NYRA Entity Buys 49 Percent Stake In United Tote From Churchill Downs

Churchill Downs Incorporated (Nasdaq: CHDN) announced on Thursday that it has entered into an agreement to sell 49 percent of United Tote Company, a wholly-owned subsidiary of CDI, to NYRA Content Management Solutions, LLC, a subsidiary of the New York Racing Association, Inc.

NYRA is a not-for-profit corporation that operates the three largest Thoroughbred horse racing tracks in the state of New York – Aqueduct Racetrack in South Ozone Park, Queens; Belmont Park in Elmont; and Saratoga Race Course in Saratoga Springs.

The transaction is subject to usual and customary closing conditions, including applicable regulatory notices and approvals, and is expected to close by the end of 2022. As part of the agreement, the United Tote pari-mutuel settlements business will be excluded and will remain with CDI.

CDI and NYRA intend to work together to create and provide a comprehensive and efficient industry-leading pari-mutuel solution through United Tote that will expedite the expansion of horse racing seamlessly onto sports wagering platforms to reach new customers. Pending the appropriate regulatory approvals, NYRA will transition its pari-mutuel wager processing to United Tote in 2023 under a separate agreement.

About Churchill Downs Incorporated

Churchill Downs Incorporated is an industry-leading racing, online wagering and gaming entertainment company anchored by our iconic flagship event, the Kentucky Derby. It owns and operates three entertainment venues with approximately 3,050 historical horse racing machines in Kentucky. CDI also owns and operates TwinSpires, one of the largest and most profitable online wagering platforms for horse racing in the U.S. and eight retail sportsbooks. CDI has in brick-and-mortar casino gaming in eight states with approximately 11,000 slot machines and video lottery terminals and 200 table games. Additional information about Churchill Downs Incorporated can be found online at www.churchilldownsincorporated.com.

About United Tote

United Tote is a leading supplier of totalisator systems, services and equipment and also provides technology services to process wagers and payouts and pari-mutuel tote services to leading racing operations including Churchill Downs Racetrack. United Tote also currently designs, manufactures and operates pari-mutuel wagering systems for more than 150 racing companies and numerous OTB facilities in North America and around the world.

About NYRA Content Management Solutions (NCMS)

NYRA Content Management Solutions (NCMS) is a limited liability corporation established by NYRA in 2019 as a simulcast purchase and sales agent for Thoroughbred and Standardbred racetracks across the country. In addition to negotiating content agreements for its clients, NCMS provides a variety of strategic consulting services.

About the New York Racing Association, Inc. (NYRA)

The New York Racing Association, Inc. (NYRA) holds the exclusive franchise to conduct Thoroughbred racing at Aqueduct Racetrack, Belmont Park and Saratoga Race Course. NYRA tracks are the cornerstone of New York State's racing industry, which is responsible for 19,000 jobs and more than $3 billion in annual economic impact. For additional information, visit NYRA.com.

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‘Just Devastating’: Amid Career Year, Ortiz’s Thoughts With His Eastern Kentucky In-Laws

John Ortiz is having a career year, his more than $3.5 million in purse earnings ranking No. 20 in America. His eight victories (out of 29 starts) matches Hall of Famer Steve Asmussen for the most this summer at Ellis Park. He is running romping debut-winner Justa Warrior in the $125,000 RUNHAPPY Ellis Park Debutante and Iowa Distaff runner-up Graysonsmacho Gal in the $125,000 Groupie Doll on the RUNHAPPY Meet at Ellis Park's signature card Sunday.

Ortiz was discussing his good fortunate on a post-card perfect morning at Ellis Park, the backdrop fluffy clouds against an azure-blue sky, when he noted the contrast to his wife Crystal's brother and sister in law in Breathitt County, which is reeling from the historic flooding in Eastern Kentucky.

Jason and Kayla Parks, like so many, had their home completely flooded. The water doesn't just go in and out. It stays there, wreaking further havoc.

“It's sad to hear that kind of news. I was talking to Reylu the other day,” said Ortiz, referring to jockey Reylu Gutierrez. “I said, 'We've got to stay humble. Here at Ellis, we're living the best meet we've had. We're winning races, doing well. We get to go home to our house and homes and apartments and our stuff. On the other side of the state, we have families in Eastern Kentucky – not just my family — who have lost everything they've worked so hard for. It's a small community. To lose just a little bit could be a lot for them.”

The Parkses are not connected to the racetrack. But Ortiz said his in-laws have been overwhelmed by the kindness and generosity that people in racing have shown them, including contributing to a GoFundMe account that Crystal Ortiz set up.

“Anything helps,” John Ortiz said. “And I've donated for other charities as well for other people, not just my own in-laws. But everybody in Eastern Kentucky needs a little hand right now, donating water or whatever we can. My wife went there the other day to help them clean up. She said it took a long time just scraping buckets and buckets of mud out of their cabinets. That's how high the water was.

“It's just devastating. You're going to get mold, and you ruin stuff, foundations. Just so much that can go wrong. It's just a humbling time right now where you understand that when we're doing well, we still can share that and help others.”

Meanwhile, business has to continue as usual at the track. Ortiz's stable has morphed from depending in large part on claiming horses to being populated with 2-year-olds. Justa Warrior, owned by Stone Bridge Farm, galloped to a five-length romp on July 22 at 5 1/2 furlongs at Ellis Park under Gutierrez.

“The barn and I were very high on her,” Ortiz said. “Physically looking at her, we always thought she was going to be a great horse. It was more like a workout for her. She just finished working this morning (Sunday) and she did the same thing: Sat three off and then goes by and opens up by two. She just likes passing. She likes the game. She enjoys what she's doing.”

Ortiz also has Boss Lady Bailey, who won by a head first time out at seven-eighths of a mile July 23. However, she'll await another stakes.

He acknowledges that he's thinking of the First Friday in May, when the Kentucky Oaks will be held at Churchill Downs.

“Every day you're going to wake up and think about something like that when you have a nice impressive filly,” he said of Justa Warrior, who drew post 12 in an overflow field for the Ellis Park Debutante. “You look at her, physically she looks great. She also has attitude to go with it, and I love a filly with attitude. They're just hungry. They're here to play the game. They want to be the alpha out there.”

Graysonsmacho Gal hadn't raced in nine months when she finished second by a head in the Iowa Distaff won by Jilted Bride, who also is running in the mile Groupie Doll. The 5-year-old Graysonsmacho Gal has raced at Ellis Park six times, winning three with a third. When she wins, she wins big. Her last three victories have been by 11 lengths, 17 (both at Ellis last summer) and 9 1/4 (at Keeneland's 2020 fall meet.)

“She's doing phenomenal,” Ortiz said. “She ran a tremendous first effort off the layup just to get beat a nose at the wire. Reylu knows her a little bit more now. She loves Ellis Park. I think that's the horse for the course.”

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‘Manny Has Really Come A Long Way With His Skill’: Chad Brown Grants Franco Two Grade 1 Mounts

Multiple Eclipse Award-winning trainer Chad Brown has been nothing short of dominant over the last decade with his trainees in the Arlington Million (Grade 1) and Beverly D. (G1). On Saturday, the veteran horseman will trust the riding services of New York-based rider Manny Franco with Sacred Life (FR) in the $1 million Arlington Million and Rougir (FR) in the $500,000 Beverly D.

“Manny has really come a long way with his skill,” Brown said Wednesday from Saratoga following Franco's victory aboard Inflation Adjusted in Race 5. “He really pays attention a lot, is always trying to get better at his profession and I see him at the best he's ever been right now. He has a really good agent with Jon Panagot who's really great to work with and he fits a lot of our horses well. He's willing to ride any level of horse. I find him equally effective on turf or dirt and he normally puts my horses in good positions.”

The 27-year-old Franco has five other calls on Saturday aside from Brown's duo. His other mounts are Intrigue (Race 2), Teepu (Race 3), Zeitlos (Race 4), California Twirl (Race 6) and Keystone Field (Race 10).

Brown will be in search of his of his record extending fifth victory in the Arlington Million. He first won the storied race in 2013 with Real Solution. Four years later he was victorious with Beach Patrol and followed up that win in 2018-19 with Robert Bruce (CHI) and the great Bricks and Mortar.

In the Beverly D., Brown is also the record holder for the most victories by a trainer with six. His first win the Beverly D. came in 2011 with Stacelita (FR). From 2015-19 he won the 1 1/8-mile race with Watsdachances (IRE), Sea Calisi (FR), Dacita (CHI) and back-to-back runnings with Sistercharlie (IRE).

Michael Dubb, Madaket Stables, Wonder Stables and Bethlehem Stables' recent $162,000 Monmouth Stakes (G3) winner Sacred Life was installed as the 9-2 fourth choice on the morning line in Saturday's Arlington Million while Peter Brant and Michael Tabor's Group 1 winner Rougir was tabbed as the 2-1 favorite in the Beverly D.

Saturday's first post at Churchill Downs is 12:45 p.m. (all times Eastern) and the Arlington Million will go as the Race 11 finale at 6:25 p.m. The Beverly D. will be staged six races early in Race 5 at 3:01 p.m.

The Arlington Million will be conducted in Lane 1 on the Matt Winn Turf Course while the Beverly D. will be contested in Lane 3, 24 feet from the inside rail.

Fans can still purchase tickets for Arlington Million Day. For ticket options and more information, visit www.churchilldowns.com.

Wagering is available for the Arlington Million and every race from Churchill Downs on www.TwinSpires.com, the official wagering provider of Churchill Downs Inc. and the Kentucky Derby.

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Steve Newby, Dale Capuano Continuing Decades-Long Success Story With Back-To-Back Stakes Winners

In an association that has touched parts of five decades, Steve Newby and Dale Capuano are still going strong – maybe stronger than ever.

On back-to-back weekends at Laurel Park, the owner and trainer found themselves in the winner's circle after 5-year-old gelding Justwaveandsmile won the $75,000 Ben's Cat July 30 and 3-year-old gelding Vance Scholars made a triumphant season debut in the $100,000 Bald Eagle Derby Aug. 6.

“I've never won two stakes in a row and probably never will again, but it was quite a run,” Newby said. “I hope to continue it. We'll see.”

Newby, a 75-year-old retired stockbroker, leaves that in the capable hands of Capuano. Their relationship goes back to when Newby first got in the game as part of partnerships on horses trained by Capuano in the late 1980s and early 1990s before deciding to strike out on his own.

“He got into the business with me,” Capuano, who turns 60 in November, said. “I'm the only trainer he's had so far.”

Their success came almost immediately. After deciding that claiming horses was not a profitable business model, Newby asked Capuano to attend Keeneland's September 1996 yearling sale and the trainer came back with four horses, including an $80,000 son of Strawberry Road that would be named Just Call Me Carl.

Just Call Me Carl was named for Carl Rowan, the late syndicated columnist and diplomat Newby first met in 1990 when he donated $50,000 – first prize for winning a USA Today-sponsored national stock-picking contest – to Rowan's Project Excellence, which provided scholarships to minority students in the Washington, D.C. area.

Newby also pledged Just Call Me Carl's earnings to Project Excellence. Just Call Me Carl banked $525,708 in five seasons of racing, winning 12 of 25 starts, six of them in stakes, including the 1998 Dancing Count at Laurel and 2000 Ben Cohen, Basil Hall and Chesapeake at historic Pimlico Race Course. That same year, Just Call Me Carl also ran second in the Frank J. De Francis Memorial Dash (G1), Laurel Dash (G3) and Philadelphia Park Breeders' Cup Handicap (G3).

“We've been together a long time and we've had some good ones. Just Call Me Carl was certainly one of those,” Capuano said. “We had some success early on. Some years were lean, but that's how it goes. He just stays with it and here we are today.

“Steve's a great guy,” he added. “They don't come along any better than he is, excellent to deal with, an all-around good guy.”

Just Call Me Carl shares a similar story to that of Vance Scholars, a horse Newby named for a scholarship program he founded in 2018 at Archbishop Carroll High School in Washington D.C. to honor 19-time Emmy Award-winning newscaster Jim Vance, who died in 2017 at the age of 75 after a brief battle with cancer. The program, which Newby funds partly with money earned by the horse, graduated its first class of 'Vance Scholars' in May.

“A lot of people that own horses, it's just in their blood or in their tradition or in their family. But for an outsider like me, it's mostly just for the fun of it and being able to have the financial ability to support it even if we don't have a bunch of winners,” Newby said. “Anybody that's in horse racing knows there's going to be periods where you don't have winners. Horse racing isn't life or death for me but, because I'm in a good position in life, I'm able to support these ventures as I would think many of the horse owners are like me that are very active in their callings, I'm sure.”

Newby's first interest in horse racing came during his undergraduate days at the University of Maryland in the 1960s, when he was working with computers and wondering if computer analysis might be the key to picking winners. After some trial and error, particularly at Rosecroft Raceway, he shifted his focus to picking stocks.

He worked for a few firms before founding his own in 1990 in Rockville, Md. and has been retired as an active stockbroker since the early 2000s, mostly trading for himself.

“He used to handicap horses when he was going to college, so he knew about that part of it, the handicapping and racing part,” Capuano said. “Owning them and the horses themselves he didn't know a whole lot about, but he's a very intelligent guy and he learned quickly. He's been great to work with, that's for sure.

“Steve has five or six with me now,” he added. “He usually keeps four or five, depending, but that's generally where his numbers run. Hopefully it'll be a good year.”

According to Equibase statistics, Capuano has started 11 horses for Newby in 2022 with four wins, one second and $185,914 in purse earnings, bringing the owner's career totals to 88 wins and $2.69 million in purses earned from 370 starters since 2000, according to Equibase statistics.

Other top horses Capuano campaigned for Newby include stakes winners Grace Bay, President Butler and Come Sundown and stakes-placed Zorally, Next Big Nothing, I'm Mr. Blue and Scarlet Tango, the latter favored over Xtra Heat when she ran second to the future Hall of Famer in the 2000 Laura Gal at Laurel.

“In a trainer, I just looked for somebody that I felt was honest. I wasn't expecting somebody to make me a fortune in the horse racing business because when I started in the 80s and 90s it was very difficult,” Newby said. “Now it's a little bit easier because of the incentives that the breeding programs are giving, so that's been helpful in the last four or five years especially. Basically, [I value] honesty in a trainer and being straightforward. If he's going to raise any of his prices he tells me in advance. He's a straight shooter, and that's all I can ask for.”

Capuano is also an excellent horseman and astute judge of talent, with more than 3,600 career wins to his credit. He picked out Vance Scholars for $22,000 at Fasig-Tipton's Midlantic Eastern Fall Yearling sale in Timonium, Md. in 2020, two years after purchasing Justwaveandsmile for $55,000 from the same sale. Together, they have won 11 of 23 starts and nearly $300,000 in purses.

“It's amazing. Dale buys these horses for 20, 30, 40,000 dollars and some of them have turned out pretty good,” Newby said. “You have some clunkers, absolutely, but with Vance Scholars, it wasn't a huge amount of money and to take home $60,000 in one race, that's pretty cool.”

Vance Scholars won the Bald Eagle Derby for fellow sophomores, rained off the turf to the main track, after not having raced in 259 days. It was his second straight win and first in a stakes.

“He came back really good,” Capuano said. “I knew he was fit and ready. You've got to get them started somewhere and for a horse like him, a 3-year-old two-other-than to have to run against older class horses of horses is asking a lot. No matter what you do it's not going to be an easy spot. He ran well and he can go a distance of ground, so that's a plus. I'll try to keep him going long because he hasn't lost going long yet. His only defeats were going short. We'll just look around and see.”

Justwaveandsmile, meanwhile, is under consideration for the $200,000 Parx Dash sprinting five furlongs on the turf Aug. 23. The Ben's Cat for Maryland-bred/sired 3-year-olds and up going 5 ½ furlongs, was Justwaveandsmile's stakes debut and his sixth consecutive win on grass.

“He's doing well. I'm thinking about running him in the Parx Dash. That's my thought right now, but we'll play it by ear,” Capuano said. “Getting him on the turf has really helped. He had a lot of little issues when he was young. He's 5 and he's only run 17 times. We stayed patient with him and we were able to give him enough time and he's paying us back now, so it's all good.”

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