Award-Winning Author, Journalist, And Attorney Toby Dies At 73

Milton C. Toby was a Renaissance man who embraced life and never did anything halfway. Tall, lanky and a bit Lincolnesque in appearance, his wit was dry, his humor quick, his passions intense. Toby's interests were many, some profound, some whimsical, ranging from Star Wars, golf, Jack the Ripper, and Fiona the hippo, to travel, law, publishing, criminal justice, animals, and mysteries. Above all he loved to write—most notably about Thoroughbred racing, to the everlasting benefit of the sport.

Toby was born on October 26, 1949, to William and Laura Susan Toby of Campbellsville, Ky. Although raised around American Saddlebreds, Thoroughbreds became his passion. Days after graduating at 22 from the University of Kentucky with a degree in Animal Science, he accepted a sports writing job at the Aiken Standard in South Carolina. His first assignment had to do with the Belmont Stakes, and he was hooked.

A year later Toby was hired on at The Blood-Horse magazine back in his home state, just before Secretariat's historic 1973 Triple Crown bid. The 70s represented a golden era for racing, and Toby was there to witness it, photograph it, and write about it. For 12 years he honed his journalistic skills, and toward the end of his Blood-Horse tenure he trekked west to supervise photography for the Olympic Games' equestrian events in Los Angeles.

In 1986 Toby launched a freelance career that would take him around the globe and into situations not for the weak of heart. As a photojournalist, he worked while living abroad in China, Costa Rica, Colombia—writing for, among other publications, the famous (some might say infamous) Soldier of Fortune magazine.

Returning stateside, Toby met and married Dr. Roberta Dwyer and by his mid-forties was looking for more worlds to conquer. He chose the legal profession, graduating in 1995 from the University of Kentucky School of Law. His subsequent practice would be wide-ranging and successful, encompassing equine law to death penalty litigation.

Beginning in 2003 Toby took his talents to the classroom, teaching at several Kentucky colleges and universities, and for a time chaired the Central Kentucky Bar Association's equine law division. During these years, he also served as President of the American Society of Journalists and Authors, advocating on behalf of freelance writers, and sat on the board of the American Horse Publications (AHP).

His insatiably curious mind eventually drew him back to racing. He loved nothing more than an unsolved mystery he could sink his journalistic chops into and was especially intrigued by the juicy cold cases served up by the Sport of Kings. This is where he shined brightest. In 2011 Toby was honored with the industry's most lucrative literary prize, the $10,000 Dr. Tony Ryan Book Award, for Dancer's Image, The Forgotten Story of the 1968 Kentucky Derby, a meticulously researched tale of racing's most famous doping scandal. Subsequent honors would include a 2018 Book of the Year nod from AHP for Taking Shergar, about the kidnapping of the 1981 Epsom Derby winner. Toby's awards through the years were many, but the real winners were his readers.

By 2023, Toby had written hundreds of articles (including 125 cover stories for The Blood-Horse) and authored nine books. In his early seventies, his skills remained in full bloom, and he continued to push himself. A month before passing, he delivered a one-hour Zoom lecture about copyright before an AHP conference. As always, Toby chose to blaze his own path throughout his life—as a lawyer, professor, photographer, world traveler, public speaker, blogger and, ultimately, as one of the best investigative reporters horse racing has ever known.

Next month, the University Press of Kentucky will publish Toby's tenth book—Unnatural Ability, The History of Performance-Enhancing Drugs in Racing. It is fitting that this posthumous volume comes at the end of a remarkable half-century career, as Unnatural Ability will stand as his magnus opus, a work of extraordinary breadth, insight, and importance to the industry he so loved.

Milt Toby passed away at his home in Georgetown, Kentucky, on July 24, 2023, following a courageous battle with cancer. At his side were his wife Roberta, Echo the Doberman, and Winston the surveillance cat. He is also survived by extended family and the many friends who loved him.

No service or visitation is scheduled, although a gathering of remembrance may be announced later. Donations in his name can be made to Bluegrass Care Navigators, Lexington, KY.

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Lingering Frustration Over Forte’s Derby Scratch: Repole Considers Leaving Sport Unless Changes Can Be Made

Owner Mike Repole remains frustrated with the state veterinarian's decision to scratch Forte, the morning-line favorite, from this year's Kentucky Derby due to a bruised hoof, he told Horse Racing Nation this week. The vet's decision kept the colt out of the Preakness as well, and Repole believes the unintended 10-week gap between races played a role in Forte's subsequent loss in the Belmont Stakes.

The colt is expected to start in Saturday's Grade 2 Jim Dandy at Saratoga as a prep race for the G1 Travers on Aug. 26, and while Repole is excited to get back on track with his Champion 2-Year-Old of 2022, the owner has expressed skepticism about his own future in the sport.

“If I can't make change in the next three years, I don't see myself being in the game after that,” Repole told HRN. “For someone who loves the sport and is highly passionate, I would be disappointed.”

Repole didn't specify what type of changes he hoped to make, but he compared horse racing to “a board game without instructions” and pointed out that commissioners answer to owners in all other major sports. He also said more should be done to educate fans and improve racing's image.

“The negativity is all people want to talk about in every business and every sport, whether it's baseball with steroids, whether it's the NFL with concussions or whether it's the less than 1 percent cheaters that we have in the game that we all want out of the game,” Repole said.

Read more at the Thoroughbred Daily News.

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Twomey Has Yorkshire Oaks In Mind For Rosscarbery

The Yorkshire Oaks is the preferred next destination for Rosscarbery (Ger) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) after she ran a fine second to Emily Dickinson (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) at the Curragh on Saturday.

Paddy Twomey's mare has won three times at Group 3 level and last summer came within a neck of claiming Group 1 glory in the Prix Jean Romanet, narrowly failing to reel in Aristia (Ire) (Starspangledbanner {Aus}).

Having finished fourth over 10 furlongs in the G1 Pretty Polly S. on her penultimate start, Rosscarbery stepped up to a-mile-and-three-quarters for last weekend's Curragh Cup–but after travelling strongly to the front, she was ousted by the hot favourite.

A return to Deauville for another tilt at the Romanet is not being ruled as the 5-year-old's next objective, but Twomey views the G1 Yorkshire Oaks on Aug. 24, over the intermediate distance of a mile and a half, as the ideal aim.

“She ran great on Saturday over a trip that is probably as far as she wants to go in ground that was more favourable to Emily Dickinson than her-she likes a bit of faster ground,” said the trainer on Tuesday.

“We have the Yorkshire Oaks and the Prix Jean Romanet in mind, that's why we ran her at the weekend as it fitted in perfectly in our schedule.

“Out of those, the preference is probably for the Yorkshire Oaks. The Romanet is the Sunday before and she was second in that last year.

“I think a-mile-and-a-half at York would be her ideal track and trip and very suitable for her, so that's what we have in mind.”

The post Twomey Has Yorkshire Oaks In Mind For Rosscarbery appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Bill Strauss, Bret Jones Added To Board Of Directors For Del Mar Thoroughbred Club

Del Mar Thoroughbred Club has added two new members to its Board of Directors: Bill Strauss, a business executive and horse owner who calls Del Mar home, and Bret Jones, the head of Airdrie Stud, a major 2,500-acre breeding operation in Midway, Ky.

The pair are the first additions to the Del Mar board since three new members were brought on board in 2018. The current board consists of nine members headed by chairman David Batchelder. The two additions raised that number to 11 when they were voted in at a board meeting at Del Mar on Saturday, July 22.

“We've made ourselves better and stronger with the addition of these two fine gentlemen,” said board member and Del Mar CEO Joe Harper. “When you can pick up a pair of individuals who love racing and have rich histories in the game like they do, it was easy to get a unanimous vote to bring them on.”

Strauss, 65, was originally a New Yorker who had a successful financial career in Manhattan before making a coast-to-coast switch to Del Mar in 1992. There he helped found Provide Commerce, which became one of the nation's top e-commerce companies, including its popular ProFlowers.com and Shari's Berries.

He and his brother, Jeffrey, a master chef, partnered in a hugely popular restaurant they called the Pamplemousse Grille just across the street from Del Mar racetrack. They named their first horse The Pamplemousse and he became a stakes winner. Since then Bill has been a partner in such topline horses as double Breeders' Cup winner Mizdirection and $5.6 million earner Hot Rod Charlie. His wife is Margie and he has a son and a daughter.

“As a long time Del Mar resident with my wife Margie, and a long time horse owner, I am honored to have been selected to serve on the prestigious Del Mar Thoroughbred Club Board of Directors,” Strauss said. “I am looking forward to working with my fellow board members to carve out a successful future for horse racing in California.”

Jones, 43, is the president of Airdrie Stud in Midway, KY. One of the leading breeding farms in the Bluegrass, Airdrie is home to 12 stallions, among them Collected, winner of Del Mar's signature Grade 1 Pacific Classic in 2017. In addition to his new role at Del Mar, Bret has served on the Breeders' Cup Board of Directors since 2011 and sits on the Keeneland Advisory Board as well as the Board of Trustees for the University of Kentucky's Markey Cancer Foundation. He lives in Lexington, KY with his wife, Tyler, and their four young children.

“I am very grateful to have been given this opportunity to work with the incredible leadership team at Del Mar,” Jones said. “Anyone who has ever walked through its gates knows how truly special that racetrack is, and anyone who cares about the future of our sport recognizes how vitally important its continued success is for our industry. California racing is a true lynchpin for our sport and its prosperity should be the business of all of us; whether you're from San Diego County or Woodford County, KY. I look forward to helping in any way I can and am honored to be working with an organization I so deeply respect.”

Del Mar's 84th summer season is underway and will run until Sunday, September 10.

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