Purse levels for maiden special weight (MSW) races on the Kentucky circuit have been established for the upcoming meets at Churchill Downs ($120,000 in the first condition book), Ellis Park ($50,000 through July and August) and Kentucky Downs ($150,000 for seven days in September).
Those figures were revealed by representatives of those tracks Tuesday during a video meeting of the Kentucky Thoroughbred Development Fund (KTDF) advisory committee.
Ben Huffman, the vice president of racing and racing secretary at Churchill Downs, also confirmed that the newly installed turf course in Louisville is ready for racing.
“We're still on target for opening the turf course opening night [Apr. 30],” Huffman said. “The turf course is looking good. We certainly want it to warm up here a little quicker. We've had our consultants out there all winter. They were out there about a week, 10 days ago, and everything so far looks great. The root system's great. So we're on schedule as of right now.”
The $120,000 figure for Churchill's first-book MSW races through May 15 is an uptick over 2021's MSW purses, which were $115,000 during Derby week, then $100,000 for the balance of the spring/summer meet.
The $50,000 Ellis projection is a slight dip from $51,000 last year.
Kentucky Downs is adding one race date this season, up from six in 2021. MSW purses for the all-turf meet have risen from $90,000 in 2020 and $135,000 last year.
When Ted Nicholson, the senior vice president and general manager at Kentucky Downs, disclosed the $150,000 figure for this year's meet, Bill Landes III, the chairman of the KTDF, reacted with mock astonishment at such a high figure by asking if that figure was actually in United States dollars.
“Do you have a grass horse?” Nicholson deadpanned in response.
When Kentucky racing shifts back to Turfway Park next December, horsemen can expect not only the completion of the racino's new clubhouse/grandstand (scheduled to open to the public Sept. 1), but five new barns, a new two-story dormitory, and a new post-race testing barn in the stable area.
Chip Bach, Turfway's general manager, said the new dormitory will be “very similar to what they have at Churchill Downs” and it will be “a thousand percent better for our horsemen who live on the grounds…. Our goal is to have them ready before we open the barn area in November.”
Quipped Landes: “From what I hear, you'll have no problems filling them next year.”
An Ellis Park turf widening project has been stalled by wet weather, but surveying is set to begin once the infield dries out, an Ellis representative told the KTDF.
The Maryland Racing Commission granted preliminary approval for a new wagering regulation on Tuesday, reports The Racing Biz, which would allow multi-race bettors to select an alternate in each leg of a multi-race wager.
The alternate would be used only in the event that the bettor's primary selection scratches, rather than the current practice of reverting to the post-time favorite.
“It gives the bettor the flexibility. Sometimes guys have been frustrated,” said Maryland Jockey Club acting president Mike Rogers. “[They say] I hate the favorite. So this gives them a chance ahead of time to say, 'You know what? I want to put an alternate in this race.'”
According to MRC executive director J. Michael Hopkins, the regulation could be in place by the fall. The delay, he explained, is due to the time it will take to pass a regulatory process which will permit the selection of alternates.
As the importance of Thoroughbred aftercare continues to grow, racetrack owners are finding all kinds of new ways to support their former runners as they move into second careers. This year, Kerr Racing and St. Patrick's Racing Stable, which is the nom de course of Oliver Keithly and Mellissa Perrin-Keithly, have found a somewhat unconventional way to help their runner Epigrammatist find his next steps in life.
Perrin-Keithly posted on Facebook earlier this month with the offer of a scholarship for a rider interested in taking Epigrammatist to this year's Thoroughbred Makeover.
“We had talked about this a year ago, that maybe we should try to give someone else the chance to go to the Makeover,” said Mellissa.
The couple has experience with the Makeover, with Oliver having taken Smugglers Hold to the polo discipline at the event in 2016 and Mellissa competing in dressage that year with One Time Richie. Mellissa also took St. Patrick's Racing graduate Shanghaied to the event's competitive trail discipline in 2019 as a training team with her father-in-law, “Pop Pop.”
The Keithlys were both riders and competitors before they were racehorse owners, with Mellissa focusing on dressage and both riding polo horses.
“It actually started because we had a horse we adopted from CANTER Ohio named Smugglers Hold and I did the Makeover with him,” said Oliver. “We liked the racing part, but were never involved in it. She did English and I did polo, and that's all we were really about. Then I said, 'Let's get into the racing part,' and we went in full bore.”
They launched St. Patrick's Racing Stable in 2018 and aftercare was always a central part of the equation for the stable's racing and breeding operations.
“We wanted to do things our way, take care of the horse from Day 1 until they were 20 years old, 25 years old,” said Oliver. “We wanted to set the horse up for a life beyond racing, because there's more to a horse's life than just racing.”
As such, Mellissa says they have worked to find private placements for their horses at the end of their race careers, and retire horses with their second careers in mind. It's not an easy task from their base in Maine, where winter weather limits the length of the season for many riders, and where there isn't the same vibrant hub of OTTB devotees that there is in Central Kentucky.
This year, Mellissa's plate was already full with the plans she had for her own dressage season and she knew she wouldn't be able to take a horse herself, but Epigrammatist found himself in need of a new job.
[Story Continues Below]
The couple are both quick to chuckle that about how the 5-year-old gelding they co-own with fellow Maine resident George Kerr didn't exactly light the track on fire. He has two wins from 23 starts and earnings of just over $23,628 for trainer John Rodriguez. When the son of Soldat bumped his leg in the stall and needed some time off, it seemed to his owners like it was time to call it a day.
“If he got down to a claiming price that was lower and someone took him, we wouldn't feel right about that,” said Oliver.
Epigrammatist came back to the St. Patrick's base in Maine for his rehabilitation, which gave the Keithlys a chance to get to know him hands-on. After a few weeks of turnout, they were delighted with his sweet demeanor and believed he would bring joy to an amateur or a professional rider looking for a Makeover project.
“He got the nickname 'Crush' because all the women would come around the barn and say 'Who's that?! He's pretty!'” said Oliver. “At the track, John Rodriguez was our trainer at the track and his nickname was Hickory because that horse would go out and try, and was rock solid all the way through.”
Epigrammatist in his racing days. Photo courtesy Mellissa Perrin-Keithly
Although he wasn't particularly fast, Mellissa said Epigrammatist was always interested in running farther – to the point he would keep loping after the gallop out, sometimes proving difficult for experienced jockeys to pull up – which makes her think he could make an eventer.
Mellissa's experience with the Makeover had taught her that the time-limited nature of the event can put a lot of pressure on riders who have made it their big goal. Horses are only able to attend once, and can't be restarted earlier than the December prior to their October competition. The goal of the program is to highlight the versatility of the breed by demonstrating how much progress a horse can make into a second career in a limited time.
Different competitors approach the event in different ways. Some make it a first-year goal with a long-term equine partner; many professionals use it as a chance to prepare and market a sales prospect whose resume is boosted by having completed the process; still other riders enjoy the training challenge and try to take a horse through it in multiple years.
For all of them, there's expense involved with training the horse, entering any shows or clinics they may do in preparation, and the veterinary work that can often pop up with any horse in an athletic endeavor. For riders who like to take project horses each year, there's also financial risk in taking one on who could come up with an illness or injury that negates their ability to be ready by October. Then, there's the expenses with the event itself – entry, stabling, travel, and hauling, which can feel like a strain just as the anxiety of the competition is landing.
St. Patrick's is offering a trainer the chance to help out with those event expenses. Its scholarship would also give the trainer a safety net for the horse – if something isn't working out, he can always come home, so they won't be stuck paying board on a laid-up OTTB who can't make the journey unless they want to. Depending on the situation, there's the possibility the scholarship recipient could become the horse's owner after the Makeover.
“We wanted to take the pressure off of somebody, that now they have this horse and now on Oct. 18 [the end of the Makeover] I don't know what I'm going to do with it,” Mellissa said. “It could be a situation where then that horse goes home with someone, it sits for a few months, and then someone has to start all over again.”
“It's just a good way for our small farm to make sure the horse has the best chance in life after racing, and hopefully other connections might think this is a good idea.”
It has become more common in recent years for racing connections to retain ownership of a horse well into the retraining process, either as a way to ease the transition to a more responsible home, or to get more enjoyment out of a horse in a new context.
Mellissa's deadline for scholarship applicants closed last week, and she will soon begin a Zoom interview process to find the best fit for Epigrammatist. The most important thing she'll be looking for: an interest in bonding with a special horse.
“One of the questions we asked on the application was, 'Can you give us an example of a human/horse connection story that has touched your heart?' and you already can tell who is there and who isn't,” she said.
“Not only did we get some really good applicants, but we got some really good feedback from people who are hands-on with the Retired Racehorse Project, so I was very happy about that,” she said. “If we can help somebody be involved in this and make somebody's dream come true, that's really what we're going for.”
Equibase, North American racing's official database, has released its February statistics for the industry's economic indicators, including field size, wagering, and other data, along with 2019 and 2020 comparables. The 2019 data is included as a pre-COVID-19 comparison.
Equibase is continuing to provide monthly reporting of its Economic Indicators Advisories as a service to the industry and in consideration of the economic changes resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic. The Advisory is typically disseminated on a quarterly basis to provide key metrics used to measure racing's performance throughout the year.
Total wagering on U.S. races in March declined 2.37 percent in 2022 as compared to 2021, though wagering through the first quarter of 2022 is still up just over 1 percent year-over-year. The average wagering per race day also declined, by 2.03 percent.
When compared to pre-pandemic numbers from 2019, however, total wagering is up 10.31 percent in the first quarter of 2022, and average wagering is up 15.37 percent.
Though the number of race dates was fairly steady year-over-year in March, the number of races held dipped 5.46 percent in 2022. The average field size also showed declines, dropping from 7.59 starters per race in March of 2021 to 7.36 starters in 2022.
Total purses and average purses per race day showed increases in March, up 6.15 percent and 6.52 percent, respectively.
March 2022 vs. March 2021
Indicator
March 2022
March 2021
% Change
Wagering on U.S. Races*
$942,589,741
$965,453,678
-2.37%
U.S. Purses
$86,833,249
$81,798,689
+6.15%
U.S. Race Days
291
292
-0.34%
U.S. Races
2,423
2,563
-5.46%
U.S. Starts
17,833
19,452
-8.32%
Average Field Size
7.36
7.59
-3.03%
Average Wagering Per Race Day
$3,239,140
$3,306,348
-2.03%
Average Purses Per Race Day
$298,396
$280,132
+6.52%
1st QTR 2022 vs. 1st QTR 2021
Indicator
1st QTR 2022
1st QTR 2021
% Change
Wagering on U.S. Races*
$2,796,360,290
$2,766,166,337
+1.09%
U.S. Purses
$244,753,188
$214,998,157
+13.84%
U.S. Race Days
807
766
+5.35%
U.S. Races
6,768
6,702
+0.98%
U.S. Starts
51,146
52,211
-2.04%
Average Field Size
7.56
7.79
-3.00%
Average Wagering Per Race Day
$3,465,130
$3,611,183
-4.04%
Average Purses Per Race Day
$303,288
$280,676
+8.06%
2020 Comparisons:
March 2022 vs. March 2020
Indicator
March 2022
March 2020
% Change
Wagering on U.S. Races*
$942,589,741
$731,609,777
+28.84%
U.S. Purses
$86,833,249
$55,774,436
+55.69%
U.S. Race Days
291
214
+35.98%
U.S. Races
2,423
1,787
+35.59%
U.S. Starts
17,833
13,919
+28.12%
Average Field Size
7.36
7.79
-5.51%
Average Wagering Per Race Day
$3,239,140
$3,418,737
-5.25%
Average Purses Per Race Day
$298,396
$260,628
+14.49%
1st QTR 2022 vs. 1st QTR 2020
Indicator
1st QTR 2022
1st QTR 2020
% Change
Wagering on U.S. Races*
$2,796,360,290
$2,508,529,406
+11.47%
U.S. Purses
$244,753,188
$205,227,651
+19.26%
U.S. Race Days
807
793
+1.77%
U.S. Races
6,768
6,616
+2.30%
U.S. Starts
51,146
51,973
-1.59%
Average Field Size
7.56
7.86
-3.80%
Average Wagering Per Race Day
$3,465,130
$3,163,341
+9.54%
Average Purses Per Race Day
$303,288
$258,799
+17.19%
2019 Comparisons:
March 2022 vs. March 2019
Indicator
March
March 2019
% Change
Wagering on U.S. Races*
$942,589,741
$945,087,433
-0.26%
U.S. Purses
$86,833,249
$79,653,572
+9.01%
U.S. Race Days
291
310
-6.13%
U.S. Races
2,423
2,678
-9.52%
U.S. Starts
17,833
20,427
-12.70%
Average Field Size
7.36
7.63
-3.51%
Average Wagering Per Race Day
$3,239,140
$3,048,669
+6.25%
Average Purses Per Race Day
$298,396
$256,947
+16.13%
1st QTR 2022 vs. 1st QTR 2019
Indicator
1st QTR 2022
1st QTR 2019
% Change
Wagering on U.S. Races*
$2,796,360,290
$2,534,968,772
+10.31%
U.S. Purses
$244,753,188
$227,119,640
+7.76%
U.S. Race Days
807
844
-4.38%
U.S. Races
6,768
7,290
-7.16%
U.S. Starts
51,146
56,830
-10.00%
Average Field Size
7.56
7.80
-3.06%
Average Wagering Per Race Day
$3,465,130
$3,003,518
+15.37%
Average Purses Per Race Day
$303,288
$269,099
+12.70%
* Includes worldwide commingled wagering on U.S. races.