Braddick New Racecaller at Turf Paradise

Turf Paradise has hired veteran and international race caller Craig Braddick for the 2021 Winter meeting, starting Jan. 4, 2021, the track announced Wednesday.

“It’s an exciting challenge to call five days per week, but I’ve always enjoyed that,” Braddick said. “I want to do all I can to positively promote Turf Paradise and grow a fanbase for horse racing in my adopted home state of Arizona. We have some great horsemen and I expect the racing to be extremely competitive. I also want to be able to interact with horseplayers online, during racing, and get their opinions.”

Braddick, a native of Cambridge, England, has called all types of horse racing, including Thoroughbred, Quarter Horse, Arabian, Standardbred, and Jumps racing both in the U.S. and overseas. Most recently, he was the race caller at Rillito Park in Tucson, AZ.

 

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Arizona Dept. Gaming Launches Wellness Program

At the December Arizona Racing Commission meeting, Arizona Department of Racing steward Magdaleno Perez announced the launch of the Healthy Humans, Healthy Horses track wellness program, created to address the growing substance abuse problem at the state’s racetracks by supporting racing participants who may be suffering from addiction.

“I commend Magdaleno and the entire racing team in their diligent efforts to move this project forward,” said ADGaming Director, Ted Vogt. “The Healthy Humans, Healthy Horses program will directly support Arizona horsemen and create a safer and healthier backside, driving us forward in meeting our mission to ethically and effectively regulate horse racing, while ensuring it is conducted in a socially responsible manner.”

The 2021 winter meet at Turf Paradise kicks off Jan. 4 and the Arizona Department of Gaming–Racing Division will implement the following measures:

  • Suspension reductions for those who seek help with substance abuse
  • Random drug testing for licensees on horseback
  • Partnering with subject matter experts to address the influx of substance abuse
  • Adjusting fines and suspensions for repeated drug-related offenses
  • Proactively connecting those seeking help with substance abuse to available resources statewide

“A big thank you to the Racing Division for their hard work to support the Arizona racing community,” said Racing Commission Chair, Rory Goreé. “It is a priority for the Commission to help ensure the health and safety of racing participants, and this project furthers that goal while providing necessary aid to those in need.”

For more information, click here.

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New Twist In Arizona Racing Saga Tabled As Commission Requests Hearing On Monarch Contracts

Those following the ongoing saga of racing and simulcasting in Arizona walked away from the latest meeting of the Arizona Racing Commission on Oct. 8 with limited clairity. Negotiations are ongoing between Turf Paradise and the horsemen regarding a live meet at the Phoenix track in 2021, which under current terms is likely to take place Jan. 2-May 1. While commission staff have seen a proposal to race those dates, the group held off voting on it until a final agreement is reached between the two parties.

(Read more about the dispute between Turf Paradise and the horsemen in this Sept. 23 column from Ray Paulick.)

Commissioners did ask track officials about rumors the facility has sold off certain equipment and let the track and barn area slide into disrepair. Representatives from Turf Paradise assured the commission that if racing dates were granted, the track would be safe for horses and humans in time for the meet to begin. Turf Paradise general manager Vincent Francia said “none of the essential equipment” like ambulances, water trucks and other maintenance vehicles had been sold.

Turf Paradise representatives also hoped the commission would grant a reduction in the minimum number of live racing dates required to operate OTBs in the state, given the current Arizona and federal-level state of emergency declarations. The commission delayed action on this question and requested more information about the language of existing rules allowing a reduction in minimum live racing dates as it may apply specifically to a pandemic.

For many, the most critical item on Thursday's agenda was consideration by the commission of simulcast agreements between Monarch Content Management and Arizona Downs in Prescott Valley, and Monarch with Turf Paradise. Monarch, owned by The Stronach Group, brokers simulcast contracts on behalf of Stronach tracks Santa Anita, Golden Gate Fields, Gulfstream Park, Laurel Park, Pimlico, plus Del Mar, Monmouth Park and Tampa Bay Downs.

Attorney Kory Langhofer, representing Arizona Downs, revealed that the most recent draft of the agreement Monarch sent the track would require money wagered at Arizona Downs OTBs to be held in a separate pool and not commingled into the host track's pools.

“It's going to have a profound effect on the commercial viability of those sites,” Langhofer said.

Langhofer also suggested he understood the copy of the contract offered to Turf Paradise by Monarch did not have this restriction, instead allowing money wagered at those facilities to go into the host track's pools as is customary.

“It hasn't been approved and my client won't approve it because it's unreasonable,” said Langhofer, who urged the commission not to approve the contract between Monarch and Turf Paradise either. He was unsure whether Monarch imposed similar restrictions on operators in other states.

Arizona has a law on the books, similar to one in California, requiring that if a company sells simulcast signals to one track in the state, it must sell to all. Attorneys for Turf Paradise, which is apparently in favor of Arizona Downs OTBs being restricted this way, pointed out that the law doesn't say anything about what the pool arrangements should be. Language in the rule that contracts can't be “anti-competitive and deceptive” refer to the rates charged for signals, not to the specific constructs of a deal. Scot Claus, an attorney for Monarch, accused Arizona Downs of repeatedly defaulting on its contracts with Monarch and said that out-of-state tracks sending their signal into Arizona cannot be forced to take wagers into their pools.

Ultimately, the commission voted unanimously to hold a special hearing to consider the Monarch contracts, with instructions that attorneys for each party should file briefs of no longer than 25 pages before the next racing commission meeting. The next regularly scheduled commission meeting is Nov. 12, 2020.

The post New Twist In Arizona Racing Saga Tabled As Commission Requests Hearing On Monarch Contracts appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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AZHBPA to Turf Paradise Racing Proposal: We’ve Conditions Too

The Arizona Horsemen’s Benevolent and Protective Association (AZHBPA) would be amenable to Turf Paradise’s latest proposal to conduct a live 2020-21 race meet as long as certain conditions of their own are met, according to a letter written by AZHBPA president Bob Hutton dated Friday and obtained by the TDN.

“Because we are the heart and soul of horse racing in Arizona, we offer you all we have to help make Turf Paradise the venue for racing it can be and once was,” Hutton wrote, pointing to the horsemen’s horses, approval rights for signals and purse money. However, “there are conditions,” he added, arguing that the condition of the facility and grounds “gives us pause as to the genuineness of your proposal.”

The letter is in response to a missive Turf Paradise sent to the horsemen Thursday, detailing a proposed live meet next year that will run Jan. 2 through May 1.

For that proposed meet to go ahead, however, Turf Paradise management listed in the letter a number of caveats, namely that $2.1 million of disputed purse account monies be returned to Turf Paradise, and that the Arizona horsemen form a new representative organization or for the current AZHBPA board members and their executive director to resign.

These purse account funds have been the latest bone of contention in a long-running dispute between Arizona horsemen and management of Turf Paradise. Track general manager Vince Francia previously told the TDN that these funds contractually belong to Turf Paradise for the horsemen that race there.

The horsemen, however, argue that they ultimately wield control over the purse account, as per a prior arbitrated settlement. Indeed, earlier this week a widely circulated email stated that the AZHBPA has secured a good chunk of this money and placed it into a trust to pay purses if and when racing resumes elsewhere.

Francia told the TDN that he has advised facility owner Jerry Simms that the AZHBPA’s written rebuttal is an “olive branch” to conduct negotiations, and that all conditions are on the table.

The main conditions outlined in the AZHBPA’s Friday response are as follows:

“The first condition is that you, Mr. Simms [Turf Paradise owner], respect the Horsemen’s choice of representation and refrain from your attempt to tell us, the Horsemen, who we can have as our representatives. Respect us, our choices, our leadership, our solidarity, and our industry.

“Here is the second condition: Honor the arbitration agreement and allow the AHBPA control of the horsemen’s purse account, (with the understanding that it will be used for purses during Turf Paradise’s live meet). Additionally, reimburse AHBPA purse money from March 2020, when you killed the contract, to present, what the state law requires: 50% of the OTB revenue, when a contract is not in place.

“This takes us to the third condition: The track must be safe for the horses and people. Right now, the main track, the turf track and the training track are not fit to run on. The backside is full of trenches, power boxes with wires exposed, and the roads and bridle path are in terrible condition. The barns are, as always, dilapidated. And the clubhouse is uninhabitable. No doubt, to meet this condition, a safety inspection will be required.

“If you meet these conditions, we will fully engage in arriving at a new contract. Suffice to say, efforts have been made to resolve our differences, but when you remove the AHBPA from our mutual account so that we, the Horsemen, cannot access our own purse funds, that should have been the end of our efforts to revitalize racing at our venue. Yet, here we are, offering to race again. Join us by respecting our choices and the laws that govern our industry. Then, both being reasonable, we can enter into a new contract.”

The AZHBPA’s latest overture, said Francia, is a “positive” one. “Mr. Hutton is offering an olive branch to discuss everything, including the two terms that we put forth. Something we both want is to have live racing reactivated here the day after New Year,” he said.

“I hope there’s resolution for both of our sides,” Francia added, “because it effects the livelihood of thousands of people in an industry that has a very ingrained attachment to this state. There’s 65 years of memories here.”

Francia also struck a more personal note. “When all this is said and done, I grieve the loss of friendship with Bob Hutton. We were good friends, we enjoyed each other’s company,” he said. “But that friendship has unfortunately been lost. And I understand.”

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