California to Honor Either Suspension or Stay of KY Baffert Ruling

As had been anticipated, the California Horse Racing Board (CHRB) will honor the 90-day suspension meted down to trainer Bob Baffert by the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission (KHRC) if the trainer's legal efforts to block the suspension aren't successful in the interim, confirmed a CHRB spokesperson Saturday morning.

Likewise, the CHRB will reciprocate any stay on the KHRC's ruling “if granted by a court,” the spokesperson confirmed in an email.

Earlier this month, the KHRC handed Baffert a 90-day suspension and a $7,500 fine after Medina Spirit (Protonico) tested positive for an elevated amount of betamethasone, a Class C anti-inflammatory corticosteroid, after last year's GI Kentucky Derby.

If enforced, the suspension will run March 8 through June 5.

On Friday, the KHRC denied Baffert's request for a stay on the suspension. In the immediate aftermath of that decision, Baffert's legal team stated that they would seek legal intervention in court.

“Denial of the stay is consistent with arbitrary and capricious manner in which the stewards have ignored the facts and law in this manner,” said Baffert attorney, Clark Brewster. “Fortunately, we will soon procedurally eclipse the biased actors and have the ear of adjudicators that adhere to the rule of law instead of man.”

The basis of the CHRB's actions is rule 1484, pertaining to “Evidence of Unfitness for License.”

The rule 1484 states: “If any applicant for a license or any licensee is under suspension, set down, ruled off, excluded from the inclosure, or otherwise barred from any racing occupation or activity requiring a license, it is prima facie evidence that he or she is unfit to be granted a license or unfit to hold a license or participate in racing in this State as a licensee during the term of any suspension or exclusion from racing imposed by any competent racing jurisdiction.”

When it comes to what will happen to the horses in Baffert's care for the duration of the 90-day suspension, the KHRC ruling states that, “Entry of all horses owned or trained by Mr. Baffert is denied pending transfer to persons acceptable to the stewards.”

The TDN emailed and texted Marc Guilfoil, the executive director of the KHRC, for clarification on who the Kentucky stewards deem acceptable, and whether that includes Baffert's assistants, but hasn't yet received a response.

The relevant rules in Kentucky appear unclear on the specifics of the horse transfer process in this particular scenario.

The TDN also asked the CHRB for clarification on what would happen to the horses in Baffert's care in California if the stay is denied in court. “We are currently working through the legal analysis with respect to whether reciprocation requires enforcement of the terms of suspension under California rules or Kentucky rules,” the CHRB spokesperson wrote, in response.

The CHRB's spokesperson did, however, highlight language in the CHRB's rules guiding disciplinary actions in cases where licenses are revoked through medication violations.

The CHRB prohibits a trainer whose license is revoked because of a medication violation from being able to benefit financially through the period of their suspension.

“This includes, but is not limited to, ensuring that horses are not transferred to licensed family members or to any other licensee who has been an employee of the licensee whose license is revoked within the previous year,” the rules state.

Furthermore, trainers suspended 60 days or more are banned from all CHRB premises, for example, and must forfeit their stalls and remove from their barn areas all “signage, colors, advertisements, training-related equipment, tack, office equipment, and any other property.”

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Saudi-Based Longshot Emblem Road Upsets Saudi Cup

Unheralded Saudi Arabia-based runner Emblem Road, a son of Central Kentucky sire Quality Road, snatched the richest Thoroughbred race ever staged, the $20 million Saudi Cup (G1) Feb. 26 at King Abdulaziz Racecourse in Riyadh.

A deafening crescendo climaxed in joy and near disbelief as jockey Wigberto Ramos coaxed Emblem Road down the center of the track for a half-length win from United States-based runners Country Grammer, second, and Midnight Bourbon, third.

For Saudi Arabian racing, the result was extraordinary. Four-year-old Emblem Road, had only raced in Saudi Arabia, where he was taking his record to eight wins from 11 starts. He is trained by Mitab Almulawah and carried the white and blue silks of Prince Saud bin Salman Abdulaziz.

Fast early fractions were set by Secret Ambition and Art Collector. Close-up in the early running were last year's winner Mishriff, caught wide and ultimately finishing last, and Mandaloun, recently elevated to victory in the 2021 Kentucky Derby (G1). But one by one the challengers melted away, including Mandaloun, who was ninth. Japanese champion T O Keynes could not add to the incredible haul of four wins by his compatriots earlier in the evening, finishing eighth in the 14-horse field, nor could Japanese star mare Marche Lorraine, upset winner of the 2021 Longines Breeders' Cup Distaff (G1), who was sixth.

With Panamanian-born rider Ramos aboard, Emblem Road stalked the early pace in midfield before collaring Country Grammer inside the final 50 meters to cue one of the greatest shocks—and celebrations—ever seen in Saudi racing.

Kentucky-bred Emblem Road, who is out of the Bernardini mare Venturini, covered 1 1/8 miles in 1:50.52 and returned $229.

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Moger Looking For Big Things From Stilleto Boy In Big ‘Cap

Ed Moger Jr. seeks the biggest win of his career March 5 at Santa Anita in Arcadia, Calif.

Infatuated with racing at a young age, he began training in 1976 and has been successful while maintaining a low profile in both Northern and Southern California for nearly half a century.

But with more than 1,900 career victories, the man knows how to win.

Saturday at Santa Anita, Moger will try to capture the track's historic marquee race for older horses, the Grade 1 Santa Anita Handicap presented by Yaamava' Resort & Casino, with an industrious 4-year-old that to date has tackled the game's elite yet remains beneath racing's radar.

The horse is Stilleto Boy, owned by Ed's younger brother, Steve, 58, who bought the gelding with the highest bid of $420,000 last July at the Fasig-Tipton Selected Horses of Racing Age Sale.

With only two wins but three seconds and five thirds from 13 starts, Stilleto Boy has rewarded the Mogers' confidence, with career earnings of $833,175.

The chestnut son of Shackleford would seem to have more than a longshot's chance in the mile and a quarter classic, as he has been chasing the likes of A-List horses Knicks Go, Life Is Good, Medina Spirit and Flightline.

“He's doing really good,” said Moger, who sent Stilleto Boy five furlongs Saturday morning in 1:02 under Juan Hernandez. Stilleto Boy went in company with stablemate Gotham Desire who received an identical clocking. “Knock on wood, everything's great,” Moger said.

“I think he'll benefit from the mile and a quarter. He ran well at that distance in the Breeders' Cup (Classic, finishing fifth behind front-running winner and eventual Horse of the Year Knicks Go), but the race was just too tough for him.”

Beaten 3 ¼ lengths by victorious Life Is Good and a length by runner-up Knicks Go last out in the Grade 1 Pegasus World Cup Invitational Jan. 29 at Gulfstream Park, Stilleto Boy did not have the smoothest trip in the mile and one eighth race.

“I was with him when he came back from Florida,” said Moger, “and he seemed tired, so I planned to just walk him for a couple weeks.

“But after about four days, we had to get him back to the track. He was tearing the barn down, so he's doing really good.”

A native of Lakeland, Fla., who turns 66 on April 5, Moger started his career as a groom for trainer Jay Mills while attending the University of Washington in the mid-1970's.

All these years later he's a multiple graded stakes-winning trainer with career earnings over $29 million, but nothing would be sweeter than putting a victory cap on it – a Big 'Cap victory.

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Letruska Returns With Facile Royal Delta Win; Apple Blossom Next

St. George Stable LLC's Letruska made an emphatic statement while winning Saturday's $150,000 Royal Delta (G3) at Gulfstream Park in Hallandale Beach, Fla.: She's Back!

The multiple Grade 1 stakes winner, who finished off her 2021 championship season with a subpar effort in the Nov. 6 Breeders' Cup Distaff (G1) at Del Mar. returned to winning form in the 1 1/16-mile stakes for older fillies and mares with a dominating three-length front-running victory with no need for encouragement from jockey Jose Ortiz.

“I think this is important. Now, she is 6 years old, and she made it look easy. It's not easy. It's a Grade 3. To win you have to make this kind of effort,” trainer Fausto Gutierrez said. “She looks in very good form and ready for the next race.”

Letruska ($2.20) broke cleanly from the starting gate and took the lead leaving the turn into the backstretch. Ears pricked throughout the remainder of the race, the 6-year-old daughter of Super Saver set comfortable fractions of 24.39 and 48.63 seconds for the first half mile and continued on to capture her 2022 debut while being geared down inside the final sixteenth of a mile.

“She broke well. I put her on the lead, and she relaxed well. Around the three-eighths pole I just smooched at her a little bit. I knew the race was over. She was full of herself. On the straight you could see I was just easing her up,” Ortiz said. “She was looking around at the people inside the track and the photographers and stuff. She did everything very easy.”

Letruska ran 1 1/16 miles in 1:43.43. Into Vanishing finished second, three-quarters of a length ahead of Il Malocchio. Crazy Beautiful finished fourth another 1 ½ lengths back.

Letruska's Royal Delta victory came over the track on which she defeated males by 4 ¼ lengths in a 1 ¼-mile stakes on the Classico del Caribe program for horses representing Latin American and the Caribbean back in December 2019. Sixteen races and eight graded stakes (four Grade 1 stakes) victories later, she is the reigning Eclipse Award older dirt female champion.

Letruska entered the Royal Delta undefeated in three starts over Gulfstream's main track, having also won the 2020 Added Elegance and Rampart (G3) before going on to dominate her division last year. The Kentucky-bred mare captured the Houston Ladies (G3) at Sam Houston, Azeri (G2) and Apple Blossom (G1) at Oaklawn, Ogden Phipps (G1) at Belmont Park, Fleur de Lis (G2) at Churchill Downs, Personal Ensign (G1) at Saratoga and Spinster (G1) at Keeneland. Her 2022 campaign ended on a sour note after she finished off the board in the Breeders' Cup Distaff (G1) at Del Mar.

“I think the Apple Blossom is next. This year, if everything goes OK, I would like her to run six times,” Gutierrez said. “Last year, she had eight stakes, a lot of Group 1s, traveling all around. Now, we need to go more passive.”

Letruska, who was turned out for six weeks following her loss in the Breeders' Cup, has pleased her trainer since returning to training.

“She's more body now. She's 6 years old,” Gutierrez said. “She got to relax for six weeks and then came back strong.”

Jockey Jose Ortiz wearing an armband with the colors of Ukraine's flag

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