As the Red Mile meet draws to a close (the final card is this coming Sunday, October 6), eyes are looking past this meet on to other things. For one, Breeders Crown nominations are coming up fast with supplemental nominations due one day after the Kentucky Futurity for potential eliminations to be raced next weekend with the finals coming up October 19.
Out west Cal Expo resumes racing with the month of October featuring Saturday night racing. Granted Cal Expo doesn't exactly have the quality of racing we do in the Midwest and East Coast, but their pools are decent (especially the later races). Cal Expo, following the models established by Canadian tracks is instituting $.20 Pick-4s and Trifectas in an effort to cater to smaller gamblers and increase churn. Unlike their thoroughbred brethren, Cal Expo will offer 16% takeout rates on the Pick-4, Pick-5, and Super High-Five wagers. Come November, Cal Expo returns to its Friday and Saturday night schedule. All this going on in the shadow of Exchange Wagering coming in January, the first track in North America to offer it (California residents only).
If you want to look a little further out, the Meadowlands rolls out Meadowlands 2.5 on November 23, a mere 51 days away from today. A new grandstand, new attitude can be expected with the fall meet featuring true year end championships.
Yes, there are some suspenseful things coming up with racing schedules for 2014 coming up for awarding. Will the legislature come through in Illinois to save racing or will racing in the Prairie state look more like fair racing? What happens to Rosecroft Raceway once the Prince George Casino
The season is waning but there is plenty of exciteement remainint, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
Thursday, October 3, 2013
Wednesday, October 2, 2013
We, the Afterthought
Earlier this week, the letter sent to Ed Martin of the ARCI by USTA President Phil Langley was released, outlining the USTA's reasons to no longer fund the Racing Medication and Testing Consortium and demand different single standards for the individual breeds racing.
If one reads the letter, the arguments made by Langley make perfect sense. Unfortunately, it also suggests the problem the standardbred industry has when it comes to doing something in conjunction with our thoroughbred cousins; the standardbred industry goes to the back of the bus, mainly considered an after thought by policy makers. Unfortunately, due to thoroughbreds being more popular where it counts with more money wagered on thoroughbred bred racing at harness tracks; even at the Meadowlands, they get away with it.
So the USTA drops funding for the RMTC because it is a thoroughbred-centric group. What's next? Unfortunately, as of now the ARCI has proposed a single medication policy for consideration by the various state racing commissions. Standardbred interests are going to have a challenge to get racing commissions who are members of the ARCI to go against, in effect, their own rules. By all means, the attempt should be made but it is going to be an uphill battle.
If one reads the letter, the arguments made by Langley make perfect sense. Unfortunately, it also suggests the problem the standardbred industry has when it comes to doing something in conjunction with our thoroughbred cousins; the standardbred industry goes to the back of the bus, mainly considered an after thought by policy makers. Unfortunately, due to thoroughbreds being more popular where it counts with more money wagered on thoroughbred bred racing at harness tracks; even at the Meadowlands, they get away with it.
So the USTA drops funding for the RMTC because it is a thoroughbred-centric group. What's next? Unfortunately, as of now the ARCI has proposed a single medication policy for consideration by the various state racing commissions. Standardbred interests are going to have a challenge to get racing commissions who are members of the ARCI to go against, in effect, their own rules. By all means, the attempt should be made but it is going to be an uphill battle.
New York and Ontario Sires Stakes Recap
VFTRG contributor Joe F. has provided a recap on the New York and Ontario Sires Stakes Finals. I apologize for the delay but family emergencies has kept me from posting this earlier. While it may be a couple of days late, I always find Joe's comments worth reading and once again he did not fail.
Yonkers distributed
$1,800,000 in their eight sire stakes finals Saturday night. The handle was
less than a million dollars. There were five 8-horse fields and three with
seven. The onerous NYRC coupling rules haunted the card. Three of the eight
were won by favorites and two by the second choice. No driver won more than one
and eight different trainers sent forth winners. American Ideal was the only
stallion with multiple winners, with his progeny taking the two-year-old colt
(He’s Watching) and three-year-old filly (Social Scene) stakes.
He’s
Watching stole the show, thumping his class by five lengths in a track record
:52.2 at 1/9 for Jim Morrill. Casie Coleman’s Design Guru, who got close last
time, went wide on the first turn and that was it for him. And the If I Can
Dream colt, Big Boy Dreams, put up an admirable second. Forty-four years ago
next month Columbia George knocked a second off the world record for a
two-year-old pacer on a half in the Sheppard at Yonkers. He beat Truluck in
:58.4 that night, 6.2 seconds slower than He’s Watching went Saturday night. Yes,
it’s impossible to compare performances
from different eras, but we’re talking about more than 30 lengths.
The
two-year-old colt pacers are an ordinary lot; none resided in the top ten as of
last week. He’s Watching fell a couple of slots out of the top group but may
step up this week. His problem is that he isn’t staked to the Red Mile races
and therefore can’t start in a split of the ISS this week. He’s not eligible to
the BC either. Will he race in the Governor’s Cup at M1 at the end of November?
The money leader in that freshman colt division, Boomboom Ballykeel, is also a
sire stakes colt. He isn’t staked to the BC either. Which GC colt will
capitalize on this situation?
He’s
Watching’s paternal sister, Social Scene, was also very impressive in crushing
the competition by five in :53 for Brennan at a generous 4/1. The 4/5 favorite,
Summertime Lea, the archetypal sire stakes filly, who was interfered with on
the first turn and used early, wound up seventh. Social Scene is staked to the
BC, but then again, so is Nitelife. If the Bettor’s Delight filly,
Shebestingin, had put her mind to accumulating SS points she would have been a
handful for Social Scene.
Mark
Austin’s lightly staked Art Major colt, Fool Me Once, was another who dominated
his divisional final. Sears steered him home in :51.3. As was the case with
Summertime Lea, Last year’s kingpin, Doctor Butch, was near the back at 33/1.
The trotter
that impressed on this Night of Champions was the Credit Winner filly, Bouncing
Bax, a sister to Bax Of Life and Baximum. She drew off from her 3 YO foes to
win in :56.2 at 2/5 for Jason Bartlett.
**********
The OSS Super
Final Night allocated $1,600,000 for eight stakes at Mohawk, a little less than
Yonkers. However, those races featured ten horse fields and as a result the
handle (entire card) was 42% higher than Yonkers’ handle. Paul MacDonnell was
the only driver to win more than one, while Muscle Mass and Kadabra each sired
two winners. Four of the eight races were won by favorites.
A blanket of
fog left viewers in the dark and Ken Middleton speechless from the last turn to
deep
stretch in the ninth and tenth races. The teletimer and sound of the field
were the only clues available.
The toughest
winner of the night was surely, Bruger Bruiser, a son of the Mach Three
stallion Believeinbruiser. Contrary to the non-confrontational style of driving
that prevails at the WEG tracks, Anthony MacDonald and the Bruiser carried Doug
McNair and Three Of Clubs past the quarter in :25.4. The favored Bruiser then
withstood last half pressure from third choice Crafty Master to beat that one a
neck in :50.3. Believeinbruiser is the sort of marginal stallion the breeding
program finds to be more of a nuisance than anything else, but good for him.
Another
winner by an off-brand stallion was Duc Dorleans, who hails from Shanghai Phil,
a son of 1999 Canadian Pacer of the Year, Blissful Hall. Duc isn’t a one-off
like the Bruiser; he’s the richest son or daughter of his daddy—not that there
are very many. Duc emerged from the fog as the winner of the three-year-old
colt pace for Sylvain Filion. He went off at 5/1. The 1/2 favorite, Mach It So,
finished last.
Kadabra, the
premier stallion in the province, had two winners in Bee A Magician and
Flanagan Memory, both sporting short prices and high expectations. But it was
new kid on the block, Muscle Mass, who stole the show. His freshman daughter, Riveting
Rosie, buried the opposition in :56 (27.2) at 1/5 while paternal brother,
Muscle Matters, did the same to the boys. Ironically, the public made a son of
Dewey, another Muscles Yankee protégé, the favorite over Muscle Matters. Dewey
skipped town after a relatively brief stay in Ontario, and his exit came none
too soon, because Muscle Mass is better than he is, and a lot cheaper.
Muscle
Mass’s celebrated brother, Muscle
Massive, is being heavily promoted by Hanover this year: there will be 41
available at the Harness Breeders Sale. He is expected to succeed as a Grand
Circuit stallion while also taking advantage of the PASS pot of gold. Muscle
Mass has been presented as a regional stallion but like Shadow Play that may
change over the next couple of years. There will be seven Muscle Mass fillies
for sale at Lexington and two colts and two fillies selling at Harrisburg,
where he’d be viewed as competition for his brother.
The Badlands
Hanover filly, Love Canal, was expected to assume a hybrid role this year, with
two feet in the OSS and the other two in the open realm. That hasn’t happened;
she met with no success in her open starts and finished second to the Mach
Three filly, Regil Elektra, on Saturday.
There were
some predictable results at Yonkers and Mohawk that are the natural outgrowth
of sire stakes racing, which is inherently unbalanced and beyond correction by
cleverly written conditions. However,
seeing the likes of He’s Watching, Bouncing Bax, Fool Me Once, Riveting
Rosie and Muscle Matters dominate the way they did infused a sector of the
sport that can be rather ho hum with a shot of energy.
Tuesday, October 1, 2013
MR - MUNICH MILE; BILLINGS TROTS & GERMAN-AMERICAN FRIENDSHIP RACES FEATURED WEDNESDAY
Wednesday, October 2nd will certainly be an action
packed day at Monticello Raceway. Besides two Billings Series trots and
two divisions of the German American Friendship Races, the Munich Mile,
the sixth leg of the Heritage Drivers Series featuring drivers of German
descent, will make for a very interesting afternoon.
We knew that a contingent of German drivers would be
visiting here on October 2nd so we rescheduled our Munich Mile for
that date and now we have four native Germans in the event,” noted Eric Warner
the tracks director of racing.
Warner is referring to Peter Platzer, Christoph Pellander,
Martina Bredlau and Andreas Schwartz who are part of a contingent in America as
guests of the North American Amateur Drivers Association.
“Since they will be racing against four NAADA members on Tuesday
we thought by having them drive in our Munich Mile on that day would make it
all the more interesting,” Warner added.
Joining the aforementioned German natives in the Munich Mile
are Greg Merton, Chuck Poynton, Bruce Aldrich, Jr. and Mike Merton. That event
will go as race nine on the 13-race program.
The winner of that race will become eligible for the series
finale—the All-America Cup—in mid-November and join the previous Heritage
Drivers Series leg winners.
The 11th and 12th races on the card
will be trots for the members of the C.K.G. Billings Driving Series. Among the
drivers in those events are former Amateur Drivers of the Year, Bobby Krivelin
and Alan Schwartz, along with the new Billings president Tony Verruso and
the longtime former president, Peter Gerry.
At the completion of those contests it will mark the fourth
time that the Billings has made a stop at the Mighty M this year.
And the main reason the visiting Germans are in the
USA is to compete against their counterparts in the North American Amateur
Drivers Association. Driving in the Munich Mile was a late added attraction for
them.
The German American Friendship races will be a trot in race
sixth race and a pace in race in race seven. In the first event the Americans
will go with Alan Schwartz, Peter Gerry, Gerry Fielding and Bobby Krivelin.
Driving for the USA in race seven are Schwartz, Fielding, Gerry and George
Bonomo.
After the race, as is custom in international amateur
racing, the participants will get together at a local restaurant and ‘break
bread’.
On Thursday the German-American Friendship races will take
place at Yonkers Raceway where the visiting Germans will drive against a
different slate of NAADA members. Then on Friday, (Oct. 4)the Friendship races
will be at Vernon Downs with yet another group of NAADA drivers competing for
the USA.
So You Want to Get a Rescued Horse?
Readers of this blog know I am a big supporter of horse rescue, all horses, but in particular standardbreds. For those looking for a pleasure horse or even a show horse, there's nothing better than a bomb proof standardbred. The big question is where to get them?
There are several ways to get horses. If you have the ability, the ideal place is at a horse auction where you can get a horse at the cheapest cost and possibly keep the horse from shipping to slaughter. Of course, a horse auction is not the best place for a novice as you need to deal with issues such as quarantine and evaluating a horse in an auction setting. If you have a friend who has the knowledge and ability to help you deal with these issues, by all means please do. Otherwise, donate to rescues which will go to these auctions and pull these horses and go look for your pleasure horse elsewhere.
The best place to get a horse in my opinion is to adopt a horse from a legitimate rescue. A legitimate rescue will require you to submit to a background check to see you truly are able to care for a horse and they will help you select a horse which fits your ability and requirements. If for some reason something goes wrong with the adoption, you can return the horse to the rescue where it will be safe until re-homed. You will likely pay a relatively small fee to adopt a horse, basically to allow these rescues to continue to operate. In many ways, it is like getting a dog/cat from a shelter.
Then there are broker owned horses. These are groups who will work with brokers (kill buyers) to find horses new homes. Personally, I don't care for this method. Yes, you may be saving a horse but you are doing so by rewarding a person who buys a horse just to resell it at a handsome profit by preying on the emotions of good natured individuals. The urge to save a horse can be strong and I imagine if you are willing to let someone profit by dealing in unwanted horses, then this option is an acceptable avenue for you. Some of these groups may be legitimate, but be aware some of these groups are 'less than honorable'. Before going this route, you may wish to read The Ethics of Horse Rescue (This blog is independent of mine and as such I take no responsibility for its content.). If you look to the right side of my blog, you will see some of the most recent blog entries from Ethics of Horse Rescue listed.
Whichever way you choose to go about getting a horse, be educated and due your due diligence. It may be the difference between having a rewarding experience with your new horse or heartache.
There are several ways to get horses. If you have the ability, the ideal place is at a horse auction where you can get a horse at the cheapest cost and possibly keep the horse from shipping to slaughter. Of course, a horse auction is not the best place for a novice as you need to deal with issues such as quarantine and evaluating a horse in an auction setting. If you have a friend who has the knowledge and ability to help you deal with these issues, by all means please do. Otherwise, donate to rescues which will go to these auctions and pull these horses and go look for your pleasure horse elsewhere.
The best place to get a horse in my opinion is to adopt a horse from a legitimate rescue. A legitimate rescue will require you to submit to a background check to see you truly are able to care for a horse and they will help you select a horse which fits your ability and requirements. If for some reason something goes wrong with the adoption, you can return the horse to the rescue where it will be safe until re-homed. You will likely pay a relatively small fee to adopt a horse, basically to allow these rescues to continue to operate. In many ways, it is like getting a dog/cat from a shelter.
Then there are broker owned horses. These are groups who will work with brokers (kill buyers) to find horses new homes. Personally, I don't care for this method. Yes, you may be saving a horse but you are doing so by rewarding a person who buys a horse just to resell it at a handsome profit by preying on the emotions of good natured individuals. The urge to save a horse can be strong and I imagine if you are willing to let someone profit by dealing in unwanted horses, then this option is an acceptable avenue for you. Some of these groups may be legitimate, but be aware some of these groups are 'less than honorable'. Before going this route, you may wish to read The Ethics of Horse Rescue (This blog is independent of mine and as such I take no responsibility for its content.). If you look to the right side of my blog, you will see some of the most recent blog entries from Ethics of Horse Rescue listed.
Whichever way you choose to go about getting a horse, be educated and due your due diligence. It may be the difference between having a rewarding experience with your new horse or heartache.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)