Baffert Gets 15 Days; Charlatan and Gamine DQ’d for Lidocaine Positives

Hall of Famer Bob Baffert has been suspended 15 days for previously announced lidocaine positives found in post-race samples from two runners on Oaklawn Park’s May 2 card, GI Arkansas Derby division winner Charlatan (Speightstown) and allowance winner Gamine (Into Mischief). The Oaklawn Park Board of Stewards has also disqualified both horses from their wins and ordered purse monies to be redistributed in rulings dated July 14 and made public Wednesday.

News of the positives first surfaced in late May, and it was revealed last week that split samples taken from both runners confirmed the original test results. In Baffert’s defense, attorney Craig Robertson said it was believed an employee had inadvertently exposed the two horses to Lidocaine while wearing a pain-relieving Salonpas patch. Robertson also noted the trace amounts of the drug would have had no impact on the performances of the two horses. Lidocaine is a Class 2 substance.

The ruling calls for Baffert to be suspended from Aug. 1 to Aug. 15, but the conditioner told the TDN that he plans to appeal: “We’re definitely going to appeal. We are very disappointed. I thought we did a great job answering this and showing how innocent I am. I understand there is the trainer’s responsibility rule, but the levels, especially with Charlatan, were so low. We showed them the science that showed it wouldn’t have affected the horses at all.”

With Charlatan’s disqualification to last place in his division of the Arkansas Derby, Basin (Liam’s Map)–most recently 10th in Saturday’s GII Toyota Blue Grass–now receives 100 GI Kentucky Derby qualifying points, with Gouverneur Morris (Constitution) earning 40; Winning Impression (Paynter) 20; and Anneau d’Or (Medaglia d’Oro) 10. Basin’s connections had previously announced that he had been taken out of consideration for the Derby in favor of shortening up in distance going forward.

Charlatan, meanwhile, was sidelined in June due to an ankle issue. Baffert also won the other division of the Arkansas Derby with Nadal (Blame), who was later retired due to a condylar fracture. Baffert trainee Authentic (Into Mischief), owned by a group that overlaps with Charlatan’s ownership group, is 4-5 on the morning line for Saturday’s GI Haskell S. at Monmouth.

Gamine’s neck victory in that May 2 allowance came over Speech (Mr Speaker), a decisive winner of the GI Ashland S. at Keeneland this past Saturday. Gamine would go on to take Belmont’s GI Acorn S. June 20 by 18 3/4 lengths, earning a 110 Beyer Speed Figure in one of the most dominant performances by a horse in 2020.

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Steve Byk Wins Handleman Memorial Award from Monmouth Park

Steve Byk, whose daily “At The Races With Steve Byk” radio show on Sirius XM Satellite is the sport’s longest running Thoroughbred news magazine program, has been named the winner of the 2020 Bill Handleman Memorial Award for outstanding coverage of last year’s GI TVG.com Haskell Invitational.

Inaugurated in 2012, the Handleman Award honors outstanding media coverage of the Haskell.

“Steve’s dedication to the sport, his passion for it and his ability to popularize Thoroughbred racing on a national platform were reflected in his broadcasts of the 2019 Haskell,” said John. F. Heims, Monmouth Park’s Director of Racing and Racing Secretary. “Racing fans have learned that he is a ‘must-listen’ for any big race on the calendar.”

The award honors the late Bill Handleman, one of New Jersey’s top sportswriters for nearly three decades for the Asbury Park Press.

Monmouth Park also announced that it has been authorized to put an additional 500 general admission tickets on sale for Saturday’s TVG.com Haskell Stakes, with the release of those tickets starting at 6 p.m. Wednesday at www.monmouthpark.com.

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Thoroughbred Meet at Meadowlands a No-Go for 2020

The planned return of autumn Thoroughbred racing on both dirt and turf at the Meadowlands will have to wait for another year.

The New Jersey Thoroughbred Horsemen’s Association (NJTHA) and track management at the Meadowlands have come to a mutual decision not to convert the facility’s main dirt track from a Standardbred to a Thoroughbred setup for 19 already-allotted Friday and Saturday dates between Oct. 2 and Dec. 5.

Under an agreement reached last year, dual-surface Thoroughbred racing was to be conducted at the Meadowlands for the first time since 2009. After hosting only Standardbred races in 2010 and 2011, the Meadowlands resumed Thoroughbred races in 2012, but in a turf-only fashion for mini-meets limited to only a few dates.

The New Jersey Racing Commission (NJRC) voted 4-0 to approve the 2020 change at its teleconference meeting on Wednesday.

The reasoning given, as read into the record by NJRC executive director Judith Nason, is that the COVID-19 pandemic has caused a loss of racing dates for both breeds in New Jersey and eroded the NJTHA purse account that funds the Meadowlands Thoroughbred meet.

Technically, the NJTHA postponed its contractual right to convert the dirt surface, Nason said. She added that both parties explored the idea of alternating races of both breeds on Fridays and Saturdays this autumn (turf only for Thoroughbreds). They also discussed having one breed race days while the other raced nights over that time period, but neither party wanted the less-lucrative afternoon time slot.

Instead, the harness season will continue at the Meadowlands during the vacated Thoroughbred dates, giving the Standardbred horsemen the opportunity to make up their lost programs.

Dennis Drazin, the chairman and chief executive of Darby Development LLC, which operates Monmouth Park, left open the possibility that the NJTHA could tack on some of the scrapped Meadowlands dates to the end of the current Monmouth Park meet, which runs through Sep. 27. The season was supposed to start May 2, but Monmouth did not open until July 3.

“I think it’s premature to have that discussion right now. Certainly we have considered that factor,” Drazin said. “Depending upon what happens, if we had extra purse money, we may consider adding a couple of days during October. But at the present time we do not have such intention.”

Drazin explained that the NJTHA’s revenue projections for the virus-delayed Monmouth meet were originally based upon the fact that no fans would be permitted at the track because of health concerns.

But now, Drazin explained, “We have a limited amount of fans, and it looks like our numbers, projection-wise, may be better than we originally anticipated.”

Drazin continued: “We’re still weak on our in-house numbers, which is where we get the 20% [takeout] blend instead of the export, which is more like 5%. But the exports have held up, and we’re hoping that by the time we get to the end of the meet, there might be some additional money so that…there’s a possibility [of adding dates]. But I wouldn’t want to tell anybody that we are definitely going to do it and disappoint them later on.”

Nason said the NJRC still considers the NJTHA’s racing permit for the Meadowlands to be “active,” which leaves open the possibility of a future Thoroughbred meet at the Meadowlands.

Drazin also asked the commission to consider Monmouth’s days lost during the pandemic to be because of an “act of God” so that the missed May and June dates count toward the state-required minimum of 50 dates. But Nason said that written request was not received in time to be placed on the July 15 agenda. It will be taken up in September after the NJRC’s attorneys review it.

For several years, Drazin has been pushing for a longer meet at the Meadowlands that includes dirt racing. The sticking point has always been the estimated $1-million cost of converting the track. But last November Drazin told TDN that he and Meadowlands owner Jeff Gural reached an agreement that covers the costs.

“In my estimation, and people can disagree, I don’t think there is a really strong night signal out there at that time of year on regular basis that bettors can follow,” Drazin told TDN last November. “The night signal at the Meadowlands, if you do it right and build on it, it’s not going to be amazing year one. But over a five- to 10-year period it can grow to a point where it’s a meaningful portion of our revenue scheme here in New Jersey.”

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A Most Unusual Saratoga Meet Set to Begin Thursday

SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. – Even though he is healthy and enthusiastic, 91-year-old Gus Ziamandanis will not be able to attend his 70th consecutive opening day at Saratoga Race Course on Thursday, July 16. His quest for a remarkable personal milestone was stopped by New York State’s coronavirus guidelines that prohibit spectators at professional sporting events.

When he understood that it was unlikely that he would get into the grounds for the 10-race opener, Ziamandanis made a reservation for a table at Capital OTB’s Clubhouse Race Book in Albany, 33 miles south of the track. Capital OTB’s venue is close to Ziamandanis’s home in the Albany suburb of Colonie. While Ziamandanis, who played handball until the gyms were closed by the pandemic this winter, is disappointed that he won’t extend his streak, he is realistic.

“The way things are going today, you live with it. You just live with it,” he said. “Just like COVID, you live with it. It took away my handball. It took away this. It took away that. You live with it. What are you going to do?”

Ziamandanis and millions of other racing fans will watch from afar. Some, no doubt, as close as across the street at King’s Tavern or in other Saratoga-area bars and restaurants in this season like no other at America’s oldest racing venue. Concerned that people would congregate along Union and Nelson avenues to get a glimpse of the action from the sidewalks, Saratoga Springs city officials asked the New York Racing Association to install temporary coverings to block the view.

“The critical part of this meet is that we celebrate racing, but we celebrate it at home,” Saratoga Springs Public Safety Commissioner Robin Dalton said at a press conference. “The city cannot have people come to the track and try to watch racing.”

She continued. “In fact, we have asked NYRA to put up privacy fencing around the track so you won’t be able to see in, and they have been very cooperative and done that. That is for the collective safety of the community and also to make sure we can continue to celebrate racing this year and every year to come.”

The New York Racing Association’s 40-day meeting is the 152nd summer of Thoroughbred racing in Saratoga Springs and the first time without spectators. The inaugural season was held in 1863 on the Horse Haven track on the opposite side of Union Avenue from the now-historic site that opened the following year. This will be the 75th consecutive season of racing at the Spa since it reopened in 1946 following three seasons of Saratoga-at-Belmont meetings during World War II. The track was closed in 1896 when its nefarious owner Gottfried Walbaum was in a tussle with The Jockey Club over dates. In 1911 and 1912, the New York tracks did not operate due to a legislative crackdown in gambling.

This year’s Saratoga meet will feature 71 stakes worth $14.45 million, with 39 graded stakes and 18 Grade 1s, including the historic GI Runhappy Travers, this year a Kentucky Derby prep on August 8. For the second year in row, Saratoga will be closed on Mondays and Tuesdays. It will open with four racing days, and then run five days per week for six weeks before reaching its conclusion with a six-day week that ends on Labor Day, Sept. 7.

As has been the case for more than 60 years, the GIII Schuylerville S. for 2-year-old fillies is on the 10-race opening day program. The co-feature this year is the GIII Peter Pan S., a race for 3-year-olds normally run at Belmont Park as a prep for the Belmont Stakes. Both races will be staged over the new dirt track installed during the off-season.

Due to the pandemic, NYRA changed the look of the Saratoga stakes schedule and cut purses following the closure of many tracks and the rescheduling of the Triple Crown. The $1 million GI Runhappy Travers, a fixture near the end of the meet for decades, was moved ahead three weeks to Aug. 8, so it could be a stepping stone to the Kentucky Derby on Sept. 5 and the Preakness S. on Oct. 3.

The 1958 Travers was held on Aug. 9, but this will be the earliest running of the 1 ¼ miles race since it was held on August 5, 1916.

Jason Fitch and his brothers, Patrick and Adam, have operated the Saratoga City Tavern on Caroline Street downtown for 15 years. Six years ago, they took over King’s Tavern, which was previously only open during the racing season, and now is open year-round. Their bars were closed for three months during New York’s pandemic “pause,” but have been open since mid-June and now move into a racing season without fans. Like many other bars and restaurants in the city, the Fitch brothers’ taverns will feature Saratoga racing on their TVs. This week they expanded the patio area and added an outdoor television at King’s Tavern.

“It’s going to be definitely a different season,” Jason Fitch said. “Whatever happens, we’re going to embrace it. It’s still going to be Saratoga with the track and the horses running. Unfortunately, we won’t be able to walk across the street, go inside and enjoy a family day there. It’s definitely going to be a unique season, but I think the community is going to come together.”

Fitch said he has heard from customers who visit Saratoga for the races, and said some have told him they have scrapped their travel plans. Others, though, may drop in for a weekend.

“It’s just one year. Hopefully, everything is back to normal by next year,” he said. “Five years from now it’s going to be ‘remember that time when the track was closed?’ It’s going to be definitely a piece of history.”

On the almost-silent backstretch Wednesday morning , not far from a barn filled with empty stalls, veteran trainer John Kimmel described the atmosphere.

“Yesterday it felt like the first day after racing ended,” Kimmel said. “You know how it is? Everybody leaves and you come out here, there are a few horses on the racetrack, it’s nice and quiet and you go, ‘Wow, it’s really nice here.’ But to know that’s how it is before the meet has even started is kind of surreal. It certainly has lost the excitement and energy that you usually bring when you come here. You kind of get excited. Owners are all here. And the horses. The place is jumping with anticipation of a great racing season getting ready to commence. Right now, the trainers are just trying to cope with the situation.”

Ziamandanis, a first-generation American, was born and raised in Albany and the Navy veteran said he made his first trip to Saratoga in 1949.

“My sister’s in-laws came up from Long Island and I had a car,” he said. “My mother and father wanted to show them the Saratoga track, so I took them.”

Two summers later, Ziamandanis started what would become a seven-decade streak of making it to the track for the Saratoga opener. Thirteen U.S. Presidents have served during Ziamandanis’s run, which began on Monday, August 6, 1951. In those days, racing was prohibited on Sundays in New York. The downstate meet would end on Saturday and the Saratoga Association would open its 24-day season on Monday. The 1951 Spa opener drew a crowd of 16,692, the biggest following World War II. The horse named Vantage, ridden by Dave Gorman, won the first race by 4 ½ lengths.

In his early years as a fan, Ziamandanis said he came to the track with some of his buddies and stood at the end of the wooden grandstand built in the 1890s. A 700-foot extension was built in that area in the 1960s. As his plumbing, heating and air conditioning business based in Albany began to prosper, he was able to secure a table for the season in the clubhouse dining area. Ziamandanis has watched the track emerge from the doldrums and declining attendance of the 1950s and early 1960s and grow into one of the most popular and beloved tracks in the country. He has seen the stars, human and equine, who have made their way to Saratoga.

“I have a lot of memories there,” he said. “A lot of memories.”

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