Month: February 2021
Sam-Son Farm to Receive Special Sovereign Award
Sam-Son Farm will be presented with the Special Sovereign Award during the 46th Annual Sovereign Awards Virtual Ceremony, which will be held in April. Selected by the Jockey Club of Canada's Stewards, the Special Sovereign Award honors those who have accomplished outstanding achievements and made a significant contribution to the Thoroughbred Industry in Canada.
Over the past five decades, Sam-Son Farm, a Canadian Thoroughbred breeding and racing operation founded in 1972 by Ernie and Liza Samuel, has been the recipient of four Eclipse Awards, 13 Hall of Fame Awards and 84 Sovereign Awards. Since its inception, Sam-Son Farm has enjoyed five Queen's Plate winners, eight Woodbine Oaks winners and 60 graded stakes winners.
Also to be recognized at this year's virtual awards, Michelle Gibson will receive the 2020 Outstanding Groom Award. Currently employed by Robert Tiller, she is the groom of 2017 Canadian Horse of the Year, Pink Lloyd.
Additionally, the finalists for the 2020 Sovereign Awards Media categories were announced Thursday. This year's entries were evaluated by media professionals within the industry selected from across North America. A 4-2-1 points system was used to determine the first, second and third place finalists in each category.
Digital Audio/visual and Broadcast Category:
- Santino Di Paola – Dear Horse Racing
- Horse Racing Alberta – Canadian Derby Year of the Mask
- Woodbine Entertainment Group – The Queen's Plate
Photograph Category:
- Rusty Barton – The Race Goes on a Year Without Fans
- Michael Burns – Training Before Dawn
- Lisa M. Thompson – One Rider Two Horses
- Will Wong – Mambointheforest
Writing Category:
- Muriel Lennox – Northern Dancer: A virile stable genius
- Chris Lomon – The Pep-Talking Groom, Willy, and a Queen's Plate Crown
- Bruce McDougall – Riding for Freedom
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DealtoPlay Incorporates Visual Gambling Tutorials to Social Network
Montreal, Quebec, Canada June 30 2008 (PressReleasePoint): With the growth of the online gaming industry, DealtoPlay.com has stepped up and brought visual tutorials to their audience. Jan Balslev and his software development team at Online-Casinos have created the tutorials that bring the teacher right to the viewers computer screen. Viewers could learn the best way to play casino games with flash based animated visual tutorials. Using voice over technology, all aspects of the game are explained by a person.
“We want our members to be well versed in the casino games they play and not make easily avoidable mistakes. Building a solid foundation will allow them to increase their odds to win. These tutorials are designed to show them just how to do that.”
When people think about how to learn to play casino games, many will tell you “That’s easy, just Google it.” That’s not the case. There is a jungle of sites out there with information leading casino and poker players in all directions making it difficult for the viewer to build a solid enough foundation to be able to play right away at a game they’re not familiar with. Lucas Goldman explains “It’s difficult to learn in an easy to understand way how to play most games. Online Casinos has created a great tool that will allow viewers to learn the basics then apply them in practice right away. We want our audience to have the option to play games they might not have known how to play but were curious about. ”
This sort of content is potent and just what online gamblers are on the lookout for. The tutorials literally walk viewers through the rules step by step on how to play Baccarat, Blackjack, Craps, Roulette, Video Poker, Hold’em Poker, Omaha Poker and 7 Card Stud. The tutorials are clean, concise and almost anybody could easily understand exactly what’s being taught. “We are a social networking site designed for online casino and poker players. Incorporating learning devices specifically designed to make them better allows us to increases the value of their overall experience not just at our site, but as gamers.”
Learning how to play the games is the first step towards responsible gaming. Members of DealtoPlay.com could use these tutorials then go straight to the tables at whichever online casino / poker room they choose.
Tutorials are available to members only, but membership is free and takes under a minute to complete thus making the tutorials easily accessible to all gamers. In addition to the tutorials, members have access to the forums, chat, custom profiles and the ability to create a custom blog. A sample craps tutorial is accessible from their homepage for anybody to view. Time to go back to class! Visit DealtoPlay.com for more information.
Man O’ War Study Finds Equine Therapy Helpful for PTSD
by T.D. Thornton and Sue Finley
Although using equine-assisted therapies (EAT) to help people overcome post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) has been long believed to be effective via anecdotal results, a recent exploratory scientific study declares that it “is the first to demonstrate that EAT can affect functional and structural changes in the brains of patients with PTSD.”
The findings are groundbreaking not only from a scientific standpoint, but also from the perspective that the peer-reviewed work by Columbia University Irving Medical Center and New York State Psychiatric Institute researchers published Feb. 5 in the medical journal Human Brain Mapping could not only pave the way for national funding for PTSD therapy, but provide homes for untold retired Thoroughbred racehorses.
The study, whose principal funding was provided by the Earle I. Mack Foundation, was based on a three-year program at the Man O' War Foundation, also a project of Mack's. It was supported by a $200,000 grant from The Jockey Club.
The complete study, “Neural changes following equine-assisted therapy (EAT) for posttraumatic stress disorder: A longitudinal multimodal imaging study,” may be downloaded here.
Groups of participants each took part in an eight-week program at the Bergen Equestrian Center in Leonia, New Jersey in a study that was conducted over three years. They were subjected to tests, including MRIs of the brain, before and after the program.
Dr. Xi Zhu, Assistant Professor of Clinical Neurobiology, and first author on the paper said, “This project provides the first neurobiological evidence of the effectiveness of equine-assisted therapy for treating veterans and civilians who suffer from PTSD.”
Dr. Prudence Fisher, Associate Professor at Columbia Psychiatry, who co-led the study with Dr. Yuval Neria, also a Professor at Columbia Psychiatry, said, “The results from this study are very exciting for the hundreds of thousands of Americans who suffer from PTSD.”
Said Neria, a lead author, “The results provide the first-of-its-kind proof that equine-assisted treatment may have not only a clinical promise but also brain-based changes that may increase a patient's capacity to enjoy life despite facing traumas and war adversities, which make this treatment so unique.”
Especially common in combat veterans, PTSD is a psychiatric disorder that occurs in people who have experienced a traumatic event or a long period in which they felt trauma. It can cause flashbacks, nightmares, anger, fear, estrangement, and a lack of trust.
“Improving reward circuitry might be a significant, initial step to finding new and enhanced methods to treat this complex disorder,” the study says.
The Man O' War Project was the first equine-assisted therapy program that wasn't content to rely upon anecdotal evidence, but insisted upon a university-led research study to examine the effectiveness of equine-assisted therapy in treating veterans with PTSD. Founded in 2015 by Thoroughbred owner, philanthropist and businessman Mack, a veteran himself and longtime Thoroughbred owner/breeder, the project was born out of his concern about the mental health crisis facing veterans and his observation of anecdotal stories from various equine-assisted therapy groups, which yet had no hard science to support their results.
In a 2019 interview with the TDN, Dr. Jeffrey Lieberman, MD, Professor and Chair of Columbia Psychiatry and one of the driving forces behind the program, criticized the effort that had previously been put forth by the United States, and praised Mack for his innovative efforts.
“I know it works,” Lieberman said. “This is a very simple, intuitive therapeutic process that the government hasn't seen fit to deal with sufficiently, and civic-minded people are stepping in. But taking it at face value, that's not the way medicine and science works. You've got to prove it. And Earle was willing to submit this hypothesis to rigorous testing in the form of a clinical trial and that makes all the difference.”
Because the model is tested and proven, it can be replicated all over the country, delivering badly needed new treatments for a devastating disorder. The therapy is particularly suited to ex-Thoroughbred racehorses, who, like veterans, had a very short, intense career, and are mission-oriented.
“I am grateful for the dedication and excellence of the Columbia University team in seeing this project through with compelling results beyond our expectations,” said Mack, “validating EAT as a very effective and much-needed therapy for veterans with PTSD. We look forward to future phases allowing for the mainstream implementation of the Man O' War protocol.”
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