Irad Ortiz, Jr. Talks Life Is Good, Recent Suspension On Writers’ Room

It was an eventful few months for three-time Eclipse champion jockey Irad Ortiz, Jr. Shortly after scoring a hat trick of victories at the Breeders' Cup, Ortiz was suspended 30 days for careless riding at Aqueduct. Upon his return, the 29-year-old picked up where he left off at Gulfstream, piloting winners left and right and over the weekend, added two more seven-figure Grade I wins to his trophy collection with victories in the Pegasus World Cup Turf Invitational S. on back-to-back winner Colonel Liam (Liam's Map) and Pegasus World Cup Invitational S. aboard emergent superstar Life Is Good (Into Mischief). Tuesday, the sometimes polarizing rider sat down with the TDN Writers' Room presented by Keeneland as the Green Group Guest of the Week to discuss his success, his suspension, his rise to the top of the game and whether or not he pays attention to either the positive or negative attention he receives from racing fans.

“Honestly, I know my horse is fast, but I never thought I was going to be on the lead by three or four lengths,” Ortiz said when asked if he was surprised by how easily Life Is Good outran presumptive Horse of the Year Knicks Go (Paynter) in the Pegasus. “But that's racing. [Sometimes] after the gates open, everything changes. I let him go into the first turn and then I just used my judgment. He was feeling good, he was running relaxed and going the right way, so I just didn't mess with him, I let him do his thing and keep going. The difference between him and some other horses; some other horses can go fast and hold their speed for six furlongs or a mile, but he can stay the distance. It's really hard to find a horse that can stay with his same speed and finish the way he finishes.”

Asked about the 30-day suspension he was handed by New York Racing Association stewards for a Dec. 3 incident in which he crowded a horse on the rail, causing apprentice jockey Omar Hernandez Moreno to fall off his mount, Ortiz took responsibility and said he had no issue with the punishment.

“We learn from our mistakes,” he said. “I made a mistake, it was not intentional, but I'm grateful and glad that the kid is okay. The stewards did their job. I agreed with them 100%. They gave me 30 days and I took it right away, I didn't say anything because I knew I made a mistake, so I'll pay for it. That's why they're there, to watch everybody and try to keep all the jockeys safe. I'm not perfect, I'm human, and now I'll just turn the page, learn from it and try not to do that again.”

Ortiz was also asked to reflect on his meteoric rise to the top of racing and whether or not he foresaw this level of success when he first came over to the U.S. in the late 2000s.

“I'm grateful and I thank god I am where I am, but when you get here, there are a lot of good jockeys,” he said. “I work hard, but you never know what's going to happen. Are you going to get the opportunities right away or not? Sometimes it'll take you five, six, seven, eight years until people start giving you a chance. So I always had big dreams, but I never pressured myself like, 'I have to be there.' It never was like that. I just worked step by step and tried to do the right thing every time someone gave me an opportunity. And that's the way we did it. My agent, Steve Rushing, does a great job, and since I started working with him, everything changed a little bit. I got better numbers. I got better chances. We got better horses. You need a little bit of everything: you need a good agent, you need to do the right thing, you need the right horses and you need the opportunity from the owners and trainers.”

Elsewhere on a jam-packed show, which is also sponsored by Coolmore, West Point Thoroughbreds, Lane's End, the Kentucky Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders, XBTV and Legacy Bloodstock, the writers discussed the courtroom drama in Seth Fishman's doping trial, the back-and-forth of the Bob Baffert vs. NYRA hearings and T.D. Thornton's comparison of racing's current era to the steroid era in baseball. Click here to watch the podcast; click here for the audio-only version or find it on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.

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Cox Hopes Concert Tour Can ‘Bounce Back’ In Allowance Race

A well-beaten favorite in the Jan. 15 Fifth Season Stakes, his first start for eight months, Concert Tour will be pointed to an easier spot for his next start.

Trainer Brad Cox told bloodhorse.com that an allowance race is the most likely option for the multiple Grade 2-winning son of Street Sense.

“He came out of the Fifth Season fine. We'll just regroup and probably try to find a conditioned allowance race for him,” Cox told bloodhorse.com. “Obviously he didn't have things go his way in his return. He's a very sound horse and he trains well. Hopefully he can bounce back.”

The 4-year-old Concert Tour is owned by Gary and Mary West. He began his career in the barn of embattled trainer Bob Baffert, winning his debut, the G2 San Vicente, and the G2 Rebel Stakes through his first three races before finishing third in the G1 Arkansas Derby. After a ninth-place effort in the G1 Preakness Stakes, Concert Tour went to the sidelines for eight months before resuming his career under Cox's care.

In Oaklawn's $150,000 Fifth Season Stakes, Concert Tour was within striking distance while three-wide in the one-mile contest. He faded badly in the stretch run, beaten 15 lengths as the heavy favorite.

Concert Tour has returned to the Hot Springs work tab since that effort, breezing four furlongs in 48.40 seconds on Jan. 28.

Overall, the colt's record stands at three wins from six starts for earnings of $857,350.

Read more at bloodhorse.com.

The post Cox Hopes Concert Tour Can ‘Bounce Back’ In Allowance Race appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Letter to the Editor: Hall of Fame Comparisons

Have you lost all editorial accuracy in comparing the violations of trainers such as Jason Servis, Marcus Vitali, Wayne Potts, with Bob Baffert? Until Medina Spirit had the very unfortunate appearance of a skin disease requiring application of an ointment containing a one half strength variant of bethamethasone, Bob Baffert was a celebrated top trainer, who had become one of the faces of the sport.

The sad oversight that led the vet to prescribe Otomax for Medina Spirit without noticing the presence of beta valerate, causing a minute overage positive in the Derby, has resulted in a brouhaha that in no way compares to the drug violations and criminal actions of the other trainers named above.

In fact, there is a real possibility that beta valerate is not even regulated in KY as prohibited in their races. The TDN and TD Thornton, in their coverage, seem determined to paint Bob Baffert with a damning brush. His very explainable reaction with some interviews right after the Derby was full of raw emotion, knowing Medina Spirit had never been injected with Beta Vet, beta acetate, the injectable liquid prohibited in the rules.

When his vet informed him three days later that one of the ingredients in the skin ointment he had prescribed was beta valerate, Baffert immediately apologized for his emotional remarks, and did so again in the hearings, where he said he regretted his actions, would not do them again if he had a do over.

Yet, the NYRA attorney closed his remarks by saying Baffert never said he was sorry, that's all they wanted. The TDN in their articles about this hearing conveniently left these apologies out. The regulated penalty for this overage is a $1500 fine, not a two-year suspension!

But the real reason for this letter is the failure of the racing media to report accurate and complete facts where Baffert is concerned. Charges against him were that he had risked the safety and welfare of the jockeys and horses. Two Hall of Fame riders, Mike Smith and John Velasquez, testified they were always secure riding his horses due to the excellent care he gave them. Two highly respected veterinarians testified that his positive tests were of very small amounts of permitted medications that had no effect on the horses.

He has not hurt the business of racing, betting is higher than ever. Commercial sales are up, fatalities on the tracks are down, aftercare for thoroughbreds has never been better. Baffert has not done anything that deserves comparison in the racing media, especially the TDN, with trainers who have used performance enhancing drugs, and broken rules of operation, including criminal conduct.

The only thing that is hurting racing now is the determination of Churchill Downs and the NYRA to continue with their unmerited lengthy suspensions against Bob Baffert, supported by a media that seems afraid to report complete and accurate facts, perhaps scared of losing advertising?

It seems as if the Woke Culture taking over racing is what we really need to fear.

Yours truly,

Cynthia R. McGinnes
Chestertown, Md.

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Like Baseball, Racing Will Have to Come to Grips with Unsettling Era

While horse racing was consumed last week by headlines related to the federal doping conspiracy trial and Bob Baffert's exclusion hearings at the behest of the New York Racing Association (NYRA), the sport of baseball, too, was embroiled in its own ongoing performance-enhancing drug (PED) saga.

Last Tuesday, retired slugger David Ortiz was voted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in his first year of eligibility, while Barry Bonds (the all-time and single-season home run record-holder) and Roger Clemens (one of the most dominant pitchers in major league history) both were denied entry by a lack of votes in their 10th and final years on the ballot.

Baseball's controversy had been simmering for years against the backdrop of the “steroid era” that ran roughly from the late 1980s to around 2010, during which a number of prominent players with outsized statistical output were either strongly suspected of or tested positive for PED usage.

While Ortiz reportedly tested dirty in 2003, it was later suggested by league officials that his one-time bad test (for a substance that has never been publicly disclosed) was the result of a false positive. Given his otherwise clean record and Hall-worthy stats, Ortiz sailed through the voting in his first try. But Bonds and Clemens–both of whom had never tested positive for, nor were ever disciplined for PED usage–again didn't make the cut despite overwhelmingly dominant on-paper credentials.

Baseball's Hall of Fame is unique compared to other sports in that it has a clause stating that those voted worthy of the honor “shall be chosen on the basis of playing ability, sportsmanship, character, their contribution to the teams on which they played, and to baseball in general.”

The “character” part of that requirement is why Bonds and Clemens failed to secure the necessary 75% of the voting bloc. Just like the presumed prolific juicers Mark McGuire and Sammy Sosa, who had also put up incredibly aberrational numbers in the 1990s, they were all denied entry because of the rampant perception they had cheated and sullied their sport.

An obvious (and admittedly flippant) racing-related take on this is that perhaps baseball should be more like our sport–we induct Hall-of-Famers (at least the human ones) while they are still active in the game.

It is only after honoring trainers and jockeys for lifetime accomplishments that regulators and racing associations occasionally have to make uncomfortable decisions about whether those honorees will be allowed to participate in the day-to-day doings of Thoroughbred racing.

But the election of Ortiz could be signaling another subtle shift in baseball's Hall voting. As the years and decades pass, there is a greater likelihood that future voters will decide that players from the PED era were not specifically guilty of doping because they were caught up in a time when the entire game was perceived to be pharmaceutically tainted. Blaming circumstances always gets easier with the passage of time.

Yet as John Feinstein of the Washington Post put it last week, “A Hall of Fame–in any sport–is supposed to be about what is good in that game. It goes beyond numbers. If you insist that Bonds and Clemens should be included because of their performance, fine. Then the Hall should create a 'Steroids Wing' and recognize those with stunning statistics who we know used steroids, even if they never tested positive.”

Racing, too, is going to have to make similar decisions in the long run.

In fact, you can already see some of the nearer-term ramifications of NYRA's attempted banishment of Baffert and the edict issued by Churchill Downs, Inc. (CDI), that prohibits Baffert's trainees from running in the next two GI Kentucky Derbies coming more clearly into focus.

In the case of NYRA, it's a Pandora's Box type of vicious cycle. Now that Baffert has been established as a baseline for exclusion, who's next? We already know that trainer Marcus Vitali is scheduled for a similar “go away” hearing in March. And NYRA announced just last week trainer Wayne Potts could be on deck.

It doesn't take more than a quick scroll through social media or a chat with backstretch folks to come up with a growing list of alleged wrongdoers who all fit the mold of, “They're trying to rule off Baffert, but what about so-and-so?”

So where does it end? Can we expect that NYRA will be charging and then holding exhaustive, week-long hearings related to detrimental conduct on a continual basis from here on out? The costs could be staggering, both in terms of actual legal expenses for NYRA, plus the public relations price of never-ending negative headlines becoming entrenched atop the news cycle.

Then again, another school of thought holds that this type of trainer-by-trainer house-cleaning is long overdue and is exactly what NYRA needs to do as a protective measure.

As for CDI's banning of Baffert from the Derby, it's also fair to ask how this decision will affect the image of America's most iconic horse race over the long haul.

Right now Baffert trains two undefeated Derby contenders, the presumed divisional champion and 'TDN Rising Star' (Corniche), plus Saturday's winner of the GIII Southwest S., Newgrange (Violence). Per usual, the seven-time-Derby-winning trainer could have another colt or two primed to peak before the first Saturday in May rolls around.

A few weeks ago I wrote about how CDI's ban could backfire by turning Baffert's exclusion into the unwanted focal point of the 2022 Derby. Now let's widen the lens further: How do you think history will portray the “most exciting two minutes in sports” when the ink is dry on what might someday be called the “Dirty Derby” era that started in 2019?

We already have a decent idea of what the first section of that rough draft will look like. It starts with Maximum Security, a one-time $16,000 maiden-claimer, soaring improbably above his peers to win the 2019 Derby, only to get disqualified for a debatable in-race interference call that roiled the sport for months.

A year later, in 2020, we learned that Maximum Security's trainer, Jason Servis, was arrested in a nationwide equine drug sweep, and that the feds allegedly have him on wiretap repeatedly discussing the doping regimen of Max during the time frame that included the colt crossing the wire first in that 2019 Derby.

Then 2021 brought us another unlikely Derby victor in Medina Spirit, a colt who was so unheralded in the sales ring that he once hammered for the too-low-to-be-true price of $1,000. Yet Baffert had him honed to such a high degree that he wired the field in the first leg of the Triple Crown.

This time, the feel-good aura of rags-to-riches glory barely lasted a week until it was revealed that Medina Spirit had tested positive for an overage of betamethasone, an infraction that has still not been adjudicated by state regulators in Kentucky (although it has sparked several high-profile federal lawsuits, CDI's no-Bob stance, and NYRA's attempts to rule off Baffert).

So if the story of the 2022 and 2023 Derbies ends up being the exclusion of Baffert's trainees, what do you suppose might happen if CDI ever decides it has to take action against other allegedly toxic trainers of top colts?

If it turns out that Baffert isn't the only conditioner told he's not welcome under the Twin Spires, the sport could soon be facing a difficult reckoning involving years in which a sizable swath of otherwise-eligible equine stars aren't allowed to participate in the Derby.

There might not be enough asterisks to go around if handicapping every year's foal crop becomes an exercise of exclusion related to which human handlers are deemed not worthy of the Derby.

Similar to baseball's steroids era, Thoroughbred racing is eventually going to have to come to grips with how the present will appear in the future.

Will the current time frame be viewed as an over-reactive witch hunt? Or will it eventually be defined as the era when the industry started cleaning up its act for the betterment of the sport?

Truth tends not to favor one extreme or the other, so the unknown answer to that question most likely lies somewhere in the hazy middle.

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