Bernardini Filly Named 2020 MHBA Champion

A filly by Bernardini out of Mystic Love (Not For Love) was selected as grand champion of the 86th annual Maryland Horse Breeders Association’s Yearling Show, held Sunday in Timonium.  Bred by GreenMount Farm in partnership with Godolphin, the champion filly was the winner of Class IV (for fillies foaled in Maryland, by out-of-state sires). She was shown by Sabrina Moore, manager and co-owner of GreenMount.

A total of 67 yearlings in four classes were judged by two-time Classic-winning trainer and Hall of Fame Show Jumping rider Michael Matz.

“I thought the last [class], that the [champion] filly won, was the strongest group,” Matz said. “She was a nice mover. She just had an overall look. I thought she was well-made and pretty well balanced.”

All yearlings who entered the show ring are now eligible for the $40,000 premium award which is split annually, with $20,000 going to the exhibitors of the four show contestants who earn the most money as 2-year-olds during 2021, and another $20,000 divided among the exhibitors of the four highest-earning 3-year-old runners in 2022.

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Uncle Chuck Breezes Bullet Six Furlongs At Del Mar

Los Alamitos Derby winner Uncle Chuck put in an “effortless” six furlong workout for Hall fo Fame trainer Bob Baffert on July 20 at Del Mar, covering the distance in bullet 1:13.40.

“He's got a big, long stride,” Baffert told the Daily Racing Form. “He's a galloper.”

The 3-year-old son of Uncle Mo is expected to make his next start in the 1 1/4-mile Travers Stakes at Saratoga on Aug. 8. Owned by Karl Watson, Mike Pegram, and Paul Weitman, the colt won his first career start on June 12 before defeating stablemate Thousand Words in the G3 Los Alamitos Derby on July 4.

A $250,000 yearling purchase at the Keeneland September sale, Uncle Chuck has earned $120,000 in his two career starts and has 20 points toward the Kentucky Derby.

The post Uncle Chuck Breezes Bullet Six Furlongs At Del Mar appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Canterbury Stewards Enforcing Penalties for Disregarding COVID-19 Protocols

With $900 in fines issued last Friday alone, the Canterbury Park stewards are backing up a new Minnesota Racing Commission ultimatum warning that licensees will pay the price for not adhering to newly strengthened protocols to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

Six grooms were docked $100 each July 17 for not wearing a wristband that signifies they passed a required health screening. Three jockeys had their wallets lightened by the same amount for not properly wearing protective masks during the July 14 program: Julio Felix and Roimes Chirinos for removing theirs during winner’s circle ceremonies; Chad Lindsay for not having his pulled up to cover his nose during a race.

The Minneapolis Star Tribune reported last week that the Canterbury backstretch community recorded its first publicly announced positive July 11 after two people in the stable area showed coronavirus symptoms. Both were isolated and tested, and the person who tested positive left the track to quarantine. Another person who had been in close contact with the infected person has also been isolated.

Canterbury was additionally in the news last week because that’s where nationally ranked jockey Florent Geroux was headed when his required test to gain entry to the track to ride the July 15 Mystic Lake Derby card came up positive.

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Los Alamitos Allowed to Continue Racing

In a teleconference Monday morning to discuss whether or not to suspend Los Alamitos’ racing license, the California Horse Racing Board (CHRB) voted in favor of the racing association, deciding that enhanced safety plans the track unveiled over the prior week satisfied board concerns after a rash of equine fatalities at the Southern California facility.

“Are you committed to this plan over the long-term? Are you committed to trying to make a cultural change at Los Alamitos?” asked CHRB chairman Greg Ferraro, of Dr. Ed Allred, who owns and operates Los Alamitos.

“Obviously we are,” Allred, who later in the meeting admitted to experiencing humiliation at recent events, responded. “We still feel we have a track that’s equal to, or superior, to any in California as far as racing surface is concerned. I think there are other areas where we discern some improvement. We’re going to work on those things.”

At the initial meeting July 10, CHRB executive director Scott Chaney explained his decision to file a petition to hold the emergency meeting, arguing that there has been an increase in equine fatalities during the first six months of this year when compared to the same period the year prior, along with a spike in recent weeks.

On a 5-1 vote, the board gave Los Alamitos the green light to continue live racing during a 10-day probational period. According to the CHRB, there have been 11 fatalities at the track since the start of June, including two during the track’s probation period.

Last Tuesday, Los Alamitos released a seven-page draft “Equine & Rider Safety Enhancement Plan” outlining a suite of new safety protocols, including an additional veterinarian to scrutinize horses entering and exiting the track during morning training. This draft plan was subsequently modified at least twice, said officials at the meeting.

Part of the enhanced safety plan involves a panel–comparable to the one already instituted for Thoroughbred races in California–to review race entries. This panel was operational over the most recent weekend of racing at Los Alamitos.

According to Chaney, the panel scratched five horses on its first day.

The plan also includes a new rule restricting intra-articular cortisone fetlock injections to within 30 days prior to a race–restrictions already largely in place in Thoroughbred racing in California.

“Three of the last four racing fatalities at Los Alamitos would not have been eligible under those conditions,” said CHRB equine medical director Rick Arthur. “In addition, we’ve added a new restriction for multiple intra-articular injections into the same joint.”

Arthur repeated his belief that the track surface at Los Alamitos isn’t a factor in the recent rash of equine fatalities. Rather, he sees it as primarily an issue surrounding veterinary practices and horse management, and a hitherto lack of scrutiny of backstretch activities at the track.

“One of the issues at Los Alamitos has been, we have very little stable surveillance, whether it’s CHRB or anyone else,” said Arthur.

As such, he touted a new plan at Los Alamitos to employ an individual to monitor activity around the stable area, and an increased CHRB safety steward presence at the backstretch beyond race days.

“In that sense, it’s a win-win,” said Arthur. “Having the [surveillance] cameras at Santa Anita is a fairly unique circumstance in racing in the U.S.–obviously we’d like to have that at all tracks, just not practical right now.”

Veterinarian Becky Fitzgerald, who conducts all pre-race examinations at Los Alamitos, said that the enhanced safety practices instituted at Los Alamitos have already paid dividends.

“I have already seen improvements based on the new system we’re implementing, more so than I expected to see,” said Fitzgerald, expressing surprise at the effectiveness of the entry review panel.

“I’ve implemented, [what] I don’t think is even in the proposal, I’ve been doing post-race exams the following day of horses that we feel might need extra scrutiny,” Fitzgerald added. “And we’ve already identified a couple of extra horses there.”

This case is first time the CHRB has exercised its authority afforded through a state bill passed last year allowing it to provide just 24-hours public notice for a meeting to discuss the possible suspension of a racing license. Prior to that, the CHRB had to provide 10 days’ public notice.

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