Gov. Murphy Signs Bill Approving Fixed Odds at Monmouth

Fixed Odds wagering will be available at Monmouth Park in the coming weeks after Gov. Philip Murphy signed legislation Thursday approving the new bet, with implementation awaiting regulatory approval from the New Jersey Racing Commission and the Division of Gaming Enforcement.

Monmouth Park, working in conjunction with BetMakers Technology Group, will be the first racetrack in the country to offer Fixed Odds wagering, a popular bet in Europe and Australia.

“We appreciate the continued support from Gov. Murphy and the state legislature, as well as Assembly Speaker Craig Coughlin and Senate President Steve Sweeney, in advancing Fixed Odds wagering,” said Dennis Drazin, Chairman and CEO of Darby Development LLC, the operator of Monmouth Park. “It provides our patrons with another wagering option that we firmly believe will be a popular one.”

The bill was co-sponsored by state assemblymen Ronald S. Dancer and Ralph R. Caputo and state senators Vin Gopal and Paul A. Sarlo.

Fixed Odds wagering allows bettors to retain the odds at the time of their bet, as opposed to pari-mutuel wagering, where odds are not finalized until betting is completed.

When it is available at Monmouth Park, Fixed Odds will be offered on win, place and show betting at the outset, with a minimum wager of $1. There will be designated Fixed Odds windows throughout the Grandstand and Clubhouse, with televisions displaying the current Fixed Odds.

Monmouth Park will also show the Fixed Odds for each race during the track's in-house televised feed of races.

Fixed Odds wagering will begin with Monmouth Park races, with the expectation that it will expand to other tracks that enter into an agreement to permit Fixed Odds wagering on their races.

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Family Ties Run Deep In Racing For Hall Of Famer Casse

Friday will be a capstone day for Mark Casse and his family when the trainer is inducted into the National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., in a morning ceremony prior to the afternoon races across the street at Saratoga race course. His son Norman, who was his top assistant before going out on his own, and daughter-in-law and TVG analyst Gabby Gaudet could not be prouder.

“It's very exciting. I know this has been one of Dad's biggest goals his entire life so I'm sure he's nervous and excited and we're proud to be a part of that,” said Norm Casse.

Mark Casse was elected in 2020 but his induction ceremony, along with the rest of last year's class, had to be postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. This year, the 2020 and 2021 classes will be honored in a combined ceremony, which will be held in the Fasig-Tipton Sales Pavilion beginning at 10:30 a.m. ET

Mark Casse, the 13-time Sovereign Award winner as Canada's Outstanding Trainer who became a member of the Canadian Thoroughbred Hall of Fame in 2016, is only the fourth trainer to be a dual member of both Halls of Fame. He joins Horatio Luro, Lucien Laurin, and Roger Attfield.

“That's pretty good company to be in,” his son said. “Overall, this is an exciting day and it's a really cool group of people and horses being inducted. It's a very special moment.”

The 2020 class includes horses Tom Bowling and Wise Dan, jockey Darrel McHargue, and Pillars of the Turf Alice Headley Chandler, J. Keene Daingerfield, Jr., and George Widener, Jr. The 2021 class is comprised of trainers Todd Pletcher and Jack Fisher and 2015 Triple Crown winner American Pharoah.

Norm Casse is a third-generation horseman and the grandson of the late noted horseman Norman Casse. There will likely be a fourth generation as Norm and his wife, Gabby Gaudet, will be welcoming their first child. Fittingly, the baby is due on the 2021 Breeders' Cup weekend.

“This has all been a whirlwind. There's no other word to describe it,” said Gaudet, who was a member of the NYRA broadcast team as an on-air reporter and racing analyst before moving on to a similar role with TVG. “It's been really busy for Norm and for me with all the traveling we've both been doing.”

Gaudet also has strong bloodlines in the sport. She's the daughter of trainers Linda and the late Eddie Gaudet and the sister of trainer Lacey Gaudet. Her family has been a mainstay on the Mid-Atlantic circuit for decades.

“Both of our families are very excited. We're just lucky that we have so much support behind us,” said Gabby. “Unfortunately, my family won't be able to come to the ceremony tomorrow as my Mom is stuck in Maryland and my sister is stuck in Delaware. But we will be there supporting Mark and it will be such an exciting day for him. It's such a big moment. There was so much uncertainty last year and you don't want a moment like that to fall a little flat. I'm happy they're incorporating this year and last year's inductees. This deserves to have its own moment. Luckily, we'll be here for it.”

Mark Casse will look to capture a unique double on Friday when he follows up on his induction by saddling Easy Time in the Grade 2 National Museum of Racing Hall of Fame in Race 7 at Saratoga.

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Ontario Sire Heritage Series Kicks Off Saturday At Woodbine

A pair of turf stakes, the Georgian Bay, and Lake Huron, will share the spotlight on Saturday's 11-race card at Woodbine in Toronto, Ontario.

The five-furlong inner turf events are part of the Ontario Sire Heritage Series, a new eight-leg stakes series open to Ontario Sired 3-year-olds, to be contested at Woodbine and Fort Erie racetracks.

Ontario Racing and its Thoroughbred Improvement Program (TIP) Committee unveiled the series in March. With a total purse structure of $750,000, the Heritage Series will feature a total of four races – three opening legs and one final – for both 3-year-old colts and 3-year-old fillies that are sustained to the Ontario Sires Stakes program.

First out of the gate on Saturday is the $80,000 Georgian Bay, which has attracted six fillies. Carded as race three, the wide-open affair includes Benny's Button.

Trainer Beverley Chubb, who co-owns the filly with breeder Shamrock Stable, had the bay well prepared for her career bow on July 3 at Woodbine.

Sent off at 19-1 in the five-furlong Tapeta race, Benny's Button grabbed the lead early and turned a 1 ½-length advantage at the stretch call into a 3 ¼-length victory in a time of :57.54.

Now, the daughter of top Canadian sire Old Forester, will step up to the stakes ranks and onto a new surface.

“I was trying to run in a non-winners of two, Ontario sired,” noted Chubb. “But the race didn't go and it got so close to that race, I figured we would give it a try. She did it with ease, I thought. We'll see what she does against tougher horses, but I don't think she's a stretch in there. She ran a very determined race. She's a serious filly – she doesn't clown around. I know she just broke her maiden, but I think she deserves a shot.”

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A multiple stakes winning conditioner, Chubb is looking for a duplicate of that curtain-raising effort from a month ago.

She likes what she's seeing from her young pupil.

“She's been training well,” said Chubb, who won the 1998 running of the George C. Hendrie, and 1999 edition of the La Voyageuse with Irish Cherry. “She broke her maiden convincingly, so I'm hoping for some good luck.”

While Chubb has come to know what to expect from her young charge on the racetrack, it's quite the opposite in the barn.

“Off the track, at home, she's a gem. Here, she can be a little bit difficult, as can all Old Forester fillies. She has the Old Forester filly streak… 'Maybe today I'm going to stand here and rear, and maybe I'm going to train.' You're just never sure. She has that typical moody streak where you never know what's going to happen.”

The Lake Huron, slated as the ninth race, has drawn six hopefuls, including Dragon's Brew, a son of Milwaukee Brew.

Trained by Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame inductee Robert Tiller, the gelding is 3-0-1 from seven lifetime starts, with a 1-0-1 mark from three turf engagements.

The grass win came in his most recent start, a six-furlong trek over the E.P. Taylor Turf Course on July 17.

Sent on his way at 15-1 Dragon's Brew, under Kazushi Kimura, found daylight in the stretch and went on to a two-length score in a time of 1:09.81 over good going.

“Did I see it coming? Yes. The way he was acting and the way he was training, I thought he'd have a good race,” said Tiller. “His first race of the year [June 27, at Woodbine], you had to throw out because there was a spill in that race. He was kind of involved and was cut up. I knew that wasn't a real race.”

Cutting back a furlong and switching from the E.P. Taylor Turf to the inner turf will present a few challenges for Dragon's Brew, noted Tiller.

That said, the decorated conditioner knows one thing he can expect from the bay, bred and owned by Goldmart Farms.

“He's always had a little trouble fighting the turn and he has to run on the Inner over five-eighths. He's in good order and we'll give it our best shot. I wish it was further and it was on the E.P. Taylor, and it's only one turn. He did have trouble making that sharp turn last fall [third on the Inner in the Bull Page Stakes]. There are some factors we're concerned about, but he'll be running on end. He'll come running. He's a good finisher, and he's a nice, little horse.”

First post time is 1:10 p.m. Fans can also watch and wager on all the action via HPIbet.com.

FIELD FOR THE $80,00 GEORGIAN BAY 

POST – HORSE – JOCKEY – TRAINER
1 – Meet the Soprano – Rafael Hernandez – Mark Casse
2 – Artful Ballerina – Emma-Jayne Wilson – Darwin Banach
3 – Benny's Button – Juan Crawford – Beverley Chubb
4 – Nero Davola (S) – Sahin Civaci – Martin Drexler
5 – Sunsprite – Justin Stein – Kevin Attard
6 – Humble Beginnings (S) – Kazushi Kimura – Krista Cole-Simpson

FIELD FOR THE $80,000 LAKE HURON 

POST – HORSE – JOCKEY – TRAINER
1 – Red Maple – Shaun Bridgmohan – Michelle Love
2 – Forest Survivor – Kazushi Kimura – Norm McKnight
3 – Jocularity – Justin Stein – Ashlee Brnjas
4 – Galvaston – David Moran – Michael Doyle
5 – All Canadian – Gary Boulanger – Gail Cox
6 – Dragon's Brew – Patrick Husbands – Robert Tiller

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