‘It Reminded Me Of Riding In Louisiana’: Parx Slop Nothing New As Edwin Maldonado Nabs First Million-Dollar Victory

Two days after winning the first million-dollar race of his career at Parx Racing near Philadelphia, jockey Edwin Maldonado was back at Santa Anita working horses Monday morning.

Maldonado's milestone victory came in front-running fashion aboard Ceiling Crusher in the Grade 1, $1 million Cotillion for 3-year-old fillies. Ceiling Crusher is a California-bred daughter of Mr. Big trained by Doug O'Neill.

Maldonado won the 1 1/16-mile Cotillion on a sloppy and sealed track after heavy rain pelted Parx for most of the day.

“It was quite an experience,” said Maldonado, whose only previous Grade 1 win came in last year's Awesome Again at Santa Anita aboard Defunded. “I haven't ridden in the rain in a long time. It reminded me of riding in Louisiana at Delta Downs.

“But it worked out great because the track got fast the end of the day when it started drying out. That worked out in our favor.”

Sent off the 3-1 co-second choice, Maldonado and Ceiling Crusher clicked off fractions of 22.31 seconds for the opening quarter mile, 47.64 for a half mile and 1:12.98 for six furlongs. They crossed the wire in a final time of 1:45.69, which earned a 93 Beyer Speed Figure.

“The pace was great,” Maldonado said. “I think it was the 1:12 that did it. I got a little break around the second turn. Turning for home I knew I had a lot of horse.”

Bred by Harris Farms, Ceiling Crusher was purchased for $22,000 at the 2021 CTBA Northern California Yearling Sale. She has won six of seven starts and banked $938,400 for owners Wonderland Racing Stables, Todd Cady, Tim Kasparoff and Ty Leatherman.

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Russell, Barbosa Repeat As Pimlico Fall Meet Leaders

In a repeat of last year, trainer Brittany Russell and jockey Jeiron Barbosa finished at the top of their respective standings as historic Pimlico Race Course wrapped up its boutique nine-day fall meet Sunday.

Russell had one winner from three starters Sunday, Michael Dubb and Michael Caruso's 2-year-old filly Low Society ($4) in Race 3, to give her seven for the meet, one more than runner-up Hugh McMahon, who captured the Race 10 finale with Dancinonthebeach ($20.40).

In earning her fifth career title Russell posted training doubles on Sept. 10, including the $75,000 Challedon with Swill, and Sept. 16, when she won the $100,000 Weather Vane with Apple Picker and $100,000 All Along with Full Count Felicia.

“It's awesome. I'll be honest, I don't feel like this was an easy meet for us,” Russell said. “But we had some quality horses show up and I think that's the most important thing. We had some nice horses, some stakes wins, good horses winning good races. That's really what we're here for.”

Low Society gave jockey Jevian Toledo his 1,500th career victory, making the day even more special for Russell and her daughter, Edy, who posed in the winner's circle with Toledo as he was presented with a sign from the Maryland Jockey Club. Low Society wound up being claimed for $30,000.

“That was so exciting. Edy thought it was great. It was a nice surprise on the day,” Russell said. “I knew he was coming close but with a maiden [$30,000} filly 2-year-old race, you weren't even thinking about it. Then he wins the race, and it was a lot of fun. I'm really happy for Toledo because, obviously, he is a huge part of our team.”

Earlier this year the recently turned 34-year-old Russell earned a second straight Preakness Meet at Pimlico title and also ranked second at Laurel winter and summer and fourth at Laurel spring while leading the standings in purse earnings each time.

Already, the Pennsylvania native has surpassed career highs across the board with 477 starters, 124 wins and more than $5.7 million in purse earnings. Leading all Maryland trainers with 81 wins at Laurel and Pimlico this year, she could become the first woman ever to finish as the state's winningest trainer.

Russell's other training titles have come at Laurel's 2022 spring and fall meets. In April she earned her second career graded-stakes victory and first in a Grade 1 with Doppleganger in the Carter Handicap at Aqueduct.

“It's great,” she said. “Obviously, we're delighted and thrilled to win.”

It is the fourth career riding title and first this year for Barbosa, 19, a finalist for the Eclipse Award as outstanding apprentice of 2022, when he captured Laurel Park's spring and fall stands in addition to Pimlico. He went winless Sunday but ended with a 12-7 advantage over Sheldon Russell and apprentice Axel Concepcion.

Barbosa registered five multi-win days during the fall meet that began Sept. 8, including hat tricks Sept. 9 and 22, and he scored an upset victory aboard Built Wright Stable's Double Crown in the $100,000 Polynesian Sept. 10.

Represented by agent Tom Stift, Barbosa ranks second overall in Maryland with 102 wins, trailing only Jaime Rodriguez (113). Barbosa finished second to Rodriguez at Laurel's winter meet with 49 wins and tied with Angel Cruz for second at Laurel's spring stand, one win behind Concepcion.

Barbosa's wins came for nine different trainers: Ray Ginter Jr. (3), Damon Dilodovico (2), Robert Mosco, Hamilton Smith, Milan Milosevic, Phil Capuano, Rudy Sanchez-Salomon, Michael Merryman and Kieron Magee.

“Starting off hot at a short meet is great, but he's been on a roll for a while,” Stift said. “He's just been hot for a couple months. He's riding in the zone. You see him making moves and it's like, 'Whoa.' ”

For the year, Barbosa has 129 wins and more than $4.8 million in purse earnings, ranking in the top 30 nationally in wins and top 35 in money won.

“He's done it quietly. It's pretty impressive,” Stift said. “He's riding aggressive, and people are really noticing now.”

A native of Puerto Rico, where he attended the Escuela Vocacional Hipica jockey school, Barbosa won on each of his first two domestic mounts, Heliacal Rising and Ludicrous Mode, last March 22 at Laurel. His spring title came made him just the third apprentice in the past decade, following Yomar Ortiz (2013) and Julio Correa (2020), to lead Laurel's rider standings.

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Apprentice Torres, Protege Of Hall Of Famers, Makes New Home On Kentucky Circuit

Apprentice jockey Jaime Torres has found a new home on the Kentucky circuit with the help of his agent, Hall of Fame jockey Gary Stevens, and the backing of Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas.

“It's been a dream to come ride in Kentucky,” Torres said. “I'm pretty new to the sport. One day I was sitting at home Puerto Rico and saw racing on from Camarero and I fell in love. From that point on, I wanted to become a jockey.”

Torres won his first race nearly one year ago at Gulfstream Park. The 24-year-old rider started galloping horses in Puerto Rico before moving to the U.S. and working for Saffie Joseph Jr.

Torres, a five-pound apprentice rider, won his first race at Churchill Downs on Sept. 16 aboard Our Keepsake, a 2-year-old Cinco Charlie filly trained by Lukas who scored by 4 1/4 lengths going gate to wire.

“Riding for Mr. Lukas is a blessing,” Torres said. “I've been very lucky to learn from so many talented people like Gary Stevens and Angel Cordero (Jr.), who was my agent in New York. They've all taught me so much about riding and life.”

Even with Lukas being a main supporter of Torres, he is slated to ride for many top outfits over the next week including Mike Maker, Chris Hartman, Joe Sharp, and Michael McCarthy.

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‘It’s A Huge Honor’: Jessica Paquette Prepares For Historic Race Calls At Parx

Jessica Paquette has weathered plenty in her almost year on the job at Parx Racing. She's handled the ups and downs, learning the craft as the track announcer at the suburban Philadelphia racetrack that Saturday's Grade 1, $1 million betPARX Pennsylvania Derby and strong supporting card.

Now she's ready for another type of weather when the blast of a tropical storm hits the area Friday night and Saturday.

“The first race I called was at Suffolk Downs after a tornado and T.D. (Thornton, the track's regular announcer) was stuck in traffic,” said the 38-year-old Paquette, who cut her teeth in racing at the East Boston oval before gigs at Sam Houston Race Park, Colonial Downs and now Parx. “It's pretty fitting that I called my first race in a tornado and this one could be in a tropical storm. It's kind of poetic, but maybe it's me.”

Paquette, who jokes that she's been called the “Lady Announcer,” will make history Saturday as the first female to call a Grade 1 stakes in North America. She'll call the $1 million Cotillion at 5:20 p.m. ET and the 43rd running of the Pennsylvania Derby at 6:10 p.m.

“First and hopefully not the last,” Paquette said. “It's a huge honor to get even get the tiniest footnote in the history books of the sport that we've all come to devote our entire lives to. The thing with working in racing, it isn't just what we do, it's who we are. Our entire sense of self gets woven into it.”

Paquette worked as the paddock host and analyst for the last two Pennsylvania Derby Days and took the full-time announcing job Nov. 15, 2022. She admits it's been a rocky road learning the craft, while receiving plenty of positive feedback from her peers and others involved in the Thoroughbred industry.

A lifelong racing fan and equestrian from New England, Paquette feels up to the challenge of the job on a day-to-day basis and on Pennsylvania racing's biggest day.

“The good thing is I'm a fundamentally anxious person, so I'm always probably like a 7 1/2 on a scale of 1 to 10. This has really benefited me horse showing as well. I don't really get more anxious. I'm just always sort of anxious. But I want to do a good job on a bottom non-winners-of-two-lifetime as much as I do on a big day. The preparation remains the same and I'm a big believer in control what you can control. And in this case, I can control how prepared I am, my attitude and how I react to things.”

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