‘Lots Of Things To Be Excited About’: Norm Casse Looks To Continue Success At Second Oaklawn Meet

Trainer Norm Casse's first starter of the 2022-2023 Oaklawn meeting finished like most of his runners from the 2021-2022 meeting. Yacht Rock hit the board in last Sunday's sixth race, finishing third in the maiden-claiming sprint for 2-year-olds.

Highlighted by Pretty Birdie's victory in the $150,000 Purple Martin Stakes for 3-year-old female sprinters, Casse produced a sparkling 5-8-3 record from 21 starts in his Oaklawn debut last season. Casse has 20 stalls in his return to Oaklawn, which launched its 2022-2023 meeting Dec. 9.

“I hate to say stronger, but it's different,” Casse said during training hours Monday morning at Oaklawn. “These are the 2-year-olds that we're really excited about. Last year, we brought a bunch of claiming horses and we were aggressive and things like that. This is different. I don't have a bunch of claimers here. I have, to me, our best group of horses here. I'm trying to support Oaklawn. They've been very good to me and I'm excited. We'll see how it pans out.”

Casse said some of his most promising 2-year-olds are for a new client, prominent Arkansas owners Alex and JoAnn Lieblong. Alex Lieblong is chairman of the Arkansas Racing Commission.

Casse's first starter for the Lieblongs, Easy Action, finished second in his Sept. 17 career debut at Churchill Downs. The ultra-live maiden special weight sprint was won by Loggins, who returned to finish second, beaten a neck, by probable champion 2-year-old male Forte in the $600,000 Breeders' Futurity (G1) at 1 1/16 miles Oct. 8 at Keeneland.

Easy Action finished fourth in his last start, a Nov. 19 maiden special weight sprint at Churchill Downs. A son of sprint champion Speightstown, Easy Action was purchased for $300,000 at the 2021 Keeneland September Yearling Sale.

“Easy Action, he's had some really bad luck,” Casse said. “Ran second to Loggins and then every time we entered him, he would get excluded or would be stuck on the also-eligible list. By the time we did get to run him back, hadn't ran in two months and he had a bunch of easy works going into it. I feel like he was just short when he ran back.”

Casse also trains 2-year-old fillies Effortlesslyelgant (by Liam's Map) and Goldenshuga (Goldencents) for the Lieblongs. The horses were purchased at auction for $475,000 and $400,000, respectively. Goldenshuga is unraced. Effortlesslyelgant finished fourth in her Nov. 23 career debut at Churchill Downs.

“She just had a terrible trip first time out and still almost won, regardless,” Casse said. “So, we're excited about her.”

Casse bids for his second career Oaklawn stakes victory in Saturday's $150,000 Poinsettia for female sprinters with Pretty Birdie. David Cabrera, Oaklawn's co-leading jockey in 2021-2022, is named to ride. Cabrera was aboard for Pretty Birdie's Purple Martin victory last March.

“She's breezed extremely well leading into this,” Casse said. “I'm extremely excited to run her. She clearly likes Oaklawn. David gets along with her really well. He rides her back and there's a lot of things to be excited about.”

Casse, who saddled his first winner in 2018, also has 20 horses at Fair Grounds. Casse is the son of United States and Canadian Hall of Fame trainer Mark Casse.

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‘Matured’ Pappacap Seeking Comeback Race Before Pegasus

Rustlewood Farm, Inc.'s Grade 2-winning homebred colt Pappacap, unraced since late July, continues to work for his return and a possible start in the $3 million Pegasus World Cup Invitational (G1) Jan. 28 at Gulfstream Park.

A 3-year-old son of 2017 champion older horse and Horse of the Year Gun Runner, who captured the 2018 Pegasus in his career finale, Pappacap has had three timed breezes since mid-November, the most recent a five-furlong move in 1:00.65 Dec. 10 at Palm Meadows, Gulfstream's satellite training facility in Palm Beach County.

“He's been training great. It's great to have him back,” Hall of Fame trainer Mark Casse's assistant, Nick Tomlinson, said. “He looks like he's matured now, and he looks fantastic out there.”

Pappacap is among 29 nominees to the $100,000 Tropical Park Derby for 3-year-olds scheduled to go 1 1/16 miles on Gulfstream's new turf course. The grandson of Scat Daddy – who swept the Fountain of Youth (G2) and Florida Derby (G1) in 2007 at Gulfstream – has never raced on grass.

“There's the Tropical Park Derby … that's not necessarily where we want to run, but he's a two-other-than, so if we don't run him before January he has to run against older horses,” Tomlinson said. “We're not really sure if we want to do that, either, so we're just kind of weighing our options.

“He's going to need to run in a race before we even think about the Pegasus,” he added. “That's the only way we're going to be able to do it.”

Pappacap has raced in 10 consecutive graded stakes since breaking his maiden sprinting at five furlongs at Gulfstream in May 2021. He won the Best Pal (G2) at Del Mar second time out and finished second in the American Pharoah (G1) and Breeders' Cup Juvenile (G1) to round out his rookie season.

This year Pappacap is winless in six tries, running second in the Woody Stephens (G1) and Pat Day Mile (G2), third in the Lecomte (G3) and fourth in the Florida Derby. He hasn't started since finishing fourth behind Gunite in the July 31 Amsterdam (G2).

After some time off, Pappacap returned to the work tab in mid-November and had a pair of breezes at Casse's training center in Ocala before rejoining the main string at Palm Meadows.

“When he came back for the Florida Derby, he kind of looked like the same horse that we had as a 2-year-old. He may have gotten a little bit bigger and little bit longer, but nothing really changed on him,” Tomlinson said. “Now that he's back here, he looks like a man now. Hopefully heading into his 4-year-old year, he'll start to really develop.”

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Open Letter to the Industry: We’ll Push for Positive Change, Flawed HISA is Not Answer

The National HBPA was approached by trainers Wesley Ward and Larry Rivelli to help facilitate this open letter to the industry. While this is being distributed by the National HBPA, which also assisted in putting the letter together, the sentiments are those of trainers Wesley Ward, Larry Rivelli and the undersigned horsemen and racing participants. They encourage others who agree with this letter to add their name by using the link here and below. More than 400 have signed up in 24 hours just from word of mouth. Because of time constraints, not all the names have been uploaded to the document (linked to here and elsewhere)–but they will be.

We, the undersigned, commit to being part of the solution in making the industry we love better, safer and improved for the three entities that make it all possible: horseplayers, horse owners and especially the horses.

In that regard, we believe the Horse Racing Integrity & Safety Act and the private Authority to which it delegates governmental powers has too many flaws, missteps and costs that could have been averted with true inclusion and transparency in its development.

Time and time again over the last several years, trainers have been asked to change. When those changes were for the good of the horse and the industry, we changed and adapted without any questioning. We now need to rally together for additional true, positive and lasting change for the good then we are ready to do just that.

However, meaningful change cannot be accomplished until the leadership of all stakeholders have real representation at the table–and from the beginning. That includes the National HBPA, America's largest organization representing Thoroughbred owners and trainers; the Association of Racing Commissioners International, whose years of hard work on model rules should be the starting point rather than largely ignored; the racetrack veterinarians, and the Jockeys' Guild.

We have the opportunity now to get this right, with the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals unanimously ruling HISA unconstitutional and the Federal Trade Commission declining to approve HISA's drug and medication rules that were to go into effect Jan. 1.

HISA is a wake-up call for the hard work of transformative change, though it is unfair to say there has been no change over the past couple of decades. There is far more uniformity than differences among racing jurisdictions.

Horsemen, including the National HBPA and its affiliates, have championed uniform rules based on science for years. Change in horse racing has come rapidly when it makes sense and truly is for the better of the industry. How quickly did it take us to get rid of anabolic steroids? Very.

We know horsemen can no longer sit on the sidelines, as many have done in the past, to now get this done right. We need to speak up, because we are experiencing the consequences when we do not.

We are extremely concerned about the price tag of HISA threatening to put small tracks and small stables out of business because, simply put, they cannot afford the cost. Horse racing cannot survive on only the largest circuits and with only the largest stables. We need venues for all classes of horses and all sizes of stables in order to support a healthy, sustainable Thoroughbred industry.

Small tracks and stables are a vital part of American racing's fabric, developing race fans and generations of future horsemen, and should not be considered as simply collateral damage.

Among other things we believe should be part of the dialogue as we work together:

There must be transparency and representation in both developing and executing the rules.

We, too, want stiff penalties for those succeeding in or attempting to circumvent the rules. But we also believe in due process.

Drug and medication policies that reflect the world in which we live, including the reality of environmental transfer and contamination of impermissible substances in trace levels that don't impact a horse's performance. We need to take a page from human testing, with reasonable, science-based screening levels.

“Gotcha” chemistry–finding a substance in single-digit picograms (parts per trillion) because today's advance testing can–that ensnares innocent parties is not helpful. One source of any negative public perception of racing is because some in leadership have conflated beneficial therapeutic medications with illegal drugs.

Horsemen and jockeys must have more say in developing safety rules, including crop regulations. While science is important, racing will only benefit from policies that allow for input from horsemen and veterinarians in the trenches.

We don't need cost-prohibitive government overreach with burdensome paperwork that takes away from what should be our main focus: our horses.

We, the undersigned, are committing today to push our fellow horsemen, racetracks and racing regulators to unite for positive, inclusive change. We've gotten our wake-up call. We look forward to working with the other stakeholders in our great industry for change done right.

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Tattersalls Online Topped By Media Naranja

Tom Malone Bloodstock purchased Media Naranja (Ire) (Yeats {Ire}) (lot 48) for 110,000gns and take top honours during the Tattersalls Online December Sale, which ended on Thursday. A winner of her only start, at Craon on Dec. 4, the bay filly was offered by trainer Hugo Merienne. She is a half-sister to Grade 2 winner Mossy Fen (Ire) (Milan {GB}).

Merienne “Media Naranja was very impressive on her first run, and I am sure she will have a brilliant future. She is jumping like a stag and she showed her class first time out on the Flat, she will have no problem to do a great novice season I am sure. She hasn't finished growing and I don't think we have seen half of what she will be able to do in the future. I wish a lot of luck to her new owner, but I don't think luck will be needed.”

Lot 85, Sophie (GB) (Farhh {GB}) in foal to Aclaim (Ire), hammered to Hugo Merry Bloodstock for 90,000gns. Consigned by Higher Eastington Stables, she is a half-sister to this term's G1 1000 Guineas heroine Cachet (Ire) (Aclaim {Ire}).

A breeding right in smart first-season sire Cracksman (GB) (lot 83) made 78,000gns also to Hugo Merry Bloodstock. The three-time Group 1 winner is the sire of G2 Premio Dormello winner Aloa (GB), Listed Star S. heroine Dance In The Grass (GB), and the German listed-placed Crackovia (GB) among his 17 first-crop winners.

Whispering Royal (Ire) (Gustav Klimt {Ire}) was knocked down to Tom Malone for 75,000gns. Sold as lot 58 from Barry Fitzgerald's Old Leighlin Stables, the juvenile colt won on debut in Dundalk in November. His dam is a full-sister to Hong Kong Champion Miler Bullish Luck (Royal Academy), and a half-brother to the dam of GII John Henry Turf Championship S. and two-time GII San Marcos S. winner Slim Shadey (GB) (Val Royal {Fr}), who was also placed twice at Grade I level Stateside.

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