Bob Meeking, Washington Circuit Staple, Dies at 94

Bob Meeking, a trainer for over seven decades and one of the Washington state's most popular and respected horsemen, passed away last week at age 94.

Meeking, who owned the 60-acre Allaire Farms in Poulsbo with his wife Barbara, had been in poor health the last few years. After missing 2021 while dealing with treatment for colon cancer, Meeking returned to Emerald Downs in 2022 with a nine-horse stable, scoring victories with runners like Wheel Rally and Emerald Sea, and finishing 10th in the $150,000 Longacres Mile with Kingmeister for longtime clients Fred and Cindy Desimone.

“I always enjoy being at the track,” Meeking said before the 2022 season. “I've been in this industry over many years and seen a lot of changes, but horse racing is a wonderful sport and I it's around for a long time.”

Robert A. Meeking was born June 6, 1928, in Victoria, BC, and saddled his first starter in 1946 at Lansdowne Park in suburban Vancouver. He trained for a remarkable 75 years, earning a reputation as a patient, high-percentage horseman while conditioning top-flight runners like Longacres Derby winners Mincemeat (1970) and Salad Sam (1976) and multiple stakes winner Bucksaw.

“I think my biggest thrill was my first winner at Santa Anita although a close second was [Mincemeat] winning two Derbies,” Meeking told Daily Racing Form.

In 2018, he participated in a unique contest at Emerald Downs when he saddled Trelawny to a runner-up finish in the 'Not in Any Rocking Chair' Starter Allowance for 3-year-olds and up which have started for a claiming price of $3,500 or less in 2017-18 and whose trainer was born on or prior to June 6, 1928. Trainers of the four runners entered were 94-year-old Arturo Arboleda, 91-year-old H.R. Pat Mullens, 90-year-old Ira Rhodes, and Meeking who had celebrated his 90th birthday the week prior to the race.

Meeking's final victory was July 22 with Emerald Sea, a 4-year-old filly that rallied for a two-length victory in a $15,000 claiming race; she would finish third Sept. 18 in the WA Cup Filly and Mare S. in what would be his final start as conditioner.

The post Bob Meeking, Washington Circuit Staple, Dies at 94 appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Denied Commission Stay, Trainer Noda Fights NYSGC Penalty in Court

In an effort to fight a 90-day suspension and $5,000 fine for “striking a horse excessively” during a 2021 workout at Saratoga Race Course, trainer Orlando Noda has commenced proceedings in Schenectady Supreme Court that he hopes will prove the New York State Gaming Commission (NYSGC) acted unlawfully last month when it rejected an appeal hearing officer's recommendation that his case be dismissed without penalization.

Noda's legal filing is known as an Article 78 review, which pertains to a New York state law by which a petitioner can ask a court to review a decision or action of a state official or administrative agency.

Article 78 filings have a reputation for being costly to litigate and very time consuming, sometimes dragging on for months or even several years in the court system.

Although the two cases are not related, Noda's penalty got handed down during the same Dec. 12 NYSGC meeting as a ruling imposed upon Richie Gazer, the longtime New York Racing Association head clocker who was suspended 30 days and fined $2,500 for “altering a published work of a horse to make the horse eligible to race.”

But taken together, those two same-day adjudications share a commonality in that both decisions by the NYSGC represented a forceful rejection of each hearing officer's months of work in conducting the appeals and writing up the reports.

In both instances, the commissioners voted unanimously to impose the original penalties that had been handed down by Braulio Baeza, Jr., the NYSGC state steward at the three NYRA tracks.

Although such outright rejections are unusual, most racing commissions nationwide are not bound to accept the opinions of hearing officers, who are often attorneys, that they hire to hear appeals.

In both Noda's and Gazer's cases, their respective attorneys had asked the commission for a stay of their penalties pending Article 78 filings. Both were denied last month by the NYSGC.

“I asked the commission for a stay as a courtesy,” Drew Mollica, Noda's attorney, told TDN. “I was denied on Dec. 20. I was in court Dec. 28, and the judge issued a stay. He can continue training. We have filed our Article 78 and we are pursuing a full and fair review of this unjust decision. In this case, the record is clear: There never was, and there is not now, any evidence that Mr. Noda did what they accused him of, and the hearing officer knew that.”

The hearing officer who oversaw Noda's appeal, S. David Devaprasad, wrote in his Nov. 1 report that, “The regulations Respondent is alleged to have violated…are impermissibly vague and [there are no written] standards as to what constitutes the proper or improper use of a crop or whip while training a horse.”

The report continued: “The testimony at the Hearing of the Commission's single eyewitness of the alleged incident was simply not sufficient (nor any more credible than Respondent's testimony in defense) to establish that Respondent engaged in any action detrimental to the best interest of racing generally or was guilty of any improper, corrupt, or fraudulent act or practice…”

Back on Dec. 12 NYSGC chairman Brian O'Dwyer disagreed. In reading Noda's decision into the record, he said that, “The commission duly deliberated and considered this matter, and determined by a 6-0 vote to reject the hearing officer's report and recommendations. In doing that, commissioners reviewed the entire record, and established by a preponderance of evidence that Noda's conduct was improper and detrimental to the best interest of racing, and determined that the appropriate penalty was that which was given by the stewards.”

Along with O'Dwyer, NYSGC commissioners John Crotty, Peter Moschetti, Jr., Christopher Riano, Marissa Shorenstein and Jerry Skurnik all voted in favor of rejecting the hearing officers' recommendations in the two cases.

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‘I’m Hoping For Even Bigger Things In 2023’: Powell-Trained Air Force Red Could Get First Top-Level Test In Kilroe Mile

Air Force Red added to a strong start to the meet for trainer Leonard Powell when scoring a front-running victory in Saturday's Joe Hernandez (G2) on the downhill turf course.

It was a second straight stakes win for Air Force Red and first at the graded level. On Monday, Powell reported the 4-year-old Air Force Blue ridgling was doing “extremely well.” Next up will likely be a tilt in the $500,000 Frank E. Kilroe Mile (G1) on March 4.

“I thought he ran really well and that finished up a nice 2022 for him,” Powell said. “I'm hoping for even bigger things in 2023.”

Air Force Red is owned in partnership by Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners and Holly Golightly. Two races after Air Force Red's 7-1 upset in the Hernandez, Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners added a second graded stakes win on the day when Queen Goddess took down the Robert J. Frankel (G2).

Air Force Red, winner of the restricted Lure Stakes going a mile at Santa Anita in his previous start Oct. 29, improved his record to 5-0-0 from 10 starts and $354,100 in earnings. Furthermore, the win in the Hernandez over Grade I winners Smooth Like Strait and Hit the Road among others ran his record to 3-for-4 on the hillside turf course. Notably, the 2023 Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint (G1) in the fall will also be contested on Santa Anita's hillside turf course. Is that a realistic goal for Air Force Red?

“I think so,” Powell said. “In the spring, we are going to stretch him out again because the big races here are at a mile. I think that's what we'll do through the spring and re-assess after that. But everything is in play.”

Air Force Red's win in the Hernandez, which came under leading jockey Juan Hernandez, put a bow on what's been a career-best season for Powell. The 46-year-old Frenchman finished 2022 with $2.1 million in earnings and five graded stakes wins, which includes Dicey Mo Chara's tally in the San Gabriel (G2) on opening day.

As for Dicey Mo Chara, his win in the San Gabriel provided a free berth in the $1 million Pegasus World Cup Turf (G1) on Jan. 28 at Gulfstream Park. That race is under consideration for the Red Baron's Barn and Rancho Temescal color bearer, Powell reiterated Monday.

“I haven't talked to the ownership yet, but everything is still possible,” he noted.

The post ‘I’m Hoping For Even Bigger Things In 2023’: Powell-Trained Air Force Red Could Get First Top-Level Test In Kilroe Mile appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Mandatory Payout: Santa Anita’s Rainbow 6 Jackpot Pool Expected At $3 Million Cal Cup Day Saturday

With a big 10-race card planned for California Cup Day on Saturday, Santa Anita Park has announced there will also be a mandatory payout in the 20 cent Single Ticket Rainbow Pick Six Jackpot, with the likelihood of a $3-million total Rainbow Six pool.

A total of five California-bred races, highlighted by the $200,000 Cal Cup Derby and the $200,000 Unusual Heat Turf Classic, will be included in the 10-race card which will begin with first post time at 12 noon (PT).

Entries will be taken Wednesday and the Rainbow Pick Six will be comprised of races five through 10, with fifth race post time scheduled for approximately 2 p.m.

The Cal Cup Derby, which was won in 2014 by eventual Kentucky Derby (G1) and Preakness Stakes (G1) winner California Chrome, will be contested at a 1 1/16 miles.  The Unusual Heat Turf Classic, for older horses at 1 1/8 miles on grass, is presented by City National Bank.

Additional Cal Cup races for Saturday are the $150,000 Leigh Ann Howard California Oaks, for 3-year-old fillies at one mile on turf, the $150,000 Don Valpredo California Cup Sprint, for older horses at six furlongs, and the $150,000 Sunshine Millions Filly & Mare Turf Sprint at about 6 ½ furlongs down the hillside turf course.

Admission gates will open Saturday at 10 a.m.

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