Indiana Grand Ready To Break Ground On $7 Million Barn, Dormitory Expansion

Caesars Entertainment, parent company of Indiana Grand Racing & Casino in Shelbyville, IN, announced plans Tuesday to significantly expand the property's barn and dormitory facilities. The addition will allow for more flexibility and state-of-the-art offerings as the 19th season of Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse racing approaches.

The $7 million investment project will include a new 100-stall barn and a 50-room dormitory, increasing stall space on the backstretch to accommodate nearly 1,200 horses. News of this expansion comes on the heels of Indiana Grand's recent announcement of its $32.5 million investment to grow and enhance the existing casino gaming floor. The barn and dormitory project should be completed in the fall of 2021.

“Each year, we turn many stables away because we just don't have the stall space for them,” said Eric Halstrom, Vice President and General Manager of Racing at Indiana Grand Racing & Casino. “As our racing continues to grow at the national level, we receive even more requests to race at our facility. This addition will further solidify Indiana Grand's as a premier racing destination.”

The new 100-stall barn, modeled after the Quarter Horse barn, built in 2014 at Indiana Grand, will be enclosed and winterized with three large sliding doors on both sides of the barn. The structure will include 10 wash bays, two restrooms and 10 tack rooms.

The dormitory will include 50 additional rooms in a two-story structure next to the new barn. The facility will provide housing for those who care for the additional horses, featuring community bathrooms for both men and women, central air and heat, and a laundry facility on both floors. Both structures will be located on the west side of the current backstretch area.

“Adding another barn will only strengthen our current program at Indiana Grand and build upon Caesars Entertainment's growing position as a leader in sports and entertainment,” said Joseph Morris, Vice President of Racing for Caesars Entertainment. “This project is another example of how Caesars Entertainment is investing in the horse racing industry in the state of Indiana.”

Work should begin in early May on the project. The construction site will be fenced off from the existing barn area to provide safety and security to the current horse population at Indiana Grand.

The 19th season of Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse racing is now in progress and continues through Monday, Nov. 8. Live racing will be conducted at 2:25 p.m. Monday through Wednesday, with first post on Thursday set at 3:25 p.m. In addition, six all-Quarter Horse racing dates are set on select Saturdays starting June 5 at 10 a.m. A special Indiana Champions Day highlighting the state's top Thoroughbred and Quarter Horses will be held Saturday, Oct. 30, beginning at noon. More information about the 2021 racing season is available at www.caesars.com/indiana-grand.

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Churchill Downs Partners With ‘Mattress Mack’ To Host Kentucky Derby Foster Family Initiative

Churchill Downs Racetrack announced today a new partnership with Jim “Mattress Mack” McIngvale that will welcome nearly 300 representatives from Kentucky's foster care sector as guests to the Kentucky Derby.

The first-ever Kentucky Derby Foster Family Initiative connects McIngvale's passion for the life-changing work made possible through the foster care system with Churchill Downs' Louisville nonprofit partners, Maryhurst and Boys & Girls Haven, who locally provide those social services.

McIngvale is a native of Texas and is well-known for using his high-stakes bets on sports as creative marketing promotions for his Houston-based mattress and furniture store, Gallery Furniture. His commitment to foster care work was inspired by his recently-adopted grandson, Brodie, in June 2019. His daughter Laura McIngvale Brown and her husband Phil Brown officially welcomed Brodie into their family after serving as foster parents.

“I have seen firsthand the importance of foster care and Brodie has been a true joy in my life,” McIngvale shared. “I'm thrilled to partner through Churchill Downs with these Louisville nonprofit organizations that work tirelessly to help children and families thrive. I couldn't be happier to help provide them the opportunity to enjoy this year's Kentucky Derby.”

Churchill Downs will be working with long-time charitable partners Maryhurst and Boys & Girls Haven to identify foster parents, alumni and social service workers and staff in the industry to host for the 147th running of the Kentucky Derby.

“We are always excited for the opportunity to use the unforgettable experience of the Kentucky Derby as a platform for good,” said Churchill Downs Racetrack president Mike Anderson. “It's incredibly rewarding when we can combine our charitable goals with a partner like Mattress Mack and give back to those in our community who, through their work or volunteerism, make our city and our world a better place.”

Maryhurst, Kentucky's oldest child-serving nonprofit organization, works to prevent abuse, restore hope and empower survivors of trauma and abuse. Maryhurst provides community-based counseling and wellbeing services, residential treatment and community and transitional living support.

“We are so grateful for our long standing partnership with Churchill Downs,” said Micah Jorrisch, vice president of external relations for Maryhurst. “This generous donation from Mattress Mack has presented a wonderful chance to recognize professionals and foster families who work tirelessly to ensure that every child in Kentucky has the opportunity to thrive.”

Boys & Girls Haven is a nonprofit transforming the lives of abandoned, abused and neglected children. Their programs include in-home foster care, residential foster care, transitional living, independence readiness and Haven family services.

“For over 70 years, we have provided a home and a future for our community's most vulnerable young people,” said Amanda Masterson, CEO of Boys and Girls Haven. “We are proud to be a part of the Kentucky Derby Foster Family Initiative; we are grateful for the support and ongoing partnership with Churchill Downs.”

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Wagering Insecurity: Tote Monitoring In Racing Falling Behind To Bingo

This is Part 5 of the Thoroughbred Idea Foundation's (TIF) series “Wagering Insecurity.”

Faced with remarkable competitive pressure from the rise of legal sports betting, horse racing is at a crossroads.

Confidence amongst horseplayers and horse owners is essential to the future sustainability of the sport. Efforts to improve the greater North American Thoroughbred industry will fall flat if its stakeholders fail to secure a foundation of integrity, along with increased transparency of the wagering business and its participants over time. Achieving this is growing increasingly difficult after the sport has neglected its core base – horseplayers – for decades.

“Wagering Insecurity” details some of that neglect, and the need to embrace serious reform. Fortunately, there are examples across the racing world to follow.

PART 5 – BINGO

The NTRA-led initiative to bring wagering integrity to North American racing had failed. Independent oversight was falling apart. The frustration was palpable in December 2008. The University of Arizona Racing Symposium (click here to read the full transcript) convened a panel to discuss the state of these initiatives.

Paul Bowlinger, a long-time horseplayer, attorney, former regulator and then the executive vice president for the Association of Racing Commissioners International (ARCI) found it Shakespearian.

“…The real genius of that soliloquy of Hamlet is not 'to be or not to be,' whether that is the question. He goes on to say, 'To die, to sleep, perchance to dream, aye, there is the rub, for in that sleep what dreams may come?'

“Because what Hamlet is really quite simply saying is, what we may discover is scarier than what we already know.”

Later in the session, Bowlinger highlighted that the complexities of the industry, compounded by other issues, distracted the evolution of integrity measures.

“…We no longer have to dream about what's on the other side of an unmonitored pari-mutuel pool…

“The second part in that soliloquy is, 'Whether tis nobler in mind to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune,' and what has bothered me is that since 2002, the Pick-6 scandal, it was the topic du jour, it was the topic du everything.

“Now granted, there have been other issues that have taken our time, medication issues, the tragic Eight Belles, Barbaro, the steroid issuesthey've all come into place and they've diverted our attention and rightfully so in many ways.

“But I think our betting public is fed up with taking the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune.”

When TIF reached him in February 2021, Bowlinger's recollection of the time was unchanged.

“The industry's complete lack of interest was so frustrating.

“We met with everyone, tried to make it work and we had all the numbers in place for it to work. All of the executives started out by saying 'yes, yes, yes,' and when it came down to executing, they ended up saying 'no, no, no.'

“I owned a nightclub for a long time and I would not possibly think of ignoring my actual customers. Racing is run as if its betting customers don't exist. I would not walk into my club and not notice my customers.

“Instead, racing goes to its distributors and asks them how they are doing. It's a remarkable way of doing business.”

Bowlinger left ARCI in 2010, returned to private law practice and has been out of the racing business ever since.

At the time of the 2008 Arizona Symposium, Bowlinger's fellow panelist Isidore Sobkowski had been out of the NTRA's Office of Racing Integrity for several years and was running his own company, Advanced Monitoring Systems (AMS), described by Bowlinger in the session as “specifically created to meet the pari-mutuel industry's need for cyber security of wagering pools and wagering accounts.”

Sobkowski lamented the lack of accomplishments to that point.

“There's a lot of talk about wagering integrity but so far I think precious little has been done.”

WITHOUT CONTROVERSY

Kevin Mullally provided an external perspective. After 12 years with the Missouri Gaming Commission, Mullally was early in his career with Gaming Laboratories International (GLI) as Director of Government Relations and General Counsel. He had recently served as Vice President of the North American Gaming Regulators Association (NAGRA). Given his broad experience in gaming regulation, he used his time at the 2008 panel to express his bewilderment at how racing could be such an outlier regarding its regulation of technology.

“This is my third consecutive conference.

“I came here two years ago to learn a little bit more about why the racing industry had managed to be the only component of the gaming industry that had not implemented any serious oversight to its technology.”

TIF contacted Mullally in March 2021 and his views were unchanged and now augmented by the new forms of gaming technology which have entered the market, each aligned to a set of technical standards that are independently tested under the authority of their regulators. Racing's controls fall farther behind.

“If you were to put me on a panel today, 13 years later, I'd say the exact same thing.

“The only difference is that the tote systems stand out even more given how technology in the rest of the gaming industry has evolved. Testing is not only ubiquitous in every other sector of gaming but is also without controversy. 

“The only aspect about testing of gaming equipment that is controversial is if someone suggests that it is not needed…

“Automated bingo card devices in church basements have more independent monitoring than the tote systems.”

Ironically, Mullally added, the primary source of new money to the racing business – subsidies via slot machines, video lottery terminals and historical horse racing (HHR) machines (slot machine-like devices driven internally by race results) – are all substantially more controlled than the billions going through the tote system.

“Historical horse racing machines have similar levels of controls and oversight as any casino or lottery-style machines. Tote systems that have been used in America lack the clear lines of accountability and defined processes to independently validate the technology. Moreover, they lack proper safeguards to independently investigate a malfunction, or investigate attempts to compromise the system. The message has always been, 'we can do better.'”

Tote operators, not so much.

Mullally's position from outside racing was affirmed by one active racing executive whose role includes managing wagering, but asked not to be named because of ongoing relationships with tote companies. That executive told TIF in early 2021 that AmTote, which was reported to process about 80% of North America's pari-mutuel bets, has consistently disappointed his track:

“They have not met our expectations on tote processing innovations and it has long seemed like they are not receiving the cash needed to evolve or innovate in racing. If anything, they have given the impression most of their team was working on their historical horse racing technology.”

That technology powers the slot-like devices used to subsidize racing in states including Arkansas, Kentucky and Virginia.

MONITORING

Back in the 2008 panel, Bowlinger, Sobkowski and Mullally were all bearish on the state of wagering integrity and did not hold back.

In the session's Q&A period, Chris Scherf, long-time Executive Director of the Thoroughbred Racing Associations of North America, the owner of the TRPB, publicly contested Sobkowski's monitoring business, challenging the underlying technology and claiming it insufficient to meet industry needs.

“I think it vastly overpromises.”

By this point, Scherf had almost two decades of experience working with the tote companies and noted that the technological infrastructure that was required to institute independent monitoring was not possible given the rather sorry state of technology on the part of the tote companies.

Reached in March 2021, Scherf made it clearer.

“You haven't had an adventure in life until you've tried to get tote companies to do something in concert. I found quickly that when you get them all into a room, everyone was in favor of uniformity and the definition of uniformity was everyone doing it 'my' way.”

The Scherf challenge in 2008 was an engagement familiar to Sobkowski, who had heard the hemming and hawing before.

“We are a vendor. We compete in a free market and we've got a good system. I understand TRA [Scherf's employer, funded by the consortium of track owners] has a system as well, we'd love to go ahead and compete against you, love to go ahead and partner with you.

“We're looking for an industry solution here, we're not looking for any kind of unfair monopoly or any kind of unfair advantage.”

Earlier in his main remarks, Sobkowski struck hard at the racing industry's overwhelming reluctance.

“I just want to say that the industry has had some pretty significant push-back to the things that we're doing as a company.

“I've been told, for example, that our system is too simplistic. I've been told that our system is too sophisticated. I've been told that our system works too well and we don't need it. I've been told that our system doesn't work at all and why bother?

“But what I've really been told over and over is that someone has to pay for this and the industry doesn't want to pay for it.”

A DEAD RAT

In 2009, the Indiana Horse Racing Commission (IHRC) decided to move forward with Sobkowski's firm, AMS, declaring itself the first state in America to institute real-time, independently monitored pari-mutuel wagering.

Joe Gorajec was Executive Director of the IHRC for 25 years, and pulled no punches in 2021 when assessing the state of wagering integrity in America, suggesting little, if anything, has been done in the almost two decades that have gone by since the Fix Six scandal. He told TIF:

“Most racetrack operators would rather have a dead rat in their mouth than expose or take action on any wagering malfeasance that occurred on their races.

“If there is a system in place, today, that is for racetracks to use to monitor live betting, then the tracks should be reporting the results to the public. The reports should indicate exactly the problem that occurred, here's what was done about it and what steps are being taken to ensure it does not happen again.

“You almost never hear that, ever, from anyone.

“Tracks will not take action on their own because tracks are not in the business of integrity. Tracks are in the business of making money conducting horse racing. Some are more integrity and safety minded than others.

“I think most tracks, confronted with a wagering integrity issue, would either bury the information or bury their heads in the sand and it would never see the light of day. That's not every track across America, but the majority would not want to make public any information that would question the integrity of wagering on their product.”

New York adopted a rule requiring independent wagering oversight, and hired Sobkowski's AMS in October 2009 to monitor all betting on tracks in the state. The rule still exists, but one long-time tote executive told TIF the technology is so limited, monitoring to meet the rule can only take place on live, in-person betting at the host track. Thus, actual monitoring only occurs on just a sliver of total betting.

Widespread independent monitoring across the tote landscape never actually materialized in any state, from AMS or another firm. Though formal explanations are impossible to find, TIF learned from multiple individuals that the protocols which govern the tote system are so antiquated that betting details from the tote companies could never get to the monitoring groups in formats that would enable transaction-level oversight. Investment to upgrade systems to enable such transmissions have not been made. These protocols remain in place today.

At present, two of the three main tote companies serving North America are owned by major racing corporations, each of which also own racetracks, ADWs, high volume betting shops, content distribution arms and a host of other service providers. AmTote was bought by Magna Entertainment (later, The Stronach Group and now 1/ST) in 2006 and as was previously cited, controls most of the tote relationships between tracks and betting sites. Churchill Downs Incorporated acquired United Tote in a November 2009 deal as part of its purchase of Youbet. The third, Sportech, sold its global tote business in December 2020 to Australian firm The BetMakers.

TIF asked former TRA boss Chris Scherf in 2021 if consolidating ownership of tote companies with racetracks, as was the case with AmTote and United Tote, made any noticeable difference.

“No. I don't think anyone perceived anything was going to change or be improved, and that's the way it played out.

“It made it easier getting the tote companies to the table a bit more regularly, but that's about it.”

During the period from the Fix Six scandal of 2002 through 2009, horseplayers increasingly questioned the ability of tote firms to secure betting as they witnessed the failings, making it all the more inexplicable that independent monitoring was rebuffed. Tote representatives said there were no such issues.

One professional horseplayer proved, and reported, that he could bet up to 50 seconds into the start of a race.

Coming Thursday, April 29: Part 6 – Proof

Miss a previous installment? Click on the links to read more.

Part 1 – Expectations

Part 2 – Intertwined

Part 3 – Volponi

Part 4 – Confidence

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Breeders’ Cup Presents Connections: Kentucky Derby ‘Kisses’ For Santana

It just feels right that a Derby horse whose name translates to “kisses” has an origin story filled with so much love; love of the horse, love of the sport, and love for one especially strong little girl. When O Besos enters the starting gate beneath the Twin Spires this Saturday, he'll have more people rooting for him than only those listed in the program.

The story begins in 1993 at Trinity Meadows, a now-defunct racetrack located just west of Dallas. A filly named With A Splash was entered in a $2,500 claiming race, and horseman Carl Potts took notice. 

Potts convinced his owners, the Hall family, to claim the filly, hoping to breed the granddaughter of Roberto. The claim was voided when With A Splash broke down during the running of the race, but Potts bought her anyway. 

It proved a shrewd decision — With A Splash foaled nine winners from 11 starters, four of which earned $100,000 or more. 

The best of her foals was Snuggs and Kisses. Sired by Soto, the filly was born in 2007. By this point, Potts' daughter was three years old and had already survived more than most people endure in an entire lifetime.

Her mother was 40 when she became pregnant, and an amniocentesis when she was just three months along showed the presence of an extra chromosome. Potts remembers being horrified when the hospital performing the procedure wrote them a prescription for an abortion.

Instead, Santana Love Potts was born six months later, healthy and happy.

“When people see this little girl, she's opened a lot of eyes,” Potts said, becoming emotional. “I've never been married, and I never had peace of mind until this little girl came along.”

Santana Love Potts, the namesake behind O Besos' dam, Snuggs and Kisses

When Santana was just 12 months old, Potts noticed small dark spots along the insides of her wrists. A visit to the doctor revealed that she was suffering from leukemia.

“We went from the doctor's appointment straight upstairs and lived in the hospital for a year,” said Potts. “It was the toughest thing I ever had to do.”

St. Jude's Children's Hospital treated Santana with the most intense regimen available at the time, for upwards of 96 hours at a time. All that time, Potts spent every moment he wasn't taking care of his horses at Santana's side. When she turned two, doctors finally declared her to be in remission.

“This little girl,” Potts said, his voice wavering, “you know, you get a horse ready to run, take them over to the paddock and send them out, and that horse might let you down. But this little girl, she's never let me down.”

Santana loved helping her daddy at the farm, especially bringing the young horses in from the field. She and that daughter of Soto met in 2008, when the yearling filly would allow Santana to “ride” on her back as she was led in from the field.

Potts named that filly Snuggs and Kisses in Santana's honor.

“Santana likes to snuggle and give everybody kisses,” he explained. 

A big filly, Snuggs and Kisses showed she'd need a little extra time before entering training, so the Hall Family gave her to Potts. He turned her out for several months, allowing the filly time for her growth plates to close.

In her third career start, Snuggs and Kisses ran third in a maiden special weight at Churchill Downs. It was that race that made Kentucky native Dr. Barrett Bernard stand up and take notice.

An emergency room physician and graduate of the University of Louisville School of Medicine, Bernard first fell in love with horse racing through his father, who particularly loved harness racing. Though the man worked banker's hours (including Saturdays), he always made time to take his son to the local OTB on Kentucky Derby day.

Bernard had gotten into a few small partnerships after his residency training was completed, but as he began to ease back on medicine — from 100 hours a week to something more reasonable, like 60 — he wanted to spend more time enjoying his passion for horse racing.

“It's my relaxation time,” said Bernard. “I like to go out and watch my horses train, and of course to see them race. It's like a mini-vacation.

“I actually have a son that I just can't watch races with; he's jumping up and down, slapping the program against his hand. My friends always say, 'Why don't you get more excited?' But as an E.R. doc, you have to be even-keeled. You can't be up one minute, then doom-and-gloom the next, so I just sit back and enjoy the race my way.”

Potts hesitated to sell even part of Snuggs and Kisses, knowing there was more to the mare than she'd shown on the track at that point. However, with Santana's medical bills and the always-challenging economics of a small-time trainer, it was hard to turn down Bernard's offer.

At first, Bernard bought half of Snuggs and Kisses for $25,000. Still a bit immature mentally, the filly finished off the board once before running a good third at Tampa and a fourth at Keeneland. 

Eventually Potts relented and allowed Bernard to buy out the second half of the filly.

“I told him then, 'I want you to remember that Carl Potts sold you the best horse you ever had,'” the trainer remembered.

In her very next start, Snuggs and Kisses broke her maiden for a $50,000 tag.at Churchill Downs. She would go on to win 12 of her 32 starts, finishing on the board 21 times and earning $288,020. She may not have won a stakes race, but in her final start in February of 2013 at six years of age, Snuggs and Kisses defeated millionaire and Grade 1 winner Daisy Devine by a head at Fair Grounds.

“She could really run,” said Bernard, 72. “She gave us so many thrills, I wouldn't have sold her for any amount of money.”

Though Bernard had never previously owned a broodmare or bred a Thoroughbred, he couldn't bear to let Snuggs and Kisses go, so he decided to breed her himself. He still has just the one broodmare.

“She has a home for life,” Bernard said. “And the fact that he named her for his daughter, that just makes her even more special. She still loves carrots, I go out to Knuckles Farm in Midway and feed her once a month or so.”

As it turns out, Snuggs and Kisses was an even better broodmare than her dam. 

Her 2014 son by Stormy Atlantic, Transatlantic Kiss, is a stakes-placed earner of $203,516. Her 2016 colt by Central Banker has earned $162,418 thus far. 

“She's gold,” Bernard said. “It doesn't matter what I breed her to, she just throws runners.”

Now, her 2018 son by Orb is taking Bernard and family to the Kentucky Derby. 

O Besos ran fourth in the G2 Risen Star and was an impressive late-closing third in the G2 Louisiana Derby for trainer Greg Foley.

“No matter what happens, this has been such a blessing,” Bernard said. “In all seriousness, he really can be there at the end. He'll do his best.

“Even small people in the Thoroughbred industry can get lucky and make it big occasionally. That's what I've thought my whole life; I just didn't think I'd be the one to do it.”

O Besos will have his fans cheering for him from outside the track, as well, and likely a few extra kisses blown toward him on the television screen.

“I'm not really a gambling person, but I could put $100 on the horse,” Potts said, laughing. “I'll be watching the race with Santana, cheering him home.”

O Besos training for the Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs

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