Tampa Bay Downs

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Tampa Bay Downs is an American Thoroughbred horse racing facility in Tampa, Florida. It opened in 1926 under the name Tampa Downs. The first of many names, the racetrack was well known as Florida Downs. The founding operation was headed by Ohio investor Harvey Mayers and Kentucky Colonel Matt J. Winn. In 1943, the United States Army took over the track for use as a training facility.

On February 12, 1981, Julie Krone, then an apprentice jockey and now a U.S. Racing Hall of Fame inductee, got her first career victory here.

In 1983 the track began running periodic Arabian horse races.

[edit] Physical attributes

The main track is a one mile dirt oval. The turf course is seven furlongs and includes a quarter mile inner chute. Tampa Bay Downs, which has long been famous as the only Thoroughbred race track on the West Coast of Florida, provides Bay area sports fans with live racing action from December through May. Tampa Bay Downs first opened its doors in 1926 under the name of Tampa Downs and has since amassed a long and colorful history. Inn 1946 the track was renamed Sunshine Park and entered the modern era with the installation of an electric starting gate, photo finish and electric tote board. During the 1950s, the racecourse was a popular attraction with many sportswriters who came to the Tampa Bay area to cover baseball spring training. Legendary names like Grantland Rice, Red Smith, and Arthur Daley became regular visitors, calling the track the “Santa Anita of the South.” Contemporary racing fans are fond of the Downs as it has a charm all its own and know it to be one of America’s most pleasant and well-kept racetracks. The year 1965 marked the third name change for the track when it opened as Florida Downs. The track returned to its original name of Tampa Downs in 1980. The present owner, Stella Thayer, assumed the reins in 1986 and the track became known as Tampa Bay Downs. In 1998 Tampa Bay Downs added its 7/8-mile grass track, complete with a ¼ mile chute, which has become one of the most popular turf courses in North America. The course was completed in the spring of 1998 and the first race was contested on Kentucky Derby Day, May 2, 1998. This new avenue has provided more opportunities for the horsemen and patrons alike. Other renovations include a state-of-the-art 22-acre golf range called the Downs Golf Practice Facility, which includes a 270-yard driving range, two in-house golf instructors as well as a wagering facility. Area poker fans enjoyed the debut of the Silks Poker Room with the opening of the 2004 season; the poker room operates every day from 1:30 PM through 12:30 AM. Prior to the 2007-2008 racing season, Tampa Bay Downs underwent several renovations that included a new Silks Poker Room on the third floor of the Grandstand, the new Legends Bar featuring famous 1930s Thoroughbred Seabiscuit, as well as a new backstretch kitchen and racing office. Also prior to the 2007-2008 meet, Tampa Bay Downs was awarded four Graded Stakes: The Grade III $300,000 Tampa Bay Downs and the Grade III $175,000 Hillsborough Stakes retained their distinctions; and the $200,000 Florida Oaks and the $150,000 Endeavour Breeders’ Cup received Grade III status. When Tampa Bay Downs’ concluded its 81st season on May 6th, the track established new records in handle, attendance and purses paid, including an all-time attendance mark of 11,014 on Kentucky Derby Day, May 5, 2007, which featured Tampa Bay Derby winner Street Sense becoming the first graduate of the Tampa Bay Derby to win the Kentucky Derby. Tampa Bay Derby day also marked the Oldsmar oval’s highest-ever handle, with $10,916,634 wagered on the Tampa Bay Downs signal on that day. Street Sense and Any Given Saturday were two of the notable horses who competed over the Tampa Bay Downs surface in the 2006-2007 racing season; they were joined by such notable horses as Cotton Blossom, Istan and Autobahn Girl. The Grade III Endeavour Breeders’ Cup for fillies and mares four years old and up, the $200,000 Sam F. Davis Stakes for three-year-olds and the $75,000 Suncoast Stakes for three-year-old fillies comprise Festival Preview Day, to be held on February 16, 2008. Festival Preview Day is a series of preparatory races for the next month’s Festival Day. The $300,000 Grade III Tampa Bay Derby, observing its 28th renewal in 2008, along with the Grade III $200,000 Florida Oaks and the $175,000 Grade III Hillsborough Stakes, are showcased on the same day, in March. The Derby is for three-year-olds with Triple Crown potential, and the Oaks are for three-year-old fillies and the Hillsborough for older fillies and mares.

[edit] Racing

The track runs four Grade III stakes races:

The track also runs numerous non-graded stakes and the purses have set records in the past several years. The ungraded Sam F. Davis Stakes is now an official prep race for the Kentucky Derby.

The track races from December until May.