Friday, November 14, 2025
    OLDSMAR - Samuel Marin, who won last season’s Tampa Bay Downs jockeys title by...
    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.
Check the website for additional promotions.
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 Grade 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 Grade 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.
Thursday, November 13, 2025
Went into business in Jamaica . . .

    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 a
go.

    “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.”

Thursday, November 13, 2025
She's stakes-placed in her last 2 . . .

    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).

Monday, November 10, 2025
Only his 3rd mount . . .
    HALLANDALE BEACH - Jockey Carlos Martinez rode his first winner on only his third career mount Sunday at Gulfstream Park, but the 45-year-old apprentice has been waiting a lifetime for his boyhood dream to come true.

    Martinez, who rode in a few unofficial apprentice races in his native Venezuela before losing a battle with the scales and venturing to the U.S. in 2012, has been an exercise rider for trainer Mike Maker for five years and trainer Chad Brown for three years but never gave up on his dream.

    “I always wanted to be a jockey,” Martinez said through an interpreter.

    After finishing off the board with two mounts Saturday, Martinez sent Carlos Perez-trained Saybrook ($9.60) right to the lead in Sunday’s Race 4, a 6 ½-furlong sprint for $8000 claimers, and rode the 4-year-old gelding with urgency in the stretch to eke out a long-awaited first career victory by the margin of a neck.

    “I thank God. I’m very excited,” said a very emotional Martinez in the Gulfstream winner’s circle. “I thank the trainers for the opportunity.”

    Martinez has been named on one mount on Friday’s Gulfstream program, Nolan Ramsey-trained Torch is Passed in Race 9.