Kirkpatrick & Co. Presents In Their Care: Goodwin, Mallari Embody Antonucci Stable’s Family Atmosphere

When Arcangelo charged up the rail to win the Belmont Stakes (G1), the spotlight immediately fell on Jena Antonucci. She shed tears of joy as the first woman to train the winner of a Triple Crown race.

Antonucci would be the first to emphasize, however, that her historic breakthrough was the product of a special team and a rare atmosphere she created after she opened her stable in 2012.

“It's a family more than it is a work environment,” Antonucci said.

She was referring to her staff at large, but prominent among them are assistant trainer Fiona Goodwin and Goodwin's husband, Robert Mallari, who has galloped Arcangelo since he was a baby.

Goodwin, 48, from County Kerry, Ireland, has been with Antonucci from the start. When Antonucci recently sent a string of eight horses to Saratoga Race Course that included the Belmont winner, she dispatched Goodwin to oversee them.

“She is a heck of a horsewoman. She has an extensive background. I've always very much trusted her opinion,” Antonucci said. “We've been able to respectfully disagree only a handful of times. How a team can handle things like that is extremely important.”

Goodwin welcomes Antonucci's can-do attitude. “She's just a very positive person to be around. She's not a yeller or a screamer. She wants to lift people up,” the assistant trainer said. “She does more for people than any trainer I've ever worked for.”

Mallari, 59, a former jockey who hails from the Philippines, is a great fit for Arcangelo. The Arrogate colt was quite the project as a May 11 foal. He did not launch his career until the final month of his 2-year-old season and did not break his maiden until March 18 at Gulfstream Park. While his studdish behavior only complicates matters, Mallari has met all challenges.

“He just has a great feel. He's been doing it a very long time. He just knows what a good horse feels like and he listens to the horses,” Antonucci said. “That's invaluable to help the program and help the horse.”

Goodwin and Mallari agree that a key to developing Arcangelo is knowing to stay out of his way. “Good horses always train themselves,” Mallari said. “When I ride him, I just guide him. He does everything by himself. He knows when to change the lead. You don't need to ask him. He does it himself.”

There is nothing like experience to aid a young horse's development. Arcangelo's past performances reflect that. Since his initial victory, he added the Peter Pan (G3) at Belmont Park and then the mile-and-a-half final leg of the Triple Crown.

“He used to be a handful,” Mallari said. “Now that he has some races under his belt, he's getting smarter. Now, he's a brilliant horse.”

Arcangelo has become responsive not only to Mallari but also to Basha, a pony who has evolved into his best buddy and his traveling companion.

Mallari has worked for a long list of trainers, among them Todd Pletcher, Nick Zito, Kiaran McLaughlin, Tom Albertrani and H. James Bond. That background helps him appreciate Arcangelo and all he means to Antonucci's modest stable.

“Jena is not as big as Todd Pletcher or any one of those people. That's why, when you have this kind of horse, it's very special,” Mallari said. “Todd Pletcher, Brad Cox, horses come to them every year. For us, it's once in a blue moon. So we always cherish that kind of horse.”

Goodwin and Mallari have one child, Sean, 17. They are making sure to enjoy the ride and will never forget that magical Belmont.

Mallari, Goodwin and the couple's son Sean pose with the Belmont winner (photo courtesy Fiona Goodwin)

“When the race ran, your heart was in your mouth. Butterflies don't even describe it. You can't even describe the feeling,” Goodwin said. “When he got ahead in the straight, you feel like your heart was just going to explode.”

Although Mallari knows his riding career is nearing an end, Arcangelo is worth continuing to awaken at 3 a.m. Antonucci is carefully managing the sophomore with an eye toward what she and others believe might be a huge 4-year-old campaign.

“We know he's a good horse. I want to find out myself how good he is,” Mallari said. “Knock on wood he stays sound, he will win a lot of races.”

Belmont Stakes winner Arcangelo is led to the winner's circle

For now, no one will forget the afternoon at Belmont Park when Antonucci proved to naysayers that a woman can play the game at the highest level. “It really was a boost for women everywhere and in this industry, too, because it really is kind of a man's world over here,” Goodwin said. “For a woman to do that, it was phenomenal. It's good for the sport, I think.

“No matter what, she is in the history books for this. No one can ever take that away from her. It's so brilliant.”

And so is Antonucci's team.

Tom Pedulla, 2022 recipient of the Walter Haight Award from the National Turf Writers and Broadcasters, wrote for USA Today from 1995-2012 and has been a contributor to the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Blood-Horse, America's Best Racing and other publications.


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Russell Baze Receives Avelino Gomez Award

Russell Baze has been named the 2023 recipient of the Avelino Gomez Memorial Award. The award, named after the late jockey who died after a three-horse accident in the 1980 Canadian Oaks, is given to the person, Canadian-born, Canadian-raised or regular rider in the country for more than five years, who has made significant contributions to Thoroughbred racing.

A native of Vancouver, British Columbia, Baze was a prominent name on the North American racing circuit for 42 years, finishing as the all-time leader for wins by a jockey. He recorded 12,842 career wins, 270 of them stakes victories, and  paced all North American jockeys in wins a remarkable 13 times.

Baze was inducted into the U.S. Racing Hall of Fame in 1999 and earned the George Woolfe Memorial Jockey Award in 2002. Ten years later, he became a member of the Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame.

“When I started out, I was just a kid who enjoyed riding, and I wasn't very good at it either, but as I went along and became a more competent rider, all the accolades that have come my way were something I never even dreamed of,” Baze said. “All I wanted to do was go out there and win as many races as I could and do the best job I could, not only for the owners and trainers, but also the fans.”

To commemorate his lasting contributions to the sport, a life-size statue of Gomez, who called Toronto home and raised a family there, keeps watch over Woodbine's walking ring. A replica is presented to each year's recipient.

The Avelino Gomez Memorial Award ceremony will take place on July 23 at Woodbine, on Woodbine Oaks day.

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FOX SARATOGA SATURDAY to Debut July 22

FOX SARATOGA SATURDAY, a new national television show covering the summer meet at Saratoga Race Course, presented by FOX Sports and the New York Racing Association, will debut this coming Saturday beginning at 3 p.m. ET. The show will air on FOX for six consecutive weeks and deliver in-depth broadcasts of the historic track's biggest races.

“The greatest meet in horse racing is moving to FOX Sports' biggest stage,” said Michael Mulvihill, President, Insights and Analytics, FOX Sports, FOX Entertainment and Tubi. “The launch of FOX SARATOGA SATURDAY demonstrates FOX Sports' commitment to showcasing this timeless sport and brings both new players and longtime handicappers as close to the action as possible.”

FOX SARATOGA SATURDAY airs through Aug. 26, culminating with an expanded show for the GI Travers S. FOX SARATOGA SATURDAY will offer fans in-depth coverage and analysis of:

The GI Coaching Club American Oaks on July 22; the GII Jim Dandy Presented by DK Horse July 29; the GI Whitney on Aug. 5; the GI Fourstardave H. Aug. 12; the GI Alabama Presented by Keeneland Sales Aug. 19; and the GI Travers Aug. 26.

“There is nothing in sports quite like the energy and excitement of a Saturday at Saratoga,  said Tony Allevato, NYRA Chief Revenue Officer and President of NYRA Bets. “Thanks to FOX Sports, this new show means the most national broadcast hours of Saratoga in history.”

NYRA and FOX Sports first established a partnership in 2016 with the launch of Saratoga Live, the critically acclaimed and award-winning television show providing daily coverage of the 40-day summer meet at historic Saratoga Race Course. FOX Sports has continually expanded its coverage of racing's most important events each year since 2016 resulting in more than 1000 hours of live horse racing coverage in 2023.

Reflecting their long-term commitment to the sport of Thoroughbred horse racing, FOX Sports is also now the exclusive home of the GI Belmont S. presented by NYRA Bets, which aired on FOX for the first time in 2023.

For additional information, and the current FOX SARATOGA SATURDAY schedule, visit https://www.nyra.com/saratoga/racing/tv-schedule.

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