Mott Hits 5,000 Career Win Mark With Churchill Downs Victory

Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott became only the seventh trainer in history to record 5,000 wins when Moon Over Miami notched a one-length score in the third race on Saturday at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky.

Mott, who was inducted into racing's Hall of Fame in 1998, took out his trainer's license at age 16 in 1969. Throughout his storied career, the South Dakota native has won some of the world's most prestigious races including the 2019 Kentucky Derby (Country House), 1996 Dubai World Cup (Cigar) and 2010 Belmont Stakes (Drosselmeyer).

Mott was at Belmont Park on Saturday but his longtime assistant trainer Kenny McCarthy and veteran exercise rider Penny Gardiner were on hand to accept the accolade.

“We're so thrilled to achieve this milestone,” said McCarthy, who has worked under Mott for 25 years. “I know Bill is watching from New York but we are so happy, and a little relieved, to get this honor.”

Mott began his career under the tutelage of fellow Hall of Famer Jack Van Berg throughout most of the 1970s until he decided to open up his own stable in 1978. Over the next four decades, Mott trained six champions and 121 Grade I winners. Among the top horses under Mott's care were 1995-96 Champion Older Horse and Horse of the Year Cigar, 2012-13 Champion Older Female Royal Delta and 1998 Champion Older Filly Escena.

Mott held the all-time trainer lead at Churchill Downs for more than 31 years until Dale Romans surpassed his mark in 2017.

Mott ranks seventh in all-time wins behind Dale Baird (9,445), Steve Asmussen (8,873), Jerry Hollendorfer (7,651), Van Berg (6,523), King Leatherbury (6,503) and Scott Lake (6,104).

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Yet Another Blown Arlington Deadline as Chaos Consumes Last-Ditch Negotiations

For the second consecutive day–and for the fourth time in two weeks–the Illinois Racing Board (IRB) on Friday had to put off voting on the fate of the nearly two-month overdue 2020 season at Arlington International Race Course.

That’s because the track and the Illinois Thoroughbred Horsemen’s Association (ITHA) still can’t come to terms on a signed contract for the meet, which is a requirement before the commission can award race dates.

What has been a tense negotiating process for the better part of nine months (with four blown IRB-mandated deadlines this June alone) devolved into a new realm of chaos during the June 19 teleconference: Arlington sent its version of a final, signed contract to the ITHA during–not before–Friday’s IRB meeting to approve the deal.

Then when the ITHA’s legal team scrambled to get a first read of that document during a hastily called recess, they realized that sometime during frenzied back-and-forth rounds of editing over the last 24 hours, different versions of the deal had gotten mixed up, making it difficult to know whether issues important to both sides got incorporated into the near-final version.

“So now we’re totally at odds, like, ‘Holy cow, what’s going on here?'” Kerry Lavelle, an attorney for the ITHA, told the IRB after discovering the botched documents. “You can see while scratching your head [how] the veracity of the whole process starts to break down, because we don’t know what’s going on.”

IRB chairman Daniel Beiser didn’t want to hear the details about the mix-up. He again recessed the meeting–which technically began on Thursday and had already been carried over to Friday–until Monday at 9 a.m. Central, at which time he vowed that the board would “one way or another come to conclusion on this item.”

But will the new Monday deadline be for real? Beiser had used nearly verbatim language on Thursday when the gave the ultimatum that Friday would be the absolute latest that the IRB would “finally dispose of this matter one way or the other.”

Arlington and the horsemen’s group two sides have been sparring since last October over crafting this deal. By contrast, the ITHA claimed back in January that its 2020 race-meet contract negotiations with nearby Hawthorne Racecourse took only one hour to complete.

Talks lagged through early spring, then the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted the world. Arlington’s previously scheduled May 1 opening date came and went without any horses being allowed to stable at suburban Chicago’s premier track.

As Illinois emerged from the health lockdown, both parties realized time was running out on the prospects for a 2020 racing season. An IRB meeting to award dates on June 5 resulted in mandated weekend-long negotiations mediated by the IRB. But when that meeting resumed June 8, the two sides could still not come to terms on a contract.

On June 17 there appeared to be a breakthrough just in time for the IRB’s meeting the next day, at which the Arlington dates were again on the agenda: The track issued a notice on Twitter Wednesday afternoon announcing that the two sides had reached a “tentative” deal for both 2020 and 2021 racing. According to the post, the 30-date 2020 meet would run July 23-Sep. 30. Additional reports said the two parties had agreed there would be no stakes program in 2020, including the track’s signature race, the GI Arlington Million.

But the deal did not materialize in time for Thursday’s IRB meeting, so a recess was granted until Friday in yet another last-ditch attempt to break the deadlock. There appeared to be two remaining issues—purse projections and a contingency for what would happen if Arlington didn’t (or couldn’t) race in 2021.

When the IRB reconvened at 1 p.m. Friday, IRB commissioner Thomas McCauley, who has been the board’s lead mediator, explained that he believed both sides had agreed to resolve purse projections similar to the way salary arbitration hearings are conducted in pro baseball. Bu the two sides still had to agree on what would happen in the event that out-of-control circumstances (like a pandemic) kept Arlington from racing in 2021.

Arlington president Tony Petrillo then told commissioners that “We had sent a final, signed agreement over to the ITHA that addressed the reconciliation payment, which we feel is a final offer and should close this issue, and that’s our current status.”

David McCaffrey, the ITHA’s executive director, then was granted the floor. Appearing taken aback, he said he had no idea what Petrillo was talking about, because the ITHA had not received any such signed contract from Arlington before the meeting.

Yet as McCaffrey was speaking, the contract popped up in his email. He said it was time-stamped eight minutes after the meeting had begun.

“Does anyone see the unfairness in sending us a contract at 1:08 p.m. on a call that started at 1 p.m. and have me say yes or no?” an exasperated McCaffrey asked.

His words were met with silence by everyone else on the conference call.

“I don’t know what to say, other than at one o’clock when I called into this meeting, despite all the feverish attempts that have been made over the last two or three weeks, we had a deal that we would agree to sign that was submitted this morning to the racing board. We will stand behind that. But I can’t respond to something that was sent to me 10 minutes ago,” McCaffrey said.

Beiser called for a recess to allow the ITHA time to examine Arlington’s latest offer. The break lasted 2 1/2 hours.

Upon resumption is when Lavelle notified the commissioners of the discrepancies between the contract drafts, explaining that the red-lining process had gone awry. He said his legal team did a comparison of what they believed to be the correct versions from each party to reach the “true version.”

But when the ITHA team did that, Lavelle said, it revealed that Arlington had included new blocks of language about force majeure that he had never seen before.

He emailed Petrillo before the meeting came back in session, who essentially told him “take it or leave it,” according to Lavelle.

“Our team needs some time to go through line by line to know what we’re going to do, and we do intend to come through, probably like Monday, [with] improvements,” Lavelle said.

Beiser granted the two sides time for another weekend-long work session, and then gave Petrillo the opportunity to respond before recessing the meeting.

“In order to help the ITHA move forward in a more expeditious manner, the agreement that I signed is the agreement that they should be working off of,” Petrillo said. “We notified them of that at the time that that was sent. [Just for clarification, there are] no other documents.”

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Cohen, Magic Star Fine After Harrowing Hedge Jump Caught On Film

A jockey never quite knows what to expect when the gates open, whether it's in a Grade 1 stakes race or a routine turf allowance. Rider David Cohen got an unusual reminder of that on Sunday, when he found himself doing a somersault over the hedges at Churchill Downs.

Cohen's ride in the eighth race, a 4-year-old Chad Brown trainee named Magic Star, had five other races under her belt, all of them without incident, so he didn't expect anything unusual. The pair broke from the insidemost gate, and settled along the rail toward the middle of the pack. Suddenly, as they began rounding the first turn, Magic Star leapt forward and to her left, then propped and dove into the thick evergreen hedge to her left. The upward hop after her first bobble dislodged Cohen, who was then propelled straight into the air and did a somersault over the filly's head as Magic Star careened into the bushes.

“It wasn't anybody's fault,” he said, noting she was surrounded by horses at the time, but wasn't squeezed or bothered. “I don't know if it was a case of it just being a hedge. Maybe she's used to seeing a rail next to her. I really don't know what she did, she just kind of bailed and didn't want to be in that tight spot.

“I believe my arm got caught up in the rein a little bit, and I believe that's what may have dragged her into the bushes. It looks like she may have jumped into it as well. But her first initial jump was not into the bushes. It happened so quick. It was over before I even knew what happened.”

Fortunately, there is no railing on the inside of the Churchill turf course, so the mare had nothing other than the vegetation to pose a hazard to her on her way in or out of the hedge.

Cohen also landed in the hedge and after a few moments, realized he was unharmed. Magic Star got out of the hedge and galloped away, eventually getting picked up by an outrider. Cohen said he knew the field would be coming back around to finish the race soon, but with no inside rail to duck under, he had to hustle to get off the course.

David Cohen and Magic Star go careening into the hedge at Churchill June 14. Both were unharmed.

“Churchill is one of those turf courses where the wire is maybe about 50 feet to the turn,” he said. “I had to make it across the turf course or they would've had to cancel the race. I don't want anyone to cancel a race when they don't have to. I was very happy to see her continue to run away. She didn't stand there and not want to move, and I knew that was a good sign that she was still able and willing and capable to run with no issues.”

David Cohen and Magic Star go careening into the hedge at Churchill June 14. Both were unharmed.

Renee Gallagher, a photographer with Coady Photography based at Churchill, had her camera ready at just the right moment to catch the incident.

Cohen reported that he checked in on Magic Star the following morning and learned that while a little body sore, she was not seriously hurt. He expects to see her back in the entries in due course, and said he'd have no problem riding her again.

David Cohen and Magic Star go careening into the hedge at Churchill June 14. Both were unharmed.

“In some cases, there's a little bit more warning and normally that's because, for example, another rider or horse causes something by coming down and you've clipped heels, but I was never put in that position,” he said. “It's just one of those very fluke type of situations. I don't foresee her doing that ever again. I don't think she's a dangerous type of horse. I think it's just one of those weird situations, and we're blessed that the horse made it out and I did as well.”

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Maclean’s Music Firster Professional on Churchill Debut

3rd-Churchill Downs, $77,248, Msw, 6-19, 2yo, 5f, :57.49, ft.
JACKIE’S WARRIOR (c, 2, Maclean’s Music–Unicorn Girl, by A. P. Five Hundred) topped off a concise worktab with a bullet half-mile from the gate in :47 1/5 at Keeneland June 9 and was made the 21-10 second favorite on debut. Hustled along early to contest the pace from the inside, Jackie’s Warrior was taken hold of by Ricardo Santana, Jr. at the 3 1/2-furlong pole and switched out into the two path. Despite having lost some momentum in so doing, the $95,000 Keeneland September graduate got had dead aim turning for home, struck to the front with a furlong and a half to race and pulled away to graduate by 2 1/2 lengths. Therideofalifetime (Candy Ride {Arg}) closed off well for second. Cousteau (Into Mischief), favored at 11-10, was off slowly, made a menacing move on the turn, but raced greenly late and crossed the line fifth. Produced by a 19-time winning half-sister to MSW Bernie the Maestro (Bernstein), Jackie’s Warrior has a yearling half-sister by Candy Ride and a foal half-brother by American Pharoah. Sales history: $95,000 Ylg ’19 KEESEP. Lifetime Record: 1-1-0-0, $45,064. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by Fasig-Tipton.
O-J Kirk Robison; B-J & J Stables (KY); T-Steven M Asmussen.

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