Pompano Beach, FL – Sept. 25, 2022 – From Florence, Italy comes news that amateur harness racing driver Larry Ferrari has won the Centennial Amateur Championship contested at Rome, Torino and Florence.
![Larry Ferrari crowned King of Centennial in Italy 1](https://harnesslink.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/Larry-Ferrari-wins-Amateur-Centennial-Championship-in-Florence-Italy.jpg)
The Ohio native, representing the Great Lakes Amateur Driving Club and the Florida Amateur Driving Club, won the competition with a crafty drive in the last of the three events where his patience paid off and squeezed through along the pylons to earn the wināthis after finishing in second in his other two drives.
Besides the U.S.A., the competition featured amateur drivers from Argentina, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Finland, Germany, Malta, New Zealand, Norway, the Netherlands and, of course, Italy.
Sponsored by the aforementioned amateur clubs, Ferrari earned the honor of representing the U.S.A. by capturing the qualifying round at Pompano Park earlier this year.
The owner of an Internet Technology company in the greater Cleveland area, Ferrari trains a small stable of horses at Northfield Park and has 370 lifetime wins, including his first on European soil.
While Ferrari won the individual competition, Malta won the World Cup in this centennial event.
In a post-race interview from Florence, Italy, Ferrari said, āSometimes, things just work out for you. I had started my final race in the second tier having drawn the eight post.
āI saw the three kinds of anxious with his nose on the gate, so I decided to follow him and that worked out well since I was able to get a spot close up. Then, I was looking for a way to get out, but nothing opened up, so I was kind of forced into being patientā¦and thatās what paid off.
āThey say, āpatience is a virtueā and no truer words were ever spoken during this race as the āseaā opened up lateāthe track was off with the raināand I had the horsepower to win it!ā
Lamenting further, Ferrari lamented, āThis whole thing wouldnāt have been possible without Dein Spriggs and Steve Oldford, who, first, invited me to Florida for their competition and then, went to bat for me to make the trip to Italy.
āAnd Maurizio Biasuzzi and Daniele Orsini made me feel like their homeland was my homeland.
āI am forever grateful.ā
Ferrariās wife, Kiesha, was also in Italy to witness the festivities.
āNext stop is back home,ā said Ferrari, āwhere I hope to get my 400th lifetime win very soon!ā
by John Berry, for Harnesslink