Bellocq Launches New Site, Remidraws.com

Cartoonist Remi Bellocq, who pens the popular weekly Friday cartoon in the TDN, has launched a new website, www.remidraws.com.

The site, designed by Alissa Miller and Alex Bellocq, showcases all of Bellocq's artwork, allowing fans to simply browse through his vast library of work, or to buy prints or original artwork. The site also features information about the artist, the son of world-renowned cartoonist Pierre “Peb” Bellocq, along with articles and videos showing Bellocq creating his cartoons.

“It has been my experience that horse people–at every level–have a wonderful capacity for humor,” said Bellocq. “My hope with Remidraws.com is for visitors to, first and foremost, have a good laugh!”

Bellocq said that future plans for the site also include a cartoon caption contest and interactive video cartooning classes for kids.

The post Bellocq Launches New Site, Remidraws.com appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

CHRB Votes To Once Again Remit Fees On Behalf Of HISA, Adopts HISA’s Concussion Protocol

The California Horse Racing Board conducted a meeting on Thursday, November 16, 2023, at Los Alamitos Race Course. Chairman Gregory Ferraro chaired the meeting, joined by Vice Chair Oscar Gonzales and Commissioners Dennis Alfieri, Damascus Castellanos, Brenda Washington Davis, and Thomas Hudnut.

The audio of this entire Board meeting is available on the CHRB Website (www.chrb.ca.gov) under the Webcast link, accessed through the Media Room tab. In brief:

  • Continuing to cooperate with the Horseracing and Safety Authority (HISA) in every way, the Board agreed to collect and remit fees on behalf of HISA, as the Board did in 2022. The HISA assessments will cover California's share of both the anti-doping and medication control program and the racetrack safety program. Discussions are ongoing with HISA to determine the amount of credits California will receive for enforcing the federal rules.
  • The Board also adopted HISA's recommended national concussion protocol for jockeys, which includes return-to-ride guidelines for jockeys declared fit to ride following an incident.
  • The Board approved the license application for Los Alamitos Racing Association to operate a daytime Thoroughbred meet from December 8 through December 17. This meet will run concurrently with night Quarter Horse programs.
  • The Board approved the license application for Los Alamitos Quarter Horse Racing Association to operate a night quarter-horse meet from December 23, 2023, through December 22, 2024. Los Alamitos is the only racetrack in California that operates throughout the full year. Los Alamitos is in the process of making $1 million in backside improvements.
  • The Board approved the license application for the Los Angeles Turf Club to operate a Thoroughbred meet at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia from December 26. 2023,  through June 16, 2024. The basic schedule for racing will be Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays, with occasional programs on Mondays and also opening-day Tuesday and Thursday, June 13. Santa Anita is in the process of replacing its dirt training track with the Tapeta synthetic surface at a cost of more than $7 million.
  • The Board approved the license application for Pacific Racing Association to operate a thoroughbred at Golden Gate Fields from December 26, 2023, through June 10, 2024. As currently scheduled, this will be the final race meet at Golden Gate before it is closed forever. Stakeholders in Northern California will be working to determine how racing will proceed without its anchor at Golden Gate.
  • The Board approved Stephanie Hronis, Lucy Lawrence, and Dr. James T. Dunn as directors of the California Thoroughbred Horsemen's Foundation (CTHF).
  • The commissioners took the opportunity to acknowledge retiring CTHF Executive Director Cliff Goodrich for his valued leadership of the organization that provides free health care services to racetrack workers. Commissioner Castellanos said Goodrich's “and his impact on a daily basis as well as his leadership during crises…has been substantial. His wisdom and character and the desire to always 'do the right thing' has benefited the backstretch workers, the CTHF staff and the overall racing industry. Vice Chair Gonzales presented Goodrich with a certificate of recognition signed by Assemblyman Mike Fong on behalf of the California Assembly.
  • The Board authorized Los Alamitos Quarter Horse Racing Association to distribute $15,530 in race day charity proceeds to four beneficiaries.
  • The Board approved a request to modify the distribution of certain ADW revenue to include funding a California co-op marketing program.
  • In his report to the Board, Executive Director Scott Chaney said it was important to point out to stakeholders and licensees that “the regulation passed by this Board a few months ago regarding unsanctioned or 'match' racing will become effective on January 1. This new rule makes it a CHRB rule violation to participate in or be present at any event involving unsanctioned or unrecognized racing.  While there is clearly more work to be done to combat this challenge to animal welfare, this is an important step in eliminating the practice. I believe it to be the first of its kind in the country.”
  • In his report to the Board, Dr. Jeff Blea, equine medical director, reported that both of the horses that were injured during the running of Breeders' Cup races at Santa Anita earlier this month underwent successful surgery and are out of danger.

The post CHRB Votes To Once Again Remit Fees On Behalf Of HISA, Adopts HISA’s Concussion Protocol appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

‘A Little Bit Tough’ Early On, Ward-Trained Royal Slipper Now Favored For Saturday’s Desi Arnaz

Wesley Ward is a Kentucky-based trainer who has been known to run a horse or two at Del Mar. He saddled the 2014 Debutante winner Sunset Glow. He's known for his turf runners such as two-time Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint winner Golden Pal; Breeders' Cup Filly and Mare Turf winner Judy the Beauty, and Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint winner Twilight Gleaming.

Ward currently has four horses stabled on the backside here including one that ran in the Breeders' Cup two weeks ago. Unfortunately, Nakatomi is not slated to run at Del Mar this fall but is scheduled to be shipped back to Kentucky this weekend.

Ward does have a 2-year-old filly who turned heads in her debut. So much so that she has been made the morning line favorite in the 36th running of the $100,000 Desi Arnaz, part of a stakes doubleheader Saturday at Del Mar.

Royal Slipper won her debut at Keeneland last month wiring the field and winning by four lengths, bounding clear early and coasting home much the best in the field of 12.

“She's got a big long stride,” assistant trainer Blake Heap says. “She's a nice filly that's for sure.”

Heap says the daughter of Uncle Mo wasn't the easiest to deal with at first. That's how she ended up in Ward's care.

“She was a little bit tough to break,” Heap notes. “That's why they gave her to us because she was hard to handle. He (Ward) spent a little bit of time with her and then he passed her on to the regular exercise riders and she's moved forward from there.”

As is often the case with 2-year old races in Southern California, trainer Bob Baffert comes to the Desi Arnaz with a live one.

Nothing Like You broke her maiden last out at Santa Anita by six lengths, wiring the field in a one-mile affair. Prior to that she had run three sprint races, coming close in her debut at Del Mar last summer but then running eighth on closing day and fourth in a race at Santa Anita.

Instead of dropping her in class, Baffert stretched her out and the daughter of Malibu Moon shined.

“I think going the two turns probably was the main factor,” Baffert says. “I like her going a mile or more. I don't think she's a one turn horse but there was nothing between now and the Los Alamitos Futurity so we thought this would be a good spot for her.”

Don't be surprised if she isn't back up on the lead again in the Desi Arnaz and, if so, she'll have plenty of company.

“Going long it's easier to make the lead than it is going short,” Baffert notes. “That horse coming in from Kentucky looks fast so you just don't know.”

Another runner who likes to be up or near the lead is Tambo, a smart-looking filly who ran a close second in the $85,000 Anoakia Stakes at Santa Anita last out. She broke her maiden three starts back at Del Mar. Trainer Peter Eurton then tried her on the turf in the $100,000 Juvenile Fillies Turf at Del Mar and she ran fourth, but bounced back with a nice effort in Anoakia.

“She seemed like she was making up ground,” Eurton says of her run in the Anoakia. “The seven-eighths seems to be something she can do. There's always the level. You have a Baffert in there in the one hole that can run. I never look past the competition. I just worry about my own and hopefully she's good enough.”

Don't Bring Crazy, out of the Doug O'Neill barn, and another Baffert runner, Halone, round out the field in the Desi Arnaz, formerly known as the Moccasin Stakes when run at Hollywood Park.

The Desi Arnaz is named after the popular actor, bandleader and husband of comedienne Lucille Ball. It's the second of nine races on the Saturday card. Approximate post time for the stakes is 1 p.m.

Here's the field from the rail with jockeys and morning line odds: Nothing Like You (Juan Hernandez, 5-2); Tambo (Antonio Fresu, 7-2); Don't Bring Crazy (Umberto Rispoli, 12-1); Royal Slipper (John Velezquez, 4-5), and Halone (Flavien Prat, 6-1).

The post ‘A Little Bit Tough’ Early On, Ward-Trained Royal Slipper Now Favored For Saturday’s Desi Arnaz appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

The Chosen Vron ‘Seems Extra Sharp’ After Breeders’ Cup Fifth, Wheels Back In Cary Grant

Of the 150 horses that ran in the Breeders' Cup at Santa Anita two weeks ago, many have been retired. Others have been turned out, freshening up for a 2024 campaign. Then there's a small number who remain in training. One is running Saturday at Del Mar.

The Chosen Vron, winner of the G1 Bing Crosby at Del Mar this past summer and fifth of eight runners in the Breeders' Cup Sprint, is back in the $100,000 Cary Grant, one of two stakes races on the Saturday card at Del Mar.

The son of Vronsky made the giant leap into elite company this summer with his win in the Bing Crosby, a “Win and You're In” for the Breeders' Cup Sprint. Trainer Eric Kruljac had limited the 5-year old to mostly Cal-bred races throughout his 18-race career and for the most part, The Chosen Vron had won those races. Eight in a row heading into the Breeders' Cup.

So why is Kruljac wheeling his prized pupil back so quickly?

“Just the way he came back from the Breeders' Cup,” Kruljac says. “I thought he was going to fire real big in the Breeders' Cup. I don't know if it was the competition. I gotta give credit to the East Coast horses, they were dominant.

“But after five or six days he swelled up and was on fire,” Kruljac continues. “He seems extra sharp now.”

The next Cal-bred race for The Chosen Vron isn't until January 7 and Kruljac doesn't want to wait that long.

“I don't think I've ever run a horse back in two weeks,” Kruljac says. “But he was just screaming for a race. Dr. Araujo (his veterinarian) took blood on him the other day and said it was fabulous. The horse is really on his toes.”

While The Chosen Vron will be a heavy favorite in the Cary Grant, there are a couple of others in the nine-horse field who are worth keeping an eye on.

Big City Lights has done little wrong during his six-race career. The 4-year-old son of Mr. Big has won three races and placed in the other three. He captured last year's Real Good Deal at Del Mar, beating Slow Down Andy and came back and ran second to The Chosen Vron in the 2022 edition of the Cary Grant. He ran in the Cal Cup Sprint at Santa Anita in January, missing by a neck to, who else, The Chosen Vron, before being put out for a freshening for much of 2023.

“He's been training great,” assistant trainer to Richard Mandella, Taylor Cambra, says. “He's coming right along. Everything we've asked of him he's done real easy.”

So how does Cambra hope to turn the tables on The Chosen Vron.

“He just got beat in the Breeders' Cup,” Cambra notes. “That can hurt a horse's confidence. We're coming in with a fresh horse. He's coming in with a horse that's been running all year.”

Cambra's also counting on Big City Light's past form.

“The last time he got turned out he came back and won first time out,” he says. “He's a horse that kind of stays a little tighter anyway so we're not too worried about it though it's always a concern.”

Other contenders in the Cary Grant worth noting are Moose Mitchell, winner of four of his last six races including a second level allowance race at Del Mar this past summer. Lovesick Blues has been knocking on the door, finishing second to Kings River Knight in the $100,000 Bertrando at Los Alamitos in June. And the hard-knocking None Above the Law, winner of the 2021 G2 Del Mar Derby.

The 40th renewal of the Cary Grant Stakes is the eighth race on the nine race Saturday card. Approximate post time for the stakes is 4 p.m. It's named after the popular actor of the 1940's, 50's and 60's and was formerly known as the On Trust Stakes when run at Hollywood Park.

Here's the field from the rail with the jockeys and the morning line odds: Principe Carlo (Kyle Frey, 15-1); Trip to Spain (Geovanni Franco, 20-1); None Above the Law (Flavien Prat, 6-1); Lovesick Blues (Umberto Rispoli, 12-1); Fast Draw Munnings – Scratched; Big City Lights (Juan Hernandez, 5-2); The Chosen Vron (Hector Berrios, 4/5); Moose Mitchell (Mario Gutierrez, (12-1), and Desmond Doss (Tyler Baze, 12-1).

The post The Chosen Vron ‘Seems Extra Sharp’ After Breeders’ Cup Fifth, Wheels Back In Cary Grant appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights