Monday, January 19, 2026
    HALLANDALE BEACH - Juddmonte’s Disco Time was installed at 8-5 in the morning line...
    HALLANDALE BEACH - Juddmonte’s Disco Time was installed at 8-5 in the morning line for a bid to remain undefeated in next Saturday’s $3 million, Gr. I Pegasus World Cup Invitational at Gulfstream Park following Sunday’s Post Position Draw. 

            The 4-year-old son of Not This Time, who drew Post #1 for the 10th anniversary running of the 1 1/8-mile stakes for 4-year-olds and up, will seek to run his career record to 6-for-6 while facing 11 rivals in the ‘Win and You’re In’ Breeders’ Cup Challenge race for the Classic, including C2 Racing Stable LLC, Gary Barber and La Milagrosa Stable LLC’s White Abarrio.

            The Pegasus World Cup will be featured on the 10th anniversary celebration program, along with the $1 million Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational (G1), a 1 1/8-mile turf stakes for 4-year-olds and up, and the $500,000 Pegasus World Cup Filly & Mare Turf (G2), a 1 1/18-mile turf stakes for older fillies and mares.

            Trainer Brad Cox, who saddled Knicks Go for a 2 ¼-length victory in the 2021 Pegasus World Cup, named Flavien Prat to ride Disco Time, who came off an eight-month layoff following his triumph in the Le Comte (G3) at Fair Grounds last March to romp to victory in the Sept.19 St. Louis Derby at Fairmount Park and the Nov. 8 Dwyer at Aqueduct.

           Cox will also be represented in the Pegasus World Cup by WinStar Farm LLC, CHC Inc., Cold Press Racing and Qatar Racing’s Tappan Street, who drew Post #7.  The son of Into Mischief, who is rated at 8-1 on the morning line, captured the $1 million Curlin Florida Derby (G1) last March at Gulfstream and recently returned from a long layoff to win an optional claiming allowance at Gulfstream Dec. 19. Luis Saez has the mount.

            White Abarrio, who scored a 6 ¼-length victory in last year’s Pegasus World Cup, is rated second on the morning-line at 4-1 for his first start since finishing off the board in the Jockey Club Gold Cup (G1) at Saratoga Aug. 31. The 7-year-old son of Race Day is slated to break from an outside Post #11 with Irad Ortiz Jr. up.

            Gulfstream’s perennial leading trainer will also be represented by Daniel Alonso’s Skippylongstocking, who finished third behind White Abarrio in last year’s Pegasus World Cup. The 7-year-old son of Exaggerator, who captured the Dec. 20 Harlan’s Holiday (G3), drew Post #5 before being rated at 15-1 on the morning line. Tyler Gaffalione has the return mount.

            Godolphin LLC’s Poster, who fell a neck short of holding off Skippylongstocking in the Harlan’s Holiday, was rated at 20-1 on the morning line after drawing Post #8. Trainer Eoin Harty has awarded the mount to Junior Alvarado.

            St. Elias Stable’s Captain Cook will break from Post 9 for a bid to give Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher a second Pegasus World Cup success, joining Life Is Good (2022). The 4-year-old son of Practical Joke, who finished second in the Perryville (G3) at Keeneland and H. Allen Jerkens Memorial (G1) at Saratoga in his last two starts, is rated at 15-1 on the morning line. Hall of Famer John Velazquez will ride Captain Cook for the first time Saturday.

            SF Racing LLC, Starlight Racing, Madaket Stables LLC and partners’ Madaket Road drew Post #6 for his bid to give Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert a fourth Pegasus World Cup victory, joining Arrogate (2017), Mucho Gusto (2020) and National Treasure (2024). Hall of Famer Mike Smith has the mount aboard the 4-year-old son of Quality Road, who is rated at 10-1 on the morning line.

            Hronis Racing LLC’s Full Serrano, the 2024 Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile (G1) winner, will break from Post #3 for the Pegasus World Cup. The John Sadler-trained 7-year-old Argentina-bred, who is rated at 12-1 on the morning line, will make his return from a fifth-place finish in the 2025 Dirt Mile with Joel Rosario aboard.

            Lawrence Roman and trainer David Jacobson’s Banishing, a multiple graded-stakes winner who is rated at 20-1 on the morning line, drew Post #4 for his second start back from troubled trip in the Breeders Cup Sprint (G1).

            Nice Guys Stables’ Mika, runner-up in the Cigar Mile (G2) last time out for trainer Mike Maker, was rated at 8-1 on the morning-line after drawing Post #10. Manuel Franco has the return mount.

            Slam Dunk Racing, Baltas Racing and `Jerry Mr Clanahan’s British Isles, a close-up second in the Native Diver (G3) last time out at Del Mar, will break from Post #2 and is rated at 20-1 on the morning line. Gulfstream-based trainer David Fawkes will saddle the 5-year-old Justify gelding and give a leg up to Diego Herrera.

            Michael and Jules Iavarone’s Brotha Keny, who captured the Zia Park Derby last time out, was rated at 30-1 on the morning line after drawing Post #12 for his first start for trainer Jose D’Angelo. Hall of Famer Javier Castellano will ride the 4-year-old son of Mo Town for the first time.

            Trainer Jose Castros’ Lightning Tones, who captured the Sunshine Classic for Florida-breds last time out, and Tami Bobo’s Catalytic, who finished third behind Skippylongstocking and Poster in the Harlan’s Holiday, are also-eligible. Both are listed at 50-1.
Sunday, January 18, 2026
Passes $500,000 mark . . .
    HALLANDALE BEACH - Gr. 1 stakes-placed on dirt, Neoequos scored an impressive turf debut Saturday at Gulfstream Park, the 4-year-old son of Neolithic registering an impressive two-length victory in the $75,000 Sunshine Turf.

    The Sunshine Turf, a 1 1/16-mile turf stakes for Florida-bred 4-year-olds and up, co-headlined Saturday’s program with the $75,000 Sunshine Sprint, a six-furlong dash for older Florida-bred horses.

    Neoequos, a son of Pleasant Acres' Neolithic who finished third in last year’s Gr. II Fountain of Youth and Curlin Florida Derby before finishing off-the-board in the Kentucky Derby, received a perfect trip under Tyler Gaffalione.

    “He traveled really well until the eighth-pole and then it looked like he was beaten, and then he kicked in again. Tyler said that first time on the grass he got a little lost,” trainer Saffie Joseph Jr. said. “He runs well on the dirt obviously, but it looks like, the grass, we’re going to stay there.”

    Neoequos ($13) broke cleanly from the starting gate to follow a contested pace while saving ground around the first turn and along the backstretch before being taken off the rail on the turn into the homestretch. Looking very much like a convincing winner at the top of the stretch, he stalled briefly before kicking in powerfully to win going away over Seminole Chief, who put in a strong rally along the rail.

    “All the credit goes to Saffie and his team. They brought the horse over here ready. They had a lot of confidence in him, and they told me to ride him with confidence,” Gaffalione said. “The horse put himself in a great spot. He broke alertly, was able to sit right off the speed and when I called on him he was able to keep finding. He kind of hesitated coming to the top of the stretch, but once he switched leads he found another gear and leveled off nicely.”

    Neoequos, who finished sixth in the Sept. 20 Gr. II Gallant Bob at Parx last time out, ran 1 1/16-miles in 1:40.36. Seminole Chief, who was ridden by John Velazquez, finished three-quarters of a length ahead of third-place finisher Tank, who set or pressed the pace during a :47.29-second first half-mile under Javier Castellano.

    Neoequos is owned by C2 Racing Stable, Ian Parsard, Shining Stables, Stefania Farms, Ken Reimer, Paul Braverman and Timothy Pinch.

    “His last work was good, but it’s a still a big difference,” Joseph said. “I thought if he handled it, he was doing well. You don’t know how they’re going to do until they get on it. Thankfully, he handled it and opened some options up.”
Friday, January 16, 2026
She tied a track record with 4 winners on one card . . .

    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.

Friday, January 16, 2026
Will remain until end of January . . .

    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.”

Friday, January 16, 2026
Career spanned 47 years . . .

    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.