Phillips: Let Kentucky’s HHR Fight Be A Warning To Others; Forge Contacts With Legislators Now

Racing interests across the country should pay close attention to what almost happened in Kentucky. A state supreme court ruling in September on historical horse racing (HHR) nearly shut down the entire Kentucky racing industry. The ruling said a legislative fix was needed. Racing interests had to scramble — it was a legislative scramble could happen to any racing jurisdiction.

Such a panic in other places would not on the scale as it was in Kentucky, where 60,000 direct and indirect jobs, $5.2 billion in economic impact, and $15 million in fiscal year 2020 for the Kentucky Thoroughbred Development Fund purses were at stake.

To avoid a legislative scramble, building relationship with legislators and policy makers should be in the DNA of everyone associated with racing. It is hard to believe in a place with iconic tracks like Churchill and Keeneland plus the home base of major racing organizations that relationship-building was not an ongoing activity.

Being unprepared is not an option. In today's environment where everything is controversial, it is vital that an infrastructure is in place to influence the outcome of legislative, regulatory or policy issues.

Preparation is the key to success. The absolute first step is to make certain everyone involved from the front office of a racetrack to the backstretch knows who their own legislators are.

A few quick ideas to build legislative relations I have used over the years: introductory meetings, staying in touch, working in political campaigns, attending fundraisers, town hall meetings and other events honoring the legislator. Seek out their opinion, look for ways to mention/publicize the legislator, invite them to meetings and events, give them awards, send out photos to local and social media.

The final important point: do not wait until you need something to get in touch.

Bill Phillips operates Phillips Strategy a consulting firm and he is a former West Virginia Racing Commissioner, Chief of Staff to WV Governor & Members of Congress. Phillips also served as an executive to professional associations, managing their legislative relations.

The post Phillips: Let Kentucky’s HHR Fight Be A Warning To Others; Forge Contacts With Legislators Now appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Gilligan: Some Trainers Cheat, Some Are Horse Whisperers

There's an old saying that if you're not cheating, you're not trying.

It is a statistical certainty that some racehorse trainers are dishonest cheats, because in any given population there are a certain number of people who will cheat to win and since cheating can confer an edge, you are more likely to find cheats amongst the more successful members of a group — until, if or when they get caught. Lance Armstrong is a very famous example.

Studies have been done on the human tendency to cheat. One study found MBA students cheat more than any other groups of students. Another study asked subjects to roll a die and if they reported rolling a one through five, they'd get that number of dollars. If they rolled a six they would get nothing.

Apparently the number six was not rolled as much as it should have been and number five was rolled an awful lot. In fact, 60% of the rolls were misreported. When the same study was done on a computer so the results could be monitored and compared to what the subjects reported, 15% of people didn't even bother pressing the random number producer to get a number. They just reported that they rolled a five. They were the most dishonest souls of all.

If people will cheat for $5 what would they be tempted to do to win millions? If Lance Armstrong would inject himself with substances to gain an edge, what might someone be prepared to give an animal?

Natalie Voss recently wrote a great piece in The Paulick Report about why the media doesn't call out the suspected cheats in the sport, explaining clearly that without proof journalists' hands are tied.

So, in the absence of evidence, how might the cheater be identified?

I don't know how many race horse trainers have an MBA, but the ones that do must be assumed guilty until proven otherwise.

Studies suggest dishonest people are less happy than honest people (that guilty conscience). So any trainers who seem to possess a rather weepy and dejected countenance should set alarm bells ringing.

'There is a saying in golf that people who cheat in life don't always cheat at golf, but people who cheat at golf invariably cheat in life. Perhaps before getting licensed all trainers should have to play a round of golf with a state steward and later in the clubhouse roll some dice.

The Voss article provoked a lot of commentary, and perhaps the question that rang truest was that as far as horsemen goes, how do some horsemen seem to glean great improvement from so many of their horses if they're not cheating? Is it possible to improve a horse by many lengths?

As a horseman I can tell you categorically that great improvement can be made in a horse's performance without a needle, and I would like to give a couple of examples of my own.

Kind Emperor came into my life as a 4-year-old maiden who'd raced 29 times. He was a good galloper, a fairly strong type and flightier than a bird.

I let him do one good gallop a day (horses often do two gallops a morning in Europe) and very seldom breezed him. I decided to move him up in distance from the sprints he had raced exclusively in to a mile and told the jockey not to fight the horse, to let him run and use his stride.  He won second time out and went on to seven career victories winning at distances up to a mile and a half and gaining himself a little fan club at Yarmouth – the only track he decided he would win at – for his exuberant freewheeling front running style, often going ten lengths clear of the field by halfway through a race.

Rushcutter Bay was a horse I bought as a yearling for 450 guineas. He had less pedigree than me and was small, but he was perfectly formed.

He was always a good horse winning his maiden second time out as a 2-year-old at Royal Windsor. He became a high-class handicapper running in the Wokingham Handicap at Royal Ascot a couple of times.

We were having some non-specific problems with his back end one year that neither myself our vets or physiotherapist could diagnose, so I contacted Mary Bromiley, the most renowned equine physiotherapist in the UK. She was in her late sixties by then, but still practicing although fussy about who she treated due to being in such demand. She agreed to take him. I sent him to her and she kept him about ten days. On the third day she called and said she had no idea what was wrong with his back but asked if he tended to duck right a bit coming out of the gate and was he sometimes a bit slow away. I said yes, he had been doing both. She said there was a minor ligament in his right hock that was bothering him slightly.

She told me that in his next race he may do the same from the gate out of habit, but after that he would jump straight and fast. She was right.

I eventually found a world renowned equine neurologist and told him about Rushcutter's problem. He diagnosed a problem with a nerve in the saddle area being affected by having a rider upon him.

After rest he resumed training and we took to warming him up in a lunge ring with no rider, then myself or another would be legged up as close to the gallop as possible and would stand in the irons while he danced the dozen or so yards onto it.  At the end of the gallop someone else would be  waiting with a lead rein, we would whip off the saddle and hand walk him the half mile home home, letting him pick grass along the way.

Three runs later he won the Rous Stakes at Newmarket bet from 50-1 down to 20-1. The handicapper raised him 20 pounds for his efforts. First time out the following year he won the Palace House Stakes again at Newmarket. The handicapper raised him another nine pounds for that win which made him, if I remember rightly, the highest rated sprinter in the country, indeed in Europe at the time.

I didn't eke out huge improvement from all horses that were sent to me, or even most of them. Most of the small string of horses I trained were cheap and modest when they arrived and cheap and modest when they left.

I know, as a racehorse trainer, that if I did manage to improve one, exactly how it was improved, and the reasons behind it. So, the media should not and cannot call out a trainer after a race because a horse in his care has improved greatly. But perhaps they could and should ask the trainer exactly how the horse has achieved such improvement. And the trainer should be falling over themselves to explain how clever they are, the way I just did.

Elon Musk says he asks engineers who interview for his companies a question he relies heavily on. “Tell me about a problem you have solved, and how you did it.”  Musk says the more detailed and technical their answer, the more it confirmed the honesty of their answer and their expertise.

Patrick Gilligan has been active in the racing industry for 38 years. He briefly rode races, galloped horses for 30 years, trained in Europe and has worked as an assistant in the United States. He is the author of 'Around Kentucky With The Bug,' which chronicles his son Jack's experiences as a jockey and was nominated for the 2018 Tony Ryan Book Award.

The post Gilligan: Some Trainers Cheat, Some Are Horse Whisperers appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Steve Asmussen Op/Ed: Please Do What is Right for the Racehorse

With heightened accountability for the health and welfare of horses, trainers today are being held to the highest of standards–as we should. However, we can see every day that race tracks and track ownership groups are not held to that same standard.

A prime example is the unfortunate trend of closing a racetrack one day a week for training. This short-sighted cost-cutting move is not in racehorses’ best interest.

I feel that I’ve exhausted the proper channels to discuss this with people in charge of safety. We need all concerned horsemen and horsemen’s associations to explain to track management and regulators why being closed a day a week for training is not a simple scheduling hurdle for trainers but absolutely is not doing right by the horse.

Tracks have added multiple maintenance breaks during training hours in order to maintain the best track surface possible. But the practice of closing a racetrack one day a week funnels an unnecessary volume of horses to work over the same racetrack, which defeats the purpose of having a renovation break or multiple breaks.

At a time when horsemanship and reacting to the individual needs of a horse should be encouraged, a mandated training “dark day” does not allow taking into account variables such as weather, track condition on a given day, timing of races or just how the horse is doing–and how the horse performed in training one morning might necessitate an adjustment for the next day.

If there’s so much more accountability for the health of a horse, then let us do everything possible to get them over there in the best shape achievable.

Soundness keeps horses training and racing, and without sound horses there are no races. Denying an opportunity to train on a schedule tailored to the individual horse, rather than for someone sitting in an office, hurts the health of our racehorses.

From my Churchill Downs and Oaklawn Park veterinarian, Dr. William C. Hawk:
“It’s not a herd mentality, where we’re trying to milk a certain group of cows at a certain time every day. Mandated days off increase the incidence of the syndrome known as ‘tying-up,’ which can lead to muscle damage, with fillies particularly susceptible. Often those horses will have to be tranquilized as prevention the day after they don’t train. If they tie-up, we have to scratch them in order to treat them, and we can’t treat them to prevent it.

“Most horses can benefit from a day off. It just needs to be by the trainers’ discretion based on what they see with each individual horse, and we want these horses training up to the day they race. We don’t want the day before for sure, and usually a couple of days before that, off before exerting at full speed.

“There are metabolic issues. Proper movement affects hooves and legs, as well as the gastrointestinal, cardiovascular and respiratory systems. Proper exercise improves their circulation, digestion, flexibility, muscle and bone development, which in turn impacts their overall health and happiness.

“No athlete is scheduled to take a set day off every week because schedules change, weather changes and games are played on different days of the week. We find the same in horse racing.
“On top of this, the track cannot be at its optimum condition for morning training after a day with no maintenance. Putting sufficient amounts of water on the track is one of the most critical components to track safety. After missing a day, it can take another day or more–depending on weather–to gain back what was lost.”

It’s amazing the resistance you meet from people in position to make decisions for the safety of the horses. It’s not OK to do nothing. It’s 100 percent not what’s best for a horse.

I continue to see the layers of safety measures being put in place, the motivation of some edicts having more to do with the hope of changing perceived public perception rather than actually benefitting the horse. What I don’t see is horsemen being part of determining thoughtful measures that effect positive transformation. That must change, and the ill-advised practice of mandatory non-training days should stop now.

Steve Asmussen is a Hall of Fame trainer who has won more than 9,000 races. William C. Hawk DVM has practiced equine medicine at the racetrack for more than 40 years.

The post Steve Asmussen Op/Ed: Please Do What is Right for the Racehorse appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Op/Ed: Owning Horses and ‘Buying’ a Dream

Sam Hoskins, an owner, breeder, syndicate manager and ROA board member, gives us his view of how the reduced prize-money will impact racing in Britain

From where we were back in the spring, to get racing back on was an incredible achievement and obviously everyone understood then that prize-money was going to be hit. Horsemen accepted that up to the point when it became clear that, despite media rights flowing, there was going to be largely no executive contribution from the majority of racecourses. The call for transparency over media rights payments has been around for a while now and it has become more widespread and vocal lately as horsemen have rightly sought to establish the full, if bleak, picture of this main source of industry funding–one that should be co-owned by racecourses and horsemen in my view. For a while now, the ROA board has been aware of the figures cited in Project Enable which points to an unaccounted sum of over £100m between the gross total media rights and the amount paid to racecourses. Hopefully this all becomes clearer in due course.

It has obviously been great to get a few owners back on track slowly but surely. Some racecourses have made a fantastic effort but there are others who’ve done the bare minimum and, frustratingly from my perspective, haven’t shown sufficient flexibility regarding badge allocation. I run two syndicates, Kennet Valley Thoroughbreds and Hot To Trot Racing, and the key to success isn’t always about winners–it is about giving everyone the best time possible and making it fun. The problem to date this summer, despite some wonderful television coverage by ITV and RTV/SSR, there has been little fun to savour on the racecourse. While we’ve done our best to convey that excitement via new communication platforms, ultimately mornings on the gallops and days at the races form a huge huge part of racehorse ownership, and indeed being part of a syndicate. At the moment, as well as running for peanuts, syndicates are being vastly restricted in terms of numbers being allowed on track while all owners are finding it tough to accept an owner’s experience with such limited interaction with trainer and jockey. Many are choosing to stay at home and watch it on TV, which is fine but a bit sad I feel. People do understand the restrictions have been imposed by government but with so many mixed messages it is getting harder to understand why racing, which is fundamentally an outdoor sport, has taken so long to welcome back crowds, even if they have to be reduced in number in the short term. I feel perception is winning the battle over common sense right now.

Hopefully the forthcoming racegoer test days will give rise to the above because ultimately we are an entertainment industry. To a certain extent you could say that prize-money doesn’t come into that part of the business, but there are many reasons why prize-money is important. Firstly, having some reward for your investment allows smaller owners and syndicate members to subsidise their reinvestment in the sport year after year. Then of course there is the competition we face from fellow racing nations such as France, Ireland, America, Hong Kong and Australia, where the prize-money pools are far greater. [Editor’s Note: The pilot project for fans at Doncaster’s St Leger meeting was cancelled after Wednesday’s card due to government directives.]

As John Gosden has already warned so eloquently, we run the risk of becoming a nursery for other nations, and it is clear that an increasing number of good horses are being bought to race on overseas. It is vital for Britain’s stature in the racing world that we are able to retain a far greater number of our better horses, not only to put on the best racing, but eventually for the best of them to join the breeding pool. Prize-money is also vital for trainers, jockeys and stable staff and without their percentages, training fees may be forced even higher than they currently are.

Most owners realise that if they have a bad horse they are going to win little or no money, but if you are lucky enough to have a horse rated 90 or 100 on the flat and you are running for £10,000 to the winner, then even if you win you’ve barely paid half of your annual training fees. This is very far from the situation experienced by owners in most other racing nations, where they can at least cover their annual costs with a decent win or two.

If owners felt confident that the racecourses, especially the big racecourse groups, were doing as much as they could to ease the situation then that would be fine, but there’s been a lot of uncertainty surrounding the funding mechanism and size of the growing media rights pot for years, not just since the onset of COVID-19. The lack of transparency over media rights and what the racecourses are actually being paid for owners running their horses at their tracks remains a sticking point. Some independent racecourses have commendably opened their books in recent times but the large racecourse groups continue to frustrate, not least as the business model for some of their tracks (i.e the all-weather tracks) hasn’t actually changed as significantly as it has for the majority who rely so heavily on crowds.

I know racing can be perceived as an elitist sport but we need people to be involved at all levels and for more owners to be brought into racing. For that, we need to support the grassroots of the sport and provide the appropriate aspiration to own horses and ‘buy a dream’. It will be interesting to see how the field sizes hold up this autumn when the fixture list resumes as normal. To be honest, a reduced pool of horses and resulting increased competition for runners going forwards could be a good thing as, while price elasticity isn’t exclusive to racing, it might force some tracks to prioritise executive contribution into prize-money.

From the syndicate members I have been speaking to, there is a concern about coming back in next year, especially if they feel that they will be unable to go to see their horse run, and at the moment, only a handful of syndicate members are granted access to a racecourse even if they have a runner.

I have a few shares in horses myself in France but I could never afford to do that here. In Britain, we are never going to have a Tote monopoly like they do in France, but there are a few things they do there that we could try here. For example, the Quinté + handicap which is run in France every day. I don’t see why that wouldn’t work here, to have a feature handicap that is a daily betting focal point, with a premier race and a secondary race, and guaranteeing 16 runners and good prize-money.

Ultimately, of course, it is so important that horsemen, racecourses and bookmakers all work together. It is very easy to criticise but it’s so much harder to come up with solutions. One point that I feel sure horsemen and racecourses can certainly agree is a push for levy to be collected on a percentage of turnover rather than profits and for levy to apply on overseas horse racing bets. That would make a huge difference, and it would benefit racecourses as well as horsemen.

The post Op/Ed: Owning Horses and ‘Buying’ a Dream appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights