‘Right Horses For The Right Levels’: Nicks Enjoying Strong Gulfstream Park Meet

Trainer Ralph Nicks has had a strong year-round presence in South Florida since opting to make Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach his base upon the addition of a Spring/Summer meeting in 2015.

The 55-year-old native of Avery, Texas, is enjoying a particularly successful 2021-'22 Championship Meet with a 31 percent strike rate. The former assistant to Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott saddled Whisper Hill Farm LLC's Gun for Success for a victory in Race 1 on Friday's program, giving him 15 winners from 49 starters.

“That is the way it goes in horse racing. Lifetime, most guys were 16 to 18 percent from where I came from and doing really well. Now, it's a little better percentage wise because they're more selective,” Nicks said. “It's been a meet where I've had the right horses for the right levels.”

Nicks, who saddled Whisper Hill Farm LLC's Dance d'Oro for a victory in the Rampart early in the Championship Meet, intends to continue supporting the year-round program at Gulfstream.

“It's been good for me. You can make a pretty good living and have a life,” Nicks said. “It's been good. Who knows what the future has, but for now it's been good and I'm happy.”

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Laurel Park: Luna Belle Tunes Up For Beyond The Wire; Triple For Apprentice Alvelo

Luna Belle, the newly crowned champion Maryland-bred juvenile filly of 2021, breezed Friday morning at Laurel Park ahead of a planned start in the $100,000 Beyond the Wire March 19.

In the second move since extending her win streak to three races in Laurel's Feb. 19 Wide Country, Luna Belle worked five furlongs in 1:01.23 over a fast main track, ranking ninth of 23 horses. Luna Belle went four furlongs in an easy 49 seconds March 5.

“She didn't work quite as good as I wanted her to, but I worked her real early and I probably should have waited until after the break,” trainer Hamilton Smith said. “But, she did it OK. My exercise rider worked her and was happy with her. We'll see how she comes out of it and go from there.”

The one-mile Beyond the Wire is the next progression for 3-year-old fillies on the stakes calendar, following the seven-furlong Wide Country and six-furlong Xtra Heat Jan. 29, which began Luna Belle's win streak.

“The plan is to go ahead and run her there,” Smith said. “Then we'll look around and see what to do after that.”

Smith co-owns Luna Belle with Deborah Greene, and they also bred the horse with Greene's late father, Fred Greene, Jr. Luna Belle earned her championship after posting two wins, one second and two thirds from seven starts capped by a victory in the Maryland Juvenile Fillies.

“It's really special. It's one that we bred and raised together to be a champion,” Smith said. “We're very proud of the fact that we did that.”

Smith won with his only two starters Friday, I'm Gittin There ($11.40), a 3-year-old filly he bred and owns, in Race 6 and gelding Low Country Dude ($44), bred and owned by Smith's older brother, Goree, in Race 7, a maiden special weight for 3-year-olds.

Friday's fastest five-furlong work of 59.40 seconds was posted by John Salzman Jr.-trained stablemates Local Motive and Buff My Boots. Winner of the 2021 Maryland Million Lassie, Buff My Boots is also nominated to the Beyond the Wire while Local Motive is a three-time stakes winner including the one-mile Miracle Wood Feb. 19.

Local Motive is nominated to the $100,000 Private Terms March 19. The 1 1/16-mile Private Terms is the next step in Maryland's series of stakes races for 3-year-olds, preceded by the Spectacular Bid and Miracle Wood and followed by the $125,000 Federico Tesio April 16. The 1 1/8-mile Tesio is a “Win and In” qualifier for Triple Crown-nominated horses to the 147th Preakness Stakes (G1) May 21 at historic Pimlico Race Course.

Other Private Terms nominees working Friday at Laurel were Majestic Frontier and Heffner, respectively second and third in the Miracle Wood. Majestic Frontier went five furlongs in 1:01.60 while Heffner was timed in 49 seconds for four furlongs.

Also prominent among Laurel's Friday workers were multiple stakes winner Whereshetoldmetogo (four furlongs, 50.60), nominated to the $75,000 Not For Love for Maryland-bred/sired 4-year-olds and up going six furlongs March 19; Fille d'Esprit (five furlongs, 1:00), third in the Feb. 19 Barbara Fritchie (G3) and nominated to the $75,000 Conniver for older Maryland-bred/sired females; and Mama G's Wish (five furlongs, 1:00.20), nominated to the Beyond the Wire off four straight wins.

Notes: Five-pound apprentice Jean Alvelo posted a riding triple Friday aboard Imagine the Mojo ($7) in Race 2, Just Pick One ($11.80) in Race 4 and Low Country Dude ($44) in Race 7. Denis Araujo doubled with Victory Given ($21) in Race 3 and I'm Gittin There ($11.40) in Race 6 … There will be carryovers of $5,066.74 in the $1 Super Hi-5 (Race 2) and $5,003.85 in the 50-cent Late Pick 5 (Races 5-9) for Saturday's nine-race program that begins at 12:25 p.m. Tickets with four of five winners in Friday's Late Pick 5 were worth $20.55 … Post time moves to 12:40 p.m. starting Sunday.

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Daniel Centeno Heads Local Riders Looking For Upsets On Tampa’s Festival Day

Daniel Centeno had an uneasy feeling as his mount in the 2014 Grade 2 Tampa Bay Derby, Ring Weekend, lengthened his lead along the backstretch to six lengths. If there was ever a moment for the normally unflappable jockey to become panic-stricken, this was it.

“I didn't want to be going that fast, especially when everybody was watching. I thought (trainer) Graham (Motion) and the owners were going to kill me if he didn't win,” Centeno recalled. “But he was doing it so comfortably, I didn't want to fight him. When he was still running at the top of the stretch, I thought 'Oh my goodness. We're going to win.' ”

A 14-1 shot that day, Ring Weekend had broken his maiden a month earlier at Gulfstream Park in his fifth career start. He would go on to become a world-class turf horse, winning five additional graded stakes, including the G1 Frank E. Kilroe Mile in 2015 at Santa Anita.

Thanks, in some measure, to Centeno's decision to just go along for the ride in the gelding's lone Tampa Bay Downs start.

That was one of two victories for Centeno in the Oldsmar oval's premier race, to be contested for the 42nd time Saturday at about 5:23 p.m.

Centeno, who also won the 2009 edition on Musket Man, is the only locally-based jockey to win the race twice.

The Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby will be broadcast live on “America's Day at the Races” on FS2 and on TVG.

Two years ago, Samy Camacho broke a five-year losing streak for the local riding colony aboard 49-1 shot King Guillermo, and Jose Ferrer won the race last year on 15-1 shot Helium. Prior to King Guillermo, out-of-town jockeys had won seven out of eight runnings.

Saturday, Centeno – the Salt Rock Tavern Jockey of the Month – will bid to become the first jockey to win the G2 Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby three times with Trademark, a 3-year-old gelding owned by BBN Racing, LLC and trained by Victoria Oliver. Trademark will break from the No. 2 post in the 1 1/16-mile “Road to the Kentucky Derby” points race.

The five other jockeys to win the race twice comprise a virtual “Who's Who” of saddle excellence: Pat Day (Parade Ground in 1998, Limehouse in 2004); Richard Migliore (Wheelaway in 2000, Burning Roma in 2001); Eibar Coa (Region of Merit in 2003, Big Truck in 2008); John Velazquez (Verrazano in 2013, Carpe Diem in 2015); and Jose Ortiz (Tapwrit in 2017, Tacitus in 2019).

Four other Tampa Bay Downs jockeys have mounts in the Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby. Camacho will break from the No. 1 post on Grantham; Antonio Gallardo will ride Golden Glider from the No. 6 post; Hector Rafael Diaz, Jr., will be aboard the Motion-trained Belgrade from the No. 10 post; and Jesus Castanon is on Spin Wheel, who breaks from the outside No. 12 position.

Classic Causeway, who won the G3 Sam F. Davis Stakes here on Feb. 12 by 3 ¾ lengths from Shipsational, is the 8-5 morning-line favorite under jockey Irad Ortiz, Jr., who rode five winners on the Sam F. Davis card.

Post time for Saturday's first race is 12:15 p.m. The Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby is the 11th of 12 races scheduled. Four other stakes are featured on the Festival Day 42 card: the Grade 2, $225,000 Hillsborough Stakes on the turf; the Grade 3, $200,000 Florida Oaks on the turf; the Grade 3, $100,000 Michelob Ultra Challenger on the main track; and the $75,000 Columbia Stakes on the turf.

Centeno, a 50-year-old Venezuela product who has won six Oldsmar riding titles (tied with Mike Manganello), has ridden in the Tampa Bay Derby 10 times. He finished third last year aboard 34-1 shot Moonlite Strike.

Centeno is also named to ride 4-year-old filly Gladys in the Hillsborough and 4-year-old colt Hidden Stash in the Michelob Ultra Challenger, a race the jockey won last year on Last Judgment.

Trademark, normally a front-running sort who was 2-for-4 as a 2-year-old, experienced traffic troubles in the early going of the Sam F. Davis.

“There was a lot of speed in that race, and he didn't get a clean trip,” said Centeno, who did not persevere after Trademark fell from contention. “I'm grateful (Oliver) is giving me the opportunity to ride him back.”

BBN Racing and Oliver also own and train Hidden Stash, whom Centeno has ridden this season in a pair of Oldsmar allowance/optional claiming races on the turf, finishing second and third. Hidden Stash showed a decided liking for the Tampa Bay Downs main surface as a 3-year-old, finishing third in the Sam F. Davis and second in the Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby.

“He's had good races on the dirt and was closing late in the (Lambholm South) Tampa Bay Derby, so I think he's got a good shot,” Centeno said.

Gladys, who won her last start by 6 ½ lengths with Centeno aboard last month in a turf allowance, is getting a chance to prove she belongs against the likes of probable co-favorites Bleecker Street and Lady Speightspeare in the Hillsborough. Gladys is owned by Dede McGehee and trained by Kelsey Danner.

“She ran beautiful last time and when I asked her turning for home, she really opened up on the field,” Centeno said. “This race is more competitive and it looks like there is more early speed, but she is rateable and doing well.”

Perhaps rounding into the best form of her career, Gladys (by Medaglia d'Oro-Lotta Kim, by Roar) will attempt to honor the memory of her sister Rachel Alexandra, the 2009 Horse of the Year who won that year's Preakness against males.

Centeno said he is “grateful, thankful and blessed” to get mounts in three of the five Festival Day 42 stakes. He did it the old-fashioned way – he earned them, by keeping himself in outstanding shape and riding each claiming and allowance horse with the same skill and passion he brings to major stakes.

“He's a classy professional who comes well-prepared for every race, from watching replays and studying the form,” said John Weilbacher, Centeno's agent.

Make no mistake: Centeno gets the same pleasure entering a winner's circle as he did when he won his six Tampa Bay Downs riding titles from 2006-2007 through 2016-2017.

“I'm doing my job well right now, focusing and working hard. I like to ride for everyone. My agent does a great job getting me good opportunities, and I have to keep enjoying them while I can.”

But Centeno – the track's all-time leader in wins, with 1,463, and stakes victories, with 54 – finds his greatest joy when he is surrounded by the women in his life. His partner, Brooke Sillaman, their 5-month-old daughter Sophia, and the jockey's 13-year-old daughter Jazmyn fill his life with contentment and love.

“It (having another child) is a blessing,” said Centeno, who earned the Salt Rock Tavern Jockey of the Month Award by winning 11 races over a period of 10 racing days. “It makes me feel younger, and I'm happy every day. Brooke and I agree on almost everything, but we always talk things through and look at the pros and cons before we make a decision. We have a really good relationship.”

Sillaman, 29, is the daughter of Thoroughbred trainer Richard Sillaman. She works as a chiropractor's assistant, and there are nights when the child-rearing duties rest squarely on Centeno's shoulders.

“That's something you never forget,” said Centeno, laughing. “First Danny (his 22-year-old son, an online marketer), then Jazmyn, and now Sophia. I love everything about it – the diapers, the feeding, putting her back to sleep. We have a beautiful little girl and everybody is happy.”

Centeno, who has ridden 10 graded-stakes winners, has 3,144 career victories in North America to go with the 847 he rode in Venezuela. He is fifth in the Oldsmar standings with 34 winners, after finishing third last season. His 18-percent strike rate exceeds all but Pablo Morales and Samy Camacho among local jockeys with 20 or more victories – a clear indication his skills and drive to succeed are at a high level.

Simply put, Centeno brings the same laser focus to his job as he does when dealing with Sophia's care.

“I think (being with Sillaman) has had a great effect. He is very happy in his personal life,” Weilbacher said.

Centeno, who plans to return to Delaware Park in May and compete at various mid-Atlantic racetracks throughout the spring and summer, relishes the competitive nature of the Tampa Bay Downs colony.

“You look at this season, and so many guys are right there,” he said. “It seems like everyone is winning their share of races.”

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March 13 Memorial Service For Equine Insurance Executive Nick Strong

A Celebration of Life reception for Lowell Nicholas “Nick” Strong will take place Sunday, March 13, 2022, 2-6 p.m. with a memorial tribute 5-6 p.m. in Ballroom 2 of the Central Bank Center at Rupp Arena,  430  West Vine Street, Lexington, Ky. 40507.

Complimentary parking is available via Rupp Arena High Street Lot, 520 W High Street, Lexington, KY 40507.

Strong, 63, of  Nicholasville, Ky., was born on Feb.  8, 1958,  and  passed on Dec. 10, 2021. A devoted husband, father, grandfather, friend and businessman, Strong left an incredible impact on the entire community and beyond. His unique sense of humor, quick wit, leadership and virtue will never be forgotten by those who knew him.

Strong graduated from Tates Creek High School in 1976 and Eastern Kentucky University in 1980. He was the epitome  of an entrepreneur who always  enjoyed  having “skin in  the  game.” He achieved great success with his diversified business interests which included being president of Old Colony Insurance Service, Inc., N & R Enterprises, Bluegrass Industrial Center, C&C Redi-Mix Concrete, chairman of Jessamine South Elkhorn Water District, special deputy sheriff for  Jessamine County, active board member for the Jessamine County Joint Economic Development Authority, Central Bank and Trust Co., and Kentucky Lloyd's Association of Agents.

Another of his greatest passions was his involvement in the equine industry; Thoroughbred owner & partner to many, boarding, breeding, racing and sales, farm ownership, bloodstock, handicapping and, of course, equine insurance.

He was a dedicated member of Southland Christian Church and many other organizations including the Keeneland Association, Thoroughbred Club of America, National Professional Association of Insurance Agents, Thoroughbred Farm Managers, Independent Insurance Agents, Chamber of Commerce, Home Builders Association and many more. He enjoyed spending time with his family & friends, traveling, construction, farming & most of all, his love of tractors.

He is survived by his loving wife, Kimberly Strong (Froelich); his children, Sarah (Brandon Wells), Maggie (Alex Blanton), Lesley (Jared Hager), Lauren (Clayton Fitch) and Travis (Jen Cowley); and his grandson, Pierce. Nick is also survived by his sister, Karla Martello, his niece and nephew, Jeff and Katie Martello and his in laws Max and Brenda Froelich. He is preceded in death by his parents, Doris and Carl Strong.

In lieu of flowers, the family has requested donations be made in memory of Nick Strong to the Kentucky Equine Education Project (KEEP), your local Humane Society or Western KY Tornado Relief Fund via Southland Christian Church.

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