Mike Rogers Pledges One-Day Match Donation to TAA Dec. 10

As part of the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance (TAA)'s month-long Holiday Giving Campaign, Mike Rogers has pledged to match all donations up to $500 made to the TAA Dec. 10. The campaign commenced Nov. 29 and is scheduled to conclude New Year's Eve.

Those wishing to support the TAA, its 81 accredited organizations, and thousands of retired Thoroughbreds can donate through the TAA's website or text DONATE to 56651. During the Holiday Giving Campaign, TAA is also offering donors the benefit of sending digital holiday cards to colleagues, friends, and loved ones.

“The Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance is doing great work and I'm happy to do my small part in helping their mission,” said 1/ST RACING Executive Vice President and Maryland Jockey Club Acting President and General Manager, Mike Rogers. “Our industry would be nothing without these horses, who all should have the opportunity to live long, happy lives after racing. Thank you, TAA, for providing an industry-united aftercare mechanism devoted to our retired equine athletes.”

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Local Stars Face Global Challengers In Sunday’s Hong Kong International Races

A quartet of international races are on offer during Sunday's highly anticipated program in Hong Kong, highlighted by local star Golden Sixty's attempt for a third straight victory in the LONGINES Hong Kong Mile. Not that because of the time difference, the races begin Saturday night in the U.S. with a first post of 11:25 p.m. ET/8:25 p.m. PT.

The first of the four races is the HK$22 million (US$2.83 million) LONGINES Hong Kong Vase (2400m, or 1 1/2 miles), scheduled as the fourth race on Sunday's card with a local post time of 14:10 (1:10 a.m. ET/10:10 p.m. PT). Aidan O'Brien will send out a pair in the race, including this year's Breeders' Cup Turf runner-up Stone Age, while Japanese-trained Glory Vase will be trying to win the race for a third time (won in 2019 and 2021).

Race five is the HK$24 million (US$3.08 million) LONGINES Hong Kong Sprint (1200m, or six furlongs), with a local post of 14:50 (1:50 a.m. ET/10:50 p.m. PT). Hong Kong's best sprinter Wellington, a three-time winner at the G1 level, will partner with international jockey Ryan Moore.

Race seven is the HK$30 million (US$3.85 million) LONGINES Hong Kong Mile with a local post of 16:00 (3:00 a.m. ET/12:00 a.m. PT). Golden Sixty faces nine rivals, including locally-based California Spangle, whom Golden Sixty beat by a neck in his final prep. Japan's G1-winning Salios gets the services of Ryan Moore and can't be left out.

The international races conclude with race eight, the HK$34 million (US$4.37 million) LONGINES Hong Kong Cup (2000m, or 1 1/4 miles) with a local post of 16:40 (3:40 a.m. ET/12:40 a.m. PT). O'Brien has entered 2020 Breeders' Cup Mile winner Order of Australia, while Japan's lead hope is G1 Dubai Turf dead-heat winner Panthalassa.

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Keepmeinmind Retired To Sequel New York For 2023

Grade 2 winner Keepmeinmind, a son of the late former New York leading freshman sire Laoban and a major player on the 2021 Triple Crown trail, has been retired to stand the 2023 season at Sequel Stallions New York in Hudson, N.Y.

The 4-year-old out of the unraced Victory Gallop mare Inclination will stand his first season for $6,500.

Keepmeinmind is one of the leading runners from the first crop of Laoban, who also started his stud career at Sequel. Laoban topped New York's freshman sire list in 2020 with progeny earnings of more than $1.55 million – with $394,320 coming from Keepmeinmind – and also finished second on the North American freshman list.

Bred by Southern Equine Stables LLC, Keepmeinmind started his career for his breeder and trainer Robertino Diodoro. After a second in his debut in early September 2020, Keepmeinmind finished second in the Grade 1 Claiborne Breeders' Futurity and third in the TVG Breeders' Cup Juvenile presented by Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance, both at Keeneland Race Course. He put himself in the mix for the spring classics with a season-ending victory for Cypress Creek LLC and Arnold Bennewith in the G2 Kentucky Jockey Club Stakes at Churchill Downs.

Keepmeinmind finished seventh in the following year's Kentucky Derby and fourth in the Preakness Stakes. He placed fourth in a pair of graded stakes and finished fourth in the 2021 G1 Runhappy Travers Stakes to end his sophomore campaign.

Off for almost a year, Keepmeinmind returned with an impressive allowance victory going nine furlongs at Saratoga Race Course in late July for trainer Todd Pletcher. He finished his career with a third behind Life Is Good in the G1 Woodward Stakes at the Belmont at the Big A meeting.

“Keepmeinmind is a specimen with a terrific disposition,” Pletcher said. “He competed with and beat the best of the best. A big boost for the New York breeding roster.”

Keepmeinmind, who retired with a record of 2-3-2 in 14 starts and earnings of $903,237, is a half-brother to stakes-placed New York-bred Happy Happy B, $115,790-earner Inclined to Win and Grade 2-placed In Jack's Memory. Inclination, a half-sister to Grade 3 winner and $553,916-earner and stakes winner Zawzooth, is also the dam of winners El Cucuy, E Moon, Generalcbandsallie, Skinny Peter and Sky's the Limit, along with Keepmeinmind's 2-year-old full-brother Mr Midway.

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Nine States to McConnell: Hands Off HISA In ‘Lame Duck’ Session

The attorneys general from nine states on Thursday implored United States Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell not to use the end-of-term 'lame-duck' session of Congress to ram through legislation that would tweak non-constitutionality issues with the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) by burying the measure within a much larger bill.

“It has come to our attention that you are considering proposing language related to HISA in the Defense Spending Authorization Act or other end-of-year legislation,” the AGs wrote to the senior senator from Kentucky in a Dec. 8 letter. “We urge you not to do so. HISA has already caused enormous upheaval in our States. A lame-duck session is not the time to slip new language into legislation amending HISA in response to [a recent court ruling]. Indeed, language that attempts anything other than repealing this ill-advised legislation will only make a bad situation worse.”

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit on Nov. 18 ruled that the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) is unconstitutional because it “delegates unsupervised government power to a private entity” and thus “violates the private non-delegation doctrine.”

On Dec. 7, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit heard arguments in a similar case that also seeks to reverse a lower court's decision to dismiss a constitutional challenge of HISA.

The state of Louisiana's AG spearheaded the effort. Also signing the letter were the AGs from Arkansas, Indiana, Iowa, Mississippi, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina and Texas.

U.S. Trotting News was the first media outlet to publish the letter.

The letter continued: “As enacted, HISA disrespects [the] system of dual sovereignty. HISA's very purpose is to take away a regulatory power individual States have exercised since the Founding–to oversee and regulate horse racing within their borders–and give that power exclusively to a private agency.”

The HISA Authority “is exercising federal regulatory powers without any meaningful restraint, oversight, or adequate time for notice and comment, rushed rules that displaced existing State laws governing horse racing and exposed jockeys and horses to unsafe conditions,” the letter stated.

“Adding insult to injury, the Authority required all participants in the horse racing industry to pay assessments to cover the cost of enforcing HISA's dangerous and poorly thought-out private rules. As a final blow, the Authority attempted to cannibalize existing State personnel to implement and enforce the rules it enacted,” the letter stated.

At a later point, the four-page plea continued: “If you seek a resolution that settles controversy in the industry, then you should organize discussions between all industry participants that would identify and address everyone's concerns with HISA instead of making a surprise amendment to HISA now. Several of our states are engaged in litigation regarding problems with HISA beyond the private nondelegation issue, and amendments cannot avoid continuing, costly litigation unless they are carefully tailored to resolve all concerns.”

Two years ago this month, when McConnell was the Senate majority leader, he was instrumental in making sure HISA got passed by tucking it into a massive, year-end government funding bill that included a $900-billion COVID-19 relief package.

“Enacting HISA in 2020 in vital national legislation that had nothing to do with horse racing is part of why it failed so miserably,” the Dec. 8 letter stated. “Amending HISA in the Defense Spending Authorization Act with no notice to industry participants or States will merely repeat the same flawed approach.”

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