Why Redvers Forgave Conformation Issues to Buy Lion Of War for Just 7,000

Lion Of War (GB) (Roaring Lion) became a TDN Rising Star after bolting up at Newcastle on Thursday but David Redvers, who signed for the colt on behalf of Qatar Racing for just 7,000gns, revealed how he called on the opinion of co-trainer Mark Johnston in a bid to ascertain if he would stand up to training or not. 

Redvers revealed he was surprised that Lion Of War was knocked down to him for just 7,000gns at Book 3 of the Tattersalls October Sale, however, he admitted that the colt's front leg was far from the prettiest, which may go some way to explaining the basement sum. 

But after getting the seal of approval from Johnston, Redvers was convinced Lion Of War was worth pursuing, and what a bargain he is turning out to be.

Redvers said, “Obviously he had the benefit of a previous outing but he has clearly surprised Charlie and Cieren [Fallon, jockey] by how much he has leapt forward from his debut win which is fantastic. He's bred to get 10 furlongs so, to be doing what he did today at Newcastle so well, it gives us great hope that we might have something a bit special.”

Lion Of War looked a colt of immense promise at Newcastle. His win was tinged in sadness, however, given the Qatar Racing team lost Roaring Lion prematurely due to colic in 2019. 

“It's well documented how gastly the whole thing was when we lost Roaring Lion. From Sheikh Fahad down to the lad who looked after Roaring Lion, everyone adored the horse as he had such character,” Redvers said.

“You can see lots of him coming through in his stock and you can see lots of him in Lion Of War with the way that he gallops. When he pricked his ears in the last furlong or two as he was being let down, he looked exactly like his old man. It's obviously quite sad but we are equally blessed to have raced at least one good crop of Roaring Lions and, if it's not this fellow, there will be one in there who will replicate what he did or at least go close to it. He looks the best of them so far and it's just extraordinary that it happens to be from the cheapest purchase.”

Recalling Lion Of War as a yearling, Redvers said that it was the colt's front legs that put most people off. However, Johnston gave him the confidence to buy the horse and now stakes races await. 

He said, “It's really quite fascinating. From the side view, he was an absolute miller, a 150,000gns horse. But when he walked towards you, his front legs were not terribly pretty. 

“I asked Mark Johnston for his opinion as to whether he could train it and as you can imagine Mark said he most definitely could. 

“You could never have imagined that we would get him for that money and it was interesting that we were allowed to by the vendor and the opposition.”

Redvers added, “Conformationally, there was definitely a risk element but what's really fascinating is that Kevin Darley was in Mark's yesterday and took a head-on video of a horse. “We compared the videos to see how he has shaped up and it's amazing how his leg has straightened up. They are still not perfect knees but they are within the acceptable limit. 

“They are not slowing him down. I worked for Mark many moons ago and his words to me were, 'I would rather a Ferrari with worn tyres than a Mini Cooper with Pirellis.' We have had hundreds of horses in training over the years and the common denominator between the lame ones and the sound ones was rarely their front-leg conformation.”

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Keeneland Fall Meet Stakes Schedule Worth Record $8.75 Million

Before Keeneland hosts the Breeders' Cup World Championships for the third time, the track will offer 22 stakes worth a record $8.75 million during its Fall Meet. The 17-day season from Oct. 7-29 will open with 11 stakes – nine of which are “Win and You're In” events as part of the Breeders' Cup Challenge Series Presented by America's Best Racing – during the signature three-day Fall Stars Weekend. Keeneland has adjusted several stakes on the schedule to attract horses bound for the Breeders' Cup, most notably moving the JPMorgan Chase Jessamine (G2) to opening day.

The Fall Meet continues an exceptional year at Keeneland, which awarded the previous meet record $7.7 million for 22 stakes during the 15-day Spring Meet in April. A total of $1.5 million of that amount came from the Kentucky Thoroughbred Development Fund (KTDF). Full fields of quality contenders drove all-sources handle to a record $219 million.

During the Fall Meet, Keeneland will present 12 stakes on grass and 10 stakes on dirt while offering multiple stakes on six days. Purses of every stakes have increased and several have doubled. KTDF is contributing $1.3 million to Fall Meet stakes purses, pending approval from the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission.

The season's richest race is the $1 million Coolmore Turf Mile (G1), a Breeders' Cup Challenge race that anchors opening Saturday of Fall Stars Weekend. Along with Coolmore's first year as sponsor of the premier turf stakes, the race is again worth seven figures – a status it held from 2014, when it was Keeneland's first million-dollar race, through 2019.

“Keeneland has planned a Fall Meet that promises to be better than ever,” Keeneland President and CEO Shannon Arvin said. “Adjustments made to the season last year, including increasing the number of stakes to 22 and boosting the final days with multiple stakes, produced an extremely successful meet from start to finish. This year, even higher stakes purses indicate the strength of the Kentucky circuit while helping Keeneland set the stage for the Breeders' Cup World Championships, which we are proud to host for the third time.”

During Fall Stars Weekend, each winner of a Breeders' Cup Challenge Series race receives an automatic starting position and free entry into the World Championships at Keeneland on Nov. 4-5.

Opening day, Oct. 7, will feature three stakes, all Win and You're In events: $500,000 Darley Alcibiades (G1) (NetJets Juvenile Fillies-G1), $350,000 Stoll Keenon Ogden Phoenix (G2) (Qatar Racing Sprint-G1) and $350,000 JPMorgan Chase Jessamine (G2) (Juvenile Fillies Turf-G1).

Keeneland moved the JPMorgan Chase Jessamine to opening day this year after previously running the race on the following Wednesday. The new date will increase attention for the JPMorgan Chase Jessamine and place the race exactly four weeks before the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf. The race also will be included in the popular Keeneland Turf Pick 3 wager on opening day.

Joining the Coolmore Turf Mile (FanDuel Mile-G1) as Breeders' Cup Challenge Series races on opening Saturday, Oct. 8 are the $600,000 Claiborne Breeders' Futurity (G1) (TVG Juvenile-G1) and $350,000 Thoroughbred Club of America (G2) (Filly and Mare Sprint-G1).

Other stakes that day are the $600,000 First Lady (G1) Presented by UK HealthCare and the $350,000 Woodford (G2) Presented by FanDuel. Both stakes are expected to attract Breeders' Cup hopefuls.

Sunday of Fall Stars Weekend presents three stakes – all Breeders' Cup Challenge races: $600,000 Juddmonte Spinster (G1) (Distaff-G1), $350,000 Castle & Key Bourbon (G2) (Juvenile Turf-G1) and $250,000 Indian Summer (L) Presented by Keeneland Select (Juvenile Turf Sprint-G1).

Stakes on the second week of the Fall Meet kick off Friday, Oct. 14 with the $300,000 Sycamore (G3) for older males racing 1½ miles on turf. Keeneland moved the Sycamore a week earlier on the calendar to serve as an option for horses pointing at the Breeders' Cup Turf (G1).

The following day, Saturday, Oct. 15, is the Fall Meet's sixth Grade 1 stakes, the $600,000 Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup Presented by Dixiana. To mark the Queen's Platinum Jubilee, Great British Racing International and QIPCO British Champions Series, on behalf of British racing, will present the winning owner of the Keeneland invitational a specially designed strawberry dish produced by Royal jewelers Garrard. The trophy is commemorating the Queen's international impact on Thoroughbred racing.

The third stakes that weekend is the $300,000 Franklin (G3) on Sunday, Oct. 16.

Stakes action resumes the following Saturday, Oct 22 with the $350,000 Lexus Raven Run (G2) and $250,000 Perryville, which was upgraded to Listed status for 2022. The following day is the $300,000 Rood & Riddle Dowager (G3).

The Fall Meet will close with two multiple stakes days beginning with the $300,000 Rubicon Valley View (G3) and $200,000 Myrtlewood on Friday, Oct. 28. Closing day will feature the $350,000 Hagyard Fayette (G2), $300,000 Bryan Station (G3) and $200,000 Bowman Mill.

The Bryan Station was upgraded to a Grade 3 event for 2022.

“The stakes schedule is designed to present our horsemen and fans with exceptional racing opportunities from opening day through the final card of the Fall Meet,” Keeneland Vice President of Racing Gatewood Bell said. “We're extremely excited by the purse structure we're able to offer and are looking forward to some outstanding competition in October.”

Keeneland 2022 Fall Meet Stakes Schedule: Oct. 7-29

Date Stakes KTDF Contribution to Purse** Division Distance
Oct. 7 $500,000 Darley Alcibiades (G1)* $100,000 2YO Fillies 1 1/16 Miles
Oct. 7 $350,000 Stoll Keenon Ogden Phoenix (G2)* $50,000 3YOs & Up 6 Furlongs
Oct. 7 $350,000 JPMorgan Chase Jessamine (G2)* $50,000 2YO Fillies 1 1/16 Miles (T)
Oct. 8 $1 Million Coolmore Turf Mile (G1)*   3YOs & Up 1 Mile (T)
Oct. 8 $600,000 Claiborne Breeders' Futurity (G1)*  $100,000 2YOs 1 1/16 Miles
Oct. 8 $600,000 First Lady (G1) Presented by UK HealthCare $100,000 3YOs & Up, F&M 1 Mile (T)
Oct. 8 $350,000 Thoroughbred Club

of America (G2)*

$50,000 3YOs & Up, F&M 6 Furlongs
Oct. 8 $350,000 Woodford (G2) Presented
by FanDuel
$50,000 3YOs & Up 5½ Furlongs (T)
Oct. 9 $600,000 Juddmonte Spinster (G1)* $100,000 3YOs & Up, F&M 1 1/8 Miles
Oct. 9 $350,000 Castle & Key Bourbon (G2)* $50,000 2YOs 1 1/16 Miles (T)
Oct. 9 $250,000 Indian Summer (L) Presented by Keeneland Select* $50,000 2YOs 5½ Furlongs (T)
Oct. 14 $300,000 Sycamore (G3) $50,000 3YOs & Up 1½ Miles (T)
Oct. 15 $600,000 Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup (G1) Presented

by Dixiana

$100,000 3YO Fillies (Invitation Only) 1 1/8 Miles (T)
Oct. 16 $300,000 Franklin (G3) $50,000 3YOs & Up, F&M 5½ Furlongs (T)
Oct. 22 $350,000 Lexus Raven Run (G2) $50,000 3YO Fillies 7 Furlongs
Oct. 22 $250,000 Perryville (L) $50,000 3YOs 7 Furlongs
Oct. 23 $300,000 Rood & Riddle Dowager (G3) $50,000 3YOs & Up, F&M 1½ Miles (T)
Oct. 28 $300,000 Rubicon Valley View (G3) $50,000 3YO Fillies 1 1/16 Miles (T)
Oct. 28 $200,000 Myrtlewood $50,000 2YO Fillies 6 Furlongs
Oct. 29 $350,000 Hagyard Fayette (G2) $50,000 3YOs & Up 1 1/8 Miles
Oct. 29 $300,000 Bryan Station (G3) $50,000 3YOs 1 Mile (T)
Oct. 29 $200,000 Bowman Mill $50,000 2YOs 6 Furlongs


*Breeders' Cup Challenge stakes.

**Kentucky Thoroughbred Development Fund. All KTDF purse allotments are subject to approval of the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission.

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‘Special In A Lot Of Ways’: First Stakes Win Latest Step For Young Trainer Jesse Cruz

Even as a West Virginia native that has traveled across the country for racing and currently splits his seasons between Florida winters and New Jersey summers, trainer Jesus 'Jesse' Cruz couldn't imagine a more perfect place to win his first stakes race than in Maryland.

Wasabi Ventures Stable's Why Not Tonight made that dream a reality June 19 when the 4-year-old mare – four starts after being claimed for $16,000 – outran two-time turf sprint stakes winner Can the Queen over 1 1/16 miles to capture the $75,000 All Brandy for Maryland-bred/sired fillies and mares 3 and up at Laurel Park.

Maryland is where the 28-year-old Cruz launched his career, winning with his first starter April 2, 2017 at Laurel. Maryland's Best, a 3-year-old gelding out of the University of Maryland's breeding program, won by 1 ¼ lengths that day and went unclaimed for a $16,000 tag.

The All Brandy was the first win in Maryland for Cruz since Feb. 23, 2020, which came before he began what has been a successful run with TK Kuegler and his wife, Michele, of Wasabi. Since the racing partnership began in 2017, Wasabi has expanded to include a broodmare operation based at St. Omer's Farm in Forest Hill, Md.

“It was a great win for all parties – me, Wasabi, the horse. It was really good,” Cruz said. “It was kind of the right way. The way TK and I started was with a [$16,000] claimer. We claimed our first horse together for [$16,000] and that's kind of what we've built our stable on is claiming horses at that level a little bit in Maryland.

“When we left, and every time we went back there, Maryland had kind of haunted us a little bit. We just never had good luck,” he added, noting Why Not Tonight's troubled fourth in a May 12 allowance at historic Pimlico Race Course. “It was very appropriate to win our first stake with a Maryland-bred, at Laurel, with a horse that we had claimed for [$16,000]. It was just everything that we had built our stable around, really.”

Cruz is overseeing a stable of 17 horses, 15 of them owned by Wasabi. Cruz credits Kuegler, a venture capitalist and native of Essex, Md., with keeping his dream of training horses alive.

In 2018, his first full season as a trainer, Cruz and a new client went to Delaware Park for its summer meet. The stable grew from four or five horses to more than 20, with modest success, but Cruz was let go when the meet ended and left with two horses owned by Wasabi.

“We got rolling a little bit, nothing crazy, but it looked like I was building some steam up,” Cruz said. “After Delaware they moved on to another trainer. They wanted to make a move, and that's horse racing.”

Cruz reached out to Kuegler, uncertain of his future.

“I called him and explained what happened. I was going to tell him, 'Look, I can help you find a trainer for these two horses, because I kind of need to get a job.' At that point I really thought my career had failed, honestly,” Cruz said. “He kind of laughed on the phone and said, 'OK. Let's get these two horses to Oaklawn. I'm going to come out there and we'll sit down and we'll figure out this stuff financially and we'll figure out how to rebuild this stable.'

“They believed in me when no one else did, and without him I wouldn't be here. I went to Oaklawn with those two horses and we just gradually built the stable back up,” he added. “It takes a lot for someone to believe in a young kid, because at the time I was only 24 years old. I had had success, but nothing spectacular. To believe in me and basically invest thousands of dollars into me, as well, with horses and stuff like that, he kind of pushed his chips onto the table with me. It takes a special person to do that.”

Humble and hard-working, Cruz learned his lessons from his mother, Daisy Tobin, who spent nearly three decades working as a groom and assistant for legendary Charles Town trainer James Casey before retiring in 2016. She still helps around the barn of her husband, trainer Lewis Craig Jr., Cruz's stepfather. Tobin raised Cruz and his older sister, Elizabeth, as a single mother.

“My mom told me very early on, horses can only give you what you put into them and that's every day waking up, taking care of them and doing all the right things. That was the work ethic that she just put into me and my sister very early in our lives,” Cruz said. “With my career, everything that I do I dedicate to her. My mom is one of the best horsemen in the world and nobody knows her name, because she had to sacrifice her dreams so my sister and I could have ours.”

By 16, Cruz was galloping at Charles Town for his parents and Casey. Among their best horses were Russell Road, who Casey trained to 31 wins, 22 in stakes, and more than $2 million in purse earnings from 2008-16; and Help a Brother, bred, owned and trained by Craig that won 15 of 49 starts from 2012-19.

“I kind of fell in love with the game at Charles Town being around Help a Brother and Russell Road and horses like that,” Cruz said. “But then Bristol kind of showed me the bigger picture like getting to Saratoga and winning graded-stakes.”

'Bristol' is Dance to Bristol, the outstanding female sprinter that won 10 of 20 starts and more than $980,000 from 2011-13. Among her victories were the Ballerina (G1) and Honorable Miss (G2) at Saratoga, the Bed o'Roses (G3) at Belmont Park and Skipat on the eve of the 138th Preakness Stakes (G1) in 2013, and the 2012 Marshua at Laurel Park. Trained by Ollie Figgins III, she ran sixth in her career finale, the Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Sprint (G1) at Santa Anita.

“Ollie was a major mentor for me. He was like a second father kind of thing. I went everywhere with Ollie,” Cruz said. “Eventually when Ollie brought his string of horses to Bowie with Dance to Bristol, I moved to Bowie with him. I galloped her all over the country. I had never flown on a plane until I went to California with her. I had never been to New York until I went there with her.”

Cruz had been away from home once before, pre-Bristol, when he spent the winter following his high school graduation living and galloping as a freelancer at Gulfstream Park, primarily for trainer Cam Gambolati, who won the 1985 Kentucky Derby (G1) with eventual 3-year-old champion and Horse of the Year Spend a Buck.

“I knew this is what I wanted to do, and a lot of my friends were going away to college and stuff like that. This was kind of like my going away to college. It let me get out of Charles Town for a little bit and gallop horses,” Cruz said. “Ollie and my parents were all OK with it. They kind of wanted me to get out of Charles Town, too. Then I came home because Ollie was getting stalls in Maryland and moving there, so I came back to be his assistant in Maryland.”

Cruz spent two galloping at Saratoga for Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott and trainers Mike Maker and Joe Sharp before getting his training career under way. When Why Not Tonight won the All Brandy, it was the result of years of dedication and persistence.

“It was special in a lot of ways,” Cruz said. “TK was away in London. He and his wife went to a day at Royal Ascot and then they were kind of on vacation over there. He was watching the race. Walking to the winner's circle, I sent him a text that just said, 'Finally.' I felt like we've kind of been growing to this point and it was something I've obviously dreamed about my entire life. But, to just get to this point and get to that next level was a very big [step] for us.”

Cruz hopes to return to Maryland with Magical Mousse, a 3-year-old Great Notion colt bred by Wasabi and Greenspring Mares and owned by Wasabi, Rocky Top Stables and Vandelay Stables. A maiden winner at Delaware Park last fall, he was fourth in a pair of open stakes at Tampa Bay Downs over the winner but has gone unraced since the Jan. 15 Pasco.

“He's a Maryland-bred,” Cruz said. “He had a little bit of a setback but everything seems to be in order now, so that's a horse that we're really excited to try to get to Maryland at some point this summer or fall.”

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Welfare And Safety Of The Racehorse Summit Focuses On Impact Of Data

Returning to an in-person format for the first time since 2018, the 10th Welfare and Safety of the Racehorse Summit, held Wednesday in the Keeneland sales pavilion in Lexington, Ky., featured a range of presentations on the progress of the racing industry to promote the health of its equine and human athletes while focusing on the significance of data in facilitating these gains.

The summit was co-hosted by The Jockey Club and Grayson-Jockey Club Research Foundation and open to the public. It was emceed by Annise Montplaisir, equine education coordinator of the Kentucky Equine Education Project Foundation and president of Amplify Horse Racing.

A video replay of the summit, which was livestreamed, will be posted on the Grayson website next week.

“The information shared at this year's Welfare and Safety of the Racehorse Summit demonstrates how the Thoroughbred industry can come together to make meaningful positive changes,” said Jamie Haydon, president of Grayson. “It is clear that collecting and utilizing comprehensive data is key to maximizing the safety of our human and equine athletes. We are thankful to Keeneland for enabling us to host this event and to our speakers for sharing their wealth of knowledge for the benefit of our industry.”

Dr. Tim Parkin, head of Bristol Veterinary School, kicked off presentations with an update on the Equine Injury Database (EID). He reviewed findings from the database since it began collecting data in 2009, including a 31.5% drop in the rate of fatalities. He discussed the spike in 2-year-old fatalities in 2020, hypothesizing that this trend may have been caused by disruptions in training at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Parkin also compared changes in risk for horses who compete on multiple surfaces versus those who race on one surface. Furthermore, he pointed out that sudden deaths have become a larger proportion of all fatalities since the advent of the EID as the decreasing rate of musculoskeletal injuries has outpaced the decline in sudden death rates.

Building off of the information in Parkin's presentation, Dr. Larry Bramlage of Rood & Riddle Equine Hospital presented on the importance of training 2-year-olds. According to Bramlage, bones are dynamic organs that strengthen and remodel in response to exercise.

“Bone trains to the level of work, not the amount. The cardiovascular system trains to the amount of work,” Bramlage said. “The limiting system is always the skeleton in the horse.”

Given this knowledge and the aforementioned spike in 2-year-old fatalities in 2020, Bramlage believes that 2-year-olds racing that year may have been kept in a holding pattern in terms of intense training due to the uncertainty of race dates. Consequently, the development of their cardiovascular systems outpaced their skeletal systems.

Dr. Dionne Benson, chief veterinary officer of 1/ST Racing, talked about the changes implemented at 1/ST tracks following the highly publicized rash of breakdowns at Santa Anita Park in 2019. Among the protocols are an increased veterinary presence at the tracks, stricter medication rules during racing and training, additional monitoring on race day, out-of-competition testing, and required registration of a horse before participating in a timed workout. Santa Anita recently completed the safest Winter/Spring meet on record, showing a 74% improvement since the spring of 2019.

“We have changed to a culture of safety out there,” Benson said. “There is a conscious effort to put the horse first.”

Dr. Ryan Carpenter, who is a practicing surgeon at Equine Medical Center in California, described a program whereby racehorses that suffer complex musculoskeletal injuries on the track are given the opportunity to undergo surgery to repair their fractures if there is a favorable prognosis for them to ultimately become pasture-sound.

Joseph Appelbaum, president of the New York Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association, moderated a panel on wearable technologies for horses. Valentin Rapin, managing director and co-founder of Arioneo, described his company's sensors that horses can wear during training that track metrics such as heart rate.

Will Duff Gordon, the chief executive officer of Total Performance Data (TPD), talked about his company's tracking technology and the potential benefits to gamblers. Equibase is currently working with TPD to harness this data and acknowledged the challenge of making this technology scalable.

“You're looking for a technology that is attainable, that tradeoff, can every horse produce the same information to help with the welfare and the wagering, but not such that only a few racecourses can adopt it,” said Gordon.

“The last few years have been about acquiring the data, getting onto as many racecourses as possible, having a big enough data set. The present and the future is about mining that data.”

Dr. Scott Palmer, equine medical director of the New York State Gaming Commission, reviewed findings from a case study using StrideSAFE, a device that detects abnormalities in a horse's gait and may have use in the future for detecting injuries before visible lameness develops. He sees great potential in the data from these technologies, especially with the imminent implementation of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA), which goes into effect July 1.

“I think that the introduction of HISA is going to make a huge change. They're already requiring a lot of data, and it seems to me that right now the challenge is going to be to prioritize,” he said. “Having sensors on horses while they train and while they race is going to be important.”

In addition to serving as emcee, Montplaisir moderated a youth panel of individuals working in the Thoroughbred industry or pursuing a career in the industry. The group consisted of Hayley Amoss, manager, communications & social media, Breeders' Cup; Hallie Hardy, executive director, Horse Country; Dr. Ferrin Peterson, jockey and veterinarian; Eric Resendiz, student at Bluegrass Community & Technical College and former Amplify Horse Racing mentee; and Deja Robinson, pre-vet student.

There was shared sentiment among the youth panel that participants in the Thoroughbred industry must take the time to educate those who are unfamiliar with the industry so that they develop a positive impression. They highlighted the impact of connecting with people on a personal level, either in person or through social media.

“People want a response that shows empathy,” said Amoss.

The summit included a regulatory panel that was moderated by Dr. Mary Scollay-Ward, executive director and chief operating officer of the Racing Medication & Testing Consortium. Formerly the equine medical director of the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission, she was joined by Dr. Will Farmer, equine medical director, Churchill Downs Inc.; Dr. Jaclyn Bradley, Prairie Meadows; and Dr. Lynn Hovda, chief commission veterinarian, Minnesota Racing Commission. The group offered their perspectives on the experience of a regulatory veterinarian, what they've learned, and challenges in the role. All agreed on the importance of clear communication with horsemen, owners, and other veterinarians across jurisdictions.

In a continuation on the work in California, Dr. Mathieu Spriet, professor of diagnostic imaging at University of California, Davis, presented findings from the use of positron emission tomography (PET) to evaluate fetlocks. In 2019, California installed a standing PET machine that can scan all four limbs in under 20 minutes without the use of anesthesia. The data demonstrated the efficacy of this technology for monitoring horses for injury and tracking healing.

Dr. Jerry Hill, chief medical adviser for the British Horseracing Authority (BHA), detailed a strategy by the BHA to improve the physical and mental wellbeing of jockeys by raising weights, prioritizing nutrition, and revamping areas at the racetracks that are dedicated to riders on race day.

Dr. Wayne McIlwraith, founding director of the Orthopaedic Research Center at Colorado State University, talked about the history of surface testing and the Racing Surfaces Testing Laboratory. Key factors in a safe racetrack are consistency, proper moisture content, and temperature. With HISA set to go into effect next month, racetracks will be required to have data protocols and standardized testing methods in place.

The summit concluded with presentations from Chris Dobbins, senior vice president of InCompass, and Dr. Stuart Brown, vice president of equine safety at Keeneland. Dobbins summarized the programs that InCompass offers to tracks to assist them in collecting and organizing data that is used to promote safety and welfare, including current efforts to facilitate record keeping once HISA goes into effect. Brown reviewed Keeneland's safety protocols and how InCompass software provides Brown with important data for flagging horses that are at increased risk of injury.

The first Welfare and Safety of the Racehorse Summit was held in October 2006; subsequent summits were held in March 2008, June 2010, October 2012, July 2014, July 2015, June 2016, and June 2018. A virtual summit series was held in 2020.

Among the major accomplishments that have evolved from the previous nine summits are the Equine Injury Database; the Jockey Injury Database; the Racing Surfaces Testing Laboratory; a uniform trainer test and study guide; the racing surfaces white paper and publication of educational bulletins for track maintenance; the publication of stallion durability statistics; the Hoof: Inside and Out DVD, available in English and Spanish; protocols for horses working off of the veterinarian's list; recommended regulations that void the claim of horses suffering injuries during a race; and inclement weather protocols.

Grayson-Jockey Club Research Foundation is traditionally the nation's leading source of private funding for equine medical research that benefits all breeds of horses. Since 1983, the foundation has provided more than $32.1 million to fund 412 projects at 45 universities in North America and overseas. Additional information about the foundation is available at grayson-jockeyclub.org.

The Jockey Club, founded in 1894 and dedicated to the improvement of Thoroughbred breeding and racing, is the breed registry for North American Thoroughbreds. In fulfillment of its mission, The Jockey Club, directly or through subsidiaries, provides support and leadership on a wide range of important industry initiatives, and it serves the information and technology needs of owners, breeders, media, fans and farms. It founded America's Best Racing (americasbestracing.net), the broad-based fan development initiative for Thoroughbred racing, and in partnership with the Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association, operates OwnerView (ownerview.com), the ownership resource. Additional information is available at jockeyclub.com.

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