For horse racing fans, the true indicator of summer is when Del Mar Thoroughbred Club opens its doors for its famed meet. The iconic San Diego-area track is an incredible place to visit whether you’re a lifelong fan of racing or if this will be your first trip to the track. If you fall into the latter category — or if you’re planning your first trip to Del Mar this summer — scroll down for everything you need to know about this year’s summer season.
Month: July 2023
Underappreciated Horse Racing Stars of the 1940s: Girl Power
World history would make the 1940s as the decade of war, starting with the Nazi invasion of Poland in September 1939 and ending with the descent into a conflict that left the planet cold with fear at times. On the racetrack, the decade was one of Triple Crown winners – four in total, the most of any decade so far – yet those years were rich with great performances, a long list of great horses vying for the hearts and minds of the fans that stood trackside.
Hong Kong Season Concludes With Historic Records, Slight Turnover Increase Over Last Season
An extraordinary 2022/2023 Hong Kong horse racing season ended in remarkable fashion on Sunday at Sha Tin Racecourse and reinforced Hong Kong's world-class racing with history-making performances of outstanding horses, trainers, and jockeys.
With only 1,250 horses in training – or around 0.7 percent of the world's horse population – Hong Kong's racing once again displayed its world-class quality.
Golden Sixty, the first horse in the history of Hong Kong racing to have secured three consecutive Horse of the Year crowns, and fellow Group 1 winners Lucky Sweynesse and Romantic Warrior, are entrenched in the top seven of the LONGINES World's Best Racehorse Rankings. They delivered astounding performances against international rivals in the international spotlight on FWD Champions Day on 30 April 2023 and led a clean sweep of the three Group 1 features of the day — FWD Champions Mile, Chairman's Sprint Prize, and FWD QEII Cup.
World-class trainer John Size became the first trainer to win 12 Hong Kong trainers' championships. He has trained 1493 winners in Hong Kong and continues to excel with an uncanny ability to patiently develop young talent into elite top-level performers. Zac Purton clinched his sixth Hong Kong jockeys' championship with a single-season record of 179 wins. Home-grown jockey Vincent Ho was crowned the Tony Cruz Award for a fourth time with the most wins in a season. They are all shining examples of the rich pool of racing talents in Hong Kong, which serves as a key driver for the continuous development of Hong Kong racing.
“Hong Kong's world-class racing is not only built on our state-of-art racing facilities, but more importantly a rich and growing pool of racing talents across all levels from trainers, jockeys, veterinarians to stable assistants and farriers etc,”s aid the Club's Chief Executive Officer, Winfried Engelbrecht-Bresges. “The Hong Kong Jockey Club is committed to attracting world-class talents from overseas and nurturing high-potential home-grown talents. I am delighted to see our racing talents and the horses they train and take care of, deliver remarkable performances this season to local and global fans. They are the future of Hong Kong's racing.”
The season also marks a full return of Hong Kong's racing to normalcy after three years of the COVID pandemic.
In the first few months after the season opening in September 2022 when COVID restrictions were still in place in the territory, the Club was able to overcome the challenges with the support of the Hong Kong SAR Government to hold one of the first international sport events in Hong Kong — the internationally renowned 2022 LONGINES Hong Kong International Races in December 2022 with the participation of over 300 overseas racing participants and more than 45,000 people flocking to Sha Tin Racecourse and Happy Valley Racecourse to witness Hong Kong horses win three out of 4 Group 1 races. The success of that event has set a timely and compelling example to the world that Hong Kong is on the international stage again and will continue to excel.
Following the uplifting of COVID measures, the Club has responded quickly and effectively to bring local racing fans and mainland visitors back to the racecourses to enjoy not only our spectacular racing but also our remarkable racecourse entertainments with the popular Happy Wednesday brand as a highlight. A notable example is that more than 84,000 people attended the Chinese New Year Raceday, the first feature raceday after the full return of Hong Kong to normalcy to kick off a new good year.
“What makes Hong Kong's racing continue during the over three long years of COVID pandemic is resilience. What makes us effectively leverage the reopening opportunity and grasp every chance to further develop and strengthen Hong Kong's racing is our inimitable 'can-do' spirit. I am proud of the determination, efforts and support of a massive group of stakeholders who love racing, including our owners, trainers, jockeys, Club employees and our racing fans. I am confident that with the support of the Hong Kong SAR Government, Hong Kong's racing will continue to play a vital role as the most popular sport in the city as well as an international brand of Hong Kong,” said Engelbrecht-Bresges.
In the past season, the Club has been working hard to address the challenges brought by the COVID pandemic. The Club understands that our valuable owners' experience in the racecourses during the most stringent period of COVID pandemic was significantly compromised as their attendance and activities during a race meeting were restricted due to the implementation of stringent public health protection measures. In order to stimulate the owners' interests in racing, the Club announced the record-high prize money and incentives structure of HK$1.73 billion across the 2023/2024 season in May. This included an 8% rise in the domestic racing prize money pool and an increment to the PP bonus scheme. The Club is confident that these attractive incentives and increasing returns on investments will incentivize our owners to bring more quality horses to Hong Kong to ensure a continuous outstanding performance of Hong Kong horses on the global stage.
The Club has stringent measures in place to ensure horse welfare. In light of the increasingly hot weather during summer, the Club has proactively introduced Twilight meetings in June and July to safeguard the welfare of horsemen and racehorses. The Club will carry out a review and consider the response of stakeholders to decide future arrangements.
The Club closed out the season's 88th and final meeting, including seven Twilight fixtures, with a total of 835 Hong Kong races and 299 overseas simulcast races and posted turnover of HK$141.1 billion, representing a slight 0.5% increase over the 2021/2022 season. The total turnover of the season finale meeting reached HK$2.065 billion, an increase of 1.3% year-on-year. This also marks a double record-high for a season finale and a single race meeting after the establishment of the HKSAR in 1997.
Under the current economic situation, it is no surprise that the turnover from Hong Kong customers has experienced a slight decrease of 0.3 percent with an acceleration starting from April. The Club's strategy to market Hong Kong Racing globally via commingling has been a great success and represents 19.6 percent of the total turnover at present. In this season we have seen an increase of 3.9 percent which has helped to mitigate the impact of the slight turnover decrease from Hong Kong customers.
The increasing popularity of simulcast of overseas races and the increasing appreciation of the global nature of racing contributed to a 12.5% growth in simulcast turnover to over HK$11.8 billion. While the majority of the simulcast turnover comes from Hong Kong customers which registered an 11.3% growth to HK$10.5 billion, the turnover generated via the World Pool from our overseas customers and partners has grown by 23% to HK$1.3 billion.
The Club has established Hong Kong as the global hub for wagering on the world's best races with even more business potential in the future. The turnover of all simulcast races conducted under the World Pool Brand (including both Hong Kong and overseas customers) have increased from HK$6.2 billion in 2021/2022 season to HK$7.3 billion, representing a 18.5% increase. We have continued to increase the number of World Pool races to 24 days this season featuring many of the LONGINES Top 100 Group 1 races. We have also broadened our World Pool partnership to include racing from Australia, Saudi Arabia, and Germany for the first time.
Engelbrecht-Bresges said: “Under such a challenging economic situation, our overall season racing turnover of HK$141.1 billion is very satisfactory. The strength of the turnover reflects the quality of our products and the on-going support of our customers. However, we will stay vigilant as there will be significant challenges from offshore bookmakers following the reopening of borders and also illegal bookmakers. To ensure our racing will stay competitive and maintain its world-class status, we will re-invest in racecourse assets and enhance customer experience. We will also grasp the unique development opportunity in the GBA under the 'One Country Two Systems' principle. After all, the Club is acting for the betterment of society. All we do is to contribute more to our community with a strategic focus that best meets the needs of Hong Kong people.”
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Multiple Graded Stakes-Winning Millionaire Tax Retired
Multiple graded stakes-winning millionaire and fan favorite Tax has been retired from racing after a 19-start career that saw him win three graded stakes and more than $1.1 million in earnings, trainer Danny Gargan said Sunday.
“We've decided to retire him because it was the right thing to do by the horse,” said Gargan. “He's done enough. We just wanted him to win over the million-dollar mark, and he got well over that.”
Owned by Gargan and R.A. Hill Stable, Tax won the 2019 Withers (G3) at Aqueduct Racetrack and finished second in the Wood Memorial (G2), awarding him enough points to start in the Kentucky Derby (G1) where he finished 14th. He followed with a fourth in the Belmont Stakes (G1) before a win in the Jim Dandy (G2) at Saratoga Race Course.
During a three-start 4-year-old campaign, he posted a 4 1/2-length romp in Gulfstream Park's Harlan's Holiday (G3) before his lone start of 2021 when off-the-board in the Pegasus World Cup (G1) at Gulfstream. The dark bay gelding made a memorable comeback nearly 18 months later when earning the final victory of his career in Delaware Park's Battery Park last July.
After a runner-up finish in the Challenger (G3) in March at Tampa Bay Downs, Tax retired with a record of 19-5-5-1 and total purse earnings of $1,102,190.
Gargan said Tax has been sent to the farm of Dean Reeves, who co-owned Tax through 2021, and will be retrained with an eye to a pony career.
“He went to Dean Reeves' farm and we're probably going to break him to be the farm pony next year,” said Gargan. “Maybe he'll come here to Saratoga next year and be our barn pony here.”
Tax retires as the all-time top earner for Gargan, who spoke fondly of the gelding's accomplished career.
“He's my favorite horse of all-time,” said Gargan of Tax, a son of Arch bred in Kentucky by Claiborne Farm and Adele B. Dilschneider. “He's so pretty and so kind for such a big horse.”
The post Multiple Graded Stakes-Winning Millionaire Tax Retired appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.