Tampa Preview Day Tickets Available

Tampa Bay Downs is offering limited general admission for its upcoming Festival Preview Day 41 Presented by Lambholm South. Due to COVID-19 restrictions, the Florida track will limit the number of spectators on the day to 2,500. Tickets are available online at www.tampabaydowns.com.

To be held Feb. 6, the Festival Preview Day card will feature the GIII Sam F. Davis S. and the Suncoast S.

Horsemen, box-seat holders and season-ticket holders do not need to purchase tickets, but will need to present their passes at the gate.

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Tampa Bay Downs: Union Rags Colt Nova Rags Rallies To Win Pasco For Mott

Leading Tampa Bay Downs jockey Samy Camacho welcomed the chance to ride the Pasco Stakes favorite, 3-year-old colt Nova Rags, for Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott. But when 16-1 shot Newyearsblockparty took the lead turning for home, Camacho realized translating opportunity to success was no easy bargain.

“I was a little worried at the three-eighths pole, because (Newyearsblockparty) was going between horses and I had to start working,” Camacho said after posting a 2 ¾-length victory aboard the 13-10 favorite at the Oldsmar, Fla., track. “But I hit him once at the top of the stretch and he responded, and when he switched leads in the stretch it was 'Bye.'”

Nova Rags completed the seven-furlong distance of the $125,000 Pasco Stakes in 1:24.55 on a fast track. Newyearsblockparty continued on willingly under jockey Jose Ferrer, finishing three-quarters of a length ahead of Foreman in the 23rd running of the 3-year-old event.

The victory was the second from three lifetime starts for the Michael Shanley-bred and owned Nova Rags, who showed signs he will enjoy going even farther as he continues his development.

Nova Rags' performance was one of numerous highlights on a partly sunny, windy Skyway Festival Day afternoon. In the previous race, the 37th running of the $125,000 Gasparilla Stakes for 3-year-old fillies, Special Princess staged a whirlwind rally on the outside to forge a dead heat with pace-setter Adios Trippi.

Both Special Princess and Adios Trippi are Florida-breds, meaning both earned $32,500 through additional money provided by the Florida Thoroughbred Breeders' and Owners' Association. Special Princess, bred and owned by J D Farms and trained by Walter Woodard, was ridden by Ademar Santos.

Adios Trippi, who is owned in partnership by Paradise Farms Corp., Brian Hanley, Greg Boyer, Scott Estes and Walder Racing, is trained by Peter Walder and was ridden by Antonio Gallardo.

The co-winners finished in a time of 1:24.89. Feeling Mischief, the betting favorite, flattened out through the stretch, finishing third.

In the third main-track stakes on the card, the 37th running of the $50,000 Wayward Lass for older fillies and mares, heavy favorite Lucky Stride wore down her competition to post a 2 ¼-length victory from On the Town. Estilo Talentoso finished third.

Gallardo rode Lucky Stride for owner Sonata Stable and trainer Michael Trombetta. The winner's time was 1:44.24, .97 seconds off the stakes record set in 2019 by Tapa Tapa Tapa.

Meanwhile, the Pasco victory by Nova Rags, a son of Union Rags out of the Smart Strike mare Wishful Splendor, should open more doors for the colt who finished fourth in his previous start, the Grade 3 Nashua Stakes at Aqueduct in November. “It's what we were hoping for,” said Mott's assistant, Mark Schreiber. “His last race was a little disappointing, but he was kind of shying from horses on the outside of him and he needed to mature a little.

“Samy rode him perfectly today and it looks like he will stretch out. All along, Bill (Mott) saw a lot in this horse,” Schreiber said.

All of the winning connections were ecstatic after the Gasparilla, even though a solo victory is always preferable. The victory was the first career stakes triumph for Woodard and the first stakes triumph at Tampa Bay Downs for Santos.

“This puts me on the map,” Woodard exulted. “I told everyone before the race they were going to know (Special Princess) was there, and Ademar did a hell of a job. She's really come into herself and I was very confident coming into the race.”

Santos was riding Special Princess for the first time, but he'd noticed she had started slow in her two previous Oldsmar starts and suggested to Woodard they work her from the starting gate a few days before the race to put more speed into her. “She broke a lot better today and got the job done,” Santos said. “I thought we beat (Adios Trippi), but it feels good because you don't have too many chances to ride this kind of horse. I told the pony rider to turn her loose in the post parade and she put her head down and got busy, and I knew she had her mind on business.”

Woodard and Santos had teamed to win the previous race on the card, the fifth, with 3-year-old claiming filly Peaceful Way, also owned by J D Farms.

Walder, who engineered the private purchase of Adios Trippi after her impressive maiden score Oct. 5 at Parx Racing in Philadelphia, was, like Woodard, just this side of over the moon after the result was posted.

“This is the happiest I've ever been for a dead-heat. I thought (Special Princess) nailed her, but my filly ran an awesome race because she took the beating up front (posting demanding fractions of 22.57 seconds for the first quarter-mile and 45.65 for the half),” Walder said.

“She just ran against a tough group at Gulfstream two weeks ago (finishing third in the Cash Run Stakes) and it was kind of a quick turnaround, but I liked the idea of wheeling her back from a mile to seven furlongs. She's getting better with each race,” Walder said.

Gallardo shared Walder's excitement. “She did the job, and it's better than second,” he said.

Lucky Stride improved to 9-for-16 with her Wayward Lass victory. “She hasn't done a darn thing wrong since we got her,” said Trombetta, who watched from Gulfstream Park. He had taken over her training last summer but had yet to win with her in four starts, all in stakes competition. “We tried her on turf a couple of times and she did fine, but we'd put this race on the calendar a while back and it worked out.”

Lucky Stride, who trailed by as much as 11 or 12 lengths in the early going, benefited from a quick pace set by long shot No Mercy Percy (who held on well for fourth), but Gallardo wasn't sure if she would get the job done as On the Town and Estilo Talentoso both finished with good energy. “I had to work with her. Michael told me she was kind of a one-paced horse, and I had to stay on top of her the whole time. But when I put her in the clear, she finished strong,” Gallardo said.

“She got floated out so wide on the turn, I was worried she wouldn't be able to get there,” Trombetta said. “It was very nice to see her finish so well.”

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Could Pasco, Gasparilla At Tampa Bay Downs Serve As Launch Pad For Future Sophomore Stars?

The winner of last year's $125,000 Gasparilla Stakes for 3-year-old fillies at Tampa Bay Downs, trainer Mark Casse's Florida-bred Two Sixty, added to her laurels in July with a front-running victory in the Grade 3 Selene Stakes at Woodbine.

But it was fifth-place Gasparilla finisher Swiss Skydiver who just about set the horse racing world on fire last Jan. 18.

After missing the Tampa Bay Downs winner's circle in Oldsmar, Fla., by less than a length (her Equibase chart comment read, in part, “…was urged to challenge the winner four wide between foes leaving mid-stretch but was floated out by that foe late while losing her momentum and just missing for a share”), Swiss Skydiver put together a season that made her one of the most popular horses in training and the favorite for an Eclipse Award as Champion 3-Year-Old Filly.

Under the guidance of trainer Ken McPeek, Swiss Skydiver won five graded stakes, including the Grade 1 Preakness – beating the probable Horse of the Year Authentic – and the G1 Alabama.

Such reflection is a roundabout way of suggesting that Saturday's seven-furlong Gasparilla and the $125,000, seven-furlong Pasco Stakes for 3-year-old males could produce one or more runners fans will be talking about deep into 2021 and beyond.

Saturday's 11-race Skyway Festival Day card, which also includes the $50,000 Wayward Lass Stakes for older fillies and mares racing a mile-and-a-sixteenth, begins at 12:10 p.m.

Seven sophomore fillies are entered in the Gasparilla, which is the sixth race on the card. The field includes Feeling Mischief, who returns to competition after winning the six-furlong Sandpiper Stakes at Tampa Bay Downs on Dec. 5. She is trained by Michael B. Campbell and will be ridden again by Jesus Castanon. Trainer Tim Hamm has two entries: Charge It All, who won a local allowance/optional claiming race on Dec. 20, and Make a Scene, who broke her maiden in Oldsmar on Dec. 26. Wilmer Garcia rides Charge It All and Roberto Alvarado, Jr., is named on Make a Scene.

For some entrants, the Gasparilla is intended as a prep race for the $150,000, mile-and-40-yard Suncoast Stakes on Feb. 6. The first four finishers in the Suncoast earn “Road to the Kentucky Oaks” qualifying points.

There are eight sophomore colts and geldings entered in the Pasco, which is the seventh race on the card. The field includes Nova Rags, a colt from the barn of Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott. Nova Rags broke his maiden on Oct. 10 at Belmont and finished fourth on Nov. 8 in the G3 Nashua Stakes at Aqueduct. Leading Oldsmar jockey Samy Camacho will be the rider.

Others to watch include The Distractor, a stakes-placed gelding trained by Kathleen O'Connell, and Newyearsblockparty, a supplemental entry trained by Anthony Pecoraro. Hector Diaz, Jr., will ride The Distractor and Jose Ferrer will be on Newyearsblockparty.

The Pasco, for some, is a prep for the G3, $250,000 Sam F. Davis Stakes at 1 1/16 miles on Feb. 6; the Sam F. Davis is a “Road to the Kentucky Derby” points race.

The 2019 Pasco winner, a Florida-bred named Win Win Win, has also burnished his resume since setting the still-standing track record of 1:20.89 for the seven-furlong Pasco trip two years ago. The final start of his career, in the G1 Forego Stakes in August at Saratoga, resulted in a thrilling, come-from-behind victory.

Throw in such previous winners as Catalina Red (2015), Dynamic Sky (2013), Prospective (2012) and Musket Man (2009), and it's apparent many top horsemen look upon the Pasco as a launching pad for horses they hope will take them places throughout the year.

So although you haven't heard much from any of the 3-year-olds set to perform Saturday, it's a safe assumption the best days are ahead for a select few.

Or, as Yogi Berra (the baseball player, not the horse) might have said, you never know until you find out.

Nine older fillies and mares are entered in the Wayward Lass, slated as the ninth race. Estilo Talentoso, a 4-year-old owned and trained by Juan Arriagada, returns to competition for the first time since her victory on Aug. 20 in the Escena Stakes at Gulfstream. She has finished first or second in eight of her nine starts. Jose Batista is the jockey.

On the Town, a 5-year-old mare from the barn of Hall of Famer Shug McGaughey, and Lucky Stride, a 5-year-old trained by Michael Trombetta, should also be competitive. Diaz has the assignment aboard On the Town and Antonio Gallardo rides Lucky Stride.

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Tampa Bay Downs: ‘Plan B’ Helps Chenvert Win High Rollers Contest

When he crunched the numbers for the last race of Saturday's High Rollers Handicapping Contest at Tampa Bay Downs in Oldsmar, Fla., Bill Chenvert determined 6-year-old mare Pugilist was the horse to beat in the one-mile claiming event on the turf.

Quick math also revealed Chenvert could not make enough money on the even-money favorite to win the contest. So he turned to his second choice, 4-year-old filly Caribbean Kitten, who had won her previous race and carried more generous odds of 9-2. After placing his contest wager of $100 to win, Chenvert, along with his son Brian and grandson Will, watched things unfold in the Skye Terrace Dining Room.

Pugilist moved first, but Caribbean Kitten was flying on the outside. Her 1 ¾-length victory from 12-1 shot Shes Dynomite added $570 to Chenvert's contest bankroll, giving him $2,090 and enabling him to edge past Greg Lewis by $30 for the top spot and first prize of $17,000.

Lewis won $6,800 for second. Both men also won seats in either of the next two National Thoroughbred Racing Association National Horseplayers Championship in Las Vegas. There were 83 entries in the High Rollers contest.

“We were making a little bit of noise in the restaurant” (during the last race), said Chenvert, a 70-year-old resident of The Villages in central Florida. “It's exciting when you win any tournament, but that was kind of an unbelievable finish. It's just a thrill when you compete against that quality of players.”

Success in the world of big-money Thoroughbred handicapping contests is nothing new for Chenvert. He finished second to Brian, his son, in last year's Pegasus World Cup Betting Championship at Gulfstream Park and was second in the 2019 Breeders' Cup Handicapping Tournament at Santa Anita. On top of that, he is competing this weekend in the Flo-Cal Faceoff and the HorsePlayers BCBC contest.

Chenvert, who owns a nursery and landscaping company in The Villages with his wife, said the High Rollers Handicapping Contest more than meets his competitive instincts. “Tampa Bay Downs is kind of close by, and I enjoy the track,” he said. “The contest is easy to enter and they do a good job running everything. We look forward to playing it again.”

Chenvert got off to a rip-roaring start, collecting $1,520 in contest cash on his first wager of the contest, a $100 bet on 14-1 shot Blueyed Princess in the fourth race on the turf. He chose the first-time starter based on her bullet five-furlong workout of 1:02 from the gate on New Year's Day at Classic Mile Training Center in Ocala.

Lewis, a Columbus, Ohio, resident who finished fifth in last year's High Rollers, also had $100 to win on Blueyed Princess (are these guys lucky or just dang good?). Lewis said the High Rollers Handicapping Contest – which required a $1,000 buy-in – is a great option for handicappers ambivalent about paying a five-figure entry fee to chase six-figure prizes.

“It's a good contest for the medium-to-small player,” Lewis said. “It's well-organized, you don't have to be a heavy player to have a shot and all the money goes back to the players. I'm extremely happy with what happened. I got more than I deserve.”

Finishing third with a final bankroll of $1,987.50 was John Kaiser of Krotz Springs, La. He earned $5,100. Fourth was Scott Prestridge of Euless, Texas, who finished with a bankroll of $1,750 to collect $3,400. Fifth was John Fisher of Leesburg, Fla., whose bankroll of $1,595 was worth $1,700.

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