Lazarus Outlines HISA Approach To Churchill Deaths

Lisa Lazarus, the CEO of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority (HISA), has written an open letter to industry participants, addressing the measures HISA plans to implement in the wake of a spate of fatalities during the first week of the Churchill Downs meet leading up to and including Kentucky Derby day. The statement, in its entirety, reads:

Fellow racing participants,

I wanted to take a minute of your time to share an update on HISA's role related to the events of last week along with a perspective on what's to come.

Our first priority is to support efforts to better understand, to the degree possible, the root causes of the deaths last week at Churchill Downs.

Here's what you can expect from the team at HISA and our counterparts at the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission (KHRC) in the coming weeks:

The KHRC is leading an Equine Catastrophic Injury Review to investigate the circumstances of and potential contributing factors to each of the fatalities that occurred. The investigations are already under way, and involve, at a minimum, interviews with the horses' connections and security personnel and review of the horses' racing, training, veterinary and pre-race exam inspection records as well as video surveillance. This is in addition to the mandatory necropsies that will be performed to further inform our collective understanding of the circumstances as outlined by HISA's Racetrack Safety Program. All findings will be submitted to HISA upon the completion of the review.

HISA will conduct its own, independent investigation of each fatality to inform whether additional steps need to be taken. HISA's investigation will include the following:

  • A review of the records pertaining to each horse which died, including the necropsy report, Vets' List history, past performances, exercise history, treatment records, pre-race inspection, and video records;
  • A review of Churchill Downs equine fatality rates from the recent period, the same period the year prior, and the most recently concluded year; as well as training fatality data;
  • A review of racetrack maintenance records, surface measurements, and testing data;
  • Interviews with the Regulatory Vet, Attending Vet, track management officials, and other relevant third parties.

HISA's findings, including the determination of whether any rule violations occurred to refer for potential enforcement proceedings, will be made public following the investigation's conclusion.

The findings associated with these investigations will also be recorded and aggregated along with other industry-wide data for in-depth analysis to eventually establish a baseline for determining with greater clarity factors that may contribute to risk of injury.

While these changes take time and do little to address the immediate and pressing concerns we share as an industry, we have operational safety rules in place that by most accounts are making a difference. And soon, we'll take another critical step toward an improved, more modern sport when the Anti-Doping and Medication Control (ADMC) Program resumes on May 22 under the Horseracing Integrity and Welfare Unit (HIWU).

For the first time in the storied history of Thoroughbred racing, there will be one set of uniform, consistent rules across all racing jurisdictions. Under the ADMC Program there will also be greater efficiency for all participants and real consequences for those who seek to break the rules for their own benefit and to the detriment of the horses under their care. The rules also create a rational, fair system for adjudicating penalties and taking into account environmental and other accidental contamination.

There is no doubt that the combination of the Racetrack Safety Program and the ADMC Program will make our sport safer for the horses entrusted to our care.

As we move forward from this collective low, I hope it is together, united with a renewed commitment to what matters most: the safety of our horses and our riders. We owe it to them to get this right. And we owe it to them to do it now.

Yours in racing,
Lisa Lazarus
HISA CEO

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Weekend Lineup Presented By Del Mar Ship & Win: Heating Up In The Northeast

The racing action this weekend in the northeast U.S. and Canada will be heating up as New York's Belmont Park presents a trio of graded stakes on Saturday, led by the Grade 1 Man o' War Stakes for older turf marathoners.

One of the other stakes on the card is the Grade 3 Peter Pan for 3-year-olds whose connections might have possible designs on a run in the June 10 Belmont Stakes, final leg of the Triple Crown.

Monmouth Park kicks off its summer meet Saturday on the Jersey Shore, and Woodbine in Toronto, Ontario, offers its first graded stakes of the year on Saturday and Sunday with a pair of Grade 3 sprints on the synthetic Tapeta surface.

Out west, Santa Anita's Grade 3 San Luis Rey Stakes has attracted a field of eight horses going a mile and a half on grass.

Saturday

3:07 p.m. ET – Grade 1 Man o' War at Belmont Park

There are not one, but two, 9-year-olds in the Man o' War lineup, Red Knight, a multiple graded stakes now trained by Michael Maker, and Channel Maker, from the barn of William Mott, who formerly trained Red Knight. Favoritism is likely to fall on the Great Britain-bred Godolphin homebred gelding, Warren Point, a 4-year-old by Dubawi who has not started since winning a G1 race in Qatar on Feb. 18. Trained by Charles Appleby – who has a formidable success rate when shipping to New York from his UK headquarters – Warren Point has won five of eight career starts, with two seconds and a third. Lanfranco Dettori, fresh off success in a Group 1 Classic last week at Newmarket, will ride.

3:40 p.m. – Grade 3 Peter Pan Stakes at Belmont Park

Henry Q is the only North American stakes winner in the field of nine sophomores entered in the Peter Pan, having won the Mine That Bird Derby at Sunland Park Feb. 28 by 14 3/4 lengths. He then finished third in the G3 Sunland Derby. The Blame colt, who was conditioned by Todd Fincher while in New Mexico, has returned to the barn of Doug O'Neill, who had Henry Q for his first three career starts. Dettori has ridden Henry Q twice and will be reunited in the Peter Pan, where he was installed an 8-1 outsider.

Bishops Bay looks to be the heavy favorite in the race for trainer Brad Cox. Unbeaten in two starts at Fair Grounds – most recently in a March 19 allowance/optional claiming race – the Uncle Mo colt will have regular rider Florent Geroux in the irons and was made the 8-5 morning line favorite. Cox has a second Peter Pan runner, Slip Mahoney, who finished a disappointing sixth in the G2 Wood Memorial. Joel Rosario will ride.

4:48 p.m. – Grade 3 Whimsical Stakes at Woodbine

Our Flash Drive, runner-up in 2022 Sovereign Award voting in the female sprint division, makes her 2023 debut in the Whimsical for Mark Casse and is pegged as the even-money favorite. She's won three of four stars on the Woodbine main track, with one second, and will be ridden by Patrick Husband. Baby No Worries is a Tapeta veteran, racing with success on the surface at Presque Isle Downs in Pennsylvania and, more recently, Turfway Park in Kentucky.

5:18 p.m. – Grade 3 Runhappy Stakes at Belmont Park

Drafted, a 9-year-old gelding trained by David Duggan, is back to defend his title in the Runhappy. The winner of 10 of 35 starts and earnings of nearly $1.2 million ran three subpar races over the winter at Aqueduct but can never be counted out. The contentious field also includes win-machine Beren (11 for 27) and Pennsylvania-bred Twisted Ride, who comes into the Runhappy off four consecutive wins this year. Both horses ship up from Parx Racing.

8:00 p.m. – Grade 3 San Luis Rey Stakes at Santa Anita

Trainer Phil D'Amato has been dominating the turf distance division in California but he's only got one entry in the San Luis Rey line-up, the 12-1 Irish-bred longshot Agatino. Michael McCarthy-trained Offlee Naughty, coming off a victory in the G2 Charles Whittingham Stakes April 8, is the 8-5 morning line favorite to successfully stretch out from that 1 1/4-mile race to the 1 1/2-mile San Luis Rey. Umberto Rispoli will ride. Richard Mandella sends out Brazilian-bred Planetario, a G1 winner in his home country and making his second U.S. start. Hector Berrios rides.

Sunday

4:16 p.m. – Grade 3 Jacques Cartier Stakes at Woodbine

Anarchist was knocking heads with some of Southern California's top sprinters while trained by Doug O'Neill, both on dirt and turf, and the Distorted Humor colt tries the synthetic Tapeta track for the first time. Now conditioned by Josie Carroll, Anarchist has had a touch of seconditis, with five runner-up efforts in eight career starts. Luis Contreras will try to get him back in the winner's circle. Arzak, trained by Michael Trombetta, was made the 2-1 morning line favorite as he attempts for a second consecutive Jacques Cartier win. He's got a ways to go to catch four-time race winner Pink Lloyd.

4:40 p.m. – Grade 3 Vagrancy Stakes at Belmont Park

Funny How had a five-race win streak come to an end in the G3 Distaff Handicap on April 7 but was not disgraced by winner Mommasgottarun. Trainer Ray Handal gives Katie Davis a leg up aboard the New York-bred filly by Overanalyze. Caramel Swirl likely needed her last race at Tampa as it was her first start since finishing a good second to female sprint champion Goodnight Olive in the G1 Ballerina Handicap at Saratoga last summer.  Junior Alvarado teams up with William Mott.

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Smile Happy To Point For Stephen Foster

Lucky Seven Stable's 'TDN Rising Star' Smile Happy (Runhappy), impressive winner of the GII Alysheba S. on the GI Kentucky Oaks undercard at Churchill Downs May 5, will make his next start in the $1-million GI Stephen Foster S. July 1, trainer Ken McPeek told the track's media office Friday.

Eighth in last year's GI Kentucky Derby, the $185,000 Fasig-Tipton Selected Yearling Showcase graduate returned from a 10-month absence with an impressive allowance victory at Oaklawn Park Mar. 16 and was a good third in the GIII Oaklawn Mile Apr. 1 before defeating GI Pegasus World Cup hero Art Collector (Bernardini) by two lengths at odds of 7-1 in the Alysheba. He received a lofty 110 Beyer Speed Figure for the effort, the highest number over a mile thus far in 2023.

McPeek reported that the commonly owned Rattle N Roll (Connect), last-out winner of the GIII Ben Ali S. at Keeneland Apr. 22, will go next in the GIII Blame S. on Stephen Foster Preview Day Saturday, June 3.

The Foster offers the winner an all-expenses-paid berth in the GI Breeders' Cup Classic as part of the Breeders' Cup Challenge Series.

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Saturday Insights: 3yo Justify Colt Debuts At Pimlico

3rd-PIM, $52K, Msw, 3yo, 6f, 4:37 p.m.
As Pimlico's meet tunes up before Preakness week, $450,000 KEESEP purchase REBELLIOUS STAGE (Justify) heads to post four in this maiden attempt. Trained by Brittany Russell and ridden by Sheldon Russell, the chestnut colt's second dam Mon Belle (Maria's Mon) is a full-sister to GI Kentucky Derby hero Monarchos and she produced GSP Supreme (Empire Maker), who is the dam of GI Met Mile champ Silver State (Hard Spun).  TJCIS PPS

4th-CD, $120K, Msw, 3yo/up, f, 1mT, 2:13 p.m.
As the Triple Crown Trail heads east, Churchill Downs continues with its racing and a competitive field assembles on the turf for this maiden. Vanished (Speightstown) will break from gate 10 for Todd Pletcher with Luis Saez aboard, and this 3-year-old $300,000 KEESEP buy is out of Elusive Pearl (Medaglia d'Oro) who won a pair of stakes routing on the grass. To her outside, is a 3-year-old daughter of Maclean's Music named Evie's Encore. Trained by Tom Amoss and ridden by Edgar Morales, the $250,000 KEESEP grad's second dam is GI Ashland S. heroine Sis City (Slew City). One other worth a mention is Em Kat (Tapit), a 3-year-old filly who is out of MGSW Great Hot (Brz). TJCIS PPS

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