Turfway, Hawthorne Cancel Friday Programs Due To Freezing Temperatures

Officials from Turfway Park have announced they will cancel its Friday night program Dec. 23 due to freezing temperatures and a forecasted wind chill as low as 25 below zero.

Hawthorne race course in suburban Chicago has also said it is cancelling Friday's card due to extreme weather. Hawthorne races originally carded for Friday will be added as extras for the final weekend of racing Dec. 30-31, when the track plans to offer 11-race cards.

The National Weather Service forecast for Friday in Florence, Ky., where Turfway is located, calls for a 20 percent chance of snow showers and a high of 6 degrees. The breezy conditions could lead to wind chills ranging from 10-25 below zero.

Turfway Park is scheduled to resume racing Wednesday with a first post of 5:55 p.m. (all times Eastern) The Holiday Meet is scheduled to run through Saturday, Dec. 31 and the Winter/Spring Meet will begin with a special New Year's Day card on Sunday, Jan. 1.

Director of Racing Tyler Picklesimer will add, and re-draw, the races from Friday's card to racing next week.

For more information about racing from Turfway Park, visit www.TurfwayPark.com.

In other news, Turfway Park has been approved by the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission to begin offering a 50-cent Late Pick 5 wager starting Wednesday, Dec. 28.

Turfway currently offers bettors an early Pick 5 wager in Races 1-5 at a low 15 percent takeout. The Late Pick 5 wager will have the same 15 percent takeout and will span the final five races each day.

Any carryover from the Early or Late Pick 5 will be added to the next day's Late Pick 5 pool.

Turfway will conclude its Holiday Meet Saturday, Dec. 31 and have a mandatory payout in all wagers.

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RTIP: Illegal Wagering Is A Global Threat, And It’s Probably Impacting You

Illegal betting doesn't get a lot of ink in the racing industry trade press, but horseplayers have probably seen its impacts before. We at the Paulick Report do receive queries from bettors periodically about payouts or pools that didn't follow an expected pattern. Sometimes this happens because of bets placed with the assistance of complex computer models.

We wrote about the challenges and impacts of computer-assisted wagering back in 2013, and it's still around and healthy as ever.

Sometimes though, those oddities may be explained by intentional pool manipulation connected to wagering on unregulated or underregulated betting markets.

A panel of experts at the recent 48th Annual Global Symposium on racing provided an overview of what we know (and what we don't) about the illegal gaming threat.

Here are a few takeaways:

-It is of course, hard to say how much money gets wagered on horse racing in illegal or gray betting markets around the world since the whole point is they don't report their incomes to government tax authorities and pay nothing toward track operations or purses. There are international organizations that have made a study of this type of activity and claim as much as 80% of the money wagered on sports and racing worldwide is placed in illegal markets. The totals bet illegally each year on sports and racing could be as much as $340 billion to $1.7 trillion, according to Martin Purbrick, chairman of the Asian Racing Federation's Council on Anti-Illegal Betting and Related Financial Crime.

These markets may be located anywhere, but are largely housed in Asia – Singapore, Macau, and Malaysia have long been familiar homes for such websites, as well as Malta, the Philippines, and Curaçao.

-The illegal markets are growing, and the COVID-19 pandemic assisted with that. Data show legal betting rose 36% during the pandemic, and it's likely illegal wagering rose by twice that much, according to Purbrick.

The draw for many users is that they're offered better pricing and promotions from unregulated or under-regulated markets than legitimate sites can offer. Some people may also be unaware they're putting their money into an unregulated exchange, because a good number of illegal markets use mirror sites that are designed to replicate the look of a legitimate site with a slightly different URL. Purbrick said illegal sites will often have multiple of these because they're more likely to evade notice from regulators, but even if one is sunk they'll have several others in play.

-There are a couple of reasons governing sports bodies and racing regulators should be worried about illegal wagering markets. For one thing, racetracks, horsemen's groups, and state governments aren't seeing any of the money wagered there the way they do when someone places a bet through a legal ADW.

For another, there's a lot of concern that the volume of money flowing through those illegal markets and the markets' possible ties to organized crime sets up an environment where the event being bet is ripe for manipulation.

-Illegal wagering is not limited to racing in Hong Kong, though it has been a focus of integrity groups based there for many years now, given its geographic closeness to several hub bases. Citibet, which is the largest known conglomerate of illegal markets, offers betting on all races, including American racing. Purbrick said they're responsible for taking bets of $7.5 billion on racing around the world.

-The way most of these markets work is that they pay out based on the parimutuel odds a horse goes off with from the legitimate market – with certain limits. Unlike legal markets though, illegal operators are not paying the racing operator or horsemen anything and keeping profits for themselves.

That means it's in the best interests of someone putting big money through these markets to make sure the odds on the racetrack toteboard are to their advantage, so they'll put some money into the legitimate market to influence those odds. The bets they place on the parimutuel markets are on horses they expect will lose, and they're intended to be offset by winning bets placed on illegal markets.

Pat Cummings, executive director of the Thoroughbred Idea Foundation, provided three examples of what this pool manipulation may look like. Cummings stuck with simple examples on show pools, but bettors may engage in similar behavior across different types of pools.

-In an obvious, successful example of manipulation at a small track, Cummings showed a theoretical scenario where a manipulator places $200 to show on the #5 horse in a race across 10 different non-pari-mutuel offshore sites, spending $2,000. In the final 60 seconds before the final wagering cycle, the manipulator drops $4,500 into the legal market on longshot #4, taking that horse's odds from 25-1 to 19-1. That has a ripple effect on the odds of the other horses in the race though, giving the manipulator a more appealing payout. Where #5 previously had $49 of a $316 show pool, it went off with $131 of a $4,951 show pool.

When the #5 finished third and paid $21, the manipulator lost their $4,500 on the parimutuel market but made $21,000 on the illegal market.



-Manipulators may be more subtle, shifting payouts by a dollar or two over what they would have been, but if the bettor is betting on the illegal market at a high enough volume, they can still profit.

-There are also times, Cummings says, when manipulators make a mistake and end up putting a chunk of money on the parimutuel market on what's intended to be a losing horse, only to have that horse pop up and win.

-A manipulator will probably spread their winning bets across multiple illegal exchanges in case one fails to pay or is unexpectedly shut down by authorities – indicating that the savvy players are aware the exchanges are illegal.

-Smaller pools are a better target for someone looking to engage in any kind of manipulation, because it costs less to change odds significantly and the payoff can be just as good as manipulating a large pool.

These manipulations, whether they're successful for the manipulator or not, have real impacts on the payouts to legitimate customers. Over time, they serve to undermine customers' confidence in the integrity of the racing product.

These manipulations are also pretty common – Cummings said he had tracked five dozen reports of possible pool manipulation this year alone. He believes in many cases, tracks may not have been aware of the manipulation until he brought the wagering activity to their attention.

-Unfortunately, Cummings said, it's probably beyond the capacity of most racetracks to stop this, given how broad the problem is. Their best bet is to increase stewards' awareness of these issues, and to offer more competitive wagering menus that could be attractive to legitimate players and less appealing to manipulators.

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Santa Anita Releases Wagering Menu For Upcoming Classic Meet

With big fields and huge wagering pools expected for Santa Anita's Classic Meet opening day, Monday, Dec. 26, fans will be treated to a comprehensive betting menu that will include a $1 million guaranteed payout in the track's 20 cent Single Ticket Rainbow Pick Six providing there is a lucky Single Ticket winner.

With 11 races on tap, including six graded stakes, the opening day Rainbow Six will be comprised of races six through 11. Early first post time on opening day is at 11 a.m. and assigned post time for race six is at 1:30 p.m. PT.

In addition to an Early and Late 50 cent Pick 4, the opening day menu will also include a special 50 cent Mid-Pick 4, which will cover races 5, 6, 7 & 8. Santa Anita will again offer a North American-low takeout of 15.43 percent on all $2 Win, Place and Show wagers.

Santa Anita's popular Early 50 cent Pick 5, which features a low 14 percent takeout is also included in the Classic Meet betting menu as is a 50 cent Late Pick 5.

On opening day, Santa Anita's 50 cent Early Pick 4 will start with Race 2, the Mid-Four with Race 5 and the 50 cent Late Pick 4 will start with Race 8.
With a Jackpot provision in place, the 20 cent Single Ticket Rainbow Pick Six requires a perfect single ticket on any given race day in order to key the Jackpot payoff. Again, on opening day, Santa Anita will guarantee a $1 million payoff to any such Single Ticket winner.

Santa Anita will also continue to offer its $5 Golden Hour Double and the $1 Golden Hour Pick 4. Both include late races from both Santa Anita and Golden Gate Fields and offer fans a low 15 percent takeout.

Players will also once again be offered $1 Exactas, $2 Rolling Daily Doubles, 50 cent Rolling Pick Pick 3s, as well as 10 cent Superfectas on all races with a minimum of six runners.

The $1 Super High 5 is also available in all races with seven or more declared starters. The wager is available on all races that have seven or more declared starters. There is a 100 percent payout on all tickets selecting five winners, no consolation, and a 100 percent carryover to the next race (including to the next day, if applicable).

Although estimates vary, with clear skies and good weather predicted for Dec. 26, Santa Anita's opening day pari-mutuel handle could exceed $20 million.

Beginning Saturday, Jan. 7, Santa Anita and Gulfstream Park will also be offering an all-new $1 Coast to Coast Pick 5 featuring a low 15 percent takeout. This wager will also be offered every Saturday and Sunday beginning in January and on all Saturdays and Sundays throughout the upcoming Classic Meet.

Entries for Santa Anita's Classic Meet opening day will be drawn this Wednesday, Dec. 21. For additional information, please visit santaanita.com or call (626) 574-RACE.

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Horseshoe Indianapolis: Handicapping Challenge Yields Donation Of Over $1,500 To Veteran Charity

Horseshoe Indianapolis made a delivery to Helping Veterans and Families of Indiana (HVAF) Friday, Dec. 16 from the special Veteran's Day event held during live racing. A special Veteran's Day Challenge Handicapping Contest was held featuring 11 top handicappers from across the nation who placed wagers on the Pick 5. A total of $1,517.50 was raised through the promotion along with the delivery of 210 pounds of peanut butter collected by the jockeys at Horseshoe Indianapolis.

“Serving the veterans in our area has become an annual focal point for us and HVAF does a tremendous job in reaching and aiding those who have served our country,” said Eric Halstrom, Vice President and General Manager of Racing. “This is the second year we have held the special Veteran's Day event featuring the Pick 5. Handicappers are more than willing to donate their time to assist us in supporting such a worthy cause.”

The Pick 5 Challenge included Steve Byk of “At the Races” Sirius Radio Show, Nick Hines, former veteran known as “Sarge” and Matt Carothers of Fanduel TV, Sara Elbadwi and Ed DeRosa of Horse Racing Nation, Gene McLean of “The Pressbox” podcast, Ellis Starr of Equibase, Anthony Stabile of New York Racing Association (NYRA) Bets, Scott Ehlers of Daily Racing Form, Dan Tordjman of America's Best Racing, and Louis Rabaut of Horseplayers Now/Green Sheet. Each handicapper placed a $250 wager, courtesy of Horseshoe Indianapolis, on the Pick 5 Friday, Nov. 11. Byk, Ehlers, Starr, McLean, and Rabaut hit the wager for $252 each totaling $1,517.50. All proceeds were earmarked to HVAF.

“We are currently serving 250 veterans per month from our food pantry,” said Ashlee Walls-Pierce, Vice President for Advancement. “We have served 1,230 veterans through November and distributed 56,000 pounds of food, clothing, and personal hygiene items through our pantry. We serve any veteran in our pantry and are gearing up for our organization's 30th anniversary next year.”

Walls noted peanut butter and canned meat are the two most requested items from the pantry. The headquarters are located in downtown Indianapolis with a total of 18 different housing properties managed by HVAF scattered around the area.

“In addition to our pantry, we have more than 350 individuals from our Christmas Outreach program receiving special Christmas items this year,” added Andrea Carlile, Community Engagement Coordinator. “Donations were made to these veterans and their families for needed items on special lists they submitted to us. Items ranged from pots and pans to a bicycle. Homelessness for veterans has gone down 35 percent over last year. During Covid it increased by 16 percent. A lot of our programs are preventative, so we are glad to see those percentages trending down.”

HVAF of Indiana, Inc. is the largest non-profit for veterans in the state of Indiana. They work tirelessly to end homelessness among veterans, offering additional solutions such as housing and re-integration services to prevent at-risk veterans from reaching that stage. For more information or to donate, visit the website at: www.hvafofindiana.org.

The 21st season of live Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse racing resumes Tuesday, April 18 and concludes Friday, Nov. 17. Racing will be held during the week beginning at 2:30 p.m. Monday through Wednesday with Thursday post times set at 2:10 p.m. Saturday racing will be offered on 16 dates in 2023 with six of those dates reserved for all-Quarter Horse action.

For more information on live racing at Horseshoe Indianapolis, visit www.caesars.com/horseshoe-indianapolis.

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