Pinatubo Possible for Prix Jean Prat

Charlie Appleby will make a decision after watching Pinatubo (Ire) (Shamardal) work at the weekend regarding his participation in the G1 Qatar Prix Jean Prat at Deauville. The Newmarket handler is leaning towards the seven-furlong Group 1 on Sunday week as the next target for last year’s champion 2-year-old, who has met with defeat in both of his starts this season. Having finished third on his first start over a mile in the 2000 Guineas at Newmarket, the Sharmardal colt subsequently found only Palace Pier (GB) (Kingman {GB}) too strong in the G1 St James’s Palace S. at Royal Ascot.

With Appleby reporting Pinatubo to have come out of his race at the Royal meeting in good fashion, a trip to France is on the agenda.

Appleby said, “Pinatubo did an easy piece of work on Wednesday and that was his first piece of work back. The piece of work was nothing strong, but it pleased us. We have a target that is the Prix Jean Prat, but it is not rubber-stamped yet. He will do another piece of work over the weekend and we will make our decision then. So far the post-race signs after Ascot have been good.

“If he has pleased us and everything is going well, we will drop him back to seven for the Prix Jean Prat.”

Although Pinatubo has been beaten for the first time in his career, Appleby believes there are plenty of positives to take out of his efforts.

He said, “He definitely came forward a bit more from the Guineas to St James’s Palace S., which we had hoped he would. I know he has been beaten in both the St James’s Palace S. and 2000 Guineas, but what he showed us is that he has great courage.

“William [Buick] said he showed great guts to keep going in the St James’s Palace. The extra furlong just caught him out at Ascot last time having travelled so well, but what he showed us was determination and that he is a great battler.”

Despite Pinatubo being lined up for a drop back in trip, the GI Breeders’ Cup Mile at Keeneland in November is a potential end-of-season target.

Appleby said, “You can see how strongly he travels through his races, so dropping back to seven doesn’t worry me at all. I’m not saying that he won’t get a mile in time. What we could potentially work back from is the Breeders’ Cup Mile at Keeneland. The two-turn mile around there could really suit him.”

The G2 Qatar Lennox S. at Goodwood remains the target for Space Blues (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}). However, Appleby has not ruled out running the Dubawi colt in the G1 Darley July Cup at Newmarket next Saturday if conditions are suitable.

He said, “Ultimately the Lennox is the aim, as we know what he can do over seven furlongs, but we might look at the July Cup. We know he is a better horse with cut in the ground, so we wouldn’t want to be dropping back on a sounder surface.

“If the conditions changed the July Cup would be worth looking at. We always had it on our mind he would be a sprinter this year.”

MG1SW Barney Roy (GB) (Excelebration {Ire}) looks set to make his next appearance abroad, with Appleby weighing up options in France and Germany for Excelebration (Ire) gelding, who finished third last time out in the Prince of Wales’s S. at the Royal meeting.

“We are looking at either the G1 Prix D’Ispahan over nine furlongs at Chantilly or the G1 Bayerisches Zuchtrennan over a mile and a quarter at Munich.

“He pulled up out of his last run well. I was pleased with the run and he put up a solid performance. The plan after this will be to give him a break and then look at going for some international races later in the year.”

The post Pinatubo Possible for Prix Jean Prat appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Major Fed Tops Field Of 10 Seeking Derby Points In Wednesday’s Indiana Derby

A field of 10 has been drawn for the 26th running of the Grade 3 Indiana Derby Wednesday, July 8 at Indiana Grand. The race is part of the Kentucky Derby Championship Series with the top four finishers earning points toward the 2020 Kentucky Derby set for Saturday, Sept. 5. The Indiana Derby is carded as the 11th on the 12-race card with an estimated post time of 7:45 p.m. First post for the afternoon card is 2:20 p.m.

Leading the list of entrants for Indiana's richest horse race is Major Fed from the Greg Foley barn. The son of Ghostzapper finished second earlier this season in the Grade 2 Risen Star at Fairgrounds and returned in the next start for a fourth place finish in the Grade 2 Louisiana Derby. He competed in the Grade 3 Matt Winn at Churchill Downs in late May and will start from post eight with James Graham aboard.

Joining Major Fed as a contender for the Indiana Derby title is Winning Impression from the Dallas Stewart Stable. The grey Paynter gelding has not raced since early May, finishing fourth in his last start in the Grade 1 Arkansas Derby at Oaklawn Park. Julien Leparoux gets the call aboard Winning Impression from post nine.

The entire Indiana Derby field, in post position order with jockey, includes: No Getting Over Me (Miguel Mena); Extraordinary (Luis Saez); Taishan (Rafael Bejarano); Earner (Stewart Elliott); Shared Sense (Florent Geroux); Background (Tyler Baze); Juggernaut (DeShawn Parker); Major Fed (James Graham); Winning Impression (Julien Leparoux) and Necker Island (Mitchell Murrill).

Leading into the Indiana Derby is the Grade 3 $200,000 Indiana Oaks. Heading the field is Graded Stakes winner Shedaresthedevil from the Brad Cox Stable. The Daredevil filly was a winner in the Grade 3 Honeybee Stakes at Oaklawn Park in March and came back for a third place finish in the Grade 3 Fantasy Stakes in early May. Her most recent start was a win against allowance company at Churchill Downs in early June. Shesarethedevil will be ridden by Florent Geroux from post six in the 10-horse lineup.

The Indiana Derby Day card features six stakes total with purses for the day just under the $1 million mark. The program begins at 2:20 p.m. with the 12th running of the $75,000 Hoosier Breeders Sophomore Stakes. Other stakes on the card include the $75,000 Hoosier Breeders Sophomore Fillies Stakes, the $75,000 Indiana General Assembly Distaff (Listed), and the $75,000 Jonathan B. Schuster Memorial (Listed). A special $100,000-guaranteed Pick 5 pool will be offered on the last five races of the program, beginning with the Indiana General Assembly Distaff in Race 8.

Indiana Grand recently received permission to allow spectators during live racing. The facility will operate at reduced capacity, in accordance with State of Indiana and the Indiana Horse Racing Commission guidelines. All guests will be strongly encouraged to wear face masks in all locations, but will be required to wear face masks while indoors except while consuming food or beverages. Doors will open at Noon on Indiana Derby Day.

Live racing continues through Wednesday, Nov. 18 with action held Monday through Thursday beginning at 2:20 p.m. Four Saturday programs are slated for all-Quarter Horse days set for July 4, Aug. 8, Oct. 23 and Oct. 24.

The post Major Fed Tops Field Of 10 Seeking Derby Points In Wednesday’s Indiana Derby appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Assiniboia Filly’s Win Streak Halted

Hidden Grace (Going Commando), a Manitoba-bred who had won nine consecutive stakes to start her career, got edged out by her own stablemate in a quest for a perfect 10-for-10 race record in Wednesday night’s $25,000 Canada Day S. at Assiniboia Downs.

Miss Imperial (Maclean’s Music), off as the as the .55-1 favorite, battled through a three-way fight for the lead and then had enough left to hold off the onrushing 1.35-1 Hidden Grace to post a one-length win. The four remaining entrants were scattered nine lengths behind the top two in the 7 1/2-furlong open stakes.

Both 4-year-old fillies are trained by Murray Duncan, but they do not share similar career paths.

Hidden Grace is owned and was bred by Cam Ziprick, Charles Fouillard and Barry Arnason. She has raced exclusively in Manitoba (nine starts) and Alberta (one start), with five of her nine victories coming against provincial-bred or sales-restricted company.

Hidden Grace’s breeder and owner partnerships are comprised of some of the same people who bred and raced fellow Manitoba-bred Escape Clause (Going Commando). That mare retired last autumn with 20 wins after emerging from Assiniboia to win stakes at Del Mar and Santa Anita before losing only by a nose to Midnight Bisou (Midnight Lute) in the 2019 GI Apple Blossom H. at Oaklawn.

Miss Imperial, owned in partnership by her trainer and the Estate of Garylle B. Stewart, now sports a 9-for-19 record after starting her career on the New York, Fair Grounds, and Oaklawn circuits. Duncan claimed her at Oaklawn Apr. 11 for $25,000, and since shipping to Winnipeg, Miss Imperial has now won three straight open stakes.

The post Assiniboia Filly’s Win Streak Halted appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Experts Say Arkansas Derby Split Sample Still On Schedule–The Only Difference Is The World Is Waiting On It

Ever since word leaked out that Charlatan tested positive for a substance widely reported to be lidocaine following the Grade 1 Arkansas Derby on May 2, one of the biggest questions on the minds of readers is – isn't this an inordinately long period of time to wait for the split sample test?

The answer: no, not really.

Dr. Scott Stanley, who previously served as director of toxicology at Truesdail Laboratories and the Kenneth L. Maddy Equine Analytical Chemistry Laboratory at University of California-Davis, said this particular split sample came along at a tough time.

“In general, split tests for drugs detected in urine samples take three to four weeks minimum,” said Stanley, who is now a faculty member at the University of Kentucky's Maxwell H. Gluck Equine Research Center and UK Department of Veterinary Science. “In the busy season — late spring and summer months — those turnaround times often increase because of the heavy workload at most equine labs. This year is much worse, because most of the equine testing labs were shut down because of COVID-19, [and] the few labs still operating had reduced staff with social distancing required. The lab's first priority is to their own clients with split samples scheduled in available time.

“Taking all these circumstances into consideration, I wouldn't be surprise if any split sample this spring were to take six to eight weeks.”

The referee laboratory in this case likely didn't receive the split sample until late May or early June, putting us four weeks into the process. Stewards confirmed to the Paulick Report July 1 that the split results are not yet complete.

Why does it feel to race fans (and certainly, no doubt, to Charlatan's trainer, Bob Baffert) like an awfully long time to wait for results?

Probably because we're not often aware of how long the road between a positive post-race drug test and a stewards' ruling is until after a case is concluded. Just days ago, we reported on a settlement reached between trainer John Sadler and the California Horse Racing Board for three medication violations incurred in April and May 2019 for gabapentin and clenbuterol. In early February, Louisiana stewards fined trainer Joe Sharp for levamisole positives his horses incurred in December, which he said were the result of a deworming product.

The public typically isn't aware of drug positives until after a split sample has come back, an investigation is complete, and the stewards issue a ruling. That's because most racing jurisdictions have rules or statutes specifying post-race positives be kept confidential for some period of time. In some states, it's until the stewards make a ruling, in others it's until a hearing has been held, and in still other cases it's for a set period of time after the positive has been reported by the laboratory to the regulatory body.

The lone exception to this could soon be California. The California Horse Racing Board found itself under fire last year after the New York Times revealed 2018 Triple Crown winner Justify tested positive for scopolamine after his Santa Anita Derby win. A split sample confirmed the presence of the substance, and a CHRB investigation concluded it was a result of contamination from jimson weed. The regulatory body held a hearing into the matter behind closed doors (in August 2018, roughly four months after the race in question) and no one knew it had happened at all until the Times report. For many, it was the lack of transparency in the process, which was completely permissible by state statute, that was more troubling than the positive test.

Since then, California SB 800 has sought to change the state's Business and Professions Code on this point. Among other provisions, the bill would add a section to existing law requiring the CHRB to put on its website results of “all nonconfidential official test samples” within five business days of confirmation of the split sample or the waiver of split sample by the trainer rather than keep those results confidential until after a hearing and ruling.

SB 800 has passed the California Senate unanimously and has moved on to the Assembly Committee on Governmental Organization as of June 18.

“The confidentiality requirement is in the Business & Professions Code, meaning it takes action by the Legislature, not the Board,” said Scott Chaney, executive director of the CHRB. “If it eventually passes both the Senate and Assembly and is signed by the Governor, it will become law on January 1. We anticipate that all of these things will happen.”

Of course, that still doesn't mean the public will have access to an initial positive test – a test performed by a state-contracted laboratory at the order of a state government body. To some fans and members of the public, it may seem that information should be part of the public record.

On the other side of the fence though, attorneys say disclosing post-race test results without the benefit of a split sample could truncate a trainer's right to be treated as innocent until proven guilty.

“A lab calls a positive and of course that's an allegation — there hasn't been due process,” said attorney Drew Mollica. “So I'm taking this for granted, no commission has ever told me this, but I'm thinking the commission says that it's only an allegation. They don't distribute the purse, they keep it confidential until they litigate it.”

Charlatan ended up with an injury that took him off the Kentucky Derby trail anyway. But if he hadn't, Mollica points out that a positive in a Derby points race has consequences for other trainers and owners as long as it remains unresolved, whether they're told about it ahead of a split sample test or not.

Justify was not disqualified for his post-Santa Anita Derby overage because officials ultimately decided his positive test was due to contamination. But if he had been disqualified in August from his Derby prep win in April, it certainly would have raised questions about the time it takes the commission and laboratories to complete initial testing, split sample testing, an investigation, and a ruling and/or hearing.

“Here's my problem with that in this day and age, especially when it relates to the Kentucky Derby — because of the points to get into the Derby, you have a problem now,” said Mollica. “Horses get into the Derby on the points, so I'm of the opinion that if the test comes up bad in those races, they should announce it because it has ramifications.

“In the real world, you're innocent until proven guilty. We as defense lawyers want due process. But I think there's a competing interest as it relates to these Derby races that get horses to the next level that might not belong there. This is a problem, and I don't think they should award the points until it's been litigated. I know that's a problem, especially if you win points two weeks before the Derby and it gets you in, but there are ramifications here for the people who are second and third.

“Justice delayed is justice denied, I get it. A rush to judgment is also bad. There are competing interests. I understand both sides of it.”

Besides the impacts of disclosure and nondisclosure to trainers and fans, there are other people who could be impacted by knowing which races and trainers are awaiting the results of a split: the employees of the laboratory asked to do the split sample test.

“In my experience at LGC we used a laboratory information management system that assigned a laboratory number to every sample upon receipt,” said Dr. Rick Sams, former laboratory director for LGC Sport Science in Lexington, Ky. “The sample was identified only by this number while in the laboratory so that testing personnel would not know the origin or history of any sample. This was done for the purpose of reducing bias. Nevertheless, I find it unfortunate and disturbing that the findings for this sample were released and the trainer identified before the split sample analysis had been completed because this put the split sample laboratory in a very difficult position.”

The situation could become especially sticky if for some reason the referee laboratory has a different finding than the lab which conducted the initial positive test – how will the public trust the results now that everyone, including the referee lab, knows the split sample came from an accomplished trainer and an impactful race? Could the release of the initial test results impact the commission's case (or Baffert's) if the stewards end up disqualifying the horse?

For now, it seems everyone – the horse's connections and the public alike – have more questions than answers.

The post Experts Say Arkansas Derby Split Sample Still On Schedule–The Only Difference Is The World Is Waiting On It appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights