Maximum Security Faces Stablemate Improbable, Shirreffs-Trained Midcourt In Awesome Again

Unbeaten in two starts for Bob Baffert, Gary and Mary West's homebred Maximum Security, roundly regarded as the best in training today, heads a field of field of five 3-year-olds and up going a mile and one eighth in Saturday's Grade I, $300,000 Awesome Again Stakes at Santa Anita.

A two-time stakes winner at Del Mar this past summer, Maximum Security comes off a huge three length win in the Grade I Pacific Classic on Aug. 22 and will once again be a prohibitive favorite in what will be his 13th career start.

Baffert's Improbable, a Grade I winner of the Whitney Stakes at Saratoga Aug. 1, earned a career-best Beyer Speed figure of 106 and will be bidding for his third consecutive win.

The John Shirreffs-trained Midcourt, who was beaten a nose by Maximum Security two starts back in the San Diego Handicap, was a well beaten third behind “Max” in the Pacific Classic and will be facing him for the third consecutive time on Saturday.

The Awesome Again, named for the 1998 Breeders' Cup Classic winner that was bred in Ontario, Canada by Frank Stronach and owned by his Stronach Stables, is a Breeders' Cup “Win and You're In” Challenge Race qualifier, with the winner earning a fees-paid berth into the Grade I, $6 million Breeders' Cup Classic at Keeneland on Nov. 7.

MAXIMUM SECURITY

Owner: Gary & Mary West, Mrs. John Magnier, Michael B. Tabor & Derrick Smith

Trainer: Bob Baffert

Immensely talented but star-crossed, this 4-year-old colt by New Year's Day appears to be thriving in Baffert's care. Ridden in his two Del Mar starts by Abel Cedillo, he'll be reunited with eastern-based Luis Saez, who has finished first on him in six out of seven starts, most recently in Saudi Arabia, where he took the $20 million Saudi Cup by three quarters of a length. Although the Saudi Cup results remain official, Maximum Security's purse earnings remain on-hold as an investigation into his original trainer Jason Servis continues. Adding to his hard-luck resume is the fact he became the only Kentucky Derby winner to ever be disqualified for a racing infraction in the 2019 Derby, a race he won by 1 ¾ lengths with Saez aboard. An official winner of 10 out of his 12 starts, Maximum Security has banked $12.1 million and will be making his first-ever start at Santa Anita.

IMPROBABLE

Owner: WinStar Farm, LLC, China Horse Club Intl., Ltd and SF Racing, LLC

Trainer: Bob Baffert

The 4-1 post time favorite in the 2019 Kentucky Derby, he finished fifth, beaten 3 ¼ lengths by Maximum Security. A winner two starts back of the Grade I Hollywood Gold Cup, run at Santa Anita on June 6, he'll be reunited with Drayden Van Dyke, who did not ride him at Saratoga. Van Dyke has won aboard Improbable in five out their seven pairings, including his Gold Cup win. A winner of six out of his 13 starts, Improbable, a 4-year-old colt by City Zip, has earnings of $1.5 million.

MIDCOURT

Owner: C R K Stable, LLC

Trainer: John Shirreffs

Although narrowly beaten two starts back in the San Diego Handicap, this 5-year-old gelding by Midnight Lute was no match for Maximum Security in the Pacific Classic when third. A shining testament to Shirreffs' horsemanship, Midcourt has been able to overcome his idiosyncrasies, including bad manners in post parade. If his mind is right, he rates an upset chance over a track on which he is 8-3-1-2.

THE GRADE I AWESOME AGAIN STAKES WITH JOCKEYS & WEIGHTS IN POST POSITION ORDER

Race 10 of 11 Approximate post time 5 p.m. PT

  1. Take the One O One—Jose Valdivia, Jr.—122
  2. Improbable—Drayden Van Dyke—126
  3. Sleepy Eyes Todd—Umberto Rispoli—124
  4. Midcourt—Victor Espinoza—124
  5. Maximum Security—Luis Saez—126

First post time for an 11-race card on Saturday is at 12:30 p.m. With no public admittance, fans are encouraged to follow Santa Anita's live video stream at santaanita.com.

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Champion Game Winner Retired to Lane’s End

Champion Game Winner (Candy Ride {Arg}–Indyan Giving, by A.P. Indy) has been retired from racing and will stand the 2021 season at Lane’s End in Versailles, Kentucky. A stud fee will be forthcoming.

During his championship juvenile season, TDN Rising Star Game Winner was undefeated in four starts–a 5 3/4-length score in his career unveiling at Del Mar followed by the GI Del Mar Futurity, GI American Pharoah S. and GI Breeders’ Cup Juvenile at Churchill Downs. After earning the champion 2-year-old title for the 2018 season, he returned at three to finish runner-up in the GI Santa Anita Derby and GII Rebel S. and finished fifth in the GI Kentucky Derby.

“As a 2-year-old, he was just phenomenal and he really brought it to that Championship level,” said Bob Baffert. “To do what he did really showed that he was the best of the best. Candy Ride was a brilliant racehorse and he throws brilliance, and with Game Winner, the minute he showed that brilliance, I knew we had something special.”

Game Winner was most recently seen winning the GIII Los Alamitos Derby by five lengths.

“After the Los Al Derby, he had a high suspensory injury, and Bob was trying to work through it and get him over it, and never could to his satisfaction,” said Lane’s End’s Bill Farish.

Bred in Kentucky by Summer Wind Farm, Game Winner is out of Indyan Giving, who has also produced graded-stakes winner Flagstaff (Speightstown). His second dam is Champion Fleet Indian who won five graded stakes and earned over $1 million. To date, his sire Candy Ride has produced 16 Grade I winners and is the fourth leading active sire by lifetime earnings.

“Champion 2-year-olds make great sires,” added Farish. “Street Sense, Uncle Mo, American Pharoah, and now Nyquist looks very promising. All were the very best of their generation and now are among the elite stallions in America. Game Winner dominated in his championship year and was a graded-stakes winner at three. He is a champion from the immediate family of a champion, so we are honored that Gary and Mary West have entrusted Lane’s End with his stallion career.”

Consigned by Lane’s End to the 2017 Keeneland September Sale, Game Winner realized $110,000 from agent Ben Glass.

“Mary and I have been excited about Game Winner since the day Ben Glass bought him for us at Keeneland,” said Gary West, who campaigned the champion colt. “These special horses are so hard to come by and to have a Champion means everything to us. I am so pleased he will stand at Lane’s End and I plan on supporting him extensively as I have with my other stallions, alongside the superior group of shareholders they have put together.”

“This includes Alpha Delta, Summer Wind Farm, SF Bloodstock, Mt. Brilliant Farm, Sea Horse Breeders, West Point and St. Elias. They are among the best breeders in America and undoubtedly will support him and contribute greatly to his chances to be a successful stallion.”

The 4-year-old retires with five wins and two seconds from eight career starts and earnings of $2,027,500.

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The Week in Review: Remember the Context of 2019 Derby DQ

After a federal appeals court on Friday upheld a district court’s decision to dismiss a lawsuit that sought to reverse the disqualification of Maximum Security (New Year’s Day) from first place in the 2019 GI Kentucky Derby, co-owner Gary West told TDN that even though he disagreed with the ruling, “it is time to move on and the decision will not be appealed.”

Country House (Lookin At Lucky), of course, has been considered the winner of the 2019 Derby ever since he was elevated from second to first via the DQ process. So this latest judgment changes nothing regarding the already-official results.

The court ruling also does not mean that the Churchill Downs stewards got the call right. The three-judge panel simply affirmed that the plaintiffs had no legal basis to challenge the outcome.

What the ruling does mean is that another precedent will get entered into the law books underscoring how hard it is (and should be) to get a judge in a court of law to overturn a field-of-play ruling by an umpire, referee, or board of stewards.

And the decision by Gary and Mary West to not pursue further legal action does finally lift the miasma of litigious dread that descends whenever sports and the courts collide.

The Kentucky Horse Racing Commission (whose members and executive director Marc Guilfoil were defendants in the lawsuit along with chief state steward Barbara Borden, state steward Brooks “Butch” Becraft, and Churchill Downs steward Tyler Picklesimer), issued a statement after the Aug. 28 judgment in which Guilfoil said the stewards’ decision to DQ Maximum Security was “an easy call to make, but a tough day to make it on.”

An “easy” call? I respectfully disagree.

Easy DQ calls in stewards’ booths don’t take 22 minutes to adjudicate. Nor do they customarily keep getting debated 16 months after the fact.

To this day you can find a balanced mix of supporters and detractors on both sides of the Derby DQ decision. It was a difficult call then and it remains difficult now even with the benefit of hindsight. Let’s not revise history to make it seem otherwise.

As the 2019 Derby gets nudged into the rear-view mirror, it’s important not to lose focus of what was happening on the macro level within our industry when the Churchill stewards decided to make the first disqualification of a winner for an in-race foul in 145 runnings of the Derby.

No sports official (or board of stewards) ever wants to be the arbiter whose judgment call alters the outcome of a big game or race. In America, there’s always been an unwritten rule that officials “let the players play” in crucial contests, even though referees, umpires, and stewards rarely admit it.

Coupled with that, the Kentucky Derby itself has always had a high bar when it comes to whether or not the stewards could or should step in to alter the running order. This dates at least back to the 1933 “Fighting Finish” in the pre-replay era, when Brokers Tip nosed Head Play after their jockeys grabbed and whipped each other in the stretch run. A foul claim by the runner-up rider was dismissed and the result stood, although both jockeys were later suspended 30 days each.

In more modern times, the 20-horse Derby has become known as an anything-goes cavalry charge into the first turn in which jockeys know they have considerable leeway to ride with more assertiveness because the stakes are so high.

But 2019 was the year when the Derby was run under shell-shocked circumstances because the sport was reeling in the wake of the 30-horse fatality crisis that shut down racing at Santa Anita Park. Tracks nationwide were under intensified scrutiny, and in the week leading up to the Derby, the sport was being called out and protested against over equine safety issues.

   It was impossible to ignore the national headlines that blared “Horse Deaths Are Haunting the Racing World Ahead of the Kentucky Derby” (Time magazine), “At the Kentucky Derby, Prayers for a Safe Race” (New York Times) and “Horse Safety at the Kentucky Derby has officials ‘On the Edge of a Razor Blade'” (Louisville Courier-Journal).

In fact, Guilfoil himself told the Courier-Journal the day before the before the 2019 Derby that, “We realize we’re under a microscope.”

So while a subconscious “Let ’em play” mindset might have previously been the unspoken norm for officiating a big race, the over-arching context of the 2019 Derby was rooted in the hyper-aware context of safety.

As the nation watched slo-mo replay after replay of the narrowly averted pile-up off the far turn in the Derby, the Churchill stewards surely, at some level, must have recognized that if they didn’t make a call that doled out punishment for the near-disaster, it wouldn’t mesh with the safety-centric image the industry had been trying to hammer home on many levels.

Did they get the call correct? That’s always going to be up for debate.

But let the record reflect that Maximum Security’s historic DQ was as much a product of the sport trying to come to grips with the enormous pressures of maintaining safety in an inherently dangerous setting as it had to do with the colt’s shifting and drifting while leading the pack off the final turn in the Derby.

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West: Recent Appeals Court Ruling On Maximum Security Disappointing, But ‘It’s Time To Move On’

Three judges from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit have affirmed a lower court's ruling dismissing a suit by Maximum Security owners Gary and Mary West against the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission and Kentucky stewards for disqualifying their horse from the 2019 Kentucky Derby. The decision, published Friday, was unanimous.

Owner Gary West told the Paulick Report he has no intention of continuing the legal fight over the outcome of the race.

“I obviously disagree with the court's findings, but it is time to move on and the decision will not be appealed,” West said via email.

The U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky had dismissed the suit for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. Attorneys for the Wests argued their horse should be declared the official winner of the race based on four arguments: that a decision by stewards on disqualifications are subject to judicial review, that the stewards' decision was deficient in terms of evidence/that it was arbitrary and capricious, that the stewards violated the Wests' right to due process, and that the regulation allowing the stewards to disqualify a horse is void because it is too vague.

Judge John K. Bush, who authored the opinion on behalf of the court, disagreed with all four of the arguments, referring to Kentucky's laws and regulations outlining what stewards are permitted to do. Kentucky regulations specifically state that stewards' findings of fact and determination “shall be final and shall not be subject to appeal.” Some types of stewards' decisions, like the choice not to grant an applicant a license or a suspension for a medication ruling, are appealable through the court system. That has not previously been the case for decisions on placings.

One of the primary differences between the stewards' process in these cases is that while reviewing a potential case of foul like that of Maximum Security, the race has not yet been declared official until after stewards complete their own internal decision-making process. In the case of a medication finding, the stewards call licensees in to a hearing and hear evidence and arguments before making a decision, which better matches with the legal definition of an “administrative hearing.” Administrative hearings may be appealed.

Bush thought that distinction was correct, because in-game decisions like a race disqualification in the hands of those best equipped to make those judgements.

“To be sure, a good judge is an umpire who calls balls and strikes,” Bush wrote in part. “But we are not game officials in the literal sense, and we are ill-equipped to determine the outcome of sporting contests. The stewards, on the other hand, are racing officials who must go through rigorous training and experience before they may serve in that capacity. Perhaps only the racehorse itself could tell us whether it was fouled during a race. But horses can't speak, so the Commonwealth of Kentucky, similar to many other racing jurisdictions, has designated racing experts — the stewards, not the appointed members of the Commission or judges — to determine when a foul occurs in a horse race. It is not our place to second-guess that decision.”

Read the complete court opinion here.

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