Justify Represented By First Japanese Starter

In this continuing series, we take a look ahead at US-bred and/or conceived runners entered for the upcoming weekend at the tracks on the Japan Racing Association circuit, with a focus on pedigree and/or performance in the sales ring. Here are the horses of interest for this weekend running at Fukushima and Kokura Racecourses:

Sunday, July 3, 2022
3rd-FKS, ¥9,900,000 ($73k), Maiden, 3yo, 1150m
THEURGIST (c, 3, Ghostzapper–Orphea, by Medaglia d'Oro) was the most expensive of this outstanding sire's weanlings to sell in 2019, hammering to Paca Paca Farm on behalf of Godolphin for $410K at the Fasig-Tipton November Sale. A half-brother to Grade III-placed Born to Be Winner (Einstein {Brz}), the March foal is out of an unraced daughter of MGSW & MGISP Nasty Storm (Gulch), the dam of Irish MGSW/G1SP Actress (Ire) (Declaration of War). B-Ghostzapper Syndicate & Paul Tackett Revocable Trust (KY)

6th-KOK, ¥13,400,000 ($99k), Newcomers, 2yo, 1200mT
JASPER TIARA (f, 2, Justify–Sweetgrass, by Street Sense), a $150K Keeneland September graduate, is the first Japanese starter for her freshman sire (by Scat Daddy) and is the first to make the races from her dam, who was placed no fewer than five times at graded level–including the 2015 GII Indiana Oaks–and was purchased by Baccari Bloodstock for $250,000 at FTKNOV in 2017. The cross of Scat Daddy over Street Cry (Ire)-line dams is responsible for the outstanding multiple Australian Group 1 winner Con Te Partiro and Irish top-level scorer Skitter Scatter. B-Chris Baccari, Brad Stephens & Breeze Easy (KY)

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As Many Questions As Answers On Eve Of HISA Implementation

A year and a half after being signed into law, the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) is expected to kick into action Friday, meaning a new uniform set of medication rules and safety standards that everyone can abide by–that, at least, was the plan.

The execution has somewhat thrown those intentions to the wind in the near term, with a piecemeal approach to implementation that has seen the anti-doping and medication control arm of the program pushed back to early next year, and several other features of the law–such as horseshoe requirements and whip specifications–pushed back a month.

In response, four U.S. Senators have requested answers from the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority–the umbrella non-profit established by the Act to oversee the program–about the legality of this staggered approach. The Authority has until July 11 to respond.

Though a legal challenge by the states of West Virginia and Louisiana to block HISA going into effect Friday failed, there still remains the possibility of any number of unregistered horses being scratched around the country over the next few days and, perhaps, weeks.

The registration deadline has been pushed back a day, to July 2. As of the morning of June 29, 20,537 people and 23,070 horses have been registered, as per the Authority.

The Authority was unable to provide estimates as to the numbers of both covered persons and covered horses that are still left to be registered.

“Since such a registration process has never existed at the national level before, it's unclear how many people and horses are or will be participating in racing come July 1. It should be noted that the universe of people expected to register is limited to the 24 states conducting covered horseraces under HISA's authority,” wrote a spokesperson for the Authority.

As a potential guidepost, 30,846 individual Thoroughbreds have made at least one start at a U.S. racetrack between Jan. 1, 2022, and June 29, according to DRF data. This includes Thoroughbreds starting at Quarter Horse and Fair tracks.

As of Friday, some of the law's key safety rules go into effect, including those governing crop use and voided claims. More on that in a bit.

Fee Assessments…

Another pressing concern for racetrack operators, industry stakeholders and the betting public is the question of cost–more importantly, who's going to pick up HISA's tab?

HISA's first-year operating budget is about $14.3 million. The way the fees have been calculated, those states or tracks with the highest handle, purses and number of starts have the largest assessments.

Each state commission has already decided whether to opt in or out of collecting and remitting fees for the program. When a commission opts out, that responsibility then falls to the tracks and the horsemen.

According to HISA, five states have chosen to fund their portion of HISA: California, Colorado, Kentucky, Minnesota and Virginia. And so, how are these five states choosing to collect their fees?

California: The Golden State owes some $1.4 million to the HISA Authority for calendar year 2022.

“Conditioned on proposed statutory authorization, the payment will be split equally between thoroughbred horsemen (purse revenue) and Thoroughbred racetracks (commissions) from their shares of Advance Deposit Wagering (ADW) revenue. This will not affect bettors,” stated the California Horse Racing Board (CHRB) in a recent press release.

Kentucky: Kentucky's portion of HISA is about $1.28 million. According to Kentucky Horse Racing Commission (KHRC) spokesperson Kristin Voskuhl, in an email, “The KHRC will disclose the annual HISA fees to Kentucky's racetracks upon receipt of an invoice from HISA. The process for how and when the KHRC will assess these new fees has not been finalized.”

Colorado: Jim Mulvihill, interim executive director of the Colorado Horseman's Association, wrote in an email that the Colorado Division of Racing stepped up to pay it out of their own budget. “So, no cost is being passed on to the track or horsemen,” he wrote.

Minnesota: According to Charlene Briner, interim director of the Minnesota Racing Commission, the commission is “continuing to evaluate the mechanism for collecting funds to pay the fees that will be assessed.”

Virginia: Executive secretary of the Virginia Racing Commission, David Lermond, explained that the commission has elected to pay its share out of its operating fund. “We're not making the horsemen pay for this,” said Lermond.

The TDN asked the Authority for information about how individual tracks are electing to collect their fees. “Would advise asking the tracks themselves that question,” the spokesperson responded.

The TDN reached out to some of the tracks facing the largest fee assessments, starting with the big three in New York: Aqueduct, Belmont Park, and Saratoga Race Course.

The New York Thoroughbred Horseman's Association (NYTHA) and the New York Racing Association (NYRA) have agreed to split the cost “and HISA has approved our plan,” wrote Joe Appelbaum, NYTHA president, in an email.

NYRA will pay approximately $800,000 and the remaining $800,000 comes from a per-start fee. The fee will begin in Saratoga and will be $50 at Aqueduct, $70 at Belmont and $90 at Saratoga. We are hoping to reimburse all runners from fourth on down,” Appelbaum wrote, adding in a follow-up call that NTYHA and NYRA area still working out the reimbursement part of the equation. Officials at NYRA confirmed Appelbaum's remarks.

Now to the Maryland tracks.

“The Maryland industry has historically divided joint expenses 50% track, 44% horsemen (Purse Account), 6% Bred Fund, consistent with the Ten Year Agreement effective 1/1/13.

“For the HISA assessment for 2022, the stakeholders have agreed to divide the cost of HISA in accordance with that formula,” wrote chairman and CEO of the Thoroughbred Horseman's Association (THA), Alan Foreman, in an email.

No individuals will be assessed or charged with starter fees, explained Foreman, adding that the tracks “cannot dictate” an inequitable formula.

“HISA encourages agreements among the stakeholders, and we have done that in [Maryland]. We have encouraged our fellow horsemen's organizations to do the same,” he wrote.

According to Bill Badgett, executive director of Florida operations at Gulfstream Park, that track has yet to settle on a final method of fee collection.

TDN also reached out to the operators of Monmouth Park and Parx Racing–both tracks among the higher end of the fee assessments–but hasn't received a response before publication.

Voluntary Agreements…

As of Friday, key portions of the racetrack safety program are scheduled to go into effect.

Among these regulations is a uniform crop rule and baseline fitness requirements for jockeys, a voided claim rule (allowing owners or trainers to void claims in the event of post-race lameness or other problems), and veterinary treatment documentation requirements for owners and trainers.

Who's going to be responsible for overseeing HISA's new safety-related duties, which would similarly include tasks like the regulatory examination of horses?

In short, commissions can enter into voluntary agreements with HISA, permitting existing staff within those states to perform the tasks outlined by HISA.

If a commission chooses to eschew that agreement, then HISA must send in substitute staff to fulfil these functions.

The TDN asked the Authority for a list of tracks which have signed a voluntary agreement with HISA but received no response. Nor did the Authority answer questions about whether it has enough staff to accommodate the needs in states that eschew the voluntary agreement.

According to the Association of Racetrack Commissioners International's (ARCI) Ed Martin, the following 15 states “have some sort of written representation with HISA of what they are currently doing, and how that fits into what HISA would like to have done.”

These state are: Arkansas, California, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Washington and West Virginia.

Martin stressed that this isn't a definitive list, with some states potentially having entered into some kind of agreement with HISA without his knowledge.

It's currently unclear if the New York State Gaming Commission has entered into such an agreement with HISA, but according to NYRA, its staff are fulfilling HISA's new safety functions.

According to NYRA spokesperson Pat McKenna, “a NYRA designee will be enforcing the HISA rules that are beyond the purview of the state steward.”

In a follow-up call, McKenna explained that these personnel will include a safety steward, a steward designee, and regulatory veterinarians.

As of Friday, a number of prohibited practices go into effect, including blistering, the pin and freeze firing of horses (beginning with the foal crop of 2022), and the use of “electrical medical therapeutic devices including magnetic wave therapy, laser, electro-magnetic blankets, boots, electro-shock, or any other electrical devices that may produce an analgesic effect within forty-eight (48) hours of a training activity or of the start of the published post time for which a Horse is scheduled to race.”

What are the possible sanctions in the event of a prohibited practice violation? And who exactly could face sanctions? The Authority failed to respond when asked.

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Flurry Content To Play Small Ball With Lady Flurry

Staton Flurry is set to be represented over the next couple of weekends in major graded stakes in the Midwest, but the Arkansas native is also not one to shy away from his Mid-South roots. On June 20, an otherwise sleepy and uneventful Monday afternoon on the American racing scene, Flurry homebred Lady Flurry (Lord Nelson) raised more than a few eyebrows, streaking home to best fellow Louisiana-breds by some nine lengths in a time that nearly lowered a track record that had been around for nearly four decades.

“I didn't expect that big of a blowout, but we knew she was training good going into it,” the Hot Springs native said of the filly, who was off as the 1-2 chalk. “We knew she had some speed in her and there is plenty of speed in her pedigree, but hard to say we expected that. To be that close to the track record was great.”

The listed track record for 4 1/2 furlongs was set by the future stakes winner Sondor when romping in by 10 lengths May 16, 1984. Lady Flurry was timed in an eased-down :51.63, with a final sixteenth in :5.96.

Flurry campaigned Lady Flurry's Arkansas-bred dam Patchofbadweather (Storm and a Half) to five wins from 13 starts–all between five and six furlongs–including the Lady Razorback Futurity in 2014. Patchofbadweather's dam was the champion Argentinian sprinter Preflorada (Arg) (Choir Prospect, by Mr. Prospector), who won a Group 1 sprint over five furlongs in :54.10. Flurry elected to send Patchofbadweather to the recently departed Lord Nelson for her 2019 covering.

“I just loved him for his speed, he was a big, fast, good-looking horse and, like I said, my mare's got some speed in her pedigree,” Flurry said. “Just took the approach of breed speed to speed and hope it holds.”

The owner/breeder said Lady Flurry was attractive and straight-forward growing up.

“She was always very smart,”he said. “All the Lord Nelsons I've seen are great-looking animals. She was always really easy to deal with, whereas her mom was a complete wild animal, an Arky-bred who had a mind of her own. She was fast also, but this filly is a whole lot more gentle to be around than her mom was. Definitely excited to see what the future holds for her.”

Having earned a strong 71 Beyer Speed Figure for the debut run, one wouldn't blame Flurry and trainer Karl Broberg for shooting for the stars. Instead, Flurry is happy enough to run the filly with her 'friends' and broach the subject of loftier targets somewhere in the future as her performance merits.

“We'll point her for the state-bred stakes the rest of the year, see if we can knock a few of those off and maybe see if she can't be champion 2-year-old filly in Louisiana,” he said. “For the most part, we'd like to keep her with her own kind, but I do think she can be competitive in open company.”

Flurry indicated that he returned Patchofbadweather to Arkansas earlier this year and the mare has a “really nice Army Mule colt” on the ground.

“The state-bred programs in Louisiana and Arkansas are so lucrative and it isn't a bad thing at all to have an Arkansas-bred these days,” he said.

Meanwhile, Flurry's part-owned 2020 GI Kentucky Oaks winner Shedaresthedevil (Daredevil) drew the outside stall in a field of five for Saturday's GII Fleur de Lis S. at Churchill Downs on a slightly bigger stage.

“She's been training great, probably as well as she's trained in a long time,” Flurry said of the 5-year-old mare, campaigned in partnership with Whisper Hill Farm and Qatar Racing. “Pauline's Pearl (Tapit) looks like she's taken a step forward and we'll have to match her, but [Shedaresthedevil] is doing great. We're expecting a big effort out of her this weekend and hopefully get her back in the winner's circle. We're taking it race by race with her, with the Breeders' Cup the goal, and we're going to work backwards from there. This is the first step.”

Flurry's own colors will be carried aboard GII Black-Eyed Susan S. winner Interstatedaydream (Classic Empire) when she makes her next start in the GIII Indiana Oaks at Horseshoe Indiana July 9. Shedaresthedevil won the same event two years ago as a prelude to her victory in the COVID-19-delayed Kentucky Oaks.

 

 

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