While lesser known to many who don’t follow horse racing closely, the Travers Stakes represents a prestigious competition with a field of some of the best race horses in the country. That race on Aug. 26 turned into a nail-biter as a 3-year-old gray colt named Arcangelo pulled ahead of the crowd to take claim the big win.
A feat in itself, but what happened at the Belmont Stakes in June is where this star-turn story really begins for Arcangelo and his trainer, Jena Antonucci, as they rode straight into the history books, crossing the finish line first and making Jena the first female trainer in history to win The Belmont Stakes. What does this have to do with Land O’Lakes? Arcangelo is proudly fed and supported by Purina Animal Nutrition.
The making of two champions
Jena, who runs the Ocala, Florida-based
horseOlogy raises, trains and races thoroughbreds -- working with some from conception to retirement. No stranger to the horse world, Jena has worked with them nearly all her life.
“My parents always said you have to get a real job -- do horses as a hobby. Well, I did those things but always found my way back to the horse world for different reasons,” says Jena. “I got bit by the bug.”
Turning this into a career, she says she learned how to better understand and retrain thoroughbred horses and loved being able to start them from ground zero.
Arcangelo came to horseOlogy as a 2-year old and didn’t initially strike Jena as a potential Triple Crown race participant.
“We took the reins—no cliché intended—and started over with him. We never intended that he would honestly ever get to the racetrack. We always felt we had a nice horse, but there's a notion in horse racing of the ‘Morning Glory’ where you watch them do everything right in the morning and then they just don’t show up in the afternoon. He handled some adversity early on and didn’t get the wins straight out-of-the-box.”
However, Arcangelo eventually did make it to the competitive track -- and proved he was meant to be there.
Jena says a win Arcangelo had this past March “started a flicker for him and he thought, ‘That was fun. Winning is fun. So, we had built a rapport. That was very fortuitous and we’re fortunate to have him with us now and be on his journey since then.”
But what was it like when this “little horse that could” took The Belmont Stakes, and Jena herself made history?
“Obviously the Belmont win is kind of a standalone of how Arcangelo slammed the door open there. Honestly, I wasn’t even leaning into the ‘I just became the first woman to have done this.’ That wasn’t even on my radar. We were more thinking ‘we just won the Belmont, are you kidding me? Are you kidding me?’ It was literally that simple.”