Irish Hill And Dutchess Views Stallions Releases 2023 Roster, Fess

Irish Hill & Dutchess Views Stallions LLC announced 2023 Stud Fees for the New York stallions they will manage.

An addition to this season's roster is multiple graded stakes winning millionaire, Warrior's Charge. He will give New York Breeders access to the speedy Munnings sire line in the form of a proven two turn horse.

From a physical perspective, Brad Cox calls Warrior's Charge “…a very well-built horse, with great bone and very sound throughout his entire career.” On the track, Cox reports “Warrior's Charge was a very good horse from day one. He had speed, he could carry around two turns, and was competitive at the top level.”

As of this release, two stallions on the roster are ranked among the top three stallions in New York. With just three crops to race, War Dancer is currently ranked second and sired 2022 graded stakes winner Dancing Buck to boost his already impressive resume.

Perennial top New York sire, Big Brown is currently ranked number three. He is represented by Somelikeithotbrown, who notched another graded stakes win in 2022 and is the leading money earner amongst New York-sired runners.

King for a Day, who sired the top selling New York-sired weanling at the October Saratoga sale ($130,000) will stand his third season after covering 147 mares in his first two seasons. Multiple Grade 1-placed millionaire and Kentucky Derby runner-up, Lookin at Lee will return for his third year at stud representing the Lookin at Lucky sire line.

Waiting, the only son of Triple Crown winner American Pharoah standing in the eastern part of the U.S, returns for his second year. Waiting comes from a powerful female family, including his second dam, Eclipse Award winner, Wait a While.

The 2023 stud fees will be:

War Dancer – $7,500
Big Brown – $5,000
King for a Day – $5,000
Warrior's Charge (NEW) – $5,000 (Please inquire about lifetime breeding rights)
Lookin at Lee – $2,500
Waiting – $2,500

Irish Hill and Dutchess Views Stallions LLC will continue to work closely with breeders by offering incentives for qualifying mares and multiple mare discounts across the entire roster.

Irish Hill & Dutchess Views Stallions LLC will hold its stallion show this year on Saturday, Dec. 10, to coincide with the New York Thoroughbred Breeders Inc. Holiday Party later that evening. Follow the farm on Facebook (@IrishHillandDutchessViewsStallionsLLC) and Twitter (@IHDVStallions) for further details. The farm will be holding the annual stallion show raffle for a free season to each stallion as well as offering special stallion show pricing.

The stallions are available for inspection by potential breeders on request.

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Who Bears Compliance Responsibility if WV Can’t Hire HIWU Vets?

Facing a dire shortage of veterinarians at the state's two Thoroughbred tracks and under deadline pressure to decide whether to enter into a voluntary implementation agreement with the Horseracing Integrity and Welfare Unit (HIWU) prior to that entity's Jan. 1 start date, the West Virginia Racing Commission (WVRC) on Monday pressed a representative of HIWU for clarity on who, exactly, will bear responsibility if the minimum required number of equine drug testing employees can't be hired within the next six weeks.

It took some polite but persistent questioning by commissioner J.B. Akers to get an answer to that question. But Alex Waldrop, the recently retired National Thoroughbred Racing Association chief executive who now works as an advisor to HIWU, eventually conceded that “the burden right now is on HIWU.”

Akers had wanted assurance that West Virginia's racing wouldn't be subject to a shutdown if neither the commission nor the tracks could fill the federally required positions related to the coming of HIWU, an overarching national concern that has ramifications beyond just Mountaineer Park and Charles Town Races.

“I have a hard time believing that we're alone on this issue,” Akers said. “If it's only a few jurisdictions that's one thing. But if it's a substantial number of jurisdictions [that can't meet the staffing statute], I think that frames the issue a little differently.”

HIWU is the entity that will operate HISA's anti-doping program. HISA creates the rules HIWU will enforce.

In October, the WVRC, like racing commissions other states, was notified of the details of the combined agreements that HISA and HIWU want racing jurisdictions to either accept or decline prior to the Jan. 1 implementation date. Commissions and/or tracks have already been assessed costs for the 2023 operations of the two programs; if states opt-in to the agreements and pay some of the costs up front, their assessments will be reduced.

Joe Moore, the WVRC's executive director, said his state is already operating under a modified 2022 agreement with HISA on its racetrack safety program. He explained that he would like the proposed combined 2023 HISA and HIWU agreements split into two separate ones because the safety standards are a “much smoother agreement to extend [but] I believe the HIWU agreement is going to be a much heavier lift.”

At a time when the hiring marketplace is fierce nationwide and Mountaineer and Charles Town already find it difficult to obtain veterinary help, Moore stated it would be next to impossible for West Virginia to go out and hire at least 12 new people to work in drug testing oversight, which according to the incoming HIWU rules must consist of at least one veterinarian, a veterinary technician, a test barn supervisor, and five assistants at each track.

“I will tell you that neither of West Virginia's two test barns are anywhere close to this minimum,” Moore said.

“At Charles Town we have a vet supervisor who conducts our blood draw, two full-time assistants for urine collections, and a part-time assistant. Charles Town has one vet that does the pre-race and nightly card at the same time. We do not have a dedicated vet for the test barn, and we do not have a licensed vet tech,” Moore said.

“At Mountaineer Park, you have a licensed vet tech and three [per-diem] vet assistants for urine collection. Mountaineer Park has one vet for pre-race and nightly racing and no vet dedicated to the test barn,” Moore said.

Moore said one idea could be for the WVRC to staff the positions as best as it can, then ask HIWU to “fill in the gaps” while rebating the state for the positions West Virginia pays to cover.

“Or HIWU may take the stance of, 'You don't have enough [staff]. We're going to take over the whole operation,'” Moore postulated.

Another option, Moore said, would be to see if HIWU would be amenable to compromising on some of the required test barn positions by reducing or eliminating them.

Waldrop said that third option isn't likely to happen: “I don't think there is much, if any, leeway in [eliminating] the individual positions that need to be filled on a daily basis at West Virginia racetracks.”

But Waldrop did add that, “I do think that a cooperative effort between West Virginia and HIWU is the best way to go forward here. But I can't deliver that today. I can't promise that will be the case.”

Akers asked Moore if it would even be possible for the WVRC to post the jobs, interview candidates, perform background checks, and hire and train them prior to the Jan. 1, 2023, deadline.

Moore replied, “Commissioner, this couldn't be done by January of 2028. The racing commission does not have the funding to hire 12 additional personnel on a full-time basis.”

Willing and available veterinarians, Moore added, “don't exist out there right now.”

Waldrop explained that HISA and HIWU could assist with hiring by tapping into the resources of Drug Free Sport International, which has been hired to build HISA's independent Anti-Doping and Medication Control enforcement agency.

But while technicians and specimen collectors can be more easily trained to do their jobs, Waldrop admitted that, “The veterinary aspects are the most challenging. And I can tell you that HIWU is well aware of that, and they've been aware of that for some time. That's probably the biggest hurdle that they see in the near term. And they certainly intend to be prepared on Jan. 1.”

Waldrop continued: “Vets are hard to come by anywhere in the country right now, though, so I'm not going to sit here and say West Virginia is entirely unique. Equine vets [who are] familiar with the racetrack, that's a challenge. But it's one that HIWU has accepted, and they are confident that they can meet it.”

Akers then again prompted Waldrop to clarify who'd be held responsible if that didn't happen.

“Is it going to be HIWU's position, if, you know, that the state of West Virginia is out of compliance and it's our fault this didn't happen?” Akers asked. “Or is HIWU going to take responsibility and say that [the WVRC] made reasonable attempts and couldn't find the personnel to hire?  Or is our racing jurisdiction going to be allegedly out of compliance with the statutory scheme, and therefore threatened by you with regard to whether we're even allowed to race or not?”

Waldrop replied that, “At this point in time, 'Who's out of compliance?' is an issue we could debate. But I think from the industry standpoint, it's HIWU's intention to be up and running and prepared to go Jan. 1.”

Waldrop continued: “One of the challenges you have in West Virginia [is] that you don't have the budgetary resources to hire these individuals…and I respect [and] understand that. HIWU doesn't have that challenge. HIWU has the financial resources to hire these people. So it's one of those hurdles that can be overcome because HIWU has that ability…. HIWU is part of Drug Free Sport, which is an international organization which has massive resources, financial as well as personnel, that they can draw upon.”

Akers said that it was his understanding that HIWU, HISA and Drug Free Sport don't currently have any regulatory veterinarians on staff.

“You're correct,” Waldrop answered. “You're focusing on exactly the right point, which is the challenge here is reg vets. The other positions we will provide. The reg vets are the challenge.”

But Akers still hadn't received a direct answer to his compliance question, so he respectfully but emphatically asked a third time if West Virginia was at risk of having its racing shut down over not having the required HIWU hires in place.

“I don't think that last scenario is going to occur, sir,” Waldrop replied. “HIWU will work with HISA, and do their level best to keep racing going in West Virginia without interruption to provide the staff that's necessary…So I would say to you that the burden right now is on HIWU to be prepared on Jan. 1.”

Akers said he appreciated that answer, adding that while he understood that Waldrop isn't a HIWU executive, he did want the minutes of the meeting to reflect that the HIWU advisor had articulated that “the burden should be presently on HIWU to make sure that these requirements are implemented by Jan. 1 to the extent that those are their mandates.”

In light of a long list of questions that Akers said he still had about entering into a voluntary HIWU agreement for 2023, Waldrop offered to set up a conference meeting in about two weeks between HIWU's executive director and general counsel and any interested West Virginia racing stakeholders and commission members.

The commission ended up taking no action on Monday on either opting into or out of the HISA and HIWU agreements for 2023.

The post Who Bears Compliance Responsibility if WV Can’t Hire HIWU Vets? appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Tom Amoss Announces Filly’s DQ due to ‘Possible Accidental Cross-Contamination’

In a couple of tweets posted to his Twitter account Nov. 13, conditioner Tom Amoss announced that his filly Catwings (Cupid) would be disqualified from her maiden-breaking victory June 23 at Horseshoe Indianapolis due to testing 60 parts per trillion above the threshold of 20 parts per trillion for permissible medication. He did not state what the medication in question was but does include that the stewards reduced his suspension from 15 days to seven after they independently recognized it was a possible case of accidental cross-contamination. Catwings won the contest by two lengths as the even-money favorite, but shows as being disqualified to last in her lifetime record as of this posting.

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Online Auction Coincides With Nov. 18 Backside Learning Center Fundraiser At Churchill Downs

The Backside Learning Center (BLC) – an independent non-profit organization providing support and resources in a safe, welcoming environment for the diverse community of racetrack workers and their families – will hold its largest annual fundraiser, “The 16th Annual Benefit for the Backside: A Day at the Races”, on Friday, Nov. 18, at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky. The event will be emceed by famous local personalities Bill Menish and Kevin Harned.

This is a sold-out event. However, the BLC is hosting an online, silent auction consisting of many unique horse racing, and other hard to find items including a Kentucky Oaks box for 6, a speakeasy tasting tour at Evan Williams bourbon for 20, a morning on the backstretch with Jockey Ferrin Peterson, top-shelf bourbon packages and much more. In addition, The BLC will conduct a “Derby Week Suite for 40” raffle drawing including food and drink (a $7,500 value.)

The BLC plans to host several Facebook Lives at the event to present their transformative work with equine workers and families. They will also recognize members of the community who have demonstrated an extraordinary level of dedication to the BLC's mission.

The major sponsors for the Benefit for the Backside include Rocket Ship Racing, LLC and Clarendon Flavors.

“This event is a great and fun opportunity to gather those who believe in our mission, and who want to support those who play such a vital role in the success of the horse racing industry,” said executive director Sherry Stanley. “The Backside is such a vibrant and diverse community right in the heart of the city that most people never think about. We serve the hundreds of workers and their children who are members of our community and who will soon be our next generation of leaders.”

To participate in the online silent auction, purchase a Derby Week Suite for 40 raffle ticket, donate and more, visit: www.benefitforthebackside.com

The post Online Auction Coincides With Nov. 18 Backside Learning Center Fundraiser At Churchill Downs appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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