Forbidden Kingdom Looks To Regain Winning Ways In San Carlos

An A-List Derby prospect a year ago, Richard Mandella's Forbidden Kingdom, a solid second in the opening day Grade 1 Malibu Stakes, heads a field of six older sprinters going seven furlongs in Saturday's G2 San Carlos Stakes presented by FanDuel TV at Santa Anita in Arcadia, Calif.

Well beaten as the even-money favorite four starts back in the G1 Runhappy Santa Anita Derby April 9, Forbidden Kingdom went to the sidelines and showed good speed in his comeback, a fifth-place finish in the G2 Santa Anita Sprint Championship on Oct. 1.

Third, beaten a half-length by Get Her Number as the 8-5 favorite in a six-furlong classified allowance at Del Mar Nov. 20, Forbidden Kingdom was most recently beaten 4 ¼ lengths by the talented Taiba in the Malibu Dec. 26.

A 4-year-old colt by 2015 Triple Crown winner American Pharoah, Forbidden Kingdom is owned by MyRacehorse and Spendthrift Farm, LLC.  Winless in four starts since taking the G2 San Felipe on March 5 of last year, Forbidden Kingdom will be reunited with leading man Juan Hernandez.  With an overall race record of 9-3-2-2, Forbidden Kingdom has earnings of $507,500.

Owned by Gary Barber and trained by Peter Miller, Get Her Number, who followed his classified allowance win over Forbidden Kingdom Nov. 20 with a huge second-place performance over a sloppy track at Aqueduct in the G1 Cigar Mile Dec. 3, returns to Santa Anita following a ninth-place finish going 1 1/8 miles in the G1 Pegasus World Cup Invitational Jan. 28 at Gulfstream Park.

A 5-year-old full horse by Dialed In, Get Her Number is based at San Luis Rey Downs and will be reunited with Flavien Prat for the first time since his classified win at Del Mar Nov. 20.  With an overall mark of 16-5-2-1, Get Her Number has earnings of $725,661.

Trainer Mark Glatt will be well represented by a pair of horses, his G2 winning Howbeit, who has been supplemented and will be ridden by Mike Smith, and Holden the Lute, who marched to an emphatic 3 ½-length score going seven panels in a second condition allowance on Feb. 19.

Although ridden to victory by Flavien Prat, Holden the Lute, a 6-year-old gelding who was claimed six starts back for $40,000, will be ridden for the first time by Frankie Dettori, as Prat has opted for Get Her Number.

Holden the Lute, who earned a career-top 98 Beyer Speed Figure on Feb. 19, is 29-6-9-2 overall and will be trying stakes competition for only the second time.

Bruce Chandler's speedy homebred Spirit of Makena, a head shy of being unbeaten in three starts, comes off a scintillating first condition allowance score going six furlongs here on Feb. 11 and will be ridden back by Joe Bravo.

A 5-year-old full horse by Ghostzapper, Spirit of Makena is trained by George Papaprodromou and will be making his first stakes appearance on Saturday on the heels of earning a career-best 98 Beyer.

GRADE II SAN CARLOS

WITH JOCKEYS & WEIGHTS IN POST POSITION ORDER

Race 5 of 9, Approximate post time 2:30 p.m. PT
Holden the Lute—Lanfranco Dettori – 120
Forbidden Kingdom—Juan Hernandez—124
Spirit of Makena—Joe Bravo—120
Clem Labine—Kyle Frey—120
Get Her Number—Flavien Prat—124
Howbeit—Mike Smith—124

First post time for a nine-race card on Saturday is at 12:30 p.m. PT with admission gates opening at 10:30 a.m.

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All Stakes Cross Country Pick 5 From Aqueduct, Oaklawn, Tampa Bay Downs

The New York Racing Association will host a Cross Country Pick 5 on Saturday, March 11, featuring an all-stakes sequence from Aqueduct Racetrack, Oaklawn Park and Tampa Bay Downs.

The Cross Country Pick 5 requires bettors to pick the winner of five select races from tracks across the country. The minimum bet for the multi-track, multi-race wager is 50 cents. Wagering on the Cross Country Pick 5 is available on ADW platforms and at simulcast facilities across the country with each week featuring a mandatory payout of the net pool. The Cross Country Pick 5, boasting a low 15 percent takeout, offers sequences with races from Aqueduct Racetrack and partner tracks across the country.Saturday's sequence kicks off in Race 9 at 4:04 p.m. Eastern from Tampa Bay Downs as a field of seven older fillies and mares travel nine furlongs on turf in the Grade 2 Hillsborough.

Four-time Eclipse Award-winning trainer Chad Brown will saddle a trio of contenders in Grade 1-winners Shantisara and Rougir along with the multiple graded-stakes placed Kalifornia Queen. Opposition will be provided by the one-two finishers of last month's Grade 3 Endeavour in Surprisingly and Scottish Star, while multiple graded-stakes winner Gam's Mission will look to make a winning seasonal debut from a nine-month layoff.

The second leg will see an overflow field of sophomore fillies route 1 1/16 miles on the Tampa Bay turf in the Grade 3 Florida Oaks [Race 10, 4:45 p.m.] led by the Brown-trained Free Look.

The Tapit bay graduated in September at Saratoga Race Course ahead of a runner-up effort in the Grade 2 Miss Grillo in October at Belmont at the Big A. She was last seen finishing a troubled fifth in the Grade 1 Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf in November at Keeneland. Looking to topple that foe will be graded-stakes placed Alpha Bella and stakes winners Navy Goat and Dreaming of Snow, who makes her turf debut.

The middle leg will switch to Aqueduct as a field of eight older fillies and mares contest the $100,000 Correction [Race 9, 4:56 p.m.], a six-furlong main track sprint.

The New York-bred Rossa Veloce could prove tough to catch if she replicates the lofty 102 Beyer Speed Figure garnered three starts back in an open allowance sprint at the Big A. The 5-year-old Girolamo mare has won 3-of-4 starts since being claimed by trainer Rob Atras. Easy to Bless, a 5-year-old Flat Out dark bay, will hope a speed duel develops as she looks to utilize a stalking approach under regular rider Jacqueline Davis for trainer James Ferraro. Shippers Big Tentations and Prodigy Doll add depth to a salty field.

The penultimate leg will see Tapit Trice look to announce his presence on the Road to the Kentucky Derby in the Grade 3 Tampa Bay Derby [Race 11, 5:15 p.m.] for Hall of Fame trainer Todd Pletcher. The 1 1/16-miles test for sophomores, which drew a field of 12, offers 50-20-15-10-5 Kentucky Derby qualifying points to the top-five finishers.

Tapit Trice graduated at second asking in December at the Big A over Slip Mahoney, who exited that effort to break his maiden ahead of a runner-up effort in last weekend's Grade 3 Gotham at the Big A. A $1.3 million Keeneland September Yearling Sale purchase, Tapit Trice enters from an eight-length score over returning stablemate Shesterkin in a one-mile optional-claimer at Gulfstream that registered a 92 Beyer. A talented field includes Grade 3 Nashua winner Champions Dream for Hall of Fame conditioner Mark Casse; Grade 3 Sam F. Davis runner-up Groveland for trainer Eoin Harty; and stakes-winner Zydeceaux for trainer Ramon Minguet.

The sequence concludes with the Grade 2 Azeri [Race 9, 5:54 p.m.] from Oaklawn Park as last year's Grade 1 Kentucky Oaks-winner Secret Oath makes her seasonal debut in the 1 1/16-miles test for older fillies and mares.

Trained by Hall of Famer D. Wayne Lukas, the Arrogate chestnut has won 3-of-4 starts at Oaklawn, including the Martha Washington and Grade 3 Honeybee last year en route to the Oaks. She will find significant opposition in the form of multiple Grade 1-winning multi-millionaire Clairiere for Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen. The 5-year-old Curlin mare, who also makes her seasonal debut, won 3-of-6 starts last year led by a head score over Malathaat – the eventual Champion Older Dirt Female – in the Grade 1 Ogden Phipps at Belmont Park. A stacked field includes multiple graded-stakes winner Interstatedaydream for trainer Brad Cox and graded-stakes winner Hidden Connection for conditioner Bret Calhoun.

Free Equibase past performances for the Cross Country Pick 5 sequence will be available for download at https://www.nyra.com/aqueduct/racing/cross-country-wagers.

America's Day at the Races will present live coverage and analysis of the Aqueduct winter meet on the networks of FOX Sports. For the broadcast schedule and channel finder, visit https://www.nyra.com/aqueduct/racing/tv-schedule.

NYRA Bets is the best way to bet every race of the Aqueduct Racetrack winter meet. Available to horse players nationwide, the NYRA Bets app is available for download today on iOS and Android at www.NYRABets.com.

Cross Country Pick 5 – Saturday, March 11

Leg A: Tampa Bay Downs, Race 9 – G2 Hillsborough (4:04 p.m. Eastern)

Leg B: Tampa Bay Downs, Race 10 – G3 Florida Oaks (4:45 p.m.)

Leg C: Aqueduct Racetrack, Race 9 – $100K Correction (4:56 p.m.)

Leg D: Tampa Bay Downs, Race 11 – G3 Tampa Bay Derby (5:15 p.m.)

Leg E: Oaklawn Park, Race 9 – G2 Azeri (5:54 p.m.)

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HISA Q&A: The ADMC Program

Edited Press Release

With the anticipated March 27 implementation of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority's (HISA) Anti-Doping and Medication Control (ADMC) Program approaching, it's increasingly important for all racing participants to understand how the Program will work. The following are HISA's answers to five frequently asked questions about the ADMC Program.

How will the new HISA ADMC Program impact the lives and workflow of horsemen?

The ADMC Program is designed to create centralized testing and results management processes and apply uniform penalties for violations efficiently and consistently across the country. Its rules will institute uniformity across jurisdictions, consistency in how laboratories test for substances, and swift and efficient adjudication practices.

Under the Horseracing Integrity and Welfare Unit (HIWU), all sample collection personnel will receive in-person training on HIWU's uniform chain of custody process and digital data collection technology. The HIWU app that sample collectors will use will significantly reduce the previously required paperwork involved in the testing process and enable horsemen to receive electronic receipts of their horses' sample collection.

For the first time, labs across the country will be testing for the same substances at the same levels. The ADMC rules establish separate categories for Prohibited Substances that are allowed outside of race day and other specific periods (i.e., Controlled Medications) and substances that are never allowed to be in a horse (i.e., Banned Substances). This system is meant to appropriately penalize those who use Banned Substances, while being sensible and proportionate when it comes to Controlled Medication violations.

In addition to in-competition testing at racetracks, HIWU will introduce a strategic Out-of-Competition testing program that will incorporate intelligence and data analysis in the selection of Covered Horses. Responsible Persons (i.e., trainers) of Covered Horses selected for Out-of-Competition testing will have the option of either having their horse tested wherever it is currently located, or at another mutually agreed upon site as long as the Covered Horse is made available for testing within six (6) hours of notification.

To support its Investigations Unit, which will work to identify bad actors through intelligence gathering from industry participants and data analysis, HIWU will launch anonymous whistleblower platforms to enable individuals to anonymously submit concerns regarding suspected violations of the ADMC Program.

Who is in charge of HIWU, the organization tasked with implementing the ADMC Program?

HIWU was established by Drug Free Sport International (DFSI) to be the independent enforcement agency of HISA's ADMC Program. HIWU is independent from, but in frequent communication with, HISA on the implementation of the ADMC Program. HISA's ADMC rules are ultimately vetted and approved by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC).

HIWU is led by Executive Director Ben Mosier, who has overseen anti-doping programs for the NBA, the PGA Tour, MLB's Minor League Program, and NASCAR.

HIWU's chief of operations, Kate Mittelstadt, previously served as director of the Anti-Doping Program for IRONMAN and has held multiple roles with the World Anti-Doping Agency and Association of National Anti-Doping Organizations. Mittelstadt was also one of the first employees hired by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency.

HIWU's general counsel, Michelle Pujals, was a member of the NBA's legal department for more than 20 years, where her duties included results management for, and investigations related to, the NBA's various drug programs and allegations of player and staff misconduct. Before joining HIWU, she was the owner and principal of Tautemo Consulting, LLC, a legal and sports consulting firm.

HIWU Chief of Science Dr. Mary Scollay was most recently the executive director and chief operating officer of the Racing Medication & Testing Consortium, prior to which she worked for more than 30 years as a racing regulatory veterinarian, including 11 years as the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission's equine medical director.

How does the ADMC adjudication process work and what happens if someone is charged with a violation?

Violations under the ADMC Program are categorized as Anti-Doping Rule Violations (ADRV), which involve Banned Substances and Methods, or Controlled Medication Rule Violations (CMRV), which involve Controlled Medications and Methods. There will be harsher penalties associated with ADRVs.

ADRV cases will be heard by an Arbitral Body chosen and appointed to cases by JAMS, a world-renowned arbitration and mediation provider with a panel of retired lawyers and judges who are experienced in anti-doping and sports adjudication. Before selecting individuals to hear cases, JAMS will ensure that there are no conflicts of interest between potential adjudicators and the Covered Person(s) involved.

CMRV cases will be heard by appointees to the Internal Adjudication Panel (IAP), a group of 15-20 members selected by HISA and HIWU based on their previous equine regulatory experience. The IAP pool includes state stewards, who are only permitted to hear cases that do not originate in the state in which they are employed, and others with equine regulatory experience. IAP members will be appointed to hear specific CMRV cases on a rotating basis following conflicts-of-interest checks.

All members of both the Arbitral Body and IAP must undergo initial training and continuing education on the ADMC regulations to be eligible to hear and decide cases.

When charged with an ADRV, Covered Persons and Horses will usually be issued Provisional Suspensions, during which time they will be ineligible to train or race until the matter has been resolved and associated penalties have been served. Covered Persons subject to Provisional Suspension are not permitted to be involved in any activity involving a Covered Horse at a racetrack or public training facility. They can, however, request a timely Provisional Hearing to advocate for lifting the Provisional Suspension.

For most alleged CMRVs, Provisional Suspensions will not be issued unless the Controlled Medication was used within a period of Ineligibility defined in the Prohibited List.

For both ADRV and CMRV cases, Covered Persons are entitled to the opportunity to provide written submissions and present evidence on their behalf to the assigned adjudicator(s).

HIWU is required to publicly disclose the resolution of an ADMC Program case within 20 days of (1) a final decision, (2) a resolution between HIWU and the Covered Person, or (3) the withdrawal of a charge by HIWU. Final decisions of the Arbitral Body and IAP can be appealed to a federal Administrative Law Judge.

ADMC violations that arise from a Post-Race Sample or that occur during the Race Period automatically lead to the disqualification of race-day results. For ADRVs, any other results that the Covered Horse obtained from the date the ADRV first occurred will also be disqualified.

If a horse is disqualified due to an ADRV or CMRV, all purses and other prizes will be forfeited and redistributed accordingly. When possible, the purse for the Covered Horse involved in the alleged violation will be withheld until a resolution has been reached.

While the purse will be affected by ADMC violations and disqualifications, the wagering payouts that are published after a race is declared official on race day are the final payouts, regardless of any disqualifications subsequently issued.

How are HISA and HIWU preparing the sport for implementation of the rules?

HIWU staff have so far visited all racetracks that will be racing on March 27 and met with local test barn staff, veterinarians, stewards, and other personnel to observe current practices, evaluate test barn facilities, and help prepare personnel on the ground for the implementation of the ADMC Program. HIWU will visit each racetrack prior to their next meet start date after March 27 and hold in-person training events for test barn personnel prior to collections being conducted at each location. Over the last several months, the HIWU team has also met with industry stakeholder groups in-person and virtually to discuss the ADMC Program and answer questions.

HIWU plans to visit numerous tracks ahead of the expected March 27 implementation date to talk to stakeholders and encourages industry organizations interested in hosting informational sessions where members can speak with the HIWU team to email info@hiwu.org to request to schedule a virtual or in-person meeting. Visits and outreach will continue after implementation, as well.

The HIWU website is also home to educational material on the Prohibited List, Detection Times and Screening Limits, test types, results management, and more. Additional educational materials will continue to be published and shared broadly with the industry.

How will the ADMC rules improve racing and help the sport grow?

The ADMC Program is central to HISA's mission to ensure the integrity of racing to the benefit of participants, fans, and bettors. HISA's rules are designed to improve the safety and welfare of horses and restore public trust in the sport.

Bettors will be able to trust that the product on the track is fair and that cheaters are not welcome in Thoroughbred racing. All signs indicate that the enforcement of consistent, national ADMC rules will ultimately lead to broader public interest, including from younger audiences, and increased wagering.

Importantly, besides making the sport safer and fairer, the ADMC Program will also make the jobs of many horsemen easier as the patchwork of state-by-state rules are replaced with a unified, streamlined anti-doping regulatory system.

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