Voss: Arizona Officials Don’t Give A Damn About Protecting Claiming Horses

Sometime last week, a group of signs were printed out and taped to doors at the racing office and onto the claim box at Turf Paradise.

“CLAIMS CANNOT AND WILL NOT BE VOIDED,” several read.

One reprinted the state statute language regarding claims, leaving no doubt at all about the policy.

“A claimed horse shall race for the account of the horse's original owner but title to the horse shall transfer to the claimant when the horse becomes a starting horse. After title to the horse transfers to the claimant, the claimant becomes the owner of the horse regardless of whether it is alive or dead, sound or unsound, or injured before, during, or after the claiming race.”

The signs were posted by Racing Division staff, though a spokesman for the Arizona Department of Gaming did not provide an explanation of what prompted them to reiterate the rule at this particular moment.

The void claim rule has been a point of discussion in Arizona for many years now. Most recently it's been brought up in context of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority. Part of the Authority's racetrack safety regulations is a void claim rule, nationalizing something that many states have been doing for years. The national void claim rule voids the claim of a horse who dies or is euthanized on track, is vanned off, is determined within one hour of the race to be lame or to have bled, or has a positive test for a prohibited substance. (Most states didn't previously void claims for bleeding or post-race medication positives, but did if a horse dies, is vanned off, or is put on a veterinarian's list for unsoundness immediately after the race.)

This isn't a controversial concept for most people in the racing industry. The goal is to reduce the incentive for bad actors to drop horses they know are lame into cheap races where an unsuspecting colleague may claim them, thinking they're getting a bargain. It's also a pretty basic attempt at improving safety for jockeys; if a trainer can no longer get a sore poor performer off his books by running it in a race, then a jockey won't be on a compromised horse at elevated risk of breakdown. A void claim rule can help improve trainers' confidence when dropping a claim, which should reduce a barrier to commerce. It should also improve horseplayers' confidence, because if a trainer has a reduced incentive to enter a sore loser, it's less likely a bettor will unknowingly put money on one.

Do I need to point out that anything that reduces on-track injury in this, the year 2022, is a good thing for horse racing in general?

Apparently I do, because this is Arizona, and from where I'm sitting 1,800 miles away, no one in a position of power gives a damn about protecting claiming horses there.

I'll tell you what they do give a damn about, though. Asserting their independence against the new Authority.

Arizona is, to my knowledge, the only state that has so far been cited by the Authority for unvoiding a voided claim under the national rules. On July 23, a horse named Ag Minister cooled out lame in the test barn, so the Authority steward on duty at Arizona Downs began the process of voiding the claim. He was notified by chief state steward Jason Hart that the claim would not be voided, under orders of his supervisors at the commission.

As of Dec. 14, Ag Minister has neither raced nor recorded a workout since being claimed by Justin Evans from that July 23 race.

Read more about the unvoided void here.

 

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Arizona is one of a number of states whose HBPA affiliate has gone to court to contest the constitutionality of the Authority. I don't pretend to have an opinion on the Authority's constitutionality, and I also don't pretend that I have zero concerns about the complexities of trying to create a central authority from scratch. But let's be honest – constitutionality isn't really what upsets racing participants in Arizona, is it?

I saw a Facebook post from an Arizona racing participant praising the legal blow dealt to the Authority by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, which found the law creating HISA unconstitutional. Lots of people on social media celebrated the setback for a lot of different reasons, some of which I understand. But this one, coming from this state, killed me.

“Awesome! We don't need anyone else telling us how to run racing in Arizona!” was the gist.

Ask Creative Plan how he feels about the job Arizona has been doing on its own.

The 5-year-old gelding by Creative Cause died in February this year, weeks after his last race at Turf Paradise, where he exited a claiming race unsound. Veterinarians who examined him afterwards uncovered multiple serious chronic issues, and the trainer who claimed the gelding (and of course was stuck with him) said the horse was entered in his last race in some condition of soreness, according to his communication with the previous conditioner. After weeks of walking on two front legs with serious damage, he was euthanized with swollen, misshapen fetlocks whose suspensory ligaments had given way, dropping his ankles toward the dirt. Every step he took would have brought extreme pain.

It's hard to know, but a void claim rule may have disincentivized Creative Plan's last trainer from entering him, knowing that not only had the horse not been competitive since August 2021, but he also had no chance at getting paid to empty out the stall.

Oh, but take heart – the commission tells me that they have, as of Dec. 1, 2022, submitted a noticed of proposed rulemaking to the Arizona Secretary of State, the first in a multi-step process to possibly get a void claim rule of some kind on the books…eventually.

(I asked for a copy of the draft rule language and was told it would be available on the commission's website “soon.”)

A former commissioner told me that he first began formally calling for a void claim rule in the state in 2019 and was repeatedly told that it wasn't possible to do any new rulemaking through the governor's office. In Arizona, the state legislature could, however, have passed a rule change if the commission or another interest group had brought them one. No one did.

Back in 2019, Turf Paradise, to its credit, created a house rule to void claims. But when trainer Robert Lucas tried to invoke the rule after claiming a lame horse, state stewards told him the track's rule conflicted with the state statute and as such was unenforceable. Turf Paradise dropped the rule, realizing it had no teeth, and everything continued as it always had.

Void claim rules first went into effect in California (just west of Arizona but really a whole other world) more than a decade ago. Data from the Equine Injury Database supports the assertion that void claim rules make racing safer and has done so since 2019. It's hard to imagine that after so many years of stuffing its fingers in its ears, the commission is honestly going to make this change on its own, but heaven forbid a national law drag it into the modern era.

Of course, it looks like that won't happen now. The Authority is fighting challenges on all sides, thanks in part to groups like the horsemen of Arizona. It sounds like they couldn't be more thrilled.

So keep your independence, folks. And god help your horses.

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‘Knowing How Far This Horse Has Come’ Leads To Picture-Perfect First Win For Trainer Jennifer Stein

Jennifer Stein was, at least outwardly, far less restrained than those standing behind her, and the jockey aboard the eye-catching chestnut colt.

Standing in the owner's box in the Woodbine grandstand for the first race on Nov. 27, the trainer of Thebackstretchdude, a son of Old Forester, watched intently as the gates opened on a rainy afternoon at the Toronto oval.

Dialed-in on the horse with the yellow saddle cloth and the jockey wearing the blue silks with white stars, Stein couldn't help but notice the emphatic voices less than an arm's length away from where she stood.

“They were screaming from the time the race started,” recalled Stein, of owner Isaac Waxman and his wife, Tess. “That emotion, it really is what this sport is all about. They're Standardbred owners and trainers, and this was their first Thoroughbred win, so it's a different kind of rush for them.”

And, also for the woman who handed the reins of the Ontario-bred to her husband, top Woodbine rider Justin Stein.

A length clear after the opening quarter of the 5 ½-furlong maiden race on the Tapeta, Thebackstretchdude repelled a brief outside challenge running on the turn and then widened his advantage to 2 ½ lengths at the stretch call.

At the wire, the slight 5-2 choice was 1 ¼ lengths clear of his nearest rival, a victory punctuated by Stein, the rider, turning his head towards the grandstand, broad smile on his face, and right index finger pointing at the rookie gelding.

Stein, the trainer, couldn't have penned a better script for her first training win.

“The owners, they weren't expecting him to win. There was a time when they weren't even expecting him to make the races. I kept it quiet the closer he got to racing.”

An understandable approach after the up and down journey Thebackstretchdude took to get to the starting gate.

A $3,000 purchase by Waxman and Stein at the 2021 CTHS (Ontario Division) Canadian-bred Yearling Sale, the horse, bred by Anthony B. Russo & Leslie L. Russo, would need some time before making it to the races was even a consideration.

“There was a lot of touch and go with him, so we turned him out. We pushed on and took it day by day. I never got too excited about it [making it to the races] because I knew anything could happen on any day. They will be able to tell you when they are ready to go.”

In the days leading up to 1:21 p.m., just over two weeks ago, Thebackstretchdude had given every indication to his connections that he was indeed ready.

“I love the fact that it was him that gave me my first training win. That made it even more special. You look back to how things all started, and it really does become something you never will never forget.”

Horses and horse racing are in Stein's DNA.

Growing up in Vancouver, she was introduced to Thoroughbreds through her parents, both of them well-known names at Hastings Racecourse.

“My parents, Floyd Tompkins and Mary-Anne Baumgartner, both trained and were both jockeys before they became trainers. My grandpa was also a trainer. It goes way back in our family. So, I fell in love with racing when I was just a kid.”

At that time in her life, only one other pursuit matched strides with her affinity for horses.

“Soccer and horses were what I lived and breathed. I played on some pretty competitive soccer teams. We were undefeated in two or three seasons. We won Coastal Cup championships a couple of times.”

Stein soon found success off the pitch.

And it came on the hooves of a multiple graded stakes winner, who made his mark in both Canada and the U.S.

A dark bay son of City Zip, Alert Bay would carve out a brilliant career, one that yielded a record of 15-8-5 from 36 starts, along with $1,342,813 in career earnings.

“I was lucky enough to groom him,” recalled Stein. “He was a colt my dad and I broke together. He ended up racing in California and then came back to me. He won the [Grade 3] BC Derby and the [Grade 3] BC Premier's, and he went on to win another four graded stakes in California. That horse was pretty special.”

In 2012, Stein came to Woodbine and started working in the barn of Steve Attard, the same year her future husband would win the Queen's Plate (now known as the King's Plate) with Strait of Dover.

Three years later, Stein headed to Europe.

“I went to France in 2015. I kind of bounced around. I was at Woodbine for two seasons – groomed a nice filly, Tahnee, as a 2-year-old for Steve – and then went back to Hastings, where we won the BC Derby with Alert Bay. Then I went to France for three months, under contract, to work with a steeplechase and flat trainer, John Hammond. He had a filly, Yaazy (IRE), come over to Woodbine to race in the E.P. Taylor Stakes. I galloped her in France, so when she came here, it was really neat to see her run.”

In 2016, Stein worked as assistant to Woodbine trainer and fellow British Columbia native Lorne Richards.

Learning the ropes from the veteran conditioner proved to be a game changer in her pursuit of a training career.

Advice was plentiful and welcomed.

“From Lorne, I learned to just be patient, that if your horses do come around, they will run for you. Just be patient and do right by them. I learned that from other trainers too, to put the long, slow miles into them.”

Stein's plans were put on hold, temporarily, after she gave birth to the couple's first child, a son, Benjamin, on May 15, 2020.

In the spring of 2022, she returned to Woodbine, this time with her trainer's license, after working in Florida over the winter with Justin for Canadian Horse Racing Hall of Fame trainer Josie Carroll.

On November 4, she saddled her first starter, Dreamingof Jeannie, a 3-year-old daughter of Frost Giant.

Under jockey Leo Salles, the chestnut filly finished third, a head back of the runner-up, in the 1 1/16-mile Tapeta race at Woodbine.

“She's a neat, little filly. She came from Fort Erie and they sent her here for some longer races. She had some things going on with her, but we got them sorted out, and she ran so well. She'll love grass and the farther, the better. It was nice to have her run third. We were really happy.”

Just over three weeks later, that happiness was usurped by Thebackstretchdude's milestone score.

The finish of the race remains etched in her mind.

“Justin gallops him every day and breezes him for all those breezes. He had a lot to do with the victory. It was special to him, and I think everyone saw that the way he patted him and celebrated at the wire. It was also nice to have my best friend, Holly [Murray] be part of it. We worked together out in Vancouver, we won the BC Derby together, our parents raced horses together. It was cool that she had paddocked for me that day.”

With the 2022 Woodbine Thoroughbred season having reached the finish line, Stein will take some time to decompress before turning her thoughts to next year's meet, one with a proposed starting date of April 22.

Plans, both in the short and long term, are already in place.

“I'd like to start next season with seven or eight, and by the end of year have 10 decent horses to go away with for the winter, to stable somewhere south and race the whole year. That's my main goal. Winning an Ontario Sales Stakes with Thebackstretchdude would be another one. There is a lot to look forward to.”

And not just in her barn on the Woodbine backstretch.

Making the most of the great outdoors, even during the winter, remains a constant in her life outside of racing.

“Justin and I like to cook together. We take out dogs on some pretty cool outdoor adventures and we snowboard. We're pretty outdoorsy. We visit our riding horses, and obviously, spend time with Benjamin. We have our hobbies to keep the racetrack and our personal lives separate.”

There will still be times, however, regardless of where she finds herself, when she will take a moment to relive that early afternoon at Woodbine, a grey day with a much sunnier outcome.

When she does watch the race replay, Stein will no doubt smile at the recollection of the sights and sounds throughout the race, all 1:04.72 of it.

“Hearing how happy the owners were, seeing Justin celebrate at the wire and knowing how far this horse had come… I don't think I could have written it any better.”

Justin Stein and Thebackstrechdude winning the first race on Nov. 27, 2022 at Woodbine (Michael Burns Photo)

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Churchill Downs Unveils Derby Logo

Churchill Downs Racetrack has unveiled the official logo for the 149th running of the Kentucky Derby presented by Woodford Reserve, which takes place May 6, 2023.

Highlighted by the Kentucky Derby's color palette of red, black, gold and white, the Kentucky Derby 149 logo features diamonds intended to replicate the blocks in Secretariat's blue and white silks as this coming year marks the 50th anniversary of his Triple Crown victory. Meanwhile, the specific number of 13 diamonds is reverence to the number of Thoroughbreds that won all three races in the historic series. The diamonds are set within a shield that projects the achievements, heritage, longevity and stability of the Kentucky Derby, which dates back to 1875.

The logo, designed by New York-based marketing agency SME, will be used on a wide variety of Kentucky Derby official merchandise that will be available online, at Churchill Downs Racetrack, the Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport, the Kentucky Derby Museum Gift Shop and other retail outlets.

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Equibase Analysis: Echo Again Could Lead From Start To Finish In Remington Springboard Mile

This Saturday's $400,000 Remington Springboard Mile Stakes is a traditional December showcase for 2-year-olds just starting out on the Road to the Derby, with points to the first five finishers which could become critical next spring in determining who can run in the Kentucky Derby if their connections choose to do so.

Trainer Steve Asmussen, who saddled the winner of this race three times in the past 10 years (2014, 2018 and 2019), saddles a pair in Echo Again and Money Run, the former entering the race after fading to seventh of nine in the Grade 3 Iroquois Stakes in his most recent start but winner of his only other race. Money Run fared a bit better in his most recent start as compared to his stablemate as he was third at this distance four weeks ago after a fifth place effort in the Clever Trevor Stakes.

Wildatlanticstorm won that race, with Campfire Creed a nose behind in second, and they are hoping to use the Clever Trevor as a prep to winning this race the same way Long Range Toddy did (for Asmussen) in 2018. Ghost Hero won the Don C. McNeill Stakes for horses bred in Oklahoma last month, but that race has not shown to be historically significant to success in the Springboard Mile.

Giant Mischief won a highly rated race at a shorter distance last month at Churchill Downs and tries stakes competition for the first time. Lil Sweet Thang and American Outlaw were separated by a length when first and second at this distance last month in an allowance race and both will attempt to make their mark in the division by improving to this level. Gunflash won at first asking in a six furlong sprint over the track in November so is being asked a couple of significant questions in terms of class and distance.

Analysis:

Echo Again was extremely impressive in her career debut this summer at Saratoga when leading as soon as he broke from the gate and coasting around the track in hand to win by nearly seven lengths. That effort earned a very strong 91™ Equibase® Speed Figure which I'm sure his connections intended him to improve upon when sent to post as the three to five favorite in the Grade 3 Iroquois Stakes one month later. However, after breaking a bit poorly to start fifth of nine, the colt moved up quickly to lead around the time a half-mile had been run, but expended too much energy, as he faded to seventh.

Recently, Echo Again has been in steady training for Steve Asmussen, who won this race in 2019 and also in 2014 and 2018. There is little doubt the reason Echo Again ran poorly in the Iroquois had nothing to do with breeding and more about how the race was run, as he's by sensational sire Gun Runner out of a mare which produced 2020 Pegasus Stakes winner Pneumatic. Getting the rail for this year's Springboard Mile it is highly likely jockey Ricardo Santana will use the colt's exceptional early speed to establish the lead easily and from there get him to relax and hold off all comers to win.

Giant Mischief earned by far the best ™ figure in the field, 101, when winning a seven furlong race last month in the second start of his career. He also won his debut in September, with a 69 figure, so the improvement was striking. In that win on November 4, Giant Mischief made the lead with an eighth of a mile to go and had to fight nearly every step of the way until near the wire when asserting himself by three-quarters of a length. The horse he beat for second, Arabian Lion, is likely to be favored in the Los Alamitos Futurity in California this weekend. Being a son of Into Mischief there's little doubt he will run as well or better around two turns and trainer Cox continues to keep his horses in top form, having won back-to-back 26% of the time over the last 12 months.

Campfire Creed and Wildatlanticstorm deserve some mention, particularly for how well they ran when separated by a nose on October 28 in the Clever Trevor Stakes. Wildatlanticstorm prevailed that day after both horses battled head and head for the last eighth of a mile. Neither has run around two turns yet and but the 91 figure both earned can be improved upon, particularly as the race has turned out to be very productive. The third place finisher, who was seven lengths in arrears of these two, improved by four points to finish second in a stakes race, while the fourth and sixth place finishers both improved mightily to win their next starts, each bettering their speed figures by nine points. If the same improvement were to happen to either of these colts that would put their effort in the 100 range, well within scope of the 101 figure Giant Mischief earned in his last race.

The rest of the field, with their best ™ Equibase Speed Figures, is American Outlaw (79), Ghost Hero (86), Gunflash (83), Lil Sweet Thang (81) and Money Run (82).

Win Contenders, in preference order:
Echo Again
Giant Mischief
Honorable mention goes to Campfire Creed and Wildatlanticstorm

Remington Springboard Mile Stakes
Race 12 at Remington Park
Saturday, December 17– Post Time 11:19 PM E.T.
One Mile
Two Year Olds
Purse: $400,000

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