Registering With An Online Casino

If you’ve been around the online casino gambling game for awhile you are probably aware that there are sites that let you play without registering. You simply need to go to the site and begin playing. This is great for a quick fix and the occasional pick up game but if this is your long term playing strategy you aren’t thinking correctly. I know this is a rather blunt statement to make but it’s true. If you are the type of player that plays occasionally then by all means just log on to whatever casino and games fits your whim and have at it. No problem. But if you are the type of player that plays regularly and logs in like once or twice a day and haven’t already registered you are missing out on a lot that your chosen online casino has to offer.

For example, many of the premier online casinos now offer rakebacks for their loyal players. This is just one reason to register with the online casino but it’s a good one. The amount of money that a player can get back with a rakeback can finance their game play indefinitely. Another reason that a player should register if they are serious about online gambling is for the information. Sure, it’s no big deal to scour the net for sources of information and up to the minute knowledge about your favorite game. The problem is that much of the information on the net isn’t casino specific. The only way that you are going to be able to get the type of information about the casino that you want is by registering for the newsletter that they offer. This is where it’s at and the place to find out about the games that they offer and the upcoming promotions.

Promotions, that brings me to the next reason that a player should register with their favorite online casino. How is a player supposed to know about the upcoming promotions, much less get in on them, if they aren’t registered with the site that is offering the promotion? It seems like lose-lose to me. If a casino is offering a really great promotion and only the registered players are privy to that information everyone else, no matter how loyal they may be, aren’t getting even the smallest slice of what they could be getting.

It’s true that there are many reasons to not register with a casino. A good reason to not register is if you aren’t sure which casino to settle in on. I can understand that, if you are still shopping around there are good reasons to keep looking before settling down. But if you are serious it’s time to admit it and get serious. That means playing the games as they should be played and registering with the best online casino that you can find.

Juan Vazquez Sees Training License Suspended Until 2025; Stewards Call Him ‘Cruel And Abusive’

Stewards in Pennsylvania have suspended the license of owner/trainer Juan Carlos Vazquez through Jan. 26, 2025 after the death of 5-year-old mare Shining Colors.

According to a ruling published July 7, Vazquez shipped Shining Colors from Belmont Park to Parx on Jan. 6 of this year. On Jan. 9, Shining Colors was euthanized with a severe case of laminitis. Stewards held a hearing into the matter on June 23.

“The evidence presented by veterinarian witnesses and the necropsy report clearly revealed that the horse Shining Colors was suffering from this severe chronic condition and should never have been shipped to Parx racing by owner/trainer Juan C. Vazquez,” the ruling read.

According to Equibase, Shining Colors made her last start on Oct. 17, 2021 at Belmont, where she finished seventh of eight. Vazquez conditioned the daughter of Paynter for Just In Time Racing. She ran 11 times and had one win on her record.

“After considering all testimony presented and the information and evidence submitted to the board of stewards by investigators of the Pennsylvania State Horse Racing Commission, the board of stewards determine that owner/trainer Juan C. Vazquez was grossly negligent, cruel, and abusive in the shipping of the horse Shining Colors from Belmont Park to Parx Racing,” read the ruling.

Vazquez was also fined $5,000, which is due July 17. His suspension is set to begin July 18. The suspension is scheduled to last for the remainder of his Pennsylvania license. Racing officials will often choose the expiration date of a license as the finish of the suspension so that in future the person is required to apply as a new licensee. Some officials have more legal latitude in denying a new license application than in revoking a current one.

Earlier this year, Vazquez was handed a month-long suspension for two levamisole positives in fall 2021 at Parx, one of which resulted in the disqualification of Hollywood Talent from the Grade 3 Turf Monster Stakes. According to his record on Equibase, he has not yet served that suspension.

In November 2021, Vazquez trainee Ekhtibaar shipped in to run at Belmont Park and was discovered dead in the van at Gate 6. According to the New York State Gaming Commission's database, the cause of death remains unknown. After numerous inquiries to the commission, the Paulick Report was informed in March of this year that the investigation was ongoing.

“Because this horse was shipped to Belmont Park on 11/17/21 from another racing jurisdiction and due to the need for multi-jurisdiction collaboration in this case, we expect this investigation to take some time,” said NYSGC spokesman Brad Maione via email March 3.

Vazquez has a lengthy violation history, with 125 records relating to violations in the database ThoroughbredRulings.com dating back to 2006, although it is important to note that some violations generate multiple records in this database if stewards issue subsequent rulings rescinding or modifying previous ones. Track management at Delaware Park and Laurel Park banned Vazquez from those properties in 2015.

The post Juan Vazquez Sees Training License Suspended Until 2025; Stewards Call Him ‘Cruel And Abusive’ appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

The Funny Farm Comes to Fasig-Tipton

With over three decades of experience in the horse world, breeder Meg Dumaine will record a first when she brings her own consignment to the Fasig-Tipton July Sale of Selected Yearlings. Dumaine will offer three homebred yearlings under her The Funny Farm banner during the one-day auction.

“I have done all phases of this industry and I have run consignments for other people, but I've never sold my own horses,” Dumaine said. “It's just sort of coming full circle, from planning the mating, being there for the breeding, foaling the foal and raising it and prepping it. It's the last step in the cycle if you're not going to go any further and race them.”

Dumaine, who grew up just outside Boston, loved horses right from the start.

“My mother says my first words were, 'I want a horse,” Dumaine recalled. “That's the story I grew up being told. And I fought desperately to have a horse, against lots of parental opposition. As soon as I was old enough to buy one and support it myself, I did. I did U.S. Pony Club until I aged out of that and I am still active with the local Pony Clubs here working with younger kids. I just always wanted to do something with horses.”

Dumaine left New England for warmer climes in the late 1970s and has been living in the Bluegrass of Kentucky ever since.

“I didn't want to stay in New England where the winters were so long and the riding season was so short,” she said. “Especially for somebody who loves to ride outdoors. I moved here in 1979 when I attended UK. I never left.

“But I never finished UK, either,” she added with a chuckle.

Dumaine began breeding horses over 30 years ago, but determined to take a break from the pursuit until she could do it right.

“I was breeding years ago while I was galloping and breaking horses for a living and foaling mares,” Dumaine said. “They were cheap junk. And when I quit doing cheap junk, I swore I would never do it again until I could afford to do something that, at least on paper, looked like it might be worth something.

“I came into a little money when my parents died and stock certificates were really boring, so I decided to play with a little bit of it.”

She made her first move at the 2017 Keeneland November sale, where she acquired the dams of all three of her July offerings. She purchased the unraced Picardia (Stormy Atlantic), a half-sister to Grade I winners Lear's Princess (Lear Fan) and Pretty City Dancer (Tapit), for $350,000; stakes winner and multiple graded-placed You Bought Her (Graeme Hall) for $250,000; and stakes-placed Conquest Superstep (Super Saver), a full-sister to graded winner Inside Straight and half to graded winner Dance Daily (Five Star Day), for $150,000.

“I decided if I was going to do it, it had to be a team effort made up of people a lot smarter than me,” Dumaine said of that trip to Keeneland five years ago. “I reached out to an old friend, Dan Rosenberg, and he helped me with a long list coming down to a short list as we walked around at Keeneland. And these are the ones that the hammer fell on.”

The Uncle Mo colt Picardia was carrying in November 2017 sold for $410,000 at the 2019 Fasig-Tipton October sale, while You Bought Her's colt by Distorted Humor sold for $270,000 at the 2020 October sale.

Dumaine currently has a broodmare band of five Thoroughbreds at her The Funny Farm in Bourbon County and while she sees the most potential for making money within Kentucky's Thoroughbred industry, she is by no means breed exclusive.

“My interest is in horses,” Dumaine said. “I've bred sports horses, I've done driving horses, I've done dressage horses, I like draft horses. I have a field full of American miniatures. It doesn't matter to me. I'm not a breed snob.

“I love the birth process with the mare,” she continued. “I love being there for the foaling. I love getting my hands on foals. And going through those phases of 'I'm scared, I'm scared. You're a predator' and then building that confidence with them. The shaping of that young mind, that process. That's not specific to the Thoroughbred, but in this part of the country, it's the thing to do. It is where there is an industry and the potential for making some money.”

The Funny Farm's July consignment kicks off with a filly by Munnings out of Picardia (hip 154) and continues with a colt by Street Sense out of You Bought Her (hip 228). The trio is rounded out by a filly by Ghostzapper out of Conquest Superstep (hip 280).

“I am confident in them,” Dumaine said of the group. “I don't think anybody knows which one is going to be a racehorse until they get head to head with another horse and you see if they are going to dig in and go. But I know these horses are sound. I know they are clean and their X-rays are good and their scopes are good. They've never had horrible mishaps and they have been handled well. They are straightforward horses with good, athletic walks. They are the kind of horses I would want to buy if I was going to buy a racehorse prospect.”

As for her first attempt at consigning her own horses, Dumaine said, “I know I can do it on a small scale in the right venue. I don't feel like I could take my horses to Keeneland in September and sell them myself and be successful. I feel like, unless you  have that one horse who is the superstar that everyone is talking about, it's too easy to get lost among 3,000 horses. The buyers have to take horses off their lists somehow and not knowing who the consignor is could be enough.”

The Fasig-Tipton July sale will be held at the company's Newtown Paddocks next Tuesday with bidding beginning at 10 a.m. Next Monday, Fasig-Tipton will host its July Selected Horses of All Ages Sale. Bidding for that auction begins at 3 p.m.

The post The Funny Farm Comes to Fasig-Tipton appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Son Of Thistle Bird Catches The Eye At Newmarket

Observations on the European Racing Scene turns the spotlight on the best European races of the day, highlighting well-pedigreed horses early in their careers, horses of note returning to action and young runners that achieved notable results in the sales ring. Friday's Observations features a son of Group 1 winner Thistle Bird (GB) (Selkirk).

1.15 Newmarket, Mdn, £15,000, 2yo, c/g, 7fT
EPICTETUS (IRE) (Kingman {GB}) is one of the key members of this boutique maiden full of illustriously-bred types, being a son of the G1 Pretty Polly S. winner Thistle Bird (GB) (Selkirk). John and Thady Gosden introduce George Strawbridge's May-foaled bay, whose half-sister is the Listed Radley S. winner and G3 Fred Darling S. runner-up Jumbly (GB) (Gleneagles {Ire}), and among those he encounters is Godolphin's forecast favourite Flying Honours (GB) (Sea The Stars (Ire}). He is a relative of Lammtarra and one of a duo from Charlie Appleby's stable, which has won three of the last six renewals of this race including in 2021 with the subsequent G3 Jersey S. scorer Noble Truth (Fr) (Kingman {GB}).

The post Son Of Thistle Bird Catches The Eye At Newmarket appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights