of business, the highly accomplished 40-year-old jockey picked up where he left off a year ago at Gulfstream Park. “I didn’t technically retire. I stepped away from horseracing to pursue other ventures – to diversify myself outside of horseracing,” said Maragh, who is just four wins away from No. 2000. “My career surpassed my wildest imagination – a career that I’m very grateful for. Since I was a youth, I was devoted only to horseracing, nothing outside of horseracing. It came to a point when I was getting close to my 40s. I wanted to go outside of horseracing.” Maragh built Road Jockey, a food delivery service, from the ground up in his native Jamaica, and only returned to riding when his business venture was fully established. “I committed two years to building Road Jockey and learning business. I had to completely knock off horseracing. I had to really disconnect. That way I could be fully focused,” he said. “It was bittersweet because I was winning a lot of races. It was a tough decision to make to step away from something that was going so well. But I always felt that that was the time to do it. I can’t wait too late. I can always come back to it.” Unfortunately, Road Jockey, which had signed on 5000 customers and 30,000 partner merchants, is not currently operating due to the devastation Hurricane Melissa left behind after ravaging Jamaica late last month. “My family is on the east coast (of Jamaica), most of my family and friends, so they were fortunate not to get the blunt force of it,” said Maragh, noting some partners and friends in Montego Bay, where Road Jockey was operating before a direct hit from the hurricane, were not as fortunate. “Right now, the focus is on the people there that were affected by the hurricane. The business is secondary at this point. It would be selfish to even think about that. “ TV Analysis Work ‘Started Tickling My Brain’ Maragh had no immediate plans to return to race-riding when he vacationed in Saratoga with his family a few years ago. “I love Saratoga. I always want to be there. I hadn’t been there in a couple of years. I decided to go and visit with my family. During that time, I went on for one segment of the NYRA show on Fox. The producers liked how I performed,” Maragh said. “They said, ‘Hey, look, there’s an opportunity to do some stuff.’ At that time, riding wasn’t on my radar at all. I didn’t have the riding juices going. Horseracing was still an obsession of mine. That’s why I went there, but it wasn’t for riding." “Doing the show for a year, it started tickling my brain. When I was riding, I wasn’t able to assess my riding. I think there were some holes I could have filled if I was able to step away and see it from a third person. That’s what the TV gave me,” he added. “I was able to watch the jockeys, the greatest jockeys in the world. It really hit me: I had a stellar career. I had a lot of opportunities. I felt like if I came back to riding, I would be the best version of myself. I wanted to explore that.” When he decided the time was right to continue his riding career, Maragh opted to stay close to home, his wife Angelina, son Luka, 5, and daughter Lilah, 1, instead of returning to the New York circuit on which he experienced so many career highlights. “I feel like I’m the best version of myself as a jockey. I might not be in the limelight like when I was winning a lot of races at the top circuit. But this version of me is the optimal version,” he said. “I continue to work and try to plug in any holes. I’m so much better at assessing my mistakes, so it’s easier to correct them. My self-assessment is way better now than it was when I was winning the most races of my life.” After riding nine winners during the 2024-2025 Championship Meet, Maragh rode 38 winners during the Royal Palm Meet and has added 10 more winners during the current Sunshine Meet after notching a double last Saturday. Maragh reacquainted himself with the Gulfstream Park winner’s circle Dec. 5 on his eighth mount back, Dundie, a horse trained by his father Collin. “When I won my first race after this break, it was a collage of emotions that hit me after the race. The journey – the ups and downs…,” Maragh said. “We don’t have a career. We have a lifestyle,” he added. “That lifestyle is challenging. You make sacrifices to live that lifestyle. It’s rewarding and validating when you get the win.”
Maragh recorded his first career win at Tampa Bay Downs Feb. 1, 2004 aboard Pricedale Kid, who captured a seven-furlong $7500 claiming race by 6 ¾ lengths.
“I remember my first win like it was yesterday. It was on my ninth mount. I was in Tampa and I wasn’t the jockey listed to ride. In the morning, the rider who was supposed to ride didn’t show up. He was an apprentice, so I asked, ‘Please, let me ride this horse.’ He was a ripe candidate,” Maragh recalled. “Sure enough, I got the opportunity to ride him for Jesus Chavez, the trainer, and won my first race on him. Two weeks later, I won my second race on him. So, my first two wins were on Pricedale Kid.”
Maragh would go on to ride many bigger names in many bigger races during his career. Main Sequence ‘The Most Phenomenal Horse’
Maragh has won 25 Grade 1 stakes, including Main Sequence’s 2014 triumphs in the United Nations, Sword Dancer and Joe Hirsch Turf Classic during the Graham Motion trainee’s Eclipse Award-winning season.
“Main Sequence was one of the most phenomenal horses I’ve ever ridden or seen run,” Maragh said. “He had an amazing turn of foot. The first time riding him he won a Grade 1. It was surreal. It was his first time in America. Graham Motion was always high on the horse’s ability.
“I won three big races in a row leading up to the Breeders’ Cup and I broke my arm and ended up missing out on the Breeders’ Cup. That was a tough moment for me,” Maragh added. “But they somehow made me feel like a part of it – Graham Motion, the owner, Flaxman, and even Johnny V [Velazquez], who picked up the mount.” Maragh reunited with Main Sequence directly following his victory in the Breeders’ Cup Turf (G1) at Santa Anita with Hall of Famer John Velazquez aboard, winning the 2015 Mac Diarmida (G2) at Gulfstream Park.
No graded stakes-winner is closer to his heart, however, than Lilah, after whom he and his wife named their daughter.
“She’s named after my first graded stakes-winner when I was an apprentice,” Maragh said. “My wife and I have been together for 20 years. We had just met when I was an apprentice and was riding Lilah. We said that if we had a daughter, we’d call her ‘Lilah.’” Hobeau Farm’s Lilah, who was trained by the late Hall of Famer Allen Jerkens, won the 2005 Hurricane Bertie by three lengths. Nine years later, Maragh would return to the Gulfstream winner’s circle following the Hurricane Bertie aboard Groupie Doll, who closed out her brilliant career with a seven-length victory. Maragh also rode the modestly bred daughter of Bowman’s Band for back-to-back victories in the Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Sprint (G1) at Santa Anita in 2012 and 2013 that earned the Buff Bradley-trained mare back-to-back Eclipse Awards as Champion Female Sprinter. She sold at auction for $3 million following her second Breeders’ Cup win. “The story with her was amazing. It was a true underdog story – a homebred from unsuccessful lineage; Buff Bradley, not the biggest mainstream trainer at the time; and myself, a kid from Jamaica trying to make it in the big game,” Maragh said.
Before riding Groupie Doll to back-to-back Filly & Mare Sprint wins, Maragh broke through at the 2011 Breeders’ Cup at Churchill Downs aboard Caleb’s Posse in the Dirt Mile (G1).
“My first Breeders’ Cup win on Caleb’s Posse was actually a relief because I had put so much pressure on myself to win a Breeders’ Cup. I had some great opportunities before that and it never materialized. I had seconds and thirds,” Maragh said. “He just ran an unbelievable race. When I crossed the wire, it was relief.”
Maragh would like to return to Thoroughbred Racing’s biggest stage, but he is currently content to staying close to home and family while renewing his love for riding at Gulfstream Park. “I know what I want. I want to be the jockey riding the biggest races in the world, all of them. That’s my ultimate goal, but the challenge is what it takes to be there,” Maragh said. “Today, I’m not able to commit to that. That goal right now I can’t focus on. It’s not realistic.”
HALLANDALE BEACH - Magic Cap Stables, Paul Braverman, Timothy Pinch, Castle Gate Farm, Kuehne Racing and John Reinhardt’s Tessellate, stakes-placed in each of her last two starts, will get another chance to break through when she returns as a leading contender in Saturday’s $75,000 Juvenile Fillies Sprint at Gulfstream Park. The Juvenile Fillies Sprint, going 6 ½ furlongs on the main track, is the headliner on an 11-race program that begins at 12:20 p.m.
Bred in Florida by Castle Gate Farm and trained by Sunshine Meet leader Saffie Joseph Jr., Tessellate shortens up in distance after running third behind Willow Case in the one-mile Hallandale Beach, a race where she dueled for the lead nearing the stretch and wound up beaten 6 ¼ lengths.
In her prior start, the $170,000 yearling daughter of multiple Gr. 1 winner McKinzie came from off the pace to be second as the favorite in the six-furlong Sharp Susan, 3 ¼ lengths behind Willow Case in a race contested over a sloppy main track.
“Last time we stretched her out. We didn’t think she wanted to go that far, but we wanted to give it a try. The cutback should help her a lot,” Joseph said. “This is the logical spot. There wasn’t anything around so we stretched her out going a mile last time just to see what happened, but she wants to be a sprinter.”
A front-running debut winner against state-breds going five furlongs, Tessellate drew Post 2 of eight and will be ridden by Edgard Zayas. They are rated as the 5-2 second choice on the morning line.
“She’s fast, but she doesn’t need the lead. She can sit and make a run,” Joseph said. “I think she goes in there with a very good chance.”
Joseph also entered La Dolce Vita and Mystical Belle. After two unsuccessful tries on the turf, Peachtree Stable homebred La Dolce Vita graduated with a popular 1 ¾-length maiden special weight triumph Oct. 24 sprinting six furlongs on the main track. “She won well last time,” Joseph said. “She’s coming back obviously a little quick, but I think if she runs her race she should be a big factor.”
La Dolce Vita has been favored in each of her three races, running second in her debut going five furlongs at Gulfstream, beaten four lengths by subsequent Hollywood Beach runner-up The Princess Bro. Fourth in a one-mile maiden spot at Kentucky Downs, she is the Juvenile Fillies 2-1 program favorite from Post 1.
“She showed promise right away. When she got beat the first time we were a little surprised, but the horse that beat her turned out to be a nice horse,” Joseph said. “She ran big last time in her first time on the dirt. I’m still not convinced that she doesn’t want the grass, but for now we’ll stick to the dirt.”
Joseph indicated MyRacehorse, P T Racing, Clay Sides and John Reinhardt’s Mystical Belle (Post 5, 3-1), a good-looking maiden winner over the all-weather Tapeta course at Gulfstream, would likely scratch in favor of an optional claiming allowance for 2-year-olds on Sunday. In her two races, Mystical Belle was second behind her stablemate and subsequent Gr. I Frizette runner-up Rileytole and then a 1 ¼-length winner over next-out winner Flowko.
“She’s run well,” Joseph said. “She ran second first time out to a nice horse that ran second in a Grade 1, and then she won second time and beat a filly that came back to win, also.”
Oliver Gray’s Dakota’s Little Auror (Post 4, 15-1) is the other horse in the field with stakes experience, having run third in the Sharp Susan and fourth in the Hallandale Beach. She has lost three straight following a maiden triumph against Florida-breds sprinting 4 ½ furlongs. Make Your Wish, Lady Chance and Epigram all enter the Juvenile Fillies Sprint off victories. Amanda Hernandez Zorilla’s Make Your Wish (Post 6, 30-1), trained by Ramon Minguet, comes from the same connections that campaigned Willow Case before the filly was sold via digital auction for $340,000. After placing in each of her first three races, including a back-to-back runner-up finishes, William Law Jr.’s Florida homebred Lady Chance (Post 7, 20-1) graduated by 2 ½ lengths against state-bred company.
Epigram (Post 8, 3-1), owned and trained by Jose Castro, will be making her stakes debut off one race, an eye-catching 9 ¾-length open maiden special weight triumph Aug. 15 sprinting five furlongs on Gulfstream’s main track. “She’s doing good. She had a good race last time, exactly like we hoped. We hope that she can run the same race. She’s a good horse, very talented,” owner-trainer Jose Castro said. “We hope she can win again. She’s in good condition, she’s training good, she’s working good, she came out of the race good. She’s very, very happy.”
Castro, who purchased Epigram for $38,000 in April as a 2-year-old in training, said the gap between starts was by design. Her multimillionaire sire, Code of Honor, was a Grade 1 winner whose first of four graded stakes triumphs came in the 2019 Fountain of Youth (G2) at Gulfstream. “She is very fast. She has a nice pedigree. When we bought her at the auction, the first time we saw her at the barn we were looking for the good confirmation. That’s the reason we chose her,” Castro said. “She’s still a baby so we have to try to just go little by little with her. We try to get her ready for this moment and right now she’s ready to run again.” Completing the field is Sultan Racing’s Nour (Post 3, 10-1), who ran second in an optional claimer at Gulfstream but finished ahead of both Willow Case (third) and Dakota’s Lil Auror (fifth).
The 3-year-old Florida-bred gelding Mad House left Tampa Bay Downs last spring with an 0-for-4 record, filling his trainer David VanWinkle with uncertainty about what came next.
VanWinkle, who began training thoroughbreds in 1989, knew Mad House had potential. The well-bred son of Vekoma out of the Munnings daughter Stifled Heiress finished second in his career debut on Jan. 8 sprinting 6 furlongs to John Hancock, the Brad Cox-trained colt who won the $250,000 Sam F. Davis Stakes in his next start.
But after that promising debut, Mad House turned in a trio of perplexing performances, including an uninspired fourth on March 30 in the 7-furlong Florida Cup Ocala Breeders’ Sales Sophomore Stakes. As he prepared to take Mad House to Canterbury Park in Minnesota for the late spring and early summer, VanWinkle probably felt like a game-show contestant holding 100 keys, only one of which unlocks the door to an elusive victory and continued success.
“We had tried to stretch him out in distance at Tampa, and I don’t think that was his cup of tea,” VanWinkle said. “He was always sound and didn’t have any setbacks, but he was a little bit high-strung and it took him time to figure things out. It took him a while to put everything together mentally.”
If you’re a serious horse racing fan, you already know Mad House has developed into one of the sport’s leading Cinderella stories of 2025. Owned by South Dakota resident James Thares, Mad House has won four races in a row since breaking his maiden on June 29 at Canterbury, including the Gr. II, $400,000 Gallant Bob Stakes on Sept. 20 at Parx Racing in Pennsylvania.
The front-running victory, in which the 23-1 shot sped six furlongs in 1:08.77, earned Mad House a spot in Saturday's $2 million, six-furlong Cygames BC Sprint at Del Mar.
Luis Saez will ride Mad House, who drew the No. 13 post in the 14-horse field. The race is the sixth on the card, with a scheduled post time of 1:21 p.m. Pacific Time (4:21 for Tampa Bay Downs simulcast viewers).
Tampa Bay Downs will simulcast all of the Breeders’ Cup races Friday and Saturday, with Friday’s Del Mar action starting at 11:35 a.m. Pacific Time and Saturday’s races getting underway at 10:05 a.m. Pacific Time.
Mad House flew to southern California on Thursday from south Florida, where he worked a sharp 4 furlongs last week in 47.10 seconds. VanWinkle arrived on Saturday, jogging the horse about a mile on Sunday and galloping him a mile-and-a-half Monday and Tuesday.
“He is fit and feeling good. He has adapted well to being out here,” said VanWinkle, who will return to Oldsmar for the upcoming Tampa Bay Downs meet when he descends from the clouds. The 63-year-old conditioner, who hails from the small Nebraska town of Burchard (population roughly 120), has found preparing his first Breeders’ Cup entry an exhilarating experience. Being surrounded by celebrities from the racing world and beyond has taken some getting used to.
The Gallant Bob was the first graded-stakes victory of VanWinkle’s career, and all of a sudden he and his horse have graduated to racing’s biggest international stage.
“I’ve seen a few (A-list racing personalities) since I got here,” VanWinkle said, referring to the top practitioners in his profession. Bill Mott, Todd Pletcher, I saw them at the (post-position) draw. It is quite a good feeling to be here. It is something you never plan on – I didn’t.”
VanWinkle, who is a three-time leading trainer at Canterbury, will be joined at the event by his wife Pam and daughter Taylor, his assistant.
After serving notice that sprinting was his thing in his first career victory, an 11 ½-length romp in a 5 ½-furlong race, Mad House won a pair of 6-furlong allowance races at Canterbury in July and August, but his three-race winning streak up north didn’t hold much weight with Gallant Bob bettors.
VanWinkle admits he wasn’t sure what to expect. “He was stepping up against much tougher competition, and I’d have been happy to have him hit the board,” the trainer said. Despite early pressure from another longshot, eventual third-place finisher Fire Pit, Mad House was able to stay comfortable on the lead under jockey Paco Lopez through taxing opening fractions of :21.58 seconds for the quarter-mile and :43.94 for the half.
Mad House drew off late to defeat runner-up Gateskeeper, an 83-1 shot, by 2 ¾ lengths. The quality of the performance, and the winner’s share of $217,500, made the decision to try the Cygames Breeders’ Cup Sprint relatively easy. “When he won a couple at Canterbury, his heart got built up and we could tell he was liking his job. You could say he is peaking at the right time,” Van Winkle said of Mad House, who was bred by Jean White, Wavertree Farm and SGV Thoroughbreds.
“He’ll be going up against a lot of older, more seasoned horses, but he has developed well so hopefully that won’t be an issue. Paco said he wasn’t pushing hard on him early (in the Gallant Bob) and that he knew he had horse left late if he needed it, so that was encouraging.”
In Saez, another of the sport’s most accomplished jockeys, VanWinkle believes the No. 13 post will not be an obstacle to performing his best. “With his running style, he is probably better off out there than down on the inside if something were to happen,” VanWinkle said.
Mad House’s morning-line odds are 30-1. The prerace favorite at 5-2 in last year’s Cygames Breeders’ Cup Sprint runner-up, 4-year-old Florida-bred Bentornato (last year’s Gallant Bob winner). Bentornato is trained by another Tampa Bay Downs conditioner, Jose Francisco D’Angelo, and will be ridden by Irad Ortiz Jr.
Two Sprint entrants besides Mad House have competed at Tampa Bay Downs. One, 4-year-old colt Patriot Spirit, won the 2023 Inaugural Stakes and was unplaced as a 3-year-old in the Gr. III Sam F. Davis Stakes. Patriot Spirit is trained by Michael Campbell and will be ridden by Javier Castellano.
The other is trainer Wesley Ward’s 6-year-old gelding Nakatomi, who finished third here in the 2024 Pelican Stakes. He will be ridden by Jose Ortiz.
Trainer Mark Casse’s 3-year-old filly Nitrogen, the winner of this year’s Gr. III Florida Oaks on the turf at Tampa Bay Downs, and trainer George Weaver’s 5-year-old Florida-bred mare Dorth Vader, the 2022 Sandpiper Stakes winner, will compete in the Longines Breeders’ Cup Distaff. Jose Ortiz will ride Nitrogen and John Velazquez will be aboard Dorth Vader.
Trainer Chad Brown’s second and third-place finishers in this year’s Gr. III Tampa Bay Derby are also Breeders’ Cup competitors. Chancer McPatrick, the Tampa Bay Derby runner-up, will be ridden by Jose Ortiz in the Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile. Brown’s gelding Hill Road, third in the Tampa Bay Derby, competes in the Longines Breeders’ Cup Turf under David Egan.
OLDSMAR - A visitor to the Tampa Bay Downs barn area this morning needed to spend only a short bit of time with first-day arrivals Alison Arriagada and Alejandro Mendieta to realize both are living the dream.
Arriagada, an assistant and the exercise rider for husband Juan Arriagada – last year’s second-leading trainer and the track’s three-time defending leading owner – cheerfully oversaw the unloading of 10 horses from Presque Isle Downs in Pennsylvania as the sun tried to peek through the clouds above their barn.
“I love being here,” said Alison, who remained at their nearby home most of the summer with their daughter while Juan was winning the trainer and owner titles in his first season at Presque Isle Downs. “I’ve been coming here 21 years as a trainer or galloping horses or working for people, and it’s pretty exciting every year to come back. And the horses seem to love it. The backside is wide open and you can take a little more time with them.”
The track opens for training on Wednesday at 6 a.m. The 2025-26 Tampa Bay Downs meet begins Wednesday, Nov. 19.
Even on days when Juan doesn’t have a horse competing, the couple gets to enjoy the thrills of Thoroughbred competition vicariously while working on the backstretch. “It’s one of the few racetracks I’ve been at where you can hear fans cheering from your barn,” Alison said. “There is no casino here and there are always people at the racetrack, and that makes it fun to run horses. It’s almost like a small Keeneland, maybe, where you can hear people screaming for the horses.”
Mendieta hopes it isn’t long before spectators are cheering for his 2-year-old colt My Boy Star, who he spent time grazing outside his barn upon arriving from Belterra Park in Ohio with five other horses following a 16-hour trip. The Florida-bred, a son of the two-time Gr. II winner and fine stallion Bucchero, is the first horse the owner and trainer has ever bred.
He is out of Mendieta’s 9-year-old broodmare My Sarasota Star, who won seven races and $230,120 in her racing career and resides in Ocala.
“He (My Boy Star) had some good workouts at Belterra, but I decided to wait to run him so my wife and our daughters could watch him race,” said Mendieta, who trained 14 winners at Belterra. “I’m real excited to see him run for the first time. Plus, he’s a Florida-bred, so he can run for more money.”
Mendieta, a trainer since 2023, loves spending the late fall and winter months in Oldsmar and is sure his 20 horses do as well. “The weather is beautiful and the horses can relax and come outside their barns and eat good grass,” he said.
Tampa Bay Downs has released its stakes schedule, which consists of 24 races worth $3,535,000 in purse money. The track’s showcase race has a new sponsor, with the Gr. III, $400,000 ESMARK Tampa Bay Derby for 3-year-old Kentucky Derby prospects highlighting the Festival Day 46 card on Saturday, March 7.
Esmark is a diversified, privately-held family company with a portfolio of industrial companies with strong roots in the steel industry. Over the years, Esmark has diversified its interests and operations into a number of businesses engaged in the industrial and commodity sectors, focusing on several key industries including steel services, oil and gas exploration, aviation, real estate, business services, technology and sports management.
The ESMARK Tampa Bay Derby is one of five stakes on the Festival Day 46 card, along with the Gr. II, $225,000 Hillsborough Stakes for older fillies and mares on the turf; the Gr. III, $200,000 Florida Oaks for 3-year-old fillies on the turf; the Gr. III, $125,000 Michelob Ultra Challenger Stakes for older horses; and the $125,000 Columbia Stakes for 3-year-olds on the turf.
The track’s other graded stakes, both on Jan. 31 on the turf, are the Grade III, $175,000 Tampa Bay Stakes for older horses and the Grade III, $175,000 Endeavour Stakes for older fillies and mares.
Lambholm South, which had sponsored the Tampa Bay Derby since 2016, has shifted its stakes sponsorship to Sunday, March 29 – Florida Cup Day – and the $110,000 Lambholm South Sophomore Turf for 3-year-olds.
A new Florida Cup Day sponsor is the AAA Feed & Tack Store, a Tampa Bay Downs fixture on the backside since 1976. Owned and operated by Jerry Porrello and his wife Nancy, the business will sponsor the $110,000 AAA Feed & Tack Turf Classic for older horses.
The first stakes Saturday of the meet is Dec. 6, featuring the $125,000 Inaugural Stakes for 2-year-olds and the $125,000 Sandpiper Stakes for 2-year-old fillies.
Officials and staff of Tampa Bay Downs invite Thoroughbred lovers and newcomers alike to share the excitement of the Oldsmar oval’s meet-long centennial celebration, marking the track’s opening on Feb. 18, 1926.
HALLANDALE BEACH - Journeyman Leonel Reyes, less than a decade after coming to the United States as an accomplished rider in his native Venezuela, is poised to reach another career milestone as he continues the quest for a second meet title at Gulfstream Park. Reyes, 39, enters Friday’s 10-race program with 993 career wins in North America, ranking fourth in the current Sunshine Meet standings with 18 wins and $692,495 in purse earnings, respectively trailing Miguel Vasquez (26) and Edgard Zayas ($882,270). His success is nothing new for the soft-spoken but quietly confident Reyes, a year-round presence at Gulfstream who was a two-time national champion in Venezuela and a nine-time meet titlist at National Racetrack Valencia before venturing to South Florida in 2016. “I won a lot of races in Venezuela, and it was a great experience,” Reyes said. “In my country it is different than riding here, but I am very grateful.”
Represented by agent Jose Sanchez, Reyes had more than 1,400 wins to his credit when he arrived at Gulfstream, where he made his U. S. debut Feb. 21, 2016. It was a month later, on March 24, when he picked up his first win aboard Virgen Morena. What has followed has been career that has seen Reyes win 100 or more races every year since 2021, with a personal best 166 in 2022. With more than two months left in 2025, he has 96 wins from 736 mounts and earnings approaching $3.8 million. Reyes has won four graded stakes in the U.S., all at Gulfstream. The first came with Gladiator King in the 2019 Gr. III Hutcheson, followed by Cool Arrow in the 2020, Gr. III Smile Sprint, Three Witches in the 2023, Gr. III Princess Rooney and Little Vic in the Gr. III Fred Hooper Jan. 24. In 2023, Reyes won a career-high $5.99 million in purses and earned his only U.S. riding title, leading Gulfstream’s Royal Palm Meet standings with 93 wins, 18 more than runner-up Edwin Gonzalez, and a $2.89 million bankroll.
The previous year Reyes ranked second to Vasquez at the Royal Palm Meet while simultaneously competing at Colonial Downs in Virginia, a rare instance away from Florida where he finished as runner-up to Mid-Atlantic-based Jevian Toledo for the riding title.
“I have ridden in some other places, but Gulfstream is like my home,” Reyes said. “I love being here.”
Reyes has three two-win days during the Sunshine Meet – opening day Sept. 5, Sept. 26 and Sept. 28 – and owns three stakes victories: Khozalite in the FSS Affirmed Oct. 18, Willow Case in the Hallandale Beach Sept. 26 and Private Thoughts in the Jet Propulsion overnight handicap Oct. 4. Overall Reyes has helped 11 different trainers at the meet reach the winner’s circle, including multiple trips for Jose D’Angelo (four), Ramon Minguet, Ron Spatz and Frank Regalbuto (two each). Others have come for Diane Morici, Ronald Coy, Rafael Romero, Lisa Lewis, Heather Smullen, Eddie Plesa Jr. and Fausto Gutierrez.
His winners have ranged from favorites like 3-year-old Divine Papi ($2.80) on Oct. 3 to 2-year-old filly Make Your Wish ($65.80), giving Reyes an average win payoff of $12.87. He also has 14 seconds and 11 thirds, putting him in the money at a 41 percent clip. “It has been a lot of hard work every day, every morning. The races are tough but we keep trying,” he said. “I am thankful to my agent and all the owners and trainers and everybody that gives me the support.” Reyes has been able to enjoy his success with wife, Daniela, and daughters Leona (15), Donna (12) and Lea (4 ½) and plans to put in the work to make it continue long past 1,000 wins. “I am grateful for the moment because this career is dangerous,” he said. “I keep trying every day, every week, every year and now we are close. I will be proud to get 1,000 wins.”
Lindy Farms’ Ready for Candy (Twirling Candy-Enoree, by More Than Ready) earned her second graded stakes win and improved to 3-for-3 under the care of trainer Philip Antonacci when she prevailed in the Gr. II, $200,000 Sands Point at Aqueduct Racetrack to lead the slate of stakes-winning OBS graduates for the week.
Ready for Candy was moved to the Antonacci barn after seven starts with trainer Michael DePaulo last year, including three stakes placings at Woodbine Racetrack. The daughter of Twirling Candy came into the Sands Point off a last-out score in the one-mile, Gr. III Winter Memories. “She's a little tricky and you have to get along with her - she has her quirks,” Antonacci said. “But when it comes to the races, she's as professional as it comes and it allows the rider to do whatever he needs to do with her which makes her dangerous.” Bred in Ontario by Mark Dodson, Ready for Candy was purchased by Game Time Racing for $60,000 at the 2024 OBS April Sale from the consignment of Tom McCrocklin after breezing in :20 4/5.
At Gulfstream Park, Half Hollow Stables and ProRacing Stable’s Khozalite (Khozan-Starship Crystal, by Congrats) was impressive returning to the dirt for his stakes debut with a four-length victory in the $200,000 Affirmed. Trained by Jose D’Angelo, Khozalite registered his second straight win following a two-length maiden triumph going a two-turn mile on the Gulfstream turf in his second career start. The son of Khozan was purchased by his owners for $55,000 at the 2025 OBS April Sale from the consignment of Journeyman Bloodstock Services after breezing in :21 2/5. At Aqueduct, Case Chambers, Paradise Farms Corp. and David Staudacher’s graded stakes-placed Out On Bail (Tiz the Law–Judge Lee, by Street Cry (IRE)) returned to the winner’s circle with a nose victory in Sunday’s $150,000 Carle Place. Trained by Mike Maker, Out On Bail notched his first win since taking the Skidmore last year at Saratoga Race Course as part of a six-start campaign that saw him hit the board in each outing. Out On Bail was purchased by Chambers for $110,000 out of the Kings Equine consignment at the 2024 OBS March Sale after breezing in :10 1/5. At Santa Anita, Himika (Curlin-Motivated Seller, by Into Mischief) returned to sprinting and delivered as the 1-2 favorite to earn her second stakes win in the $85,000 Anoakia Stakes over fellow OBS grad Revera. Trained by Bob Baffert, Himika was purchased for $900,000 by owner Baoma Corp at this year’s OBS April Sale from the de Meric Sales consignment after breezing in :9 4/5. In August at Del Mar, she earned her first stakes win when annexing the Gr. III Sorrento going six furlongs.
HALLANDALE BEACH - For a horse whose trainer feels could be even better on the grass, Half Hollow Stables and ProRacing Stable’s Khozalite was impressive returning to the dirt for his stakes debut with a popular and professional four-length victory in Saturday’s $200,000 Affirmed at Gulfstream Park. The seven-furlong Affirmed was the last of three stakes worth $470,000 in purses on a 12-race program co-headlined by Mythical’s popular romp in the $200,000 Susan’s Girl for fillies, each part of the $1.2 million Florida Thoroughbred Breeders’ and Owners’ Association Florida Sire Stakes series for 2-year-olds by accredited Florida stallions. Named for Lou and Patrice Wolfson's Florida-bred 1978 Triple Crown winner who was a five-time champion, back-to-back Horse of the Year and 1980 Hall of Fame inductee, the Affirmed is the middle leg of the FSS series, following the $100,000 Dr. Fager. The series concludes with the $300,000 In Reality Nov. 29. Ridden by Leonel Reyes for trainer Jose D’Angelo, Khozalite ($9.20) covered a fast main track in 1:23.30 to register his second straight win following a two-length maiden triumph going a two-turn mile on the Gulfstream turf Aug. 30 in his second career start. “I think he’s going to be better on turf. The key with him is the distance. The longer he goes, the better it is for him. That’s why I ran him on the grass, because the two turns is what he needs,” D’Angelo said. “Khozalite is the kind of horse that just needs distance. That’s why I take the shot back on the dirt. He was ready today. I’m very happy with him. He had a nice gallop-out. I’m proud of him and his race.” One of three last-out maiden winners in the field of 11 along with Khozalite and D’Angelo-trained stablemate Micanopy, Wootun broke alertly and went straight to the front, leading through an opening quarter in :22.65 seconds with Khozalite pressing to his outside in second. Strategic Risk, a Gulfstream debut winner in June who was exiting back-to-back graded-stakes efforts at Saratoga, saved ground inside in third with Hawk in the clear in fourth. The half-mile went in :45.38 when Wootun began to tire and Khozalite eagerly inherited the top spot rounding the far turn with Strategic Risk poised to strike on the far outside in third. Khozalite began to gain separation once straightened for home and had plenty left to turn back a late run from Squire, a Leinster colt who edged Strategic Risk by three-quarters of a length for second. “I knew both my horses were well-prepared. I know they were going to run from the start if everything goes good,” D’Angelo said. “When I saw him third and second and making his move turning for home, I knew he was going to be there.” Hawk finished fourth, followed by Trelawny, All to Win, I’m Tuff Enough, He’s My Uncle, Micanopy, Wootun and Dr. Fager runner-up Camigol. Reyes has been aboard for each of Khozalite’s races including a dead heat for second in a six-furlong dirt maiden special weight against Florida-breds Aug. 2, and has also been up for D’Angelo in morning works. “The trip was perfect. His outside post position was good. I tried to go behind the speed. When I asked him at the quarter pole he responded very well,” Reyes said. “After his last work, I was very confident in him because he felt really, really good and ready for the race.”
D’Angelo said the plan is for Khozalite to target the 1 1/16-mile In Reality on opening weekend of Gulfstream’s 2025-2026 Championship Meet. “Yes, 100 percent,” he said. “He ran good two turns on the grass so he should be fine there.”
HALLANDALE BEACH - The $200,000 Susan’s Girl and the $200,000 Affirmed have attracted full fields for next Saturday’s second leg of the Florida Sire Stakes series at Gulfstream Park. The Susan’s Girl, a seven-furlong test for 2-year-old fillies sired by accredited Florida stallions, drew a field of 12 (and an also-eligible), including Finding Strength and Love Like Lucy, who finished second and third, respectively, in the $100,000 Desert Vixen, the six-furlong first leg of the Florida Sire Stakes series. Michael Yates-trained Finding Strength finished a nose behind Lennilu, who will bypass the second FSS leg for a planned start in the $1 million Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint on Oct. 31 at Del Mar. Jorge Delgado-trained Mythical will return to Gulfstream after incurring her first loss while finishing fifth in the Aug. 30, Gr. I Spinaway at Saratoga. The Arindel home-bred won her April 17 debut at Gulfstream before beating the boys in the June 5 Tremont and capturing the Aug. 3 Gr. III Adirondack at Saratoga.
Trainer Kenny McPeek entered Blazing Bridgette, a daughter of Uncle Chuck who finished third in her recent career debut at Aqueduct. Trainer Joe Orseno entered Sister Hustle, a daughter of Uncle Chuck who romped by 12 ¼ lengths in her recent debut at Presque Isle Downs for owner/trainer Randall Russell. Antonio Sano-trained Camigol, who finished second behind Fourth and Central in the $100,000 Dr. Fager, the six-furlong first leg of the FSS open division, is prominent among 11 entries for the seven-furlong Affirmed. Camigol finished third in the Aug. 2, Gr. III Saratoga Special after breaking his maiden at Gulfstream Park by 5 ¾ lengths. Fourth and Central was not entered in the Affirmed. Jose Pinchin-trained Trelawny, a son of Uncle Chuck who finished three-quarters of a length behind Camigol in the Dr. Fager, is entered to return in the Affirmed. Heather Smullen-trained Wootun and the Jose D’Angelo-trained duo of Micanopy and Khozalite, all recent second-start graduates, and Patrick Biancone-trained Squire, a stakes-placed son of Leinster who will return to dirt after a subpar showing on turf in the Hollywood Beach, have also been entered in the Affirmed. The Susan’s Girl is carded as Race 8, while the Affirmed is carded as Race 11 on next Saturday’s 12-race program. The $70,000 Mr. Jordan, a mile overnight handicap for 3-year-olds and up that is carded as Race 10, drew a highly competitive field of nine, including Sam Wilensky-trained Lure Him In, Bobby DiBona-trained Steal Sunshine, Joe Orseno-trained Hades, Patrick Biancone-trained Classic of Course and Jose Castro-trained Lightning Tones.
Richard Kent isn’t one to lean on hyperbole when discussing the plethora of horses who have come through his care. But in the moments after a filly fittingly bearing the name of Expectations exited the Ocala Breeders’ Sales Company ring during the opening session of the October Yearling Sale, the longtime consignor put some lofty hopes on the youngster who headlined his Kaizen Sales consignment Tuesday. “I sold Serena Song’s as a yearling and this filly has that kind of class,” Kent said. “That’s big words.” It remains to be seen if Hip 177 can come close to delivering in the manner of the Hall of Famer Kent sold during his tenure at Bridlewood Farm. During the first day of action at the two-day October exercise, however, the bay filly by Mo Donegal ended the day out front when she brought $240,000 from bloodstock agent Christophe Nouvellet on behalf of Dream With Me Florida to top the session. Bred by Peter E. Blum Thoroughbreds, the bay filly has the pedigree to back up her elegant looks as she is out of the Speightstown mare On the Good List, a half-sister to Gr. 1 winner Dunbar Road. The female family is rich in success with Gr. 1 winner Secret Status, multiple graded stakes-winner Private Mission, and graded winner Alumni Hall also on the page. Since arriving on the sale grounds, Kent stated the filly did nothing but signal a high level of quality in her own right. “The price was excellent. The filly justified the price,” Kent said. “She was just a super star all week. She’d been scoped eight times and showed herself just brilliantly over 100 times. She’s a very classy filly. We had all the players in town bidding on her.” Nouvellet, who recently purchased the 200-acre McKathan Brothers’ Farm in Citra, was the player who ultimately won out, saying the winning bid was above what he expected to pay, but nonetheless was willing to stretch to. “She’s a good physical and we’re going to hope for the best,” said Nouvellet. “She’s a good mover and I think on paper she has everything to succeed. We just like to buy good horses.” The Mo Donegal filly was one of four horses to reach the six-figure level during the opening session of the sale. The day’s trade ended on a high note as Hip 251, a bay colt by Jack Christopher, elicited a final bid of $200,000 from DiBello Racing Stables. Consigned by Beth Bayer, the colt is out of the Hard Spun mare Madelyn’s Magic, who is a half-sister to graded stakes-winners Totally Boss and Super Steed. “We had been waiting all day for him to come up,” Bayer said. “I love Jack Christopher as a new sire. All the ones we’ve seen have looked like athletes and (this colt) had a nice pedigree as well and a very good mind. He showed really well every single time.” Champion Corniche, a graduate of the 2021 OBS April Sale, and multiple graded stakes-winner Bucchero, who sold at the 2014 OBS June exercise, again made their mark in the pavilion as they were responsible for two of the six-figure lots. HIP 48, a bay colt by Corniche out of the Take Charge Indy mare Mollyball, sold to MJB Stable for $200,000 while Hip 1, a daughter of Bucchero, got the sale off to a quick start when she hammered for $110,000 to Thorostock’s Nick Sallusto. Named Mr. Predicted, the Corniche colt is a half-brother to stakes-placed Lawyer Mason and hails from the female family of graded stakes-winners Adriano and Strike Power. He was consigned by his breeder, Edisley Soler, who is selling for the first time under the Soler & Soler Thoroughbred Corp. banner. “I thought he was going to bring more, that’s a good horse,” Soler said. “I raised him, he’s been my baby. I liked everything about him, he’s just a really nice colt.” Like her sire, Hip 1 wasted little time making a strong impression as she kicked off the day’s selling and set the tone for her connections. Consigned by Kaizen Sales and bred by Rivermont Farm, the chestnut filly is out of the winning Greatness mare Dagney’s Revenge and hails from the female family of graded stakes-winners Seeking Slew and Canadian Frontier.
“She was just a real quality filly. Many people told us she was the best filly on the grounds,” said Kent, who led all consignors on the day with 18 head sold for $605,000. “We were not coming in with that high of expectations but once we were here, she really sold herself and did all the work. She looked fabulous, behaved great. We showed her 100 times, and she did as well on the 100th time as she did on the first." Other top prices for the day included Hip 144, a bay filly by Vekoma consigned by Bobby Jones Equine, who sold for $95,000 to Dennis Campbell, and Hip 169, a bay colt by Epicenter consigned by Summerfield, who brought a final bid of $90,000 from Red Wings. Tuesday’s session produced year-over-year gains in gross, average, and median compared to 2024. A total of 146 head sold for gross receipts of $3,255,600, up from the $1,713,900 generated by 104 during the first session a year ago. The average improved from $16,480 in 2024 to $22,299 with the median coming in at $15,000 compared to $10,000 last year. Last year’s OBS October Yearling Sale had its sale sessions adjusted due to Hurricane Milton. The RNA rate for the session came in at 32.4 percent compared to 35.4 in 2024.
HALLANDALE BEACH - Multiple stakes-winning 8-year-old mare Choose Joy, unraced in 435 days, made a dramatic triumphant return by rallying from far back to edge Etrurian by a head in Friday’s feature at Gulfstream Park. Ridden by Miguel Vasquez for owner-trainer Steve Dwoskin, Choose Joy ($14.60) completed five furlongs on the all-weather Tapeta course in :55.93 seconds for her 10th win from 27 career starts. The optional claiming allowance for fillies and mares 3 and older was moved off the grass following overnight rain. “I’d rather it had been on the turf, but she’d had some good races on the Tapeta. I knew she was ready,” Dwoskin said. “She was fit, and she’s just a good horse.” Choose Joy was unhurried early, trailing all but one horse as Etrurian led her stablemate and narrow 2-1 favorite Beauty of the Sea through a quarter-mile in :21.53 seconds and a half in :43.76. Vasquez swung Choose Joy to the far outside leaving the far turn and they came with a steady run down the center of the stretch to catch Etrurian at the wire.
In a career marked by stops and starts, Choose Joy hasn’t raced since she was third as the favorite behind a pair of next-out winners in a five-furlong optional claimer on Gulfstream’s all-weather Tapeta last July 26. She now has been third or better in seven of eight tries over Tapeta, with three wins.
Dwoskin purchased Choose Joy for $35,000 at auction in 2019, and Friday’s $27,000 winner’s share of the purse pushed her career bankroll to $439,745.
“I’m very proud of her,” he said. “She keeps getting closer to half a million [dollars].” Rainbow 6 Solved Friday for $143,083 Jackpot Payout
The 20-cent Rainbow 6 was solved by one lucky bettor for a $143,083.80 jackpot payout Friday.
The last multiple mandatory payouts of $8,569.28 came on Sept. 14, and the multi-race wager had gone unsolved for five racing days.
Joey Platts’ Call Me Angel ($13.40), ridden by Elijah Greenidge, captured Race 10 finale to complete the winning 2-7-3-3-3-8 combination. It was Ocala trainer Terry Oliver’s first win since April 10, 2011, also at Gulfstream
Despite a less-than-ideal break following a six-plus month layoff, Speedway Stables’ Cavalieri (Nyquist-Stiffed, by Stephen Got Even) was unbothered as she remained unbeaten with a victory in the Gr. II, $200,000 Zenyatta Stakes going 1 1/16 miles at Santa Anita Park to lead the slate of stakes-winning OBS grads for the week. After hopping at the start and trailing the field, Cavalieri improved to 5-for-5 for trainer Bob Baffert while also earning a fees-paid berth to the $2 million Breeders’ Cup Distaff at Del Mar. It was Cavalieri’s first start since winning the Gr. I Beholder Mile in March at Santa Anita.
“She is just so talented, the further the better for her,” Baffert said. A 4-year-old daughter of Nyquist, Cavalieri was purchased by Peter Fluor’s Speedway Stables for $900,000 from the Wavertree Stables consignment at the 2023 OBS April Sale after she breezed in :20 2/5. At Aqueduct, R. Lee Lewis’s Gun Song (Gun Runner – Nicole H, by Mr. Greeley) overtook Gr. 1 winner Randomized and powered away to a score in the Gr. II, $250,000 Beldame Stakes. By winning the Beldame, part of the Breeders' Cup Dirt Dozen series for the $2 million Breeders' Cup Distaff in November at Del Mar, Gun Song receives a credit of $30,000 toward entry fees for the Distaff. Trained by Mark Hennig, the 4-year-old daughter of Gun Runner enjoyed a tremendous sophomore season that included a win in the Gr. II Black-Eyed Susan at Pimlico Race Course. Gun Song was purchased by her owner for $400,000 at the 2023 OBS March Sale out of the de Meric Sales consignment after breezing in :10 1/5. Also at Aqueduct, George Mellon’s Patriot Spirit (Constitution- Mistical Plan, by Game Plan) power away late to post a 1 1/2-length score in the Gr. III, $200,000 Vosburgh Stakes, earning himself a fees paid berth to the Breeders’ Cup Sprint at Del Mar. Trained by Michael Campbell, the 4-year-old Constitution colt was purchased by George Mellon for $235,000 out of the Clary Bloodstock consignment at the 2023 OBS March Sale after breezing in :10 flat. At Santa Anita Park, Innovative (Complexity-Lantiz, by Tizway) roared through the stretch to win Saturday’s Gr. III, $100,000 John C. Harris Stakes on the hillside turf course. Innovative prevailed by a neck over Lee’s Baby Girl with another half-length back to morning line favorite and fellow OBS grad Warming in third. Trained by Phil D’Amato, the daughter of Complexity is owned by Little Red Feather Racing and Sterling Stables. She was purchased by Little Red Feather Racing for $230,000 at the 2024 OBS April Sale from the consignment of Longoria Training & Sales after breezing in :9 4/5. At Gulfstream Park, rising star Lennilu (Leinster – Lulu’s Pom Pom, by Pomeroy) booked her ticket to Del Mar for the $1 million Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint by capturing her third stakes victory in the $75,000 Hollywood Beach. Owned by Amy Dunne, Cailtin Dunne, Brenda Miley, Jean Wilkinson, Hoffman Family Racing, Tranquility Lake Farms, Maury Hamilton and Christopher Harrington, the daughter of Leinster was making her return to turf after prevailing by a nose in the $100,000 Desert Vixen. Trained by Patrick Biancone, Lennilu was purchased by Glencrest Farm for $23,000 from the Abbie Road Farm consignment at the 2024 OBS Winter Mixed Sale. At Remington Park, trainer Danny Pish sent out Essential Time (Essential Quality-Twilight Curfew, by Twirling Candy) to victory in the $150,000 Clever Trevor Stakes. Owned by Duffy’s Racing Stable and Heider Racing Stables, Essential Time was bred by D. J. Stable and offered at the 2025 OBS April Sale where he failed to meet his reserve after breezing in :10 1/5 from the consignment of 1880 Bloodstock. At Remington Park, Everything’s Cricket Racing’s Sabalenka (Good Samaritan-Darling Daughter, by Maria’s Mon) won the $75,000 Ricks Memorial Stakes as she rallied from sixth place to gain the victory over fellow OBS grad Neom Beach. Trained by Joe Sharp, she won by 2 3/4 lengths in a time of 1:42.12 over the firm course. Sabalenka was purchased by Four Quarters at the 2022 OBS April Sale and for $35,000 from the Harris Training Center consignment after breezing in :10 1/5. So There She Was (Munnings-Risk Premium, by Take Charge Indy) highlighted the Remington Park card when she put away heavy favorite Lemon Zest to take the $200,000 Remington Park Oaks. The 3-year-old filly pocketed $120,000 for owners Great Friends Stables and Mark Davis of Vista, Calif. Trained by Doug O’Neill, she was purchased by Mark Davis for $100,000 at the 2024 OBS March Sale from the Gene Recio consignment after breezing in :10 1/5. Another winner on the Oklahoma Derby Day card was Paradise Farms, David Staudacher, Gata Racing Stable and Turman Racing’s Woodstock (Yaupon-Hot Hippie, by Medaglia d’Oro) who captured the $50,000 E. L. Gaylord Memorial. The filly, trained by Michael Maker, was purchased by Maker from this year’s OBS March Sale for $100,000 from the Global Thoroughbreds consignment after breezing in :10 2/5.
HALLANDALE BEACH - Amanda Hernandez’s Willow Case came with a steady drive through the stretch to reel in favored Vita Mia and edge clear by three-quarters of a length to extend her win streak to three races in Friday’s $75,000 Hallandale Beach at Gulfstream Park.
Named for the city that Gulfstream has called home since it opened in 1939, the Hallandale Beach for 2-year-old fillies going a one-turn mile headlined a nine-race program to kick off September’s final weekend of the Sunshine Meet.
Ridden by Leonel Reyes for trainer Ramon Minguet, Willow Case ($8) covered a fast main track in 1:38.01 to win her second consecutive stakes following Gulfstream’s six-furlong Sharp Susan Aug. 9.
“I was very confident because she is a very professional, very focused filly,” Minguet said. “I thought that running a mile it would fit her very well. I think the longer distance is better for her than the short distance.”
Reyes had Willow Case positioned in fourth as 45-1 longshot Triple Threat led along the rail through a quarter-mile in 24.02 seconds with Sharp Susan runner-up Tessellate between horses in second and Sept. 6 maiden winner Vita Mia cruising three wide in third. Tessellate inherited the lead pressed to her outside by Vita Mia when Triple Threat began to drop back after a half in 47.19.
“This filly ran beautifully,” Reyes said. “It was the plan to sit behind the speed. I was behind two or three horses and at the eighth pole, I took her out and she finished good.” Reyes tipped Willow Case to the far outside approaching the stretch and, after Vita Mia put away Tessellate, the bay daughter of Neolithic continued to gain ground with every stride before moving up on even terms past the sixteenth pole and galloping past the wire.
“That was the plan, to stalk the pace behind the speed horses. She was running well and I was happy with her position. She closed the way I expected,” Minguet said. “In the last half-furlong I got a little worried, but at the end she responded.”
Vita Mia was second, followed by Tessellate, Dakota’s Lil Auror, That Police – who stumbled badly out of the starting gate – and Triple Threat. Reyes was encouraged with the way Willow Case galloped out in what was her fourth career race and first at a route of ground. “I think she can get more distance – a mile, a mile and an eighth, a mile and a sixteenth,” he said. “That will be OK for her.” Willow Case went off a 30-1 longshot when she ran a distant fourth behind subsequent Grade 3 winner Mythical in debut April 17, returning two weeks later to graduate by a neck at 14-1 odds going the same 4 ½-furlong distance. She went unraced until the Sharp Susan, which she won in a 27-1 upset. Friday she was the third choice in a field of six at 3-1. “We’ll see how she comes back to the barn. It’s been working for her to give her some time between races, four weeks to six weeks, and she responds to that,” Minguet said. “We’ll see in a few weeks what it looks like.
HALLANDALE BEACH - The Leinster Hollywood Beach, indeed. The nine-horse field for Saturday’s $75,000 Leinster Hollywood Beach at Gulfstream Park features three very promising offspring of red-hot freshman sire Leinster – multiple stakes-winner Lennilu, as well as stakes-placed Squire and Monster. Patrick Biancone-trained Lennilu is scheduled to make a highly anticipated return to turf in the five-furlong test for 2-year-olds after prevailing by a nose in the $100,000 Desert Vixen, the six-furlong first leg of the Florida Sire Stakes series for fillies on Gulfstream’s main track. After rallying to win her 4 ½-furlong debut over a sloppy Keeneland main track on April 6, Lennilu made a highly successful transition to turf with a 3 ¾-length front-running victory in the $100,000 Royal Palm Juvenile Fillies at five furlongs at Gulfstream on May 10, earning a fees-paid berth into one of six stakes during the Royal Ascot Meet. She went on to finish third in the five-furlong, Gr. II Queen Mary before capturing the Desert Vixen. “She’s good. She has the attitude of a good horse,” Biancone said. “She doesn’t want to get beat.” The Hollywood Beach will be Lennilu’s final prep for the $1 million Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint at Del Mar on Oct. 31, as long as the race remains on turf. “If it comes off the turf, Lennilu will run the following weekend in Kentucky,” Biancone said. Lennilu, rated second at 2-1 on the Hollywood Beach morning line, is nominated to the $300,000 Indian Summer, a 5 ½-furlong turf event at Keeneland on Sunday, Oct. 5. Jonathan Ocasio has the return mount on Lennilu, who is owned by Amy Dunne, Caitlin Dunne, Brenda Miley, Jean Wilkinson, Hoffman Family Racing, Tranquility Lake Farms, Maury Hamilton and Christopher Harrington. Amy Dunne and Biancone are also well represented by Squire in the Hollywood Beach field. Squire, like Lennilu, has demonstrated versatility in his brief career. The 2-year-old gelding overcame bumping at the start of his 4 ½-furlong debut to win by a head at Gulfstream. He returned on turf to finish second in the $100,000 Royal Palm Juvenile behind Sandal’s Song, who went on to finish third in the Gr. II Norfolk at Royal Ascot. Squire finished fifth on dirt last time out following a less-than-ideal trip in the $100,000 Dr. Fager, the six-furlong first leg if the FFS series. Dalila Rivera has the call on Squire, who is rated third at 9-2. Arindel’s Monster, who finished fourth and fifth in his first two career starts in Kentucky, demonstrated a distinct preference for turf while scoring a nine-length front-running victory in a five-furlong maiden special weight at Gulfstream. “He really likes the turf, and he really likes the turf here,” trainer Jose D’Angelo said. “It’s not soft ground, and he really likes that.” Monster, who is favored at 9-5 on the Leinster Hollywood Beach morning line, set the pace in the 5 ½-length Skidmore on turf at Saratoga before settling for a second behind Bobrovsky, a highly- regarded Dale Romans-trained son of Daredevil. Monster’s performance in the Hollywood Beach will dictate his next start. “I’d like to go to the Breeders’ Cup,” D’Angelo said. Edgard Zayas, who was aboard Monster for his sensational maiden-breaker, returns to the saddle for the Leinster Hollywood Beach. Squire, Lennilu and Monster, all Florida-breds, will break from the three outside post positions – 7, 8 and 9, respectively.
“I like his post,” D’Angelo said. “We have to go.”
Leinster, a Rusty Arnold-trained son of Majestic Warrior, closed out his racing career with a victory in the 2021 Gr. III Gulfstream Park Turf Sprint Stakes before entering stud duty at Pleasant Acres Stallions in Ocala. D’Angelo is also represented in the Hollywood Beach field by Fugget About It Racing Stables’ Itza Lock, a gelded son of Silver State who is coming off a front-running 3 ½-length maiden romp at Gulfstream in his second career start in a five-furlong maiden special weight on Tapeta. “He is really improving. That’s why I’m giving him a chance in the stakes,” D’Angelo said. Samy Camacho is scheduled to ride Itza Lock for the first time Saturday.
Daugherty Racing’s Win N Juice, a Florida-bred son of Win Win Win, figures to make his presence felt in the Hollywood Beach. After finishing sixth in his debut in the Royal Palm Juvenile, he graduated at five furlongs on turf at Gulfstream and finished second behind Hey Nay Nay in the Tyro at five furlongs on turf at Monmouth. Undefeated Hey Nay Nay went on to win the Gr. III Del Mar Juvenile Turf. The Nolan Ramsey trainee failed to menace in the Juvenile Sprint at Kentucky Downs in his most recent start.
Ramsey is also scheduled to saddle Robert Proulx’s Street Player, who is set to make his first start on turf after breaking his maiden at Gulfstream in his second career start and finishing off the board in a pair of stakes.
Miguel Vasquez has the call on Win N Juice, while Yolber Torres has the mount on Street Player.
Candido Vargas and Darinel Arguela’s The Princess Bro, a daughter of Win Win Win trained by Kevin McKathan, and Leon Ellman, Glassman Racing and Laurie Plesa’s Timeless Victory, a son of By My Standards trained by Eddie Plesa Jr., are slated to make their respective stakes debuts coming off debut maiden special weight victories. Trainer Daniel Hurtak’s Zevi’s Zone, a son of Uncle Chuck who graduated first off the claim in a $35,000 maiden claimer at five furlongs on Tapeta, rounds out the field.
HALLANDALE BEACH - Joe Bravo turned 54 during the three months he was sidelined with a broken right pinky finger, giving the journeyman rider with more than 5,700 career victories a brief glimpse into retirement. Suffice it to say, it wasn’t for him. At least not yet. “I could retire tomorrow, yes, but if you wake up and you have no purpose, it’s kind of tough,” Bravo said. “For the last quite a few years now, I’ve not tried to ride a lot of races. I want to kind of hold on to my job. By not riding a lot of races, I think I can keep my job going a lot longer. “Every day you go out, especially here at Gulfstream Park, you’ve got these maiden special weight races that come out and you never know who’s going to come out of here. I remember going back to a thing like Curlin coming down the stretch in his maiden victory. That horse was coming down the middle of the racetrack. Nobody knew who he was … and it was tomorrow’s superstar. I’m kind of hoping to team up with one of those again.” Bravo is named on Fausto Gutierrez-trained 3-year-old colt Rashid in Race 7 Friday at Gulfstream, a claiming event for 3-year-olds and up scheduled for one mile on the turf. They are rated at 4-1 on the morning line, third choice in a field of seven. On Saturday, Bravo is named to ride stakes winner Big Data for trainer Michael Lerman in the $70,000 Duke of Mischief overnight handicap and Gutierrez’s Show Off in the $75,000 Ginger Punch Handicap on the undercard of the $200,000 Princess Rooney (G3), a ‘Win and You’re In’ qualifier for the Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Sprint (G1). “I was off three months so it took me like two weeks I was getting on horses. I’m going to take another two weeks here at Gulfstream before I start,” Bravo said. “I only ride one race [Friday]. I want to see how it all goes. I ride two on Saturday, both stakes races. I like that. Stakes are good. “It’s all going to be touch and feel,” he added. “To be honest, in the back of my head I’m thinking, ‘I carry a stick.’ I broke my little pinky so when I go to hit, it’s going to be pretty interesting. That’s like the only question, physically, I have. It seems like, ‘it’s just a pinky,’ but that little pinky kept me out all summer.” Bravo, whose 5,719th and latest victory came June 6 at Churchill Downs, has not ridden since June 13 at Gulfstream when he was hurt following Special Aviator’s fourth-place finish as the favorite in one-mile optional claiming allowance on the grass. A seemingly minor incident turned into an unplanned summer holiday. “Everybody’s asking, ‘What happened? Where’s Joe been all summer long?’ You don’t really hear [about] it because it was pulling up after a race. I was galloping a horse out, and this game is so dangerous,” Bravo said. “It was one of those things where you don’t think you’d get injured. All of a sudden the horse stopped and she decided to go the other direction. I came off and when I went, I tried to brace myself. “They ended up having to do surgery. They put a screw in it, so all summer long I’ve been on vacation. It was kind of a nice time to step back from racing, but then I looked outside the racing world and said, ‘What [have] I miss[ed]?’ It seemed like every trip I did it was Saratoga, Del Mar, Monmouth Park. I missed racing. I was born 5-[foot]-2 for a reason. I was born for this stuff. I’m a jockey. What do you do on vacation? I visit racetracks.” Though diligent in his recovery, Bravo got a quick reminder of the demands riders face on a daily basis once he returned to the irons to gallop during morning workouts. “The first day I got o horses, I was so sore,” he said. “That was the biggest frustration for me. Ever since the surgery on the hand, I had hand physical therapy but then I was lucky enough on the off days – it was like a seven-days-a-week process – of doing personal training, too. So I kept myself halfway in shape like that, but there’s nothing like being back on a horse. “You’ve got get your timing back and you’ve got to take baby steps. When the doctor releases you, you can’t just go do it,” Bravo added. “You’ve got to do the gym to get basic [fitness], you’ve got to get the fitness on a horse, but then you’ve got to get your timing down. Turning for home, throwing the cross and getting after them. It’s a baby-step process.” The son and grandson of jockeys, Bravo rode his first race March 6, 1988 at Calder Race Course, where his first winner came 11 days later. A 13-time meet leader at Monmouth, mere miles from where he was born in Long Branch, N.J., ‘Jersey Joe’ ranks ninth among active riders in victories and 26th overall. He has earned more than $204 million in purses from 32,035 mounts. “Everyone says, ‘Joe, how did you almost win 6,000 races?’ Well, when I was younger I was a little bit more ambitious,” Bravo laughed. “I feel really bad for the younger riders coming up these days, because there’s not as much opportunity just because there’s not as much racing going on. I was blessed when I came up. I was riding day and night. Atlantic City, Philadelphia, Garden State Parkway ran at night, Meadowlands ran at night. Many times I’d ride at Belmont [Park] during the day, go over and ride Meadowlands at night, sleep in Manhattan and go do it again.”
During his down time this summer, when not working out or rehabbing Bravo did some television analysis during the Haskell (G1) program at Monmouth and also attended the prestigious yearling sales in Saratoga Springs, N.Y. “Having the summer off, it gave me the chance to think, ‘What am I going to do the day that I can’t ride any races?’ I did dabble in a little bit of commentating and stuff like that, but another kind of passion that I thought about and I would love to try to get into is bloodstock,” Bravo said. “I went to all the sales at Saratoga and everything. Looking at horses and how they develop, it’s kind of what I’ve been doing every day for 30 plus years. “When I look at a horse I kind of look at what they could kind of develop into. It’s something I’d like to dabble with,” he added. “If I could kind of mingle that in with commentary and do some bloodstock … I don’t think I could ever walk away from horse racing. Horse racing’s pretty fun. Every day you don’t know what to expect.” Winner of the 2019 Breeders’ Cup Distaff (G1) with Blue Prize and third in the 2014 Kentucky Derby (G1) aboard Danza whose first Grade 1 win came on Formal Gold in the former Donn Handicap at Gulfstream, Bravo isn’t thinking about reaching 6,000 wins or any other career milestones. “All I can do is worry about trying my best on the next horse I ride,” he said. “Hopefully we have a couple more years left to enjoy this game. You can’t put a number on anything. You never know what’s going to happen. This is a crazy world. Be appreciative of what you’ve got around you at the moment. Everything else is cherry."
David S. Romanik’s Argos (Nyquist - Athenian (IRE), by Acclamation (GB)) became a top-level winner and earned a fees-paid berth in the $1 million Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Turf (G1) when he notched a thrilling victory in the $500,000 Summer Stakes (G1) at Woodbine Sept. 13, headlining the group of stakes-winning OBS graduates for the week.
Argos, trained by Riley Mott, was making his third career start in the Summer after winning his debut over 5 ½ furlongs on the Ellis Park turf in July, and then finishing third in the Soaring Free Stakes at Woodbine Aug. 16. The bay son of Nyquist was a $165,000 purchase by Romanik at this year’s OBS March Sale from the Majestic consignment after breezing in :20 3/5. “This horse breezed at OBS in :30.4 and the only other horse I’ve ever owned who did that ran in the Breeders’ Cup in 1989, so thought I had something special,” Romanik said. “We thought he was this caliber.” Saturday’s Woodbine card produced another OBS highlight as Caitlinhergrtness (Omaha Beach – Belatrix, by Giant’s Causeway), named after WNBA superstar Caitlin Clark, got herself back in the winner’s circle with a victory in the $150,000 Ontario Matron Stakes (G3). It was the fifth win from 14 starts for the chestnut filly, who was named Canada’s champion 3-year-old female. Owned by WinStar Farm LLC, last year’s King’s Plate winner, trained by Kevin Attard, was consigned by Off the Hook to the 2023 OBS Spring Sale where she sold for $375,000 after breezing in :10 flat. At Churchill Downs Sept. 13, Khrysselv Mavarez’s Leon King Stable Corp.’s Bentornato (Valiant Minister-Her Special Way, by Put It Back), who was making his first start since his narrow loss to Straight No Chaser in last year’s $2 million Breeders’ Cup Sprint (G1), dazzled in his 4-year-old debut when he drew of for a 5 ¼-length win in the $300,000 Louisville Thoroughbred Society Stakes. It was the fifth stakes win for the son of Valiant Minister, who is trained by Jose De’Angelo and boosted his career earnings to $1,282,180. Bentornato is a two-time OBS graduate, having been sold by Stuart Morris at the 2022 October Yearling Sale and then purchased by Champion Equine for $170,000 out of the Golden Rock Thoroughbreds consignment at the 2023 March Sale after breezing in :20 4/5. At Monmouth Park on Sept. 13, heavily favored Dripping Gold, (Lemon Drop Kid - Aurelia, by Danzig) trained by Shug McGaughey, surged late to win the $1000,000 Presious Passion by three-quarters of a length. Dripping Gold was purchased by West Point Thoroughbreds, which campaigns the gelding in partnership along with NBS Stable and Titletown Racing Stables, for $300,000 at the 2021 OBS March Sale from the consignment of Woodford Thoroughbreds after breezing in :10 1/5.
HALLANDALE BEACH - Amy Dunne and trainer Patrick Biancone’s Squire, who has shown talent on both dirt and turf in the first two starts of his career, will return to the main track Saturday for the $100,000 Dr. Fager at Gulfstream Park. The Dr. Fager, the six-furlong first leg of the 2025 Florida Sire Stakes series for 2-year-olds sired by accredited Florida stallions, will co-headline Saturday’s 11-race program with the $100,000 Desert Vixen for FSS-eligible 2-year-old fillies.
Squire has been installed at 8-5 in the morning line in a field of eight on the strength of a rallying victory in his April 18 debut at 4 ½ furlongs and a runner-up finish on turf in the $100,000 Royal Palm Juvenile, a mile turf stakes May 10 that offered the winner a fees-paid berth in a stakes during the Royal Ascot meeting in Great Britain. Sandal’s Song, who defeated Squire by 1 ½ lengths, went on to finish third in the June 19 Norfolk (G2).
“Squire is a very nice colt. He broke his maiden on dirt. The race was short for him, but he did it. Then he was a little bit too nervous when he ran in the stakes. He never settled. He was a pain in the butt to put in the gate,” Biancone said. “He went to the lead but didn’t finish. But at the end of the day, he ran a great race, because the winner nearly won the Norfolk at Ascot. He finished third.”
Squire, who has been gelded since his over-anxious second-place finish in the Royal Palm Juvenile, prepared for the Dr. Fager with a sharp three-furlong breeze from the gate in 35.70 seconds, the fastest of 22 works recorded at the distance Saturday at Palm Meadows, Gulfstream’s satellite training facility in Palm Beach County. “We decided to give him time when he didn’t go to Ascot. We sent him to the farm and he got rested and he was gelded. He put on some weight,” Biancone said. “We were going to give him a prep race a month ago, but the track was so [sloppy] that day, I decided to scratch him. So, we’ve trained him for this race. He’s ready to go.”
Jonathan Ocasio will ride the son of Leinster for the first time. The Ocasio/Biancone combination was highly successful during the Royal Palm Meet that came to a close Sunday, winning 11 of 30 races for a 36-percent strike rate.
Trainer Michael Yates, who saddled undefeated Rated by Merit for a sweep of the FSS series last year, will be represented by Fourth and Central, a homebred son of Cajun Breeze. Like Squire, Fourth and Central enters the Dr. Fager off a bullet workout. He breezed four furlongs in 46.85 seconds, the fastest of 53 workouts recorded at the distance at Gulfstream Aug. 23. “He does it well within himself.…It wasn’t like we asked him to work in a bullet,” Yates said. “He was in a set and was on the outside and his instructions were to just give company with the other horse and let him gallop out strong.” Fourth and Central, who captured his 4 ½-furlong career debut May 28 for Yates’ Shadybrook Farm, is coming off a troubled fifth in the Aug. 9 Proud Man a six-furlong stakes contested over a sloppy track. "I don’t think it was the slop that compromised him. He got away just a step slow from the gate and that was almost a little bit rushed after they outbroke him a little bit. And then he kind of ran up into a trap basically,” Yates said. “He got between horses, behind horses, and he had to check really had going into the turn. He had all rights to just pack it in then, then he made another run and there was a horse backing up in front of him in the middle of the turn. It was the pacesetter, just stopping in front of him, so he had to check again.” Yates expressed reservations about Fourth and Central’s far outside post position. “I don’t like the fact that there’s nobody outside of him because I’ve had so many horses that break from the outside, 2-year-olds, that duck out,” he said. “They give up a lot of ground when they do that, they don’t leave there running straight.” Marcos Meneses has the return mount on Fourth and Central, who is 8-1 on the morning line.
Tonchs Horses’ Camigol enters the Dr. Fager off a distant third-place finish in the Aug. 2 Saratoga Special (G2). The Antonio Sano-trained son of Neolithic finished second behind Fourth in Central in his 4 ½-furlong debut after being taken up in traffic shortly after the start. He came back to graduate by 5 ½ lengths in a 4 ½-furlong maiden special weight race June 26. Edwin Gonzalez, who was aboard Camigol for his first two starts, returns to the saddle the Dr. Fager. Camigol is 6-1 on the morning line.
Trainer Jose Pinchin, who saddled Three Rules for a 2016 FSS series sweep, will be represented by Trelawny in the Dr. Fager. The homebred son of Uncle Chuck, who is owned by Pinchin and Michael Bernard, debuted July 13 with a 3 ¾-length victory at the Dr. Fager distance of six furlongs. He came back to finish fourth in the Proud Man. Jose Morelos has the return call on Trelawny, who is rated second at 3-1 on the morning line.
Anthony Rogers and trainer Rohan Crichton’s All to Win will be the only other Dr. Fager starter to win at six furlongs. The son of Win Win Win enters the opening leg of the series coming off an eventful 1 ½-length debut victory Aug. 2. Emisael Jaramillo has the return call aboard All to Win, who is rated third at 4-1 on the morning line.
David Humphrey and Move Horse Inc.’s I’m Tuff Enough, The Equine Consulting’s Ristre and Stonehedge’s Jamalamadingdong round out the field.
HALLANDALE BEACH - More than 40 years ago, three-time Eclipse Award-winning owner and breeder Dan Lasater had an idea. Lasater sat down with Kenny Noe Jr., president of Calder Race Course, and suggested Calder play host to a three-pronged stakes series for 2-year-olds to promote the growing Florida breeding industry. Come Saturday, Lasater’s Florida Sire Stakes Series will celebrate its 44th running when Gulfstream Park plays host to the first leg of what is now the $1.2 million series. The 2-year-old series begins with the $100,000 Dr. Fager and Desert Vixen at six furlongs, continues with the $200,000 Affirmed and Susan’s Girl on Oct. 18 at seven furlongs, and concludes on Nov. 29, the opening weekend of the Championship Meet, with the $300,000 In Reality and My Dear Girl at 1 1/16 miles. The series has produced champions Holy Bull, Smile, Big Drama, Awesome Feather and Brave Raj along with other Gr. 1 winners Jackson Bend, Three Ringsand Mecke. Saturday’s $100,000 Dr. Fager drew a field of eight, including the likely favorite in Squire, co-owned and trained by Patrick Biancone. The gelded son of Leinster broke his maiden at first asking on the dirt going 4 ½ furlongs before finishing second on the turf in the Royal Palm Juvenile Stakes, a ‘Win and In’ for Royal Ascot. The gelding worked a ‘bullet’ three furlongs on Aug. 30 in :35 3/5 from the gate. Jonathan Ocasio is named to ride. Trainer Michael Yates, who swept the Sire Stakes last year with St. Elias Stable’s Rated by Merit, will saddle Fourth and Central. The Shadybrook Farm homebred son of Cajun Breeze won his debut at 4 ½ furlongs before finishing a troubled fifth in the Proud Man over a sloppy six-furlong track. Marcos Meneses will ride. Trainer Jose Pinchin will send out Trelawny, fourth in the Proud Man, while trainer Antonio Sano will saddle Camigol, a winner here at 4 ½ furlongs in his second start before finishing third in the Gr. II Saratoga Special. Edwin Gonzalez will ride. Emisael Jaramillo will ride All to Win, who won his only race at six furlongs here, while Edgard Zayas has been named on first-time starter Jamalamadingdong for trainer Jose D’Angelo. In the $100,000 Desert Vixen for fillies, Biancone has entered Lennilu, winner of the Royal Palm Juvenile Fillies and third in Royal Ascot’s Gr. II Queen Mary. Biancone could also run Lennilu in the $1 million Untapable at Kentucky Downs on Sunday, Sept. 7. If Lennilu heads to Kentucky, Yates could have the favorite in Finding Strength, a Khozan filly owned by LNJ Foxwoods and Church Street Stables. The filly finished third in her debut here before winning at 5 ½ furlongs by 4 ¼ lengths. Yates has entered Copper Creole, a daughter of Cajun Breeze who was third in her debut at five furlongs on the turf. Leading trainer Saffie Joseph Jr. has entered Love Like Lucy, a $300,000 daughter of Win Win Win who won her only start at six furlongs. Zayas will ride.
Saturday’s 11-race program will also include the $70,000 Mambo Meister, a mile turf event for 3-year-olds and up. The 11-horse field includes And Uwish, second in the Warrior’s Pride to Reef Runner, who was disqualified from victory Saturday in Del Mar’s Gr. III Green Flash, and Goes the Clown, who will be seeking his fourth consecutive victory.
In days gone by, the late great Jimmy Powers penned his well-read column "Nobody asked me but . ." in the New York Post and Daily News for decades. With apologies to Jimmy, here's my current version.
The NYRA betting platform uses 'Trackman' as its handicapper, with selections under every race at every track. The moron who masquerades as 'Trackman' writes 'a' whenever he's supposed to write 'an,' and 'an' whenever he's supposed to write 'a.' When he wants to say something like 'This filly is among the fastest out of the gate,' he writes 'with among.' Every time. And nobody edits his stuff.
The person who writes the graphics on the Major League Baseball telecasts always writes 'The Mets are 4 1/2 games behind 'Of' the Phillies. Of? Hard to believe.
Without a doubt, the TV graphics on the LIV Golf telecasts are the worst in sports history. Too small, confusing . . . whomever invented them should be demoted. Whomever approved them should be fired.
Without Tiger Woods, and the defection of so many popular players to LIV, the game just isn't the same. I have a hunch Tiger's getting ready to join the Champions. Turns 50 on Dec. 30.
The rectangles that show balls and strikes, and reveal how many pitches the umpires blow, should be used as the real McCoy, with the men upstairs in the booth making the correct calls, as they do with calls on the field. A bad 3 and 2 call as a strike instead of ball 4 has changed the complexion of too many games.
Putting a man on second to start extra-inning games is absurd. So is making a pitcher throw before he is ready. People paying $100 for a ticket on a Sunday afternoon aren't interested in leaving the park 20 minutes earlier.
Letting the TV announcers interview ballplayers who are out in the field during play is also absurd. Why any manager would allow it is hard to understand.
Subjecting Marion County viewers who buy Spectrum (and others) and are forced to watch the Jacksonville Jaguars every weekend is criminal. For the prices we pay, we should have Sunday Ticket for nothing, or at least a minimal fee.
If the Marion County police and sheriffs departments would station cars along highway 27 west of I-75, they would nab enough auto and motorcycle speeders to fund the city and county for years, along with saving many lives, and hospital visits. Too many 80-to-90 speeders, too many accidents.
OLDSMAR - Florida-bred horses will compete for an additional $1 million in purse money during the upcoming 2025-26 Tampa Bay Downs meet, the track’s 100th anniversary season.
The increase brings the total of additional purse money available for registered Sunshine State products to more than $2 million during the 90-day meet. The money will be allocated to all overnight races, with as much as an extra $21,000 (plus $2,000 in Florida Owner Awards) available for Florida-breds in maiden special weight and allowance races.
“We’re delighted this money has become available,” said Allison De Luca, the track’s Director of Racing and Racing Secretary. “It’s a significant boost for Florida-breds and should help (increase) entries.”
The money will be paid to all Florida-bred horses finishing first, second or third in overnight races on a 70-20-10-percent basis. Florida-breds will be running for $55,000-$56,500 in all maiden special weight and allowance races.
The 2025-26 meet is scheduled to begin Wednesday, Nov. 19 and run through Sunday, May 3. Stall applications are available online at www.tampabaydowns.com and are due by Sept. 15. The first condition book will be available at www.equibase.com on Wednesday.
Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners’ Velocity (Nyquist-Blast, by Harlan’s Holiday) stormed through the stretch at Del Mar to upset the field in the Gr. I, $300,000 Del Mar Oaks, earning her first graded stakes victory and leading the slate of stakes-winning OBS grads. The lightly-raced daughter of Nyquist proved a half-length best at the wire in what was only her fifth lifetime start, striking to the front inside the sixteenth pole and having enough in the tank to hold off the fast-closing Lush Lips and favored Thought Process. “She’s had a wonderful couple of weeks down here,” trainer Michael McCarthy said. “She was on her toes in a great way walking around the paddock, coming out through the tunnel. I liked everything I saw today.” Velocity was purchased by her owners for $75,000 from the Two Oaks Equine consignment at the 2024 OBS March Sale after breezing in :10 1/5. Earlier in the day, Al and Bill Ulwelling’s Mansetti (Collected-Gidget Girl, by Sky Mesa) delivered an upset of his own in the 166th running of The King’s Plate, the $1 million Canadian classic at Woodbine. Bred by Jungle Racing, Mansetti crossed the wire 2 ½ lengths in front under heady handling from rising star Pietro Moran and for champion trainer Kevin Attard.
“He showed a lot of talent from a young age, and I really thought he was going to be a good horse, but he just got so kind of keen and eager as a baby that you didn’t think he’d stretch out. Luckily for us, he matured nicely over the wintertime,” Attard said. Mansetti was a $40,000 purchase by his owners from the 2024 OBS April Sale from the Eddie Woods consignment after breezing in :20 4/5.
At Monmouth Park, Respect the Valley's Dazzling Dame (Girvin - Awesome Dama, by Corinthian) earned her second victory in as many starts when she captured the $100,000 Sorority Stakes by two lengths. Trained by Brittany Russell, the daughter of Girvin was purchased by her owners for $45,000 at the 2025 OBS March Sale from the Richardson Bloodstock consignment after breezing in :21 flat. She was previously sold to Tahoe Bloodstock from the Hare Hill Farm consignment for $65,000 at the 2024 OBS Winter Mixed Sale.
At Gulfstream Park, Blue Boy Racing and Matty Dan Racing’s Vincey Girl (Race Day-Gracious, by Elusive Quality) used a patient stalk-and-pounce trip to capture the $75,000 Sheer Drama Handicap. The 4-year-old daughter of Race Day earned her first stakes win. She was purchased by Pro Racing Stable for $40,000 from the On the Run Sales consignment at the 2023 OBS June Sale after breezing in : 21.
At Prairie Meadows, Sandeep Patel’s Ritzaphena (Lexitonian - Ritz And Glitz, by Desert Party) remained unbeaten in two starts and became the first stakes-winner for her sire when she rallied for a 1 1/4-length win the $100,000 Prairie Meadows Debutante. Trained by Jayde Gelner, Ritzaphena was purchased by Scott Gelner for $75,000 at the 2025 OBS April sale from the consignment of SGV Thoroughbreds after breezing in :10 1/5.
At Thistledown, Crown the Buckeye (Yaupon - Feisty Tomboy, by Unbridled's Song) powered to a 12 ¼-length victory in the $100,000 Cleveland Kindergarten Stakes. Owned by Paradise Farms Corp., David Staudacher and Hooties Racing, and trained by Mike Maker, the son of Yaupon was purchased by Sean S. Perl Bloodstock for $250,000 from the Grassroots Training & Sales consignment at the 2025 OBS April Sale after breezing in :10 flat.
Baoma Corp’s Himika (Curlin-Motivated Seller, by Into Mischief), the 1-5 favorite in a field of six fillies at Del Mar, made a successful step up in class when she captured the six-furlong, $150,500, Gr. III Sorrento Stakes by 4 1/4 lengths, becoming one of two OBS grads to earn graded victories over the weekend. The bay daughter of Curlin won her second race in as many starts, covering the distance in 1:10.61 for trainer Bob Baffert, who won the race for the ninth time. “She took care of business in the stretch,” jockey Juan Hernandez said. She was purchased by her owners for $900,000 at this year’s OBS April Sale from the de Meric Sales consignment after breezing in :9 4/5. A day earlier at Del Mar, Pegram, Watson and Weitman’s Desert Gate (Omaha Beach-Theogony, by Curlin) cruised to an 8 ¾ length victory in $150,000, Gr. III Best Pal Stakes over a field of five. Like Himika, the colt was handled by the meet’s leading rider, Juan Hernandez, and gave trainer Bob Baffert his 12th victory in the race. Desert Gate had scored by 2 ¼ lengths in his racing debut in June at Santa Anita. “It’s nice to see these horses develop like this,” Baffert told Del Mar publicity. Gate was purchased by his owners for $260,000 at the 2025 OBS March Sale from the Navas Equine consignment after breezing in :9 4/5. Other OBS grads who earned stakes wins during the week included Green With MV Stable’s Diciassette (Mitole-Im a Dixie Diva, by Henny Hughes), who accelerated through the lane to go on to a one-length victory in Saturday’s $75,000 Proud Man at Gulfstream Park. Trained by Patrick Biancone, Diciassette was making his second career start. Fellow OBS grad Khon Han, who broke last and trailed the field in the early stages, made a dramatic late run to be second, two lengths ahead of another OBS grad in Wine Candy. A son of Mitole, Diciassette was purchased for $34,000 by Superfine from the Abbie Road Farm at the 2024 OBS October Yearling Sale. At Colonial Downs, JR Ranch and MyRacehorse’s Reputation (Bolt d’Oro-Final Reward, by Arch) captured the $100,000 Tyson Gilpin Stakes by 6 ¾ lengths. Trained by Gustavo Delgado, Reputation bested a field that saw fellow OBS grad G W’s Girl finish third. Reputation was purchased by de Meric Sales for $135,000 from the Kaizen Sales consignment at the 2023 OBS October Yearling Sale. At Canterbury Park, Valene Farms’ Carson Bay (Midshipman - Karakorum Fugitive, by Ten Most Wanted) captured the $75,000 Minnesota Oaks, setting all the fractions before drawing away to win by 5 1/2 lengths. Trained by Gary Scherer, Carson Bay was purchased for $70,000 by Murray Valene at the 2024 OBS March Sale from the consignment of Niall Brennan Stables after galloping during the under-tack show.
At Assiniboia on Aug. 4, Attack (Munnings - Ammannati (Ire), by Galileo (Ire)) earned the win in the $125,750 Manitoba Derby after heavy favorite Take Charge Tom, who crossed the finish line first, was disqualified for interference shortly after leaving the gate, as a result of four different claims of foul, two by jockeys and two by trainers. The son of Munnings is trained by Craig Robert Smith and owned by a partnership that includes Highfield Investment Group, Inc., Dialed In Racing Stable, Bruce Appleyard, Jamie Graham, Lucky Diamonds Racing, Smokin Guns Stable, James and Robert Bauder, and John and Leslie O’Neill. Attack was purchased for $300,000 at the 2024 OBS March Sale by D. J. Stable from the Ocala Stud consignment after breezing in :21 2/5. At Hastings, Peter Redekop’s Avana (Vino Rosso-Revealing Moment by After Market) drew clear late for the victory in the $50,000 BC Cup Distaff Handicap for trainer Barbara Heads. She was purchased by Mike Ryan, agent, for $150,000 at the 2023 OBS March Sale from consignor Cary Frommer after breezing in :10 2/5.
HALLANDALE BEACH - A pair of upcoming Group 1 turf stakes at Goodwood Racecourse in England will earn the winners an automatic berth on the 2026 Pegasus World Cup Day program January 24 at Gulfstream Park. The one-mile Visit Qatar Sussex Stakes for 3-year-olds and up July 30 will serve as a qualifier for the $1 million Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational (G1), while the 1 ¼-mile Visit Qatar Nassau Stakes for fillies and mares 3 and older is a qualifier for the $500,000 Pegasus Filly & Mare Turf Invitational (G2). Held in late January on a card headlined by the $3 million Pegasus World Cup Invitational (G1) for older horses on dirt, the Pegasus Turf is contested at 1 1/8 miles and the Pegasus Filly & Mare Turf run at 1 1/16 miles. Among 26 entries for the Sussex is millionaire Carl Spackler, a winner of eight of 12 races in the U.S. including three Grade 1 stakes before being sold privately to China’s Yulong Investments to race overseas. Carl Spackler made his first two career starts at Gulfstream, the second a maiden triumph in February 2023. He was sixth in the June 17 Queen Anne Stakes (G1) in his European debut. The Nassau drew 22 horses including Crimson Advocate, who parlayed a win in Gulfstream’s 2023 Royal Palm Juvenile Fillies to a next-out triumph in the Queen Mary Stakes (G2) at Royal Ascot. She has remained in Europe since returning to Royal Ascot last summer, winning the Conqueror Stakes May 3 at Goodwood and most recently finishing third in the Falmouth Stakes (G1) July 11 at Newmarket. European-based horses have made their mark in the Pegasus Turf since its debut in 2019. Magic Wand ran second in both 2019 and 2020 before Warm Heart captured the 2024 edition in a track-record time of 1:44.45 in the finale of her esteemed career. Both Irish-bred mares were facing males for trainer by Aidan O’Brien. Connections Weigh Options for G2-Placed Anna’s Promise Bell Racing’s Gulfstream Park Oaks (G2) runner-up Anna’s Promise, scratched as the program favorite from the July 12 Azalea, is being brought along slowly as trainer Carlos David seeks the next spot for his star 3-year-old filly. Claimed out of a Feb. 5 maiden win at Gulfstream, Anna’s Promise has worked twice since her most recent start, when she was third of four horses behind Grade 1-placed Take Charge Milady and 2024 champion 2-year-old filly champion Immersive in the 1 1/16-mile Monomoy Girl June 14 at Churchill Downs. Most recently, Anna’s Promise went a half mile in 49.10 seconds July 6 on the main track at Palm Meadows, Gulfstream’s satellite training facility in Palm Beach County. David opted to give her some more time before breezing her back this weekend. She worked the week before [the Azalea] and I didn’t like the way she came out of it,” he said. “She left some feed and she wasn’t 100 percent, so we took a step back. It was the right thing to do. She’s doing good now.” Bell Racing’s William Belford spent $50,000 to claim Anna’s Promise after she finished second twice in five prior starts. She stretched out to two turns to win a March 6 optional claiming allowance next time out and earn her a shot in the Gulfstream Park Oaks, where she ran behind front-running Five G.
From there Anna’s Promise took on the country’s best in the Kentucky Oaks (G1), running fifth at odds of 29-1 as millionaire Good Cheer extended her unbeaten streak to seven races. Among the horses finishing behind Anna’s Promise were multiple graded-stakes winners La Cara and Quietside; Grade 1-placed subsequent Iowa Oaks winner Quickick; Virginia and next-out Delaware Oaks (G3) winner Fondly; Gazelle (G3) winner Ballerina d’Oro; Take Charge Milady and Fantasy (G2) runner-up Simply Joking.
“She ran a respectable race,” David said. “It was definitely a great experience. I was there with my family and we had a great time. The owners were happy to be there, so it was all good.” Anna’s Promise stayed in Kentucky for the Monomoy Girl, finding herself on the lead through six furlongs in 1:12.10 until being overtaken by the top two entering the stretch and tiring through the lane under jockey Luis Saez, who had been up for both her allowance win and the Gulfstream Park Oaks. “The last race it was a four-horse field and I felt like Luis just kind of forgot there was only four horses and when they loaded the fourth horse, he was still getting ready when they opened the doors,” David said. “She missed the break a little bit and kind of rushed up and ended up getting tired at the end. She’s good. She’ll be back.” David has nothing picked out yet for Anna’s Promise but is keeping an eye on the calendar. David entered her in a Thursday allowance at Parx that serves as a prep for the one-mile, 70-yard Cathryn Sophia there Aug. 19, but said he was unlikely to run. A strong possibility is the seven-furlong Audubon Oaks Aug. 10 at Ellis Park, David said. Among other upcoming spots are the Test (G1) Aug. 2 at Saratoga and Charles Town Oaks (G2) Aug. 22, both also at seven furlongs, and six-furlong Prioress (G2) Aug. 30 at Saratoga. “We’ve been trying to look at our options. It’s kind of limited with 3-year-old fillies right now here,” David said. “We were thinking about running her [in the Azalea] and then going back up north, but that didn’t work out so now we have to go back to the drawing board. “There’s the Test in Saratoga but that’s a Grade 1 and it might be a little too tough for her,” he added. “I like her going seven-eighths, but there’s other options. Some of these tracks have those Oaks races around so we might go in one of those again.” Sovereignty in Jim Dandy (G2) Saturday, Next Mandatory Rainbow 6 Payout Aug. 3 Kentucky Derby (G1) and Belmont Stakes (G1) winner, Sovereignty, winner of the Fountain of Youth (G2) and second in the Florida Derby (G1) this winter, faces four others Saturday in Saratoga’s Jim Dandy (G2). Fans can watch and wager on all of Saratoga’s races at Gulfstream throughout the summer…The next mandatory payout of the 20-cent Rainbow 6 will be Sunday, Aug. 3…Gulfstream’s weekend begins with Edgard Zayas leading all jockeys with 80 wins. Emisael Jaramillo is 20 wins behind…Saffie Joseph Jr. leads all trainers with 43 wins. Jose D’Angelo is second with 36 and Carlos David is third with 34…Ken Ramsey is currently the leading owners with 11 victories, followed by Amaty Racing with 10 and Arindel with nine. Arindel is leading all owners in money won.
HALLANDALE BEACH - The $200,000, Gr. III Princess Rooney Invitational, a Breeders’ Cup ‘Win and You’re In’ event, will highlight the 2025 Sunshine Meet stakes schedule of 17 races worth $1.625 million in purses at Gulfstream Park. The seven-furlong stakes for fillies and mares, which offers the winner a fees-paid berth in the $1 million Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Sprint on Nov. 1 at Del Mar, will be renewed Sept. 20. Last year, Saffie Joseph Jr.-trained Soul of an Angel captured the Princess Rooney by 3 ¼ lengths before going on to rally from last to prevail in the seven-furlong Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Sprint by a half-length at Del Mar. Michael McCarthy-trained Ce Ce won the 2021 Princess Rooney before going on to score in the Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Sprint at Del Mar. Ce Ce returned to Gulfstream to win the 2022 Princess Rooney, but was unsuccessful in her defence of her Breeders’ Cup title at Keeneland. Both Soul of an Angel and Ce Ce were honored with the Champion Female Sprinter Eclipse Award after winning the Princess Rooney and Breeders’ Cup Filly & Mare Sprint. The stakes action for the Sunshine Meet (Sept. 5 through Nov. 23) will be kicked off by the first leg of the FTBOA Florida Sire Stakes series for 2-year-olds, Florida-breds. The $100,000 FSS Dr. Fager, a six-furlong sprint for 2-year-olds, and the $100,000 FSS Desert Vixen, a six-furlong dash for juvenile fillies, will be run on Sept. 6. FSS action will resume Oct. 18 with the $150,000 FSS Affirmed, a seven-furlong sprint for 2-year-olds, and the $150,000 FSS Susan’s Girl, a seven-furlong stakes for juvenile fillies.
The $100,000 Gil Campbell Memorial, a mile stakes for Florida-bred 3-year-olds and up, will also be featured on the Oct. 18 program. Campbell, the late president of the Florida Thoroughbred Breeders and Owners Association, owned Stonehedge Farm South in Williston, FL with his wife Marilyn, who is still very much active in breeding and owning Florida-breds. Seven stakes are scheduled to be conducted on a turf course that is currently undergoing renovation. The $75,000 Bob Umphrey Sprint, a five-furlong dash for 3-year-olds and up, and the $75,000 Ginger Punch, a mile stakes for fillies and mares, will kick off the turf stakes action on the Princess Rooney Invitational undercard on Sept. 20.