Michigan Officials Warn Horse Trainers, Owners About New Scam

The Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development (MDARD) is urging horse trainers, horse owners, and others in the livestock industry to be cautious when accepting new clients or purchasing new animals. Scammers are posing as new clients who want to bring in their horses to be trained by local trainers, but their vehicle breaks down when transporting the animal, and the requests for money begin.

MDARD is currently assisting the Michigan State Police with a case in Otsego County where scammers were targeting horse trainers, horse owners, and others connected to the horse industry who are at least 60 years old and use social media to manage their business.

“MDARD routinely works with the Michigan State Police and local law enforcement to provide specialized guidance and advice related to animal and public health,” said Dr. Nora Wineland, state veterinarian. “Our Animal Industry Division's Compliance Investigative Unit is dedicated to investigating issues related to the movement of animals throughout the state to protect animal and public health. At MDARD, we will continue to look out for Michiganders and their animals.”

Scammers reach out to local horse trainers via text or social media direct message claiming to have gotten the trainer's information from another known contact in the trainer's social media network. After a deal is made to transport the horse for training, the scammers will again contact the trainer to explain how their vehicle has broken down and they need money to make repairs and continue traveling.

The scammers will then request the money be given to them in the form of a gift card, having the numbers on the card read or sent directly to them. If a trainer refuses to make this transaction, scammers will threaten to contact the trainer's other clients and drive away their business or harass the trainer in other ways.

MDARD continues to assist the Michigan State Police, who is the lead agency for scam investigations, on this case. The agencies are encouraging those working in a livestock-related business to be mindful of the following warning signs when beginning to interact with new clients:

  • Using English inaccurately in written messages.
  • Being evasive or combative when asked about more specific details.
  • Providing excuses for why certain deadlines or requests will not be met; the excuses usually sound reasonable.
  • Avoiding giving their full name; preferring to use their first name only.
  • Trying to change a decision through emotional manipulation or threats.
  • Requesting to use gift cards as a form of payment.

If you think you may have been contacted or victimized by one of these scammers, please contact your local police department. If you think you have provided a payment to a scammer, please contact your banking institution immediately.

For more information on how to identify and protect yourself from scams, please visit the Federal Trade Commission's website.

The post Michigan Officials Warn Horse Trainers, Owners About New Scam appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Nielsen Hopes ‘Amazingly Sound And Charismatic’ Stradivarius Gets Redemption In Goodwood Cup

Owner Bjorn Nielsen is convinced that Stradivarius retains the ability and enthusiasm to win an unprecedented fifth Al Shaqab Goodwood Cup on Tuesday – provided that replacement rider Andrea Atzeni can negotiate a clear passage.

The trouble in running which Stradivarius encountered when third in last month's Gold Cup at Royal Ascot has led Nielsen to return to Atzeni, who partnered Stradivarius to his first two Goodwood Cup wins.

Nielsen, who said he is “making headway” promoting Stradivarius as a stallion prospect and concedes that Tuesday's race, which is part of the QIPCO British Champions Series, might be his last ever racecourse appearance, believes that Stradivarius has purposely been kept hemmed in on occasions, particularly at Ascot.

However, he hopes it will not be an issue here, where an outstanding field of nine for the £500,000 Group 1 includes the Gold Cup winner Kyprios, last year's Goodwood Cup winner Trueshan, whose participation hinges on the ground, the 2021 Gold Cup second Princess Zoe, and the much improved Coltrane.

Nielsen said: “The way the races have been run, really since October 2018, the tactics have been to put Stradivarius in a pocket, and that's a lot easier to do at Ascot as it's a short straight, whereas at York they can't hem him in as it's a long straight and they come up the middle.

“It happened the last time he won the Goodwood Cup too, as he was held in a pocket there until Frankie got out just in time. That's been the strategy and that's the way it is, but Andrea knows the score. He's ridden him three times and won every time.”

Reflecting on Stradivarius' career, and on the particular significance of the Goodwood Cup, Nielsen added: “When he beat Big Orange for his first Goodwood Cup was when he really announced himself. Winning The Queen's Vase had shown he was a good horse but when he beat the Gold Cup winner the way he did it was a changing of the guard and it was clear to me that day that so long as he stayed sound he was going to be a top, top stayer.

“I couldn't have visualized he would go on as long as he has, but he's been an amazingly sound and charismatic horse. If he could win the race for a fifth time it would be some redemption for what's happened at Ascot the last three times he's run there.

“He hasn't lost any of his ability or enthusiasm and if things had gone the right way at Ascot last month I have no doubt that he could have won another Gold Cup, as when they turned in the others were all being ridden along and he was sitting there with a double handful. I think he could have won on Champions Day last year too, but for not being able to get out.”

As for the possibility of Tuesday marking the end of a truly glorious racecourse career for the seven-time Group 1 winner, who has won a record 16 races in the QIPCO British Champions Series, he said: “It could be his last run, of course, but it depends on his performance now and he seems in really good form. I saw him go up Warren Hill the other day and he's in good nick. He did a bit more I think when Andrea had a sit on him the day afterwards, and everyone was very happy with him.

“I'm just taking it one race at a time and we'll see how it goes. If he gets properly beaten we'd probably call it quits, but he's not shown any signs of that and there's a chance that he'll run again, for sure. He has an entry in the Lonsdale at York, so we are keeping our options open.”

Kyprios will be bidding to follow in the footsteps of his trainer Aidan O'Brien's great stayer Yeats, who is the stable's only Goodwood Cup winner so far, and he still has untapped potential over Cup distances. Yeats only ran here twice, winning easily after his first Gold Cup win in 2006 and just as impressively when returning two years later after the third of his four wins at Royal Ascot.

O'Brien said: “Everything has gone well with Kyprios since the Gold Cup and we are very happy with him. It's a tough race to win and we haven't been successful since Yeats, but he's in good form and we are looking forward to it.”

Trueshan does not enjoy traditional midsummer ground – hence last month's return to Newcastle to race on Tapeta in the Northumberland Plate – so connections will have their fingers crossed that the odd showers which are currently in the forecast for Monday develop into something more significant.

Hollie Doyle has been beaten on the six-year-old only once in eight starts and was on board at Newcastle for one of the greatest handicap performances of modern times. She said: “Alan has said he'd be happy to run if it's good ground, and although it looks unlikely at the moment there is some rain around on Monday so we'll just have to wait and see.

“Last year's Goodwood Cup was excellent for us and he won very decisively. I know the race cut up and he had the soft ground he loves, but he handled the track very well and so if he does run I'll be very much looking forward to getting back on him.

“The Northumberland Plate last time was extraordinary. I know he's a dual Group 1 winner, but Alan had doubts about him giving away all that weight. He's just so tough. It was the first time when I've ridden him that he really had to dig deep to win, as usually he just takes you along and wins very decisively. He really dug deep at Newcastle, and that run will just have put him straight for Goodwood.”

Princess Zoe will be making her first appearance at Goodwood. She was only sixth in last month's Gold Cup, but her best form puts her in the mix. Her defeat of Quickthorn in Ascot's Sagaro Stakes in May (Enemy fifth) has worked out well and confirmed she can handle fast ground.

Coltrane is in the form of his life and by following a narrow success in the Ascot Stakes at Royal Ascot with a 10-length win in a Listed race at Sandown he showed that he is on a steep upward curve and should not be underestimated. His trainer Andrew Balding also saddles Group 3 runner-up Nate The Great.

The field is completed by last year's runner-up Away He Goes, who has not been seen to advantage on either of his starts since, and the former Dante Stakes winner Thunderous, who was second to Stradivarius in the Yorkshire Cup.

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One Night In Vichy: It’s Right Up Our Allier 

“Come to Vichy,” they said. “We'll stop in Deauville on the way, it'll be fun.”

So began a 60-hour pilgrimage to one of the five days of racing that comprise the biggest week of the year at the Hippodrome Vichy Bellerive, a charming course with delicate touches of Art Nouveau glamour set on the banks of the Allier river. 

TDN readers of a National Hunt persuasion (there may be some!) might have felt their interest piqued at the mention of the Allier region, deep in central France and famed for its AQPS graduates, such as the Bruno Vagne-bred Envoi Allen (Fr) and Haras de Saint Voir's Gauloise (Fr). But Vichy in the sweltering heat of July is all about the Flat, with the racecourse's most prestigious race, the G3 Grand Prix de Vichy, being the highlight of the Festival du Galop, which this year celebrated its 25th anniversary. 

The history of Vichy Bellerive stretches back much farther than that, almost 150 years in fact. In 1875, the grand old Duc de Morny, largely remembered as the architect of the rather more celebrated racing resort of Deauville, persuaded his great friend Baron de Veauce to set up a riverside racecourse in the spa town. Vichy, referred to by one pithy bloodstock agent as “the capital of the collaborators”, was of course later more readily known for its status during the war, but it is a place well worth visiting even if horses aren't your thing. There certainly aren't any TDN readers of whom we can say that, but some of us do occasionally look up from our pedigree pages and poultices to enjoy the odd pursuit unconnected to equines, and if you have even a passing interest in architecture and Art Deco style, then hotfoot it to Vichy at once and walk around looking up. You won't be disappointed.

Our own rather more jolly collaboration for a road trip, which began in 40-degree Suffolk heat, comprised of three co-owners of a horse we visited briefly in Deauville, with the expedition being led by the sole owner-breeder of the rather aptly-named Duc De Morny (Fr) (Cityscape {GB}). The latter was set to run in the mouthful of a race that is Vichy's Listed Prix des Jouvenceaux et des Jouvencelles Bernard Ferrand. The Prix Morny would have been much more straightforward.

The owner-breeder in question is Jocelyn Targett, a man never knowingly under-enthused about life in general, and about horseracing in particular. Hopes were high en route, and deservedly so, because the equine Duc had won his first two starts for Christophe Ferland and had mercifully arrived in Vichy from La Teste de Buch ahead of the forest fire that forced the evacuation of his stable-mates to Bordeaux last Tuesday. 

It is a safe bet that not many breeders compose songs in their heads about their horses, but then Targett is rather extraordinary in a number of ways. So as the 400 miles between Deauville and Vichy were whiled away we joined him in several choruses of 'Duc, Duc, Duc, Duc de Morny, Morny, Morny' to the tune of Gene Chandler's Duke of Earl, and arrived eventually, in the highest of spirits. 

The heatwave had abated sufficiently to provide perfect conditions for a turf meeting en lumiere, and Vichy Bellerive was awash with families enjoying an agreeable evening at the races. Not all of them were necessarily there to witness the European debut of the surprise Saudi Cup winner Emblem Road (Quality Road), whose connections sprang even more of a surprise by deciding to run him a) on turf, and b) in the Grand Prix de Vichy.

His new trainer, Alessandro Botti, was playing a rather straight bat, if one can use a cricketing analogy for a French-based Italian, when it came to discussing Emblem Road's chances on his first run for 144 days and since moving from Riyadh to Chantilly. Following his fifth-place finish in a Grand Prix field of six, narrowly behind a horse who had been claimed for €18,111 after his previous run, the Botti bat was straighter still as his poker face made it impossible to discern to what, if any, extent he was surprised by the horse's lacklustre performance.

It has been a strange week for Saudi Cup winners. The 2021 winner Mishriff (Ire) plainly wasn't right in February when never travelling in this year's race on a dirt track which appeared to have been prepared with a deeper, more attritional surface than had been the case 12 months earlier. Mishriff bounced back to finish only a neck behind Vadeni (Fr) in the Coral-Eclipse, but he was almost 11 lengths behind Pyledriver (GB) when third in Saturday's King George, and he has dwelt in the stalls on both his last two starts.

Emblem Road's disappointing comeback was of little concern to the many racing fans who swamped the winner's rostrum after the 6-year-old Riocorvo (Ger) (Pastorius {Ger}) was led back in as the Grand Prix winner under Gerald Mosse.

As giant sparklers were let off around the podium, the evergreen jockey, who won the G1 Poule d'Essai des Pouliches in May on Mangoustine (Fr), was enjoying the delights of Vichy every bit as much, if not more than, ParisLongchamp. And who can blame him? With 'Miss Allier' on one arm and her similarly sashed deputy on the other, and laden with bottles of champagne and a giant box of chocolates, Mosse certainly appeared to be, as the youngsters say, living his best life. 

A bit like on Grand National day, the race immediately after the main event was restricted to amateurs and apprentices, which was just as well for Mosse, as there followed the longest presentation ceremony known to man. Speeches, more sparklers, some more speeches, and yet more champagne thrust into the jockey's welcoming arms ensued. By now, with darkness properly descended and just the final race set to go off at 10.45pm, one might have expected the family-heavy crowd to start dissipating. But the many miniature ponies scattered about the racecourse were still doing sterling service transporting young children about by saddle or by cart, the restaurants and bars were swinging, and it was clear that there would be no leavers until the last banger had gone up in the post-race firework display.

Duc De Morny had silenced us only temporarily with his performance on the night which, though creditable, saw him finish in the position all breeders with a black-type runner dread: fourth. As a young colt who has already shown much promise, he'll be back, for sure, and by then we may have learned the lines to the second verse of Duke of Earl.

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‘Incredibly Proud’: First Students Graduate From UK’s Riding A Dream Academy

Nine students from the Riding A Dream Academy, which was set up after Khadijah Mellah became the first British Muslim woman to win a UK horse race, have become the first to graduate from its prestigious Scholarship program.

The Khadijah Mellah Scholarship is the Academy's year-long flagship program, which was established to help other young people aged 14-18 from diverse and underrepresented communities get into racing and to increase diversity and inclusion in the sport. It is kindly funded by the Racing Foundation, with additional support from the Jockey Club and Champion Equestrian.

Over the course of the year, the students, all aged 14-18 and who have come from across the UK, have learnt to ride racehorses under the expert tuition of the instructors at the British Racing School (BRS) in Newmarket where the Academy and its program are run. The course began with a residential week at the BRS in August 2021 and the students have returned for one weekend each month since then to continue their tuition.

“I am so incredibly proud and humbled by everything that the students have achieved this year,” said Khadijah Mellah, in whose name the Scholarship is run and who was the inspiration behind the Riding A Dream Academy. “To see them arrive in August last year having only ever sat on riding school ponies, to now be riding racehorses on the gallops here is just mind blowing. As a group and individually I am so impressed by the talent, hard work and commitment they have put in and I can't wait to see where their careers in racing take them next. None of this would have been possible without the support of the Racing Foundation and the incredible instructors at the British Racing School – I am so grateful to everyone who has made the Academy possible.”

Sienna, 15 from London, is one of the students to have graduated on Saturday. She said: “Being part of the Riding A Dream Academy has meant so much to me. It has been a lifelong dream to be a jockey and the Academy has made that dream a reality. The Academy has changed my life and I am so grateful to have had so many people there and at the British Racing School who have believed in me and made this all possible.”

The Academy acts as a pathway into horse racing with one of its students, O'Shane, 17 from Ebony Horse Club in London already working in the sport at a racing yard in Newmarket.

A third student, Aamilah, 16 from Gloucester, is set to join the sport's Foundation Course which is the next step for young people looking to start their careers in the sport and progress onto becoming a jockey. She said: “I am so lucky to be one of the first group of the Riding A Dream Academy – it's been such an honor and an incredible experience. It has helped me so much with my riding journey and I am now one step closer to becoming a jump jockey and my dream of winning the Grand National!”

The Academy was set up by Naomi Lawson and ITV Racing's Oli Bell as a legacy to the achievements of Khadijah Mellah who became the first British Muslim woman to win a horse race in the UK when landing the Magnolia Cup at Goodwood in 2019 and aims to increase diversity and inclusion in British horse racing.

To date, 60 percent of the Academy's applicants have been from a diverse ethnic background, with 73 percent of students in the pilot year coming from a diverse ethnic background. This compares to just 2 percent of jockeys from a diverse ethnic background and between 3-5 percent of individuals who currently go on the industry's entry level Foundation Course.

It currently runs two programs – The Khadijah Mellah Scholarship and a Residential Week which acts as an introduction to the sport. Later in 2022 it will expand its programs, thanks to the Racing Foundation, to include a Residential Week for non-riders and Regional community weeks.

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