Friday, November 21, 2025
$75,000 Juvenile Sprint set for tomorrow . . .

      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.

 

      

 

          

Thursday, November 20, 2025
More than 4,000 show up on-track . . .
    OLDSMAR - Dennis Petrucelli, a former rider who has overseen the Tampa Bay Downs jockeys' room as the track’s Clerk of Scales for 15 years, feels a surge of familiar energy every Opening Day.
    The first card of the Oldsmar oval’s 100th anniversary season today in front of a crowd of 4,021 was no different. The all-sources handle reached $3,790,951.
    “You get to see all the people who rode here the year before, and you get to meet some new guys who are up-and-coming future stars,” Petrucelli said. “Maybe when they leave they’ll go someplace up north and get lucky and keep going.
    “You can’t beat Opening Day here. The money has gotten so good for a smaller track, and you look at the crowd. Free admission on Wednesday is a great idea, and people end up betting it back at the windows.”
    From a personal standpoint, it’s especially meaningful for the 80-year-old Petrucelli to be back at work after a six-month offseason. “All I’d be doing otherwise is sitting at home watching TV,” he said.
    Antonio Gallardo began riding here about the same time Petrucelli took charge of the room. The 38-year-old Gallardo, who won today’s third race on 4-year-old Florida-bred gelding Issano for owner-trainer Justin J. Nixon, loves returning to Tampa Bay Downs to renew friendships and spirited yet friendly rivalries.
    “It seems like there’s a little more energy on Opening Day,” said Gallardo, who won the riding title at Presque Isle Downs in Pennsylvania this year. Before today’s assignments, Gallardo last rode on Oct. 23.
    “It’s weird – you stay at home for so long, it gets a little boring. You need some action. Opening Day gives you a different vibe. You see how many people are here, and they’re saying ‘Antonio, it’s nice to see you, how you doing?’
    “You can feel the adrenaline, because you’re back competing against a lot of people you haven’t seen for six months.”
    On Wednesday’s card, 24-year-old defending jockey champion Samuel Marin and 61-year-old kid-at-heart Jose Ferrer each rode two winners and will begin Saturday’s action tied at the top of the jockey standings. In what other sport, besides an occasional golf tournament, can you watch the generations come together like that?
    “It (Opening Day) is completely special here, and then when you win a race right away you feel confident and comfortable being back,” said Ferrer, who began his career in 1982. “The crowd here might not be big for some tracks, but this being a small grandstand it feels like there are a lot of people here and you are close to them.
    “It’s nice to be back and it’s great to be around all the fans in Tampa again,” added Ferrer, who has won more than 4,800 races.
    Trainer Gregg Sacco, who just turned 60, knows how racing can bring people of all ages and backgrounds together. His late father William J. Sacco trained horses here in the early 1950s when the track was known as Sunshine Park, and his uncle Johnny was a jockey at the same time.
    Nowadays, Sacco’s son Will – who turns 25 next week – manages the stable’s New York string while Gregg is in Oldsmar. No matter where he is stationed, though, the memories come flooding back every Opening Day.
    “It’s a blend of old faces and new faces, of horsemen and jockeys coming from all over. Opening Day is exciting for everybody, including the fans,” Sacco said. “This is my fourth season here and Tampa has some of the greatest fans in the country.”
    Sacco has been training 35 years. In a sport that is often fragmented, he knows what it means to compete at a track that first opened for business in 1926. “It’s kind of crazy – my dad and my uncle Johnny won races here in 1951, and here I am today,” Sacco said. “Every year, it looks like Tampa does something new, whether it’s in the clubhouse or the grandstand or the eateries. They keep changing with the times, which you need to do to attract the younger generation. You look at the picnic area for families on the other side of the paddock – it’s just a very comfortable track for everybody of every age group.”
    Schedule info. Day 2 of the 2025-26 meet is Saturday. Beginning next week, Tampa Bay Downs will race on a Wednesday-Friday-Saturday schedule through Dec. 20, with Sundays added to the mix on Dec. 21.
    The track – including The Silks Poker Room and The Downs Golf Practice Facility – is closed in its entirety on Thanksgiving, Nov. 27, and on Christmas, Dec. 25.
    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 CHALLEGE 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. 
Wednesday, November 19, 2025
First victory in 8th start this year . . .

    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.

Friday, November 14, 2025
The Downs opens for 100th season on Wednesday . . .
    OLDSMAR - Samuel Marin, who won last season’s Tampa Bay Downs jockeys title by riding 116 winners, received feelers during the summer about shifting his base of operations to the New York winter circuit.
    The interest from northern trainers and jockey agents came as no surprise. The 24-year-old from Venezuela followed his Oldsmar campaign by finishing second in the standings at Monmouth Park in New Jersey over the summer with 66 victories, including a meet-high nine stakes triumphs.
Marin was No. 1 at Monmouth in mount purse earnings with almost $21.9 million, bettering the track’s wins leader, Paco Lopez.
    After discussing a possible move with his agent, former jockey Mike Moran, Marin spent about a week considering the pros and cons of competing in the Big Apple. “New York is the place where everyone wants to be, and a lot of the New York trainers helped me out at Monmouth. So, for a little while, I thought I would do it.
    “But we (he and Moran) did great here last year and I had a lot of fun. I get to compete against great riders, I get a lot of support from the horsemen and the Tampa fans are really cool. A lot of people are very positive with us, and it gives you a lot of confidence when you have that kind of backing.”
    Make no mistake: If Marin’s career continues its ascent, he will one day graduate to New York, Kentucky or another more lucrative venue commensurate with his talents. But for now, Marin has no reservations about trying to become a back-to-back Tampa Bay Downs champ first.
    Marin is a solid favorite to take home another trophy during the 100th anniversary season at Tampa Bay Downs, which celebrates Opening Day on Wednesday with a nine-race card beginning at 12:40 p.m. Admission is free and the forecast is for sunny skies, low humidity and temperatures reaching the low 80s.
    For the first time, Tampa Bay Downs will employ drone technology throughout the meet to provide aerial views of the action for spectators and TV audiences. The drone shots will be displayed on the jumbo video board in the infield and televisions throughout the facility. 
    On the wagering front, the track is introducing a takeout rate of 10 percent on all show wagers made on-track, including MBet (the takeout will remain unchanged at 17 percent on off-track show wagers). 
    The 2025-26 stakes schedule begins Saturday, Dec. 6 with the $125,000 Inaugural Stakes for 2-year-olds and the $125,000 Sandpiper Stakes for 2-year-old fillies. Both races are contested at the 6-furlong distance.
    The meet is laden with promotions marking the racetrack’s centennial celebration, including free admission each Wednesday. Handicappers and fans can register for the free “10 Days of Festivus Online Handicapping Contest,” which runs from Dec. 5 through Dec. 24, at www.tampabaydowns.com beginning Nov. 30.
    Moran, the leading jockey here in 1978 when the track was called Florida Downs, is a master motivator, wasting no time dangling the proverbial carrot in front of his charge. With his other jockey, five-time Oldsmar champion and 2024-25 runner-up Samy Camacho, not eligible to ride here until Dec. 10 due to a riding-related suspension he elected to carry over from last season, Moran sees a possibility of Marin getting off to a quick start in the standings.
    “He (Marin) already has a lot of good business. If we can get lucky and get him on the right horses, I think he could set the (single-season Tampa Bay Downs) record,” Moran said, referring to Antonio Gallardo’s mark of 147 winners in 2014-15. “(Marin) is strong, he’s smart, he’s good out of the gate and he does his homework.
    “He knows where he is supposed to be during a race and is not afraid to use his horse to get that spot.”
    There is no question Marin will face spirited competition from a veteran cast eager to school him in the sport’s ephemeral nature of success – no matter how nice a guy he may be.
    Jockeys such as Camacho, who finished third in the Monmouth standings; Gallardo, himself a five-time Tampa Bay Downs champion who captured his sixth title at Presque Isle Downs in Pennsylvania this year; Daniel Centeno, a six-time wins leader at the Oldsmar oval; Pablo Morales, the Presque Isle Downs runner-up; Sonny Leon, who was fifth at Tampa Bay Downs and fourth at Monmouth; and even a relatively unknown up-and-comer such as Cipriano Gil or Israel Rodriguez should have something to say about things (and don’t be surprised the first time ageless Jose Ferrer beats Marin this season in a photo finish).
    But the capable guidance of Moran, combined with Marin’s ability, enthusiasm and devotion to his profession, all point to another strong season for the youngster, who joined the ranks of graded-stakes winners during the summer with a pair of Gr. III victories at Monmouth on 5-year-old Surface to Air.
    “I’m 100-percent focused on what I want. This is my life,” Marin said. “Even when I get done riding for the day, I still want to keep riding.”
    Moran says his rider’s singlemindedness is a major factor in his rise. “He pays attention to everything. He watches replays, he works hard in the morning and he wants to be the best he can be,” Moran said. “He’s going to do everything in his power to be leading rider again.”
    While the saying “youth must be served” seems appropriate to Marin, the race for leading trainer will likely fall under the heading “experience is the best teacher.”
    A veteran cast is headed by Kathleen O’Connell, No. 1 the last two seasons and a four-time champion overall, who first arrived at Florida Downs in 1976 to gallop horses. She began her own stable in 1981 and has saddled 2,597 winners, with nine graded stakes victories to her credit.
    O’Connell shares at least two traits with Marin: She loves working with horses and she loves the atmosphere at Tampa Bay Downs. “K.O.,” who won the 2011 Tampa Bay Derby with Watch Me Go, is always on the lookout for another graded-stakes winner, yet entirely aware of what it takes to get a horse to that level.
“We’re looking forward to having a good meet, but it never gets easy. There are a lot of good trainers at Tampa. It’s always a tough meet and a competitive meet. Everyone knows how good the (dirt) surface is and how good the turf is, and when you get south Florida shippers from trainers like (Claude) McGaughey and (Chad) Brown, they come here loaded for bear.
    “You just have to be lucky and have your horses stay healthy and you have to have the right races ‘go,’ ” said O’Connell, referring to races that most closely fit the abilities of horses in a trainer’s barn. “We have a bunch of useful horses and we’ll run them where they belong. It’s like playing poker – you have to know how to play the cards and when to play them.”
    Simply, a trainer who yields to an owner’s whims too many times on which contests to enter stands little chance of winning a lot of races.
    O’Connell won 53 races last season, 11 more than runner-up Juan Arriagada, who has won the last three Tampa Bay Downs owner titles and again is a contender in the trainer race. Others likely to be in the mix include nine-time champion Gerald Bennett, who finished third last season; Mike Dini; Juan Carlos Avila; Jon Arnett; and Chad Brown, who finished fifth last season with 26 winners while shipping his horses here from south Florida.
    A familiar face returns to the Oldsmar training ranks in Tom Proctor, who last competed at Tampa Bay Downs during the 2022-23 meet. Proctor, who is perhaps best known for winning the 1994 Breeders’ Cup Distaff with One Dreamer, captured the Gr. II Nassau Stakes at Woodbine in June with 5-year-old mare Ocean Club.
    Win or lose, it’s Tampa Bay Downs, where O’Connell has enjoyed much success, made enduring  friendships and overcome occasional disappointments through her advocacy of the sport, and the horses under her care.
    There is no place like home, and it is good to be back.
    “I’m grateful for the opportunities the track and my owners here have presented me, and I’m looking forward to getting the season started. I have an amazing team that I can’t say enough about,” O’Connell said. “A lot of them are family members of people who have worked for me, and they love their jobs and are dedicated to the horses.”
Thursday, November 13, 2025
Slated for Jan. 24 at Gulfstream . . .
    LEXINGTON, Ky. & HALLANDALE BEACH – The $3 million Pegasus World Cup Invitational (G1) will for the first time be included in the Breeders’ Cup Challenge Series: Win and You’re In, Breeders’ Cup Limited and 1/ST announced today. 

    The Breeders’ Cup Challenge Series is an international series of 94 stakes races in 15 countries whose winners will receive automatic starting positions and fees paid into a corresponding race at the 2026 Breeders’ Cup World Championships, scheduled to be held Oct. 30-31 at Keeneland Race Course in Lexington. 

    As part of the global series of automatic qualifying races for the $7 million Longines Breeders’ Cup Classic (G1), the Pegasus World Cup Invitational, which will be held on Saturday, Jan. 24, 2026, at Gulfstream Park, will offer the winner an automatic starting position along with pre-entry and entry fees paid (a $150,000 value). Additionally, the nominator of the winning horse will receive a $10,000 award. 

    All Breeders’ Cup Challenge winners also receive travel benefits to the World Championships: 

·         $10,000 for starters based outside of Kentucky in North America 

·         $40,000 for international starters based outside North America 

    Since its debut in 2017, the Pegasus World Cup has established itself as one of North America’s most prestigious luxury sports and lifestyle events. Remarkably, six of the nine Pegasus World Cup champions have also won a Breeders’ Cup race, underscoring the natural synergy between the two elite racing programs. 

    “The Breeders’ Cup Challenge Series is designed to celebrate and connect premier racing on a global stage,” said Drew Fleming, President and CEO of Breeders’ Cup Limited. “Including the Pegasus World Cup is a perfect fit – it’s a first-class event that now becomes part of an elite journey to the Longines Breeders’ Cup Classic.” 

    “This partnership connects two of the sport’s most powerful stages,” said Aidan Butler, President, 1/ST. “The Pegasus World Cup Invitational’s 10th anniversary will serve as a true gateway to the Breeders’ Cup Classic - linking our passionate fans, horsemen and international audience in a new and meaningful way.” 

    The 2026 Pegasus World Cup will headline a day of world-class racing and entertainment from Gulfstream Park, presented by 1/ST, and broadcast live from 4:30pm – 6:00pm (ET) on NBC and Peacock.  

    For more information and tickets to the 2026 Pegasus World Cup, visit pegasusworldcup.com or follow on socials @pegasusworldcup.