Ness Receives Six-Month Suspension in PA; Has Appealed

Jamie Ness, a prolific winner in the Mid-Atlantic states and the third-leading trainer in the country in wins, has been handed a six-month suspension by the Pennsylvania Racing Commission after a horse he trained tested positive for Bufotenine.

Ness was also fined $5,000. The suspension is scheduled to begin Sept. 5 and runs through March 3, 2023.

Ness, who is being represented by attorney Andrew Mollica, has appealed the suspension.

“We are in the process of appealing,” Mollica said. “We will take this the whole way. He obviously vehemently denies any wrongdoing. The law and the facts are on our side.”

The positive test occurred in a Feb. 23 race at Parx and involves the horse Crabs N Beer (Blofeld). The 3-year-old gelding won the race, a starter-optional claimer by 2 1/2 lengths as the 3-5 favorite.

According to britannica.com, Bufotenine is a “weak hallucinogenic agent active by intravenous injection, isolated from several natural sources or prepared by chemical synthesis. Bufotenine is a constituent of toad poison, the poisonous, milky secretion of glands found in the skin on the back of the animal.” Bufotenine is often referred to as a toad venom and, in humans, is used as a hallucinogen with properties similar to mescaline and mushrooms.

Mollica provided the TDN with a document issued by the Association of Racing Commissioners International (ARCI) that lists Bufotenine as a substance that has “no effect on the physiology of a racing animal except to improve nutrition or treat or prevent infections or parasite infestations…”

The document also notes that the substance is found in reed canary grass and may be found in the urine of horses eating this grass.

“We already know it's a contaminant, not because I say so, but because ARCI says so,” Mollica said, “ARCI went out of their way to carve it out and say it should not result in a positive. I thought this was pretty straight-forward. I am shocked we are here. How this got to this level is unfathomable to me. Our position is quite clear.”

Mollica also questioned why Pennsylvania regulators were relying on a blood test but did not conduct a urine test. He said that if the substance had shown up in a urine test, that would not have resulted in a positive.

Ness is enjoying another banner season. Through Friday, he had 198 wins on the year from 711 starters, for a winning rate of 28%.  He has been particularly dominant at Parx, where he has run away from the pack in the race for leading trainer. Ness's 107 wins at Parx puts him 67 wins in front of runner-up Louis Linder, Jr. Ness also runs regularly at Laurel, where he six wins on the meet.

Ness, who been training since 1999, has 3,703 winners and a career winning percentage of 25%.

In 2012, his Tampa Bay Downs barn was searched. It appears that nothing illegal was found.

“It's something I'm not used to, but it comes with the territory of being on top, I guess,” he told the Paulick Report at the time. “The higher your win percentage is, the more detractors you get. But I sleep well at night, and not because I'm tired. I know everything gets done right and it doesn't bother me when I walk through the grandstand and hear people say, 'Oh, they're cheating,' but it bothers the people who work for me, and that's what I care about. I'm used to it, but some of my grooms get very defensive when somebody says, 'You guys are cheaters,' or something like that.”

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Highfield Princess Will Head To Breeders’ Cup Turf Sprint After Nunthorpe Victory

The Trainers House Enterprises Ltd-owned and bred Highfield Princess (FR) produced a brilliant display to win the Coolmore Wootton Bassett Nunthorpe Stakes (G1) at York on Friday. The victory secured Highfield Princess a guaranteed start in the US$1 million Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint (G1) through the Breeders' Cup Challenge Series: Win and You're In.

The Breeders' Cup Challenge Series is an international series of 82 stakes races whose winners receive automatic starting positions and fees paid into a corresponding race of the Breeders' Cup World Championships, which will be held at Keeneland Race Course in Lexington, Kentucky, on Nov. 4-5.

Highfield Princess becomes the third horse to gain a Win and You're In berth into the Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint this year, joining Casa Creed, the Jaipur Stakes (G1) winner at Belmont Park on June 11, and Nature Strip (AUS), who won the King's Stand Stakes (G1) at Royal Ascot on June 14.

Highfield Princess will now be aimed at another top-level contest in France, before heading to Keeneland for the Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint in November, according to her trainer John Quinn: “She's the most extraordinary horse I've ever trained, and I'll put her in the (Prix de la) Foret and Prix de l' Abbaye (at ParisLongchamp) now before running her in the Breeders' Cup.”

A blistering pace was set in the early stages by Hollie Doyle on the 2-year-old filly The Platinum Queen (IRE), but Highfield Princess, under Jason Hart, showed an electric turn of foot to quicken past the leader and win by 2 ½ lengths. Emaraaty Ana (GB), second in this contest last year and fifth in the 2021 Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint (G1) at Del Mar, put in another big performance to finish 1 ½ lengths behind in third and complete a Yorkshire-trained 1-2-3 in the sprint highlight.

Highfield Princess, a 5-year-old daughter of Night of Thunder (IRE) out of the Danehill mare Pure Illusion (IRE), completed the 5 furlongs in 57.18 on a course listed as good-to-firm. She became the seventh filly or mare to win the Coolmore Wootton Bassett Nunthorpe Stakes in the last 11 runnings.

It was her second Group 1 success in just two weeks having won the Arc Prix Maurice de Gheest (G1) at Deauville on Aug. 7 and reflecting on victory at York, Quinn said: “She's a wonderful mare. She didn't run as a 2-year-old and has taken a while to learn her trade.

“This year she won the all-weather final at Newcastle, and then romped home in the Duke of York (G2) before running well in the Platinum Jubilee (G1) and winning the Group 1 at Deauville.”

As part of the benefits of the Challenge Series, Breeders' Cup will pay the entry fees for Highfield Princess to start in the US$1 million Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint at Keeneland, which will be run at 5 ½ furlongs. Breeders' Cup will also provide a travel allowance for all starters based outside of North America to compete in the World Championships. The Challenge winner must be nominated to the Breeders' Cup program by the Championships' pre-entry deadline of Oct. 24 to receive the rewards.

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Phil D’Amato Stacks The Deck For ‘Deep And Competitive’ Del Mar Oaks

The Phil D'Amato barn has been hitting on all cylinders this summer at Del Mar and he plans to bring the same cast of horses that dominated the G2 San Clemente last month to the G1 Del Mar Oaks Saturday.

Benowitz Family Trust, et al's Bellabel, Michael House's Sixteen Arches and R Unicorn Stable's Island of Love crossed the finish line one, two, three in the San Clemente and D'Amato says Bellabel appears to have improved since that race.

“Just the ease at which she does everything,” D'Amato says. “She just does things so effortlessly, especially in the last two grass works. Just displays her turn of foot on cue rather than having to niggle on her and ask her. She's just much more push button.”

Sixteen Arches was runner-up to Bellabel in the San Clemente.

“She's another filly that's on the improve,” D'Amato says. “She finally got a nice clean trip the other day, came running late and I expect a similar race from her.”

D'Amato says it wouldn't surprise him if Island of Love steals the Oaks on Saturday.

“She's just ultra consistent,” D'Amato says. “She's a filly that can strike at any time.”

For good measure, D'Amato is running a fourth filly, Rockingham Ranch or Talla Racing's Rhea Moon who, like her three stablemates, is also an Irish-bred. She's coming off of a third-place finish in an entry level allowance at Del Mar on opening weekend.

Having four horses in the same race will keep any trainer on his toes and D'Amato remembers the advice given to him by a Hall of Fame trainer several years ago.

“When I first started training, I asked Richard Mandella about this,” D'Amato said. “How do you handle multiple horses in one particular race? And he told me 'You tell your owners, if you're not training the horse, someone else is and it's going to be in the race, too. So you just treat them all as individuals and bring them to the race to the best of your ability and may the best horse win.'”

While it appears D'Amato has his bases covered in the Del Mar Oaks, there are challengers that could keep him out of the winner's circle beginning with the shipper and favorite, Gainesway Thoroughbreds' Spendarella. She has won three of her four career starts and comes off of an impressive runner up finish in the Coronation Stakes at Royal Ascot in June. Trainer H. Graham Motion has brought her across the country for this one.

There's also Schroeder Farms or David Bernsen's Cairo Memories, who won back-to-back Grade 3 races at Santa Anita before shipping back east and running fifth in the G1 Belmont Oaks at Belmont Park.

“It's a deep and competitive field,” trainer Bob Hess, Jr. says, “but we have a good post and she loves the distance, loves the surface here so I'm expecting a top effort.”

Tina and Jerome Moss' Lady T ran fourth behind the D'Amato trio in the San Clemente but before that she broke her maiden by 14 lengths followed by a runner up finish in the G2 Summertime Oaks at Santa Anita. Trainer John Shirreffs thinks with a good trip, she could pull off the upset.

“We like the post position that we got (post #13),” Shirreffs says. “Hopefully she can get a nice stalking position.”

Shirreffs says he throws out the effort in the San Clemente.

“She never got to relax,” Shirreffs says. “She was pressured the whole way. Usually she runs her best if she just lays a little off of it and gets comfortable.”

A full field of 14 is expected for the 1 1/8 mile turf race. It goes as race eight on the 10-card program.

Here's the field from the rail out with jockeys and morning line odds. Rhea Moon (Ramon Vasquez, 30-1); Bellabel (Umberto Rispoli, 5-1); Island of Love (Juan Hernandez, 12-1); Lucky Girl (Ryan Curatolo, 30-1); Cairo Memories (Mike Smith, 3-1); Tezzaray (Hector Berrios, 20-1); Sixteen Arches (Abel Cedillo, 12-1); Gracelund Gray (Joe Bravo, 15-1); Txope (Florent Geroux, 5-1); Gold Dragon Queen (Armando Ayuso, 50-1); Spendarella (Tyler Gaffalione, 8/5); Ballet Dancing (Drayden Van Dyke, 20-1); Lady T (Victor Espinoza, 20-1), and Lady Clementine (Mario Gutierrez, 30-1).

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