Grassley Amendment Fails; HISA `Fix’ Language in Omnibus Bill

After a week of political uncertainty, the Senate has passed a version of the full year-end omnibus spending bill with language affording the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) more rule-making authority in the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA), according to a source close to the process.

The language is designed to address a ruling in the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals from November, which found the law as written doesn't afford the FTC enough latitude in the rule-making process.

The Senate voted in favor of the bill 68-29, but it must first pass the House of Representatives before heading to the president's desk.

It's currently unclear what specific language the Senate's version of the $1.7-trillion spending bill includes regarding HISA and the FTC's modified role.

But language in a prior version of the bill allows the FTC to “abrogate, add to, and modify the rules of the Authority promulgated in accordance with this Act as the Commission finds necessary or appropriate to ensure the fair administration of the Authority, to conform the rules of the Authority to requirements of this Act and applicable rules approved by the Commission, or otherwise in furtherance of the purposes of this Act.”

Currently, the FTC can only accept or reject a proposed rule constructed by the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority, the private entity given broad umbrella power over implementing the act.

In a statement immediately following the news, National Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association (HBPA) CEO, Eric Hamelback, praised last-minute efforts by a group of lawmakers led by Senator Chuck Grassley to strip the language from the omnibus spending bill.

“We know there were several Senators who would have supported removal language. However, the amendment did not get that opportunity and the HISA “fix” language remains in the Omnibus bill. With that said we are on firm ground to remain focused as the “fix” language changes very little about the Act as it remains unconstitutional,” wrote Hamelback.

HISA spokesperson, Mandy Minger, said that the Authority would have a comment after the bill is signed.

If enacted into law, questions swirl about what this legislative fix possibly means for HISA. Various avenues were detailed in a recent conversation with constitutional law expert, Lucinda Finley.

Last week, the FTC announced that it had disapproved “without prejudice” the program's anti-doping and medication control (ADMC) rules because of the law's constitutional holes.

In the near-term, with this new language HISA can resubmit the ADMC rules with the FTC. It would then take approximately 60 days for these rules to go into effect, “assuming that the FTC was going to approve them substantively,” HISA CEO Lisa Lazarus previously explained.

There remains a ruling pending in the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals concerning similar constitutional questions to the Fifth Circuit. It is currently unclear when that ruling will land.

But if the amended language in the omnibus spending bill is sufficient in the judgement of the Fifth Circuit, it could essentially render the current cases before the Fifth and Sixth Circuits legally moot in a practical sense.

It could also make the possibility of the Supreme Court taking them up altogether highly unlikely.

Even then, don't expect the legal fireworks to end, with a case in the U.S. District Court of Texas–Northern District, Amarillo Division–a potentially nasty looking legal blackthorn for the law.

Finley told the TDN that the case raises several additional constitutional arguments that the Fifth and Sixth Circuits did not rule on, including HISA's investigative, subpoena and punishment power as a private body, and the way in which individuals on the HISA board are appointed.

“It argues that the whole structure is a delegation of not only too much executive authority, but can amount to a delegation of legislative and judicial authority as well,” Finley explained.

If the judge in the case agrees that HISA indeed delegates too much power to a private entity, the plaintiffs in the case are seeking an injunction to suspend enforcement of the law, said Finley.

Would such an injunction apply nationwide or just in Texas?

“You've actually asked what is one of the most raging controversies in U.S. law,” Finley replied, leaving the answer open-ended.

The post Grassley Amendment Fails; HISA `Fix’ Language in Omnibus Bill appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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‘He’s A Fast Horse’: Baffert Not Concerned About Taiba Handling Shorter Distance In Malibu

In 2020, Kentucky Derby and Breeders' Cup Classic hero Authentic became the 10th 3-year-old male trained by Bob Baffert to win a divisional Eclipse Award. On a blockbuster opening day card at Santa Anita Monday, a potential 11th such champion could emerge for the Hall of Fame trainer in the Grade 1, $300,000 Malibu.

There is a case to be made for the honor if the Baffert-trained Taiba were to prevail as expected in the seven-furlong feature for sophomores on opening day. A win would make Taiba the only 3-year-old male this season with three Grade 1 triumphs of the season, adding to his previous scores in the Santa Anita Derby and Pennsylvania Derby. Taiba also nearly bagged another Grade 1 this summer in the Haskell Invitational at Monmouth Park, when he came up just a head short to Cyberknife.

Meanwhile, the presumed frontrunner in the division is Eastern-based Epicenter, who was injured in the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Classic Nov. 5 and subsequently retired. He had a single Grade 1 tally this season, which came in the historic Travers Stakes at Saratoga.

But helping to boost the case for Epicenter are wins in the Grade 2 Louisiana Derby and G2 Risen Star at Fair Grounds, G2 Jim Dandy at Saratoga, plus runner-up finishes in both the G1 Kentucky Derby and G1 Preakness Stakes.

On Wednesday at Clocker's Corner, Baffert opted for diplomacy when it comes to a potential championship for Taiba.

“I don't want to get into that discussion. I don't have a vote so I don't know,” he said.

In the Malibu, Taiba will be sprinting for the first time since a six-furlong debut win at Santa Anita in March. He most recently was beaten just a half length for second after a troubled start in the Breeders' Cup Classic going 1 1/4 miles, which was won by undefeated superstar Flightline.

“He missed the break, sort of slipped leaving there and he lost position,” Baffert said of Taiba's Classic run. “We wanted him like where Epicenter was (fifth after a quarter mile), but Epicenter beat us to the spot.”

Taiba would improve his position under Mike Smith in the Classic and while no match for Flightline, he was just edged for runner-up by the older horse Olympiad.

“We were hoping we would run second. I knew trying to beat Flightline would be difficult,” Baffert said.

A $1.7 million auction purchase last year, Taiba has worked four times at Santa Anita since the Breeders' Cup and shows two bullet drills on the tab. He blazed a half mile in 46.6 seconds on Dec. 3 and came back with another bullet on Monday when completing five furlongs in 59.6 seconds.

Baffert indicated he was not overly concerned about the cutback to seven furlongs.

“When he broke his maiden he went nine and change (officially 1:09.8). He's a fast horse,” Baffert added.

Joining Taiba in the Malibu starting gate for Baffert will be Messier. Sidelined following a 15th-place finish in the Kentucky Derby, Messier returned in a Nov. 5 allowance at Keeneland where he dueled on the lead for a half mile and then faded. Baffert said the Empire Maker colt bled in that effort.

“(Jockey John Velazquez) pulled him up and he had a little bit (of blood) on the nose,” Baffert said. “I don't know why as he had never done that before. But he's come back and worked and hasn't bled, so I'm not sure why it happened.”

Similar to that allowance race, Messier in the Malibu will race without the anti-bleeding medication Lasix as it is not permitted in California stakes races.

The Malibu is carded as the 10th race on Monday's 11-race opening-day program.

The field:

  1. Forbidden Kingdom, Juan Hernandez (3-1);
  2. Messier, John Velazquez (6-1);
  3. Apprehend, Ramon Vazquez (8-1);
  4. Nakatomi, Tyler Gaffalione (10-1);
  5. Hoist the Gold, Joel Rosario (12-1);
  6. Taiba, Mike Smith (6-5);
  7. Perfect Flight, Ricardo Santana Jr. (12-1);
  8. Strava, Flavien Prat (15-1);
  9. Straight No Chaser, Edwin Maldonaldo (20-1).

The post ‘He’s A Fast Horse’: Baffert Not Concerned About Taiba Handling Shorter Distance In Malibu appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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‘Irad Will Have Her Where She’s Supposed To Be’: Personal Best Leads McGaughey Pair In Tropical Park Oaks

Hall of Fame trainer Shug McGaughey will have two chances in Monday's $100,000 Tropical Park Oaks at Gulfstream Park to get off to a fast start for the 2022-2023 Championship Meet on the Opening Day program.

McGaughey is scheduled to send out a pair of highly promising fillies in Allen Stable Inc.'s Personal Best and Phipps Stable's Surprisingly, in the 1 1/16-mile stakes for 3-year-old fillies on turf that will co-headline Monday's 10-race program with the $100,000 Tropical Park Derby, a 1 1/16-mile turf stakes for 3-year-olds.

Personal Best ran the best race of her seven-race career in her most recent start in a 1 3/8-mile allowance on turf at Aqueduct, where she stalked the pace before drawing clear by 4 ¾ lengths.

“Her last few races have been really good, the last one especially. She's a filly we've always been pretty high on,” said McGaughey, who will also saddle Fort Washington for a start in the Tropical Park Derby. “A mile and a sixteenth may not be her best gig, but I like her a lot. I think, throughout the year, she'll be a very useful horse.”

The homebred daughter of Tapit will be making her stakes debut in the Tropical Park Oaks with Irad Ortiz Jr. in the irons.

“She'll be a little back in this race, but Irad will have her where she's supposed to be, and we'll go from there,” McGaughey said. “She's shown some speed going longer. I don't know what she'll do going shorter.”

Surprisingly won her first two starts of 2022, impressively drawing away to victory at Horseshoe Indianapolis in June and Ellis Park a month later. She was compromised by early traffic before finishing seventh in the Virginia Oaks at Colonial Downs in her most recent start Sept. 8.

“She ran a good race in Virginia coming off a couple allowance races and wasn't beat that far. We've trained her here for a good while and she's been doing really, really well,” McGaughey said. “I thought it was worth taking a chance [in the Tropical Park Oaks] – her last chance running against 3-year-olds.”

Edgard Zayas has the call on the daughter of Mastery.

Michael Nentwig, Michael Dubb, Beast Mode Racing LLC, John Rochfort and trainer Robert Falcone Jr.'s Spirit And Glory, who rallied from last to win the Virginia Derby, will be awaiting Surprisingly in the Tropical Park Oaks. The Irish-bred daughter of Cotai Glory finished fifth in the Sands Point (G2) and fourth in the Winter Memories at Aqueduct in her two subsequent starts.

Isaac Castillo is scheduled to ride Spirit And Glory for the first time Monday.

Fortune Racing LLC's Candy Light, who was three-quarters of a length ahead of Spirit And Glory while finishing second in the Winter Memories, is slated for a return in the Tropical Park Derby. The Graham Motion-trained daughter of Candy Ride had finished third behind Spirit And Glory two starts earlier in the Virginia Oaks.

Jose Ortiz has the call aboard Candy Light.

John Gallegos' My Philly Twirl, who captured her third straight race during last season's Championship Meet in the Sanibel Island; St. George Stable LLC's Omixochitl, who weakened to finish fifth in the Virginia Derby after leading in the stretch; and Diamond 100 Racing Club, Amy Dunne and Patrick L. Biancone LLC's Diamond Wow, a stakes-winning daughter of Lookin At Lucky who finished second in the 2021 Jessamine (G2) at Keeneland; are among other top contenders in the Tropical Park Oaks.

Jumeirah, Frosted Oats and Gunesh round out the field.

The post ‘Irad Will Have Her Where She’s Supposed To Be’: Personal Best Leads McGaughey Pair In Tropical Park Oaks appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Gritty, Well-Bred Axthelm Back At Gulfstream Park For Tropical Park Derby

Edward Seltzer and Beverly Anderson's Axthelm, who debuted at Gulfstream before making his next three starts in Kentucky, has returned for the South Florida's racetrack's opening day of the 2022-2023 Championship Meet Monday.

The 3-year-old son of Into Mischief is scheduled to face 11 other 3-year-olds in the $100,000 Tropical Park Derby, a 1 1/16-mile turf stakes that will co-headline a 10-race program with the $100,000 Tropical Park Oaks, a 1 1/16-mile turf stakes for 3-year-old fillies.

Axthelm's July 17 debut in a maiden special weight race at five furlongs Tapeta didn't go as trainer Saffie Joseph Jr. had expected.

“He's shown ability from the beginning. Obviously, he has a good pedigree – an Into Mischief homebred for Ed,” Joseph said. “First time out, we thought he would win. We were a little surprised he didn't. It was probably a little shorter than he wants to go, but it was a good spot to start him out.”

The five-furlong race on Tapeta certainly set him up perfectly for his return to action at Kentucky Downs six weeks later. The Kentucky-bred colt graduated by a head over Chad Brown-trained favorite Growth Capital while running a mile on turf in a $157,000 maiden race.

“We waited for that spot,” Joseph said.

Axthelm made two more starts at Keeneland, finishing third in both races at a mile on turf. In his most recent start in the Bryan Station (G3), he made a serious challenge for the lead at the top of the stretch before settling for third, beaten by less than a length by victorious Balnikhov. Todd Pletcher-trained runner-up Wit, went on to finish a close third in the Hollywood Derby (G1) at Del Mar.

“I thought he ran OK in his first race but I thought he showed a much better performance in that stake when he had a few weeks to acclimatize there,” Joseph said. “He was bottled up for most of the race. He never really got out, but for a horse who was making only his fourth start facing those quality horses, I thought he showed a lot of grit.”

Axthelm has produced a series of four strong breezes at Palm Meadows, Gulfstream's satellite training facility in Palm Beach County, since returning from Keeneland.

“We discussed and put our heads together and decided to go straight to the Tropical Park Derby – give him a little freshening and start him back up for this race,” Joseph said. “Everything seems to have gone on target. He's always been a good work horse. I think he's coming into the race really well.”

Edgard Zayas, who was aboard Axthelm for his first three starts, has the return mount Monday.

Peter Brant and Joseph Allen LLC's Fort Washington, who finished seventh, beaten by just 2 ½ lengths by Balnikhov following an extremely slow start, will also return in the Tropical Park Derby. The son of War Front, who captured the Tale of the Cat at Monmouth in June, will be equipped with blinkers for the first time.

“The last two times he didn't break and he ran really good races. He just gave himself way too much to do,” McGaughey said. “I put blinkers on him and schooled him in the gate at Payson Park. He seems to pop right away from there now. I think, if he breaks good, he'll be in contention and finish good.”

Fort Washington will be ridden for the first time by Jose Ortiz.

Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher is scheduled to saddle Whisper Hill Farm LLC's Grand Sonata and St. Elias Stable and Repole Stable's Steady On for starts in the Tropical Park Derby, for which the Pletcher-trained Native Thunder is second on the also-eligible list.

Grand Sonata, who captured the Dania Beach and the Kitten's Joy (G3) at Gulfstream last season, most recently finished third in the Gio Ponti at Aqueduct, beaten three-quarters of a length by Churchtown and a neck by Steady On, both of whom he will face again in the Tropical Park Derby.

Hall of Famer Javier Castellano, a five-time Championship Meet titlist, has the call.

Steady On, a late-developing son of Pioneerof the Nile, overcame a hard bump at the start of the 1 1/16-mile Gio Ponti before finishing second. H had won his two previous starts at a mile on turf.

Irad Ortiz Jr. has the return mount.

W.B. Harrigan and Mike Pietrangelo's Churchtown set a controlled early pace with mild pressure to his outside before holding on to win the Gio Ponti by a half-length under Junior Alvarado, who will be aboard again Monday. Trained by Hall of Famer Roger Attfield, the son of Air Force Blue has been first or second in six of nine career starts.

Silverton Hill LLC's Red Danger, who captured the Pulpit at Gulfstream last season; Gary Barber, Manfred Conrad and Penny Conrad's Golden Glider, a gelding that has never run on turf and ran respectably in several Triple Crown preps earlier in the year; Reeve Thoroughbred Racing's Dakota Gold, a multiple New York-bred stakes winner who finished fourth in the Gio Ponti; and Three Diamonds Farm and Deuce Greathouse's Stolen Base, won won the American Turf (G2) at Churchill Downs in May; are among the top contenders in the Tropical Park Derby.

Grand David, Night Jumper and Venezuelan Triumph round out the field. Native Thunder is joined on the also-eligible list by Marwad.

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