Vincent Scuderi

Born in Glen Cove, Long Island, 57-year-old Vincent Scuderi is the third-generation president of his family’s Brooklyn business, Van Blarcom Company, now known as VBC. The company’s five buildings occupy an entire city block, manufacturing child resistant closures and specialty products for the pharmaceutical and health-care industries. Incorporated on Feb. 3, 1947, VBC manufactures more than one billion closures and fitments annually and employs 300 people. “I have a good business that allows me to pay my horse bills,” Scuderi said April 22. “It’s a very hard game.”

It’s a game he loves to play. His father and uncle helped introduce him to horse racing, and he began catching harness races at nearby Roosevelt Raceway. “I started going for a few late races after work,” Scuderi said. “I was 18 or 19 back then with no money. Two of my friends and I, we used to go there and go party afterwards.”

Scuderi bought his first horse, a Thoroughbred, some 30 years back. The horse never made it to the races. Instead of giving up on racing, he claimed another. “Baby Chris was her name,” he said. “She won three or four races. I was hooked.”

Though he bred Dads Caps and still owns his dam, Seeking the Silver, Scuderi describes himself as a “most predominantly a claiming owner.” He hit a huge home run with Endless Circle, a horse he claimed for $14,000 who subsequently won two stakes with trainer Rudy Rodriguez. Scuderi also had considerable success with Uncle T Seven, a top New York-bred.

He now has six or seven horses with Rodriguez and trainer Michelle Nevin, three babies and one accomplished broodmare who has now produced a Grade I stakes winner. When Scuderi entered speedy Dads Caps in the Carter, he told Rodriguez he’d be okay with scratching him if there was a ton of other early speed in the race. “I honestly thought I could finish in the top four,” Scuderi said. “I was getting weight. It was my home track. And there wasn’t a lot of other early speed. I thought we had a chance.”

He did, giving Rodriguez, jockey Luis Contreras and Scuderi and his family, wife Deborah, son Vincent and daughter Liza, their first Grade I. “It was a surprise,” Scuderi said. “I just get such a thrill out of winning. I really do.”


Centennial Farms

Wicked Strong’s victory in the Wood Memorial at Aqueduct came 21 years after Donald Little Sr. and Donald Little Jr.’s Centennial Farms enjoyed a seminal New York moment at nearby Belmont Park when Colonial Affair won the 1993 Grade 1 Belmont Stakes, making jockey Julie Krone the first female rider to win a Triple Crown race. “I was so nervous for that race that when they loaded the horses in the gate I left the owners in the box seats and hid behind a pole,” 53-year-old Little Jr. said. “By the time they were at the eighth pole, I was back in the middle of the group yelling and cheering.”

Colonial Affair wasn’t done giving the Littles reasons to cheer, adding the Grade I Whitney Handicap and Grade 1 Jockey Club Gold Cup the following year.

Two years earlier, Centennial Farms’ Rubiano won the Grade 1 Carter Handicap, Grade I Vosburgh, Grade 2 Forego, Grade 2 Tom Fool and the Grade 3 Westchester on the way to being named 1992 Eclipse Champion Sprinter. “Rubiano and Colonial Affair put us on the map,” Little Jr. said.

Corinthian kept Centennial Farms in the headlines when he won the Grade I Metropolitan Mile and the inaugural Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile in 2007.

Little Sr. is an investment banker in Boston and the chairman of Centennial Farms. Little Jr. is the Centennial Farms President. Little Sr. is a past president of the United States Polo Association and a master of the Myopia Hunt Club who competes in the master’s class at Grand Prix show jumping events. He was also the youngest aircraft commander in the Strategic Air Command. Little Jr. is also a pilot.

Centennial Farms, which creates racing partnerships, began in 1982 and has won more than 65 graded stakes and $15 million in purses. Paula Parsons breaks and trains Centennial’s yearlings at its 60-acre farm in Middleburg, Va., and Dr. Stephen Carr, a veterinarian, advises Centennial on acquisitions and stallion management. Centennial has horses with three trainers, Jimmy Jerkens, Michael Matz and Rodney Jenkins.

When Centennial’s Grade 3 winner Chelokee was injured and retired, Centennial donated him to the University of Arizona to stand at stud.

Wicked Strong’s original name was Moyne Spun when he was purchased by Centennial for $375,000 at the 2012 Keeneland Yearling Sale. Two weeks after the 2013 bombings at the Boston Marathon, Little Jr. wanted to rename him Boston Strong, but that name had already been taken by Sovereign Stable. After conferring with his friend and Principal of the Boston Bruins, Charlie Jacobs, and Jacob’s wife, Kim, Little settled on Wicked Strong. Then he announced that one percent of his earnings would be donated to the One Fund, which was set up to support victims of the bombings. Already, $7,000 has been donated to the One Fund. After the Wood, Little announced the percentage would be five for the Triple Crown races.

“A lot of times, it takes tragedy to pull people together, and it’s very obvious that did that for the people of Boston,” Little told Anthony Gulizia of the Boston Globe in an April 20th, 2014, story. “The first reaction is anger, which I had myself. But then after that you think about the victims and their families and how we’re going to grow from this and support each other from this, and it happened.”

It only happens when people decide to make a difference.

Preston Stables LLC

Preston Stables.jpg

“In the oil business, you get a dry hole and lose 80 percent of the time,” Art Preston said in a 2011 article in The Blood-Horse. “It’s like racing. If you persevere, you’re going to hit the big one.”

His seven-year-old Flat Out persevered. After finishing second in the Woodward, third in the Jockey Club Gold Cup and eighth in the Breeders’ Cup Classic, Flat Out won the $500,000 Grade I Cigar Mile for trainer Bill Mott, who trained two-time Horse of the Year Cigar. Preston purchased Flat Out for $85,000 at the 2007 Fasig-Tipton Kentucky July Yearling Sale under a stable name, Oxbow Racing. Preston also raced as LOR (Lone Oak Racing) Stables and as Prestonwood Farm with his brother Jack and their late brother, J.R. He and Jack are frequently mistaken for each other.

A native of Oklahoma who now lives in The Woodlands in Texas, Preston graduated with a Bachelor’s Degree in geology from the University of Illinois. After working as a geologist in the Illinois Basin, Preston and his brothers partnered on several ventures in gas and oil, real estate, cattle ranches, nutritional supplements marketing, fiber optics, restaurants, geothermal power generation companies, and, of course, Thoroughbreds.

Preston founded Presco Inc. in Woodlands in 1991. Presco Inc., a natural gas exploration and development company, has offices in Texas, Michigan, Colorado, Oklahoma and Kentucky and oil and gas production facilities in Colorado, Montana and Oklahoma. According to Presco Inc.’s website, Preston’s companies have developed and sold numerous oil and gas assets with cumulative sales prices, not including normal production revenues, in excess of $400 million.

His success in business allowed him to get involved in racing. He purchased a percentage of a claimer in the late 1970s, and then, with his two brothers, began Preston Farm near Quanah, Texas. Then they opened Prestonwood Farm in central Kentucky. Prestonwood Farm was re-named WinStar Farm when it was sold in 2000 to Kenny Troutt and Bill Casner.

Prestonwood Farm’s top horses included 1987 Eclipse Award Champion Sprinter Groovy; 1999 Champion Older Male Victory Gallop, who denied Real Quiet the Triple Crown by edging him in the 1998 Belmont Stakes, and Da Hoss, who won the Breeders’ Cup Mile twice in 1996 and 1998.

Preston, who had another multiple stakes winner this year in Flashy American, keeps his horses at his 800-acre Oxbow Farms in Paris, Kentucky, 30 miles north of Lexington. His current stable of 50 horses includes weanlings, yearlings and the ones now racing. Tim Schuh trains most of Preston’s horses. Preston tends to name his horses using the first letter of the sire’s name. Flat Out, a son of Flatter, has now earned just under $3.5 million.