Kentucky Derby Museum Names Katrina Helmer Director Of Communications

After a record-setting Kentucky Derby 149 for the Kentucky Derby Museum, the nonprofit organization is already hard at work preparing for Derby 150 and is pleased to share there will be a new addition to its Leadership Team to help prepare for next year.

Katrina Helmer has been named the new Director of Communications and will take over for Rachel Collier Carr, who is leaving to spend more time with her family. The Museum is incredibly thankful for Rachel's tremendous work, talent, and energy that she invested in the Museum since taking the Director's role in 2019.

Katrina worked alongside Rachel for the last year as the Social Media and Communications Manager. Katrina came to the Museum in June 2022 after working as a Communications Director at Louisville Metro Council, and before that she had a 10-year career in television news as a reporter, anchor, and producer in several markets, including Louisville. As Communications Director, Katrina is thrilled to be part of the creative team that will drive the Museum's messaging and storytelling for the historic Derby 150 and beyond.

“Katrina has done a stellar job with our Communications platform since coming to Kentucky Derby Museum. She was a natural fit for the Director position, and we are excited about her bright future at the Museum,” said Patrick Armstrong, Kentucky Derby Museum President and CEO.

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Breeders’ Cup Presents Connections: With Promising 3-Year-Old, Antonucci Focused On ‘What Really Matters’

To the outside world, it may appear as though the winner's circle is the ultimate goal for horse racing participants.

For trainer Jena Antonucci, however, a trip to the winner's circle is just a byproduct of her actual goals. Just a few days after sending out perhaps the biggest winner of her career, 3-year-old Arcangelo in last Saturday's G3 Peter Pan at Belmont Park, Antonucci took the time to set the record straight.

“Goals and success are defined very interestingly, not only in racing but also in life,” Antonucci said. “Without getting overly philosophical, you've gotta be really careful to make sure you're setting goals that represent who you are.

“My goal has always been to do the best we can with the horses that we have, and really, just building good relationships with good people. Then, at the end of the day, whatever that yields is what it yields.

“It's easy to get caught up in the chase for success and lose sight of what really matters. For me, it's about doing what I love, and doing it in a way that I can be proud of. If the winner's circle comes, that's just a bonus.”

Ridden by Kentucky Derby-winning jockey Javier Castellano, Arcangelo won the Peter Pan by a hard-fought head over favorite Bishop's Bay. The Peter Pan has often been used as a prep for the Belmont Stakes, and as a son of the late Arrogate out of a Tapit mare, there's little question Arcangelo should appreciate the Belmont distance. In fact, Arcangelo's third dam, Better Than Honour, produced back-to-back Belmont Stakes winners Jazil and Rags to Riches.

Yet, neither Antonucci nor owner Jon Ebbert are at all ready to commit the colt to the third leg of the Triple Crown. It's a testament to both parties' patience that they're willing to let the horse tell them when he's ready, rather than the other way around.

The owner-trainer partnership between Ebbert and Antonucci, well-established as it is, began less than two years ago at the 2021 Keeneland September sale.

Antonucci recalls that her business partner, Katie Miranda, was trying to get her attention from a short distance away. Miranda whistled, but Ebbert stepped in to respond.

“It was an exchange of sarcasm, to be honest, and we all just knew, 'These are my people,'” Antonucci remembered. “We started talking, and it just developed from there.”

Ebbert had gone to the sale to purchase one yearling; instead, he left with two. Arcangelo was hammered down for a final bid of $35,000, a bargain price considering the fact the colt has now won two of four starts for earnings of $167,400.

“Jon just fell in love with this horse,” Antonucci said. “Clearly Arrogate wasn't hot then, and since he was a May foal, he was kind of a sum of parts. He wasn't flashy or pretty, and there was a lot to still come together. There was nothing offensive, he just needed the time.”

Ebbert liked the colt so much that he gave him a name of great personal importance. Arcangelo means “archangel” in Italian; the colt is named for a former employee of Ebbert's at his farm in Pennsylvania.

“He had this little Italian guy who worked for him,” explained Antonucci. “He was just crazy about the horses, and he had this way with all of them. He's passed on now, so he named this colt after this amazing human being.”

After connecting at the Keeneland sale, Ebbert opted to send Arcangelo to Antonucci's Ocala-based breaking and pre-training operation, which she manages in concert with Miranda. 

Both Antonucci and Miranda have their background in the hunter/jumper realm, so their styles of training are well-matched. 

“I started riding at three years old, having seen horses driving down the road and annoying my mother enough that she finally stopped and signed me up for lessons,” Antonucci said. “My parents thought it would be a good idea to buy me a green horse for my ninth birthday; well, she taught me a lot!”

Antonucci spent a few years pursuing other career paths, but she always came back to the horses. Eventually, she decided to pursue it full time. 

“I grew up doing a ton of retraining of off-track Thoroughbreds, because that's just where you got your horses back then,” she explained. “Eventually, I found that I really wanted to understand the 'why.' As in, I wanted to understand what I was having to fix in these off-track horses, where it was coming from.

“It didn't make sense to me. In the hunter/jumper world, you learn all of the foundation of balance, what it means to create it from the hind end, and what it means to be an athlete. Then you see these horses that are supposed to be athletes, but they're dragging themselves around on the front end and not at all balanced.”

Hired to help start horses for the D. Wayne Lukas program at Padua Stables, Antonucci gained a whole new perspective on the retraining process for ex-racehorses. She then spent four and a half years as an equine veterinary assistant, learning more about horses and their health, before opening her own business at Bella Inizio Farm and expanding into both pre-training and full-time race training.

“One of the most important things to me is that every horse is an individual,” she said. “Yes, we have a base program, but everything is tweakable. Every horse has its own personality, has its own path, and has different things you're tending to. I'm never going to be a 200-horse person. Whatever opportunities I got, I just wanted to try and do the best job I could with those horses. I can't fix them all, and I can't save them all, but if I do my best with what I have, that will reward me down the road. I've tried to stay true to that idea: 'What can I do best for these horses while they're in our hands?'”

Delving deeper into the horsemanship Antonucci has developed throughout her career, she explains that from the very beginning she wants to develop the horse's ability to trust.

“We do a lot of field work, they have the rest of their lives to go between the rails,” said Antonucci. “We ground drive them, make sure they can stop, go, turn right, left, etc. I think you partner up with a horse better, and they build stronger sense of trust in humans in their lives, when you slow down and explain it to them. They'll give you everything they have if they feel safe with you.”

That education of the horse extends to the jockey, as well. 

“We can only do so much in the mornings,” Antonucci said. “I like to develop a relationship with riders, because they understand how horses run for them when they understand how we train.”

For Arcangelo, having an experienced Hall of Famer like Castellano aboard likely made all the difference in the Peter Pan. 

He's the right kind of rider for Arcangelo,” she continued. “He needs someone that's willing to mentor him a little and make the right asks at the right times: 'I need you to go here, go there.' In the stretch, Javi was super confident that he had enough horse to run back by Bishop's Bay. That's so important, teaching him to look a horse in the eye and then go by him again.”

In the meantime, Antonucci looks forward to whatever the future brings with Arcangelo, whether that's a try in the Belmont Stakes or in one of the other Grade 1's later this summer.

“The horse is just built different. I know that sounds so cliché, but it's my job – our job – to stay out of his way,” Antonucci said. “Mr. Ebbert has done a great job to give the horse time and let him mature. He's a May foal. It's all been about education and him maturing and figuring out who he is. He's still a kid figuring it out. We'll stay out of his way and see how he comes out of this, then make a decision from there.” 

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Jockey Jose Batista Banking On Healthy Summer For Strong Showing At Monmouth

Jose A. Batista has a clear objective for this summer at Monmouth Park and it has nothing to do with any statistical goals. For the 26-year-old jockey from Chepo, Panama, it's all about staying healthy.

If that happens, Batista is confident that everything else will fall into place.

“I want to see how good a summer I can have if I stay healthy,” said Batista. “I know it's a tough meet. It's a very good jockey colony. But I am going to work hard to do the best I can.”

Batista, listed to ride four horses on Saturday's 10-race card, is back at Monmouth Park with some momentum from a strong showing at Tampa Bay Downs, where he finished fifth in the rider standings.

That has pretty much been the case for Batista since he first started riding in the United States in 2017: if he's healthy he is a factor wherever he rides.

“I was very happy with the meet at Tampa that I had,” he said. “To do well and not have any injuries made it a good meet – my best year at Tampa.”

This year marks the third time he will hang his tack at Monmouth Park

After an abbreviated appearance at the Jersey Shore track in 2020, he rode in the Midwest in 2021 before trying Monmouth Park again last year. Batista was off to a solid start, with eight winners from 48 mounts, before suffering a fractured ankle in a spill on July 8. He was not able to resume riding until Oct. 28.

“It was my first time with him at Monmouth Park and we were doing good and getting help from a lot of trainers and we were excited about the start,” said Eddie Zambrana, Batista's agent. “Then the spill happened. It was frustrating for both of us.”

For Batista, who has 371 career wins, it marked the second time he had to return from major injuries, having been sidelined 3½ months in 2020 after going down when his horse clipped heels at Tampa Bay Downs on Feb. 8 of that year.

He has come back more determined both times.

The decision to try Monmouth Park again was a relatively easy one, Batista said.

“There are so many trainers from Tampa Downs that come to Monmouth Park and I had a good meet at Tampa,” he said. “So I decided to follow the business.”

A graduate of the Laffit Pincay Technical Jockey Training School in Panama, Batista was the leading apprentice at Presidente Ramon Racetrack in his native country before shifting to Gulfstream Park in 2017. By 2018, he had already notched his first graded stakes win (the Grade 2 Hardacre Mile at Gulfstream aboard Conquest Big E).

His decision to become a jockey, even though no one in his family had any connection to horse racing, was based on two things. One was that he fell in love with horses and the sport at a young age.

“And I thought `I'm little. I'm skinny. I can do this (become a jockey),' ” he said.

Zambrana said the feedback he gets from trainers about Batista is that they are impressed with his overall ability and his strength.

“A lot of trainers will tell that he is a strong rider with a lot of energy and that he does a lot of things well,” said Zambrana.

Batista enters the weekend with 40 wins from 237 starts this year, putting him well within range of his career-best 69 wins in 2017.

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Churchill Downs Racing Club Forms New Partnership With Trainer Greg Foley

Racing fans can experience a low-risk pathway to becoming a horse owner by joining the 2023 Churchill Downs Racing Club.

The Churchill Downs Racing Club, which was started in 2016, will partner with trainer Greg Foley to purchase an unraced 2-year-old. Up to 200 people can join the latest club for a one-time membership cost of $500.

“The Racing Club has been a huge success at getting fans interested in owning horses,” Foley said. “I'm really excited for this opportunity to train for the club and have the chance to meet everyone to introduce them to a side of horse racing they may not be familiar with.”

Members of the Churchill Downs Racing Club will receive a behind-the-scenes look into Thoroughbred ownership with breakfast during select mornings to watch the club's horses train, access to the paddock area for the club horse's race and two free general admission tickets to the 2023 Churchill Downs season.

The Churchill Downs Racing Club is a 501C7 Not for Profit Social Club. The club is structured as a not-for-profit educational association.

Foley operates a year-round stable in Kentucky and calls Churchill Downs his home. The second-generation trainer runs his barn with his sons, Travis and Alex, and sister Vicki. The Foley family are residents of Oldham County, Ky., located about a half-hour from Churchill Downs. Foley also will send a string of horses to Fair Grounds in New Orleans from November-April.

For more information about the Churchill Downs Racing Club and to purchase a membership, visit: https://www.churchilldowns.com/racing-wagering/racingclub.

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