TAMPA BAY: CHAPLAIN EXTENDS HANDS TO BACKSIDE WORKERS; HANDSOME PLAYBOY WINS
By Mike Henry —-
OLDSMAR, FL. – Six mornings a week, Alex DeLima walks from barn to barn at Tampa Bay Downs, a thermos of hot coffee in hand, eager to share a message of hope and love with the track’s backstretch population.
If DeLima sees someone is busy working with a horse, he’ll move ahead in his journey, always secure in the knowledge that God’s word is all-powerful and enduring.
“God is love, and He is trying to reach out to man in the Bible from the beginning in Genesis through the Book of Revelation,” said DeLima, a full-time pastor at The Well in nearby Tarpon Springs who became the racetrack’s Chaplain last month. DeLima said he wants to bring people “to a consciousness that there is a supreme God who created us and loves us and wants to have a relationship with us – in other words, He has a plan for our lives if we allow Him to help us.”
In his first few weeks on the job, the 52-year-old DeLima – a new member of the Race Track Chaplaincy of America – has found the job involves wearing numerous hats as he mixes with grooms and hotwalkers, exercise riders and jockeys, as well as trainers, racing officials and the occasional owner.
In addition to organizing the annual Christmas Party for backstretch workers last Thursday, DeLima provided words of sympathy to friends and family of late owner-trainer Bobby Raymond in the winner’s circle after Saturday’s second race; served food at the Horsemen’s Benevolent and Protective Association (HBPA) Christmas Cookout on Tuesday; led jockeys in pre-race prayers inside their quarters; and offered blessings to members of the Tampa Bay Downs starting gate crew.
DeLima also conducts a weekly non-denominational church service (usually held on Mondays) in the Chaplaincy’s trailer. DeLima, a product of Brazil who speaks English, Spanish and Portuguese, delivers his message in Spanish, with his wife Rachel translating to English. Their children – Sarah, 20, Bethany, 17, and Nathaniel, 13 – are part of their youth worship team and contribute with their voices and instruments during the service.
A large percentage of any racetrack’s backstretch population is itinerant, since few tracks conduct racing on a year-round basis. Many workers are in the United States on temporary work visas, with limited English-language skills that can make caring for themselves a bigger challenge than taking care of the Thoroughbreds.
“My main mission,” said DeLima, “is to give people the comfort that someone is caring for them while they are here and to help them in any way we can.” The Chaplaincy works in concert with the Tampa Bay Downs Division of the HBPA to provide needed medical and dental services, as well as food, clothing, bedding and transportation.
The Chaplaincy is also an advocate for backstretch workers who need to deal with the Internal Revenue Service, Social Security, the Division of Motor Vehicles and the civil-justice system.
Beginning after the first of the year, DeLima hopes to organize soccer matches on the large fields across from the Track Kitchen and to start chess and domino tournaments. Caring for valuable racehorses can be a stressful occupation, and providing healthy outlets for workers is an ongoing goal.
Mike Murray, the Executive Director of the Tampa Bay HBPA, was instrumental in DeLima coming to the Oldsmar oval after meeting him about 6 years ago while teaching an advanced English language class. DeLima’s cheerful, outgoing approach and his devotion to God’s word through the Holy Bible have already impacted members of the backstretch community, Murray said.
“The fact he is fluent in English and Spanish is a huge plus,” Murray said. “Alex is a terrific person, and he has drawn the HBPA and the Chaplaincy closer. And he has found people (with pressing needs) who might not otherwise have come to us, because of his personality.”
DeLima, who has ministered to inmates both in Georgia and at the Sumter Correctional Institution in Bushnell, Fla., strives to help every individual find a level of self-worth that might previously have gone untapped, “We love people for who they are, not what they might have done in the past,” he said. “People have struggles, but usually when they see a chaplain they can open up to them and tell what is happening in their lives.”
Handsome Playboy scores. Because of a medical issue, trainer Gerald Bennett, who bred and owns Handsome Playboy in partnership with his wife, Mary, was unable to attend on Dec. 3 when the 2-year-old gelding finished a strong second to Super Chow in the Inaugural Stakes.
Happily for the Bennetts, Handsome Playboy took another step forward today with a 4 ¼-length victory from Call Me Ice Man in the fourth race, a 6-furlong conditional allowance for 2-year-olds. Handsome Playboy rolled home in 1:11.33, the second victory in four lifetime starts for the homebred.
Handsome Playboy encountered little difficulty despite an incident at the starting gate when he unseated jockey Pablo Morales, who once back aboard made all the right moves to display his horse’s strong finishing kick.
A Florida-bred son of Handsome Mike, out of Rita – herself a daughter of $600,000-plus earner Platinum Tiara – Handsome Playboy paid $4 to win.
“Pablo said he had so much horse on the backside and going around the turn, he couldn’t believe it,” Bennett revealed. “He was easing down coming to the wire. He (Handsome Playboy) is improving and learning the game, but I want to take him back to the gate to be schooled.”
Bennett said that Handsome Playboy’s pedigree makes him well-suited for two-turn races and the turf, but he plans to nominate him anyway to the $125,000, 7-furlong Pasco Stakes for newly turned 3-year-olds on Jan. 14.
“It’s a big thrill to get one you bred yourself who has a chance to be a stakes winner and go on to bigger races,” Bennett said.
Around the oval. The Tampa Bay Downs Horsemen’s Benevolent and Protective Association is sponsoring a “Day at the Races” Christmas Party for licensed owners and trainers on Friday in the Winners’ Terrace. Tickets are $10 and are available at the HBPA office on the backside. Dinner, drinks and cash door prizes are included. Call Mike Murray at (813) 925-0192 for details.
Pablo Morales rode two winners today. In addition to his triumph on Handsome Playboy, Morales won the ninth and final race on Dyna’s Honor, a 3-year-old filly owned by Blazing Meadows Farm and trained by Tim Hamm.
Dyna’s Honor was claimed from the race for $16,000 by trainer Jon Arnett for new owner Rodney Miller.
Thoroughbred racing continues Thursday with a nine-race card beginning at 12:25 p.m. Racing will be conducted Friday and Saturday, followed by a three-day hiatus before the Wednesday, Dec. 28 card.
The track is open every day except Christmas, Dec. 25, for simulcast wagering, no-limits poker action and tournament play in The Silks Poker Room and golf fun and instruction at The Downs Golf Practice Facility.