Stakes Purses Raised by $1.2 Million at Fair Grounds

Louisiana's Fair Grounds Race Course & Slots will host 73 black-type races worth a combined $9.7 million during the upcoming 76-day 2023-24 Thoroughbred meet, officials at the New Orleans oval announced Wednesday. The amount is up $1.2 million from last year, but does include $1 million in base purses offered Dec. 2 as Fair Grounds hosts the 25th annual Claiming Crown. That event returns to Fair Grounds for the first time since 2011 with purses ranging from $75,000 to $200,000. Another $25,000 in each race will be available in purse supplements for accredited Louisiana-bred horses.

“In our 152nd year, Fair Grounds will set another record for the richest stakes schedule in Louisiana history,” said Doug Shipley, President and General Manager of the track.

Opening day is scheduled for Friday, Nov. 17, with six $75,000 Louisiana-bred stakes over the season's first two days, while the Road to the Derby Kickoff Day happens Dec. 23 with eight stakes.

“Many deserve thanks for their dedication and efforts to make this happen,” said Fair Grounds Racing Secretary Scott Jones. “Along with our phenomenal Road to the Kentucky Derby series and thriving turf course, this is one more reason why there is no better winter destination for horse racing than New Orleans.”

The highlight of the season, the $1,000,000 GII Louisiana Derby, is set for Saturday, Mar. 23, with 100-50-25-15-10 points awarded to the top five finishers on the Road to the Kentucky Derby. Eight stakes worth a total of $2,625,000 will be carded for the day, including the $400,000 GII Fair Grounds Oaks Presented by Fasig-Tipton, which awards 100-50-25-15-10 points en route to the GI Longines Kentucky Oaks. Last year's runner-up Pretty Mischievous (Into Mischief) rebounded from that defeat with a victory in the Oaks.

“The strong infusion of our sport's top 3-year-olds training and racing at Fair Grounds has been very apparent these past few seasons,” Jones said. “Beginning with the Gun Runner and the Untapable for late-season juveniles, it's proven that our progressive schedule of 3-year-old races for both the boys and girls gives horsemen the proper distances and spacing to prepare their runners for the first weekend in May and beyond.”

Closing day is Sunday, Mar. 24. Regular post time throughout the meet will be 12:45 p.m. CT, with an earlier noon CT first post on Thanksgiving Day (Nov. 23), Road to the Derby Kickoff Day (Dec. 23), Road to the Derby Day (Jan. 20), Louisiana Derby Preview Day (Feb. 17), and Louisiana Derby Day (March 23).

Click to see the entire Fair Grounds 2023-24 stakes schedule or the first Condition Book.

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Melancon Arrested On Evangeline ‘Buzzer’ Charge

Jockey Gerard Melancon, a mainstay atop the riding standings in his home state of Louisiana, was arrested Aug. 26 on a charge related to the alleged possession of an electrical shocking device after Evangeline Downs stewards reported an “incident” to state police.

Ray Paulick of Paulick Report had the scoop in a Tuesday story. He cited confirmations of the “unnatural stimulation of horses” arrest from the St. Landry Parish sheriff's office, the clerk of the parish court, and the Louisiana State Police. But details were scant because of an “ongoing investigation.”

TDN attempted to contact the St. Landry Parish district attorney to find out about a court date, and whether Melancon had retained a lawyer, but had no luck reaching anyone who would comment prior to deadline for this story. Melancon himself could also not be reached for his side of the story.

The St. Landry Parish clerk of court told the Paulick Report that the 55-year-old Melancon was released on a $20,000 bail bond.
Charles Gardiner, the executive director of the Louisiana State Racing Commission, told the Paulick Report that the state police and Evangeline stewards will conduct separate investigations. But, he added, a complicating factor in the stewards' investigation is that the Evangeline race meet has ended and the stewards are not considered to be on the job 48 hours after a meet ends.

Melancon went 0-for-4 riding at Evangeline last Wednesday, Aug. 24. He was named there on mounts Thursday and Friday but did not ride either card. The day following his arrest, Melancon rode the closing-day Evangeline card Aug. 27, then rode at Louisiana Downs Aug. 28. He is named to ride at Louisiana Downs Sept. 4, 5, and 6.

Melancon has won 5,079 races from 32,444 mounts dating to 1984. In June of 2021, when profiled in the Rayne-Acadian Tribune for winning his 5,000th race, Melancon acknowledged issues in his 20s with alcohol and cocaine that nearly derailed his life and riding career. But he said he quit abusing substances in 1989 and has claimed sobriety as a recovering addict ever since.
Prior to that, Melancon's name had surfaced two alleged Louisiana race-fixing scandals.

In 1986, Melancon was named as an “unindicted co-conspirator” in the investigation of an allegedly fixed Fair Grounds race in which he purportedly received $500 from another jockey to hold back his horse. Published news accounts at the time stated that Melancon had testified before a grand jury against the fellow riders who ended up being indicted.

In April of 1987, after jockey Bryan Jenkins was allegedly caught with an illegal shocking device at Evangeline, he testified at a racing commission hearing that Melancon had handed the device to him after obtaining it from a pony person, according to coverage of the incident in the Shreveport Times.

Even though he was never indicted in either case, citing the race-fixing allegations, the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission refused to license him to ride in the 1992 GI Kentucky Derby.

In 2021, Melancon was named as a finalist for the Mike Venezia Memorial Award, which the New York Racing Association awards to a jockey who displays extraordinary sportsmanship and citizenship.

This summer, on June 29, Melancon joined a federal lawsuit in which two states, the Jockeys' Guild, and various Louisiana-based “covered persons” under the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority (HISA) are trying to get HISA derailed on alleged non-constitutionality grounds and for alleged non-compliance with federal rulemaking procedures.

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Louisiana Downs Announces Changes To 2022 Quarter Horse Schedule

The  2022 Quarter Horse racing season at Louisiana Downs began on January 10 and attracted strong interest from horsemen in the Mardi Gras Futurity (RG3).

Nominations for the first “official” futurity of the year topped previous numbers with Bruce Salard, executive director of the Louisiana Quarter Horse Breeders Association (LQHBA) sharing that a record 223 payments had been received. Based on that level of interest, it was clear that trials for the 300-yard championship could not be completed in one day.

On Friday, January 28, the Louisiana State Racing Commission (LSRC) approved a request from David Heitzmann, director of racing for the Bossier City racetrack, to amend its schedule. Approval was granted for the following changes:

  • Trials for the Mardi Gras Futurity will now take place on Saturday, March 5 and Sunday, March 6. The draw will take place on Saturday, February 26
  • Closing day of the 2022 live racing season will be on Wednesday, April 6, instead of  Thursday, April 8

“We appreciate the efficiency of the LSRC in approving the change in our schedule so that we can safely run all the trials for the Mardi Gras Futurity,” said Heitzmann. “Last year's purse was $349,946, but with such strong interest by horsemen, the ten finalists will run for a record purse on March 27.”

Louisiana Downs will also present the 15th running of the $50,000-added Mardi Gras Derby on Sunday, March 27 with trials set for Monday, March 7. Trials for the $75,000-added Louisiana Downs Futurity (G3) will be run on Sunday, March 13 with the top ten qualifiers advancing to the final on Sunday, April 3. Schooling races will be offered On February 12 and 19 for 2-year-olds paid into the Mardi Gras Futurity as well as the Louisiana Downs Futurity.

Live Quarter Horse racing will be conducted Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday through March 2. Beginning Sunday, March 6, the schedule changes to Sunday, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. One Thursday race card will be added on March 31. Post time will be 1:00 p.m. (Central), except for Mardi Gras trial dates, which will begin at 11:00 am.

Dates have also been approved for the 2022 Louisiana Downs Thoroughbred live racing season. The 84-day meet will begin on Saturday, May 7 and conclude on Tuesday, September 27.

Louisiana Downs 2022 Quarter Horse Stakes Schedule

Revised as of January 28

 

March 27         $100,000-added Mardi Gras Futurity(RG2)     2 YO LA-Bred            300 yards

$50,000-added Mardi Gras Derby                     3 YO   LA-Bred         400 yards

April 3             $75,000-added Louisiana Downs Futurity(G3)             2 YO               300 yards

 

2022 Quarter Horse Trial Dates

March 5 and March 6             Mardi Gras Futurity

March 7                                   Mardi Gras Derby

March 13                                 Louisiana Downs Futurity

2022 Schooling Race Dates

February 12                             Mardi Gras Futurity

February 19                             Louisiana Downs Futurity

The post Louisiana Downs Announces Changes To 2022 Quarter Horse Schedule appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Fair Grounds Not Definite on Dates Reduction

Jason Boulet, the Fair Grounds director of racing, was repeatedly pressed by Louisiana State Racing Commission (LSRC) member Tom Calvert Tuesday about whether or not his track would once again seek a statutory change to reduce its required number of race dates from 80 to 75 when the state legislature convenes its 2022 session Mar. 14.

The exchange did not yield a definitive answer beyond Boulet's disclosure that the Fair Grounds and its corporate parent, the gaming firm Churchill Downs, Inc. (CDI), would be in favor of participating in discussions among stakeholders that might reduce race dates in Louisiana with the goal of making it easier to fill entries at the state's four Thoroughbred tracks.

The dates statute wasn't on the agenda for the Jan. 18 LSRC meeting. But Calvert brought it up after Boulet reported that so far through the November-through-March meet, the number of starters per Fair Grounds race has dipped from 8.3 to 7.6 in a year-over-year comparison, a decrease Boulet termed “alarming.”

“The struggle for entries is a reality for us,” Boulet said, noting that the Fair Grounds has already had to obtain permission from Louisiana Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association (LHBPA) on three occasions during the current meet to card eight-race programs instead of the required nine.

“The [handle] numbers so far after 34 days–not a good, positive thing so far at 11.9% down year-to year,” Boulet said.

But Boulet also noted that year-to-year comparisons are difficult nationwide because the COVID-19 pandemic has skewed the industry's metrics.

Boulet did manage to make the handle numbers sound rosier by offering a pre-pandemic comparison that stated the Fair Grounds handle is “actually trending up 7%” from the 2019-20 meet.

“Overall handle has been a struggle,” Boulet explained. “That being said, even with that, we've had positive video poker and slots revenues over the year. That's been good for us. And it allowed us to actually do a purse increase for 15%.”

Calvert then wanted to know if Fair Grounds or CDI has legislation either pending or planned to reduce the dates requirement.

“I'm not aware of that, sir,” Boulet answered.

“Wouldn't that be a good thing for you?” Calvert asked.

“I think that, in front of this commission, yeah, I mean, that's always been a very sensitive subject about touching that 80-day minimum statute,” Boulet said. “Again, the Fair Grounds is a proponent of trying to move forward with talking about overlap, and we hope that the conversation is brought forth to this commission. Of course, the HBPA has all the rights to be concerned about moving forward with allowing us to go below the 80 days…”

Calvert then pointed out that last year, the Fair Grounds and CDI advocated for just such a five-date reduction. He noted the provision was included in 2021 racing legislation, “but at the last minute it was pulled out of the bill.”

Boulet then said he has not recently met with the legal counsel or lobbyists the Fair Grounds employs, so he allegedly wasn't sure what might be in the legislative pipeline.

“What I'm saying, I think the commission would be receptive to it,” Calvert said. “We understand that most of the successful models around America have less days than the Fair Grounds has. I just think that you guys can't drag your feet on it. You've got to move it. And sometimes I know it's like swimming against the current, but you've still got to put it out there.”

Boulet said, “I appreciate the way you put it, because I know that in the long run [that] once we are given that door to open, then all the tracks, including Churchill Downs [Inc.], would take advantage and try to move toward these boutique meets and whatever…” Boulet said. “Basically, it comes down to we hope that the commission can consider it case by case, track by track, and the HBPA has to have the final approval…”

LHBPA president Benard Chatters wasn't about to let this back-and-forth between Calvert and Boulet go without getting on the record how his organization's membership felt.

“The horsemen absolutely oppose a reduction in racing dates,” Chatter said. “The Fair Grounds runs 80 days per year. The other three tracks run 84 days, so [Fair Grounds] has a reduction in days that other tracks don't.”

Chatters noted that for some portions of the current meet, the Fair Grounds chose to run five-date race weeks instead of four, compounding race-filling difficulties.

“Everything in the horse world from the [horse] owner's perspective is on the rise,” Chatters said. “Expenses are on the rise. The one thing that's not on the rise is opportunities to race these horses. It is imperative that these owners have as many opportunities to race these horses as they can so that they stay in this business. If you look at the numbers, if you look at all of the positive things that we have coming into racing in the near future [like a cut from online sports betting], you'll be able to see that everything is in place to be able to draw more horses to the state, to bring more horses into the grounds…

“It is very, very critical that you never forget that the owners [of horses] put on this [show] and we're the ones that take all of these [negative financial consequences] by the seat of our own pants,” Chatters said, pointing out that revenues for track operators are “through the roof.”

Chatters continued: “I want to make sure that you're listening. Profits are up, betting is up, and all of this stuff. And so this 'difficulty' in getting horses is kind of far-fetched, I think…When you go to talk about cutting race days and that kind of thing [it] means that it makes it very, very difficult to not necessarily make a profit in the horse racing business as an owner, but just to keep your nose above water so that you're not drowning. When we run these [smaller outfits] out, we're in trouble.”

Calvert then asked, “How do you respond to the criticism of your position which says you want to have terrible horse racing? [That] you want to have races with four or five horses in [them] so that this low level of horsemanship, this low level of trainership, can pick up money and keep being in the business? I mean, I'm of the proposition that this should be sort Darwinistic and that [outfits that can't survive] should be eliminated from the world of horse racing. What do you think?”

Chatters responded by rattling off a sizable list of people and entities that all benefit from purse money trickling down into the economy, including all the way to farmers who grow hay and vehicle dealers who sell pickup trucks.

“So, the importance of as many people participating in horse racing as possible on the state economy is critical, or crucial,” Chatters said.

“I disagree with you when you say the owners are the bedrock of horse racing,” Calvert said. “I would say the racing fan is the bedrock of horse racing…How do you respond to those fans that say we have to eliminate this low level of horse racing to keep the fans interested? A four-horse field, a five-horse field with $5,000 claimers is not something the fans are going out to the racetrack to see. They're not even betting on those races. How do you respond to that?”

Chatters answered that those $5,000 claimers sometimes outhandle higher-quality races. Calvert didn't buy that idea. He said not with short fields, they don't.

“I have no problems, Mr. Chatters, with a $5,000 claiming race that has 12 horses,” Calvert said. “I do have a problem with four-horse races. And [CDI] has advised that the reason why [Fair Grounds has them] is because they have an 80-day meet. If they had a 75-day meet, they'd have greater purses, which would be a benefit to the horsemen…”

Chatters, in closing, said, “We're simply asking that opportunities to race is not touched [in the legislature]. We are asking this commission to stay the course with where we are with these types of issues.”

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