Top Trainers Showing Early ‘Enthusiasm’ For Colonial Downs Meet

Following the opening of the barn area earlier this week, anticipation is running high for the 2021 race meeting at Colonial Downs, exemplified by the widespread participation of horsemen across the Middle Atlantic, Northeast, and Midwestern regions; and attracted by a strong average daily purse structure of $500,000 per day.

For its 21-day meeting beginning Monday, July 19 — with all races televised on TVG — some of the nation's top stakes-winning trainers are scheduled to participate, including Ferris Allen, Bret Calhoun, Ignacio Correas, John Kimmel, Michelle Lovell, Graham Motion, John Ortiz, Dale Romans, Dallas Stewart, Mike Stidham, Michael Trombetta and Brendan Walsh.

“It's extremely gratifying to witness the overall enthusiasm and interest from these top trainers for this year's meeting,” said Jill Byrne, Colonial Downs Vice President of Racing Operations. “We are proud to further our goal of maintaining a first-class racing and a stabling program, and to ensure that the highest standards of safety and integrity are administered for our horsemen and fans.”

“We have a great mixture of horses and outfits from all over,” added Racing Secretary Allison DeLuca. “We have a lot of Kentucky people and some from Florida. I think the competition might be tougher. I'm hoping we'll run more dirt races this year. Some people get it in their head there's only turf here, so I hope we can get some more dirt participation.”

Dallas Stewart has nominated 5-year-old Chess Chief for the $100,000 Bert Allen Stakes, a 1 1/16-mile race over the Secretariat turf course for Virginia bred/Virginia restricted runners on the opening day program. Owned by the Estate of James Coleman Jr., Chess Chief, a Virginia-bred son of Into Mischief, won the New Orleans Classic Stakes (G2) at the Fair Grounds in March, and finished fifth in the Stephen Foster Stakes (G2) last time out at Churchill Downs.
“The plan for Chess Chief is to use the Bert Allen Stakes as a prep for the Pacific Classic,” said Stewart, “But plans can also change based on how the horse performs.”

Stewart, who will be based at Colonial for the first time, plans to have 20 horses in the Colonial backstretch by opening day and five are on the grounds already. Among his contingent is the 3-year-old Macho Uno colt, Shadow Matter, who he plans to run in the Housebuster Overnight Handicap July 20.

“We're excited about the meet,” he said. “Jill Byrne [Colonial Downs' Vice President of Racing Operations] recruited us and some other stables from Churchill Downs since their backstretch is closing for the summer. The racing is going to be good. We have a race in mind for every horse coming to Virginia, so we look forward to having a solid meet.”

Also nominated for the Bert Allen Stakes is the Romans-trained Attachment Rate, third in Keeneland's Commonwealth Stakes (G3), and Virginia-sired Mr. Buff, a winner of 11 stakes in New York and more than $1.3 million for trainer John Kimmel.

Mike Stidham, leading trainer at Colonial's 2019 and abbreviated 2020 meet, plans to have between eight and 10 horses rotating in and out of his barn including David Ross's Palio, who scored a maiden special weight win at New Kent last summer. Palio also is nominated to the Bert Allen Stakes. Ross, who races under the stable name DAARS, Inc., is the all-time leading owner at Colonial Downs.

“I train for David, and he likes to focus on the Colonial meet and race as many of his horses as he can during that time,” said Stidham, who had a Grade I win earlier this year with Mystic Guide in the Dubai World Cup. “The meet here is always fun.”

Colonial's all-time leading trainer Ferris Allen, a Varina, Virginia native, returns with 30 stalls. “I always target the Colonial meet,” he said. “The level of competition is going to better than it ever has. Nobody knows the lay of the land here as well as me, so hopefully that will be a help to us.”

“We built a loyal following of owners and handled their horses at Colonial over the years,” said Allen. “But after being closed for six years, those folks weren't at the doorstep waiting for you when Colonial reopened in 2019. People had to move on so that first year back was like re-establishing a network. Last year, we planned to take a step forward, but the pandemic prevented that. So this year is almost like year one again in re-establishing that base.”

The highlight of the stakes calendar will be the $250,000 New Kent County Virginia Derby (G3) for 3-year-olds and the $150,000 Virginia Oaks for 3-year-old fillies, both at 1 1/8-miles on Aug. 31.

In addition to the minimum daily $500,000 purse structure, there will be added incentives for horsemen at Colonial, including:

  • All owners who start a horse at Colonial Downs will receive the greater of $1,000 or their share of the purse money from the race.
  • All trainers will receive $300 per horse started.
  • Colonial Downs will offer free horse transportation originating from Fair Hill Training Center.

Colonial Downs is pleased to extend a $15 donation per starter to the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance (TAA), which will be matched by the VHBPA.

“It is our privilege to present a race meet of this caliber symbolizing the long-term potential for horse racing in Virginia,” said John Marshall, Executive Vice President, Operations, Colonial Downs Group. “Fans on-track can expect a high level of service and quality despite economic challenges raised following the pandemic. Fans on-line and off-site can expect the highest level of wagering quality during our early week and early day time period. We have all long awaited this day and are thrilled it has finally arrived at full capacity.”

The Colonial Downs meet will continue through September 1 with racing every Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday at 1:45 PM.

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Sunday’s Racing Insights: Juvenile Colts Out in Full Force

Sponsored by Alex Nichols Agency

3rd-CD, $100K, Msw, 2yo, 5f, post time: 1:43 p.m. ET

A Winchell Thoroughbreds/Steve Asmussen coupled entry receive a tepid 3-1 morning line nod in this salty looking special weight. Totalizer (Candy Ride {Arg}) is out of GSP Taxable (Tapit) from the family of GI Kentucky Oaks heroine Summerly (Summer Squall). Chileno (Gun Runner), co-owned with co-breeder Three Chimneys, was a $375,000 Keeneland September yearling. His MG1SW dam Wapi (Chi) (Scat Daddy) was Chile's champion 3-year-old filly of 2016. Wapi's now 3-year-old Curlin colt, who remains unraced, was the $1.5-million co-topper at FTSAUG '19. This same team campaigned Horse of the Year and promising freshman sire Gun Runner.

Dale Romans also has two runners. Officer Nick (Frosted), a $225,000 KEESEP yearling, is out of a full-sister to GI Breeders' Cup Ladies Classic heroine Unrivaled Belle (Unbridled's Song), who in turn produced brilliant champion Unique Bella (Tapit). Romans's other representative Southern Sense (Street Sense) cost $65,000 at the same auction, and is out of a half-sister to Mutakddim from a super deep female family.

Almuahed (Candy Ride {Arg}) was a $110,000 KEESEP RNA turned $180,000 OBS April grad off a :21 3/5 breeze. His second dam is GISW Dream of Summer (Siberian Summer), making his dam a half to highest-level winners Creative Cause (Giant's Causeway) and Vexatious (Giant's Causeway) as well as GII Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby hero Destin (Giant's Causeway).

Condemn (Medaglia d'Oro) is from a typically deep family developed by his owner/breeders Adele Dilschneider and Claiborne Farm. The colt's second dam is MGSW/MGISP Cheery (Distorted Humor), the dam of two-turn MGISW Elate (Medaglia d'Oro). TJCIS PPs

 

3rd-BEL, $90K, Msw, 2yo, 6fT, post time: 2:02 p.m. ET

Trainer Graham Motion has a pair of newcomers for this juvenile turf dash. Powerful Force, by fast-starting freshman Practical Joke, was a $300,000 Fasig-Tipton Gulfstream grad after a :10 1/5 breeze. His second dam was a stakes-winning juvenile who in turn produced GSW/GISP 2-year-old Concave (Colonel John) and SW/GSP Peisinoe (Yes It's True). Evan Harlan (Temple City) is out of a half-sister to MGISW turfer and fellow Motion trainee Miss Temple City (Temple City), as well as GSW Pricedtoperfection (Temple City). TJCIS PPs

 

6th-MTH, $47.5K, Msw, 2yo, 5f, post time: 2:32 p.m. ET

Robert and Lawana Low's Uninvited Guest (Distorted Humor) was a $400,000 Keeneland September yearling out of SW and GSP Interrupted (Broken Vow), who is a half to 2019 GI TVG Pacific Classic S. hero Higher Power (Medaglia d'Oro) and MGSW sire Alternation (Distorted Humor). Summer Wind Equine paid $575,000 for Interrupted at the 2018 Keeneland November sale while she was carrying Uninvited Guest. Down Cold (Mastery) is half to speedy GI Breeders' Cup Sprint and G1 Dubai Golden Shaheen winner Secret Circle (Eddington). He was a $35,000 Keeneland September yearling turned $125,000 OBS April juvenile following a steady :10 2/5 breeze with a solid gallop out. Fight Your Corner (Frosted) went for $15,000 last September and $55,000 this March (:10 1/5). His dam is a half to graded winners Salute the Sarge (Forest Wildcat) and Chelokee (Cherokee Run). TJCIS PPs

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Labor Reform in Washington: Could it Help Racing?

For many trainers around the country, their biggest practical worry from day to day isn't the patchwork quilt of medication rules and regulations, or the fear that one trainer has an unfair competitive edge over another, but whether they've enough grooms, hotwalkers and riders populating their barns to properly tend to the horses in their care.

With fewer and fewer North Americans siphoning into horse racing, the sport has turned for relief, of course, with growing reliance on Central and South America–what has proven an increasingly tenuous stable of talent the more calcified the topic of immigration has become politically.

“It's always been tough,” said trainer Dale Romans, about the hiring of immigrant workers. “The whole system is messed up no matter what administration is in. It just needs to be changed and fixed.”

After many years of political atrophy surrounding the issue, however, there are a number of bills either floating around Capitol Hill already, or else waiting in the wings, which offer the promise of long-needed assistance to the industry, an integral component of which appears to be a sweeping piece of legislation called the Farm Workforce Modernization Act.

The act passed the house earlier this year, and farmworker groups met Wednesday with a bipartisan group of senators, along with agriculture secretary Tom Vilsack, to discuss introducing a senate version of the bill.

“There's all of a sudden multiple buckets,” said Eric Hamelback, CEO of the National Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association (HBPA), of these various pieces of legislation. “All of them, to some extent, are positive for our industry and the overall guest workers program.”

Returning worker exemption

Arguably the most commonly requested visa for backstretch workers is the H2-B, awarded to seasonal “non-agricultural” workers like those in landscaping, hospitality sectors, seafood and in some construction jobs.

The number of H-2Bs is capped at 66,000 annually, with an even split of 33,000 available for each half of the federal government's fiscal year. And while additional visas are frequently made available, they're not always enough to meet demand.

Just look at this February, when the fiscal year 2021 H-2B cap of 33,000 slots was easily reached. The Department of Labor (DOL) reported receiving applications for nearly 100,000 separate workers.

To help release a bit of steam from the system, congress has periodically enacted a returning worker provision, which permits those who had previously been in the U.S. on an H-2B visa–granted during a particular period–to be exempt from that cap.

The last time this program went into effect–towards the end of Dec. 2015–the returning worker exemption permitted those who had previously held an H-2B visa issued between Oct. 2012 and Sept. 2015 to be cap-exempt for fiscal year 2016.

That exemption expired at the end of 2016 and has not been re-enacted since.

On Tuesday, however, a bipartisan group of senators introduced the H2-B Returning Worker Exception Act of 2021 designed to develop a long-term solution to permanently address the annual H-2B visa cap.

As currently written, the bill does a number of things, including amending the definition of “returning worker” to include anyone who has entered the U.S. on an H-2B visa in any one of the 3 previous years.

The bill also seeks to streamline the application process, requiring the DOL to maintain a public online job registry. It would also implement new integrity measures and anti-fraud provisions.

Romans calls the re-enactment of the returning worker exemption something that would make it “much easier” for him to hold onto valuable employees.

“Think about running a business where you have to have 60 employees at all times, and you never know for sure if you're going to get classified or get the visas,” he said. “How can you consistently operate your business like that?”

According to Hamelback, of all the pieces of legislation swirling around Washington, this bill potentially has the most political traction.

“This is something we've always advocated for,” Hamelback said. “And this has been the first time, at least since I've been in my current role, there's been a strong champion for that.”

Agricultural worker classification

One of the biggest obstacles to securing, and then holding onto, immigrant labor in horse racing surrounds the way backstretch grooms, hotwalkers and exercise riders are not legally classified as agricultural workers.

This means they are not eligible to apply for H-2A visas, geared towards field workers and general farm laborers, among others. Why is that important? For one, there's no cap on the number of H-2A visas issued annually.

According to various sources, there's a potential bill being drafted that, if introduced and passed, would redefine the remit of the agricultural worker to include laborers related to the breeding, care and feeding of horses.

According to these sources, the bill could be attached as an amendment to the Farm Workforce Modernization Act, a sweeping piece of legislation that would provide undocumented farmworkers and their family members with a path towards legal citizenship, and impose mandatory employment verification (“E-verify”) in agriculture, among a host of other changes.

Any move to reclassify equine laborers as agricultural workers, Hamelback said, needs to be done in such a way that backstretch workers are eligible for both H-2A and H-2B visas.

“The definition is very general and open, which usually is good, and we don't want it to close the door on H-2Bs at this point,” said Hamelback.

H-2C

Back in 2017, a bill–the Agricultural Guestworker Act of 2017–was introduced into Congress which, had it proven successful, would have created an entirely new category of guestworker visa, coined the H-2C.

As envisioned, the H-2C visa was seen as a replacement to the H-2A system–seen as cumbersome, outdated and broken–bringing a more flexible program, one potentially open to workers in racing.

Indeed, the legislation received support before from key industry groups like the National Thoroughbred Racing Association (NTRA) and the Thoroughbred Owners of California (TOC).

According to Hamelback, there is talk among legislators on Capitol Hill for similar legislation to be potentially reintroduced in the near future.

“But we don't have a lot of details on that at the moment,” he said, stressing the tenuous nature of any immigration-related negotiations in the current political climate. “It's a difficult topic that sometimes isn't approached properly.”

Differences

While these bills maneuver their way through Washington–successfully or not, as we'll find out–the daily woes surrounding staffing will continue to chaff.

And so, has the advent of a new administration brought about any meaningful change to the immigration environment? Attorneys and trainers send different messages.

“The difference is huge,” said Will Velie, an Oklahoma-based immigration attorney with many clients in the racing industry.

The stringent immigration policies of the Donald Trump administration saw pretty much any illegal immigrant apprehended by law enforcement vulnerable to deportation proceedings, no matter their criminal background, said Velie.

But the new administration, he said, has reinstituted a prior policy, whereby illegal immigrants who come into contact with law enforcement are priorities for deportation only if they fit the following five categories of criminal history: Felons, gun possession, drugs, gang membership or domestic violence.

This change has had a knock-on effect for racing, said Velie, explaining how it has loosened the pressure valve on backstretch communities. “Just like that, the temperature dropped.”

Due to a COVID-related backlog in biometric appointments–a reported 1.3 million pending applicants earlier this year–the U.S Citizenship and Immigration Services has suspended fingerprint requirements for certain petitions, another development that has helped ease pressure on the system, said Albany-based immigration attorney, Leonard D'Arrigo.

“Every day, it seems, they're issuing a new executive order or some policy guidance, undoing what the prior administration has done,” he said.

According to Romans, however, from a practical standpoint, the task of finding talented and reliable staff is as difficult as it has always been. Which is why any change to the system should be broad and sweeping rather than incremental, he added.

“We need a comprehensive overhaul of the whole thing,” Romans said. “Not just a few little pieces they try to patch it up with.”

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‘Home-Court Angle’: Jeff Ruby Has A Shot At His Own Trophy

Prominent restaurateur Jeff Ruby figures to be in the Turfway Park winner's circle for the stakes he sponsors. His partners in King's Ovation just hope their horse is in there as well after Saturday's $250,000 Jeff Ruby Steaks.

Ruby is a partner in Peacock Stable, headed by a pair of iconic sports personalities in retired NBC Sports broadcaster Tom Hammond and Mike Battaglia, the longtime voice of Churchill Downs and Turfway and who continues to do the morning line for both tracks. Peacock also includes Cris Collinsworth, the Cincinnati Bengals star receiver turned analyst for NBC's Sunday Night Football.

Peacock co-owns King's Ovation with West Point Thoroughbreds, a pairing that trainer Dale Romans put together after West Point bought the horse.

“It's kind of a home-court angle,” Romans said. “If we win, I'm going to make Jeff buy me the Tomahawk steak. He's got about a $400 Tomahawk bone-in ribeye.”

Peacock and Ruby have been in the Jeff Ruby Steaks before in partnership with West Point, with Dabo finishing fifth two years ago.

“We laughed then about having Jeff present the trophy to himself,” Hammond said. “That would be a nice deal.”

Hammond has kept ownership in one or two horses for decades. His Peacock Stable is named for the NBC connection.

“I always tried to get a lot of NBC people involved,” he said. “We'd buy a share so it doesn't cost much, and we just have fun.”

The sportscaster said Ruby is one of Collinsworth's friends, with the Jeff Ruby's Steakhouse menu featuring Steak Collinsworth: an 8-ounce filet topped with fresh asparagus, Alaskan King Crab, Béarnaise and Bordelaise sauces.

King's Ovation, who is 15-1 in Battaglia's morning line, has a maiden win in five starts. He was second in the Grade 3 Swale at Gulfstream before making his two-turn debut in the 1 1/16-mile Fountain of Youth (G2). King's Ovation finished a non-threatening sixth that day, with Romans saying the colt quit running for a while after getting his leg stepped on when bumped.

“He just progressed so well from 2 to 3 that Dale decided to run him with the big boys,” Hammond said. “He ran well in the Swale. He ran OK in the Fountain of Youth. He came back with a lots of cuts. (Jockey) Corey Lanerie said that when he got stepped on and cut up, he kind of spit the bit but then picked it back up a bit. I was impressed, too, in the Swale when he came in between horses in a tight spot. Most young, immature horses won't do that, but I thought he showed a lot of guts. He's got three nice works at Gulfstream. All those being said, why not take a shot once more with the big boys to see what we have?”

A Jeff Ruby Steaks victory would be Peacock Stable's biggest to date. And would that lead to taking on the biggest boys on the first Saturday in May down the road at Churchill Downs?

Hammond laughed, adding, “There's no vaccine for Derby fever. So far I haven't caught it. I try to be realistic.”

Romans also has Albaugh Family Stables' Smiley Sobotka in the Jeff Ruby. That son of Albaugh's Grade 1 winner Brody's Cause came out of a maiden win to finish a close second in Churchill Downs' Grade 2 Kentucky Jockey Club on Nov. 28. In his only start since, Smiley Sobotka struggled home ninth in Tampa Bay Downs' Sam Davis (G3), a performance Romans is throwing out.

“They're both nice horses,” he said. “I'm trying to figure out where to run them all, give everybody another chance (to make the Derby). It made sense to give Smiley Sobotka another chance. And if he runs well on the surface, he is a Canadian-bred so we could point to the Queen's Plate later.”

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