More Qualifiers Announced For 2021 National Horseplayers Championship

Each week, the NTRA will provide a rundown of those who have qualified for the National Horseplayers Championship (NHC) the previous weekend.

The NHC is the most important tournament of the year for horseplayers and is the culmination of a year-long series of NTRA-sanctioned local tournaments conducted by racetracks, casino race books, off-track betting facilities and horse racing and handicapping websites, each of which sends its top qualifiers to the national finals. The 2021 NHC is now slated take place in the Bally's Events Center from August 27-29.

Friday, November 20
HorsePlayers.com

Edward Lohn of The Villages, Fla. will be heading to the NHC for the fourth time.

Ernest Hey Jr. of Lancaster, N.Y. has qualified for his third NHC appearance.

Saturday, November 21
HorsePlayers.com

Peter Dresens of Groton, Mass. has qualified for his fifth NHC tournament and has cashed once for $14,400 in 2017.

Sunday, November 22
HorsePlayers.com

Kenneth McMahan of Lexington, Ky. will be making his ninth NHC appearance when he heads to Las Vegas in 2021.

Mike Somich of Raleigh, N.C. is now dual qualified for what will be his second NHC appearance.

 

The post More Qualifiers Announced For 2021 National Horseplayers Championship appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Essential Quality 10-1 Favorite In First 2021 Derby Future Wager Pool

Godolphin's undefeated $2 million Breeders' Cup Juvenile (GI) winner Essential Quality is the 10-1 individual favorite among 24 betting interests in Pool 1 of the 2021 Kentucky Derby Future Wager, which kicks off a four-day run at Churchill Downs on Thanksgiving Day.

The pari-mutuel field of “All Other 3-Year-Old Colts and Geldings” is expected to be the overall first-pool favorite for the 23rd consecutive year and veteran odds maker Mike Battaglia has installed it as the 6-5 favorite.

In addition to Essential Quality, other promising juveniles that are expected to take interest are CHC INC and WinStar Farm's recent 9 ½-length maiden winner Life Is Good, who cruised 6 ½ furlongs on debut in 1:15.40 Sunday for Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert, and Klaravich Stable's $125,000 Nyquist Stakes winner Highly Motivated, who is conditioned by top trainer Chad Brown. Both colts were made 15-1 on Battaglia's morning line odds.

Here's the complete Kentucky Derby Future Wager Pool 1 field (with trainer and morning line odds): #1 Caddo River (Brad Cox, 30-1); #2 Dr. Schivel (Mark Glatt, 30-1); #3 Essential Quality (Cox, 10-1); #4 Fire At Will (Mike Maker, 30-1); #5 Get Her Number (Peter Miller, 20-1); #6 Highly Motivated (Brown, 15-1); #7 Hot Rod Charlie (Doug O'Neill, 20-1); #8 Jackie's Warrior (Steve Asmussen, 20-1); #9 Keepmeinmind (Robertino Diodoro, 20-1); #10 King Fury (Kenny McPeek, 50-1); #11 Life Is Good (Baffert, 15-1); #12 Midnight Bourbon (Asmussen, 30-1); #13 Pickin Time (Kelly Breen, 20-1); #14 Red Flag (John Shirreffs, 30-1); #15 Reinvestment Risk (Brown, 30-1); #16 Rombauer (Michael McCarthy, 30-1); #17 Savile Row (Baffert, 20-1); #18 Scarred (Asmussen, 30-1); #19 Sittin On Go (Dale Romans, 30-1); #20 Speaker's Corner (Bill Mott, 50-1) #21 Super Stock (Asmussen, 30-1); #22 Ten for Ten (Shug McGaughey III, 50-1); #23 All 3-Year-Old Fillies (50-1); and #24 All Other 3-Year-Old Colts and Geldings (6-5).

The pool, which features $2 Win and Exacta wagering, opens Thursday at noon and will close Sunday at 6 p.m. ET.

The Kentucky Derby Future Wager will be offered concurrently with the sixth annual Kentucky Derby Sire Future Wager, which provides bettors with a unique opportunity to wager on select breeding stars and their entire crop of juveniles with the hope of winning next year's Kentucky Derby.

Offspring sired by Into Mischief and Tapit were made the co-individual favorites at 6-1 on the morning line by Battaglia. The overall favorite is the “All Other Sires” betting interest, which was made 9-2.

Here's the Kentucky Derby Sire Future Wager field (with morning line odds): #1 American Pharoah (20-1); #2 Bernardini (30-1); #3 Bodemeister (30-1); #4 Candy Ride (ARG) (30-1); #5 Constitution (20-1); #6 Curlin (15-1); #7 Flatter (30-1); #8 Frosted (30-1); #9 Ghostzapper (30-1); #10 Hard Spun (20-1); #11 Honor Code (20-1); #12 Into Mischief (6-1); #13 Liam's Map (30-1); #14 Medaglia D'Oro (20-1); #15 Munnings (30-1); #16 Not This Time (20-1); #17 Pioneerof the Nile (30-1); #18 Quality Road (30-1); #19 Street Sense (15-1); #20 Tapit (6-1); #21 Tiznow (15-1); #22 Uncle Mo (15-1); #23 Union Rags (50-1); and #24 “All Other Sires” (4-1).

This marks the eighth consecutive year that Churchill Downs has hosted Future Wager pools in November on closing weekend of its Fall Meet. In last year's wager, eventual Kentucky Derby winner Authentic closed at 50-1 odds and returned $103.60 for a $2 wager. His sire, Into Mischief, closed at 17-1 and returned $36.20.

The Kentucky Derby Future Wagers provide fans of Thoroughbred racing with opportunities to place bets on possible entrants in the Kentucky Derby Presented by Woodford Reserve (Grade I) at odds that could be far greater and more attractive than those available on the day of the race. The 147th running of Kentucky Derby, America's greatest race and the first leg of the Triple Crown, is set for Saturday, May 1, 2021 at Churchill Downs.

Bets can be placed at Churchill Downs Racetrack, TwinSpires.com and other online wagering outlets and satellite wagering centers across North America.

There are no refunds in the Kentucky Derby Future Wager. Should Churchill Downs officials determine during the duration of this week's four-day pool that one of the wagering interests has experienced an injury, illness or other circumstance that would prevent the horse from participating in the Kentucky Derby, betting on the individual horse will be suspended immediately.

More information, Brisnet.com past performances and real-time odds on the Kentucky Derby Future Wager will be available before the pool opens Thursday online at https://www.kentuckyderby.com/wager/future-wager.

The post Essential Quality 10-1 Favorite In First 2021 Derby Future Wager Pool appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

TIF: There’s Still Time To Make Handle A Top Priority For Racing

Racing needs a long-term plan which will put the sport on a path to raise handle to nearly $50 billion annually with more than $5 billion held by the industry by 2040.

Sound optimistic?

Falling well short of that goal would still be a monumental accomplishment given we are on track for another year at just $11 billion in handle, and down nearly 50% in the last two decades, adjusted for inflation.

So where are the plans from the industry to start thinking long-term about not just surviving, but thriving, and building a robust, wagering-forward industry?

Horse racing has a tremendous opportunity to lean into a massive culture of betting liberalization, but it has otherwise failed to capitalize on it. Time is still there, and the opportunity is not yet lost.

There is no doubt horsemen should be thankful for the enrichment they've received through purses over the last two decades coming by way of slot machines, video lottery terminals, historical horse racing or other revenue sharing from casino-related operations. In many cases, tracks and horsemen lobbied relentlessly for them. It makes sense that they continue to fight for them, but not at the expense of racing's most obvious source of sustainable revenue – actual wagering on racing.

These significant purse supplements have allowed the industry to minimize the importance of presenting a modern wagering product. Most tracks have not focused on making racing wagering more competitive and most horsemen's groups have not advocated for meaningful improvements to stoke wagering, either.

In some cases, 90% of prize money has come from subsidized sources beyond racing, wagering on the sport has not seemed as important – a reality which is reflected in annual handle figures over the last 20 years. Many owners and trainers within horsemen's groups do not possess a detailed understanding of racing wagering. They don't know what to advocate for to improve their own futures.

This is problematic, because as it relates to prize money for racing, the future is not bright.

Subsidies to racing from gambling beyond racing, in whatever form they take in states that have long enjoyed them, are changing. Some states are in worse shape than others. The pain of the industry's likely contraction will be widespread.

Horsemen cannot just want a bigger slice of a shrinking pie, it must advocate for growing the pie so that the slices grow for all parties.

Existing groups – including TOBA, state THAs, HBPAs and others – must begin to develop a meaningful strategic plan. Transformational steps to ensure the best possible future for racing must be embraced. At the forefront, a radical rehabilitation of wagering on racing is needed. No ideas should be off the table.

The sport is in no position to turn away from unexplored revenue streams or customer bases. Fixed odds betting on American racing is evolving, albeit slowly, and while there is no denying that the cut from fixed odds betting to tracks and purses is smaller than that provided by pari-mutuel wagering, ignoring the fastest growing legal wagering opportunity in modern American history cannot be an option. Racing's path through fixed odds must be navigated delicately and adjusted over time, but racing needs to be co-located with all other wagering opportunities.

Racing can make its pari-mutuel offerings better and get its wagering product in front of far more customers. The question, of course for all of this, is in the specifics. How?

The sport needs short, intermediate and long-term strategic planning, identifying and plotting courses to achieve goals over the next 10, 20 and 30 years.

Racing had no such plan in 1990 when annual wagering was an inflation-adjusted $18 billion and a decade later, topped $21 billion, also when adjusted for inflation. But what has happened in the intervening two decades is a mass legalization of wagering opportunities combined with significant technological innovations and a substantial increase in personal entertainment options. Racing has to compete if we are to preserve our sport, let alone grow it.

Where are the attempts to voraciously advocate for a most robust wagering offering for our sport which will likely rely far more on it in the next 20 years than it has in the past 20 years?

Just because we lack a centralized structure to oversee an industry master plan does not mean that those groups which exist now are hamstrung from starting one. Owners, breeders and all horsemen should be as interested in growing wagering as anything else they do. Many don't have the first clue where to start, and while unfortunate, it's understandable. There should be no further delays in correcting our course.

The Thoroughbred Idea Foundation was launched to advocate for progressive change in racing because we believe it is possible to turn the sport around.

With a concerted effort, racing could double handle in the next ten years, and double it again in another decade, but only if changes are adopted which would offer more realistic pricing of pari-mutuel wagers, complement tote wagering with fixed odds betting, modernize technology, improve access to data and substantially increase transparency across the sport.

Racing must be more open in reporting on the business of betting – where it is coming from, what it contributes to purses and how it has changed over time. This movement should be driven by owners. Racetracks have proven insufficient leaders of the sport and industry organizations have been distracted by other topics. Nothing should be more top of mind than how we fund our business and keep racing viable.

Racing needs a new generation of horsemen's leadership to propel it forward. Those who might not think it is the role of horsemen to relentlessly pursue improving the wagering business should think again – their role is federally protected by the Interstate Horseracing Act and should be the envy of any professional sporting endeavor in the country. Racing needs increased wagering to survive, let alone thrive.

The business of betting has been ignored for far too long. A new future for the sport promotes a modern wagering business at the heart of racing.

The post TIF: There’s Still Time To Make Handle A Top Priority For Racing appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Sources: COVID-19 Outbreak Hits Parx Jockey Colony

Multiple sources have told the Paulick Report as many as 10 jockeys currently based at Parx Racing in Bensalem, Pa., have tested positive for COVID-19 in the last week. In addition, the sources said, one racing official who regularly comes in close contact with riders has also tested positive.

Track officials have not issued any statements concerning COVID-19 and could not be reached for comment.

Parx races Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays.

Angel R. Rodriguez, fourth leading jockey during the current meet, was off all mounts on Nov. 18 and has not been named to ride this week. At least two other riders who have been riding regularly at Parx, Jason Nguyen and Luis Rivera, were off their mounts last week and not named in entries for the upcoming week.

Numerous jockey changes are anticipated on Monday's card as a number of riders were said to have tested positive since entries were taken for the Nov. 23-24-25 races.

The post Sources: COVID-19 Outbreak Hits Parx Jockey Colony appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights