The Comments Section: Owner Responsibility And An Appreciation For The Workers In The Barn

Nearly a year after permanently disabling comments on The Paulick Report, the comments section is back! Well, sort of. We can't fire up story comments again. The number of hours our staff was collectively losing in moderation (which, despite automation tools, often failed to remove libelous or trolly comments) was too great, and the few bad actors out there made it too labor-intensive to continue, even as we tried many different systems to combat them. The good news is, we are bringing back reader voices here on the Paulick Report with this new feature. Read a previous edition here.

In response to Chelsea Hackbarth's piece 'Help Wanted: KEEP Helping Kentucky Farms With Strategies To Improve Employee Retention In A Tough Labor Market'

I love working with horses and the equine industry in general.

Why would anyone not involved with horses from a young age want to work these types of jobs when they could make more at a restaurant, work less hours and get paid overtime when they work it? Retail, warehouse, factory, restaurants and just about every other industry pays far more than farm industry.

If most general farm managers can make six-figure salaries and department managers make $60-$80k, regular employees should start out making at least $35k a year after taxes, employees shouldn't have to work six days a week, should get paid overtime if they work more than 40 hours and have access to benefits.

This industry keeps talking about how vets suffer from long hours and low pay and poor treatment, if they're treating the doctors who treat their horses like this, how do you think they treat the grooms, night watchman and the lower tier personnel? Do you think our personal well-being is valued more than a vet?

Most equine workers are there six days a week in the rain, snow, ice, blazing heat or below freezing temperatures. We're constantly filling up buckets in the summer and breaking up ice in the winter. We're watching for illness and signs of distress. We're anticipating weather movements so we can determine what to do with our horses that day. We're waiting for a mare to foal and stay as long as it takes to make sure it's all taken care of before we even consider leaving for that day.

Are we not important enough to keep happy? Are vets the only ones that matter? We are there for the horse every day while vets are there for your horse every so often, shouldn't we be part of the focus?

The love of the horse goes a long way in helping us stay in the industry but that love doesn't pick up where the low pay ends. Morale on a lot of farms is down. Spirits are low. Help is scarce.

The pandemic has and still is driving up the cost of everything and the wages are staying stagnant while most other industries have started to raise theirs to retain and gain new employees. The equine industry has refused to do this thus far and it's hemorrhaging skilled workers and deterring new ones.

I've watched more horsemen and women walk away than stay and it's still happening. More farms are losing help, they then overwork what help they have to compensate and then more leave because of that. It's a vicious cycle and until pay and hours worked and overall treatment of the equine employee gets better, it'll continue to die a slow painful death.

Jon Hyman, fan, groom, and foreman

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In response to Ray Paulick's commentary 'View From The Eighth Pole: Soul Searching, Restitution In Order For Owners Who Supported Jorge Navarro's Stable':

Regarding your View from the Eighth Pole about restitution to owners of horses who finished behind Jorge Navarro horses: my wife and I are owners of Aaron Racing Stables and had a very nice mare named Mia Bella Rossa, who in the years 2019 through 2021 and won eight races for us after being claimed for $12,500.

On July 16, 2019, she ran very well and lost a close battle with a Navarro horse named Cuddle Kitten. We were three and a half lengths ahead of the next horse and the rest of the field were far behind. Navarro received Cuddle Kitten from her owners, Flying P Stables, a start before this one, and she promptly won four races in a row including a starter at Saratoga. The Equibase numbers in those races were 10 to 20 points higher than she had ever run before.

It would be nice for a small owner, one or two horses at a time, to receive the $12,800 difference between first and second in that race. While we doubt that Navarro will pay restitution to all of the owners so cheated, we look forward to following the path of this issue.

Andy Aaron, owner

I disagree with applying restitution if the prosecution is not required to prove the medication given changed the order of the races involved. For example, the federal charges are things like “misbranding conspiracy, obstruction, smuggling, and unlawful distribution of prescription drugs.” These have a far lower standard for proving guilt than proving a drug is both performance enhancing and forbidden. As a result, the punishment should be far less as well.

In Navarro's case he admitted to using a blood booster, which I assume is Erythropoietin (EPO). It is a Class 1 drug with a Class A penalty that would result in a loss of purse. However, other trainers like Servis are accused of using clenbuterol, which is permitted under certain circumstances, and SGF-100, which both the Australian and Hong Kong racing authorities have stated their belief that it is useless.

The key problem with Navarro is the concept of an estoppel. My understanding is that the racing commission's failure to assert its right to enforce the rules in a timely manner makes the rules unenforceable. Navarro's juice man shoes illustrate that he was making little effort to disguise his behavior and that the commission made even less effort to punish it. The commission's complacency may have encouraged other trainers to join the “dark side.” I assume I am in the minority with my opinion.

Richard Neil Braithwaite, horseplayer

Although it didn't make it into a Paulick Report story, Ray tweeted last week questioning the choice of trainer by NYTHA president Joe Appelbaum, who was running a horse with Juan Vazquez via his Off The Hook stable. Those questions prompted this response from writer Tom Noonan: 

“In his statement to me, Joe Appelbaum accepted responsibility for retaining Vazquez. He also responded to my query promptly (within hours on a Friday afternoon) and exhibited the transparency that is so rare in racing. Would that New York's State Gaming Commission had the same level of accountability. After all, they granted Vazquez a license after denying him with no meaningful explanation in early 2018.

Racing has plenty of room for examining the accountability of owners as I argued in this post about owners much more prominent than Joe Appelbaum. And it must be done with transparency.”

–Read Noonan's complete op/ed on his blog here.

2021 has been a busy news year for horse racing, and we know there will be more stories that spark discussion and reaction from our readership. As always, you can send your letters to the editor, tips, comments, and rants to our publisher and editor here.

The post The Comments Section: Owner Responsibility And An Appreciation For The Workers In The Barn appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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What Did You Read? Paulick Report’s Top Stories Of 2021

As we prepare to close the book on 2021, it's time for our traditional look back on the most popular stories of the year by traffic. We've done this for six years now (see previous editions of 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, and 2020).

This was the year of the litmus test for Thoroughbred racing: from the ongoing federal doping case against Jorge Navarro and Jason Servis to the actions of the sport's top jockeys, as well as the ongoing drama surrounding Kentucky Derby first-place finisher Medina Spirit.

We at the Paulick Report could not do the work we do without our readers and our advertisers. Thank you this holiday season (and always) for your support. 

The post What Did You Read? Paulick Report’s Top Stories Of 2021 appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Judge Modifies, But Does Not Revoke Fishman’s Bail Conditions

After federal prosecutors alleged that indicted Florida veterinarian Seth Fishman is still selling purportedly performance-enhancing drugs (PEDs) while awaiting trial in the international racehorse doping conspiracy case, the judge in the case Wednesday ordered new bail modification conditions after hearing both sides of the issue at a Monday hearing that could have–but didn't–result in Fishman's bail being revoked.

Judge Mary Kay Vyskocil of United States District Court (Southern District of New York) wrote in a Dec. 22 order that the following added terms shall apply to Fishman's pretrial release:

“The defendant shall surrender all drugs and/or substances now stored at [the address for his Boca Raton business] to an agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Food and Drug Administration, or the designee of either the FBI or the FDA, within two weeks of Dec. 20. At all times prior to the surrender of the drugs or substances … the defendant, his agents, and any employees of any business controlled by the defendant shall refrain from entering the [Boca Raton business]. For the duration of the period of his pretrial release, the defendant, and all entities that he controls, shall refrain from the manufacture and/or distribution of any drug or substance, and from the administration of any drug or substance, apart from the drugs and substances that the defendant may administer to himself in the course of self-treatment for his own medical conditions.”

Fishman is charged with two felony counts related to drug alteration, misbranding, and conspiring to defraud the government. His trail is tentatively expected to begin in January.

On Dec. 6, federal prosecutors asked the judge overseeing the case to consider revoking the bail terms of Fishman's pretrial release. The basis for that request was that an employee of Fishman's had informed the government that Fishman was still allegedly creating pharmaceuticals for foreign distribution, and an FBI search of Fishman's business permitted by that employee allegedly turned up some of the same drugs that had formed the basis of Fishman's originally charged offenses.

One week later, Fishman's legal team denied the charges while alleging that the move by the feds to get Fishman's bail revoked was a ploy to undermine his legal preparation for the upcoming trial.

The post Judge Modifies, But Does Not Revoke Fishman’s Bail Conditions appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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View From The Eighth Pole: Soul Searching, Restitution In Order For Owners Who Supported Jorge Navarro’s Stable

From Jan. 1, 2016, through March 8, 2020, trainer Jorge Navarro won 741 races from 2,468 starts. That's a win percentage of an unfathomable 30%.

The owners of those runners earned $24,360,514 in purse money.

That's 741 wins and millions of dollars in first-place money that, in my opinion, rightfully belongs to someone else. The judge who sentenced Navarro to five years in prison agrees. She has ordered Navarro to pay restitution of $25,860,514, an amount he surely doesn't have unless the owners who benefited from his cheating are willing to fork it over.

Here's just a few examples.

There's the $180,000 that Lael Stable should have received for a win by the stable's Divining Rod in the Grade 2 Kelso Handicap at Belmont Park in 2017. The Arnaud Delacour runner had to settle for $60,000 after finishing second behind what we can only assume was a juiced Sharp Azteca, who raced for the Gelfenstein Farm of Ivan Rodriguez. Divining Rod, a son of Tapit, was deprived of a G2 win, something that also would have had ripple effects on the catalogue page of his family female.

Another horse cheated out of a graded stakes win by Sharp Azteca was Brittlyn Stable's Forevamo, trained at the time by Al Stall. The Uncle Mo gelding finished second in the G3 Pat Day Mile Stakes at Churchill Downs in 2016. He would have earned $141,050 for first place but instead received just $45,500. His owner didn't get the glory of standing in the Churchill Downs winner's circle with the Hall of Fame jockey for whom the race is named or get new hardware for their trophy case.

It is about the money, but it isn't JUST about the money.

I learned that from Josie Martino, who with husband Salvatore Delfino raced Wildcat Red in the colors of their Honors Stable Corp. The son of D'Wildcat won six of 22 starts for trainer Jose Garoffalo, including the G2 Fountain of Youth Stakes at Gulfstream Park in 2014.

Two years later, Wildcat Red finished second in the Sunshine Millions Sprint Stakes at the South Florida track, earning $29,100. The winner of the $90,210 first-place prize was X Y Jet, who at the time was racing for Gelfenstein Farm and trained by Navarro. The trainer would later admit to injecting the horse with illegal performance enhancing drugs.

X Y Jet dropped dead two months before Navarro was taken into custody as part of the sweeping FBI investigation that led to indictments against more than two dozen trainers, veterinarians and drug suppliers.

No owners have been charged, though those who gave horses to Navarro to train may have benefited the most from his cheating.

Martino and Delfino hit it big with Wildcat Red, a $30,000 OBS 2-year-old purchase who earned $1.1 million in 22 starts. He was one of the first horses campaigned by their small stable. Yet even with the horse's success, Martino said in a phone call to the Paulick Report, she and her husband feel cheated by having to compete against a juiced Navarro runner in the Sunshine Millions. “We are speaking out in Red's honor,” said Martino, an admitted animal lover who was stunned by Navarro's callous treatment of horses. “Red can't talk, but he deserves to be heard. What happened wasn't right and it wasn't fair to the horse.”

In virtually every one of the 741 races won by Navarro from 2016-'20, there are similar stories of horses, owners, trainers and jockeys being deprived of a victory and higher purse money. It might be a claiming race or a stakes, on dirt or turf, in New York, New Jersey or Florida. Cheating is cheating at any level.

The owners of horses trained by Navarro who gained financially by his serial doping might benefit  from some serious soul searching. If it's only about winning, if that's why they sent horses to someone so brazen that he had a customized pair of shoes with #juiceman printed on them in big letters, this game would be better off without them. It will survive.

In the now-famous video filmed at Monmouth Park in the summer of 2017, when Navarro and one of his owners, Randal Gindi of Monster Racing Stables, joked about Navarro being the “juiceman,” the trainer had a brief moment of candor.

“We f – – k everyone,” Navarro said.

He wasn't kidding.

That's my view from the eighth pole.

The post View From The Eighth Pole: Soul Searching, Restitution In Order For Owners Who Supported Jorge Navarro’s Stable appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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