Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance To Be Featured On Tampa Bay Derby Day

The Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance will be featured at Tampa Bay Downs with a named race on the Tampa Bay Derby undercard on Saturday, March 11.

Following the running of the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance Race, a presentation will be made to the winning connections including a branded blanket and swag bag. Tampa Bay Downs, a longtime supporter of the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance, will feature and promote accredited aftercare awareness throughout the race day and race meet.

As part of Tampa Bay Down's support, a VIP experience has been donated to the winners of the January 2023 Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance “Off to the Races” online benefit auction of bucket list racing events.  This all-inclusive VIP experience consists of dining, premium seating, winner's circle access, and more.

“We are excited to have Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance on-site during the Tampa Bay Derby with a featured race and hosting a VIP experience,” said Margo Flynn, Vice President of Marketing and Publicity at Tampa Bay Downs. “We value aftercare and think this is a great opportunity to promote everything that the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance does on one of our biggest race days.”

“The Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance is thrilled to have such longstanding support from Tampa Bay Downs” said Emily Dresen, Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance Director, Funding & Events. “Accredited aftercare is important to Tampa Bay Downs, and they continue to promote safe and proper aftercare for our equine athletes through a variety of avenues, and we are so excited to be here for the Tampa Bay Derby.”

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TIF: NYRA Policy Leads Sport As Computerized Robotic Wagering Impact On Display In Gotham Stakes

Large betting teams which often place their bets at the last second via industry-enabled, batch bet-placement tools – often called Computerized Robotic Wagering groups (CRWs) – have been restricted from placing win pool bets within two minutes of the start of races at the New York Racing Association (NYRA) tracks (Aqueduct, Belmont and Saratoga) since July 2021.

NYRA also banned the CRWs from playing the late pick five, pick six and cross-country pick five, when offered.

“NYRA has been ahead of the curve on this since they instituted this policy,” said Patrick Cummings, executive director of the Thoroughbred Idea Foundation (TIF). “Mainstream horseplayers should be aware of it, embrace it and bet accordingly. This isolates the win pool, providing less fluctuation and essentially, more certainty, for horseplayers.

“All tracks across America should follow NYRA's lead on this, leaving some pools for non-CRWs.”

While full details are nearly unattainable to confirm independently, since its 2020 white paper, TIF has estimated about one-third of total betting on U.S. racing comes from CRWs.

“Overall, our research has found that the more difficult the bet type, the greater the percentage of CRW money in those pools,” said Cummings. “The more exotic the bet, the more the CRWs play, and usually, the higher their rebates.

“From the evidence we have seen, TIF does not believe CRWs comprise one-third of the win pool, but we expect they are over one-third of some tracks' exotic pools, particularly pick fours and pick fives, bets which are routinely marketed to mainstream customers.

“Additional data we have reviewed, but are unable to confirm independently, suggested just one CRW team represented 20 percent of a track's pick four and pick five pools. If that is true, it's staggering, and suggests something is wrong with the way in which wagering on U.S. racing has evolved in the last few years.”

THE GOTHAM DIFFERENCE – WIN & EXACTA POOLS

The Gotham Stakes at Aqueduct on Saturday dramatically demonstrates the difference between pools with and without CRW play.

TIF isolated the changes in the last 10 betting cycles from the win and exacta pools of the Gotham, essentially the final 90 seconds of betting. The first six of those cycles experienced small, incremental changes in both pools, but the final four are significantly different.

See the chart below.

In approximately the last 30 seconds of Gotham Stakes betting, less than 42 percent of the final exacta pool is wagered while only about 17 percent of the final win pool was staked.

During this same period, the win odds on eventual race winner, #12 Raise Cain, drifted higher from 21.5-1 to 23.5-1. In the same time frame, the eventual winning $1 exacta combination of Raise Cain with #11 Slip Mahoney crashed from $138.75 to $81.25, a 43 percent decline in the probable payout.

While just 9.7 percent of the successful win bets were placed in these final four cycles, almost 66 percent of the winning exacta bets were placed in those last seconds.

“Nothing precludes you from betting exactas or any exotic pool,” Cummings added, “but this nearly two-year experiment from NYRA is showing the way in which win pool betting can differ from the exotics pools with these sorts of policies. In this example, you can really see it because we are comparing it to the most visible exotic bet, which is the exacta. Mainstream customers should be attentive to this.”

CRW PLAY AND THE FUTURE

How U.S. racing's wagering business evolves is anyone's guess, but the trajectory in recent years has been staggering.

Data TIF has obtained or reviewed from California and Florida, among other states, shows about 15 CRW accounts are active between two entities – Elite Turf Club and Racing Gaming Services – almost all of them at Elite. There are also smaller CRWs enabled to bet through connections with more mainstream ADWs.

According to California Horse Racing Board records, the largest CRW team betting on racing in that state appears to be a group identified as Elite Turf Club 17, which handled $20.4 million (2018) and $22.5 million (2019) at Del Mar, but which grew its handle to $60.4 million at the seaside oval in 2021.

The CRW team identified as Elite Turf Club 2, which appears to be the second-largest of the teams by handle, went from $33.0 million (2018) and $34.6 million (2019) to $45.6 million in 2021.

At Santa Anita, Elite Turf Club 17 bet $48.3 million (2018) and $52.6 million (2019), and grew its handle to $72.4 million there in 2021. During that same period, Elite Turf Club 2 went from handling $63.7 million (2018) and $63.3 million (2019), respectively, to $52.9 million in 2021.

Converted to handle per race day, both teams played significantly more at Del Mar in 2021, notable given that the track hosted the Breeders' Cup that year. On a per card basis in 2021, Elite Turf Club 17 handled $1.3 million per Del Mar race day with Elite Turf Club 2 just over $1 million per race day. At Santa Anita, Elite Turf Club 17 wagered about $770,000 per card while Elite Turf Club 2 was at approximately $562,000 per card.

Records obtained from Florida showed the concentration of the two largest teams on the state's biggest day of racing.

The 2022 Pegasus World Cup card at Gulfstream Park handled $43.8 million, according to the Equibase charts from that day. Of that, Florida state records show Elite 17 handled $6.4 million while Elite 2 bet $1.7 million. Combined, those two CRWs represented roughly 19 percent of all handle on that track's biggest day.

To view the full betting settlement sheet from 2022 Pegasus World Cup Day, obtained via a public information request from Florida's Department of Business and Professional Regulation, please click HERE.

“Undoubtedly, the one area of really strong, sustained growth in U.S. racing wagering has been the CRW teams, and this data goes even farther to show that one or two teams alone are particularly significant,” said Cummings.

“While the CRWs have been growing as a larger percentage of handle, we've concurrently seen a decline in mass market betting, which defies all of the other metrics in the greater wagering space.

“U.S. racing needs all of its customers – both the mass market player and CRWs. While the effects of CRWs on ordinary horseplayers are seen and felt almost every race, every day, and many players yearn for a day when they did not exist, it is both difficult to envision a future with fewer CRW players and also unrealistic to move in that direction.

“We believe the focus should be on finding a balance to meet the needs of all players. The sport needs to get its betting business under control and recognize the realities that exist today and make adjustments. It's remarkable that tracks and televised coverage of the sport heavily markets bet types to ordinary players that they should know is exactly where CRWs feast.

“The NYRA experiment is an attractive one in that it gives the public an area to focus without CRWs if they so choose.

“The goal should be to both retain existing customers and create new ones, and the status quo elsewhere seems to render that mission impossible. More tracks adopting the NYRA approach, or other versions similar to it, would create a healthier environment for mainstream players and hopefully grow racing's overall wagering business.”

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Frankie Dettori: Elite Power ‘Took My Breath Away’ In Riyadh Dirt Sprint

Frankie Dettori has revealed Elite Power's win in the Riyadh Dirt Sprint took his breath away while expressing his delight at how well Country Grammer stayed on for the runner-up berth for the second consecutive year in The Saudi Cup.

The Italian showman believes Country Grammer can build on the run when he steps up in distance by a furlong for his defense of his Dubai World Cup crown on March 25, where he faces a potential rematch with all-the-way Saudi Cup winner Panthalassa.

Dettori is on his global farewell tour and is expected to bring down the curtain on his near 40-year career in November. He twice went close to winning in Riyadh with second place finishes aboard Bob Baffert's Country Grammer and Havnameltdown in the Saudi Derby.

“To be honest with you about Country Grammer, I thought at the quarter pole that I was going to possibly end up with no (prize) money. They pay up to 10th and I thought I wasn't going to make 10th the way we were going, but he is such a great horse and he is all heart,” Dettori told Sky Sports Racing.

“He just kept on digging and digging, and we managed to pick up a massive check and finished a good second. The mile and one furlong is maybe a touch short for him but hopefully Dubai will be up his street. A mile and a quarter is his gig and he is a tough and consistent horse.

“He never runs a bad race and while he may lack the turn of foot of the very good horses, you know he is going to be coming. He is a good partner to have and I really enjoy riding him.”

Country Grammer lost out to the locally-trained Emblem Road in 2022 and went under by three-quarters of a length to Japan's Panthalassa in this year's renewal of The Saudi Cup.

Stablemate Havnameltdown was a popular choice to follow up Baffert's Saudi Derby win of 12 months earlier courtesy of Pinehurst, but the front-runner was worried out of it after a tough home-stretch battle with the Saudi-trained and owned Commissioner King.

Dettori said: “I got chinned on the line in the Derby – Bob told me to nurse his speed as much as I could, but unfortunately the way we were drawn the other horse made me work for it and I paid the price at the end.

“That was a bit sour, but Bill Mott's horse was incredible. He took my breath away and it was an amazing performance.”

Mott's Elite Power landed the Breeders' Cup Sprint at Keeneland in November and was arguably the most impressive winner on Saudi Cup night as he eased over three lengths clear of the field in the Riyadh Dirt Sprint in the colors of the late Saudi Prince Khalid Abdullah's Juddmonte operation.

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Fun to Dream Crowned CTBA Horse of the Year

Grade I winner Fun to Dream (Arrogate) was crowned California-bred Horse of the Year at the CTBA Awards dinner held Monday night. The 4-year-old filly, who is out of the Maria's Mon mare Lutess, was bred by Connie Pageler and trainer Bob Baffert and is owned by Paegler and Natalie J. Baffert. The gray filly was also named Cal-bred champion 3-year-old filly and sprinter, and her dam was named Cal-bred broodmare of the year.

“I did this, it was a crazy thing, I called Garrett O'Rourke at Juddmonte and I told him I'm going to do something really crazy, I'm sending you a mare that I claimed for $8,000,” Bob Baffert, who was voted Trainer of the Year, said. “I told Connie, we're going to breed her to Arrogate, one of the greatest horses I ever trained. And we got lucky. We talked about what to name her and it's fun to dream, that's why we're all in this business. And that's how she got her name.

“Connie sold the mare and I'm going to get crazy again and do a foal share with Justify. So, hopefully, I'll be up here in a couple of years and maybe we can catch lightning in a bottle twice.”In 2022, Fun to Dream had five wins in six starts, including the GI La Brea S., and earned $426,590. Overall, she has six wins in seven starts and earnings of $546,590.

Other 2022 Cal-bred champions:
Champion California-bred 2-Year-Old Male: Giver Not a Taker (Danzing Candy)
Champion California-bred 2-Year-Old Female: Sell The Dream (Munnings)
Champion California-bred 3-Year-Old: Slow Down Andy (Nyquist)
Champion California-bred 3-Year-Old Female: Fun to Dream
Champion California-bred Older Male: The Chosen Vron (Vronsky).
Champion California-bred Older Female: Becca Taylor (Old Topper)
Champion California-bred Sprinter: Fun to Dream
Champion California-bred Turf Horse: The Chosen Vron
Champion Sire of California Conceived Foals by Earnings: Grazen (Benchmark)
Champion Sire of California Conceived Foals by Number of Winners: Grazen
Champion Sire of California Conceived Foals by Turf Earnings: Grazen
Champion Sire of California Conceived 2-Year-Olds by Earnings: Stay Thirsty (Bernardini)
Trainer of the Year: Bob Baffert
Broodmare of the Year: Lutess (Maria's Mon)
Champion Breeder of California Foaled Thoroughbreds by Earnings: Nick Alexander
Scoop Vessels Award: The Derby Room
CTBA Hall of Fame: Joe Harper, Nashoba's Key (Silver Hawk)

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