Honestly, when we talk about horse racing, Ohio isn’t the first place that comes to mind. Most people immediately go to Kentucky, California, or maybe even Florida. Ohio is often right at the bottom, treated like the hardworking cousin who shows up early, does half the setup, and somehow still gets left out of the group photo.
We’re trying to say that Ohio has some real horse racing stories.
Yes, it might not always be the loudest one that gets all the national television attention, but it is built around country fairs, harness tracks, Thoroughbred programs, breeders, owners, trainers, and people who drive the American horse racing industry.
Families here have been around horses for decades, and it is definitely in their blood. So, let’s talk about local horses, trainers, and owners who actually left a mark on Ohio racing history.
Ohio Racing Has Always Had Two Strong Personalities
First of all, we have to look at Ohio’s horse racing culture from two different angles. There is Thoroughbred racing, with its dirt tracks and state-bred programs. But there is also harness racing, which may be even more deeply woven into Ohio’s racing identity.
We’re talking about Standardbreds, county fairs, the Ohio Sires Stakes, Scioto Downs, Dayton Raceway, and the list goes on and on.
People here also love betting on horses. Yes, they may not be some big horse racing events, but they can always go for horse betting online when it comes to a big race like the Kentucky Derby or Breeders’ Cup.
Now let’s talk about popular names from the industry that will be embedded into Ohio’s traditions and history.
Glacial Princess
This is one of the rare horses that turns out to be a racetrack winner, and people talk about its dominance for years. Every racing state needs a horse like Glacial Princess.
This horse was one of Ohio’s great Thoroughbred stars. A dark, powerful filly who made her name largely at Beulah Park and became a local legend.
Okay, Glacial Princess might not have gotten a Secretariat level of popularity, but ask any horse racing fan from Ohio, and they will definitely know this horse.
Altissimo
Then we have Altissimo, which is kind of like a modern version of Glacial Princess in Ohio’s memory. This is an Ohio-bred sprinter and became a three-time Ohio Horse of the Year, so no wonder it ended up on this list.
But this isn’t just a horse that turned up to one race and won. Altissimo built an entire racing career, won multiple stakes, and kept competing at a high level for a couple of years. Altissimo was probably the turning point where people started treating Ohio-bred horses seriously.
Mo Doesn’t Know and the Joy of the Local Rival
Ohio racing has had its share of local rivalries and familiar names, and Mo Don’t Know belongs in that conversation.
He was another Ohio-bred standout, a multiple-time Ohio Horse of the Year, and a horse whose presence helped make state-bred races feel like real events rather than quiet regional footnotes. When horses like Mo Dont No and Altissimo show up in the same conversation, you get something every local racing circuit needs: continuity.
Richard Zielinski and the Ohio Trainer Grind
Trainers are easy to underrate if you only watch race replays.
The horse runs. The jockey rides. The trainer’s name appears on the screen for a few seconds. Then everyone moves on.
But a trainer’s work is the long part of the story.
Richard Zielinski’s name is tied closely to Altissimo, and that says a lot. It takes skill to keep a horse sound, fit, motivated, and effective over multiple seasons. It takes judgment to place a horse properly, choose the right races, manage setbacks, and know when to push and when to wait. This is a trainer with close to $15 million in career earnings and close to $1 million in 2026 alone. So, he is still dominating the horse racing scene.
Owners Like Nancy Lavrich Show Why Local Racing Survives
Owners matter because they decide to keep playing the game.
That sounds simple.
It is not.
Owning racehorses is expensive, emotional, unpredictable, and very good at making sensible adults say things like, “Maybe this next one will be special.” It takes commitment to stay in the business, especially at the regional level, where the rewards are often more about passion and pride than giant financial upside.
Nancy Lavrich is one of those Ohio names tied to the state’s Thoroughbred world, including connections around Altissimo and long-term breeding involvement. Owners like that matter because they are not just buying a day in the winner’s circle. They are supporting the program over time.
Final Thoughts
Maybe Ohio isn’t the first place that comes to mind when we talk about horse racing, but it is definitely a place where the horse racing scene slowly grows. It might not be glamorous like Kentucky, but some stories are built in fairgrounds, local barns, and state-bred stakes.
So, don’t be surprised if we start seeing more of Ohio on the countrywide horse racing scene.




















































































