Trainer Jay Bernardini and jockey Jacqueline Davis each enjoyed three-win days before an enthusiastic Belmont Stakes Day crowd of 8,333 at Suffolk Downs on Saturday, June 9.
Bernardini broke the ice for his first win of the season in the fifth race with Gesu ($10.20), ridden to victory by David Amiss. He and Amiss teamed up again to prevail by a head with Miss Shoppin Diva ($19.40) in the featured eighth race, a five and a half furlong allowance event. He swept the late double with Mock Me Not ($7.40) under Jacqueline Davis, who capped off her triple in the ninth as well.
Davis, who currently tops the jockey standings with eight victories, won the second race with Navy Nurse ($6.80) for George Saccardo and the seventh race with the Peter Bazeos-trained Breathtakingbreeze ($5.20) before completing her trifecta with Bernardini in the ninth.
Suffolk Downs honored four “Community Winner’s Circle” recipients for their positive contributions to their local communities. The track recognized the Salesian Boys & Girls Club of East Boston, the Revere Beautification Committee, the Viking Proud Foundation of Winthrop and HarborCOV of Chelsea. The live racing schedule moves to a four-day week (Mon-Tues-Wed-Sat) starting next week. First pos time is 12:45 p.m. daily.
Ciccarello leads Revere Softball to new heights
Former East Boston resident and Savio Prep graduate, Joe Ciccarello was asked what the signature victory was for his rapidly rising Revere High softball program this season.
The answer: an upset of perennial Middlesex League powerhouse and recent two-time Division 1 state champion Lexington in the first round of the State Tournament – on the Minutemen’s home field, no less.
“That was a turning point for the program – a ‘we have arrived’ moment,” said Ciccarello. “Beating Lexington, the Middlesex League champion, at Lexington was a very good win for us and it told our girls that on any given day we can beat any given team.”
Ciccarello’s efforts this season earned him the Northeastern Conference Coach of the Year Award. The program has advanced quickly under his direction. His first team went 3-17 but the Lady Patriots have won 22 games and qualified for post-season play the past two seasons, and the future – with a host of returning players including freshman phenom pitcher Sabrina Palermo – looks exceedingly bright.
“When I took over this program three years ago, I always thought that I didn’t want to coach a team, I want to coach a program,” said the 43-year-old Ciccarello, a mathematics and economics teacher at the high school. “Every year we want to be competitive and go further in the tournament and I think that’s what happening right now and the other coaches are recognizing that.”
The Lady Patriots impressed long-time fans with their strong execution of the fundamentals – a trademark of Ciccarello-led teams. An early-season showdown with eventual NEC champion Lynn Classical – a game that was tied 1-1 in the sixth and in which All-Star catcher Lindsay Gurska hit a home run – was a sign that Revere was climbing the conference ladder.
Gurska, a junior who developed this season in to one of the best catchers in the area, junior center fielder Jackie Noel, and senior first baseman Michaela Maguire received All-Star recognition. Maguire and graduating players Alex Ambrosino, Courtney Gurksa, and Brianna Lauletta are credited with helping the program advance to the next level.
Palermo’s emergence as a fire-balling right-hander with other strikeout pitches in her repertoire, was a launching pad to the Patriots’ success. “When you bring a lot of speed to the mound like Sabrina does, it gives you a chance offensively to get going because you know she’s going to hold the opposition down,” said Ciccarello. “She had a great year for a freshman but is she wants to jump to the next level and carry us past teams like Central Catholic and Lynn Classical, she’s has to work in the off season.”
Ciccarello said another noteworthy development for the team was the all-around performance by sophomore outfielder Cassandra DiBella, one of several players who previously excelled for the middle school team coached by Peter DiCarlo.
“I thought Cassandra Dibella was the biggest surprise of the year,” said Ciccarello. “The whole coaching staff was impressed by how well she played her position in right field – she’s fast and caught up with a number of fly balls. And at the plate, she has a really quick bat and good speed on the bases.”
Another impressive newcomer to the varsity was freshman second baseman Christina Stella. “She played excellent second base,” said Ciccarello, who added that the other half of the middle-infield combination, sophomore shortstop Logan DiCarlo, is a “budding All-Star.”
“As far as I’m concerned, Logan is the face of our program; she always has a smile on her face and she’s a really nice kid,” said Ciccarello. “I love this team – they’re great kids.”
Ciccarello brought considerable coaching experience and a history of winning to the Revere program. A former hockey goaltender and Class of 1987 graduate of Savio Prep, he was the softball coach at Savio for ten seasons, leading his team to eight post-season berths. As the Savio hockey coach for eight season, he led the Spartans to five consecutive North Sectional finals and three Sectional championships.
Ciccarello said the sport of softball has been an integral part of his life for a long time. In fact, softball led him to meeting his wife, Adeline (McCarthy), a former East Boston High softball star pitcher.
“During the summer of 1996, she was helping out as a coach of an East Boston team and I was coaching the Savio team,” said Ciccarello. “And that’s how we met.”
Ciccarello cites neighboring Malden, this year’s Division 1 North Sectional champion, as an example of how a team can become a contender for a state championship – the place where the Revere coach hopes his program will be as soon as the 2013 season.
“If we want to be like that, then we have to play at the next level of softball all summer long,” said Ciccarello. “We have to take the next step by playing highly competitive softball in the summer like our opponents are doing.”
And if the improvement over the last two seasons in an indication, the Lady Patriots could be playing softball this time next June.