Tampa Bay Downs’ New Chaplain Alex DeLima Eager To Lend A Helping Hand

Six mornings a week, Alex DeLima walks from barn to barn at Tampa Bay Downs, a thermos of hot coffee in hand, eager to share a message of hope and love with the track's backstretch population.

If DeLima sees someone is busy working with a horse, he'll move ahead in his journey, always secure in the knowledge that God's word is all-powerful and enduring.

“God is love, and He is trying to reach out to man in the Bible from the beginning in Genesis through the Book of Revelation,” said DeLima, a full-time pastor at The Well in nearby Tarpon Springs who became the racetrack's Chaplain last month. DeLima said he wants to bring people “to a consciousness that there is a supreme God who created us and loves us and wants to have a relationship with us – in other words, He has a plan for our lives if we allow Him to help us.”

In his first few weeks on the job, the 52-year-old DeLima – a new member of the Race Track Chaplaincy of America – has found the job involves wearing numerous hats as he mixes with grooms and hotwalkers, exercise riders and jockeys, as well as trainers, racing officials and the occasional owner.

In addition to organizing the annual Christmas Party for backstretch workers last Thursday, DeLima provided words of sympathy to friends and family of late owner-trainer Bobby Raymond in the winner's circle after Saturday's second race; served food at the Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association (HBPA) Christmas Cookout on Tuesday; led jockeys in pre-race prayers inside their quarters; and offered blessings to members of the Tampa Bay Downs starting gate crew.

DeLima also conducts a weekly non-denominational church service (usually held on Mondays) in the Chaplaincy's trailer. DeLima, a product of Brazil who speaks English, Spanish and Portuguese, delivers his message in Spanish, with his wife Rachel translating to English. Their children – Sarah, 20, Bethany, 17, and Nathaniel, 13 – are part of their youth worship team and contribute with their voices and instruments during the service.

A large percentage of any racetrack's backstretch population is itinerant, since few tracks conduct racing on a year-round basis. Many workers are in the United States on temporary work visas, with limited English-language skills that can make caring for themselves a bigger challenge than taking care of the Thoroughbreds.

“My main mission,” said DeLima, “is to give people the comfort that someone is caring for them while they are here and to help them in any way we can.”

The Chaplaincy works in concert with the Tampa Bay Downs Division of the HBPA to provide needed medical and dental services, as well as food, clothing, bedding and transportation. It is also an advocate for backstretch workers who need to deal with the Internal Revenue Service, Social Security, the Division of Motor Vehicles and the civil-justice system.

Beginning after the first of the year, DeLima hopes to organize soccer matches on the large fields across from the Track Kitchen and to start chess and domino tournaments. Caring for valuable racehorses can be a stressful occupation, and providing healthy outlets for workers is an ongoing goal.

Mike Murray, the Executive Director of the Tampa Bay HBPA, was instrumental in DeLima coming to the Oldsmar oval after meeting him about six years ago while teaching an advanced English language class. DeLima's cheerful, outgoing approach and his devotion to God's word through the Holy Bible have already impacted members of the backstretch community, Murray said.

“The fact he is fluent in English and Spanish is a huge plus,” Murray said. “Alex is a terrific person, and he has drawn the HBPA and the Chaplaincy closer. And he has found people (with pressing needs) who might not otherwise have come to us, because of his personality.”

DeLima, who has ministered to inmates both in Georgia and at the Sumter Correctional Institution in Bushnell, Fla., strives to help every individual find a level of self-worth that might previously have gone untapped.

“We love people for who they are, not what they might have done in the past,” he said. “People have struggles, but usually when they see a chaplain they can open up to them and tell what is happening in their lives.”

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Trainer Lindsay Schultz Off And Running At Oaklawn Park Meet

A little over a year into her training career, Lindsay Schultz already has victories at five tracks and a stakes placing.

Schultz is now off and running at the 2022-2023 Oaklawn meeting that began Dec. 9, scoring in Friday's seventh race with Tiger Moon ($41) for her major client, Ten Strike Racing (founding partners Marshall Gramm and Arkansan Clay Sanders). Tiger Moon represented the 14th career victory for Schultz, 34, who struck out on her own in the fall of 2021 after previously assisting Hall of Fame trainer Shug McGaughey.

Schultz recorded her first career victory Jan. 8, 2022, at Oaklawn with Capture the Glory ($36.80) for Ten Strike. Schultz added three more victories at the 2021-2022 Oaklawn meeting before moving to Monmouth Park, where she won six races from just 27 starts.

Reflecting the growth of her stable, Schultz came to Oaklawn last season with seven horses, including six for Ten Strike, but has 17 stalls in 2022-2023.

“We obviously want to do better, but we've gotten more horses,” Schultz said. “I would like to get some more owners, but the ones that I have are really good.”

Schultz said her stable again features hard-knocking older horses like Alex Joon, who finished second, beaten a half-length, in the $125,000 Edward P. Evans Stakes last July at Colonial Downs. Schultz, on behalf of Ten Strike, claimed Alex Joon for $30,000 last December at Oaklawn. Schultz said she also has several 2-year-olds, including Cecile for a new client, Choctaw Racing Stable (Perry Sutherland).

Among the most successful owners in Oaklawn history, Choctaw has campaigned, among others, Oaklawn stakes winners Hot Jaws, Tyus, Sister Act and Officer Alex. Officer Alex (2013 Bachelor) was the penultimate Oaklawn stakes winner for the late Lynn Whiting, best known as the trainer of 1992 Kentucky Derby winner Lil E. Tee. Hot Jaws, Tyus and Sister Act – all active in the 1990s – were trained by the late Jeff Jacobs.

Schultz said Sutherland and one of her owners, Scott Galloway, are good friends. They've always partnered on horses in the past. From the first crop of Grade 1 winner Mendelssohn, Cecile was purchased for $150,000 last May at Fasig-Tipton's Midlantic sale of 2-year-olds in training. She finished sixth in her Nov. 16 career debut at Churchill Downs.

“She ran good,” Schultz said. “Showed some speed, ranged up to some freak of Brad Cox (Dazzling Blue). I like her.”

Cecile worked a half-mile in :48 Monday morning in advance of a planned start Dec. 31, the first scheduled program in Oaklawn history exclusively for 2-year-olds.

In addition to Oaklawn and Monmouth, Schultz later won races at Colonial Downs, Delaware Park and Churchill Downs. She had a horse entered Thursday at Turfway Park. Through Wednesday, Schultz had started 85 horses this year, with her horses generating $594,963 in purse earnings.

“It was pretty good,” Schultz said of her post-2021-2022 Oaklawn showing. “Monmouth was a good place for us to go, just to get some wins and to get some more horses.”

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Kirkpatrick & Co. Presents In Their Care: Future Trainer Estrada Found His Calling In Helping Others

Johnathan Estrada feels very much at home at Belmont Park.

His parents worked as grooms there. He is proud to be part of the first graduating class of Anna House, established in 2002 as a daycare and early education center for children of backstretch employees at the Elmont, N.Y., track.

Estrada, 21, has been employed by trainer David Donk for the last four years, first as a hotwalker and now as a groom. He is part of the workforce that lives on the backside. He devotes countless hours to the Racetrack Chaplaincy, helping with teen mentoring and other programs. And if the need should arise, he is not afraid to put himself at risk to rescue horses from a fire.

Estrada was relaxing in his room during the early evening on April 13, 2021, when he thought he heard a loose horse running by. He opened his door in his flip-flops to find three loose horses barreling past. He knew something was very wrong.

Then he smelled smoke. Then he saw barn 60 on fire. He never hesitated. Flip-flops and all, he charged into the rapidly-burning structure and joined workers from other nearby barns in rescuing as many terrified horses as possible.

“People from trainers I didn't even know were here,” he said, “running in and out of the barn and trying to help these horses.”

Fifty-eight horses were saved. American Sailor and Beastie D, both trained by Wayne Potts, could not be spared. American Sailor had won the Grade 3 Troy Stakes on turf the year before. No one will ever know what Beastie D might have accomplished. He was an unraced 3-year-old.

Any parent would be proud to have Estrada as a son. His work ethic and selflessness were recognized not long ago when Godolphin's Thoroughbred Industry Employee Awards were presented at Keeneland Race Course in Lexington, Ky. He received the Newcomer Award, sponsored by the New York Racing Association.

Estrada, whose parents both were grooms, is part of the first graduating class at NYRA's Anna House

“He is a warm, kind-hearted young man who is willing to go the extra mile for so many people,” said Nick Caras, program director for the Racetrack Chaplaincy in New York. “He is always asking, 'What do we have to do today? Who are we helping?'”

No task seems to be too small or too big for Estrada. On a recent day, he removed some seats from a 15-seat Chaplaincy van to create more space for supplies for a holiday party.

He never knows where the course of each day might take him. “He has sat with somebody in the waiting room of a hospital for hours on end,” Caras noted.

Estrada has been part of Donk's team since he was 18. “He's very kind with the horses and he loves the horses,” the trainer said.

Estrada's wonderful demeanor leads him to be consistently paired with fillies. “I'm very kind to animals and fillies like that type of person,” he said. “They like to be handled very carefully and you have to be gentle with them. I guess I have that touch.”

“He's very kind with the horses,” trainer David Donk said of Estrada

Initially, Estrada did not think he could adjust to waking up in time to arrive at the barn before dawn. The long hours were daunting. He briefly moved to California to study in a seminary, but the lure of the horses was too strong. He returned to Belmont after only a few months.

He said of his interaction with horses, “Being able to connect with them and bond with them as you're working, it brings me peace. They are always there for you, the horses. As much as we are there for them, they are there for us.”

He has spent countless hours volunteering since he was 15, helping first at a backstretch social event. “Ever since that day, when I got to see families smiling and children laughing and enjoying themselves, it just clicked in me. I love to help people,” he said.

He has become so indispensable that Caras calls him “part of the Chaplaincy family.”

Estrada's goal is to become a trainer. He learns valuable lessons every day from Donk and his top assistant, Arturo Ramirez. He holds Ramirez in such high esteem that he views him as a “father figure” around the barn.

Donk would like nothing more than for Estrada to realize his dream one day. “Any goal is achievable,” he said. “Anyone this young, it's up to you to learn how to train horses and also learn the business side of it.”

Estrada understands how much he must learn if he is to train on his own. He knows the business aspect can be particularly demanding, and he has recently begun to consider attending college as a way to complement his hands-on knowledge that increases daily.

“It sounds impossible, but nothing is impossible,” said Estrada of his career goal.

Tom Pedulla 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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Irad Ortiz Jr. Eclipses Garrett Gomez’ Single-Season Record For Stakes Wins

With the 2022-2023 Championship Meet days away, jockey Irad Ortiz Jr. is back at Gulfstream Park looking for a strong finish to what has been an historic, record-breaking season.

Ortiz, 30, arrived in South Florida in mid-December in a familiar position – leading all jockeys in North America in both wins and purses earned, having topped the 300-win mark for an eighth straight year.

On his first day, Ortiz won the Wait a While on Gulfstream's new turf course aboard Junipermarshmallow Dec. 10. It was his 78th stakes victory of 2022, two more than the previous single-season record of 76 set by late Hall of Famer Garrett Gomez in 2007. Ortiz picked up No. 79 with Viburnum in the $100,000 Via Borghese Dec. 17.

“It's phenomenal. It's been great. Thank God first for keeping me healthy and sound and in one piece to be able to keep doing it every day, keep trying,” Ortiz said. “My agent, Steve Rushing, does a great job and the trainers and owners give me great opportunities, a lot of good horses. They give me such good support and thank God everything worked out good. We've had an amazing year.”

Once considered an unapproachable mark, Ortiz began closing in on Gomez starting with three Breeders' Cup wins at Keeneland Nov. 4 and 5 – the Juvenile (G1) on Forte, Sprint (G1) with Elite Power and Filly & Mare Sprint (G1) aboard Goodnight Olive – to push his career total to 17.

Ortiz swept the Nashua (G3) and Tempted Nov. 6 at Aqueduct as well as the Youngstown Oaks and Mahoning Distaff Nov. 21 at Mahoning Valley to set him up for the chance to pass Gomez, who passed away in 2016 at the age of 44.

“I didn't even realize I was close until Breeders' Cup week when my agent told me. I said, 'Wow.' We were only 10 behind so I said, 'Let's try for it. Let's work and try to make it. It's not easy, but let's try.' Everything worked out great,'” Ortiz said. “It was amazing.

“Garrett Gomez was someone we respect so much, a great rider,” he added. “It was hard. My agent kept me motivated.”

Less than a month earlier, thanks to his victories in Kentucky and New York, Ortiz surpassed his own North American record for single-season earnings. He set the bar with $34,109,019 in 2019 and raised it again this year with more than $36 million and counting.

“It's been great. What can I say?” Ortiz said. “It's something that's very exciting and very special for me because I've been working at it since I started. I've been working since then right up to today. I wake up and go out there and try to do my thing and get on horses every single day.”

Ortiz began riding professionally in 2011 and is approaching 3,400 career victories, having reached 300 or more wins every year since 2015. He won the Eclipse Award as North America's champion jockey three straight years from 2018 to 2020, and is a leading candidate to add a fourth statuette this season.

At Gulfstream, where he rode his first full winter in 2017-2018, Ortiz won three consecutive Championship Meet titles from 2018-2019 to 2020-2021, the latter with a track record 140 victories. He finished third last winter with 80 wins from just 297 mounts, but topped all riders with more than $5 million in purse earnings after sweeping the $3 million Pegasus World Cup (G1) with Life Is Good and $1 million Pegasus Turf (G1) with Colonel Liam.

Leading rider at Belmont Park's spring-summer meet as well as Saratoga, Ortiz has set a personal high with 49 graded-stakes wins in 2022, including his second Belmont Stakes (G1) in June with Mo Donegal. Retired Hall of Famer Jerry Bailey holds the single season record with 55 graded victories.

“I just go out there and try to win every single race. That's the way I work,” Ortiz said. We've been having a great year so let's finish strong. You want to do it but it's not that easy, like people think. You can have the favorite by far, but something happens at the break or any part of the race, you could get beat. No matter how good the horse is that you have, everything has to go the right way. It's not easy.”

The 71-day Championship Meet opens Monday, Dec. 26 highlighted by a pair of $100,000 turf stakes – the Tropical Park Derby for 3-year-olds and Tropical Park Oaks for 3-year-old fillies – and runs through Sunday, April 2.

“It's great to be back,” Ortiz said. “I feel great. I love the people, they give me such big support and I love everyone here. They're happy when they see me and I respect everyone, so I'm here to do our thing and win the most races we can.”

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