San Diego Winner Royal Ship Cruises Into Top 10 In Breeders’ Cup Classic Rankings

Following his impressive victory in last Saturday's San Diego Handicap (G2) at Del Mar, Fox Hill Farms, Inc., and Siena Farm LLC's 6-year-old gelding Royal Ship (BRZ) has gone from unranked to No. 7 in the latest Longines Breeders' Cup Classic Rankings, with top-rated Flightline holding a 38-point edge of Olympiad. The Longines Breeders' Cup Classic Rankings is a weekly rating of the top 10 horses in contention for the $6 million Longines Breeders' Cup Classic (G1) at Keeneland Race Course in Lexington, Kentucky, on Nov. 5.

Royal Ship, trained by Richard Mandella, came from off the pace in the San Diego Handicap to score a 2 ¼-length win over 2-1 favorite Country Grammer. A son of Breeders' Cup Juvenile (G1) winner Midshipman, Royal Ship received 100 votes.

Flightline, trained by John Sadler, remains on top through the first six weeks of the rankings. The Hill 'N' Dale Metropolitan Handicap (G1) winner has 323 votes. Owned by Hronis Racing LLC, Siena Farm LLC, Summer Wind Equine LLC, West Point Thoroughbreds, and Woodford Racing LLC, Flightline is slated to start next on Sept. 3 in the TVG Pacific Classic (G1), a Win and You're In for the Longines Breeders' Cup Classic.

Grandview Equine, Cheyenne Stable LLC, and LNJ Foxwoods' 4-year-old Olympiad is in second place with 279 votes. Undefeated in five starts this year for trainer Bill Mott, Olympiad, Life Is Good, Hot Rod Charlie, and Americanrevolution, are all expected to start in this Saturday's Whitney (G1) at Saratoga, a Win and You're In for the Longines Breeders' Cup Classic. The Whitney will be broadcast live on NBC and Peacock (5 p.m. ET) as a part of the Breeders' Cup Challenge Series: Win and You're In – presented by America's Best Racing.

CHC, Inc. and WinStar Farm LLC's 4-year-old Life Is Good, winner of the Pegasus World Cup Invitational (G1) and the John A. Nerud Stakes (G2) for trainer Todd Pletcher, remains in third place with 259 votes. Winchell Thoroughbreds' 3-year-old Epicenter, a 1 ½-length winner of last Saturday's Jim Dandy Stakes (G2) at Saratoga, has jumped from sixth place to fourth this week. Epicenter (202 votes) is trained by Steve Asmussen, who saddled both Curlin and Gun Runner to victories in the Breeders' Cup Classic.

Country Grammer, owned by Commonwealth Thoroughbreds, LLC, WinStar Farm LLC, and Zedan Racing Stables, Inc., and trained by Bob Baffert, drops from fourth place to fifth with 197 votes. Boat Racing, LLC, Gainesway Stable, Roadrunner Racing, and William Strauss' 4-year-old Hot Rod Charlie, second in the Dubai World Cup (G1), slips one spot to sixth place with 154 votes.

Following seventh-place Royal Ship is Gold Square LLC's 3-year-old Cyberknife, winner of the TVG.com Haskell Stakes (G1) on July 23. Trained by Brad Cox, who saddled last year's Longines Breeders' Cup Classic winner Knicks Go, Cyberknife drops one position to eighth place with 79 votes. The third 3-year-old in the top 10 is Whisper Hill Farm's Charge It. Trained by Todd Pletcher, Charge It, a 23-length winner of the Dwyer Stakes (G3), is in ninth place with 55 votes.

CHC Inc. and WinStar Farm LLC's 4-year-old Americanrevolution, the third Pletcher-trained horse in the Top 10, is in 10th place with 37 votes.

The Longines Breeders' Cup Classic Rankings are determined by a panel of leading Thoroughbred racing media, horseplayers, and members of the Breeders' Cup Racing Directors/Secretaries Panel. Rankings will be announced each week through Oct. 11. A list of voting members can be found here.

In the Longines Breeders' Cup Classic Rankings, each voter rates horses on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 system in descending order.

Longines Breeders' Cup Classic Rankings – Aug. 2, 2022*

Rank Horse Votes First-Place Votes Previous Week
1 Flightline 323 25 1
2 Olympiad 279 5 2
3 Life Is Good 259 4 3
4 Epicenter 202 0 6
5 Country Grammer 197 0 4
6 Hot Rod Charlie 154 0 5
7 Royal Ship (BRZ) 100 0 Not Rated
8 Cyberknife 79 0 7
9 Charge It 55 0 9
10 Americanrevolution 37 0 11

*Note – The Longines Breeders' Cup Classic Rankings have no bearing on qualification or selection into the Longines Breeders' Cup Classic.

The 2022 Longines Breeders' Cup Classic, which will be run at 1 ¼ miles on the main track at Keeneland, is limited to 14 starters. The race will be broadcast live on NBC.

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Three Jockeys to Become Test for Contested HISA Enforcement

The legal rabbit hole deepened on Tuesday in one of four lawsuits designed to derail the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act Authority (HISA), pulling jockeys Drayden Van Dyke, Miguel Vazquez and Edwin Gonzalez into the fray as plaintiffs alleged new harms resulting from rule enforcement they believe is in contempt of a court order.

Plaintiffs led by Louisiana, West Virginia, and the Jockeys' Guild moved for a federal judge to issue an immediate order to enforce its July 26 injunction to keep Guild-member jockeys from being subject to HISA rules nationwide. The plaintiffs also want the judge to make the HISA defendants explain to the court why they should not be held in contempt for “flagrantly violating this Court's injunction within a mere four days after this Court entered it.”

A series of filings Aug. 2 in United States District Court (Western District of Louisiana) centers on different interpretations the two sides have regarding what Judge Terry Doughty meant when he wrote in that July 26 injunction that, “The geographic scope of the injunction shall be limited to the states of Louisiana and West Virginia, and as to all Plaintiffs in this proceeding.”

The plaintiffs-most specifically, the Guild-believe the judge's words apply to “all of the members of the Jockeys' Guild, regardless of the U.S. jurisdiction in which the jockey is riding.”

The HISA defendants have steadfastly maintained that individual members of the Guild are clearly not plaintiffs in the lawsuit, and to consider them that way “would wreak havoc on the sport. For example, many jockeys are not Guild members, such that different rules would apply to jockeys riding in the same race.”

Separately, the defendants have made a formal motion asking for a clarification of the wording in the injunction, but the court docket indicates the judge might not offer one until next week, unless Doughty opts to expedite the matter.

And beyond that, the defendants' appeal of their turned-down request to put a stay on the entirety of the July 26 preliminary injunction is headed for the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals.

Confused yet? There's more. This case is only one of four lawsuits initiated at the federal level this year to keep HISA rules from going into effect nationwide. The first two got tossed out by judges but are in the process of being appealed. The fourth just got filed on Monday in a Texas court.

According to Tuesday's filings, Guild-member jockeys Van Dyke, Vazquez and Gonzalez are just the first three jockeys that the plaintiffs believe are being harmed by the allegedly contemptuous enforcement of HISA safety rules.

“Though the ink has not yet dried on this Court's order preliminarily enjoining Defendants from enforcing HISA's unlawful rules, some Defendants have already decided that they need not follow the Order,” the filing stated. “[D]espite the Order's plain text, the Authority Defendants continue to implement and enforce the enjoined rules against members of Plaintiff Jockeys' Guild.”

According to the filings, on July 27, one day after the allegedly unclear order was issued, a HISA spokesperson stated that “HISA will continue to enforce its rules in all applicable jurisdictions, with the exception of Louisiana and West Virginia. Outside of those states, the court order applies only to the five individuals specifically named in the case.”

And on July 29, the filings stated, the California Horse Racing Board (CHRB) put out an advisory that stated, “Unless and until a federal court clarifies an earlier ruling by indicating otherwise, the CHRB will continue to honor its agreement with HISA by enforcing HISA safety rules, including the rules covering use of the riding crop, as the CHRB has been doing since HISA rules went into effect on July 1.”

Then on July 30, Del Mar stewards issued a ruling against Van Dyke for his use of the riding crop in a July 29 race that they deemed to be in violation of HISA Rule 2280, imposing a $250 fine and one-day suspension.

“The suspension is set to preclude Mr. Van Dyke from racing on Aug. 6, but he must confirm participation on Aug. 3 for that race day,” Tuesday's filing stated. “To be clear, Mr. Van Dyke is a member of Plaintiff Jockeys' Guild and thus Defendants are enjoined from implementing and enforcing the enjoined Racetrack Safety Rules against Mr. Van Dyke.”

The filing continued: “Compounding this problem, over the weekend, Plaintiffs were informed that the HISA stewards at Gulfstream Park in Hallandale, Florida plan to issue multiple rulings against members of Plaintiff Jockeys' Guild for similar violations.”

For actions during July 31 races, the filing stated, “HISA stewards intend to issue written rulings on Aug. 5 against Miguel Vazquez [for] a violation of enjoined HISA Rule 2280 that prohibits a jockey from raising his wrist above a certain point before striking a horse with his riding crop; and Edwin Gonzalez for a violation of enjoined HISA Rule 2280 for a different riding crop violation.”

Both Gulfstream jockeys are expected to receive fines of $250 each, one-day suspensions, and points to escalate penalties for subsequent violations.

“Through these continued enforcement actions, the Authority Defendants thus have made clear that they seek to enforce enjoined rules against Plaintiffs' members throughout the country outside of Louisiana and West Virginia,” the plaintiffs' filing stated.

The plaintiffs are asking the judge to award compensatory damages to cover the allegedly lost purse earnings that the above three riders will incur, plus a “coercive fine of $250 per day for each day any points assessed…as a result of HISA's contempt are not purged from their records.”

The Guild-backed plaintiffs also want those damages to apply to any other Guild members who get subsequently penalized while this issue is contested in the courts.

With regard to how the judge might rule in his clarification of the injunction, the plaintiffs noted in court documents that “nearly 50 years of Supreme Court case law” is on their side, because precedents confirm that “members of associations are entitled to the benefits that their associations obtain in litigation.”

In the overall lawsuit, the HISA Authority, the Federal Trade Commission, and board members and overseers of both entities are alleged to have violated the Fourth, Seventh and Tenth Amendments to the Constitution, plus the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), which governs the process by which federal agencies develop and issue regulations. An adverse ruling against the defendants could mean a reopening of public commentary periods and a rewrite of all existing and in-the-pipeline HISA rules.

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Kentucky Downs Will Raise Three Stakes Purses If Those Fields Have Grade I Winner

The seven-day FanDuel Meet at Kentucky Downs could have up to six races worth $1 million for registered Kentucky-breds with purse incentives added to the $750,000 GIII Kentucky Downs Ladies Turf, $600,000 GII Franklin-Simpson and $600,000 GIII Mint Ladies Sprint.

Kentucky Downs will bump any of those purses to $1 million, including money from the Kentucky Thoroughbred Development Fund (KTDF), if a Grade or Group 1 winner starts in that stakes race. The increase will match the purse structure for Kentucky Downs' three existing $1 million races, with $550,000 in association money that every horse runs for regardless of where it was born and an additional $450,000 in KTDF supplements.

“This is just another step as Kentucky Downs works to improve its racing program and to reward horse owners who make this great industry possible,” said Ted Nicholson, Kentucky Downs' Vice President for Racing. “We've been fortunate to receive graded designation for a number stakes in recent years, and now the objective is to get them upgraded. The ultimate goal is to get a Grade I designation.

“In that regard, money talks–or certainly helps. The KTDF makes it possible for us to have $1 million races for Kentucky-breds, which dominate racing. But we also want to make the base purse attractive to horsemen who have quality horses that weren't born in the commonwealth.”

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Ramey: Before Treating Your Horse With Something, Here Are Three Important Questions To Ask

I will readily admit that I have not studied the religions and philosophies of India. Nevertheless, I find myself drawn to a quote that is attributed to Sai Baba, an Indian guru and yogi who lived in western India, and who died in 1918 (he's buried in the town of Shirdi). Sai Baba is considered as a saint by many Hindus and Muslims (you can CLICK HERE to read about him, and if you ever think that this is just a horse blog, well, now you've been thoroughly disabused of that notion). I think that the quote has much to say in its own right, but this isn't an Indian philosophy blog (CLICK HERE to see a list of Indian philosophy blogs).

Anyway, here's what he said: “Before you speak, ask yourself: Is it kind, is it necessary, is it true, does it improve upon the silence?”

I've been thinking about this quote a lot, especially as pertains to treating horses. What strikes me about it is how it succinctly sums up what I think should be the approach to the veterinary care of horses. Of course, an interest in taking care of horses is something that everyone who reads my articles probably has in common, and while there may be some disagreements in the particulars of how we may take care of them, for me, at least, I think that Sai Baba's words offer some pretty good direction, no matter what treatment is selected. See what you think.

1. Is it kind? If your horse is like, say, every other horse that I've ever seen – or person, for that matter – he'd probably prefer NOT to be bothered with some sort of medical attention. Horses would much rather be running around in a field, or munching on some hay, than they would be standing with some bandage on their leg, or having someone grinding away at their teeth. They don't think kindly of that sort of attention. Of course, it's also not kind to allow a horse to suffer, and that's why, say, cutting into a horse's abdomen for a colic surgery is kinder than letting him die of colic.

To me, “kind” implies that you should choose the treatment with the least amount of discomfort, side effects, fuss, and bother.

Of course, it's “kind” that's one of the appeals of the “natural” health movement – “natural” gets used as a synonym for “kind” or “good.” And, while the association “natural” with positive attributes is a bit silly (see, for example, rattlesnakes, or Hurricane Katrina), to be honest, I completely agree with the idea that a treatment should be as kind as possible. For example, I always preferable to use a treatment that is less invasive to one that is more invasive. Or, to take another example, I like the idea that, when treating a wound, you should never put anything on a wound that you wouldn't put in your own eye. (CLICK HERE to read about things to put on wounds).

Still, kindness only goes so far. Kindness isn't the ONLY thing that one needs to consider, when it comes to treating. In fact, if you use something to treat a horse that isn't effective, that isn't kind at all. We owe it to horses to treat them with things that are likely to be effective, and we shouldn't bother them by giving them treatments that aren't (and you shouldn't have to pay for them).

2. Is it necessary? I really can't think of any reason to give a treatment if a treatment isn't needed. I figure that if a medication, product, or service isn't needed by your horse, why bother? If it doesn't do anything, why should you pay for it?

Now there's no question that things get done to horses all the time that are both kind and not necessary for the horse's health. Blanketing comes to mind. Daily brushing. Tail extensions. Deworming again and again without seeing if your horse actually has parasites (CLICK HERE to see recommendations on internal parasite control). Trimming a horse's feet on a preset schedule, rather than as needed. Stuff that seems, on the surface, like excellent care, but isn't really needed. It could be a long list.

And, of course, there a lot of things that people do to horses that aren't necessary for the horse, but make the people feel better – brushing might fit in there, and surely checkered leg bandages – and, mostly, I'm OK with those things. I mean, why have a horse if you don't get to feel good too? But things start to change if someone's trying to sell you something. That's where the “true” comes in.

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3. Is it true? If I said that people should be told the truth about the treatments that someone wants to give to their horses, would you disagree with me? I hope not. Still, truth is a funny thing. In terms of medical treatments, it's supposed to mean something like, “In accordance with fact or reality.” But when it comes to medical treatments, people mostly use the word “truth” to mean something like, “It worked for me (and that's the truth).”

Sadly – frustratingly – medicine isn't that simple. The history of medicine is littered with treatments that people swore “worked.” They were being truthful in their thoughts, even though, in the light of hindsight, it was clear that the treatment did no good – or even did harm. For example, George Washington was most likely bled to death by his doctors. At the time, bleeding was considered a standard medical treatment – it “worked” – for something like 2,000 years. So, I think that “true” has to mean something more than, “In my experience,” or, “In my opinion.”

For example, I have absolutely no doubt that almost every time when someone tells me (or writes to me angrily) that this or that “worked” for a horse, that that person is telling me a truth – their truth. But if someone else's experience has been different – if, say, the exact same product or service hasn't done anything at all – when that person says that it hasn't done anything, he or she is telling the truth, too. So it seems to me that, in the context of treatment, there's a deeper meaning of truth, and, given that this whole discussion started with a comment from Eastern philosophy, that's probably not surprising. The deeper meaning goes beyond, “It worked for my horse.” I think that we owe it to everyone – and especially the horse – to find out if what we think is so (the truth, in some sense) is actually in accordance with fact or reality.

Now that said, one of the things that really makes me steam is the fact that there's so much stuff out there in the horse world that's just not true. Here are just a few examples:

  • Acupuncture isn't some historical tradition of treating animals in China
  • Stem cells haven't yet been shown to do anything useful for horses
  • Ribs – any bone – don't get “out of place” unless there has been serious trauma. And, when they do get knocked out of place, you can easily show that they are out of place.
  • Supplements haven't been shown to do anything to improve animal health, except in certain cases where there's a deficiency of something. In fact, in human medicine, they've been shown to be mostly useless, and they can sometimes cause harm.

To find out how deep the truth of what someone is telling you runs, ask them for the basis of their, “truth.” If they just come up with stories about how their horse was helped, or how this or that should be used because it is the “latest” treatment, I'd raise an eyebrow. You don't want your horse to just be the subject of some treatment experiment that you pay for and of which no one is keeping track. That's also not necessary or kind: to anybody. The sad thing about the horse world is that there are lots of people trying to sell you something but precious few who actually work to provide good evidence that their wares actually do anything. 

4. Does it improve upon the silence? With treatments, “silence” means, “Doing nothing.” Otherwise stated, is the product or service that is given to the horse better than just doing nothing?One of the beautiful things about treating horses is that they try to heal whatever injury they have. All biological systems have mechanisms to try to repair themselves. The goal of a medical treatment is to try to do better than the horse's body would have done on its own. If all you do is run around in circles providing treatments while the horse's body takes care of the problem – and pay for the privilege of doing so – you really haven't accomplished much.

It's a simple fact that some of the treatments being given to horses today haven't been shown to do more than the horse would do on its own. They keep getting given for a variety of reasons (hope, money, good intentions, etc). Of course, if improvement is noted while the treatment is being given, then the treatment usually gets the credit, at least for a while, at least until the next newest treatment craze comes along.

I think most people promoting this or that treatment or therapy really do want to help horses. I'm a skeptic, not a cynic. But I think you should keep Sri Baba's words in mind when you consider doing something to or for your horse. If you can't answer all four questions with a resounding, “Yes,” then maybe you should think twice.

Dr. David Ramey is a vocal advocate for the application of science to medicine, and—as such—for the welfare of the horse. Thus, he has been a frequent critic of practices that lack good science, such as the diverse therapies collectively known as “alternative” medicine, needless nutritional supplementation, or conventional therapies that lack scientific support.

This article original appeared on Dr. Ramey's website, doctorramey.com and is reprinted here with permission.

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