Wednesday, November 5, 2025
Most victories by OBS grads in single Cup . . .
    The 42nd edition of the Breeders’ Cup World Championships proved to be a banner affair for graduates of Ocala Breeders’ Sales Company auctions. Four OBS grads prevailed during the two-day event, the most victories ever posted by the company’s sale graduates in a single Breeders’ Cup.

    Swinbank Stables, Medallion Racing and Joey Platts et al.’s Cy Fair (Not This Time-Remarqued, by Arch), a graduate of the 2025 OBS April Sale, struck first when she scored a three-quarter-length victory in the $1 million Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint.

    Cy Fair became the second filly to win the race, joining Twilight Gleaming (IRE) in 2021, and gave trainer George Weaver his first Breeders’ Cup victory. 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.


    Saturday’s Breeders’ Cup card saw good things come in threes as Morplay Racing and Qatar Racing’s Shisospicy (Mitole – Mischief Galore, by Into Mischief) kicked off a trio of triumphs from OBS grads when she went to the front out of the gate and held the advantage all the way around to post a 2 ½-length victory in the $1 million Breeders’ Cup Turf Sprint. Trained by Jose D’Angelo, Shisospicy became the first 3-year-old filly to win the $1 million race. It was also the first victory in the World Championships for D’Angelo.

    The win improved Shisospicy’s earnings to $2,090,270 with a record of 9-6-1-1 that now includes three graded stakes victories. She was offered at the 2024 OBS April Sale by Hartley/DeRenzo Thoroughbreds where she was an RNA after breezing in :9 3/5.


    Another OBS grad wasted no time in giving D’Angelo his second Breeders’ Cup triumph as Leon King Stable Corp. and Julia and Michael Iavarone’s Bentornato (Valiant Minister-Her Special Way, by Put It Back), lived up to his role as the favorite in scoring a 2 ¼-length victory in the $2 million Breeders’ Cup Sprint.

    Bentornato increased his earnings to $2,322,180 and improved his record to 11-7-2-2. 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.


    Wrapping up the Breeders’ Cup glory was Baoma Corp.’s Nysos (Nyquist – Zetta Z, by Bernardini), a graduate of the 2023 OBS April Sale, who wore down stablemate Citizen Bull to post a head victory in $1 million Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile. The victory gave trainer Bob Baffert his 21st overall Breeders’ Cup win to put him in a tie with Aidan O’Brien for the most Breeders’ Cup victories all time.

    Nysos was purchased for $550,000 out of the Best A Luck Farm consignment by Donato Lanni, Agent for Baoma Corp at the 2023 OBS April Sale after breezing in :9 4/5. The victory was his sixth in seven starts and his first Gr. 1 triumph as he increased his earnings to $1,118,500.

    Other stakes-winning OBS grads during the week included Queen Maxima (Bucchero – Corfu Lady, by Corfu) getting back to her winning ways in taking the $200,000 Senator Ken Maddy Stakes  at Del Mar. Trained by Jeff Mullins, Queen Maxima is owned by Dutch Girl Holdings and Irving Ventures. Consigned by Blue River Bloodstock, the daughter of OBS graduate Bucchero was purchased by Michael Pender, agent, for $40,000 from the 2023 OBS June Sale after breezing in :20 3/5.

    The Oct. 31 card at Del Mar also saw Conducted (Mendelssohn-Marvelous Spot, by Archarcharch) take the lead and never look back in winning the $200,000 Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance Stakes by 1 ½ lengths for trainer O. J. Jauregui. Owned by Danny Eplin, Julia and Michael Iavarone, and Arthur Spencer, the Mendelssohn colt was purchased by Eplin at the 2025 OBS April Sale for $110,000 from the Hoppel consignment after breezing in :20 3/5.

    At Churchill Downs, Roll On Big Joe (Prospective – Nina’s Gift, by Victory Gallop) put away pacesetter Glengarry leaving the turn and drew away in the stretch to win the $269,500 Bet on Sunshine Stakes (Listed).

    Roll On Big Joe prevailed for trainer Bob Hess Jr. and owners Rancho Temescal (Tim Cohen), Rancho Temescal Thoroughbred Partners (Joseph Miller), White Fence (David Marabella) and Richard Hale Jr. He was purchased by Rancho Temescal for $90,000 at the 2022 OBS June sale from the Gayle Woods consignment after breezing in :10 flat.

    At Gulfstream Park, Ad Hoc Stable’s Crafty Collector (Collected-Craft Woods, by Declaration of War) rallied to register a 61-1 upset victory in the $75,000 Cellars Shiraz Stakes. The Gerald Bennett trainee earned her first stakes victory. She was purchased at the 2023 OBS Winter Mixed Sale by her owners for $15,000 from the CoCo’s Ranch consignment.
Monday, November 3, 2025
Nearly $1 million wagered . . .
    HALLANDALE BEACH - A mandatory payout of the 20-cent Rainbow 6 jackpot pool Sunday at Gulfstream Park yielded multiple $7,316 payoffs. A total of $950,462 was wagered on the Rainbow 6 Sunday, creating a total jackpot pool of $1,061, 733.

    The winning combination was 3-5-1-3-10-5.


    The Rainbow 6 will start anew when live racing at Gulfstream resumes with a nine-race card Friday. The sequence will span Races 4-9, featuring Mr Narcissistic’s return from a three-month freshening in the Race 8 feature, a five-furlong starter allowance on turf for 3-year-olds and up. The Saffie Joseph Jr.-trained 7-year-old gelding, who hasn’t finished out of the money in his last 15 races over a two-year period.  Edgard Zayas has the return mount.


    The Rainbow 6 sequence kicks off with a six-furlong maiden special weight for fillies and mares, featuring three well-connected first-time starters: Storm West, a 3-year-old daughter of West Coast trained by Saffie Joseph Jr.; Plum Perfect, a 4-year-old daughter of Triple Crown champion American Pharoah trained by Kent Sweezey; and Traviesa, a 3-year-old daughter of Speightstown trained by Hall of Famer Todd Pletcher.

Just a Photo Springs 14-1 Upset in Empire Builder Handicap

    Smith Ranch Stables’ Just a Photo came with a steady run down the center of the stretch and turned back a bid from Private Thoughts approaching the wire to spring a 14-1 upset in the $70,000 Empire Builder overnight handicap.

    Trained by Luis Ramirez and ridden by Marcos Meneses, his second victory on the afternoon, Just a Photo ($31.20) completed one mile over a firm turf course in 1:32.40 four weeks after running fourth behind Private Thoughts in Gulfstream’s Jet Propulsion, an overnight handicap going 1 1/16 miles.


    It was the speedy Prevent, breaking from Post 2 in a field of nine, who took the early initiative and went the opening quarter-mile in :23.50 seconds and a half in :45.72 under pressure on his outside from Act a Fool. Anamnestic saved ground in third inside Sherlock’s Jewel with Private Thoughts – riding a three-race win streak – settled in fourth.

    Act a Fool overtook Prevent leaving the far turn after a sharp six furlongs in 1:08.73, but had a wall of pursuers behind him once straightened for home. Private Thoughts was able to split horses and get in a challenging spot at the eighth pole but Just a Photo, swung to the far outside at the top of the stretch, powered home to win by a neck.

    Private Thoughts held second, with late-running Divin Propos, sent off the 7-5 favorite, nailing Relampago Verde by a head for third. They were followed by Act a Fool, Sherlock’s Jewel, Prevent, Tee At One and Anamnestic. 

    A gelded 5-year-old son of 2018 Triple Crown champion Justify, it was the fifth career win from 17 starts and first in a stakes for Just a Photo, who ran second in the May 17 Mr. Steele at Gulfstream and third in the Sept. 6 Colonial Cup at Colonial Downs.
Wednesday, October 29, 2025
Earned a spot via Gallant Bob victory . . .

    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.

Tuesday, October 28, 2025
Winning from sea to shining sea . . .
    Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners’ Warming (Global Campaign-Haute Style, by Unusual Heat) settled near the rear of the field and then shot through horses at the top of the stretch to win the Gr. III, $100,000 Autumn Miss Stakes on the turf at Santa Anita Park Oct. 26, leading the slate of stakes-winning OBS grads for the week.

    The Autumn Miss was the first graded stakes win for Warming, who bested second-place finisher and fellow OBS grad A Thousand Miles.

    “Around the quarter pole, the horse in front of me dropped out and I saw the opportunity to shoot in between them,” winning jockey Juan Hernandez told Santa Anita publicity. “I asked my filly to go in through that hole and she did it. She just kept accelerating to the wire.”

    Trained by Graham Motion, Warming was purchased by her owners at the 2024 OBS March Sale for $100,000 from the consignment of Blue Sapphire Stables after breezing in :10 1/5.

    At Aqueduct, LSU Stables’ multiple stakes-winner Bank Frenzy (Central Banker-Storm Now, Tiznow) staved off a late bid from fellow OBS grad Doc Sullivan to capture the $250,000 Empire Classic during the annual Empire Showcase Day.

    Trained by Rudy Rodriguez, Bank Frenzy earned his sixth career stakes victory – all coming in New York – as the 5-year-old Central Banker chestnut inched that much closer to millionaire status. The gelding opened his 2025 season with consecutive state-bred wins in the Stymie and Haynesfield at Aqueduct and also annexed the state-bred Commentator at Saratoga Race Course in June.

    Bank Frenzy, the 2024 NYTB Champion Older Dirt Male, was purchased by Philip Harding for $110,000 out of the 2022 OBS April Sale from the Sequel Bloodstock consignment after breezing in :10 2/5.

    The Empire Showcase card also saw David Staudacher and Paradise Farms Corp.’s The Wine Steward (Vino Rosso – Call to Service, by To Honor and Serve) prevail in the $200,000 Hudson Stakes.

    Trained by Mike Maker, the 4-year-old Vino Rosso colt was purchased for $340,000 by Maker from the Sequel Bloodstock consignment at the 2023 OBS March Sale after breezing in :10 2/5.

    At Gulfstream Park, Peachtree Stable homebred Spirit Doll (Tiz the Law-Pakhet, by Cairo Prince) had everything go her way racing first time on the grass and powered to a 6 ½-length victory over fellow OBS grads Vita Mia and Bayou Brigid in Saturday’s $75,000 Our Dear Peggy.

    Trained by Saffie Joseph Jr., Spirit Doll became a first-time stakes-winner. She was offered at the 2025 OBS April Sale by the Julie Davies consignment where she failed to meet her reserve after breezing in :10 2/5.

    At Mahoning Valley, Crown the Buckeye (Yaupon – Feisty Tomboy, by Unbridled’s Song) made it two wins in a row with his victory in the $100,000 Best of Ohio Juvenile Stakes. Trained by Mike Maker and owned by Paradise Farms Corp., Staudacher, David and Hooties Racing, Crown the Buckeye pulled away late to win by 4 ¼-lengths.

    Bred by Pick View, Paul W. Schaffer & William D. Pickerrell, 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. 
Monday, October 27, 2025
Oldsmar track opens Nov. 19 . . .

     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.