Ireland: Stewards Suspend Jockey 50 Race Days For Failure To Pull Up Fatally Injured Mount

The Irish Horseracing Regulatory Board has issued a suspension of 50 race days to jockey Robbie Geoghegan after he failed to pull up his injured mount, Sole Pretender, in the Lord Hemphill Memorial Handicap Chase at Galway Downs on Sunday, Aug. 6. Sole Pretender had to be euthanized after the race due to the extent of his injury, reports racingpost.com, a broken back fetlock, below his fetlock joint.

According to the post-race report, “evidence was heard from the rider concerned who stated that he felt his mount was not moving correctly at the time but was unaware the injury was as serious as it turned out to be.”

IHRB rules 216(ii)a and 216(iii) require a rider to pull up and dismount a lame or injured horse as soon as it is reasonably possible to do so.

Sole Pretender, a 9-year-old with 10 lifetime wins, was trained by Norman Lee. Lee told racingpost.com he did not agree with the penalty imposed on Geoghegan.

“I thought it was harsh on Robbie,” Lee said. “It wasn't Robbie's fault. He just didn't realize the extent of the injury. He didn't know what was happening underneath him and didn't realize he was so injured. He didn't go very wrong straight away.”

Read more at racingpost.com.

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‘She Is Just Very Good Right Now’: Off Nine Days’ Rest, All That Magic Hangs Tough For First Stakes Win

Trainer Kathleen DeMasi has never been happier that a race she was pointing to never filled.

That was in early June, when DeMasi was looking for a dirt sprint for All That Magic, a filly of modest accomplishments through her first four career starts. DeMasi opted to try the 4-year-old daughter of Fast Anna in a turf sprint instead, and has reaped since benefits beyond her wildest imagination.

The latest was All that Magic's gutsy nose victory over multiple stakes winner Train to Artemus in Sunday's $104,000 Incredible Revenge Stakes at 5½ furlongs on the turf at Monmouth Park – her first career stakes win and DeMasi's first stakes win since Nov. 29.

All That Magic is now 4-for-4 sprinting on the turf, with jockey Nik Juarez in the irons for those four consecutive wins.

“She's just amazing,” said DeMasi. “I wasn't really worried about the added distance (her previous three wins were at five furlongs on the grass) because she has been drawing away in her wins lately. My biggest concern was having just nine days rest. But she is just very good right now.”

Despite not breaking sharply, All That Magic was able to assume command quickly, with Train to Artemus – who had won eight of his previous 12 starts – on her flanks through an opening quarter in :21.95 and a half in :44.30. All That Magic dug in to hold on, with the late-running Can't Buy Love rallying for third, another three-quarters of a length back.

The winning time was 1:03.37.

“This is the first time she broke slowly in the four starts I have ridden her,” said Juarez. “I wanted her on the lead. I was a little worried when she wasn't on the lead immediately and she wasn't as comfortable as she usually is. I had to use her early to get the lead. But she's a talented filly.

“To do this again nine days later with a horse (Train to Artemus) hounding her the entire way really shows how impressive this was. It felt like a rushed pace for us, so for her to be able to throw it down in the lane and hold on says a lot about her class on the grass.”

DeMasi said the tardy break caused her some initial angst.

“Once I saw the break I was like, 'oh, that's not good,'” said DeMasi. “I saw she was being a little fussy at the gate. The guys did a great job getting her straightened out. She didn't break as sharply as she could have but Nik Juarez did a great job of getting her where she needed to be. She recovered well enough.

“She didn't get a breather, but I thought to win this race she had to be in front of Train to Artemus. I was a little concerned that horse was right on her hip the whole way and started thinking 'okay, I'll take second money.' But she dug in so gamely.”

Sent off as the 4-5 favorite in the field of eight fillies and mares, 3 and up, All That Magic returned $3.60 to win. Owned by Pewter and Spedale Family Racing, All That Magic now shows a 5-1-1 line for eight career starts.

The win in the Incredible Revenge Stakes came nine days after a six-length romp at Monmouth Park against allowance company at five furlongs on the grass.

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27-Time Winner Welder Arrives At Old Friends Farm

Welder, the record-holder for wins at Remington Park with 16, arrived at his new home this morning, Old Friends in Georgetown, Ky. The speedy gray was retired from racing during the fall of 2021.

Owned by Ra-Max Farms of Claremore, Okla. and trained by Teri Luneack, Welder was accepted to live at Old Friends since his farm was ceasing operations. Clayton Rash, owner of Ra-Max Farms, passed away in January 2022.

“Welder arrived at 10am, nice, cool and collected,” noted Barbara Fossum, manager at Old Friends. “He looks fabulous and is remarkably calm.”

Welder, 10, now joins the family of 265 horses under the care of Old Friends. The operation specializes in a retirement home for mostly Thoroughbreds after their careers in racing have concluded. The Oklahoma-bred millionaire was well-known to the founder and president of Old Friends, Michael Blowen.

“Michael is a horseplayer and has known of Welder for a while,” Fossum said. “I mean, 27 career wins! Michael keeps track of specific horses that might be a fit at Old Friends and Welder is one of them. He truly admires horses like Welder, a hard-knocker and a horse that is a superstar in his region.”

Among the many nationally-known horses who also call Old Friends home are Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes winner Silver Charm and Belmont Stakes winner Touch Gold, both 29. The Triple Crown was denied Silver Charm in 1997, when Touch Gold won the Belmont.

Welder will be in quarantine for two weeks and will then be introduced with the other residents at Old Friends.

Welder won 27 of 44 career starts in a career that spanned 2015 to 2021. He broke his maiden status at Remington Park in his second lifetime attempt on Nov. 27, 2015 and won his final career race, also at Remington Park, on Aug. 27, 2021. Welder, by The Visualiser from the Tiznow mare Dance Softly, also finished second five times and third another seven, for 39 top three finishes and total earnings of $1,263,359. The sprinter will be inducted into the Oklahoma Horse Racing Hall of Fame at Remington Park on Sept. 23.

For more information regarding tours or how to donate to Old Friends, please visit oldfriendsequine.org.

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Authority Tells Appeals Court Not To Be Persuaded by HBPA’s ‘Scattershot’ Attempts to Derail HISA

With oral arguments in the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit looming in less than two months, the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) Authority defendants in a two-year-old lawsuit spearheaded by the National Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association (NHBPA) asserted in a legal brief Friday that the panel of judges should “dismiss this appeal or affirm the judgment” from a lower court that ruled the 2022 rewrite of the HISA law was constitutionally compliant.

“Congress, the Executive, and all three federal courts that have considered the amended Act have reached the same conclusion: HISA is now constitutional,” the Authority defendants stated in the Aug. 4 filing.

“As every court to consider Congress's amendment has held, HISA no longer violates the private-nondelegation doctrine because the Authority is now subordinate to the Federal Trade Commission [FTC],” the filing continued.

“Appellants' scattershot attempts to invalidate the Act on other grounds come up short, too,” the Authority's brief stated.

“The district court correctly rejected Appellants' due-process claim,” the brief continued. “Alongside ample statutory safeguards, a trial revealed 'no evidence of actual, unconstitutional self-dealing.' The contention that HISA violates the President's appointment (and removal) powers-which all Appellants concede is 'mutually exclusive' with the private-nondelegation claim-also fails under Supreme Court precedent.

“The Authority's private creation and control confirm what this Court's prior opinion made clear: the Authority's Board members are private individuals rather than 'Officers of the United States'-and thus 'the Appointments Clause says nothing' about them,” the brief stated.

“Finally, NHBPA's feeble attempts to contrast HISA with other statutes upheld against private-nondelegation challenges rest on supposed differences that are either factually inaccurate or constitutionally irrelevant,” the Authority's filing stated.

Back on July 5, the NHBPA, along with 12 of its affiliates, told the Fifth Circuit Court in their own brief that even after being amended by Congress, the December 2022 version of HISA remains “patently unconstitutional,” and that the Authority overseeing the sport “is basically a private police department” whose sweeping powers equate to “oligarchic tyranny.”

In addition to the HISA Authority, personnel from the FTC are defendants in the lawsuit.

The first time the HBPA plaintiffs attempted to challenge the original 2020 version of the HISA statute in federal court, on Mar. 15, 2021, the suit was dismissed on March 31, 2022.

The HBPA plaintiffs then appealed, leading to a Fifth Circuit Court reversal on Nov. 18, 2022, that remanded the case back to the lower court. In the interim, an amended version of HISA got signed into law Dec. 29, 2022.

On May 4, 2023, the lower court deemed that the new version of HISA was constitutional because it fixed the problems the Fifth Circuit had identified.

The HBPA plaintiffs then swiftly filed another appeal back to the Fifth Circuit, underscoring in the July 5 brief that, “This Court's job is to again tell Congress-'No.'”

The Fifth Circuit is hearing this appeal on an expedited basis, with oral arguments tentatively scheduled for the week of Oct. 2.

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