Kirkpatrick & Co. Presents In Their Care: Whether Working With Horses Or People, Edward Escobar Always ‘Goes Beyond’

Edward Escobar never wanted to follow in his father's footsteps. And the world is a better place for that.

Escobar was born in the Bronx and raised in San Juan, Puerto Rico. He never knew his father. He never enjoyed the guidance of a good father. He never heard a stern but loving voice.

As he grew, Escobar quickly became known as “Flaco,” or slim. He turned his lack of bulk to his advantage by attending jockey school from 1984-'86. He ventured to New York to seek racetrack employment in 1988 at age 19. Hall of Fame jockey Angel Cordero Jr. was among those who helped him to feel at home.

“He's my angel,” Escobar said. “I learned a lot from him as an exercise rider and a jockey.”

Escobar, 54, has become a mainstay on the backstretch at New York Racing Association tracks. He is an asset as an exercise rider but, more importantly, he is embraced as an extraordinary person. Nick Caras, who oversees various programs that aid backstretch workers, describes Escobar as a “go-to person” for those in need.

“It's a blessing whenever he's involved,” Caras said. “He can definitely move the ball down the field, if that's an expression.”

Escobar delights in the unpaid work he does almost daily once he is done galloping horses each morning. “That's what we call volunteers,” he said. “You want to do something from the heart, you get something from their heart.

“Some people, the first thing they say is, 'How much are you going to pay me?' Not me.”

Escobar does everything he can to be readily available. “Everybody says, 'When you have a problem, go see Flaco,'” he said proudly. “Sometimes they don't speak English and they're afraid to talk. So they look for me and say, 'Flaco, I need to talk to you. I have a problem.'”

Escobar works closely with Caras and with Humberto Chavez, chaplain of the Racetrack Chaplaincy of New York. He said of his interaction with fellow workers, “I talk to them and say, 'What happened? I can't help you but I can talk to somebody who can help you.'”

Caras cannot begin to estimate how many people Escobar has assisted. He finally settles on “countless” and adds, “He knows the ins and outs. He is easy to talk to, but he is not a pushover.”

When Escobar is not being a good listener, he contributes in other ways by helping to arrange various bus trips such as sightseeing in New York City, visits to amusement parks, and taking in the massive Christmas tree at Rockefeller Center.

He views any activity as a good activity. “They stay in the rooms, most of the people. That's what we're trying to avoid,” Escobar said. “Come with us, enjoy, see new things.”

He wakes up at 4 a.m. daily and takes pride in everything he does. He has been employed by many trainers over the years, but he found a home with Bruce Levine for the last 12 years. They are a perfect fit.

“He's the first one here,” Levine said. “He sets the tack out. He puts out the set list for every groom. He goes beyond what he needs to do, you know what I'm saying?”

Escobar takes everything in stride. “He has the patience of a saint with a horse. He's just very kind to the animal,” Levine said. “He's just a really good guy. He should be up for the Good Guy Award.”

Escobar speaks glowingly of the accomplishments of his children: Stephanie, 32; Christopher, 20; Jaz Marie, 19; and Rosa, 18. “I'm very focused on my job,” he said. “I'm very focused on them, too.”

Escobar's opportunities have been limited, but he still dreams of riding a winner in the afternoon (photo courtesy of Edward Escobar)

He also is focused on one goal that has been incredibly elusive – his first victory as a jockey. According to Equibase, he is 0 for 81 in records that date to 1995. He has never had an agent and gains mounts sporadically, receiving horses no one else wants in exchange for galloping horses in the morning at no charge.

He is still searching for a live mount. “If I don't have the horse,” he said, “I don't have the purse.”

His greatest memory involves battling Richard Migliore for second in a maiden special weight race on the tough New York circuit. The photo revealed he narrowly missed gaining second aboard a 32-1 shot whose name he does not recall.

In Escobar's lone mount this season, he came in last of five aboard Reapply for owner and trainer James Chapman in a maiden special weight race on June 4 at Belmont Park. He lagged at the back of the pack throughout and was eventually beaten by 22 ¾ lengths.

Escobar is undeterred. “Never give up. Never give up,” he said. “I just have to find the right spot and the right horse.”

If he ever does, expect cheers to rise from barns across the land.

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.


If you wish to suggest someone as a potential subject for In Their Care, please send an email to info @ paulickreport.com that includes the person's name and contact information in addition to a brief description of the individual's background.

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Kirkpatrick & Co. Presents In Their Care: Cristina Bonilla’s Dream To Ride Lives On

Dreams die hard. So it is with Cristina Bonilla.

She did not grow up around horses. She came to the racing game late, at 24. She is 37 now. She estimates she has suffered at least four concussions, including one in a horrific accident at Arlington Park in 2021, and tells of significant memory loss.

And yet Bonilla, a 5-2, 109-pound exercise rider for trainer Domenick Schettino at Belmont Park, never loses sight of her dream. She yearns to be a jockey again.

“It's the only sport where men and women compete at the same level. I love that,” she said. “It makes you work harder. It makes you work way harder.”

Bonilla earned a bachelor of fine arts degree from the School of the Art Institute in her hometown of Chicago. She was working in marketing when she read that no female jockey had ever won the Kentucky Derby. She kept turning over that fact in her mind until it became life-changing.

She called her older sister, Crystal. “What do you think if I become a jockey?”

Crystal answered the question with a question. “What?”

Calls were made and Bonilla gave up everything to leave Chicago for New York, where she met trainer Gary Gullo at the Belmont stable gate.

“Are you homeless?” he asked.

“Yeah, pretty much,” Bonilla responded.

He called fellow trainer Dominic Galluscio, who hired her as a hotwalker and allowed her to stay in a room at his house with the provision that she work hard. She fulfilled her pledge for six months but was determined to start her riding career.

Galluscio contacted Jimmy Miranda and arrangements were made for Bonilla to work for the retired jockey in Orlando. Bonilla learned the basics by riding Quantum, a retired Thoroughbred, in a round pen for two months. Although it was a slow process, she worked her way up to galloping horses.

Cristina Bonilla's painting of Randy Romero brought the two together

Bonilla also sold artwork online, including a portrait of Randy Romero that attracted Romero's attention and inadvertently brought the two of them together. He asked her to send videos of her on horseback. He was sufficiently impressed that he agreed to become her agent and they went to work at Evangeline Downs in Louisiana in 2017. She was 31.

That led to one of the best days of Bonilla's life. She won with her sixth mount, a runaway 11-length victory at a mile and 70 yards aboard Superstitious Swan. “I remember dropping my reins mid-stretch because I was so excited,” she said.

Her return to the jockeys' room was equally memorable. In keeping with tradition, she was pelted with eggs, powder, you name it. “They got me really good,” she said, “and they put it on TVG.”

Romero died two years later at the age of 61 after battling numerous health issues.

Cristina Bonilla and the late Randy Romero

After Evangeline, it was on to Fair Grounds and eventually Arlington Park with its Polytrack surface. She believes the Polytrack contributed to one of the worst days of her life. It was the summer of 2021 and she was aboard an ill-fated horse named Charlie's Heir that suffered a heart attack as they approached the wire.

“When they have a heart attack, they give you no warning, no sounds, not even slowing down,” Bonilla said. “It's just like bam, out of nowhere. He goes to the left, I go to the right.”

She landed head first on a track she described as unforgiving. “I love riding on the Poly,” she said, “but it's not fun to fall on.”

She woke up in the hospital three days later, not recalling how she got there. Five weeks later, she was galloping for trainer Wayne Catalano and soon won a race for him. She has been with Schettino for most of the last three years and believes she has made great progress there.

“I feel great,” she said. “The only thing is remembering stuff. I feel like it's a lot less than before.”

She has developed a strong relationship with Schettino and spends holidays with his family. He values her ability to read horses, to elaborate on what she is feeling beneath her each morning and to calm nervous fillies.

“She's trustworthy and to me that's a lot,” the trainer said. “That's my number one thing I think about is trust. I know that they're looking out for these horses. She loves the horses and loves what she does.”

Bonilla also has gained experience as a veterinary assistant. “It's something to fall back on,” she said, “because you never know what your next injury is.”

According to Equibase, she has ridden competitively just once this year, finishing last of six aboard 41-1 Bear's Correct in a one-mile maiden claiming race at Aqueduct on March 3. In 392 lifetime starts, her record stands at 17-30-31 with earnings of $346,183.

Bonilla is doing everything possible to hire an agent who can create opportunities for her in New York. She said she is willing to pay 40 percent of her earnings to that person for the first year. As much as Schettino cares about Bonilla, he is skeptical about that plan.

“For her to ride again and stay in New York, hopefully she'll get a chance. But New York is a tough place for her to fulfill her dream. That's just my opinion,” Schettino said. “New York is a tough place for a lot of people to fulfill their dreams. You're in the top place with the best of the best.”

And yet, through it all, Bonilla is undeterred.

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.


If you wish to suggest someone as a potential subject for In Their Care, please send an email to info @ paulickreport.com that includes the person's name and contact information in addition to a brief description of the individual's background.

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Kirkpatrick & Co. Presents In Their Care: Aspiring Horseman Blake Dutrow Learning ‘There Are No Shortcuts’

The Dutrow racing family appears to have another member in the pipeline.

Blake Dutrow can still remember how much fun it would be when he would accompany his grandfather, Dick, a top Maryland horseman, to the barn to treat the horses to carrots and peppermints. He has spent his young life learning about racing from his father, Chip, and his uncles, Tony and Rick.

“The best horse racing families you see pass it along from generation to generation,” said Blake, 31.

Blake is an understudy to Rick as his uncle makes a comeback from a 10-year suspension punctuated by White Abarrio's rousing triumph in the Whitney at Saratoga. Their relationship extends far beyond mentor and mentee.

Blake has been unwavering in his love and support for Rick as his Kentucky Derby-winning uncle served a suspension that represented one of the sternest disciplinary actions in the sport's history.Blake lived with his uncle during the early years of the punishment. He was always willing to listen when Rick needed to talk.

“I wasn't looking for friends when I was out,” Rick said. “But he was there.”

They would retreat to Rick's basement on Sunday afternoons during football season, just the two of them. And they would talk racing.

“He would always tell me, 'Blake, I'm going to get back and we're going to win big races,'” Blake recalled. “There were times when I thought he might not even have the chance to get back.”

If there was to be a comeback, Blake decided his uncle would not go it alone. “I kind of knew whether it was five years in or the full 10, that I would do whatever I could to help Rick,” the nephew said.

They started at Belmont Park in early April with one horse, a filly named Recognize. “I'll rub her,” Dutrow told Blake, “and you'll walk her.”

Owners who had not forgotten that Dutrow trained 2008 Kentucky Derby and Preakness winner Big Brown or that he won the Breeders' Cup Classic in 2005 with Horse of the Year Saint Liam, among other accomplishments, gradually returned.

Blake stood with his uncle when Prince of Pharoahs, his first starter, won on May 6 at Belmont Park. They were again side by side when White Abarrio, transferred to their rapidly-growing barn ahead of a solid third-place finish in the Met Mile, drew off to win the Whitney by 6 ¼ lengths on Aug. 5, Rick's 64th birthday.

“It's crazy how fast it all happened. If you would have said we were going to run in the Whitney this summer, let alone win it, I would probably have said 'You're crazy,'” Blake said. “But if anybody is crazy enough to do it, it's definitely my uncle Rick. He tells me all the time, 'We're going to win another Derby. We're going to win Breeders' Cup races and get back to where we were before.'”

This story is very much a family affair. Chip accompanies any horses that need to be shipped out of town for races. Blake stays behind to oversee a small string at Saratoga and will remain there until that meet closes on Labor Day. Rick trains the majority of horses at Belmont Park.

Blake Dutrow, left, with his uncle, Rick, and father, Chip

Rick said of his nephew's role, “We're trying to give Blake the chance to learn the horse racing game. He wants to learn it and he has plenty of opportunities to do that.”

Due to the lack of staff at this early stage, there are times when Blake must figure out things for himself. That may not necessarily be a bad thing.

“We don't rush him to learn,” Rick said. “He learns on his own, just like I did, just like most horsemen do.”

However checkered Rick's past might be due to assorted violations, his passion for his horses is undeniable. Blake sees that every day.

“To guys like Rick, they live for it,” Blake said. “If he could make the days longer so he could spend more time with the horses, I'm sure he would.”

Blake has accompanied his uncle back to the barn after dinner. “That's his favorite time of day – at night – because nobody is there,” the nephew said. “When you come and see your horses, all of their necks are out. They're just so happy to see him because they know exactly why he's there, to feed them candy.”

Sweet moments, indeed, taking Blake back to those carrots and peppermints with his grandfather. The Whitney provided an incredible moment. Rick also wants his nephew to understand that the Whitney stems from attention to the daily grind.

Blake Dutrow with the Whitney winner, White Abarrio

“He's got to go all in all the time,” Rick said. “There are no shortcuts to being a good horseman and that is what we want Blake to be.”

Blake understands that he has so much to learn from Rick, his father and his uncle, Tony, if he is to train on his own. That is a goal worth chasing.

“I love horses. I have the passion for it,” he said. “It's definitely in my blood as something I believe I was born to do.”

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.


If you wish to suggest someone as a potential subject for In Their Care, please send an email to info @ paulickreport.com that includes the person's name and contact information in addition to a brief description of the individual's background.

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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.


If you wish to suggest someone as a potential subject for In Their Care, please send an email to info @ paulickreport.com that includes the person's name and contact information in addition to a brief description of the individual's background.

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