Donegal Racing CEO Jerry Crawford Talks Belmont Score On Writers’ Room

The winner's circle after Saturday's GI Belmont S. surely rivaled any in Triple Crown history in terms of population after Mo Donegal (Uncle Mo) crossed the wire three lengths to the good. In addition to Mike Repole and his substantial crew of family and friends, the celebration contained the massive partnership of Donegal Racing, which brings all of its investors along for the ride with every horse it purchases. Tuesday, the CEO of Donegal, Jerry Crawford, sat down with Joe Bianca and Bill Finley of the TDN Writers' Room presented by Keeneland as the Green Group Guest of the Week to discuss the experience of sharing the Belmont triumph with so many people, how he uses algorithms to shop the sales, Donegal's new initiative to give their winning jockeys future stallion shares and more.

“When we had about 350 people at the Kentucky Derby, I had about had enough of the phone calls saying, 'Hey Jerry, can we get two double beds in our hotel room instead of one king bed?'” Crawford joked. “But I wouldn't trade it for anything. We had over 200 people at the Belmont, I think Mike had 80-something. He's been giving me a hard time, saying he never thought he'd be partners with somebody who brought more people to the races than he did. But the key thing about everybody owning part of every horse is that nobody ever gets disappointed–if we have a big horse in any year, nobody gets left out or feels like they bought the wrong horse.”

Asked about the background of the algorithm that guides him to buy particular sale horses, Crawford said the formula–and Donegal itself–was borne out of frustrations in trying to handicap, not win, the Kentucky Derby.

“About 2003 or so, my son Connor and I were talking about why we always get our asses kicked betting the Derby,” he said. “It seemed like one longshot after another would come along and we would be out of it. So we decided to try and find an algorithm that would help us pick a Derby winner. This is way before Donegal. What we discovered is that we couldn't find an algorithm to pick a winner, we were only able to pick horses that could not win under our algorithm. So I said to my very patient wife Linda, 'I'm going to take $250,000 to Lexington to the [Keeneland September] yearling sale and buy a horse that fits our algorithm', and she was cool with it. This was in 2008, when the stock market crashed, and when the stock market crashes, people stop buying boats and diamonds and racehorses and the rest. I ended up buying eight horses for $405,000 because of the market. One of those horses was eventual stakes winner Paddy O'Prado, who finished third in the Derby and fit our algorithm to a tee. So we proceeded from there. I did worry flying home from that sale that there was going to be hell to pay when I told my wife I bought eight horses, not one, but we got through that, and it's been good since.”

Crawford and Donegal had a unique experience this spring, winning the Belmont and also having a deep connection to the Derby winner. Keen Ice scored the most significant victory of the Donegal partnership's lifetime when upsetting Triple Crown winner American Pharoah in the 2015 GI Travers S. Retired to stud for 2018, the multimillionaire son of Curlin has had mixed early results, but will forever be the sire of a Derby champion after 80-1 Rich Strike upset the Run for the Roses. Crawford was asked if he felt pride in that, even as Mo Donegal ran fifth with a tough trip that day.

“You use the right word, we were very, very proud to have been the people who picked out Keen Ice at the yearling sale,” he said. “Fortunately we weren't second [with Mo Donegal], so I'm glad [Rich Strike] won because it certainly flatters Keen Ice, who was a very special horse. It was a stunning victory when he beat American Pharoah up at Saratoga. I always stop to thank the Zayats in any conversation like this, because they were true sportspeople in running American Pharoah that day. They didn't have to do that. But by being sporting and putting the horse in the race, it gave us a chance for one of the biggest days in the history of horse racing.”

Elsewhere on the show, which is also sponsored by Coolmore, the Pennsylvania Horse Breeders Association, XBTV, West Point Thoroughbreds and Legacy Bloodstock, the writers reacted to all the action from Belmont weekend and analyzed the implications of the Texas Racing Commission killing its simulcasting signals as a way to avoid the purview of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act. Click here to watch the show; click here for the audio-only version or find it on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.

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Racing and Gaming Conference at Saratoga Set For Aug. 15-17

Online casino gaming and its relationship with sports betting will be the focus of the upcoming Racing and Gaming Conference at Saratoga (RGCS), which takes place Aug. 15-17 at the Saratoga Hilton.

The session titled Online Casinos: How Will Online Gaming Legalization Across the Nation Play Out in the Next Five Years? will be moderated by Joe Weinert, Executive Vice President, Spectrum Gaming Group. The featured presenters are:

  • Senator Joe Addabbo Jr., Chairman, Racing, Gaming and Wagering Committee, New York State Senate
  • Howard Glaser, Global Head of Government Affairs and Legislative Counsel, Light & Wonder
  • Samuel Gerrity, CEO, Saratoga Casino Hotel
  • John Pappas, State Advocacy Director, iDEA Growth

 

RGCS agenda topics also include:

  • Responsible Gaming: Are Programs and Funding Keeping Pace with Industry Growth?
  • State Lotteries – Finding Avenues for Growth
  • Sports Betting: What's Next?
  • Downstate Casino Expansion
  • The Rise (or Scourge) of Unregulated Gaming Machines
  • M&A Investment Trends in Sports Betting and Online Gaming
  • Gaming Regulation in the Digital Age: Are “Analog” Regulations and Regulators Sufficient to Police the Digital Gaming Market?
  • The Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act and the Future of Racing
  • Horse Racing, NFTs, and the Metaverse
  • Aftercare for Race Horses: Who Pays?
  • Fixed Odds and the Future of Horse Betting

The RGCS will also host two networking events–a Welcome Cocktail Party Monday night and an evening of charity gaming at historic Canfield Casino Tuesday evening–as well as an afternoon of racing at Saratoga Race Course Wednesday. The conference is coordinated by Spectrum Gaming Group.

To register, view the RGCS agenda, and reserve a room at the host hotel, visit www.racingandgamingsaratoga.com.

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Ex-Minnesota Commission Executive Director May Joins Gaming Laboratories International

Gaming Laboratories International (GLI) has expanded its clients solutions and client services teams with the additions of Steve May as client solutions executive and Samuel Grunther as account executive.

May has an extensive background in pari-mutuel, racing, and compliance, and that wide-ranging experience will provide value to GLI's clients. Before joining GLI, he was executive director of the Minnesota Racing Commission. He has also served as director of Pari-Mutuel Wagering and Compliance for the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission, and vice president/business manager for the Association of Racing Commissioners International. He is accredited to officiate thoroughbred, quarter horse, and harness races throughout North America.

Senior vice president of Government Affairs and general counsel Kevin Mullally said, “Steve May has been a successful problem-solver throughout his career, and we are fortunate to have him join the GLI team. He is known for playing an essential role in developing a regulatory framework for historical horse racing. However, his technical acumen and knowledge of developing and implementing compliance programs will greatly benefit a wide array of our clients. He has earned the trust of both regulators and the industry, and we are grateful to have him on the team.”

Grunther has a sound history in the iGaming and sports betting industry, and in his new role at GLI, he will provide ongoing commercial and client support to both suppliers and operators in the space. Previous roles included Conduet, where he served as client relations and conversations specialist; FanDuel, as customer operations agent; guest relations operator at Madison Square Garden; and ticket operations associate for the New York Yankees.

Gaming Laboratories International provides suppliers, operators, and regulators with expert guidance for navigating the future of gaming and ensuring gaming innovations meet regulatory standards with confidence. Since 1989, GLI has certified nearly 2 million items and has tested equipment for more than 480 jurisdictions. GLI has a global network of laboratory locations across six continents, with U.S. and international accreditations for compliance with ISO/IEC standards for technical competence in the gaming, wagering, and lottery industries.

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Masen, Public Sector Give Brown One-Two Punch In Saturday’s Poker

Four-time Eclipse Award-winning trainer Chad Brown will send out two sons of Kingman in search of his first career score in Saturday's Grade 3, $250,000 Poker, a one-mile Widener turf test for older horses at Belmont Park.

Brown, who will be represented by Masen and Public Sector, has sent out 13 previous Poker entrants with his best results coming from runner-up efforts by Raging Bull [2021], Made You Look [2018] and Projected [2017].

Juddmonte's British homebred Masen enters from an in-hand five-length triumph in the Seek Again traveling one-mile over a good Widener course on May 22 at Belmont. Manny Franco engineered the decisive victory over a compact three-horse field that garnered Masen a 100 Beyer Speed Figure.

The 4-year-old gelding launched his career in Ireland with conditioner Ger Lyons where he posted three wins at Leopardstown, including a 2 1/4-length victory in the seven-furlong Knockaire in October 2021 over good going in his final start before being sent to Brown.

Masen finished a heartbreaking second in his stateside debut in the Grade 1 Maker's Mark Mile in April at Keeneland. Masen, with Flavien Prat up, was carried wide in upper stretch by the pacesetting multiple graded stakes winner Smooth Like Strait, before taking command in the final furlong only to be collared by Shirl's Speight for a narrow nose loss. The prominent effort garnered a 104 Beyer.

The regally-bred Masen is out of the Smart Strike mare Continental Drift, whose dam Intercontinental was a multiple Grade 1-winning turf champion for Brown's late mentor Bobby Frankel. In addition to Intercontinental, Masen's third dam, Hasili, produced four other Grade/Group 1 winners for Juddmonte.

Masen has breezed back twice from the Seek Again, including a half-mile in 51.22 in company with Public Sector on Monday over the Belmont inner turf.

Klaravich Stables' Public Sector, a 4-year-old colt, enjoyed a productive sophomore campaign, capturing the one-mile Grade 2 Hall of Fame in August and the 1 1/16-mile Saranac in September at Saratoga Race Course ahead of a win in the nine-furlong Grade 2 Hill Prince in October at Belmont.

The five-time winner from 11 starts launched his current campaign with an off-the-board effort in the Grade 1 Turf Classic on May 7 on the Kentucky Derby undercard at Churchill Downs. He is cross-entered in Saturday's nine-furlong Grade 3 Monmouth at Monmouth Park.

Prat returns to the irons aboard Masen, assigned 120 pounds, from the inside post; while Jose Ortiz will guide Public Sector, who carries a field-high 124 pounds, from post 4.

Woodslane Farm homebred Woflie's Dynaghost [post 5, Luis Saez, 118 pounds] has proven to be an omni-surface star with wins on dirt, synthetic and turf in his 13-race career.

Trained by Tom Albertrani, the 4-year-old Ghostzapper colt graduated at first asking in November 2020 over a good main track at Aqueduct Racetrack and two starts later captured an off-the-turf optional-claiming tilt over a sloppy and sealed Big Sandy.

He picked up a turf win in an optional-claiming event in December at Tampa Bay Downs and followed with a score over the Gulfstream Park synthetic in January. Wolfie's Dynaghost secured graded-stakes placed status with a game runner-up effort to Phantom Currency in the Grade 3 Appleton in April at Gulfstream ahead of a distant pacesetting third last out in the Seek Again.

Albertrani said the good turf last out may have worked against Wolfie's Dynaghost.

“I thought maybe the soft ground wasn't to his liking for his last performance, but we're hoping to get back onto firm ground,” Albertrani said. “He's been training well going into this race. We'll hopefully get a better performance this weekend.”

Albertrani said Wolfie's Dynaghost came into his own over the winter in Florida with his only off-the-board effort in four starts coming in a good fifth, defeated 4 3/4-lengths, in the Grade 3 Challenger over the Tampa Bay main track. The winner of that event, Scalding, came back to capture the Grade 3 Ben Ali at Keeneland; while the runner-up, Cody's Wish, followed with a five-length score in the Grade 3 Westchester at Belmont.

“He really has matured since a year ago,” Albertrani said. “We got a few nice races into him the past few months and besides the one dirt race we tried at Tampa, he's been pretty well right there or thereabouts his last few races. Hopefully, we can throw out the last one.”

Albertrani said he will entrust Saez to work out a winning trip in the compact field.

“He can be either on the lead or close to the lead,” Albertrani said. “It really doesn't make too much difference with him. The main thing is that he's running comfortable.”

Out of the Dynaformer mare Dynaire, Wolfie's Dynaghost is a half-sibling to the Albertrani-trained multiple graded-stakes winning multi-millionaire Sadler's Joy, who was a staple in distance races on the turf with his trademark closing kick.

“'Sadler' was definitely a route horse that always would come from last at a mile and three eighths or longer,” Albertrani said. “'Wolfie' is more of a miler, who has a little bit more tactical speed, for sure. They're two opposites. The mare has certainly thrown some nice runners.”

Edward Messina and William Butler's Sanctuary City [post 2, Kendrick Carmouche, 118 pounds], a 5-year-old New York-bred son of Temple City, boasts a consistent record of 19-4-7-3 for purse earnings of $366,795.

Trained by James Ferraro, Sanctuary City closed from last-of-8 to finish second last out in the 1 1/16-mile Kingston against fellow state-breds on May 30 at Belmont. The late-running bay closed to finish fourth in last year's Poker at odds of 32-1 and will be in search of his first score since taking an optional-claimer here last May.

Completing the field is Adele B. Dilschneider's Penalty [post 3, Joel Rosario, 118 pounds], a four-time winner for Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott.

The 7-year-old Blame gelding has raced twice since finishing sixth in last year's Poker, including a fifth in the TVG at Kentucky Downs in September and a ninth-place finish last out in the seven-furlong Elusive Quality on April 30 at Belmont.

The Poker is slated as Race 6 on Saturday's 10-race card. First post is 1 p.m. Eastern.

America's Day at the Races will present daily coverage and analysis of the spring/summer meet at Belmont Park on the networks of FOX Sports. For the complete broadcast schedule, visit https://www.nyra.com/belmont/racing/tv-schedule.

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