Breeders’ Cup Presents Connections: In Three Decades, Block Has Seen A Lot Of Change In Illinois Racing

When people ask children what they want to be when they grow up, the answers — sometimes comical, sometimes fanciful, and rarely practical — are rarely predictive of their eventual career path.

But for Chris Block, it was always a given that no matter where his life took him, no matter what job he aspired to or settled for, horses would always follow.

“My family has been in the industry in Illinois breeding and racing for probably more than 50 years,” said Block. “I grew up around the racing industry with my father and mother allowing me to get involved and taking me to the track and giving me the experience of going to the races. It is something that I cherish from my childhood days.

“First and foremost, I love horses, so that made it easy for me to get involved. I was fascinated by the racing part of it so those two loves I just combined. I had it in my mind that I wanted to be in the industry in some capacity and training was what interested me the most.”

After attending the equine program at a junior college in Illinois for two years, during which he worked for Hall of Fame trainer Bill Mott, Block was eventually able to strike out on his own in 1989. It was his parents who would give him his first break, sending him to Kentucky with a handful of homebred horses. Block sent out his first horse at Turfway Park but kept his sights on a return to the Windy City. Greater still was the goal of acquiring stalls at Arlington Park, the beating heart of Chicago racing.

“My eventual plan was to make my way to Chicago which I did. Once I was there, my first win was at Sportsman's Park,” said Block. “My father, he enjoys the industry just as much as me, he went and bought me a couple ready-made horses out of sales and it took off from there. It wasn't easy getting stalls and getting established in Chicago but my most favorite racetrack, and my family's, is Arlington. I was fortunate enough to get in there and I got four stalls. I eventually graduated to 10 stalls and at one point I had 50 stalls.”

Since that first horse left the gate at Turfway Park, Block has sent out 1,358 winners to date and banked more than $46 million in purses. Among his top winners is Grade 1 Clark Handicap and G1 Donn Handicap winner Giant Oak, who stood at Millennium Farms in Kentucky until his premature death in 2017. Block now maintains contingents of horses in Illinois, Kentucky, and Louisiana, though his home base remains Chicago.

But three decades after Block returned to Illinois with the overarching intent of racing and supporting his state program, Block, his family, and the entirety of the Illinois Thoroughbred breeding and racing community find themselves in a precarious situation. The closure of Arlington has left the state's horsemen in limbo and while the passage of an expanded gaming bill could bring business back to the state, relief may not come fast enough.

“Arlington closing was devastating,” said Block. “The history of Illinois horse racing in the last 10 years … no one would believe the book if I wrote it. I've been heavily involved in the political process. I lobbied hard with my constituents here to get gaming at the racetracks. I stood arm and arm with the Arlington/Churchill representatives in Springfield and the Hawthorne representatives in a strong effort to save the industry that was headed in the wrong direction and behind the times.

“The model of gaming at the racetracks and 'racinos' works in every other state. We worked hard and passed the gaming bill twice, but it was vetoed twice by Governor (Pat) Quinn for various reasons. That set us back, but then we passed it again with the current Governor, J. B. Pritzker. But Churchill turned their back and partnered up with Rivers Casino. They have now left a gaping hole in the industry that I'm not sure we can recover from unless Hawthorne Park comes through with their racino and there have been major delays with that. This is a central struggle that I face as a trainer and my family and so many others face and breeders and owners.”

Faced with a truncated Illinois racing calendar that now only includes 75 days, drastically cutting the opportunities for trainers, breeders, and owners to take advantage of Illinois-bred incentives, Block is concerned that breeding with continue to decline until the program is all but snuffed out.

“We have about 60 acres and we currently we have 14 broodmares,” said Block. “That's been a number that is consistent for us. We have had more, and even though the industry has really struggled in the last 10 years, my parents have held strong. But it has been a real struggle for Team Block. We're going to hang in there, but we are concerned about the future. From a breeding standpoint, even 10 years ago the industry was producing 1,000 foals. The last count for 2021 was 151 and we hear it will dip under 100 for next year.”

In an effort to help supplement their breeding program, Block and his family have had to retool their strategy and focus some of their mares on strictly breeding to sell. For the past three years, the family have sold those designated foals at the Keeneland September Yearling Sale. The rest remain with the family and go on to race.

Similar to the change in he's seen in the breeding shed, Block has experienced a notable reduction in the number of horses in his racing stable.

“I used to have close to 50 plus horses in the barn. This year, the number of horses was 27,” said Block. “The effects of what has happened in the state can be seen right there, and I think that number will dwindle even more. The program won't work much longer unless we see benefit from the passage of the gaming bill.

“We're also hoping a miracle happens at Arlington Park and that someone partners with the Chicago Bears, who are in line to buy the property, and puts together a multi-purpose design for that ground. It's one of the most beautiful racetracks in the world and we want that to be preserved. We want the chance to be able to race there in the future. We're the third largest market for horse racing and how racing could be on death's door here is beyond me. The horsemen find it amazing that we've arrived at this point. We've tried our best, but we've been dealt bad cards along the way by entities who have turned their back on the industry.”

With so uncertainty a reality that he has come to accept, Block continues to do what he loves: train. On a brighter note, his barn continues to churn out winners — among them, 5-year-old homebred Another Mystery (by Temple City), who took the Bob F. Wright Memorial Stakes Nov. 27 at Fair Grounds Race Course & Slots.

“Another Mystery has jumped to the forefront for the barn,” said Block. “Another horse that has been the stalwart for my barn before him is Cammack (Giant's Causeway). He's 11 and he's been what I call the 'blue collar' horse. He's raced in Illinois for the majority of his life, and he's been so consistent.

“I also have a filly by the name of Fate Factor who has been a really strong one for us, and we have another filly named She Can't Sing for that I train for Mr. [Bob] Lothenbach who has had a really good year. Then we have some young horses that are really improving, so we've been doing pretty well.”

A member of the Illinois Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association board, Block plans to continue his efforts to improve the state of racing at home and has thrown his hat in the ring as a candidate for president of the association. With so much on the line, he's prepared to go to bat for his horses and Illinois racing and breeding interests. The alternative, for Block, is unthinkable.

“Really, if you looked at Indiana, and you look at Pennsylvania, and you look at New York, that is where Illinois should be,” said Block. “I just hope we don't see what is happening in Illinois in other states.

“We're at a crucial point for racing and breeding here in Illinois. It will either survive, and get really, really good, or it will crash and burn very quickly here. I want to see if I can make a difference.”

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Letter To The Editor: Closing Arlington Will Rob Sport Of Future Fans

I was there on June 29, 1973. Arlington Park was chosen for the return race for Secretariat, his first since capturing the Belmont Stakes, and the Triple Crown, by 31 lengths. I was a month away from turning two, but at least I can say I was there when arguably the greatest thoroughbred ever ran.

I was there on May 25, 1979. I was in the grandstand at Arlington with mom, dad, and my two brothers when someone noticed a large black plume of smoke in the distance from the southeast. A man next to us commented, “you know, that's where O'Hare is.” Apart from the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, the American Airlines Flight 191 crash has the worst death toll in American aviation history.

I was there on July 31, 1985. Mom and dad decided we were going to Arlington, like many other times, that day. We'd heard about the restaurant fire but figured it was small and the horses would still be running. It wasn't a short trip either, we were coming from Milwaukee, so we had to be pretty sure, or naive. Needless to say, they weren't running and the entire grandstand was engulfed in flames when we arrived.

I was there on August 25, 1985. The Miracle Million was a sea of humanity and tents. We were all just so glad to see racing at Arlington again, if only for the day. My brother and I had win tickets on Teleprompter and my dad hit the exacta with Greinton.

I was there on July 13, 1996. The Citation Challenge was put together swiftly by management    to attract Cigar, who was attempting to tie Citation's mark of 16 consecutive victories.

After the win and his press obligations, Jerry Bailey autographed a Cigar T-shirt for me, and many others, in the paddock near the jocks room, showing unbelievable patience and generosity with us, even telling a security guard who offered him a way out, that it was OK, he'd keep signing  until he got everyone.

I was there on August 16, 2003. Storming Home was clearly the best horse in that Arlington Million, but unfortunately he spooked right before the wire and interfered with two of his rivals. It was unbearably hot that day and I almost suffered a heat stroke arguing with a guy about the inevitable DQ, asking him if nothing happened, “Why is Gary Stevens out there lying on the turf course?”

I was there on May 23, 2009. There were a lot of horses with a chance to win the Arlington Matron that day as they turned for home, in a frantic attempt to give his mount the room it needed to possibly win the race, Jamie Theriot slammed into a horse to his right causing a chain reaction of horses and jockeys flying everywhere. One of the jockeys, Rene Douglas, went down and would never walk again.

I was there at Arlington Park not just on these more notable days, but hundreds and hundreds of other days. It didn't matter if it was Million Day or just an afternoon for basic claimers and allowance runners , I wanted to be there.

First, it wasn't my choice, if mom and dad were going, the kids were going. Luckily, dad caught the “bug” from grandpa, and mom caught it from dad, and so the story goes. Later on, I learned it wasn't my choice again, it had chosen me and I had caught the “bug,” and I was helpless to resist.

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I was thoroughly enthralled with going to Arlington Park; it completely captured my imagination and I loved everything about it. From looking through my dad's old Daily Racing Forms to pretending I was a jockey riding a horse on the arms of the couch to finding wooden planks in the   garage and placing them on the lawn so I could park my little wagon, just the way I'd seen the crew at Arlington do when putting the starting gate on the turf course.

One of my greatest teenage moments was not my driving license or going to prom, it was going up to a betting window at the age of 14 or 15, calling out a bet to the teller, and him giving me the ticket, not even questioning whether I was old enough to bet. I thought I ruled the world. I was eventually caught, taken to the security office, and waited for my parents to be called to the office so they could be notified of my offense, like they didn't know. I pretended to listen to the security guard as he scolded me but it was during a race, I was listening to the track announcer, not him.

So, fast forward to 2021, it looks like those days at Arlington Park could be a thing of the past. It's been heartbreaking to witness. That beautiful, breathtaking building on a wonderful piece of land has been decided to be unwanted as a racing property anymore. None of us should be surprised, we've seen this movie play out before at Hollywood Park and Calder.

And, yes, there's plenty of blame to go around, from the foot dragging politicians in Illinois to the management of CDI, but I am not interested in getting into that argument. I have just been hoping  and praying Arlington would get a different fate. It deserves better.

People still actually go to Arlington. On the weekends, they have good crowds with people who are interested and are fans of horse racing. It is the most spectacular way to spend a Saturday afternoon in the summer. Not like these racinos where the horse racing is an almost afterthought, or a necessary evil that's part of a bigger deal to get slots and table games into the venue. I've been to  these racinos too; very few are betting or watching the horses run. No new fans are being created.

And that's the hardest part for me, if Arlington goes away, no kid in the future will see the things I've seen, experienced what I've experienced, or have the memories that I've had over the last 50 years. Nobody else will be able to be touched by a place so profoundly as Arlington has touched me and my family.

And I know all the cliches and proclamations: change is inevitable, time moves on, CDI is just doing right by their shareholders, and that there are still plenty of other racetracks running. I understand that and do accept that change is inevitable but this one is personal to me. It's where I learned the game that has been with me my entire life.

I've witnessed some of the highest highs and lowest lows at Arlington Park, I've seen human stars like Pat Day, Earlie Fires, Jorge Velasquez, Jerry Bailey, Junior Alvarado, Rene Douglas, Sandy Hawley and countless others, and marveled at their courage. I've watched equine stars like Lost Code, Meafara, Taylor's Special, Buck's Boy, Black Tie Affair, Dreaming of Anna, Manila, Gio Ponti and countless others, and been in awe of their speed and determination. And in another week, that might be all that's left, memories.

The statue above the paddock at Arlington is that of the photo between John Henry and The Bart from the first Arlington Million, it's called “Against All Odds,” and the Million run 27 days after the fire that took down the entire building is referred to as the”Miracle Million,”  Is it too much to ask that Arlington still has more Millions left in it, or is it going to take another miracle? Or is the hope that CDI sells the property to one of the bidders that still plans to use the land for horse racing against all odds? Maybe so.

The sport needs as many places like Arlington Park as possible. We can't keep losing treasures like this and say, “it'll be fine.” We need the fan base to grow, not just the wagering dollars to increase. You do that at the track. And if this truly is the end, goodbye Arlington, thanks for the memories, it was a hell of a ride. You will be truly missed, it's too bad your current sellers don't feel the same way.

– Rob Kaegi is a lifelong fan of Thoroughbred racing

If you would like to submit a letter to the editor, please write to info at paulickreport.com and include contact information where you may be reached if editorial staff have any questions.

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Reader Mail Bag: Adieu To Arlington

The following is a collection of letters we've received from readers in recent days as the permanent closure of Arlington Park seems imminent. If you'd like to submit a letter to our editors, Please click/tap here.

Would create lots of controversy if I had written this in the former comments boxes you had, but the fall of Arlington Park (sorry I was never there) followed the only business rule under profit-oriented capitalism, which is always to endeavor to make the highest rate of profit you can get. It's America's real national religion.

Racing has declined to the point at which the large land areas, which most big tracks possess, is worth more if sold to real estate or developer interests. I fully expect downstate New York racing to go the same way one day. I always thought Aqueduct would go first, but I'm beginning to think Belmont might also be either shrunk dramatically or sold in total to developers. They certainly have declined horribly, both in terms of track accommodations and attendance. Back in the day, tracks were owned by sportsmen and women could never have foreseen this day — but unfortunately, it's here.

–Michael Castellano
Racing fan since the 1960s

Hi Ray, Just wanted to say thank you for your piece about the bitter fall of Arlington.

(If you missed it, it's available here.)

I, too, fell in love with racing there in the 1970s. Over the years, I got to see Secretariat, John Henry, and local legend Rossi Gold, and my cousin and I were present for the “Miracle Million.” I am absolutely heartsick about what has happened. It feels as if COVID-19 has stolen the present and the future, and now, even the past is being taken away.

–Lori Barron
Racing Fan

Hi Ray, Been a long time reader and appreciate the work you do! Just read your Arlington Park story “The Bitter End.” I live close by so it's my home track. What you wrote is so perfect and spot on. When I first heard of this being the last year, my only thought was I need to go one last time. I've been asked a few times by friends but I can't do it. It's not only the bad management as you stated or Churchill Downs greed, it's just to hard to see that beautiful place one last time knowing it's coming down. My wife, my son, my friends have so many great memories and just wish we could continue them at Arlington. I know there are other great and fun tracks but there not close to me like Arlington. Thanks for sharing your thoughts and listening to mine.

–Tom Horak
Racing Fan

I'm not sure what your coverage has been about Arlington but I would suggest looking into the political side of the story based on the state refusing to allow slots for so many years I just believe CD got fed up and walked away. I wanted to blame CD at first glance, however “after further review“ I lay the blame on the crooked politicians of Chicago and the state.

As we say in the Midwest “everything in Chicago is fixed except the roads.”

–Thom Albright
Former owner and racing fan

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The Bitter End: Arrogance Of Arlington Park Management Washes Away Memories Of A Better Time

The new millennium was not kind to horse racing in Chicagoland.

In 2000, the Bidwill family's Sportsman's Park, the bullring in the gritty south side suburb of Cicero that for years hosted both Standardbred and Thoroughbred racing, had just been transformed to an auto track that planned to continue offering Thoroughbred races on dirt spread over a concrete oval. That absurd experiment lasted a couple years. The auto track was a dud and a financial disaster. The dirt track was unsafe. Sportsman's ran its last horse race in 2002 and is now the site of several big box stores.

And 2000 was also the year Richard Duchossois merged his family-owned Arlington Park in the northwest Chicago suburb of Arlington Heights into the portfolio of the publicly traded Churchill Downs Inc. Then under the leadership of Thomas Meeker, Churchill Downs had been on something of an acquisition spree, having just purchased Calder Race Course near Miami, Fla., and Hollywood Park in Inglewood, Calif.

We know how those acquisitions have worked out for the Thoroughbred industry. Meeker left Churchill Downs in 2006, one year after Hollywood Park was sold to a land development company that would close the track in 2013 and construct an NFL football stadium in its place.

Calder's grandstand was torn down in 2015 and the racing surface and a portion of the stables were leased to The Stronach Group, owner of Gulfstream Park, to run a spectator-less meet re-branded as Gulfstream Park West. That lease expired last year and Calder/GP West is now history. So, too, are the purse supplements that came from the Calder Casino, for which horsemen helped Churchill Downs Inc. fight for approval in a 2008 referendum.

It's difficult to imagine how there is a future for Arlington Park as a racetrack after the current meet ends next month. Churchill Downs Inc. is majority owner of Rivers Casino 10 miles away and turned down the opportunity created in 2019 by gambling expansion legislation that would have permitted an on-site casino at Arlington. Illinois breeders, owners and trainers were stunned and felt betrayed when Arlington said it would not apply for a casino license and instead sell the property for development. For years, decades even, horsepeople stood side by side with Arlington representatives in the state capitol in Springfield, lobbying for legislation to permit slots or casinos at racetracks.

Arlington did not apply for 2022 racing dates and it would not be in Churchill Downs Inc's best interests as a casino company to sell the track to anyone who would offer pari-mutuel wagering on horse racing. That would be competition for the gambling dollar and conceivably could hurt Rivers Casino's business.

The Carey family's Hawthorne Race Course appears to be Illinois racing's last hope – unless you count old Fairmount Park in southern Illinois, which has been rebranded as FanDuel Sports Book and Horse Racing.

Hawthorne, which sat directly adjacent to Sportsman's Park, announced plans for a $500 million casino expansion following the 2019 gambling legislation. But construction on the casino was halted in April, with no public explanation or a timeline for completion.

Even if the Hawthorne casino is completed, the situation is far from ideal. Hawthorne is now the only track hosting Standardbred racing in the Chicago area, and this creates not only a potential conflict over racing dates between the two breeds, but future revenue from the casino earmarked for purses will have to be divided between Thoroughbreds and Standardbreds. The 2019 legislation permitted a new harness track/casino to be built in an area south of Chicago, but to date neither a suitable investor or property has been approved.

Arlington's racing days are dwindling down to a precious few, The palatial grandstand remains one of the great wonders of the North American racing world, though it's obvious the once pristine aesthetics and maintenance standards set by the very hands-on Richard Duchossois have fallen considerably as he approaches the century mark in years. Unsightly weeds growing throughout the plant are just one of the eyesores that wouldn't have been there a decade ago. In fact, back then, Duchossois himself might have grabbed a weed wacker to show the maintenance crew how it's done, just as he took control of traffic flow into the parking lot one Arlington Million day not that many years ago.

Speaking of Arlington Million Day, or whatever it was called this year after the signature race's purse was slashed and renamed the Mr. D. Stakes in honor of Duchossois, how about that Tony Petrillo, the track's president?

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Based on reporting by Jim O'Donnell in the Daily Herald (apparently the only Chicago-area newspaper to cover this year's three Grade 1 races, with both the Chicago Tribune and Sun-Times ignoring them), Petrillo had quite the meltdown, lashing out at media members who did come to cover the races. According to O'Donnell and confirmed by several writers and photographers from horse racing publications, Petrillo would not allow photographers, other than the track photographer, to get in position to photograph any of the big turf races.

After the day's final race was run, buoyed with members of the security staff, Petrillo cleared out the press box while those same writers and photographers were trying to finish their assignments and send their stories and pictures to their respective publications.  Petrillo even told one photographer who happened to be on assignment for a Churchill Downs Inc. subsidiary, that she was “banned for life” from Arlington Park.

It's the same treatment owners and trainers have been receiving from Arlington management in recent years.

There was a time when Arlington Park's press box was as welcoming and friendly as any track in the country. It wasn't just the comfortable accommodations or the excellent meals that were served to grateful writers and photographers. More importantly, Richard Duchossois would walk through the press box and thank each member of the media individually for coming to Arlington Park, asking them if there's anything they needed.

How times have changed.

My gut feeling is that this is the end of the road for Arlington Park, the track where I fell in love with racing in the 1970s. It's been a long, slow and painful death to observe since Duchossois relinquished complete control of Arlington in 2000. I may not agree with them, but I understand business decisions and fiduciary responsibilities that drive publicly traded companies like Churchill Downs Inc. What I don't understand is the arrogance and nastiness from Arlington's management that has accompanied the track's tragic fall.

I had always thought the final days of Arlington Park would be bittersweet, a mix of sorrow with the great memories furnished by the horses and people who put on the show for so many decades. But the architects of what seems destined to be this wonderful track's final chapter seem hell bent on making sure it's a bitter end.

 

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