‘Way Bigger Than We Originally Anticipated’: Laurel Track Work To Stretch Into Summer

Officials from The Stronach Group announced June 14 that the track renovation at Laurel Park will take longer than originally planned. On a webinar for horsemen, track management revealed that while they had hoped to resume stabling and workouts on the surface in early July, early August is now the target after excavation revealed more serious issues with the base. Dennis Moore, senior track superintendent for 1/ST RACING, reported that it appears a “high plasticity clay” was added to the base at one point “which should have never been there.”

The clay retained water, which was a particular problem since a spring ran under the track surface. The spring originally had a French drain system to remove the water, but that was plugged up at some point.

“It was really just a wet sloppy mess,” said 1/ST chief operating officer Adian Butler. “You don't need to be a track engineer to understand there's a lot of water underneath there.”

The clay has been removed and there will be some regrading done around the quarter pole as well as some surface consistency adjustments on the backstretch.

Additionally, Butler said there were two active sewer lines discovered underneath the track's homestretch, as well as one inactive stormwater drain. The entire base of the track will be replaced and ultimately the pipes discovered there will need to be filled with a solid material so that if they crack, the material above them won't shift.

“It's way bigger than we originally anticipated … we're not going to do this unless we're going to do it properly,” Butler said.

The base will be completely replaced, and Butler could not rule out a need to do additional renovations in two or three years.

In the meantime, the track is replacing boards and doing extensive painting and power washing in the barn areas, and continuing to battle the rat issue.

When horses do return to the surface, Butler and others stressed that it would be a gradual process to get up to full steam. Horses will be allowed to do light work, followed by timed work, followed by racing with extensive surface checks along the way by The Stronach Group and the Racing Surfaces Testing Laboratory. Butler was hopeful racing could return to Laurel sometime after horses come back the first week of August, but stressed the timeline is dependent on weather and the supply chain for the track surface materials.

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‘We’ve Always Been Good About Being A Good Neighbor’: Maryland State Fairgrounds Embraces Role As Training Center During Laurel Park Closure

The month of May is typically a busy one for the Maryland State Fairgrounds in Timonium, Md., which serves as the host of the Fasig-Tipton Midlantic 2-Year-Olds In Training Sale after the Preakness Stakes. However, this May in particular, and the months that follow, figure to be the busiest in recent memory.

The temporary closure of Laurel Park and its backstretch for racing surface repair has scattered its horsemen to tracks and training centers in the surrounding area, and the fairgrounds will absorb some of that horse population as a training center — a role the track doesn't regularly play on a full-time basis.

Racehorses shipped to the fairgrounds from Laurel on Monday, after a few days' turnover from when the final 2-year-old sale tenants vacated the premises last week. Training will commence over the five-eighths oval on Tuesday.

It's a quick turnaround for the property, which hosted the 2-year-old sale horses for about 2 1/2 weeks, between ship-in and prep for the breeze show, the breeze show itself, pre-sale inspections, the two-day auction, and shipping out. However, the recency of the sale also ensured that the property would be ready to host its long-term guests.

Andy Cashman, general manager of the Maryland State Fairgrounds, said the negotiations between the fair management and the Maryland Jockey Club were relatively swift, taking place a couple weeks before the sale.

Cashman said it takes all of six weeks for the fairgrounds' roughly 20-person staff to get the property ready to receive the 2-year-old sale horses in early May, both in terms of the stabling area and the racetrack, so having that inertia helped make for a more seamless transition for the training horses that will follow.

“I think we've always been good about being a good neighbor,” Cashman said. “We've always gotten along with everybody to make that work. There's a lot of infrastructure around here that's more handy to use for them than some of the other tracks.”

The recency of the auction also proved to be a boon for the fairgrounds in terms of number of horses it could take in. The bricks-and-mortar barns feature 531 stalls and 48 tack rooms, but the property gained an additional 60 temporary stalls under a tent at the back of the barn area to accommodate the Midlantic sale catalog, and that tent will stay in place for the new tenants.

Among the trainers who planned to ship horses to Timonium was Jerry O'Dwyer, who said he'd send 15 to 20 of his Laurel-based horses to the fairgrounds, and the rest would go to Delaware Park.

O'Dwyer acknowledged the headaches caused by leaving Laurel and having to ship from the fairgrounds to run at nearby Pimlico Race Course instead of stabling at the track like some other relocated trainers, but he said the potential benefits outweighed the temporary setbacks. The trainer said it was important for him to keep a string in Maryland to stay involved with the state's racing circuit, even if he wasn't on-site at the live meet.

“I'm glad they're re-doing the track at Laurel,” he said. “I know it's a pain for everybody to get out, but if we all get out, they can do the job properly, and when we go back, we'll know we've got a safe surface, and hopefully it'll be good for years to come.”

O'Dwyer said he had run a handful of horses in Timonium during the Maryland State Fair meet in the late summer, and he said the tight-turned bullring was definitely one for specialists when it came to racing. He wasn't sure if the layout would change the way he trained his horses, as opposed to the 1 1/8-mile oval at Laurel, and the one-mile main tracks at Pimlico and Delaware.

“I don't know, to be honest,” he said. “I'll cross that bridge when I come to it. We breeze our horses nice and smooth. We don't tend to breeze them real fast, so I think that'll be good. I like to get nice halves into them, and a nice, solid gallop-out, so I think this track will be very workable for us.

“The track should be in good shape after the sale here, and having been worked over plenty,” he continued. “All the horses seemed to breeze good over it, and I've had good reports from people saying this is a good track to train over.”

Moving horses between locations during the upheaval will be one matter, but relocating backstretch employees and exercise riders would be an entirely different challenge. About 35 miles and a drive of 45 minutes to an hour separates Laurel Park and Timonium, making a daily commute difficult to impossible for employees living on-track at Laurel Park.

Cashman said plans called to use a local hotel within walking distance of the track to house stable workers in Timonium, and bussing employees who might not have the means of transportation to relocate to the fairgrounds.

Staff retention wasn't a major concern for O'Dwyer in regards to the move. He said he'd send a smaller crew to Timonium compared to the team at Delaware Park.

“I have nearly a completely different staff up at Delaware, riders-wise, and I've sent a good bit of my grooms up there,” he said. “We have a new bunch of riders and hot walkers up there. I've been very fortunate to get a good crew up there, and that's very beneficial. I have two riders at Laurel and a couple of grooms, and they'll come over here. There is a couple of my hotwalkers who don't want to come over because it's a bit far for them to go, but we'll make it work.”

The Maryland State Fair hosts its small live meet from Aug. 26 to Sept. 6, and Pimlico's meet was extended to the end of June to give Laurel Park as much time as possible to get its surface ready for racing.

If it's needed, Maryland State Fairgrounds chairman of the board Gerry Brewster said the track would be ready to take some pressure off its compatriots, both of which are in varying states of metamorphosis, whether it was to host live racing dates or house training horses. It wouldn't be the first time.

“We've done it before about 25 years ago,” Brewster said. “Pimlico had a redo and brought their races here. Of course, we used to race here 42 days a year. There's some talk of this year of adding a third week of racing here, in addition to the bookend weekends on either side of the fair. We could possibly have a third weekend.”

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Four MATCH Series Races At Pimlico Draw 130 Nominations

The four stakes at Pimlico Race Course that kick off the 2021 Mid-Atlantic Championships Series (MATCH) attracted 130 nominations, among them many local runners that regularly compete in Maryland and other tracks in the region throughout the year.

This year's series begins May 15-16, and each of the six divisional legs—there are four divisions, all on dirt this year—will be held in Maryland with the exception of one stop at Colonial Downs in Virginia in late August. The MATCH Series concludes Dec. 26 at Laurel Park.

Note that entries for the Friday, May 15 card will be taken Sunday, May 9. Entries for May 16 will be taken Monday, May 10.

The May 15 Black-Eyed Susan Stakes program will include two MATCH events: the $250,000, Grade 3 Pimlico Special (3-Year-Olds and Up—Long Dirt division) and the $150,000, Grade 3 Allaire DuPont Stakes (Filly and Mare Long—Dirt division). On May 15, Preakness Stakes day, the $100,000 Runhappy Skipat Stakes (Filly and Mare Sprint—Dirt division) and $150,000, Grade 3 Maryland Sprint Stakes (3-Year-Olds and Up Sprint—Dirt division) are scheduled.

The Pimlico Special, at 1 3/16 miles, attracted 39 nominees including last year's winner, Harper's First Ride, who at the time was trained by Maryland-based Claudio Gonzalez but was sold before his start in the Pegasus World Cup Invitational in January of this year. Cordmaker, who is based at Laurel with trainer Rodney Jenkins, was third in the 2020 Pimlico Special and is coming off a victory in the Harrison Johnson Memorial Stakes in March at Laurel. Runnymoore Racing's Alwaysmining, a multiple stakes winner in Maryland based at Fair Hill Training Center, finished second in an open allowance race at Parx Racing for trainer A. Lands Trites in late March.

Among the locals nominated to the Allaire DuPont at 1 1/8 miles is BB Horses' Landing Zone, who is trained by Gonzalez. The 4-year-old Morning Line mare won four in a row last summer and fall, progressed to the stakes level and came away with a second and third at Laurel. Sonata Stable's Lucky Stride, trained by Maryland-based Mike Trombetta, won the Nellie Morse Stakes at Laurel in February and last November finished second in the Thirty Eight Go Go Stakes at Laurel.

Multiple stakes winner Anna's Bandit, who has been away since July 2020, is nominated to the six-furlong Runhappy Skipat. Owned by No Guts No Glory Farm and trained by John Robb, the 7-year-old Great Notion mare has won 17 of 36 starts and was third in the Grade III Barbara Fritchie Stakes at Laurel in the winter of 2020. Five Hellions Farm's Dontletsweetfoolya, who won her last five races, two of them stakes at Laurel, in 2020 for trainer Lacey Gaudet, has been away since her seventh-place finish in the Barbara Fritchie earlier this year. Parx-based Chub Wagon, owned by Daniel Lopez and George Chestnut and trained by Guadalupe Preciado, is five-for-five in her career and last out at Parx won the Unique Bella Stakes for Pennsylvania-breds by 7 1/2 lengths; her winning margins total more than 31 lengths.

The Filly and Mare Sprint—Dirt division has produced the overall MATCH Series champion since the series returned after 16 years on the shelf: Jessica Krupnick in 2018 and Bronx Beauty in 2019. MATCH wasn't held last year because of COVID-19 restrictions.

Hillside Equestrian Meadows' Laki, trained by Damon Dilodovico, was the MATCH Series champion in the 3-Year-Olds and Up Sprint—Dirt division in 2018 and 2019 and is among those nominated to the six-furlong Maryland Sprint. The 8-year-old Cuba gelding won the Grade III Frank J. De Francis Memorial Stakes at Pimlico in October 2020 and in April captured the Frank Whiteley Stakes at Laurel. Maryland-based Whereshetoldmetogo, trained by Brittany Russell for Madaket Stables, Ten Strike Racing, Michael Kisber and Black Cloud Racing, won three consecutive stakes at Laurel from November 2020 through March 13 of this year. The 6-year-old El Padrino gelding encountered trouble and was eased in the Frank Whiteley but had previously defeated Laki at Laurel.

The MATCH Series, the only one of its kind in racing, will feature 24 stakes—20 of them in Maryland and four at Colonial Downs—valued at $2.75 million. Bonus money will be $282,000 for 2021. Owners and trainers will compete for $63,000 in divisional bonuses and the overall MATCH Series champion will net $30,000 in bonuses for its owner and trainer.

In addition, the Maryland Horse Breeders Association will pay a $3,000 bonus to the breeder of the top points-earning Maryland-bred and $3,000 for the top points-earning Maryland-sired horse. If the top points-earner is both Maryland-bred and -sired, the breeder would get $6,000.

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Massive Laurel Horse Move-Out Preakness Week

Difficulties with the dirt track base repair and cushion resurfacing project at Laurel Park continue to mount, with the loose-ended timetable for the work now expected to extend at least until the start of July.

Executives with The Stronach Group (TSG), which owns both Laurel and Pimlico Race Course, said during a Friday tele-meeting that they now need to pause work on the problematic and expensive project at Laurel until management can relocate of all horses stabled at Laurel to other facilities in Maryland.

This news was delivered two weeks after TSG came under fire at a Maryland Racing Commission (MRC) meeting for an alleged “accumulation of bad decisions over time” that led to Laurel's main track safety concerns not being addressed sooner by track management.

At that Apr. 22 meeting, TSG's senior vice president of racing, Steve Koch, told commissioners that Laurel would tentatively be back up and running by the start of June, with limited training allowed at the facility and horses vanned to Pimlico for timed workouts. That plan changed last week when TSG announced all horses would instead have to vacate the property.

The cumbersome logistics of orchestrating such a large horse and worker migration on short notice couldn't come at a worse time for TSG and Maryland horse outfits, with the GI Preakness S. week on the cusp of getting underway at Pimlico.

During the May 7 meeting, Koch projected a new, albeit hazy, timeline for the completion of repairs.

“At the moment, we've requested of the racing commission that the race meet remain at Pimlico through the end of June, so returning early July to be back at Laurel,” Koch said. “There's a lot of unknowns as we get into this racetrack [project and] we'll know more as this thing unfolds.”

Aidan Butler, TSG's chief operating officer, likened the moving-target time frame as a “cat and mouse” game.

Although Butler's words were meant to be figurative, as Friday's meeting evolved, it became clear that felines and rodents were literally involved in the ever-widening scope of the project.

That's because TSG will use the opportunity of having a vacant barn area to launch its most thorough rat extermination attempt to date.

Back in January, TSG executives confirmed to the racing commission that spending $20,000 monthly to try and eradicate rodents while horses remained stabled on the grounds wasn't working, largely because of the abundance of unsecured or spilled horse feed kept the rats well satiated.

Dionne Benson, TSG's chief veterinary officer, said during Friday's meeting that in addition to everything else, that means backstretch outfits will have to attempt herd their barn cats and bring them along once they get stall reassignments at either Pimlico or the Timonium fairgrounds. This is because of concerns that the cats could be poisoned by eating either the rodenticide or a rat that has consumed it.

Then MRC commissioner David Hayden suggested that all hay and straw should also be removed from the backstretch to eliminate another readily available food source for the rats.

David Richardson, the executive director of the Maryland Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association, said that hay and straw removal would be done if the exterminators recommended it.

Richardson asked trainers to expediate getting their requests in to the Laurel racing office about their preference–either Pimlico or Timonium–for being relocated, and to note if their stable help will need living accommodations at either venue.

TSG will provide a shuttle service to those tracks for employees who wish to remain in their Laurel living quarters, and trainers can still keep tack and other personal property secured at Laurel, so long as nothing gets stored in stalls.

To date there have been 789 stall requests: 502 for Pimlico and 287 for Timonium, meaning the majority of outfits will not make the cut for the preferred stabling at Pimlico.

Richardson said that the day after the Preakness, construction will begin on three new 40-stall barns at Pimlico, and that temporary stabling there will also be made available.

As for the housing of backstretch workers, those who opt to live on the grounds at Timonium could end up relegated to either the jockeys' quarters or some other areas that have access to bathrooms and showers, because there are currently no dorm facilities there that meet fire code requirements.

“There are still a lot of items that are outstanding,” Richardson said, underscoring the difficult nature of the transition.

TSG executives also addressed the implications of turf racing in Maryland because of the  extended meet at Pimlico.

Koch said the grass course at Pimlico–which is only half as wide as the one at Laurel–will, per usual, get used “very, very heavily” on the Friday and Saturday of Preakness week.

“So yeah, there are [future] constraints on that course in the sense that, you know, how much [use] can 70 feet sustain compared to the 140 feet that we have at Laurel?” Koch asked rhetorically.

Butler then picked up the topic: “If it's usable we will use it. Once it's through the big weekend…we're going to use it as often as we can.”

Even before Laurel's main track woes arose this winter and spring, TSG executives were on record as contemplating the addition of a synthetic racing surface there.

Butler said on Friday that with the base now exposed, TSG has the opportunity to assess what the scope of that project might look like. But he added that the synthetic option won't be contemplated until a later date–which will eventually mean more logistical headaches.

“Because there is a very high likelihood of us putting in a tunnel at Laurel, there is no way to drill under the track,” Butler said. “That will have to be a section…cut completely down through the substructure. That means later, when we come to replacing and putting in tunnels and replacing surfaces, or having new surfaces, I should say, there is unfortunately going to be some more disruption.”

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