Cautious Optimism in Illinois Racing

Illinois racing has its problems. There's no more Arlington Park, there will be only 64 days of racing this year and the circuit will shut down in the middle of the summer. But with the 2022 season about to start Saturday at Hawthorne, officials at that track are predicting that navigating through this year will be challenging but not impossible.

“How are we going to do? I can tell you more Wednesday when we draw the first card,” said Racing Secretary Al Plever. “But I think were going to be OK.”

The Hawthorne spring meet consists of 34 days and runs through June 25. When Arlington was running, racing would shift there in the summer before returning to Hawthorne in the fall. That gave horsemen a seven-month racing season that consisted of 118 days last year. But Hawthorne won't be running a summer meet because it must also host two harness racing meets each year. That means that there will be no Thoroughbred racing in the Chicago area for the bulk of the summer, from June 26 until a 30-day fall meet begins Sept. 23.

The fear was that the gap in the summer would lead to an exodus out of Illinois, with horsemen choosing a circuit where there were more racing opportunities and they wouldn't have to pack their bags in the summer.

“At the end of June, we're all going to have to leave,” said trainer Mike Campbell, the former president of the Illinois Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association. “The problem we are all facing having to leave our homes. I will not live in my home here for more than four months a year. That's a problem. Everybody is in same boat.”

But Plever said only a handful of Illinois regulars have left and that stalwarts like Larry Rivelli, who will have 80 horses at Hawthorne, have remained loyal. Most have found a place to call home during the summer. The best fit appears to be Canterbury Park. The Minnesota track will have 65 days of live  racing, beginning May 18 and ending Sept. 17. In an effort to attract Chicago horsemen, Canterbury has put together a bonus package for Illinois-based horses. A thoroughbred starter that raced in Illinois in 2021 or 2022 but has not previously started at Canterbury will be eligible for a $1,000 bonus in their first start of the 2022 season.

“It will be a little different this year because people used to be able to stay here pretty much all year and now we have a couple of months where they are in limbo,” said Hawthorne Assistant General Manager John Walsh. “They can go to Canterbury, which is a great track that has turf racing When they're done there they can come back in the fall and I think we will also have some sort of bonus program for horses coming in from Canterbury. I haven't heard of too many people who are staying away.”

Campbell said he will spend the summer at Colonial Downs and knows of other trainers who will be doing to Indiana Grand, Prairie Meadows and the Ohio racetracks.

One of the reasons horsemen are committing to Hawthorne is that a sizable purse increase will be ushered in this year. At about $120,000 a day in 2021, Hawthorne had among the smallest purses in the sport. This year, the simulcasting money bet off-season in Illinois does not have to shared with Arlington and the horsemen have also secured a one-year subsidy from the state. Plever said purses will average about $190,000 a day this year with purses for maiden special weight races increasing from $22,000 to $40,000.

Walsh also believes a later start–Hawthorne typically opened about a month earlier–will help.

“We might get off to a bit of a slow start but I think that by May we will be 40 to 50 percent better off than we have been at some of the past spring meets,” Walsh said. “We're going to have more turf racing. Weather-wise, we're sure to have some decent days in May and June. When you're running in March and April there can be rain or even snow and you're hard pressed to even get on the turf course. I think we will do much, much better and the signal will look better with some green grass instead of everything being just gray.”

But there will be challenges. Thoroughbreds used to be able to train at Hawthorne when it was shut down in the winter, but, because of the harness meet, which didn't end until March 20, that wasn't possible. With the track not opening for training until Monday, five days before opening day, there will be a number of horses who aren't yet ready to go. Plever said that of Monday there were 400 horses on the grounds and he expected another 200 to 300 would arrive by Saturday. That may not seem like a lot, but Hawthorne, throughout April, will race just two days a week, on Saturdays and Sundays.

In the longer term, Hawthorne should be just fine. A casino is in the works and the added money should yield a generous hike in purses. There is also the hope that a new harness track will be built somewhere in Illinois, which would mean that Hawthorne could go back to running Thoroughbreds only.

“This meet, it is the start of something,” Walsh said. “Once the casino opens up that will really energize things. We have a time line now. In time, these purses here are going to go through the roof.”

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Thoroughbred Owner, Horseplayer Al Roehl Dies At 66

Al Roehl, a Thoroughbred owner and regular participant in handicapping contests, died on March 24 in Lexington, Ky., following a brief illness. He was 66.

Semi-retired from his Chicago-based marketing and mentoring career, Roehl was known for his low-key positive attitude and passion for Thoroughbred racing. He enjoyed mingling with horsemen during training hours and attending the races on random weekdays and big event afternoons. His handicapping skills earned him spots in various challenges including national tournaments.

Roehl owned racehorses both with his wife Jan, and in small partnerships. His past runners include Prayer Service, an allowance winner at Churchill Downs, Oaklawn Park and Ellis Park. The gelding is retired at the Roehl's Lexington farm after being retrained to pull a carriage steered by the Roehls.

“Al was always fun,” said Steve Margolis, who was among the trainers Roehl employed. “He was a dear friend, not just a client. He was always happy no matter how his horses ran. He was so knowledgeable about the game that he understood why a horse did not win.”

After their initial meeting on a Belmont Park-bound train, the Roehls spent the afternoon sharing wagers and cashing tickets. They later married and relocated to Lexington in 2006. In recent years, they have been known for their popular “Picnic with Goats” venture in which customers dine at their farm with friendly goats nearby.

A graduate of the University of Notre Dame, Al worked at the Leo Burnett Worldwide advertising agency with Kellogg's as his primary account. His enduring professional relationships attest to his ability to do his job brilliantly while still being an approachable guy from Chicago's south side. He then ran a consulting group for 14 years before founding The Neuro-Fitness Center in 2019. His goal was to help individuals and organizations “Get their brain to work for them. Not against them.”

In addition to Jan, Al is survived by his four children, Jeff (Gina), Melanie (Bob), Tyler and Christopher; stepchildren Sara and Alex (Erin); and four grandchildren. A celebration befitting a man who led a big life will be held in Chicago this summer. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to a charity of one's choice.

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In Memoriam: Canadian Racing ‘Icon’ Glen Todd, Philanthropist Jim Ryan, Award-Winning Turf Writer Philip Von Borries, Jockey John Cantarini

The Paulick Report has learned of the passing of the following notable horse racing personalities.

Glen Todd, a longtime supporter of the British Columbia Thoroughbred horse racing industry, died on Sunday, March 27, at the age of 75, reports the Vancouver Sun.

“Glen played a giant role in British Columbia's Thoroughbred racing industry, whether as an owner of hundreds of racehorses in recent years, or as a business leader in providing direction, insight and vital influence over the ongoing sustainability of the industry,” wrote Hastings Racecourse on social media. “Glen's passion and commitment to the industry — and the people within it — was unparalleled and will be sorely missed.”

Last year, Todd gave Hastings an interest-free $1 million loan to fund purse money over the summer. He was involved in racing for nearly 60 years, owning and training hundreds of racehorses in B.C. and Kentucky through his North American Thoroughbred Race Horse Company.

Todd is also a member of the British Colombia Sports Hall of Fame for his founding of the Canada Cup softball tournament.

James P. Ryan

Thoroughbred owner and breeder James P. Ryan, who bred and raced 1983 Belmont Stakes winner Caveat, died on March 11 at the age of 89. The native of Pittsburgh, Pa., who lived in Glenwood, Md., at the time of his passing, made his fortune in the homebuilding business, working closely with a brother to develop Ryland Homes into one of the largest companies of its type in the nation.

Ryan had immediate success in horse racing with his Ryehill Farm breeding operation in Mt. Airy, Md., which he purchased and developed around 1970. Among his top runners was Smarten, a multiple graded stakes winner who went on to become a leading sire in Maryland. Other homebreds to carry the Ryehill silks were back-to-back Eclipse Award-winning 2-year-old fillies, Smart Angle and Heavenly Cause, in 1979-'8o. All were trained by Woody Stephens.

Another top Ryehill homebred, Awad (by Caveat), who won the 1995 Arlington Million and earned more than $3.2 million, was trained by David Donk, a former Stephens assistant.

During his backstretch visits to see his horses, Ryan grew increasingly concerned about the conditions stable workers endured and the substance abuse problems many of them developed. In 1988, Ryan dispersed most of his horses and used proceeds from sales to start the Ryan Family Foundation, pledging $1 million in $20,000 grants to racetracks – provided they would match the funds – to start treatment programs and improve conditions. At least 50 tracks did match the funds and Ryan added to his pledge. The programs that came out of Ryan's philanthropy serve many backstretch workers today.

Ryan was also a major supporter of Operation Smile, a Middle East program that provided funding and surgeons to treat children with deformities from malnutrition or war-related injuries. The last big horse he bred after getting back into racing and breeding was Ops Smile, named in honor of the Operation Smile program.  Also by Caveat, Ops Smile won the G1 Manhattan Handicap in 1997.

Ryan is survived by Mariam, his wife of 27 years, five children, two step-children and numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren, along with his former wife, Linda Ryan.

 

Phil Von Borries at Arlington Park

Award-winning turf writer Philip Von Borries passed away on Thursday, March 24, at the age of 74 due to respiratory issues.  Von Borries earned the 1990 Eclipse Award for Local Television Achievement of Louisville's WKPC-TV, as well as the John Hervey Award presented by the U.S. Harness Writers Association.

Twice published on horse racing topics, Von Borries' books are entitled RaceLens: Vintage Thoroughbred and Racelines: Observations on Horse Racing's Glorious History.

Von Borries wrote for numerous American, Canadian and European publications, among them The Thoroughbred Record, The Kentucky Derby Magazine, The European Racehorse, The Thoroughbred Times, The Blood-Horse, The Daily Racing Form, Turf & Sport Digest, Hoofbeats and The Standardbred.

Von Borries also did publicity for the Arlington Million and the Kentucky Derby; television production work on the latter for ABC-TV; and appeared as an extra in three horse racing movies–Sylvester, Seabiscuit and Dreamer.

His television work includes two national award-winning documentaries on the Kentucky Derby's fabled black history: “The Roses of May” (1984 Iris Award) and “Black Gold” (1990 Eclipse Award; best local television production).

Von Borries is also the author of five baseball books: The Louisville Baseball Almanac; Ameridi (American Diamonds): An American Baseball Reader; American Gladiator: The Life and Times of Pete Browning; Louisville Diamonds; and Legends Of Louisville. His baseball bylines have appeared in The Boston Red Sox Magazine, The Oakland Athletics Magazine, The Chicago Cubs Program Magazine, The Washington Times, Sports Collectors Digest and Oldtyme Baseball News.

He has also written on science fiction, film and true crime.

Jockey John Cantarini

Retired jockey John Cantarini, who rode world record-setting sprinter Crazy Kid in the early 1960s, died on March 20 in Penticton, British Columbia, according to his wife of 57 years, Martha Crawford Cantarini, who was at his side at the time of his passing.

A leading rider at Agua Caliente and the California fair circuit, Cantarini became regular rider of Crazy Kid, a son of Krakatao bred by Rex Ellsworth who Ellsworth lost in a claiming race for $2,750 at Caliente. By the summer of 1962, Crazy Kid had become a stakes winner and world record holder, winning the Bing Crosby Stakes at Del Mar in 1:07 4/5 for six furlongs.

A couple of years later, Cantarini rode a nondescript horse to a fifth-place finish but ended up a winner when he asked the owner, a horsewoman and Hollywood stunt double named Martha Crawford, out to dinner. Six months later, in 1964, the two were married.

Cantarini's brushes with Hollywood extended beyond his new wife, who was a stuntwoman in numerous films, doubling for actresses Anne Baxter, Eleanor Parker, Shirley MacLaine, Rhonda Fleming, Jean Simmons and Claudette Colbert, among others.

Among the owners Cantarini rode for were bandleader Harry James and actress Betty Grable, who were regulars at Southern California tracks.

One of the best horses Cantarini rode was stakes winner Irish Minstrel, who finished second in the 1968 Canadian Derby at Northlands Park.

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Cal Expo Extends Harness Track Lease Through 2030

The board of Webis, the Group specializing in pool wagering and the operators of WatchandWager Cal Expo, the Californian harness track, is pleased to announce that its principal USA based subsidiary WatchandWager.com LLC (“WatchandWager”) on Friday, March 25, received formal approval from the Board of the California Exposition and State Fair in Sacramento, Calif., to extend its lease of the operation of Cal Expo Harness racetrack until May 2030.

The current lease runs to May 2025, so WatchandWager has taken up its option to extend the lease for a further five years.

This approval is subject to a signed contract between the landlord and WatchandWager, but the key commercial terms of the extension have been agreed, so the contract is expected to be a formality. Shareholders will be informed when the contract extension has been signed.

WatchandWager has been operating live racing at the Cal Expo venue since 2012 and continues to improve the quality of racing at the venue. In addition, this sector of the business has proven to be profitable in the past and indeed currently. The Board sees no reason why this positive trend should not continue to be the case into the extension. The racetrack also enjoys an excellent health and safety record for equine and human participants, and this continues to be a key focus for the operation.

This approval secures the WatchandWager physical licensed presence in California for a further significant period, alongside its existing online license. This commitment to the state is important, as the state government continues to consider its options for the legalization of sports betting in California, the biggest market in the USA. While this subject is complex and currently subject to change, the Board believes cementing its position in California as a racing and gaming operator can only enhance its prospects in the key state of California.

It should be noted that the above extension approval does not require approval from the state regulator, with WatchandWager already being approved by the California Horse Racing Board to conduct its operations.

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