Cynane, First Winner For Omaha Beach, Pointing To Royal Ascot’s Queen Mary

VinLaur Racing Stables, West Paces Racing and Rainbow's End Racing Stable's Cynane [pronounced kee-nah-nay] is likely bound for Royal Ascot off a strong debut victory on Thursday at Belmont Park. Trained by Tom Morley, the daughter of Omaha Beach provided her sire with his first winner in the five-furlong maiden special weight over the Widener turf course.

Omaha Beach stands at Spendthrift Farm in Lexington.

Ridden to victory by Hall of Famer Javier Castellano, Cynane led at each point of call under confident handling and kicked clear down the lane to fend off the bid of post-time favorite Sam's Treasure to her outside. She crossed the wire 2 3/4 lengths the best and stopped the clock in 57.61 seconds.

Morley said the talented filly will now be pointed to the five-furlong Group 2, £115,000 Queen Mary for juvenile fillies on June 21.

“That's the plan at the moment,” said Morley. “She came out of the race really well and she's got a great mind and really good appetite – she was screaming for her feed tub last night. She jogged sound this morning, so we'll start putting plans in place to go to the Queen Mary.”

Cynane arrived in Morley's barn after starting her training at King's Equine in Ocala, Florida over the winter. Morley said she has impressed him ever since she began breezing over the Belmont training track in March.

“She has never missed a beat – not only with us, but with Raul Reyes in Ocala,” said Morley. “You only get one shot to go to Ascot with these horses and to get there, you have to never miss a day and be good enough to win on debut. Full credit to her, because she has a wonderful temperament and is good as gold.”

Though Cynane's sire was a three-time Grade 1-winner on dirt, her affinity for turf can be attributed to her strong female family. Her dam, the Arch mare Burning Arch, was a two-time winner at one mile on the lawn and is a half-sister to Cat's Claw, who won the Waya at 1 1/2 miles on the Saratoga Race Course turf. Cynane's second dam, the Phipps Stable-bred stakes-placed Chili Cat, is a half-sister to multiple Grade 1-winning turf specialist Point of Entry, as well as Pine Island, a dual Grade 1-winner on dirt.

“She's got a really, really good female family and is from a really good American turf line from the Phipps family,” said Morley. “She has every right to be a good horse and hopefully she can be.”

Cynane's royal pedigree attracted attention at the Keeneland September Yearling Sale, where she hammered for $250,000. Bob Scavetta, the managing partner of Rainbow's End Racing Stable, purchased a minority share in the filly on the recommendation of Morley, who has trained for the partnership since 2016.

“We're very pleased to have that share. Tom is a master of putting personalities of owners together,” Scavetta said, with a laugh. “Tom loved the filly, and his eyes are the best. It's a great relationship.”

The filly is named after the Macedonian princess Cynane, a half-sister to Alexander the Great who was a fierce warrior trained in martial arts. Morley said the name is fitting for a horse who is equally feminine as she is audacious.

“It's quite a sweet name, but if you look up who Cynane was as a person, she was not sweet at all,” Morley said. “It's a warrior name, it's fierce and feminine – I think it's a great name.”

Scavetta said Cynane has the potential to bring him on a once-in-a-lifetime journey.

“We've got to consider going to Ascot with her, but the only hook is we have a grandson graduating that week,” said Scavetta. “I'm sure he would understand if papa wasn't there.”

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James L. Gagliano

It has been increasingly difficult to watch as the opponents of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act of 2020 (HISA) continue to ramp up their campaign to see it derailed. Much like throwing spaghetti against the wall to see what sticks, they continue to pitch mistruths and diversions and file myriad lawsuits across the nation in an attempt to get something to stick in the minds of lawmakers, judges, and policymakers.

I would like to set the record straight about HISA and to comment on its opponents' most recent actions.

Over the past months these opponents, principally the National Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association (NHBPA) and a handful of state racing commissions have trafficked in a series of mistruths and fabrications to try to hoodwink members of the racing industry and the public to oppose HISA. All this is underwritten by a couple of unrelated, agenda driven, special interest activist groups, which have zero involvement in our sport and have no interest in its long-term viability.

They have argued that HISA was passed in the “middle of the night” in 2020. It wasn't. It's first form of a bill was introduced in 2015 and re-introduced in 2017 and 2019, it received hearings in Congress, was carried forward by a House Committee in 2020, and was, in September that year, passed unanimously by the House of Representatives as a stand-alone piece of legislation. A month later it was passed by the Senate as part of a larger bill, due to the expiring legislative session.

Opponents also claim to not have had input into HISA. Nonsense. As someone fully involved in the development of HISA, I can attest to the countless times horsemen's groups and racing commissioners, specifically, met with backers of the bill and its original sponsors. In fact, I recall flying leadership of the NHBPA to Colorado Springs to meet and discuss the bill. I'll foreshadow the rest of this essay by sharing that at that time counsel for the NHPBA said their most significant concern was including anything in a bill that would open the Interstate Horseracing Act of 1978 (IHA) to any form of amendment or tampering. We've spoken with them in closed rooms and debated them in public for years – but somehow, they were “never included.”

Against this background of spin and untruths, the opponents have become serial litigators: they have filed six federal lawsuits across the nation – making redundant claims in each – in an effort to find the “right” federal appeals court to find HISA unconstitutional.

Thus far, the opponents have failed in the U.S. Sixth Circuit, which in a comprehensive and well-reasoned opinion found HISA to be constitutional. Last week, they failed again when a federal district court in Texas issued another extensive opinion finding HISA constitutional. The opponents are going to take another shot at it with the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court now that the court's earlier decision on HISA has been made moot by way of a legislative amendment in December. Not being content with these bites at the apple, opponents have recently filed additional nearly identical lawsuits within two other federal circuit court jurisdictions.

While helping plaintiff's lawyers live their dreams, the HISA opponents expend great energy complaining about how much HISA might cost. While assessments will continue to be fine-tuned – one thing is for sure, they are driving up the industry's expenses by continuing to sue with no end in sight.

All this brings us to this past week. Once again, the challenges facing our athletes and our industry have come to the forefront – directly to a national audience at the time of our sport's biggest event. Following the unfortunate equine fatalities at Churchill Downs, and the massive national media attention it garnered, opponents of HISA have chosen not to get behind a collective effort to solve these issues but, instead, to break down the industry's best hope for ensuring horse safety and industry integrity. Early this week, they continued their scorched earth efforts to derail HISA in favor of maintaining the status quo by immediately seeking an injunction against the rollout of the HISA anti-doping and medication control program on May 22. This, despite the fact that the very same court they are asking for the injunction just found HISA to be constitutional.

These injunctions take a toll. One judge delayed HISA's implementation of its medication program by a month, making it impossible to begin before Derby week. HISA will not be fully implemented until later this month now, due to the NHBPA. Would a unified, independent medication and track safety program have made a difference? Thanks to the NHBPA, we will never know.

Most organizations would have kept a low profile after such an embarrassment. Not the NHBPA, they doubled down. They got their few supporters in Congress to prepare legislation that would immediately repeal HISA and offer the illusion of a state compact-based regulatory model. The draft legislation would enable states to choose to keep the current state-by-state regulatory approach or create a regulator whose board of directors would be hand-picked by state commissions – under rules that specifically allow the directors to have conflicts of interests. The medication regulation by compact regulatory model is a recycled version of an idea first trotted out by the Association of Racing Commissioners International in 2010 and which has continued to be touted by opponents to HISA since. Obviously, it hasn't worked yet, and it will not work in the future.

Further, this trojan horse of a bill takes a carrot and stick approach that would put simulcast wagering across the U.S. at risk of an immediate and summary cessation. Under this bill, if two states enter into a compact to create the conflicted new regulatory body ALL other states would be forbidden from simulcasting until they enter into the compact as well. As I foreshadowed earlier, NHBPA's lawyer told us years ago that anything touching the IHA was an absolute no-go for them – now that they are blinded by their hate for HISA, they seemingly no longer care. This “we have to destroy the industry to (possibly) save it” approach is an absolute affront to everyone in our industry – those who support HISA and those who do not.

The horses that perished last week have recent racing histories within numerous states for which there is no single regulator that has the ability to conduct complete cross-border investigations. HISA changes this dynamic. Under the HISA opponents' preferred approach, each state is an investigatory island, limited to inquiries within their own borders. One would think that the NHBPA would want the fullest possible investigations in support of their members who lost horses – and to avoid the same things happening to other horses in the future. They focus instead on hobbling HISA while leaving their constituents and our equine and human athletes at continued risk.

I've spent every living moment of my professional life working in this industry, in many roles, including at some of the smallest tracks and the largest. It's a sport I have loved since I was a child, and it remains with deep roots among my friends and family. Racing safety and integrity are matters concerning everyone at all levels of the game – and to so many outside of it. Who among us in the sport didn't hear over the last few days: “What's going on with horse racing?” and “What can be done to fix it?” The answer is clear: HISA.

Unlike what the opponents of HISA are peddling, the industry should embrace the opportunity to safeguard our horses and our game by moving forward with HISA, not taking a trip backward to the tired and worn-out programs of the past.

 

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NHBPA ‘Will Not Exploit the Deaths of Horses To Make a Point’

Not even 24 hours after the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) Authority and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) alleged links between the sport's recent adverse headlines and the National Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association (NHBPA)'s request to delay the May 22 implementation of the Anti-Doping and Medication Control (ADMC) program, the NHBPA fired back with a response that stated the fatalities of seven horses during GI Kentucky Derby week shouldn't be used as a means to make legal arguments in the 2-year-old lawsuit.

“The Horsemen will not exploit the deaths of horses to make a point, because this industry is not going to fix anything moving forward by pointing [fingers],” stated the first line of the NHBPA's May 12 filing.

United States District Court Judge James Wesley Hendrix of the Northern District of Texas (Lubbock Division) had given the NHBPA until the close of the court on Monday, May 15, to file a response to the arguments against delaying the ADMC that were articulated May 11 by the HISA Authority and the FTC defendants.

But because the HISA Authority alleged in its Thursday filing that “recent headlines provide fresh reminders” of “inconsistent regulation,” and because the FTC claimed that the NHBPA has “repeatedly challenged” HISA's efforts to “prevent these kinds of tragedies,” the horsemen plaintiffs wasted little time in trying to address those accusations with a legal response by midday Friday, well ahead of the judge's deadline.

The NHBPA's filing stated that the equine fatalities during Derby week did, in effect, occur under the HISA regulatory framework, citing a May 8 statement released by the HISA Authority that said, “Churchill Downs has been cooperating with HISA since its inception and is in full compliance with our rules and processes.”

The NHBPA also stated that it was the FTC itself, and not any legal efforts by the NHBPA, that kept the ADMC from being in place before the Triple Crown series started.

“It was also the FTC's choice to delay the ADMC from May 1 to May 22. The NHBPA did not delay the ADMC rules until after the Kentucky Derby. The Defendants made that choice because in their view the rules were not ready for implementation in prime time on the most important race of the year,” the NHBPA's filing stated.

“[T]he Authority is still caught in its own logic trap as to the ADMC,” the NHBPA filing stated. “On the one hand, they say, 'few substances that were broadly legal under most states' preexisting regulations are prohibited under the new HISA rules.' On the other hand, they say the ADMC must go into effect immediately or horses will die because current state regulations are insufficient.”

On Mar. 15, 2021, the NHBPA and 12 of its affiliates sued the FTC and HISA Authority personnel, seeking to derail HISA's implementation on constitutional grounds. Judge Hendrix dismissed that suit on March 31, 2022.

The NHBPA plaintiffs appealed, leading to a Fifth Circuit Court reversal on Nov. 18, 2022, that remanded the case back to the Lubbock Division. In the interim, an amended version of HISA was signed into law Dec. 29, 2022. That fix was designed to make HISA compliant with the constitutional defects the Fifth Circuit had identified. On May 6, 2023, Hendrix validated the newer version of HISA as constitutional.

Now the NHBPA is planning another appeal back to the Fifth Circuit, and it wants the ADMC's rollout stopped while that process plays out.

The HISA Authority's May 11 filing explained that it sees the overall issue this way: “Congress, the Executive, and both federal courts [have] come to the same correct conclusion: the Act is now constitutional.”

The NHBPA's May 12 filing countered that claim: “Congress did not 'follow the blueprint'–it made the barest tweak possible to keep the law alive and take a second shot at the courts allowing it to go through.”

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Kentucky Commission Confirms All Post-Race Tests For Derby, Oaks Are Clear

The Kentucky Horse Racing Commission confirmed on May 12 that post-race drug tests for this year's Kentucky Oaks and Kentucky Derby have come back clear of any violations.

The commission received the final results on Friday from the University of Kentucky's Equine Analytical Chemistry Lab.

The commission began using the laboratory at the University of Kentucky in 2021 after the facility invested $2.5 million in new testing equipment.

While the announcement that tests are clear used to be a given, the declaration did not come after the 2021 Kentucky Derby, and subsequently trainer Bob Baffert held a press conference to announce Medina Spirit had tested over the legal limit on the corticosteroid betamethasone. Prior to that, stablemate Gamine had a positive test for the same substance after the 2020 Kentucky Oaks.

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