Upcoming Kentucky MSW Purses: KD $135K, CD, $125K, KEE $78K

Projected purse levels for maiden special weight (MSW) races on the Kentucky circuit in September and October will be $135,000 at Kentucky Downs, $125,000 at Churchill Downs, and $78,000 at Keeneland Race Course.

Those figures were revealed by representatives of those respective tracks Tuesday during a video meeting of the Kentucky Thoroughbred Development Fund (KTDF) advisory committee.

Ted Nicholson, Kentucky Downs' senior vice president and general manager, also said that his all-turf venue will also be raising non-stakes purses across the board by 8% from the amounts that were initially listed when the condition book for the September meet first came out in April.

Last year, Kentucky Downs carded $90,000 MSW races, but that money represented a 30% cut from 2019 because of lost-revenue circumstances related to the pandemic.

Bill Landes III, the chairman of the KTDF's advisory committee, who represents the Kentucky Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association (KTOB), asked fellow advisory committee member Rick Hiles, the president of the Kentucky Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association, if he was okay with such a high purse value for Kentucky Downs horses winning a first career race.

“Well, I've had some concerns about getting [MSW purses] up too high [because I'm] afraid that the legislators are going to step in,” Hiles said, alluding to the potential that elected officials might think that's too much KTDF money to be giving away.

Hiles added that he has relayed that sentiment to Nicholson in the past and will do so again when they discuss the issue in the near future. “But, you know, we just have to go with the flow I guess,” he said.

“Ted, be careful,” Landes cautioned Nicholson.

Ben Huffman, who serves as both the director of racing at Churchill Downs and as the racing secretary at Keeneland, provided the figures for those two tracks. He added that Churchill's MSW purse figure is the expected “range” of money for right now, pending the finalization of the condition book for the September meet.

In 2020, Churchill offered split MSW purse values in September–$97,000 during the rescheduled GI Kentucky Derby week, then $75,000 for the balance of the month. Those numbers were also skewed by pandemic conditions that affected the generation of purse money.

Keeneland carded $70,000 MSW races in October 2020 after losing the entire April meet to COVID-19 and instead running during July.

During the Aug. 3 meeting, the committee unanimously approved all of the tracks' requests for KTDF funding, which means a recommendation from the advisory committee to release the money will be forwarded to the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission, which votes on the actual disbursement at its next meeting.

The KTDF is funded by three-quarters of 1% of all money wagered on both live Thoroughbred races and historical horse race (HHR) gaming, plus 2% of all money wagered on Thoroughbred races via inter-track wagering and whole-card simulcasting.

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Under Glare of Probing Questions, Curious Answers in Kentucky

The Week in Review by T.D. Thornton

In theory, state racing commissions are supposed to provide a layer of checks and balances by making both racetrack operators and horsemen accountable for their actions. In practice though, that often doesn't happen because regulators in many jurisdictions fail to ask probing questions of licensees during open, public meetings.

In Kentucky, for example, if you want the most concise on-the-record snapshot of what's going on with the circuit, the best source generally isn't a Kentucky Horse Racing Commission (KHRC) meeting. Instead, the proceedings of the Kentucky Thoroughbred Development Fund (KTDF) advisory committee are usually far more informative and insightful.

Bill Landes III, who chairs that committee as a representative of the Kentucky Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association (KTOB), is known for cutting to the chase and asking blunt, common-sense questions. Representatives of the state's five Thoroughbred tracks must update the advisory board on how each track is spending money for purses, capital improvements, marketing, and other aspects of their racing operations, and those executives are obliged to answer every query tossed at them, because the KTDF board recommends to the full commission how to allot the millions of dollars in purse supplements generated by live, simulcast and historical horse race betting.

During last week's KTDF advisory board meeting, two exchanges stood out. One put management of Turfway Park on the spot over equine safety. The other revealed surprising reluctance by a Kentucky Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association representative to embrace a master plan for improving the infrastructure and quality of racing at Ellis Park.

At one point during the Apr. 6 video meeting, Tom Minneci, the senior director of finance at Churchill Downs, Inc. (CDI), the gaming corporation that owns Turfway, had just finished giving a financial rundown of the track's recently-completed meet.

Landes then asked KTDF board members if there were further questions for Turfway, and Doug Hendrickson, who represents the KHRC on the KTDF advisory committee, had a one-word query: “Fatalities?”

Minneci deferred comment to Tyler Picklesimer, Turfway's director of racing and racing secretary. When Pickelsimer did not immediately respond, Minneci asked Chip Bach, the track's general manager, for help in coming up with the answer.

There was an awkward moment of silence, during which both Pickelsimer and Bach seemed to be caught off guard by the KTDF wanting to know about horse deaths.

“I've got our handle numbers in front of me. I don't have that in front of me,” Bach said. After another pause, he added, “Tyler, do you see it?”

Pickelsimer responded that he did not know the number of equine fatalities that had occurred at his track over the last three months. “I know it was a good meet, but I don't have that in front of me, no.”

Landes, who can be as diplomatic as he is direct, didn't see the need to make the Turfway execs squirm any longer over not knowing something important that they should have. He suggested to have the minutes of the meeting reflect their non-answer as a “deficiency” that needed to be addressed at the next meeting.

Bach promised to come up with the correct figure at that time. He probably should have stopped there, but felt compelled to add that, “The problem with some of the fatality numbers is horses can meet that number after they've left the track. So I just want to make sure that we've got a right number for you. Sometimes we have to go to the commission to get that number.”

This is disquieting on several levels. First, as a corporation, CDI likes to describe itself as being an industry leader in equine safety. Yet neither the GM nor the director of racing at its Turfway operation could state for the record how many fatalities occurred there over the past 90 days, or even offer a ballpark figure.

It's also circularly bizarre that a KHRC board member asked Turfway executives the fatalities question in the first place, but a Turfway official responded that he needed to check with the KHRC to obtain the correct number.

Ellis Park Twilight Zone

Later in the meeting, Jeff Inman, the general manager at Ellis Entertainment LLC, was running down a list of necessary (but generally low-level) capital improvements that Ellis Park was trying to have completed before the start of its meet June 27.

Landes politely interjected, wanting to know when Inman's company was going to come through on the big-ticket items it promised when it bought Ellis Park in 2019, like the widening of the turf course and the installation of lights, which would allow Ellis to slide into a more lucrative twilight simulcast time slot while avoiding the brutal summer heat that is detrimental to horse health and sometimes causes cancellations.

Landes termed those improvements “long overdue, and everybody knows it.”

Inman replied that the turf course widening is likely to happen first, but not until after the 2021 meet.

“If we regain capital funding, we will start work after the horses leave, [by] late October, early November,” Inman said.

J. David Richardson, who, like Landes, represents the KTOB on the KTDF advisory committee, concurred with the chairman.

“I do believe that Ellis Park has enormous potential to do much, much better with at least some opportunity to run under lights and expanded turf racing on a course that's not torn up because you have to overuse it,” Richardson said. “I really want to reiterate…how positive I think this could be for Ellis Park, for Kentucky racing, and for strengthening the whole circuit that we all are trying to do in terms of making Kentucky horses more valuable.”

Landes said he believed that Kentucky Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association (KHBPA) president Rick Hiles and KHBPA executive director Marty Maline “would agree with me [that] if you get twilight racing at Ellis Park and some lights there, there ain't no telling what y'all could do. And I'm not telling you something you don't know. I'm hoping Rick and Marty agree with that.”

But when Landes directly asked Hiles–who is a KTDF advisory committee member representing the KHBPA–for his opinion on the Ellis improvement plan, Hiles said he couldn't fully endorse the concept of twilight racing.

“I'm a little concerned about moving racing post times back too far, simply because of the ship-ins from Louisville and Lexington losing an hour in time zones and coming back late at night,” Hiles said. “Getting back at 12, one, two o'clock in the morning–I just don't know how [horsemen] are going to react to that.”

Landes seemed surprised by the HBPA's noncommittal stance, but he tactfully acknowledged that the concerns Hiles articulated about the late nights were valid. (Maline, who was present for the video meeting, chose not to speak on the subject.)

“Well, you have that issue to a certain extent at Turfway,” Landes reasoned, meaning late shipping after night racing. “And [at Ellis] it's either coming in at one or two o'clock in the morning or dealing with 108 or 110 degrees” during afternoon racing.

“I just don't know,” Hiles said. “School, for me, is still out on it.”

It must have been frustrating for Landes and other KTDF advisory board members to be pressing Ellis to make good on promises that could strengthen the entire circuit only to learn that the elected horsemen's representative on their board wasn't entirely supportive of the idea.

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Arklow Recognized As 2020 Kentucky Thoroughbred Development Fund’s Earner Of The Year

Donegal Racing's well-traveled Grade 1-winner Arklow was honored Wednesday for his exploits right at home as the 6-year-old horse was feted as the 2020 Kentucky Thoroughbred Development Fund's Earner of the Year.

“We're very excited about this award for Arklow. It's very cool,” said Jerry Crawford, founder and president of the Des Moines-based Donegal Racing partnership. “This business is so, so hard for owners. When you get a horse that can pay some feed bills, it's gratifying in multiple ways to say nothing of all the excitement it creates.”

Now 7, Arklow was recognized at the Kentucky-bred Champions Awards ceremony, presented by the Kentucky Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders (KTOB) and the Kentucky Thoroughbred Association (KTA), at Keeneland. Frank Penn, co-breeder of the $160,000 Keeneland September yearling purchase in 2015, accepted the trophy on Donegal's behalf.

The Brad Cox-trained Arklow earned $849,734 in his seven-race campaign last year, capped by taking Kentucky Downs' $1 million, Grade 3 Calumet Turf Cup for the second time in three years, sandwiched around a second in 2019. Arklow also finished second by a head in Churchill Downs' $100,000 Louisville Stakes (G3). The son of the late Claiborne Farm stallion Arch concluded 2020 by shipping out to Del Mar — his 12th different racetrack – to capture the Hollywood Turf Cup (G2).

The KTDF award recognizes Kentucky-bred horses racing much of the year in the Commonwealth and is based on earnings at Kentucky tracks. Arklow earned $608,184 racing in graded stakes at Kentucky Downs, Churchill Downs and Keeneland. He made an additional $80,000 while a close sixth in the $4 million Longines Breeders' Cup Turf at Keeneland, though those earnings did not count toward the award.

“Donegal has always loved racing in Kentucky,” Crawford said. “The KTDF purse supplements make you love it even more. Take a horse like Arklow, who only ran in graded stakes in 2020. The Kentucky-bred incentive program rewards excellence, being staged against open company. As purses in Kentucky have increased, in no small measure because of the KTDF, so has the competition. So to be KTDF Earner of the Year becomes even more of a feat in which my partners and I take great pride.”

Cox, the 2020 Eclipse Award winner as North America's outstanding trainer, also was recognized Wednesday as the KTDF Trainer of the Year.

“The KTDF is a great program and makes lucrative opportunities for Kentucky horsemen,” Cox said. “Kentucky-bred horses compete world-wide, but it's obviously nice when you can race right here in our own state. It's an achievement, for sure, for Arklow to be the KTDF Earner of the Year, and I'm extremely proud to be the KTDF Trainer of the Year as well.”

For his career, Arklow is 8-7-2 in 31 starts with earnings of $2,666,116 for Donegal Racing, Joseph Bulger and the Estate of Peter Coneway. Those victories include New York's Grade 1 Joe Hirsch Turf Classic at Belmont Park in 2019.

“The KTDF awards have always been reflective of what's running within the circuit,” said Chauncey Morris, the KTA-KTOB's executive director. “To see a horse like Arklow and owner Donegal Racing at the highest level here in Kentucky just shows how we're evolving into the top tier racing jurisdiction in the United States.”

Crawford said Arklow got a couple of months off after running in the Breeders' Cup Turf for the third time.

“There's at least a 50-percent chance of him getting back to the races on May 1 in the Grade 1, Old Forester Bourbon Turf Classic on Derby Day,” Crawford said. “And for the fourth straight year, we will be pointing for the Calumet Turf Cup at Kentucky Downs, where Arklow has had two wins and a second out of three tries.”

Arklow has raced on Kentucky Derby Day twice before, earning his first stakes victory in the 2017 American Turf (G2) and finishing fourth in the Old Forester in 2018. The Sept. 11 Calumet Turf Cup will run run as a Grade 2 stakes for the first time for 2021.

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Kentucky Downs: Three Million-Dollar Races Top 2021’s $10 Million Stakes Schedule

For the first time in its 31-year history, Kentucky Downs is offering three $1 million races during its six-date 2021 meet. Added to the track's signature Grade 2 Calumet Turf Cup, whose purse was first raised to seven figures in 2019, Kentucky Downs' $1 million trio also will feature the Grade 3 Turf Sprint and Grade 3 WinStar Mint Million.

Kentucky Downs will stage 16 stakes worth a track-record total of $10 million, including $4.85 million in purse supplements for registered Kentucky-bred horses. The all-grass meet runs Sept. 5, 6, 8, 9, 11 and 12 over Kentucky Downs' undulating, kidney-shaped 1 5/16-mile race course.

The WinStar Mint Million, formerly the Tourist Mile, presently stands as the United States' second-richest eight-furlong grass stakes behind only the $2 million Breeders' Cup Mile (G1). The race was worth $750,000 last year, while the six-furlong Turf Sprint was $700,000.

Kentucky Downs for the first time has a pair of Grade 2 stakes in the Calumet Turf Cup for older horses at 1 1/2 miles and the Franklin-Simpson for 3-year-old sprinters, now worth $600,000.

“Purses are the economic engine of the racing industry, and Kentucky Downs is proud to be a leader helping Kentucky stamp itself as the premier racing circuit in America,” said Ron Winchell, Kentucky Downs' co-owner and managing partner with Marc Falcone. “We're only six days, but winning one of our stakes – or even one of our overnight races – can make the entire year for an owner. Many horsemen tell us that money they earn at our meet gets promptly reinvested in the industry the next week at Keeneland's September Yearling sale. Such investment impacts countless small businesses that are part of Kentucky's equine agribusiness.”

A total of nine Kentucky Downs stakes received purse hikes. That includes the Ladies Turf (Grade 3) jumping from $500,000 to $750,000. Each of Kentucky Downs' six graded stakes is worth at least $600,000, with the Grade 3 Ladies Sprint joining the Franklin-Simpson in getting $100,000 increases to reach $600,000. The Music City for 3-year-old fillies and Untapable for 2-year-old fillies, worth $400,000 in their inaugural runnings last year, now enjoy $500,000 purses.

The Kentucky Downs' stakes purses reflect contributions of up to 50 percent from the Kentucky Thoroughbred Development Fund (KTDF) for horses born in and sired by stallions in the Commonwealth. That includes the vast majority of the horses racing in Kentucky and easily the largest group running in America. The 2021 meet's Kentucky-bred stakes supplements were approved Tuesday by the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission's KTDF Advisory Committee.

“The KTDF Advisory Committee aspires to be good stewards of the funds entrusted to their approval and direction,” said Bill Landes, the long-time chair of the KTDF committee and general manager of Oldham County's Hermitage Farm. “As such we applaud Kentucky Downs proposed KTDF supplement to their 2021 stakes, allowance and maiden race program. Their program enhances the value of Kentucky-bred racehorses not only at the Kentucky Downs meet but also enhances the value of Kentucky-bred yearlings that will sell in central Kentucky following their meet.”

Horses that aren't registered Kentucky-breds still can compete in some of the most lucrative stakes in North America and beyond. For instance, the $1 million races each reflect a base purse of $550,000 for which all horses run.

The increases were possible because the Kentucky General Assembly in February passed legislation that for the first time defined pari-mutuel wagering, including Historical Horse Racing's innovative technology that allows guests to bet on previously run races in an electronic game format.

“We can't thank the Kentucky Legislature enough,” Falcone said. “We are able to offer among the highest purses in the world because they understood the importance of Historical Horse Racing and passed legislation that ensures a bright future for live horse racing and the Commonwealth's signature industry. The lawmakers' leadership and members of both parties in both chambers saw the big picture and how higher purses lead to a lot of good things happening. That includes increased jobs, economic development, enhanced tourism opportunities and more dollars to the General Fund that ultimately benefit all Kentuckians.”

The lowest stakes purse Kentucky Downs will have is $400,000 each for the Tapit Stakes and the One Dreamer for fillies and mares, both restricted for horses that have not previously won a stakes in 2021. Those races received $100,000 increases.

The condition book for Kentucky Downs' 2021 meet will be available later this month.

Kentucky Downs 2021 stakes schedule

(all stakes include KTDF* purse supplements)
All races on turf

Sunday, Sept. 5 — $500,000 Dueling Grounds Oaks, 3-year-old fillies, 1 5/16 miles; $750,000 Gun Runner Dueling Grounds Derby, 3-year-olds, 1 5/16 miles.

Monday, Sept. 6 — $500,000 Juvenile Fillies, 2-year-old fillies, mile; $500,000 Juvenile, 2-year-olds, mile; $1 million WinStar Farm Mint Million Mile (G3), 3-year-olds & up, mile.

Wednesday, Sept. 8 — $400,000 Tapit Stakes, 3-year-olds & up non-winners of a stakes in 2021, mile and 70 yards.

Thursday, Sept. 9 — $500,000 Juvenile Sprint, 2-year-olds, 6 1/2 furlongs; $400,000 One Dreamer, fillies & mares 3 years old & up non-winners of a stakes in 2021, mile and 70 yards.

Saturday, Sept. 11 — $1 million Calumet Turf Cup (G2), 3-year-olds & up, 1 1/2 miles; $600,000 Franklin-Simpson (G2), 3-year-olds, 6 1/2 furlongs; $600,000 Ladies Sprint (G3), fillies & mares 3yo & up, 6 1/2 furlongs; $750,000 Ladies Turf (G3), fillies & mares 3 years old & up, mile; $1 million Turf Sprint (G3), 3-year-olds & up, 6 furlongs.

Sunday, Sept. 12 — $500,000 Music City Stakes, 3-year-old fillies, 6 1/2 furlongs; $500,000 Ladies Marathon, fillies & mares 3 years old & up, 1 5/16 miles; $500,000 Untapable Stakes, 2-year-old fillies, 6 1/2 furlongs.

*Kentucky Thoroughbred Development Fund

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