Trainer Chad Brown Finally Going For The Green At Kentucky Downs

With two wins from three starters on opening day and another four horses entered this weekend, Chad Brown – America's champion turf trainer for eight consecutive years – has made a connection this season with Kentucky Downs, the one track in the U.S.A. that runs all its races on grass.

Now that he has a Kentucky division based at Churchill Downs managed by Whit Beckman, the four-time Eclipse Award-winning trainer is better positioned to compete for the exceptional purses offered by Kentucky Downs over its distinctive European-style course.

“I think a lot of it is just stabling at Churchill, the proximity now gives us that option,” Beckman said of running at Kentucky Downs, where an average of $2 million a day is scheduled to be paid out in purses over this six-date meet. “Where focusing primarily on Saratoga and the Northeast in the past, shipping-wise it didn't make a lot of sense. You'd run in Kentucky on Derby Day and be out and back in New York pretty soon afterward. I think just having the string down here at Churchill makes it doable and easy. We're in and out in a day, just like any other race-and-return situation.”

Now the friendly ribbing is that Brown finally found Kentucky Downs, and he didn't waste any time capitalizing. His team pounced on Monday's opening card and collected total of $500,400 with a victory by Juddmonte Farm's Flavius in the $750,000 Tourist Mile Stakes and Head of Plains Partners' Fluffy Socks in a $90,000 maiden special weight race.

“I'm thrilled getting to go to Kentucky Downs,” said Beckman, a Louisville product who never before had the opportunity to go to the track while working for New York-based Todd Pletcher and now Brown. “I thought it was an awesome place. Just such a nice place to race horses, just a different feel from your traditional racetrack dynamics. I loved it down there. I thought it was great.”

Led by Regal Glory, the 9-5 morning-line favorite in the one-mile G3 English Channel Ladies Turf, the Brown barn will be well-represented this weekend. Graded stakes-placed Tapit Today also has a place in the gate for the Ladies Turf; Klaravich Stable's Front Run the Fed looks to be a contender in the deep G3 RUNHAPPY Turf Sprint field; Lady Lawyer is on the also-eligible list for the G3 Real Solution Ladies Sprint and needs a couple of defections to draw into the body of the race.

Brown's rise to the top of the North American trainer's standings table has been fueled by his skill with turf horses. After a five-year run on the staff of the late Hall of Fame trainer Bobby Frankel, Brown opened his own stable in Nov. 2007, managing a total of 10 horses sent to him by prominent owners Ken and Sarah Ramsey and Gary and Mary West. Brown's first graded stakes win came a year later on the turf in the G3 Miss Grillo with Maram, who then gave Brown his first Breeder's Cup win in the Juvenile Fillies Turf.

In 2012, Brown ended the season atop the turf training earnings list, a spot he has maintained in every year since. Last year, his turf horses earned $24.2 million of his all-surfaces total of $31.1 million.

Regal Glory, bred and owned by Paul Pompa, made a substantial contribution to the Brown stable's turf earnings last year, banking $338,834 with a 3-2-0 record from six grass starts as a 3-year-old. The daughter of Kentucky Derby winner Animal Kingdom won the Penn Oaks and completed the Saratoga double of the G3 Lake George and the G2 Lake Placid. She is winless in three starts – two of them G1 races – since the Lake Placid last August. Each of those races was won by another filly or mare from Brown's deep stable of female grass runners. Following a fourth-place finish in the G1 Just A Game at Belmont Park, Regal Glory was shipped to Kentucky in early August and has had five works for Beckman. Jose Ortiz, with two wins and three seconds in five starts on Regal Glory, has the mount.

“She's been training away down at Churchill and we're really happy with her progress and how she's maintaining,” Beckman said. “She's just been up against tough stablemates.”

Hall of Fame jockey Javier Castellano rode Flavius in the Tourist Stakes and will be aboard Tapit Today for the first time in the Ladies Turf. The 5-year-old Tapit Today, co-owned by William Lawrence and Bradley Thoroughbreds, returned from a five-month layoff to run fourth, beaten 1 ¾ lengths by Nay Lady Nay, in the G3 Matchmaker on July 18 at Monmouth Park. The Kentucky-bred daughter of Tapit is seeking her first stakes victory.

Front Run the Fed enters the RUNHAPPY Turf Sprint off a two-month break in races following his victory in an allowance/optional claimer at on July 5 at Belmont Park. He has been the favorite in his last eight races, winning four, topped by the Better Talk Now in 2019 at Saratoga. This will be his first try in graded-stakes company and first six-furlong race since April 2019 for the off-the-pace runner.

Rabbah Bloodstock's Lady Lawyer, a daughter of Blame bred by Claiborne Farm, started her career in Europe with John Gosden. She was moved to the U.S. to Brown's care this season and has a win and a second in two starts for her new trainer. In her most recent start, she prevailed by a neck in the 5 ½-furlong allowance/optional claimer, her first win on turf. All three of her wins in Great Britain were over artificial surfaces.

The post Trainer Chad Brown Finally Going For The Green At Kentucky Downs appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Weekend Lineup: Queen’s Plate, Kentucky Downs

Last week's 146th Kentucky Derby marked the second leg of the 2020 American Triple Crown and this weekend sees the Canadian Triple Crown get underway with the 161st Queen's Plate at Woodbine. The spotlight doesn't solely rest north of the border as the boutique Kentucky Downs meet hosts its marquee day of stakes on September 12. Each stakes on the Kentucky Downs program on Saturday is worth at least $500,000, with the four Grade 3 stakes highlighted by the $1 million Calumet Farm Kentucky Turf Cup at 1 1/2 miles.

TVG is the go-to network for live broadcasts of both Woodbine and Kentucky Downs racing, providing comprehensive coverage along with live racing from other tracks.

Fans of international racing can also tune in to TVG on Saturday and Sunday to morning to catch five Breeders' Cup “Win and You're In” races. On Saturday, Leopardstown will host three – the Irish Champion Stakes (Breeders' Cup Turf) , the Coolmore America “Justify” Matron Stakes (Filly & Mare Turf) and the KPMG Champions Juvenile Stakes (Juvenile Turf). The action will switch to the Curragh on Sunday for the Moyglare Stud Stakes (Juvenile Fillies Turf) and the Derrinstown Stud Flying Five Stakes (Turf Sprint).

Saturday September 12

4:27 p.m.—$500,000 Grade 3 Kentucky Downs Ladies Turf Stakes at Kentucky Downs on TVG

Trainer Chad Brown, the future Hall of Famer who is a presence at this meet for the first time, has 9-5 favorite Regal Glory in the Ladies Turf Stakes for fillies and mares. Regal Glory is a multiple graded-stakes winner, taking last year's Grade 2 Lake Placid and Grade 3 Lake George at Saratoga, along with two other stakes at age 3. In two starts this year she was second to her talented stablemate Newspaperofrecord in Belmont's Grade 3 Intercontinental and fourth to her in the Grade 1 Just a Game. Brown also entered 5-1 Tapit Today, who finished most recently was a good fourth in Monmouth Park's Grade 3 Matchmaker.

Entries: https://www.equibase.com/static/entry/KD091220USA7-EQB.html

4:51 p.m.—$250,000 Grade 2 Canadian Stakes at Woodbine on TVG

Art of Almost and Elizabeth Way, both trained by Roger Attfield, will take on eight rivals, including multiple Grade 1 winner Cambier Parc, in Saturday's $250,000 Canadian Stakes. Cambier Parc, who last raced nearly a year ago, has won three of her past four starts – including back-to-back Grade 1 triumphs – for OXO Equine and trainer Chad Brown. The four-year-old daughter of Medaglia d'Oro took the Del Mar Oaks last August and followed it up with a victory in the Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup in October.

Entries: https://www.equibase.com/static/entry/WO091220CAN9-EQB.html

4:59 p.m.—$500,000 Grade 3 Kentucky Downs Ladies Sprint Stakes at Kentucky Downs on TVG

The Ladies Sprint provides a scintillating showdown among Grade 1 winner Got Stormy, the 2-1 favorite in the overflow field of 15, and Kimari. The Mark Casse-trained Got Stormy has consistently been tough competing against males in Grade 1 races, including winning last year's Fourstardave at Saratoga and finishing second in her title defense this year, along with a second in last year's Breeders' Cup Mile. Now she'll sprint for the first time in her glorious career that has seen her earn $1.6 million to date. Kimari, trained by Wesley Ward, has only been beaten once in the United States, and that was when fourth in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint at Santa Anita.

Entries: https://www.equibase.com/static/entry/KD091220USA8-EQB.html

5:32 p.m.—$500,000 Kentucky Downs Juvenile Turf Sprint Stakes at Kentucky Downs on TVG

Trainer Wesley Ward has the two morning-line favorites in the Juvenile Turf Sprint in debut winner Outadore (2-1) and Fauci (5-2), who won a Keeneland maiden race on turf and was second in Saratoga's Skidmore on grass. Another interesting horse is 9-2 third choice County Final, who won his debut on grass at Churchill Downs then was second in the Grade 3 Bashford Manor on dirt. Transferred to Hall of Famer Steve Asmussen, County Final romped in Monmouth Park's off-the-turf Tyro Stakes.

Entries: https://www.equibase.com/static/entry/KD091220USA9-EQB.html

5:41 p.m.—$1,000,000 Queen's Plate at Woodbine on TVG

Plate Trial champ Clayton and multiple stakes-winning filly Curlin's Voyage will take on 12 other Queen's Plate hopefuls in the $1 million classic set for 1 ¼ miles. The 161st edition of the Queen's Plate, North America's oldest continually run race, is the first leg of the OLG Canadian Triple Crown, a tri-surface series for Canadian-bred three-year-olds. A son of Bodemeister, Clayton has three wins and one second from four starts for owners Donato Lanni and Daniel Plouffe. Trained by Kevin Attard, who also sends out the filly Merveilleux, the bay colt arrives at the Plate in sharp form, having won two straight, including the Plate Trial on August 15.

Entries: https://www.equibase.com/static/entry/WO091220CAN10-EQB.html

6:04 p.m.—$1,000,000 Grade 3 Calumet Farm Kentucky Cup Turf Stakes at Kentucky Downs on TVG

The Kentucky Turf Cup is headed by Michael Hui's 2019 winner Zulu Alpha and Donegal Racing's 2018 winner Arklow. Both became Grade 1 winners after their 1-2 finish a year ago at Kentucky Downs, with Arklow winning Belmont Park's Joe Hirsch Turf Classic in his next start and Zulu Alpha taking Gulfstream Park's $1 million Pegasus World Cup Turf in January. Zulu Alpha, fourth in last year's Breeders' Cup Turf, has made a claim as being America's best distance turf horse after winning the Pegasus World Cup Turf and tacking on Grade 2 victories in Gulfstream Park's Mac Diarmida and Keeneland's Elkhorn. Arklow is trying to regain his 2019 form, and trainer Brad Cox has been pleased how the 6-year-old horse has responded in training to the addition of blinkers.

Entries: https://www.equibase.com/static/entry/KD091220USA10-EQB.html

6:36 p.m.—$700,000 Grade 3 Runhappy Turf Sprint Stakes at Kentucky Downs on TVG

Totally Boss, winner of this race in 2019, looms the favorite in an overflow field for the Turf Sprint Stakes, whose winner will receive a fees-paid spot in the $1 million Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint as part of the Breeders' Cup Challenge Series' “Win and You're In” program. Totally Boss has raced only twice this year, most recently rallying strongly only to lose Keeneland's Grade 2 Shakertown by a head to his Rusty Arnold-trained stablemate Leinster. Totally Boss could join Hold the Salt (2008-2009) as the only repeat winner of the stakes.

Entries: https://www.equibase.com/static/entry/KD091220USA11-EQB.html

The post Weekend Lineup: Queen’s Plate, Kentucky Downs appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Thoroughbred Idea Foundation: Run-Ups Cause Inaccuracies That Are ‘An Affront To Integrity’

Saratoga, Gulfstream and Kentucky Downs have all run races over wrong distances within the last six weeks – at least one half-furlong longer than the races were scheduled.

This 50th volume of #FreeDataFriday is not an explanation of some obscure method of timing races, it offers merely a sobering fact, easily exposed BECAUSE of the way in which America times horse races.

First, understand that nearly every distance of a race run in North America is not the actual distance traveled, but the distance which is timed. Horses run-up to the starting point and reach the spot which is the published race distance away from the finish, and then the clock starts. It might be 30 feet, 50 feet, 70 feet or more. It depends on many factors.

Yes, we think this is the wrong way to time races, but at least we know that run-up exists.

But when the un-timed portion of a race is a half-furlong (1/16th of a mile) or more, and those wagering on that, riding in those races or preparing horses for such events are either unaware or not properly informed of this? Well, that's a problem – for the integrity of the sport and for the confidence of stakeholders.

Saratoga ran the Grade 2 Bowling Green on August 1, 2020 at a reported 1 3/8 miles on turf – the race was likely at least 1 7/16th miles, more than a half-furlong farther than reported to anyone, including owners of horses in the race, jockeys who rode it and the bettors who staked more than $1.7 million on this race.

Last Saturday, September 5, Gulfstream Park ran two listed, black-type awarding stakes (the Bear's Den and Miss Gracie) at a reported “about” 7.5 furlongs on the turf. The races were very likely about 540 feet, or roughly four-fifths of a furlong longer than that, much closer to 8.5 furlongs.

On Monday, September 7, Kentucky Downs ran four races at 6 ½ furlongs. The reported “run-up” for the race, acquired via the new Equibase-serviced Gmax timing and tracking system, was 330 feet, a distance that equates to a half-furlong. In other words, horses actually ran seven furlongs. The charts for these races (R2, R6, R7) are HERE – but a replay can be found via ADW replay providers.

The circumstances of all of these races, and the impact of the extra ground covered, and the degree of harm done by presenting customers with these errors, assuredly, varies.

Here is what we know.

The times of all the races in question are not necessarily wrong – all of the races are timed from the point that is the published distance of the race from the finish. What that means is that the clock starts WELL after the race has actually commenced and makes it remarkably easy to “see” these errors.

In other words, once the horses get to the point that is 1 3/8 miles from the Saratoga finish, or 6.5 furlongs from the finish at Kentucky Downs – the timing system in place starts. Saratoga uses beam-based times, Gulfstream uses Trakus and Kentucky Downs is a new user of the Equibase-enabled Gmax. But an examination of the actual time the horses are racing differs substantially from the official times.

In all of the races noted above, horses raced for no less than seven seconds before the timer began and, again, the fractions recorded for each race are not disputed. At Gulfstream, horses ran for more than 11 seconds, a duration that is the equivalent of 12.5% of the actual time recorded for the race.

Below, review the chart which shows the observed times from video, either via YouTube or replays available from most ADWs, the actual time horses were racing according to those observations, a “hand-time” using a stopwatch from the break of the gate to the finish, the official time of the race as it was reported and the variance between the hand time and the official time.

The variances, in orange on the right, tell the tale. The actual time horses are racing is substantially longer than what is reported to the public. If there are approximately six horse lengths in one second (1 length = approximately 0.16 seconds), then a variance of 7.63 seconds is the equivalent of 45.6 lengths. A variance of 11.34 seconds is the equivalent of 68 lengths.

This is madness.

Over $6.8 million was wagered just within these individual races.

There seems to be a reckless disregard for the truth from track operators as it relates to running races at the distances they schedule.

Here are some questions:

1. Would a horse that won the Bowling Green have been demoted from first to fourth horse if the race was run over the published distance of 1 3/8 miles instead of the actual distance of 1 7/16 miles, given that the interference occurred in the “last half-furlong” of a race that was already a half-furlong too long? (Saratoga)

2. Would a filly have earned black-type for the first time, potentially increasing her future value, if the race was actually contested over 7.5 furlongs instead of nearly 8.5 furlongs? (Gulfstream)

3. Will bettors have won or lost because their analysis and bets were formulated and executed believing the distance published by the track, replicated and sold by Equibase, further sold and distributed by downstream providers like the Daily Racing Form, TimeformUS, Thoro-Graph, BRIS and Ragozin, was accurate?

4. Will regulators – state racing commissions – step forward and hold operators accountable to ensure accuracy in the distances and times of races run in their jurisdictions? (Kentucky, New York. Florida does not have a racing commission)

5. What are the challenges keeping track operators from running races at the distances THEY set and how can they be overcome to ensure accuracy for all?
As it relates to the last question, some of these answers are clear.

Elements of tradition (“this is the way we've always done x”), course management, and safety concerns are the cause of these issues, while the product leaves us with duped customers or participants – bettors, horsemen, jockeys and fans. Accuracy matters, or at least, it should.

INACCURACY IS AN INTEGRITY CONCERN

North American racing does not time races from the break of the gate. Almost every race is run over a distance LONGER than what is published. But run-up on dirt races is normally consistent, and as all seven examples above are turf races, it is clear that portable rails and turf management are partial causes, or exacerbating, the problem.

But how much run-up is too much?

The answer to this should be, at the very least, when the run-up is a half-furlong or more considering the sport still measures distances in such ways.

Over the last year, the #FreeDataFriday series has covered a plethora of issues which impact racing. At its heart, this has been about the need to see access to racing data improved, preferably at reduced price points, and used to attract new customers to racing's wagering markets. Remarkably, though, it seems the sport either fails to either check its own basic math on occasion, or worse, just ignores it.

Not only does accuracy matter, but inaccuracy is an affront to integrity.

Look at how long these “errors” are when extrapolated over a map of Gulfstream, in this example below. Using simple Google Map analysis, with the rail set at 108 feet off the inside, the red dot is located where the gate was approximately placed and the yellow dot roughly 540 feet beyond that (a total of 648 feet of measured distance on the map). This point is already on the first turn and is roughly the spot which is 7.5 furlongs from the finish at this rail setting where the timing would begin.

To give added perspective, consider this – 540 feet is more than half the distance from the top of the stretch to the finish in dirt races at Gulfstream. The image below provides more context. The yellow dot representing 540 feet back from the finish line.

SOLUTIONS

Those races at Gulfstream were “about” 7.5 furlongs like the Kentucky Derby is “about” 1 1/8 miles, which is to say, it isn't. In 2020, racetracks in America should be running, timing and reporting the exact distance of a race as it is scheduled. Not 7.5 furlongs with 540 feet of run-up, not 6.5 furlongs with 330 feet of run-up. Schedule it, offer betting on it and run it at a precise distance. Precision, in both reporting and execution, are needlessly tricky.

The simplest solution is for North American tracks to start accurately reporting existing distances, using existing measures, with completeness. Races at six furlongs on dirt at Churchill Downs have a run-up of 220 feet. The timed portion of the race may be six furlongs, but the race is contested over a distance that is really six furlongs and 73 yards. If you can be disqualified for an offense in an untimed portion of the race, why can't we report (and time) the actual distance horses run?

What might be more precise? Yes, the metric system. It's easier than it seems.
That same Churchill race reported as six furlongs and 73 yards would be 1,274 meters.

Unarguably, the metric system presents one standard measure, boiled down to a precise, uniform number, and something we accept in human racing around the world, at both the highest levels of professional competition and the lowest levels of amateur, even children's sports. Oh, it's used in racing too…just not here…yet.

Regardless of the measurement used, accuracy is easily the most important need.

Racing must start timing from the break of the gate, not some point which is the published race distance from the finish while the gate itself is positioned quasi-arbitrarily behind that point, 50 feet, 150 feet, or as was the case in the last week, maybe between 330 to 540 feet away from the actual point that is the distance everyone otherwise believes.

There are significant costs associated with this development too, but they must be borne.

This status quo is fraudulent to horse owners and bettors and misleading to jockeys. These frauds, perpetrated on the public, could leave tracks open to litigation from aggrieved customers.

Our sport, and its operators and regulators, are not taking it seriously. The actions needed to correct these errors are clear. It is up to those same entities to take those measures and ensure accuracy.

The post Thoroughbred Idea Foundation: Run-Ups Cause Inaccuracies That Are ‘An Affront To Integrity’ appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Honor Roll Presented By The Runhappy Meet At Kentucky Downs: Social Paranoia’s Road From The Sale Ring To The Dueling Grounds Derby

Joe Seitz remembers $75,000 being a “fair price” when the now 4-year-old Social Paranoia sold as part of the Brookdale Sales consignment at the Fasig-Tipton Kentucky July Yearling Sale in 2017.

Street Boss, the colt's sire, was standing for $10,000 live foal at Darley when Social Paranoia was conceived, so 7.5 times the stud fee was a profitable multiple for his breeders, Mineola Farm and Silent Grove Farm.

Social Paranoia's buyer and current owner, Stuart Grant's The Elkstone Group, has enjoyed an even higher multiple off the purchase price. After 15 career starts for trainer Todd Pletcher, Social Paranoia has earned $929,710, more than one-third of that coming from his 2019 victory at Kentucky Downs in the $600,000 Exacta Systems Dueling Grounds Derby.

Ridden by Jose Ortiz, Social Paranoia raced closed to the lead on the European-style turf layout at Kentucky Downs, moved to the lead inside the furlong pole and edged clear late to win by a half-length. His time of 2:08.50 for 1 5/16 miles established a new course record.

“I remember him clearly when he was at Fasig-Tipton,” Seitz said recently. “He was very popular, an awesome sale horse. We got $75,000, which was a fine price, but I had hoped he would do more.

“Fortunately, he got in the right hands, with Stuart Grant and Todd Pletcher.”

Slow to leave the maiden ranks (though he was third in the Grade 3 Pilgrim in the last of five starts at two), Social Paranoia scored his initial career win in his first start at three at Gulfstream Park and has exclusively competed in stakes competition ever since.

His big score at Kentucky Downs was the final start of 2019 for Social Paranoia, who began his 2020 campaign with a victory in the G3 Appleton Stakes at Gulfstream. Most recently he unleashed a furious stretch rally to win the G3 Poker Stakes at Belmont on July 4. He's just resumed training after a minor setback following the Poker and was not nominated for any stakes at the upcoming Runhappy Kentucky Downs meet, according to Pletcher.

Brookdale will be offering a full-brother to Social Paranoia in Book 2 of the Keeneland September Yearling Sale.

The post Honor Roll Presented By The Runhappy Meet At Kentucky Downs: Social Paranoia’s Road From The Sale Ring To The Dueling Grounds Derby appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights