The Friday Show Presented By Breeders’ Cup: The World Comes To Kentucky

There is always a lot to absorb when pre-entries for the Breeders' Cup world championships are announced, and this year was no exception. Multiple oversubscribed fields – especially in the turf contests – will make handicapping many of the 14 races at Keeneland in Lexington, Ky., on Nov. 6-7 a serious challenge.

In this week's Friday Show, Paulick Report bloodstock editor Joe Nevills and news editor Chelsea Hackbarth (who will be pulling double duty next week aboard her pony escorting international horses to the racetrack for training) join Ray Paulick to discuss the races and horses they are looking forward to the most and how the results of key races may impact Horse of the Year voting later this year.

Will the winner of the $6-million Classic get an automatic Horse of the Year vote, or are there some scenarios that would allow for someone from another division – possibly Swiss Skydiver or Monomoy Girl from the filly/mare ranks or juvenile sensation Jackie's Warrior – an opportunity to get enough support?

Watch this week's Friday Show below.

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Del Mar’s Bing Crosby Season Kicks Off With Evenly Matched Group In Kathryn Crosby Stakes

For Saturday's opening of Del Mar's seventh fall race meeting, its racing office carded a nifty feature that drew eight fillies and mares who'll run a mile on the turf. A handicapper might need a large crowbar to separate them all.

The Bing Crosby Season kicks off with a salute to the classy wife of the late singer and track co-founder – Kathryn Crosby – with a stakes race named in her honor and limited to fillies and mare aged 3 and up. It will be offered as the seventh event on a nine-race program that is off and running at 12:30 p.m. Pacific, the starting time for virtually all programs every day for the fall session.

Pick a filly or mare in this lineup and you can make a ready case why she could or should win. Morning line maker Jon White gave just the slightest of edges for favoritism to Donnie Crevier's veteran mare Cordiality as he hung her at a lukewarm 7-2. He put Branham, Baltas or McClanahan's Colonial Creed next at 4-1, then put a 5-1 projection on four different horses. It figures to be a tight one in the wagering and just as tight out on the Jimmy Durante Turf Course.

Here's the full field for the $75,000 overnight stakes from the rail out with riders and morning line odds:

Hronis Racing's Ellie Arroway (Victor Espinoza, 8-1); Charles or Gordon's Never Be Enough (Tiago Periera, 5-1); Gem or Kagele's Proud Emma (Flavien Prat, 8-1); Deborah McAnally Trust's She's Our Charm (Juan Hernandez, 5-1); Eclipse Thoroughbred Partners' Muchly (Umberto Rispoli, 5-1); Cordiality (Drayden Van Dyke); Baoma Corp's Qahira (Abel Cedillo, 5-1), and Colonial Creed (Mario Gutierrez).

Cordiality, a 7-year-old who can still pick them up and put them down, comes into the race off a wire-to-wire tally at Santa Anita at the same distance on Oct. 3, besting several of the rivals she'll face Saturday. The Tim Yakteen-trained daughter of Papa Clem has 12 wins in 33 lifetime starts and sports a trio of firsts and a pair of seconds in seven Del Mar turf starts. She's the top earner in the lineup with $620,815 in purses.

Colonial Creed races out of the barn of trainer Richard Baltas. The 4-year-old chestnut by Jimmy Creed is a steady sort who rarely misses picking up a check and has three wins and three seconds in her 10 turf starts. She was third to Cordiality, less than two lengths behind, in the October 3 race at Santa Anita.

Muchly missed to Cordiality be less than a length in the aforementioned heat. The 4-year-old British-bred by the Zafonic stallion Iffraaj is conditioned by Simon Callaghan and has finished on the board in all but one of her stateside races since coming over from Europe this year.

She's Our Charm has won three of seven lifetime starts and comes into the race off a wire-to-wire score at Santa Anita on October 16. Hall of Famer Ron McAnally is the 4-year-old filly's trainer and – with his wife Deborah – breeder. She's by the high-line Kentucky stallion Candy Ride – who McAnally trained to win the 2003 Pacific Classic at Del Mar – and out of their Empire Maker mare Charm the Maker. She's captured three of seven outs in her brief career and has the kind of speed that makes her the likely pacesetter in Saturday's feature.

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Turf Paradise, Arizona HBPA Sign Agreement For 2021 Meet

Turf Paradise management and the Arizona Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association (AZHBPA) have signed an agreement to hold an 84-day live race meet at the Phoenix, Ariz., track, running from Jan. 4 through May 1, 2021.

An 11th-hour snafu over wording in the agreement between the two parties caused the 24-hour deadline for submission of agenda items to the Arizona Racing Commission to be missed. The Commission is scheduled to meet in special session on Friday, Oct. 30, to approve the race dates, as well to consider contracts for the upcoming Breeders' Cup simulcasts. The Commission will still meet to approve the contracts. The request for approval of the 84-day meet will now be scheduled for the regularly scheduled monthly meeting of the Commission on Nov. 12.

“Many thanks to Arizona Racing Director Rudy Casillas for hosting the forum for dialogue between the two parties,” said Turf Paradise's general manager Vincent Francia. “An equal amount of thanks to AZHBPA President Bob Hutton and track owner Jerry Simms for committing to dialogue until everything was resolved. Now, it's time to race.”

The 84-day meet will be conducted on a 5-day a week schedule, Monday thru Friday with post time set for 12:30 p.m. The lone exception to the schedule is Kentucky Derby Day, Saturday, May 1.

Horsemen will arrive Nov. 19 to prepare their stalls; horses will arrive Nov. 25. The first condition book and stakes schedule are published at www.turfparadise.com.

“There's a lot to do in a short time,” said Francia. “But we'll be ready.”

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Baffert Scopolamine Hearing Unfolds in Complicated, Twisting Fashion

After 2 1/2 years of closed-session decision-making by the California Horse Racing Board (CHRB) and a complicated court battle to publicly reopen the case over whether to disqualify 2018 Triple Crown winner Justify over a scopolamine positive from when the colt won that year’s GI Santa Anita Derby, the initial back-and-forth legal salvos in an Oct. 29 stewards’ hearing on the matter indicate that the argument could come down to whether scopolamine was a Class 3 or Class 4 substance at the time of the post-race test.

The difference in classification might seem pretty simple to determine. And the distinction is of the utmost importance in California, where Class 1 through 3 drug positives trigger automatic disqualification of horses, regardless of trainer intent or culpability.

But as four-plus hours of back-and-forth testimony and cross-examination repeatedly underscored Thursday, a definitive answer on the drug’s technical classification remains elusive and open to interpretation because of the cumbersome, bureaucratic way the CHRB has to codify its rules to comply with state law (explained below).

Beyond the objection-laden testimony over scopolamine’s classification at the time of Justify’s positive, an attorney for Bob Baffert, the colt’s trainer, argued that the stewards shouldn’t even be re-hearing the case at all because the CHRB already adjudicated it without imposing any penalization or race disqualification in an August 2018 executive session.

That controversial 2018 commission vote took place privately after a detailed–but not publicly disclosed at the time–investigation that led to the exoneration of Justify and Baffert based on a finding of accidental environmental contamination by jimson weed.

“This case was correctly decided by the CHRB in 2018. It was a final and binding decision. And nothing has changed since then, and you all should simply affirm that decision so that we can put this matter to bed once and for all,” said Baffert’s lawyer, W. Craig Robertson III.

“When that investigation was complete, there were two things that were clear, undisputed and undeniable,” Robertson continued. “Number one, that this was a case of innocent environmental contamination from hay and it was not a case of any intentional administration of any drug or medication. And number two, that the trace levels of scopolamine … had no effect on the performance of these horses and no effect on the races.”

But Robert Petersen, an attorney representing the CHRB, said he disagreed “with the idea that this is somehow a re-do of some earlier adjudication. I think the facts clearly show there has never been a full adjudication on the merits of this issue … People may have an issue with the rule [mandating Class 3 disqualifications being too] draconian. But that’s what the rule is. I can’t change the rules.”

Although Justify is the “headline horse” in the case, the stewards were combining two cases into one hearing Thursday. Also up for potential re-adjudication was the scopolamine positive of MGISW Hoppertunity, another Baffert trainee who tested dirty when winning the GIII Tokyo City Cup S. the day after Justify won the Santa Anita Derby.

For context, the two positives of the Baffert trainees were not isolated cases. In roughly the same time frame in 2018, the CHRB received positive post-race tests for scopolamine on five other horses, and the CHRB eventually treated them all as unintentional jimson weed contaminations from ingesting tainted hay.

Thursday, the CHRB’s equine medical director, Rick Arthur, DVM, was the chief witness called by Baffert’s attorney to defend the new complaint.

Arthur, who led the 2018 scopolamine investigation and had recommended not penalizing Justify, Baffert, or any of the other horses or trainers based on the findings and mitigating circumstances, testified under the unusual circumstances of disagreeing with the CHRB’s decision to have the Santa Anita stewards revisit the case. (It should be noted that the CHRB is no longer comprised of the same makeup of commissioners who were on the board in 2018).

“The entire case [of all scopolamine positives during that time frame] was dismissed. And I’m actually pretty shocked the state’s arguing otherwise,” Arthur said.

“I stand by my recommendation to the executive director and the board 100%,” Arthur continued. “This was the correct decision. It was the fair decision. Usually, regulatory agencies don’t have the guts to do what’s fair and right, and this board made that decision appropriately. I think they could be questioned about the lack of transparency. And I warned them that this was not going to stay a secret at that time. But that was their decision, not mine.”

Background on the case

Arthur’s point about the lack of transparency factors centrally in the way the Justify and Hoppertunity positives were handled in 2018. No complaints were issued at the time of findings, and the CHRB’s investigation unfolded behind the scenes while the nation was watching Justify win race after race en route to an undefeated, Triple Crown-winning season.

When the CHRB finally did vote not to penalize Justify or Baffert, it was August 2018, and their unanimous executive-session decision was not made public.

It was more than a year before news about Justify’s positive and non-penalization became widely known. On Sept. 11, 2019, the New York Times broke the story that Justify tested positive when he won the Santa Anita Derby, a GI Kentucky Derby points qualifying race that vaulted him into contention for the Triple Crown.

That revelation sparked a January 2020 lawsuit initiated against the CHRB by Mick Ruis, who owned and trained the 2018 Santa Anita Derby runner-up, Bolt d’Oro. In his suit, Ruis alleged that the CHRB’s secret vote to dismiss the case led Ruis to suffer “the loss of purse caused by the CHRB’s failing to disqualify Justify and re-distribute the purse for the positive test result.”

Eight months later, as part of a negotiated settlement to get Ruis to drop his lawsuit, the CHRB again met in closed session, voting Aug. 20, 2020 to reverse its previous course of no action and to proceed with a complaint seeking the disqualification of Justify and the redistribution of the purse from that stakes.

So is scopolamine Class 3 or 4?

The new complaint that the stewards were tasked with adjudicating Thursday pertains to possible race disqualifications for Justify and Hoppertunity, and not punishment of Baffert.

The bone of contention that came up early and often was how California classified scopolamine at the time of the offenses.

The CHRB, by its own regulation, follows the Association of Racing Commissioners International (ARCI) Uniform Classification Guidelines for Foreign Substances and Recommended Penalties when establishing model rules for drugs. The ARCI once classified scopolamine as a Class 3 drug (lower-number classifications are more severe). But in December 2016, the ARCI reclassified it to a lesser Class 4 offense.

Arthur testified that the CHRB fully intended to follow the ARCI’s model rule that reclassified scopolamine (and other drugs that also changed classes). But since California’s Office of Administrative Law doesn’t allow the CHRB to change rules by automatically referencing another authority’s code, the racing agency has to go through a drawn-out process to make even minute changes such as drug reclassifications.

So because of this bureaucratic backlog, scopolamine in 2018 was still technically Class 3 in California, even though Arthur and the CHRB considered it to match the ARCI’s newer Class 4 downgrade.

Arthur explained how as the equine medical director, he has regulatory leeway to take into consideration mitigating circumstances, and that’s what he did when recommending no initial penalties for the scopolamine positives.

“It is inherently unfair to hold somebody to a classification that is outdated because of regulatory inefficiency,” Arthur said.

But Petersen, the CHRB attorney, said regardless of Arthur’s intent and interpretation, that’s not how the scopolamine rule was on the books at the time Justify and Hoppertunity tested positive.

“It is true that scopolamine was later reclassified as Class 4. But that did not happen until January 2019,” Petersen said.

In concluding remarks, Robertson urged the stewards to consider the wider, precedent-setting implications of not allowing the scopolamine adjudications from 2018 to remain intact.

“You, as stewards, always have discretion to do what’s right and just,” Robertson said. “And not only do you have that discretion, you should exercise that discretion. Not just for the parties in this case, but for the horse industry as a whole.”

CHRB steward John Herbuveaux, who moderated the proceedings, cautioned all parties at the conclusion of the hearing that a decision is “not going to be something that’s going to happen in the very near future.”

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