He’ll Have A Triple: Ferrer Bags Three Winners At Tampa Bay Downs On 57th Birthday

The calendar says jockey Jose Ferrer was a year older on Wednesday. Just don't tell that to his rival jockeys or the trainers and owners who continue to benefit from his skill and passion.

Ferrer rode three winners at Tampa Bay Downs in Oldsmar, Fla., on his 57th birthday, then performed 20 pushups in the winner's circle after weighing in following the ninth race, which he won on 3-year-old filly Princess Nina.

“Hell, no,” Ferrer replied when asked if he felt 57. “Didn't you see me doing 20 after the race?”

Undoubtedly, he will feel even younger in a couple of hours when he shares ice cream and cake with his wife Steffi and their sons, Derek and Joseph.

Ferrer captured the first race aboard Mermaid Kisses, a 4-year-old filly owned by Ridenjac Racing, Dale Howes and Asta Fico and trained by Dennis Ward. The jockey added the eighth race with Papajudgy, a 5-year-old gelding owned and trained by Kerri Raven. Papajudgy was claimed from the race for $7,000 by trainer Darien Rodriguez for new owners Acclaimed Racing Stable and Gumpster Stable.

In the ninth race on the turf, Ferrer kept Princess Nina close up early, moved to the lead rounding the turn for home and coasted to a 4 ¾-length victory from Kitten With a Whip in the 1-mile contest. That victory moved him into a tie for seventh in the 2020-2021 Tampa Bay Downs standings with 29 victories.

Kentucky Derby Day tickets going fast. Due to COVID-19 restrictions, attendance at Tampa Bay Downs on May 1, Kentucky Derby Day, will be limited. As a result, tickets must be purchased in advance, either online or at the Customer Service window on the first floor of the Grandstand. Advance wagering on the Kentucky Derby will be available Friday, April 30.

A front-row box seat for six people in the Grandstand on May 1 is $350, with other boxes available for $250. General-admission tickets are $10 each, with seating on a first-come, first-serve basis. The gates will open at 10 a.m. and there will be a noon post time for the Tampa Bay Downs race program.

Picnic Area tickets are $10. Patrons must bring their own chairs. Kentucky Derby Picnic Area tables for six are $75. All prices include a service fee. Fans are encouraged to purchase their tickets early to avoid being shut out.

For details, visit www.tampabaydowns.com on the Internet or call (813) 855-4401.

Around the oval. Sosua turned in an eye-popping effort in her career debut in the second race, pulling away through the stretch of the six-furlong maiden special weight contest to a 12 ¾-length victory from Mastering Bela. Hector Diaz, Jr., was aboard Sosua. The winning 4-year-old daughter of Speightstown, out of the Unbridled's Song mare Cara Marie, stopped the timer in 1:11.51.

Sosua was a $260,000 purchase at the 2018 Keeneland Association September Yearling Sale. She is owned by Mark B. Grier and trained  by Arnaud Delacour.

Another first-time starter won the third race on the turf, as 3-year-old filly Mago On My Mind, a 49-1 shot, strode clear in deep stretch under jockey Isaac Castillo to post a 2-length victory from Clap for Me. The winner, by Brethren out of the Congrats mare Ruby On My Mind, paid $101.80 to win after touring the 1-mile distance in 1:37.34.

Mago On My Mind is owned by Eduardo Murillo Ortega and trained by Antonio Machado.

Diaz, the jockey on Sosua, also won the sixth race on 3-year-old filly Will Take Roses after Sharon's Law was disqualified for interference through the stretch. Will Take Roses is owned by Angel Ubarri and trained by Victor Carrasco, Jr.

Thoroughbred racing continues Friday with a nine-race card beginning at 12:23 p.m. Following Saturday's card, Tampa Bay Downs will be closed on Easter Sunday, then pick up on Wednesday, April 7 with the 74th day of the 2020-2021 meeting.

Otherwise, the track is open every day for simulcast wagering, no-limits action and tournament play in The Silks Poker Room and golf fun and instruction at The Downs Golf Practice Facility.

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Family Life Helped Axmaker Discover The True Meaning Of Winning

In the stretch run leading to his son Noah's birth in November of 2016, trainer Cody Axmaker would playfully pat Danielle Larabell's belly and ask their boy if he could enter the world on a day when his dad didn't have a horse running.

“Cody is very intense about his work,” said Larabell. “Before Noah came, he couldn't walk past a horse's stall if he noticed anything out of place.”

Five weeks after Noah's arrival (which came on a day with no horses in), Larabell rejoined her life partner's barn at Turf Paradise in Phoenix, Ariz., setting up a nursery in one of the tack rooms. Although Axmaker remained laser-focused on running his stable, a gradual shift in perspective occurred each time he stopped in to check on Noah.

“You've never felt anything as strong as the love you have for your kids,” said Axmaker, a 32-year-old Granger, Wash., product in his first season at Tampa Bay Downs. “It's a feeling you wouldn't trade for the world. It makes you step back and look at the future.”

A self-professed perfectionist, Axmaker tends to analyze every detail, no matter how small, in evaluating his horses and their performances. Five or six years ago, he might have obsessed about what to do differently to win more races (he has four winners from 51 starters here, with 12 seconds).

Although he still returns to the drawing board after a disappointing outcome, having Noah, 4, and daughter Delilah, who was born July 4, 2019, helps Axmaker maintain a strong grasp on what he can and cannot control.

“It (parenthood) has leveled him out. It's taken him down a notch,” Larabell said. “It helps take his mind off things at the track when he comes home and has the kids to focus on. As much as we love the horses – they were our kids before the kids – there is more to life than racing.”

Axmaker has hired additional help so that he can get home a little earlier to be with the family (due to COVID-19 restrictions, Larabell and the children are not allowed on the backside). For the past several years, their home has been a 40-foot Presidential Holiday Rambler RV, which they keep at a bucolic, shady private residence nearby.

Noah has as much energy as a 2-year-old colt in training, and Axmaker enjoys teaching him to play catch, hit a golf ball and shoot baskets and then watching him play on his mini-trampoline when Dad gets worn out. Axmaker reads both kids bedtime stories before turning in.

“Danielle is a great mom,” Axmaker said. “I just kind of help guide them, be a disciplinarian when it's needed and give them chores and keep them busy.”

The couple senses a day coming when the RV won't be sufficient for four people, along with a cat, a red heeler cow dog and a bird. They also own a 9-year-old Icelandic pony they adopted on the off chance Noah and Delilah grow up liking horses.

They are looking to find a house in the surrounding area, with a goal of making Tampa Bay Downs their annual winter racing locale. Axmaker is submitting stall applications for the rest of 2021 to Monmouth Park in New Jersey, Canterbury in Minnesota and Gulfstream Park in south Florida, after primarily racing last summer and fall at Arapahoe Park in Colorado and Belterra Park in Ohio.

“The RV is a little crowded sometimes, and Noah is ready for his own space,” Larabell said. “But it's fun. It's nice to be able to put everything in there and go to the next place when we need to.”

Axmaker's mother Suzy, who works on the Oldsmar backside for trainer Michael Campbell, helps pick up the slack, both at the barn and with the children. She handles laundry duties for her son's stable and is adept at using an equine massager to soothe sore equine muscles. She'll also watch the children when Cody and Danielle need a night out.

For Axmaker, being the breadwinner for four after mostly answering only to himself and owners is a validation of a lifestyle he was born to. His father Peter Axmaker is a trainer, and Cody grew up in Granger wanting to spend his free time helping around the barn and learning what makes Thoroughbreds tick.

“I grew up on a 70-acre farm where my dad bred horses, broke babies and trained them for the racetrack, and I was always watching and learning,” Cody said. “I remember reading the condition book on the drive home from Emerald Downs when I was 7 and figuring out which races were good spots for his horses, and discussing it with him.”

The young boy enjoyed getting into the stalls, feeling a horse's legs and trying to get in tune with their bodies, the way his father did. Most of Peter Axmaker's horses were Washington homebreds, some with nagging issues that kept them from running to their full potential. Cody came to believe the No. 1 thing a trainer could do to improve their performance was treating them as he would want to be treated – giving them sufficient time to recuperate after a race and letting them out of their stalls whenever possible.

In 2008, Peter Axmaker decided he wanted to spend the majority of his time breeding and raising horses in Kentucky, so Cody took over the racing end of the business. He proved himself by sending out a steady stream of winners at Turf Paradise under his father's name and leading the stable to a second-place finish in 2010 at Yavapai Downs (now Arizona Downs).

He quickly discovered that the most challenging aspect of the business was trying to get faster horses.

“I had a lot of cheap horses starting out. They didn't have much blood (pedigree) compared to what I have now,” he said. “The cheaper horses are harder to train than those with better bloodlines. They are like a puzzle, and if you want to win races you have to figure them out and make the right moves.

“You have to have a lot of patience, and you have to convince your owners to be patient and wait for the horse to bloom into itself.”

Being around his father's stable taught Axmaker there are no shortcuts to success and that he had to be self-reliant to survive. Before his big meet at Yavapai Downs 11 years ago, he was scuffling along at Turf Paradise, training horses running in his father's name while the elder Axmaker raced at Los Alamitos in southern California.

In his last race that season at Turf Paradise, Cody saddled a 12-1 shot, Stormy Seattle, for an upset victory that turned things around.

“That got me ten grand in my pocket, and that was good to get us to Yavapai Downs, where my dad's stable won 20 races and was second-leading trainer,” he recalled.

It also allowed the ongoing education of Cody Axmaker to continue without interruption, and he was determined to grasp the opportunity.

“You can never stop learning in this industry,” he said.

“I think that is where he has an advantage, because he is very hands-on and rides all his horses,” Larabell said. “He loves working with them to find out what makes them feel good. Shoeing, chiropractic work, whatever it takes, he's done all of it.”

Axmaker has found Tampa Bay Downs to be an ideal location for his 20-horse stable. He'll hook his horses up to a walking machine in the afternoons and give them free rein to soak up sunshine and their surroundings, and he'll let them roll in the sand pens. He says that has been a successful formula for his 8-year-old gelding William Crotty, who became Axmaker's first 10-race winner with a victory here on March 12 in a mile-and-40-yard waiver claiming race.

William Crotty, who races for one of Axmaker's major clients, Carrol Stubbs, has thrived under the conditioner's care, winning 10 of 29 starts. The trainer also worked to alleviate some chiropractic issues he thought were preventing the horse from fully extending himself.

“It sounds simple, but he's just a horse that you have to keep happy and feeling good. I've got a sand-pile outside the barn I let the horses roll in, and he never misses a day,” Axmaker said. “He'll roll on one side, get up and roll on the other. There's a lot of green grass, too, and we'll let him graze and enjoy the sunshine every day after training.”

In addition to Stubbs, Axmaker has forged solid relationships with owners Roger Shiflett and Snowbird Thoroughbreds, owned by the husband-wife team of Tom and Pam Thieding. Both Shiflett and Snowbird Thoroughbreds have claimed horses for Axmaker at the current meeting, with Shiflett paying $32,000 for the maiden 3-year-old filly Sweet Mary Lou after her runner-up finish in a mile turf race on March 12, and the Thiedings claiming 3-year-old colt Kayaker for $32,000 after a maiden victory on Feb. 26.

Another solid owner is Michael Feigenbaum, whose 6-year-old mare Bonita Annie – a second and two thirds locally, from four starts – is Axmaker's top money-earner.

“Now that I'm getting some better quality horses from owners who are willing to put up the money to buy better-bred, younger horses, I think I can compete with the best of them,” Axmaker said. “We're excited to see where they lead us.

“My philosophy is that you always want to have a string freshening up, a string getting ready to run and a string racing, because they can't run all year long. I feel like I can get 10 good races a year out of most of them if they remain sound and competitive.

“I think I'm pretty good at diagnosing problems. I've worked with a lot of good vets over the years, and I'm big on being able to pinpoint an issue and working on it and just staying patient, giving the best care we can give.”

Although she has her hands full with Noah and Delilah, Larabell misses being able to help out at the barn. Besides working as a groom, she has also galloped horses, getting a quick education one day when Axmaker put her on a horse so independent-minded that she decided to bail out when he took off in the wrong direction.

That experience is something she can laugh about because of her respect for each horse's strength and spirit.

“They have so much heart,” she said. “If a horse is losing all the time, they feel that. You can tell they're mad when they get back to the barn. When they win, they come back walking like 'Yeah, I just won.'

“They know how you're feeling, too,” she said. “They peer into your soul. They've helped me get through a lot of things when I was having a hard time.”

Winston Churchill is credited with saying “There is something about the outside of a horse that is good for the inside of a man.”

And, yet. … Axmaker was in search of something else eight years ago when he went to the Whiskey River Saloon in Phoenix (long since shuttered) after a day of hard work at Turf Paradise.

“We met two-steppin',” recalled Larabell, who was there with friends. “He tapped me on the shoulder and asked me to dance, and that was it.”

“Her big blue eyes drew me in,” said Axmaker.

Axmaker was getting ready to head back to Granger for the summer. After spending most of their free time together the next few weeks, he asked Larabell to come with him (“I can't do long-distance, so you're going to have to come with me if we want to try to make this work,” in horse-trainer speak).

“That was pretty wild for me, seeing that I'd never been away from family,” said Larabell, who has a cosmetology degree and had considered becoming a sign-language interpreter. “I told him, 'Well, you have to come meet my family first if I'm going to leave the state with you.' It was kind of a weird feeling, but it felt right. And I liked the idea of being involved with horses. We went out to lunch with my best friend and she grilled him, but when you know, you know.”

As they continue to progress in the sport, Axmaker and Larabell hope to make a difference in how racing is perceived by the public. They are committed to finding new homes for their horses when their racing days are ended, scouring the Internet for potential new owners interested in a show horse or one to trail ride or simply turn out in a pasture.

“It is the trainer's responsibility to do something for the horses that don't want to compete anymore,” said Axmaker, who estimates he has found new homes for about 100 retired racehorses.

Larabell would like to see more tracks establish child-care facilities to assist young parents struggling to balance the demands of raising a family and caring for valuable racehorses.

No matter where the road takes them, they are firm in their belief that they can accomplish their goals together. Call it faith.

“We definitely involve God in our success,” Axmaker said. “There have been a lot of times when I've thought, how am I going to get out of this one? And He pulled me out somehow. That is something we try to pass down to our kids.”

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18th Annual Florida Cup Offers Six $110,000 Stakes At Tampa Bay Downs

A total of 53 horses have been entered in Sunday's six $110,000-guaranteed Florida Cup Day stakes races that are part of a 12-race Tampa Bay Downs card in Oldsmar, Fla. Post time for the first race is noon.

All of the Florida Cup stakes races are for registered Florida-breds.

The 18th annual Florida Cup, which was cancelled last year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, has attracted horses from the barns of top trainers such as Bill Mott, Todd Pletcher, Michael Maker, Mark Casse and Christophe Clement, as well as Tampa Bay Downs mainstays Gerald Bennett and Kathleen O'Connell.

A number of Gulfstream Park-based jockeys will make the trip north to ride, including Joe Bravo, Paco Lopez, Corey Lanerie, Edgard Zayas and Chantal Sutherland, who recently announced she will return to the saddle in Florida after a brief hiatus. Sutherland will be aboard the 5-year-old mare Kelsey's Cross in the Pleasant Acres Stallions Distaff Turf.

The Florida Cup action starts with the fifth race, the Equistaff Sophomore Turf for 3-year-olds at 1 1/16 miles on the grass. Seven are entered, headed by Maker's Grade 3 stakes winner Chess's Dream, who will be ridden by Daniel Centeno.

Next up for Florida Cup runners is the seventh race, the Ocala Breeders' Sales Sophomore for 3-year-olds racing seven furlongs on the main track. Top contenders in the eight-horse field are multiple-stakes winner Breeze On By, from the barn of Ralph Nicks, and Jeff Engler's stakes winner Willy Boi.

Zayas will be on Breeze On By and Lanerie will ride Willy Boi.

The eighth race is the 1 1/8-mile Grey Goose Turf Classic, with six horses set to go to the post. Pletcher's 4-year-old colt Shamrocket, to be ridden by Zayas, and Maker's distance-loving 4-year-old gelding Me and Mr. C, with Centeno named, appear to be the leading challengers.

The ninth race, the NYRA Bets Sprint for horses 4-years-old-and-upward at six furlongs on the dirt, drew a wide-open field of 10. The 4-year-old colt Shivaree – last year's Florida Derby runner-up – won the Florida Thoroughbred Breeders' and Owners' Association Marion County Florida Sire Stakes in December and may be the post-time wagering favorite. Trainer Ralph Nicks has named Lanerie to ride.

A field of 10 fillies and mares 3 and upward will contest the Pleasant Acres Stallions Distaff Turf, which is the 10th race at 1 1/16 miles. Trainer Darien Rodriguez's Crown and Sugar, the 2019 race winner, and Cam Gambolati's 6-year-old Bienville Street are among those who will attempt to deny Suthlerland a storybook comeback, at least on Sunday. Gallardo is named on Crown and Sugar and Lopez is named on Bienville Street. Another to watch is 5-year-old Beautiful Lover, trained by Clement and to be ridden by Bravo.

The Florida Cup action wraps up with the 11th race, the Stonehedge Farm South Sophomore Fillies for 3-year-old lasses racing seven furlongs on the main track. The 12-horse field includes the O'Connell-trained Fan Fan, to be ridden by Hector Diaz, Jr., and the dead-heat winners of the Jan. 16 Gasparilla Stakes, Adios Trippi and Special Princess. Adios Trippi will be ridden by Gallardo and Special Princess will have the services of Jose Ferrer.

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Sharon Boland, Daughter Of Hall Of Fame Jockey, Happy To Be ‘Back At The Races’

As she accepted congratulations from a stream of well-wishers at Tampa Bay Downs in Oldsmar, Fla., after winning Saturday's sixth race on the turf with 5-year-old mare Twirling Star, trainer Sharon Boland struggled to keep her emotions under control.

It wasn't just winning two races on a card under her own name for the first time that caused Boland to choke up. The occasion also gave her a chance to reflect on a lifetime around Thoroughbred racing that has provided rewards lasting far beyond the excitement of getting to the winner's circle.

“I was still breaking babies five or six years ago, but I was pretty much thinking about getting out of the game because it was changing so much. I had a lot of owners who said 'You need to be back at the races. This is what you love, and this is what your passion is.' So I came back, and it's paying off,” she said.

Boland, who also won the first race with 5-year-old gelding He's Royalty, has 12 horses in training at Tampa Bay Downs and six more babies at Lambholm South in Reddick, Fla., including a few she bred and “which I'm quite excited about.”

Boland learned to gallop horses at Lambholm South when it was known as Hobeau Farm and later galloped for trainers Bill Badgett and the late Sarah “Sally” Lundy.

Saturday's victories were her first of the meeting. He's Royalty, who broke his maiden in the 5 ½-furlong first, is owned by Bart Brookshire and was ridden by Mike Allen, while Wilmer Garcia rode Twirling Star for Boland and owners Anthony Ali, Khaleef Ali and Yanush Ali in the 1-mile sixth. The victory was the mare's second.

Boland is the daughter of National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame member Bill Boland, who won the 1950 Kentucky Derby on Middleground as a 16-year-old apprentice jockey. A day earlier, Boland had won the Kentucky Oaks on Ari's Mona. Before turning 17 that July, he earned the first of his two Belmont Stakes victories on Middleground. Boland and Middleground finished second in the Preakness to Hill Prince.

Bill Boland lives in Palm Coast, Fla., with his wife of 68 years, Sandy. In honor of his Kentucky Derby victory, Sharon named her property, which is in Reddick, Middleground Farm.

“My dad taught me everything I know, mostly about integrity,” Sharon said. “Meaning you've got to be able to go home and sleep at night. You do the business right, work hard, hay and oats and it will pay off. You treat people fairly and be honest, and that is what I try to do.”

Following Saturday's victories, Boland was just as happy for Allen, Garcia and her team that helps care for her horses on the Tampa Bay Downs backside. “You can't take credit for everything. It is 99 percent the horse, but it takes all of us and all the hours you put in.

“I have a lot of people supporting me, and winning two today means the world to me.”

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