Final Golden Gate Fields Meet Potentially Set For 25% Purse Cut

The overnight purses for Golden Gate Fields' final meet are potentially set for a 25% cut due to a longstanding overpayment of the purse account, according to Thoroughbred Owners of California (TOC) president and CEO, Bill Nader.

The Bay Area racetrack is scheduled to race from Dec. 26 through June 9, 2024, after which, the facility is set to close permanently.

The purse account, said Nader, is overpaid by some $3.1 million.

“There's a pretty big overpayment that's been building,” said Nader. “They're looking to claw some of it back, but not all of it.”

While the TOC is still in negotiations with 1/ST Racing and Gaming, which operates Golden Gate Fields, about the proposed cuts, such a decrease in overnight purses was a “distinct possibility,” said Nader. He added that further details should be available Tuesday or Wednesday, when the condition book would be issued.

“You can increase and decrease purses pending purse generation at any point in any year, so, they're within their rights,” said Nader, who added that, as an example, Maiden Special Weights would drop from $30,000 to $22,500 under the proposed structure.

“But this thing's blown out to a big number,” he said, of the purse overpayment. “Handle was down in 2023. They haven't really cut purses at all. Frankly, they wanted to cut purses last fall—we told them no, and they didn't.”

Dave Duggan, Golden Gate vice president and general manager, confirmed that the track had been in discussions with the TOC to cut purses there “for quite some time.”

Santa Anita's overnight purses are also scheduled to be cut around 5% for its upcoming Winter/Spring meet, underway Dec. 26, with $2 million cut from the track's stakes schedule, said Nader.

Ed Moger is currently leading trainer at Golden Gate, with around 40 horses stabled there. The anticipated cuts to Golden Gates' purses could lead to some Northern California trainers relocating elsewhere, he said.

Officials for Arizona's Turf Paradise recently announced they hoped to operate a meet there from Jan. 29 through May 4, pending approval from the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority.

If the 25% purse cut is enacted at Golden Gate, “there would probably be some barns that move there,” Moger said, about Turf Paradise, adding that while he would not relocate to Arizona, such a purse decrease could see him shift a significant portion of his horses south to Santa Anita.

“But it's tougher to win a race at Santa Anita,” said Moger. “I'll have to play it by ear.”

When asked about the allure from other tracks to Golden Gate's current trainer colony, Nader suggested that even with a 25% cut, Golden Gate's purses would still compare favorably with Turf Paradise.

The Stronach Group (TSG) announced in July that it was closing Golden Gate Fields at the end of December with the goal of increasing field size and adding another day of racing a week at Santa Anita.

After pushback from industry stakeholders who argued that such an abrupt closure would pose an existential threat to the future of racing in Northern California, TSG officials left the door open to delaying the track's closure another six months. But they appeared to make such a deal incumbent upon a reshaping of the way simulcasting proceeds are allocated in the state.

The rule of thumb is that proceeds from wagers made in the “northern zone” stay in Northern California to pay for purses and operational expenses, while the proceeds from wagers made in the “southern zone” stay in Southern California for the same purposes.

Initially, various stakeholders in Northern California—including representatives of the California Authority of Racing Fairs (CARF)—voiced resistance to TSG's idea of moving these proceeds south.

In September, however, California lawmakers sought enough buy-in to pass legislation that meant if Golden Gate Fields is not licensed to operate beyond July 1 next year, proceeds from simulcast wagering in the north are funneled south when there is no live racing in the northern half of the state after that date.

When asked about recent turn of events involving Golden Gate Fields, Moger appeared resigned to the situation.

“I've been here for almost 50 years,” said Moger. “I'm not too happy about it.”

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Hot Fudge Makes Quick Turnaround For First Stakes Win In Garland Of Roses

KEM Stables' Hot Fudge notched her third consecutive victory and first stakes score with an off-the-pace rally in Saturday's $120,000 Garland of Roses, a six-furlong sprint for fillies and mares at Aqueduct Racetrack.

Trained by Linda Rice, the 4-year-old daughter of Liam's Map wheeled back on eight days' rest after taking an optional claimer by 3 1/4 lengths first off a six-month layoff on Dec. 1 at Aqueduct, a move that has garnered success for Rice several times in the past year. She sent out last year's Garland of Roses victress Betsy Blue on the heels of a third-place finish in the Go for Wand (G3) just one week prior, and Mommasgottarun to a graded stakes triumph in the Distaff Handicap (G3) in April with five days between starts.

“I've done it before, right,” Rice said of the quick turnaround. “When we gave her the summer off, it wasn't that there was any specific reason other than I just thought she needed it. I gave her all summer and she's been ready to run for a while. She ran a big race and I thought that race would tighten her up. You're always a little apprehensive when you run them back on short rest, but I knew that this filly was doing well enough to do it.”

Ridden to victory by Kendrick Carmouche, Hot Fudge broke cleanly from the outermost post 5 as Headland showed early speed before being overtaken by Olga Isabel, who quickly ducked in from post 3 and established inside position to mark an opening quarter-mile in :21.94 over the fast main track.

Hot Fudge raced in third behind the top pair down the backstretch and was angled wide by Carmouche into the turn to set her sights on the lead as the Trevor McCarthy-piloted Kant Hurry Love came under a ride from fourth and followed the run of Hot Fudge. Olga Isabel gave way at the top of the lane after a half-mile in :45.19 and relinquished the advantage to a game Headland, but Hot Fudge gained ground with each stride down the center of the course and stuck her head in front near the sixteenth marker.

Kant Hurry Love was fully extended in late stretch and continued to inch closer within the final sixteenth, but Hot Fudge had enough left late to stave off her rival and cross the wire a neck in front in a final time of 1:10.45.

The New York-bred Kant Hurry Love held place by 2 1/4 lengths over Headland with You Look Cold and Olga Isabel completing the order of finish. Disco Ebo and Self Isolation were scratched.

Rice praised Carmouche for his tactical ride.

“She runs on the lead herself, but she's versatile enough to sit off of it which was key in this position,” Rice said. “Kendrick rode a beautiful race. They went fast in front of her and she managed to run them down.”

Carmouche, who rode Hot Fudge for the first time in the afternoon, said the filly re-engaged when pressured late by Kant Hurry Love.

“My filly was fighting. I went out to meet the other horse where she can fight a little more but once she got in front she could hear Trevor coming and you could see her pin her ears back,” said Carmouche. “I switched my stick and she gave me a little bit more just to make sure she got there. I take my hat off to Linda and the owner to come right back with this filly off the layoff when she ran a good number the first time.”

In victory, Rice improved her total win tally on the NYRA circuit this year to 157, moving her closer to the NYRA single-season record of 164 wins that was set by David Jacobson in 2013. Rice added that Hot Fudge's likely next target is the seven-furlong, $150,000 Interborough on Jan. 20.

Bred in Kentucky by Edwin Anthony from the Into Mischief mare Noelle's Mischief, Hot Fudge banked $66,000 in victory, improving her total purse earnings to $356,405 through a lifetime record of 11-6-1-1. She was at $235,000 purchase by Emerald Sales, agent, at the 2021 OBS Spring Two-Year-Olds in Training Sale, where she was offered by Flying Fish.

Hot Fudge returned $8.20 for a $2 win ticket.

McCarthy, aboard the David Duggan-trained Kant Hurry Love, said the stakes-winning daughter of Kantharos gave her all in defeat.

“I thought she'd be a little bit closer. I tried to gun her and they outran her early, so I tipped her out down the backside and gave her a little breather,” McCarthy explained. “She's not one that truly loves a whole lot of kickback – she'll take it, but she's happier without it. Around the turn, I tucked inside with Kendrick and followed him. I tipped her out and she gave me every effort. The more I asked, the more she gave. I couldn't ask for more.”

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Jockey Keith Asmussen Passes His Dad with 64th Career Victory

Jockey Keith Asmussen recorded his 64th career victory in Saturday's opener at Oaklawn, eclipsing the total of his father, Hall of Fame trainer Steve Asmussen, during his riding career.

Keith Asmussen, fittingly, reached the milestone on a horse trained by his father, Hern, who won the 1 1/16-mile claiming race.

“Couldn't be more excited for today and the rest of the meet,” Keith Asmussen said.

Steve Asmussen rode 63 winners in 1982-1984, according to Equibase. Asmussen turned to training after he became too heavy to ride.

Keith Asmussen, 25, launched his full-time riding career in late 2022 after earning a master's degree in professional accounting earlier in the year from the University of Texas' McCombs School of Business.

Asmussen's younger brother, Erik, 21, made his Oaklawn riding debut in Saturday's first race and finished sixth aboard What a Country for his father.

“It was awesome to get to ride with my brother,” Keith Asmussen added.

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