Beverly Park Closes Out Year with 15th Win

There are better, faster horses in the sport, but there's not another one like Beverly Park (Munnings). In an era where five or six starts a year is considered a normal campaign for a horse and many trainers look for seven or eight weeks between starts, the 5-year-old made of blood, flesh and iron continued to laugh at conventional wisdom. In his 30th start of the year, he won Saturday's third race at the Fair Grounds by 3 3/4 lengths, paying $3.80. The race was a starter optional claimer and it was his 15th win on the year.

Beverly Park's 15 wins easily led the sport in 2022. Nine other horses are tied for second with eight victories. His 30 starts also led all horses. Pretty Loud (Boisterous) was next with 28. The Fair Grounds was the 14th track Beverly Park has competed at this year.

“He is definitely an iron horse,” said owner-trainer Lynn Cash. “He's probably the horse of a lifetime. He travels well. He's been a fun horse. I just happened to grab onto his coattails while he was going by and he pulled me up.  He's as sound a horse as has ever been. I've never had to do any work on him whatsoever.”

The story of Lynn Cash and Beverly Park began on Aug. 15, 2021 when he claimed the horse from trainer Dane Kobiskie for $12,500 out of a race at Belterra Park. Cash brought him back 13 days later and he won for his new barn. During 2021, he won seven of eight starts for Cash. His overall record for Cash's Build Wright Stables is 22-for-38.

Much of his 2022 campaign was spent in a starter allowances. Throughout the year, he was eligible for races where a horse had started for $5,000 or less in 2021 or 2022. Cash would take him around the country, shipping to wherever he could find a race at that level, traveling countless miles.

“I just love this horse,” he said. “Me and him, from the beginning, we have been the ones together on the road.”

What Cash learned early on was that while Beverly Park may not be a top-level horse when it came to talent, but he more than made up for that with his competitive spirit.

“He's just a competitor,” he said. “He's at the track, slow galloping or jogging and when a horse comes by that is working he wants to take off and go get them. He has so much heart. Every time, he leaves it out there.”

With a new year here, Cash will have a harder time finding races for Beverly Park as he will no longer be eligible for the starter allowance races at some tracks. He said if he can't find enough starter races he will try Beverly Park in allowance races. He also said it's not out of the question that he ventures into stakes company.

“At some point, I may give him his shot in stakes,” he said. “Maybe a Grade III in New York or something like that. They have a lot of small fields in stakes there. I think he deserves that chance.”

He said one goal for 2023 would be to again lead the nation in wins and added that he thought 11 or 12 victories next year was reasonable.

Cash wasn't sure where Beverly Park would run next but said a Jan. 11 race at Parx is a possibility. If not there, a return to the Fair Grounds for a Jan. 19 race could be in the offing. He could, of course, always run in both.

For now, there will be a few days rest and a chance to savor another big win.

“This one was really sweet,” Cash said. “They were very nice to us here at the Fair Grounds. A lot of people came up to us after the race. He's become a fan favorite. Just a special, special horse.”

The post Beverly Park Closes Out Year with 15th Win appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Woodward, Cigar Mile Among Races Downgraded

The American Graded Stakes Committee released its list of graded stakes for 2023 Friday and it includes five races that were downgraded from Grade I status to Grade II races, including two of NYRA's more prestigious races for older dirt horses, the Woodward and the Cigar Mile H. Also dropping down from the Grade I to the Grade II level were the Clark S. at Churchill Downs, the Starlet S. at Los Alamitos and the Rodeo Drive S. at Santa Anita.

The Woodward was, perhaps, the most surprising inclusion on the list of newly appointed Grade II races. Twenty winners of the race have made their way into the Hall of Fame, including Kelso, Buckpasser, Forego, Seattle Slew, Affirmed, Spectacular Bid and Cigar. But the race has struggled somewhat in recent years as the NYRA racing department tried to figure out where it fit best on the calendar on how to juggle a glut of late summer-early fall races for the handicap division, including the GI Jockey Club Gold Cup. In 2006, the Woodward was moved from Belmont Park to Saratoga. The race was moved back to Belmont in 2021, trading places with the Jockey Club Gold Cup, which was switched to Saratoga. This year's Woodward was won by a top horse in Life Is Good (Into Mischief), but the race drew only four horses and the three challengers to Life Is Good were a fairly weak lot.

The Cigar Mile was inaugurated in 1988 and initially run as the NYRA Mile. Winners include Forty Niner, Cigar, Tonalist (Tapit) and Maximum Security (New Year's Day). This year's race did not come up particularly strong as Mind Control (Stay Thirsty) beat five others.

One race, the Stephen Foster S., was upgraded from Grade II to Grade I status. The race had been a Grade I through 2018 when it was downgraded. This year's winner was Olympiad (Speightstown).

A total of 97 Grade I races will be contested in 2023.

The committee reviewed 901 stakes races and assigned graded status to 440 of them, nine fewer than were graded in 2022.

Three races were upgraded to Grade II's, the Beaumont S., the Franklin S. and the Ladies Sprint S. Seven races were downgraded from Grade II to Grade III status for 2023: the Sorrento S. at Del Mar; Dinner Party S. at Pimlico; Monrovia S., San Carlos S., San Marcos S. and Santa Ynez S. at Santa Anita Park; and Tampa Bay Derby at Tampa Bay Downs. Four races were upgraded to Grade III status for 2023: the Manila S. at Belmont Park; Blame S. and Shawnee S. at Churchill Downs; and Music City S. at Kentucky Downs. Twelve races were downgraded from Grade III to Listed status for 2023.

The post Woodward, Cigar Mile Among Races Downgraded appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Baffert Renews Court Fight to Race in ’23 Derby

Trainer Bob Baffert filed a new motion in federal court Thursday that attempts to reverse the second year of a two-year banishment imposed upon him in 2021 by Churchill Downs, Inc. (CDI), the gaming company that controls the GI Kentucky Derby.

Although the Hall of Fame trainer's ruling-off by CDI extends to the corporation's entire portfolio of racetracks, gaining access to the Derby itself is unquestionably Baffert's goal.

Baffert's trainees have crossed the finish wire first a record seven times in America's most historic and important horse race.

But it was that seventh Derby winner–Medina Spirit in 2021–who triggered Baffert's banishment when the colt tested positive for betamethasone, a Class C drug, in a post-Derby test.

Citing that positive finding and a spate of other drug overages in Grade I races around the same time, CDI told Baffert in June 2021 that he would be ineligible to race at its tracks until after the 2023 Derby, and that any horse that raced under his training license would not be eligible to accrue qualifying points to get into the 2022 or 2023 Derbies.

Earlier in 2022, Baffert fought in federal court to reverse that CDI ban, and this fresh Dec. 15 motion is actually a part of that same lawsuit.

Baffert had initially sued CDI on Feb. 28, 2022, in an attempt to get an injunction enjoining CDI from suspending him from its tracks and races. His complaint in United States District Court (Western District of Kentucky) alleged civil rights violations related to what Baffert said was a deprivation of his right to due process of law guaranteed under the Fourteenth Amendment.

Separately, Baffert fought unsuccessfully in the courts to try and ward off a 90-day suspension for Medina Spirit's drug overage that had been imposed upon him in February 2022 by the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission (KHRC).

Those legal efforts failed, and Baffert eventually had to start serving his KHRC suspension about a month before the 2022 Derby. He transferred his entire California-based stable to the care of other trainers, and his legal team at that time withdrew the motion for an injunction.

Two horses Baffert trained through March 2022-the $1.7-million FTFMAR buy Taiba (Gun Runner) and 'TDN Rising Star' Messier (Empire Maker)-ran in the Derby under trainer Tim Yakteen's license, finishing 12th and 15th, respectively.

Even though Baffert has already served that KHRC suspension, he and Medina Spirit's owner, Amr Zedan, have appealed to the KHRC and are awaiting a verdict they hope will clear Baffert's name and restore Medina Spirit as the Derby winner.

“This is a renewed motion for a preliminary injunction against CDI [and its executives] Bill Carstanjen, and R. Alex Rankin,” Baffert's lawyers wrote in the Dec. 15 filing.

“[The KHRC penalty] mooted the previous motion, and Baffert requested time to conduct further investigation into the circumstances surrounding CDI's conduct. Following this Court's grant of Baffert's request to withdraw his preliminary injunction without prejudice to refiling, Defendants filed a motion to dismiss. Baffert filed a Response, and briefing concluded on June 6, 2022. That motion remains pending,” the Thursday filing stated.

“In the interim, Baffert has been able to prove in two forums that CDI's claims about him and his record are false. The New York Racing Association, Inc. (NYRA) conducted an extensive six-day hearing on allegations virtually identical to CDI's-i.e., claiming Baffert is a dangerous cheater who 'dopes' horses to gain a competitive edge. The hearing officer initially found in NYRA's favor. But on appeal, in an order issued June 23, 2022, NYRA's own hand-picked Panel rejected every one of the premises underlying NYRA's (and CDI's) claims against Baffert.”

And the hearing officer's recommendation in the KHRC appeal, according to Baffert's filing, “is not expected until the spring of 2023, after which the [KHRC] will have ninety days to issue a final order. Judicial review will likely follow. Because CDI's suspension will stand regardless of the outcome, waiting for the Commission's resolution is unnecessary…”

Baffert's filing continued: “Granting an injunction would work no hardship on Defendants. Numerous rules and regulations already safeguard CDI's interests in health, integrity, safety, and fairness. Baffert has already served his time for the mere allegation of a violation which has yet to be fully adjudicated, and there is no doubt among industry observers and even casual spectators that Baffert suffered consequences for the mere perception of wrongdoing.

“Meanwhile, all Baffert-trained horses are subject to Commission testing for the presence of medications and to any applicable penalties for the detection thereof. Baffert has not had a post-race positive for any horse in any jurisdiction since the 2021 Kentucky Derby ….

“The hardships Baffert will suffer absent an injunction far outweigh Defendants' abstract concerns. Eligibility for races on CDI tracks, including legendary stakes races like the Kentucky Derby and Kentucky Oaks, are restricted by age. Defendants' suspension means those horses will lose their chance to compete in those races forever. If owners wish to enter their horses in those races, they must forego Baffert's services, causing substantial damage to Baffert's business. CDI's hypothetical, reckless, and empirically disproven allegations of harm pale in comparison to the continuing damage Defendants continue to inflict upon Baffert, his business, and his reputation.”

Baffert, as the party seeking a preliminary injunction, must demonstrate that the legal factors that necessitate granting a preliminary injunction weigh in his favor.

According to the filing, those factors are “1) whether the moving party would suffer irreparable harm without the order, 2) whether the moving party demonstrates a strong likelihood of success on the merits, 3) whether the order would cause substantial harm to others, and 4) whether the public interest would be served by the order.”

Baffert's filing continued: “The first and most obvious harm is the loss of purses. By definition, the amount of winnings Baffert will lose due to CDI's suspensions is impossible to calculate.

“A second injury is the loss of unique opportunities ….Citing CDI's suspension, some owners have moved their horses (worth millions of dollars) to other trainers. His remaining [clients] have informed Baffert that they will not send him any new Derby horses until the CDI suspensions are resolved, or will soon move horses if CDI's suspensions are not enjoined.”

A novel argument that wasn't in the initial version of the complaint has to with CDI's subsequent purchase of Ellis Park.

“Due to CDI's acquisition of Ellis Park, it holds a virtual monopoly over racing in Kentucky, which limits its common law right to exclude licensees in Kentucky,” the filing stated.

In Kentucky, CDI owns Churchill Downs Racetrack, Turfway Park and Ellis Park. It does not own Keeneland Race Course or Kentucky Downs.

“Trainers are instrumental in bringing a horse to market, and only a handful of trainers are capable of producing a Derby horse,” Baffert's legal team wrote. “By banning all horses trained by Baffert, Defendants and their co-conspirators disadvantaged competing owners by denying them 'relationships the competitors need in the competitive struggle,' which is a per se unreasonable restraint on trade.

CDI representatives could not be reached for comment in time for deadline for this story. CDI spokespeople routinely respond to media inquiries about legal affairs by stating that the corporation does not comment on active litigation.

In its most recent court filing from June 6 that tried to get the case tossed out, CDI wrote that “Baffert's lawsuit is a desperate and baseless attack on CDI's right to protect the integrity, reputation, and safety of the races it hosts, The Court should dismiss his complaint.”

The post Baffert Renews Court Fight to Race in ’23 Derby appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Arlington Million Could Move to Colonial Downs

Churchill Downs Inc. has requested permission from the American Graded Stakes Committee to move the GI Arlington Million S., the GI Beverly D. S. and the GI Secretariat S. to Colonial Downs. The three races were fixtures at Arlington Park before that track closed in 2021. Last year, the Million and the Beverly D. were run at Churchill Downs.

The 2023 races are slated to be run on Aug. 12.

In November, it was announced that Churchill had acquired the assets of Peninsula Pacific Entertainment LLC, the owners of Colonial Downs.

“Churchill has made a request and the committee will review it,” said  Andy Schweigardt, secretary for the American Graded Stakes Committee. “They hope to have a meeting before Christmas to make a decision.”

Approving Churchill's request may not be a formality. Schweigardt explained that in order for the committee to grant approval to a track to move a graded race a number of factors have to be taken into account.

“They have a rule that covers this that was instituted many years ago,” he said. “We consider moves on a case-by-case basis. The basic requirements are that the new venue has to be in the same region as the old racetrack and the name, conditions, calendar date and purse of the relocated race have to be substantially similar to previous years.”

When asked if Colonial in Virginia is in the same region as Churchill and Arlington,  Schweigardt said: “To me, no. But that's just me. The previous tracks would be considered to be in the Midwest. I'm not sure Virginia would be considered the Midwest.”

The 2022 Secretariat was not run because Churchill was having issues with its turf course at the time and track officials wanted to limit the number of races run over it.

Colonial's turf course is a mile-and-an-eighth in circumference and is the widest grass course in North America.

The post Arlington Million Could Move to Colonial Downs appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights