‘It’s Kind Of Our Breeders’ Cup’: Van Berg’s Plans For Claiming Crown Come To Fruition

When Tom Van Berg runs in the Claiming Crown Saturday at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky., it will be the culmination of a plan that started two years ago.

Van Berg had just formed his Grit To Glory Racing syndicate. He thought an achievable goal would be to get his partners to the Claiming Crown, launched 24 years ago to serve as a championship of sorts for claiming horses – a day to celebrate the workhorses and stalwarts that fill out racing programs on a daily basis across America.

The Claiming Crown became an even bigger aspiration when it was announced in July that the eight-race event would come for the first time to Churchill Downs, Van Berg's home track, after spending a decade in Florida.

“We were building for this,” Van Berg said Thursday morning. “When they announced it was coming to Churchill, it got us more excited and we tried to target it even more, to try to have a horse for each race. Unfortunately we had four of them that didn't make their spots and we have two pairs that are in the same race. But I think we still have some pretty good chances, and it should be a fun day for the group.”

Van Berg has five horses in the Claiming Crown entries for three races:

— Decision Maker (winner of eight races and $408,569) and Chicken Fried Racing's Tiz Rye Time ($290,703) in the $175,000 Jewel at 1 1/8 miles for horses that started for a claiming price of $35,000 or cheaper in 2021-2022;

— Petit Verdot (winner of a Keeneland $10,000 starter-allowance in his last start) in the $150,000 Tom Metzen Memorial Canterbury at 5 1/2 furlongs on turf for horses that started for $25,000 or less in 2021-2022;

—  Lt. Junior Grade (a $40,000 claim a month ago) and The Queens Jules (11-time winner, $361,342) in the $125,000 Rapid Transit at seven furlongs for horses that raced for $16,000 or less in 2021-2022.

Van Berg is enjoying a banner year, with career-best purse earnings of $1.15 million. He's in his fifth season with his stable since returning from a 10-year hiatus from training to help his late father, the legendary Jack Van Berg, before the Hall of Famer's death at age 81 in late 2017.

Regardless what happens Saturday, it will be a festive occasion for Van Berg, who with wife Angi rented a Churchill Downs suite to throw a client appreciation day for their owners.

“Just a thank you for supporting us and being part of this program the last two years,” Van Berg said. “It's been one of our better years. It's a fitting end. Hopefully the horses show up Saturday and help us make it that fairytale ending.”

The Claiming Crown was created by the National Horsemen's Benevolent & Protective Association (NHBPA) and the Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association (TOBA) to provide a big day for trainers and owners (and their horses) who don't play at the top end of the game. Mission accomplished, said Van Berg, who winters at Oaklawn Park and is on the board of the Arkansas HBPA.

“The way we set our syndicates up, it's a smaller group of people,” he said. “We try to keep it at 4 1/2-percent shares so we don't have to do all the licensing stuff. But we don't have access to the high-dollar horses. So what we have to do is a lot of ground work and find potential horses that fit these conditions. Then we see if they work out over the long term, and if we can improve them enough to where we have a shot in these races. It's kind of our Breeders' Cup. It's more of a blue-collar, working-class race day, and that's the kind of stable we have.

“It's a very big deal. We started (Grit To Glory) and the first horse we claimed was the last of October two years ago. I think we've pursed out nearly $1 million on an original investment of $220,000 and we still have a lot in the bank to target more horses. This could be a really big capstone at the end of this year.”

While the Claiming Crown horses ran in a certain level of claiming race at some stage, Van Berg said that certainly doesn't mean there aren't stakes-caliber runners in the fields.

“It's tougher than you think when you listen to what the concept is,” he said. “Some of these horses, they're really proven racehorses. It makes the excitement of a big day accessible to the smaller outfits — the horsemen who are in it 365 days a year and don't get the chance or the opportunity to run for those big purses or those exciting races like the larger outfits do. It's a very big compliment to the HBPA to say, hey, we're going to give back to some of the smaller outfits and smaller horsemen. They put their work in, too, so let's give them a little bit of a reward and a little chance at some excitement.”

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Riley Mott Earns First Career Victory At Churchill Downs

Riley Mott, 30-year-old son of Hall of Fame trainer William Mott, recorded his first career win from his third starter on Thursday at Churchill Downs, when the 2-year-old Union Rags filly Unifying scored a front-running victory under Florent Geroux.

Mott, who has worked as assistant to his father since 2014, announced in July that he was going out on his own with plans to set up a public stable at Oaklawn in Hot Springs, Ark., this winter. The meet begins Dec. 9 and runs through May 6.

In the meantime, Mott has started three horses at Churchill Downs, beginning with American Tattoo, who finished sixth in a Nov. 2 claiming race. His second starter, Spunk, ran third in a maiden claiming race Nov. 6 as a 6-5 favorite.

Unifying ran once for the elder Mott, finishing second in a Sept. 15 maiden race at the Belmont at the Big A meet, before being transferred to Riley Mott. His victory on Thursday was for owners Sheri Greenberg, Staghawk Stables, Tom Reiman and Ronald Johnson. Unifying, who led at every call, covered six furlongs on a fast track in 1:11.17 and paid $4.90 as the favorite in the field of nine.

The race was restricted to 2-year-old fillies that sold or were bought back for $50,000 or less at their most recent public auction. Unifying was a $32,000 Keeneland September Yearling Sale purchase from Mill Ridge Sales and earned $52,320 for the win.

“I want to be as successful as my dad,” Mott told Tom Pedulla in a Paulick Report feature earlier this year. “I walk through his office at home and he's got a trophy case on every wall. I want that for myself and for my family. It's motivation for me to hold to the standard that he's held throughout his career.”

William Mott, a South Dakota native, saddled his first winner at a small track at his home state as a 15-year-old in 1968. He became the youngest trainer to be inducted in the National Museum of Racing Hall of Fame in 1998. A three-time Eclipse Award winner who trained two-time Horse of the Year Cigar to 16 consecutive victories, Mott is coming off a Breeders' Cup where he saddled two winners – Cody's Wish in the Grade 1 Dirt Mile and Elite Power in the G1 Sprint – and Olympiad, who finished second to Flightline in the G1 Classic.

Riley Mott, born in Hollywood, Fla., will reside during the Oaklawn meet in Arkansas with wife Megan and their nearly one-year-old daughter Margot, then race on the Kentucky circuit the rest of the year.

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42 Organizations Receive Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance Accreditation

The Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance has awarded accreditations to 42 Thoroughbred aftercare organizations for 2022.

The 42 organizations include 41 previously accredited organizations and one that received accreditation for the first time. The Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance, the only accrediting body in Thoroughbred aftercare, now has a network of 81 organizations with approximately 180 facilities in North America.

“Congratulations to the 42 organizations who earned their Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance accreditation. Earning TAA accreditation is a true testament to an organization's dedication to providing the best care possible for our Thoroughbreds,” said TAA president Jeffrey Bloom.

“TAA-accreditation proves to the racing industry that its Thoroughbreds are going to the best possible aftercare organizations in North America, and although this stamp of approval is reassuring, funding is still a concern to assist these groups and the thousands of retired racehorses in their care,” Bloom added. “We encourage everyone to support the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance and its 81 accredited charities.”

The 42 organizations earning accreditation this year are: After the Races, Bright Futures Farm, Inc., CANTER Kentucky, CANTER Michigan, Caribbean Thoroughbred Aftercare, Center for Racehorse Retraining, Central Kentucky Riding For Hope, Days End Farm Horse Rescue, Down The Stretch Ranch, Equestrian Inc., Equine Advocates Inc., Equine Rescue & Adoption Foundation, Final Furlong, Inc., Finger Lakes Thoroughbred Adoption Program, Friends of Ferdinand, Inc., Galloping Out, Harmony and Hope Horse Haven, Inc., Healing Arenas, Inc., Heart of Phoenix Equine Rescue, Hidden Acres Rescue for Thoroughbreds, Hope's Legacy Equine Rescue, Illinois Equine Humane Center, Lollypop Farm, Mitchell Farm Equine Retirement, Inc., NEER North, Our Mims Retirement Haven, Inc., Out Side In, Inc., R.A.C.E. Fund, Inc., Remember Me Rescue, RVR Horse Rescue, Sandia Creek Ranch Auxiliary Foundation, Second Call Thoroughbred Adoption and Placement, Inc., Second Chance Thoroughbreds, Inc., Second Stride, Inc, Square Peg Foundation, The Foxie G Foundation, The Susan S. Donaldson Foundation, This Old Horse, Inc., Thoroughbred Athletes, Inc., Tranquility Farm – The Harry A. Biszantz Memorial Center for Thoroughbred Retirement, TRRAC Thoroughbred Retirement, Rehabilitation, and Careers, War Horses at Rose Bower.

Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance-accredited organizations undergo a thorough application and inspection process prior to accreditation being awarded to ensure they meet the TAA Code of Standards, which covers five key areas: operations, education, horse health care management, facility standards and services, and adoption policies and protocols. Facility inspections are conducted at all facilities housing Thoroughbreds for each organization. Ongoing updates and re-inspections are required of all organizations as a condition of accreditation.

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“As the TAA's 10th year of service comes to a close, we are grateful for the 81 accredited organizations who will move with us into the new year to continue the TAA's mission to retrain, retire, and rehome Thoroughbreds once their involvement in the racing industry comes to a close,” said Janice Towles, TAA accreditation and grants manager.

“I would also like to extend my heartfelt thanks to those that contributed to the TAA's accreditation process, Towles added. “The TAA Accreditation Committee which met weekly for the last six months, TAA Accreditation Committee chair Kristin Werner, TAA inspection coordinator Suzie Picou-Oldham, and the dozens of individuals across North America who perform facility inspections, many of whom give their time and resources to the TAA for free.”

All organizations that hold Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance accreditation are eligible to receive financial grants to support the care of their Thoroughbreds. Grant applications are currently being reviewed and the total grant amount awarded by the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance will be announced this month. Since 2012, the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance has awarded $24.5 million to accredited organizations.

The full list of 81 organizations, information about the accreditation process, and the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance's Code of Standards can be found on ThoroughbredAftercare.org.

Based in Lexington, Ky., the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit that accredits, inspects, and awards grants to approved aftercare organizations to retrain, rehome, and retire Thoroughbreds using industry-wide funding. Along with continued funding from its original partners Breeders' Cup, The Jockey Club, and Keeneland Association, the TAA is supported by owners, trainers, breeders, racetracks, aftercare professionals, and other industry members. Since inception in 2012, the TAA has granted more than $24.5 million to accredited aftercare organizations. Currently 81 aftercare organizations comprised of approximately 180 facilities across North America have been granted accreditation.

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