Mahoning Valley: $93,301 Pick 6 Carryover, Mandatory Payout On Saturday’s Closing Day Card

A $93,301 Buckeye Jackpot Pick 6 carryover mandatory payout and the second running of the Cheryl C. White Memorial Stakes will highlight closing day of the 2022 Winter/Spring race meet at Hollywood Gaming Mahoning Valley Race Course on Saturday, April 16.

Handicappers will also be offered customary end of meet mandatory payouts in both the Pick 4 and Pick 5 wagers at the track located in Youngstown, Ohio.

The closing day card kicks off with a first race post time of 12:15 p.m. and also marks the beginning of the 15 percent takeout Pick 5.

This is followed up with the Buckeye Jackpot Pick 6 sequence beginning in race 4 with an estimated post time of 1:38 p.m. which is a 20-cent minimum, 20 percent takeout wager.

The final of the mandatory payouts is the 15 percent takeout Pick 4 sequence which starts in race 6 with an estimate post time of 2:34 p.m.

Hollywood Gaming Mahoning Valley Race Course is scheduled to return for the 2022 Fall race meet on Friday, Oct. 21.

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Equibase Analysis: French-Bred Waliyak Poised For First North American Victory In Jenny Wiley

The Grade 1, $500,000 Jenny Wiley Stakes at Keeneland in Lexington, Ky., brings together a field of six fillies and mares, with two of them standouts on class as they have won at the level. Shantisara won the Grade 1 Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup last fall on the Keeneland turf, but hasn't been seen since. Regal Glory won the Grade 1 Matriarch Stakes on the turf last November at Del Mar in California and also won the Grade 3 Pegasus World Cup Filly and Mare Turf Invitational Stakes when last seen in January. Both are trained by Chad Brown, who has won the Jenny Wiley three of the last four years.

Navratilova won the Grade 3 Valley View Stakes on the Keeneland grass last fall and returned to the races following five months off to be third in the Grade 3 Honey Fox Stakes so has room to improve and be competitive in this race. Lady Speightspeare won the Grade 1 Natalma Stakes as a 2-year-old and in only the second start of her career, in the summer of 2020, but has only won once on turf in four tries since then. Waliyak was imported from Europe last fall off a win in the Group 3 Prix Bertrand de Tarragon and was not disgraced when fourth of 10 in the Grade 1 E.P. Taylor Stakes so may fit here. Scarabea rounds out the field with a one for 10 record and enters the race off a fifth-place finish in the Grade 3 Orchid Stakes.

Analysis and top contenders:

Although Irish-bred Shantisara earned a field high 121 Equibase Speed Figure when winning the Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup six months ago, there's no guarantee she can pick up where she left off following the long layoff. Granted, top trainer Brown has won with 25 percent of his starters coming back from four months or more away from the races in turf routes going back five years, but when making her U.S. debut last June, off a four-month layoff, Shantisara could only manage a second-place finish, and that was in a non-graded race. The Queen Elizabeth II is a race restricted to 3-year-olds only so Shantisara is also facing older horses for the first time. Prior to the win at Keeneland, Shantisara earned a 104 figure winning the Jockey Club Oaks Invitational at Belmont Park in September, and that's the effort she may be most likely to repeat, which may not be good enough to win.

French-bred Waliyak ran better in Europe than Shantisara and so will be my top selection in this year's Jenny Wiley. Last summer at Royal Ascot, Waliyak finished third of seven in a Group 3 race, compared to the fact Shantisara  never ran in a group stakes race in Europe. One race later, Waliyak won a Group 3 stakes with a 102 figure, before an even better effort when second of 10 in the Atalanta Stakes behind next out winner Saffron Beach. That earned a 108 figure which Shantisara duplicated winning the Prix Bertrand de Tarragon in September. She was highly regarded enough to face some of the best females on turf in the E.P. Taylor Stakes at Woodbine in October and checked in fourth of 10, beaten just 1 1/2 lengths for the win. Now rested and working consistently including two drills on the Keeneland turf, Waliyak need only run back to either of her last two races in Europe to win this race. Additionally, she may go to post at decent odds because her trainer, Edward Vaughn, is not well known. However, his Race Lens statistics reveal he's very competent, with just 50 starters in the past five years but with 17 first- or second-place finishes. Potentially best of all, jockey Umberto Rispoli rides. Rispoli has been in the top three in jockey standings at Southern California tracks for the past few years and is riding in Kentucky for the spring. 

Regal Glory, like Shantisara, is trained by Brown, and is in my opinion much more likely than her stablemate to win the Jenny Wiley. Regal Glory has won 10 of 17 races and banked $1.5 million to date. She ran one of the best races of her career when missing by a half-length in the Grade 1 First Lady Stakes at Keeneland six months ago, earning a career-best 111 figure, then won the Matriarch Stakes in late November. Returning for her 6-year-old campaign, Regal Glory picked up where she left off with a win in the Pegasus World Cup Filly and Mare Turf Invitational, earning a very good 109 figure which may be improved upon in her second start of the year.

About the rest: Lady Speightspeare won the Grade 1 Natalma Stakes, a turf route, as a 2-year-old in the summer of 2020 but since then her only win came at seven furlongs, on the all-weather surface at Woodbine, with a 103 figure. She has not progressed in three turf route races since, with 107, 96 and 105 figures and in all three races she lost ground in the last eighth of a mile which does not bode well for her chances in this race. Navratilova won the Grade 3 Valley View Stakes at this distance on the Keeneland turf last fall, leading from start to finish in the same manner as she won the Tepin Stakes four months earlier in June. She has never faced this level of competition and her career-best 101 figure would not be good enough to compete with the best in this field if repeated. Scarabea has only a maiden win to her credit and her last two races at a mile and one-half on turf, with 99 and 98 figures, make it hard to consider her a contender.  

Win Contenders, in preference order:

Waliyak
Regal Glory
Shantisara

Jenny Wiley Stakes – Grade 1
Race 10 at Keeneland
Saturday, April 16 – Post Time 5:48 PM E.T.
1 1/16 Miles on Turf
Fillies and Mares, 4 Years Old and Upward
Purse: $500,000

Ellis Starr is national racing analyst for Equibase

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‘Grey Area’: New Hampshire Officials Questioning Legality Of TwinSpires Wagering App

New Hampshire officials are concerned that the state may be losing out on hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of revenue to the TwinSpires advance-deposit wagering app, according to wmur.com.

State residents have signed up for the app and may use it to wager on races across the country, but none of that money is being returned to New Hampshire taxpayers.

“They're not regulated by us, nor do they operate on any confines of state law,” lottery executive director Charlie McIntyre told WMUR. “So, it's a grey area. It's a concern for us, obviously, because all other gambling in the state happens through us – either we license it, or we regulate it. In this case, neither.”

The New Hampshire lottery attempted an administrative regulation change to bring TwinSpires into compliance, but that failed, and now the state attorney general's office is looking into the app. A change in state law could be required, officials said.

Churchill Downs, Inc., the parent company of TwinSpires, faced a similar challenge in Texas and eventually had to cease operations in the state.

Read more at wmur.com.

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‘Horse-Racing Regulators Have Tremendous Experience’: ARCI Launches Sports Betting Regulators Association

In an acknowledgement of the rapid expansion of sports betting in America, the Association of Racing Commissioners International (ARCI) on Wednesday announced the official launch of a subsidiary named the Sports Betting Regulators Association (SBRA).

The new organization will have its first meeting on July 10 in Boston at the National Council of Legislators from Gaming States' summer meeting, said ARCI president and CEO Ed Martin, who made the announcement during his closing comments Wednesday at the ARCI's 88th annual Safe Horse and Honest Sport Conference at the Griffin Gate Marriott.

Martin said the new body is a logical offshoot of ARCI, which is the umbrella organization of the official rule-making bodies for professional horse and greyhound racing. Martin said the ARCI approved the development of a sports wagering-centric entity shortly after the U.S. Supreme Court knocked down the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act in May, 2018. That opened the floodgates for states to legalize sports betting in what now has increased to 33 states.

“Since that time, a number of our existing members have added responsibilities beyond just horse racing,” Martin said. “In many states, they've been morphed into a gaming commission or expanded into a gaming commission.”

SBRA policy-making process will emulate what ARCI has done in horse racing with its model rules, which have been widely adopted by states. SBRA similarly will bring together the government regulatory entities, as well as affected constituencies, to develop consistent regulatory policies to ensure the integrity of sports betting and to protect the public's interest by providing confidence that all wagering and associated events are conducted fairly and honestly.

“We've already incorporated some preliminary standards in some of the model rules,” Martin said. “But we anticipate that we will emulate some of the transparency and the independence (of regulating horse racing), possibly recommending licensing of officials. Some of the sports that people are allowed to wager on, there's no transparency. There are concerns. The states have a responsibility to ensure that everything that they're permitting people to bet on is on the up and up.

“It's a new area, an area where horse-racing regulators have tremendous experience. The constituent we serve is the general public.”

The SBRA announcement came a day after investigative sports journalist Tim Livingston of the true-crime sports Whistleblower podcast (whistleblowerpod.com) told the ARCI conference about his findings of corruption involving referees influencing outcomes of games, sometimes to provide the best match-ups for television ratings; player drug-testing programs that sound good but are designed not to catch offenders; tennis players who lack sponsors and other funding being paid to tank the first set of a match and more.

“When you consider what Mr. Livingston presented, it's a jaw-dropper,” Martin said. “It's always easy to be critical of the regulator. But when you consider the job that is done in horse racing, and you compare the need in human sport for transparency and openness to eliminate even the appearance of conflicts, those are the kinds of issues the regulators will get in the room and talk about. They will determine the direction that they want to go.”

Martin said the ARCI governance will remain the same, with an SBRA chair elected.

“It will function as a committee within the ARCI,” he said. “But it will be autonomous. We're going to invite all the existing states that regulate sports wagering, and we hope they come to the table.”

More information on SBRA will become available at arci.com and sportsbettingregulators.com.

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