Double Crown, Cash Seek First Grade I In Cigar

Just after hitting the 1 1/2-year anniversary mark of sending out his first entry as a licensed trainer, Norman “Lynn” Cash secured his first graded stakes victory with Double Crown (Bourbon Courage), the longest shot on the board at 42-1, who ran down favorite Baby Yoda (Prospective) to clinch the GII Kelso H. at Belmont at the Big A Oct. 29. This Saturday, Cash hopes to take his training career to the next level, as Double Crown returns to Aqueduct, along with stablemate Outlier (Not This Time), to contest the GI Cigar Mile H.

“[Double Crown] is chomping at the bit to get out there, he's probably got more energy than he's ever had,” said Cash, who owns the Maryland-bred with his wife, Lola. “I was wanting to find something either 14 days or 21 days out, so that he would be coming off of about three weeks' rest, but it just worked out that there was nothing we could really find that seemed like a good fit for him, so we just kept him on the shelf. He's training really well and we're hopeful.”

The 5-year-old bay gelding, sitting at 15-1 on the morning line, drew the rail, while Outlier drew the sixth post.

“This is only the second Grade I I've ever had horses in and the way it's looking, we have a mediocre chance, but then again, that's about as good as we've had. I've got [Outlier] in there that likes the front end, who will hopefully keep the pace honest,” said Cash. “In my mind sometimes, I have to pick things apart and find the strength of my horses and the weaknesses of others. I think there's a couple of them that like it a little shorter, that maybe the mile is the far end of their comfort zone, and I'm hoping that the deep mile in that deep track at Aqueduct kind of plays to our advantage.”

For Cash, the numbers speak volumes, especially when it came to Double Crown. So much so, that the Midway, Ky., resident, on a rare day with no horses running, took a special trip to Churchill Downs in early June to drop a claim slip on the Maryland-bred who was entered in a mile-long claimer for a $40,000 tag. Double Crown finished second, by a neck, while Cash came out on top in the seven-way shake.

“I'm stabled at Laurel Park and here in Lexington, and that was the first thing that made me look at him: he was a Maryland-bred and he had solid numbers,” said Cash. “He had won a couple of stakes early on in Florida [as a 3-year-old] and ran second in the Maryland Million Sprint [last year]. It's a small thing, but the extra 15% that Maryland pays for Maryland-breds, when you're trying to get your bills paid at the end of the month, sometimes things like that make a difference.”

Double Crown romped in the Kelso | Coglianese

Cash kept his new trainee in Kentucky for his next two starts, where the gelding picked up back-to-back seconds at Churchill, before shipping him up to his Maryland base. He tried running him at a variety of distances, over a range of surfaces, including the turf at Laurel for the Ben's Cat S. (going 5 1/2 furlongs) and the all-weather track at Presque Isle Downs for the Peach Street S. (going a mile and 70 yards), through the summer into early fall, with his best results a victory at Colonial Downs in allowance company and a runner-up finish in the Polynesian S. at Pimlico, both going 1 1/16 miles on the dirt.

All of this led to his start in the Oct. 22 Maryland Million Classic S., which resulted in a disappointing fourth, as he finished 6 1/4 lengths behind the winner Ournationonparade (Cal Nation).

And when it was time to look ahead for a potential next target, it seemed things began to fall into place, all pointing toward the mile-long Kelso, just seven days later.

“It was like he never really got out and was able to move in the Maryland Million Classic, when he ran fourth, and we felt like he just wasn't spent, that he had effort to go. We debated whether or not to put him in the Kelso, and finally, probably what made the decision was that I had [fellow Maryland-bred] Eastern Bay [E Dubai] in that same day, so I [already] had a van going. I called the racing office there in New York and they said they've got a five-horse field and I'm like 'Wow, how do you not go to that race?'” said Cash.

The rest was history, as Double Crown bided time near the back of the pack, found his opening while coming down the stretch, hit a second gear to catch Baby Yoda and flew past to cross the wire 1 3/4 lengths ahead, securing the first career graded stakes victory for himself and his owner/trainer.

The whirlwind of emotions hit Cash and his wife all the way in Salt Lake City, Utah, where they had traveled to attend a family member's funeral. They made it to their rental car just two minutes before the horses loaded into the gate, watched the race unfold on their iPad, felt their hope grow as the field turned for home and erupted in celebration as Double Crown and jockey J.D. Acosta, sporting the red and black silks of the Cash family's Built Wright Stables, crossed the finish line first.

Cash (middle) and his wife, Lola (right), at Turfway earlier this year | Coady

“We probably looked like we were crazy as people drove past, because we were laughing and high-fiving and jumping and pumping, just ecstatic over this. It was quite a day and then, an hour later, Eastern Bay missed the GIII Bold Ruler S. I bet by two or three inches,” said Cash. “I can assure you that nobody was more surprised with the win with me.”

Rising from the claiming ranks to stakes company and later the winner's circle following a Grade II victory, with a Grade I debut just ahead, Double Crown reflects the successful, albeit unique, training program by today's industry standards that Cash has developed since getting into the sport.

“You've probably noticed that we run our horses a little more frequently. If I could plan every race I had, every horse would have 11 or 12 days off. Any time I have to choose between a race [coming up] at nine days and another coming up at 19 days, where I either have to go two or three days before what I think is perfect, or seven days later than what I think is perfect, I go nine days every time, [depending on] the horse being sound and everything,” explained Cash.

Between the time he was claimed, June 5, and his most recent start, Oct. 29, Double Crown has averaged two starts a month, with his longest break the past five weeks leading up to the Cigar.

“He's a horse that runs his race, whatever level that is. Let's say we're doing speed ratings. He runs a 98 to 102 speed rating, and if the race falls below that because maybe the pace is too fast and they all are tired in the end and he can come get them, then he wins. If the race stays above that level, he gives you everything he has but that's what he can give you, and he comes in second, third. But he's definitely an honest horse, he leaves it out there for you every time, [off of a] short or long rest,” said Cash.

Another prime example is Cash's trainee Beverly Park (Munnings), who recently scored his 13th win of the year in his 28th seasonal start Nov. 28 at Mahoning Valley Race Course. Claimed for $12,500 Aug. 5, 2021, Beverly Park's number of starts this year also leads the continent, and if all bodes well, he isn't finished with his 5-year-old season just yet.

“I don't know if I'm a fan-favorite but I know the horse is,” added Cash.

Beverly Park in one of his 13 wins of 2022 | Coady

The growth of Cash's stable, his ever-increasing success on the track and his love of the horse fuels the passion that inspired him to turn a hobby into a fully fledged career in the first place.

“I do feel that horses know when they're loved and when they're not, and I feel like they produce better when they're treated [well]. I'm probably more handsy and 'huggy' and 'kissy' with my horses than most trainers are, maybe it's not a manly thing, but when I saddle, I'll be right there and I just kind of stand there and rub their neck underneath, just spending some time with them,” said Cash.

When it comes to the Cigar, Cash knows that Double Crown and Outlier will both likely be perceived as the underdogs, just as the Maryland-bred was in the Kelso, but he's okay with that.

“Sometimes it doesn't matter what the odds board says, what the speed rating says, whatever. It comes down to how the race goes and again, I think I have a hard-knocker here that will give his 100 speed rating performance.”

Though nothing is official yet, Cash says he's had a couple of phone calls about big races that are coming up, which may be on the horizon for Double Crown in 2023.

Despite the weight of what Saturday could bring, Cash continues with his regular day-to-day operation, overseeing the 45 to 50 horses in training, all owned by him and his wife, between his 27 stalls at the Thoroughbred Center in Lexington and his 30 stalls at Laurel, along with his own 31-acre farm in Midway, which houses layups and a few mares.

“I'm a roofing contractor, a year and a half away from roofing contracting, that is having the time of his life and never dreamed any of this. I was just going to claim a few horses and have some fun when I got my trainer's license and it's just crazy how some of these horses have blossomed,” said Cash. “Eastern Bay, what an amazing 8-year-old that guy is, and Double Crown, I don't know if he's improved the most, but by type of races he's won, he certainly has. It seems like we're running in five, six, seven stakes a month, with different horses, and I've probably got five or six legitimate stakes horses. That's exciting.”

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Beverly Park Grinds Out Continent-Topping Win No. 13

Beverly Park (Munnings), scored his 13th win of the year in his 28th seasonal start Monday in the sixth race at Mahoning Valley Race Course.

With a little more than a month left in 2022 and his next closest competitors all five victories behind him, Beverly Park has now assuredly clinched the title of North America's winningest Thoroughbred based on victories for the year.

Beverly Park's number of starts also leads the continent, and given this horse's penchant for performing well under a steady workload, the 5-year-old starter-allowance stalwart might not yet be finished racing before the condition books close on 2022.

In his typical force-the-issue, grind-it-out fashion, the 7-10 favorite hounded the pacemakers from the outside in the six-furlong sprint restricted to horses who have started for a claiming tag of $8,000 or less over the past two calendar years.

Beverly Park took over at the head of the lane under jockey Yan Aviles, got headed in midstretch, then dug in determinedly to power past a stubborn rival to win by a length in 1:12.28.

Beverly Park was claimed for $12,500 Aug. 5, 2021, by current owner/trainer, Norman Lynn Cash, whose horses race under the name Built Wright Stables.

Beverly Park has not started for a tag since being claimed, feasting exclusively on starter-allowances, optional claimers in which he was not entered for a tag, and in the $100,000 Ready's Rocket Express on the Claiming Crown card two weekends ago.

In the span between Cash's claiming him and Monday's win, Beverly Park is now 20-for-36 with $465,628 in purse earnings (roughly 37 times that original claim investment). His lifetime record stands at 23-7-4 from 45 starts.

Beverly Park has been eligible for some lucrative starter-allowance spots. But because improved horses who once ran for low claiming tags generally scare away entrants for those restricted races, Cash has had to hit the road his stable star to extend his winning ways.

So far in '22, Beverly Park has raced at Oaklawn, Charles Town, Turfway, Laurel, Mahoning Valley, Keeneland, Monmouth, Belterra, Churchill, Thistledown, Delaware, Colonial and Timonium.

No North American Thoroughbred had won more than 12 races in an entire calendar year since 2011, when Rapid Redux ran the table with a 19-for-19 record.

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The Week in Review: Small-Circuit State-Breds Spark Underdog BC Appeal

The Breeders' Cup is always a bit more interesting when underdog horses from smaller circuits are in the mix, and both Slammed (Marking) and Tyler's Tribe (Sharp Azteca) have the potential to bring outsized attention to their respective breeding programs in New Mexico and Iowa when they run in the Nov. 4 and 5 championships.

In the entire history of the Breeders' Cup dating to 1984–out of a pool of 4,344 horses–those two states have accounted for just one state-bred starter each.

Slammed will represent New Mexico, and you could say that she arguably has the better chance in her race, the GI Breeders' Cup Filly and Mare Sprint. After breaking out at Del Mar this summer, she's more proven at the national level, and she also owns a recent sharp win over the Keeneland surface, having earned a Breeders' Cup berth with an Oct. 8 GII Thoroughbred Club of America S. victory.

But figuratively, Slammed has to outrun the oddball specter that lingers from the only other Land of Enchantment-bred to give the Breeders' Cup a go: Ricks Natural Star, whose start in the GI Turf in 1996 rates as one of the most captivatingly bizarre happenstances in the history of the series.

As Andrew Beyer wrote in his Washington Post preview of that year's championships, “On a morning when the world's best horses were entered for Saturday's Breeders' Cup, the main object of attention at Woodbine Racetrack was a hopeless 7-year-old from New Mexico…. In the view of many at Woodbine, [Ricks Natural Star] is making a mockery of the sport's biggest event. To others, this quixotic venture epitomizes the romance of the game.”

When the gelding's offbeat owner and trainer, William Livingston, took out a loan and submitted a surprise $40,000 entry to enter his one and only racehorse against the planet's top turfers, Breeders' Cup officials were both appalled and perplexed. This was the era prior to the current stricter qualifying standards and more enlightened veterinary oversight, and to say the entry was off their radar would have been an understatement: Ricks Natural Star hadn't raced in over a year and hadn't won a race in three years, since besting $3,500 claimers on the dirt at Sunland Park.

Livingston, a veterinarian from New Mexico who claimed to treat everything from “parakeets to elephants,” had only gotten his training license just prior to the Breeders' Cup, and he told the media that he had conditioned Ricks Natural Star by driving alongside him on a ranch in a pickup truck.

Livingston then drove the gelding to Canada in a one-horse trailer, keeping his Turf entrant in a makeshift pen in the parking lots of motels when he stopped for the night. Informed by Breeders' Cup officials along the way that Ricks Natural Star lacked a required published workout that would preclude him from starting, Livingston made a side trip to Remington Park in Oklahoma so the gelding could stretch his legs in a leisurely six furlongs in 1:21.46.

There were border-crossing difficulties getting into Canada and Livingston arrived without proper tack and equipment, yet he delighted in showing off Ricks Natural Star, even allowing onlookers to climb atop the gelding's back for photo opportunities. This was the Breeders' Cup that would feature the mighty Cigar's final race (he'd finish third in the GI Classic), but all of the pre-event attention was riveted on Ricks Natural Star, with Livingston insisting he would win the Turf.

Local jockey Lisa McFarland was recruited (or perhaps drew the short straw) from the local riding colony to pilot Ricks Natural Star, and if her strategy was just to let him run freely then get out of the way of everyone else, she executed it with precision. Far underlaid in the betting at 56-1, the popular gelding forced the pace for a half-mile then was eased back through the field, distanced well behind winner Pilsudski (Ire).

Ricks Natural Star made one more start a couple months later in New Mexico for a $7,500 tag (sixth, with the chart caller's comment “showed nothing”), but was claimed out of that race by new connections solely for the purpose of retiring him.

Conversely, the unbeaten 2-year-old Iowa-bred Tyler's Tribe, who has never been headed while winning five dirt races by an aggregate 59 3/4 lengths, is on target for the GI Juvenile Turf Sprint.

Tyler's Tribe will bring a little more “undefeated appeal” into his Breeders' Cup appearance (his connections are opting for first-time turf rather than stretching out to two turns against what looms as a deep GI Juvenile field on dirt). But his Iowa roots don't come with any oddball back story like his New Mexico counterpart. The only previous Iowa-bred in the Breeders' Cup was Topper T (Bellamy Road), who ran eighth in the 2018 GI Juvenile.

End Zone Athletics Hits 200 Wins

With a pair of victories at Remington on Saturday night, End Zone Athletics, the stable name for horses owned by trainer Karl Broberg, quietly hit the 200-victory mark for the year–again.

End Zone, which operates at numerous tracks throughout the South and Midwest, is well on its way to leading the continent for wins as an owner, as it has every year since 2016.

Save for the pandemic-altered 2020, when Broberg's outfit won “only” 165 races, End Zone has now cracked the 200-win mark every season since 2017.

Even more impressively, consider for perspective that during that entire time frame, only one other owner has reached 200 victories in a single season (Loooch Racing Stables in 2018).

In the North American trainer standings, Broberg is currently second on the year for victories. He was the continent's winningest trainer by that metric between 2014-19, and was second in wins in 2013, 2020 and 2021.

No Walk in the Park for 'Beverly'

Beverly Park (Munnings) came a neck shy of winning his 12th race of the year on Saturday at Keeneland. But the third-place effort might have been gutsier than any of the 11 victories racked up so far this year by North America's winningest horse for 2022.

Facing $20,000 starter-allowance company for the second straight time after feasting primarily on $5,000 starter-allowance foes during the earlier part of the season, the 5-year-old forced the issue under jockey Rafael Bejarano while widest in a four-way speed duel, put away those three rivals by the quarter pole, led until the eighth pole, then couldn't withstand a pick-up-the-pieces late rally from a fresh closer.

Beverly Park, who races for owner/trainer Norman Lynn Cash (Built Wright Stables), still has a three-victory cushion over his next closest competitor, Exit Right (Effinex), who ran sixth and last in a $5,000 starter/optional claimer at Delaware Park on Friday.

No North American Thoroughbred has won more than 12 races in an entire calendar year since 2011.

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TDN en Espanol: Reseña De La Semana–Un Buen Año Para Tener Un Caballo Duro

Traducción de Herman Guanipa

¿Interesado en recibir artículos de la TDN en español? Envíe un correo electrónico a suefinley@thetdn.com.

Con el fenómeno invicto Flightline (Tapit) y la estrella de segundo año de campaña Epicenter (Not This Time) estan encabezando un muy respetablemente Breeders' Cup Classic Grado 1, una broma que a menudo se ha repetido es que 2022 está resultando ser “un año duro para tener un buen caballo” apuntando a un campeonato en cualquier renglón.

Sin embargo, algunos niveles más abajo en la escala social (en la industria hípica), en realidad más que algunos, ese estilo rutinario de hacer las cosas está cambiando a ser un trabajador meticuloso, proactivo y analítico, demostrando que el 22 es en realidad  es “un buen año para tener un caballo duro”.

La semana pasada en Churchill Downs, Beverly Park (Munnings) ganó su undécima carrera de la temporada en su salida número 23 del año. Ambos números son los mejores en Norteamérica; sus rivales más cercanos tienen ocho victorias y 20 carreras, respectivamente.

Caracterizado por su determinación y su naturaleza enfocada en la velocidad,  el cincoañero largó rápido en un Starter Allowance de 6 1/2 furlones (1.300 mts) y $20.000 el 21 de septiembre, puso presión sobre el riel en un duelo por tomar la delantera, luego impuso su ritmo y ganar por 3/4 de cuerpo al bajo la conducción de Rafael Bejarano para el propietario/entrenador Norman Lynch Cash, quienes corre sus ejemplares bajo el nombre de Built Wright Stables.

Once victorias y es solo la primera semana de otoño. Analizando la situación, ningún Purasangre de Carreras norteamericano ha ganado más de 12 carreras en todo un año calendario desde 2011, cuando Rapid Redux lo hizo con un llamativo récord de 19 por 19. Quedan más de tres meses completos de carreras en el 2022.

De hecho, para cuando leas esto, Beverly Park ya podría estar a punto de participar en su próxima carrera.

El colega Bill Finley describió de manera “retrospectiva” la operación de Cash a mediados de mayo, cuando Beverly Park había acumulado sus primeras seis victorias del año. Después de haber tenido caballos de carreras en asociación con su esposa, Lola, durante aproximadamente una década, Cash sacó su licencia de entrenador en abril de 2021. Ahora dirige un establo de 40 ejemplares (se divide entre Laurel Park en Maryland y el Thoroughbred Training Center en Lexington, Kentucky) sobre la teoría de que mientras los caballos demuestren que pueden desempeñarse bien en carreras continuamente, estarán en la oficina de las inscripciones.

Cash reclamó Beverly Park por 12.500 dólares cuando ganó un Reclamo para ejemplares no ganadores de 3 carreras (NW3L) en Belterra Park el 5 de agosto de 2021, con la esperanza de tener suerte con un caballo que había ganado por 15 cuerpos en su condición anterior,  un Reclamo de $5000 para  ejemplares no ganadores de dos carreras (NW2L). Eso significaba que Beverly Park sería elegible para algunas carreras productivos como los Starter Allowances. Pero debido a que los caballos que suben de nivel que una vez corrieron por bajos precios de reclamo generalmente asustan a los participantes para esas carreras restringidas, Beverly Park tuvo que salir de viaje a buscar para extender su racha ganadora.

Hasta ahora en el 2022, Beverly Park ha corrido en Oaklawn, Charles Town, Turfway, Laurel, Mahoning Valley, Keeneland, Monmouth, Belterra, Churchill, Thistledown, Delaware, Colonial y Timonium. En el lapso de 399 días entre el reclamo de Cash y la victoria de la semana pasada en Churchill, Beverly Park está de 31-18 con 424.024 dólares en ganancias. Su récord de por vida es de 40-21.

 

Por fin uno de los favoritos

El Parx Dirt Mile de 200.000 dólares aún no tiene el estatus de una carrera de Grado, pero Mind Control (Stay Thirsty) ha hecho que valga la pena ver los últimos dos años las carreras del mismo día Pennsylvania Derby, Grado 1.

Un caballo constante de media distancia que a menudo se percibe como que aún tiene algo que demostrar, Mind Control es conocido por recuperarse cuando parece irremediablemente perdido (como en el Parx Dirt Mile 2021), y ganar carreras por márgenes pequeños (de sus 11 victorias de toda la vida, dos fueron por nariz, tres por cabeza y uno por pescuezo).

Algo así como uno de los favoritos de los fans, el abanderado del Red Oak Stable y Madaket Stables para el entrenador Todd Pletcher no ha sido el preferido comodín de las apuestas de ganadores, pale y show: Entrando a explicar el Parx Dirt Mile del sábado pasado, Mind Control había corrido en 15 Clásicos consecutivos, desde el 7 de marzo de 2020, sin haber sido el favorito de cada una de esas carreras.

Aunque hazañas como esta son difíciles de fijar como reales “récords” (cualquier ayuda bienvenida por cualquier persona con una base de datos lo suficientemente completa), es poco probable que algún deporte haya sido testigo de que demasiados (si lo hay) ganadores millonarios en premios que compiten estrictamente en Clásicos durante un período de 2 años y medio sin ir una vez como primera elección del público.

Eso cambió el 24 de septiembre, cuando los apostadores de Parx pusieron Mind Control como la opción 3-5 para la Dirt Mile. El seisañero siguió a quien marcó el paso de la carrera,  criado en Pennsylvania Far Mo Power (Uncle Lino) en cada paso del trayecto antes de que el duelo de ambos los alejara del grupo en la última curva.

El 12-1 y el favorito en las apuestas corrieron peleando la punta de la carrera a lo largo de toda la recta, cabeza a cabeza y en un pequeño descuido Far Mo Power con  la conducción del local de Parx,  Dexter Haddock,  cargó dos veces hacia afuera en contra de  Mind Control y al perteneciente del Salon de la Fama, John Velázquez.

En la línea llegada, Far Mo Power dominó por un pescuezo, pero el anuncio de objeción y observación enseguida aparecieron en la pizarra. Cuando los números dejaron de destellar, Mind Control fue subido al primer lugar y Far Mo Power y el jockey Dexter Haddock bajados al segundo lugar por interferencia.

“Mi caballo es un luchador, pero cuando (Far Mo Power al principio) salió y lo tocó, estaba bien”, dijo Velázquez. “(Mind control) se intimidó un poco, pero mi caballo volvió a tener un cabeza y cabeza con él… En los 100 mts finales [Haddock] golpeó (su montura) con la mano izquierda y lo tocó (Mind Control), lo desequilibró. Eso realmente intimidó y mi caballo perdió el equilibrio y no pude volver”.

Independientemente del razonamiento de los oficiales para la descalificación, es difícil ver el distanciamiento través de los ojos de las conexiones afectadas .

El propietario de Far Mo Power, Joseph Sutton, solo ha corrido 18 caballos de por vida con un establo de dos caballos, según Equibase. El entrenador Louis Linder Jr., ha estado condicionado durante una década y nunca ha ganado Clásicos de Grado. Haddock, ha montado desde 2017, tiene una victoria en un Grado 3 en el tope de su currículum de jinete, que lo obtuvo apenas el mes pasado. Una victoria en una carrera de 200.000 dólares en la  pista donde trabaja, habría sido una gran consideración o logro para todos los involucrados, sin embargo, la gente de Far Mo Power fue diplomática después del resultado.

“Eso son las carreras de caballos”, dijo Linder. “Me duele, pero viviremos para luchar otro día. Desde el primer momento en que este caballo estuvo en el establo, supe que era especial”.

Añadió Haddock: “Mi caballo se esforzó mucho. Estoy triste. Estoy con él todos los días por la mañana. Estoy triste por mí. Estoy triste por el entrenador”.

En cuanto a Mind Control y su triunfo por descalificación, le fue adjudicado una cifra de Beyer de 100 puntos. Después de correr la gran mayoría de sus carreras con una curva, ahora ha ganado sus únicos tres Beyers de tres dígitos en sus únicas tres carreras con dos curvas en una milla.

Tal vez esas cifras le vengan bien en el reintento en noviembre de la Breeders' Cup Dirt Mile Grado 1 en Keeneland. Una fiebre sacó a Mind Control de la Dirt Mile del año pasado en Del Mar.

 

Reflexiones sobre el Medio Oeste

Es un poco temprano para prender la bola de cristal para ver qué cambios podrían afectar a los calendarios de carreras regionales en 2023, pero tres noticias separadas de la semana pasada insinuaron algún cambio sutil en el Medio Oeste.

La venta pendiente por 79 millones de dólares de Ellis Park a la compañía de juegos Churchill Downs, Inc. (CDI), dio luz verde a la Comisión de Carreras de Caballos de Kentucky en septiembre 20. Aunque Ellis está programado para competir esencialmente por el mismo bloque de 24 fechas el próximo año durante la misma forma de verano, CDI naturalmente querrá poner su propio sello en las operaciones allí. Teniendo en cuenta que el acuerdo se facturó en gran parte como una forma de apuntalar las carreras durante todo el año en Kentucky, se puede apostar a que la nueva dirección hará un movimiento considerable para llamar y retener operaciones que tradicionalmente podrían haber corrido en otros hipódromos.

Mientras tanto, en septiembre 2022, Hawthorne Race Course recibió una lista de 23 fechas por parte de la Junta de Carreras de Illinois que devolverán una temporada de Purasangres en verano a la gran Chicago después de una ausencia de un año después del cierre repentino y permanente del Hipódromo Internacional de Arlington. Hawthorne correrá los sábados y domingos desde el 4 de marzo al 3 de junio, luego agregara los miércoles hasta el 4 de septiembre.

Ese horario podría forzar al antiguo Fairmount Park, que ahora se conoce como FanDuel Sportsbook y Horse Racing. Esas dos pistas de Illinois tienen cierta superposición en lo más bajo en los niveles de jerarquía, y con el horario de los martes/sábados de FanDuel a partir del 18 de abril al 18 de noviembre, habrá coincidencia de sábados en verano dentro del estado.

Otro comodín en la mezcla del Medio Oeste es Canterbury Park en Minnesota. A pesar de terminar su temporada de 64 fechas el 17 de septiembre con un récord de manejo total reportado a 97,6 millones de dólares, Canterbury se enfrenta a un futuro incierto porque un acuerdo de 10 años entre la pista y la Comunidad Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux (que proporciona financiamiento del fondo de los premios a cambio de que el hipódromo y los horsemen  no busquen formas adicionales de apuestas) está establecido que se vence el 31 de diciembre.

Andrew Offerman, Vicepresidente Senior de las Carreras de Canterbury, dijo al Minneapolis Star Tribune el día después de que terminara la temporada, que el calendario del 2023 dependerá de la cantidad disponible de dinero de los premios. The Tribune informó que Canterbury pagó 15,7 millones de dólares en premios esta temporada, con 7,28 millones de dólares procedentes del acuerdo de mejorar las bolsas a repartir.

Menos dinero en los premios probablemente significaría menos días de carreras el próximo verano, dijo Offerman al Tribune, y agregó que Canterbury podría considerar correr tres días a la semana en lugar de cuatro.

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