Birthday Boy Trombetta Closing in on 2,000 Career Win Milestone

Birthday Boy Trombetta Closing in on 2,000 Career Win Milestone

$75,000 Howard Bender ‘on Radar’ for Grade 3-Placed Gelding Galerio
New Post Time, Super Hi-5 Carryover for Return of Live Racing Thursday

LAUREL, MD –As fate would have it, Mike Trombetta has the opportunity to celebrate two milestones in the same week.

Perennially one of the top trainers in Maryland who is also a player on the national stage, Trombetta turned 55 on Tuesday. The Baltimore native stands just two shy of 2,000 career wins, which he can reach as soon as Thursday when live racing returns to Laurel Park.

Trombetta has three horses entered in two of Laurel’s nine races Thursday – 3-year-old gelding Mr Mosley in the opener for maidens 3, 4 and 5 going 1 1/16 miles on the Bowl Game turf course, and both Fifteen Royals and Ellanation in the seventh, an optional claiming allowance for fillies and mares 3 and up sprinting 5 ½ furlongs on the Exceller layout.

In addition, Trombetta will be represented by 3-year-old filly Imagery in Thursday’s sixth race at Woodbine, a six-furlong optional claimer on the grass where she is the narrow 3-1 program favorite. On Friday, Trombetta has five horses entered in four races on Laurel’s nine-race card.

“We’re trying to get there. We have a little bit more to do with it. We need two more. It’s exciting stuff,” Trombetta said, adding that it “would be cool” to get No. 2,000 at home in Maryland. “I can’t really control it, but maybe it will work out that way. It would be a lot of fun.”

According to Equibase statistics, Trombetta’s 1,998 wins have come from 11,238 career starters, including 91-for-581 this year. He has reached more than $1 million in purse earnings every year since 2005 and at least $3 million since 2007, with a career bankroll approaching $68.3 million.

“Time goes by so fast, as we all know. Fortunately, I still enjoy this a whole lot and that makes it fun,” Trombetta said. “When those times do come up and you reflect a little bit, I’m grateful that I’ve been able to do this as an occupation.”

Based primarily at Laurel and the Fair Hill Training Center in Elkton, Md., Trombetta runs horses up and down the East Coast. He spends part of the summer in Saratoga and winter in South Florida, and this year branched out with a small string at Delaware Park.

“We had a few more than we could fit at the other two places [Laurel and Fair Hill],” Trombetta said. “So, we get scattered about and that makes it a little bit more challenging for all of us, but that’s part of the game.”

Trombetta’s introduction to horses came from his father, at tracks such as historic Pimlico Race Course and the Maryland State Fairgrounds in Timonium, and he steadily worked his way up the ladder to becoming a trainer.

“My dad owned some horses when I was a teenager and I got some exposure to it that way. I liked the sport and I liked the horses, and I got an opportunity to start working with them a little bit,” he said. “I was walking hots when I was 13 years old and I was grooming horses by the time I was 15. When I was in school I did school, but when I wasn’t in school I was at the track.”

Trombetta’s first winner came in 1986 with Amant De Cour at Atlantic City Race Course in New Jersey, which closed in 2015. He picked up No. 1,000 Nov. 27, 2011 at Charles Town with Allwewantforxmas.

The MTHA Trainer of the Year in 2005, Trombetta burst on the national scene with Sweetnorthernsaint, an ex-claimer turned Grade 2 winner who went off as the Kentucky Derby (G1) favorite in 2006 and ran second to champion Bernardini in the Preakness (G1). Among his local stakes wins were the 2006 Miracle Wood and 2007 Harrison E. Johnson Memorial at Laurel.

For his career, Trombetta said ‘The Saint’ meant “everything. That was a turning point for me. That’s when we went from just doing this job to everybody kind of getting a chance to know who we were, and that meant the world to us. That just put fuel on the fire that I could have never expected.”

Other stakes horses for Trombetta include 2020 Forego (G1) winner Win Win Win, 2019 Highlander (G1) winner Wet Your Whistle, 2012 Nearctic (G1) winner Next Question, 2009 Commonwealth (G3) winner Eternal Star, 2009 Carry Back (G2) winner Not for Silver and Grade 3 winners Weigelia, Control System, Jimanator, Despite the Odds, Street Magician, Souper Escape, Global Access, Independence Hall.

Over the years, Trombetta has had some major owners as clients such as Live Oak Plantation, R. Larry Johnson and the Meyerhoff family, best known for campaigning Hall of Famer Spectacular Bid.

Trombetta won Laurel’s 2019 spring stand and shared the 2015 winter meet title with Claudio Gonzalez, to whom he has finished second in annual Maryland wins each of the past two years. He also ranks among the all-time leading trainers in Maryland Million history with eight wins.

“We’ve had a lot of good owners for a lot of years, and we’re obviously very grateful to them,” Trombetta said. “It’s a team effort. Everybody works so hard. To think about all the people that get up at 3:30 or 4 o’clock in the morning to do this job, it’s pretty amazing stuff. I can’t say enough. These guys work tremendously hard for us. They’re very dedicated. I’ve had some really good people for a lot of years, and I’m grateful to have them.”

$75,000 Howard Bender ‘on Radar’ for G3-Placed Gelding Galerio

Morris Kernan Jr., Yo Berbs and Jagger Inc.’s Grade 3-placed gelding Galerio may get the chance to register his first career stakes victory next month over Thanksgiving weekend at Laurel Park.

Trainer and co-owner Jamie Ness said the $75,000 Howard Bender for Maryland-bred/sired 3-year-olds and up sprinting seven furlongs Nov. 26 is in play for the 5-year-old son of Jump Start, bred in Maryland by Daniel Marconi.

“I’d like to have something in between there if I could, but I definitely have that on the radar,” Ness said. “He’s a nice horse.”

Galerio, first or second in 22 of 28 lifetime starts including nine wins, was claimed for $40,000 out of a runner-up finish Aug. 16 going a mile on the main track at Colonial Downs. In his first start for Ness, he ran second in the M.P. Ballezzi Appreciation Mile Oct. 12 at Parx.

Among the horses he beat that day were Grade 3 winners Informative, Phat Man and Senior Investment and multiple stakes winner Someday Jones. Galerio was pre-entered in the $150,000 Maryland Million Classic Oct. 23 at Laurel.

“He’s not Maryland-sired, so he’d have [had] to get lucky to get in,” Ness said. “He ran up at Parx and ran second in a nice stake and beat some really good horses. Even if he did draw in [the Classic], I think it [was] too quick. I think he would bounce a little bit and not throw his best effort, so we weren’t really looking at it.”

Galerio has earned more than $417,000 in purses and placed in five stakes, all this year, including the Salvator Mile (G3) June 12 at Monmouth Park and the Harrison E. Johnson Memorial, John B. Campbell and Jennings in successive starts at Laurel to kick off 2021 for previous trainer Dale Bennett.

“We knew what we were getting. He’s a classy old horse,” Ness said. “We got him for [$40,000] and he was a little beat up, so we took our time with him. He really beat some good horses the other day. He ran second but the horses behind him are really good horses. I was really happy with his last race. Hopefully we’ll get him back and have him [at Laurel] all winter in those races.”

New Post Time, Super Hi-5 Carryover for Thursday Return of Live Racing

Laurel Park will have a new post time of 12:25 p.m. starting with Thursday’s return of live racing and continuing through the remainder of its calendar-year ending fall meet.

Nine races are on tap Thursday including five scheduled for Laurel’s world-class turf course which drew a total of 76 entries, an average of 15.2 per race. Racing will be conducted over the Bowl Game and Exceller course layouts.

Thursday’s feature comes in Race 7, a second-level optional claiming allowance for fillies and mares 3 and up sprinting 5 ½ furlongs on the Exceller that drew a field including July 24 Sensible Lady Turf Dash winner Can the Queen, July 4 Jameela winner Ellanation and Grade 3-placed Drop a Hint.

A pair of allowance races for 3-year-olds and up going 1 1/16 miles help spice up Thursday’s card. Race 3, on the Exceller turf, features Mystical Man, beaten a head as the favorite over yielding ground Sept. 25 at Laurel in his first start for Hall of Fame trainer Jack Fisher off a $75,000 claim at Saratoga. Race 8, on the main track, will see Godolphin’s Lidstrom, a $2.5 million yearling in September 2019, go after his second straight win following a maiden special weight triumph Oct. 2 at Laurel.

There will be a carryover of $3,117.78 in the $1 Super Hi-5 for Thursday’s opener.

Friday’s nine-race card features a stakes-quality, third-level optional claiming allowance for fillies and mares 3 and up sprinting seven furlongs in Race 3. The field includes Moquist, undefeated through three career starts; multiple stakes winners Dontletsweetfoolya and Needs Supervision, respectively unraced in 138 and 237 days; and March 13 Conniver runner-up Lookin Dynamic.

Irish Mias, the 2019 Laurel Futurity winner for trainer Graham Motion, is entered to make his first start in 393 days in Friday’s Race 8, an open, entry-level allowance dash for 3-year-olds and up going 5 ½ furlongs on the Exceller turf course.