Breeders’ Cup Announces Election Of 20 New Members

The Breeders' Cup announced today that 20 individuals were elected to serve as Breeders' Cup Members. Voting for the 2022 Member election by Breeders' Cup 2021 foal and stallion nominators was concluded at 5:00 p.m. ET on June 6. Votenet, an independent election services company, administered the Members Election voting process.

The following individuals, listed alphabetically, received the most votes from the Breeders' Cup nominators to fill 20 Member seats. Each Member will serve a four-year term:

Rory Babich
Antony Beck
Gatewood Bell
Case Clay
Alan Cooper
Everett Dobson
William S. Farish, Jr.
H. Greg Goodman
Jonathan Green
Fred W. Hertrich, III
Jak Knelman
M.V. Magnier
Pope McLean, Jr.
Gavin Murphy
Garrett O'Rourke
Mike Pons
Daisy Phipps Pulito
Jaime Roth
Tom Ryan
Shunsuke Yoshida
“It is my pleasure to congratulate our new and re-elected Members who will be serving the Breeders' Cup over the next four years,” said Barbara Banke, Breeders' Cup Chair. “In concert with current Members, we will be seeking their insights and expertise in our continued efforts to enhance the Breeders' Cup World Championships, our racing programs, and the safety and integrity for all those who participate in Thoroughbred racing.”

The Breeders' Cup Members are elected every other year by Breeders' Cup foal and stallion nominators through a proportional voting system based on the level of nominations paid to the organization. There are a total of 39 elected Breeders' Cup Members.

The Members meet each July and elect individuals to the Breeders' Cup Board of Directors, which oversees the activities of the organization.

The online portion of the Breeders' Cup Director election will begin on July 1 and conclude on July 8. The voting results will be announced following the annual meeting of the Breeders' Cup Members on July 14.

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CKRH Celebrates Return Of Popular Fundraiser To Keeneland; Event Includes Online Auction Of Thoroughbred Halters

A beloved non-profit therapeutic riding program, Central Kentucky Riding for Hope (CKRH), is celebrating the return of its Night Of The Stars gala in the Keeneland Sales Pavilion on June 18, 2022. The evening will include dinner, silent & live auctions and a simulated Thoroughbred auction that gives guests the opportunity to sponsor a CKRH rider & program horse team for the coming year.

Tickets to the event & more information can be found at http://bidpal.net/nots2022. Nearly 250 items are now available for online bidding, including:

–19 halters worn by various Thoroughbred superstars such as Triple Crown winners American Pharoah and Justify, champion Arrogate and 2022 Kentucky Oaks winner Secret Oath. Each halter comes with a Certificate of Authenticity

–A signed 1992 NCAA Elite Eight basketball from the iconic University of Kentucky and Duke game memorialized by Christian Laettner's buzzer-beating shot.

–Box stall equine transport by Salle Horse Vans from Lexington, KY to Ocala, Fla.

–Corporate box for 2022 or 2023 race meets at Churchill Downs

–An equine oil painting by the late renowned animalier Count Bernard de Claviere

–Unique experiences such a personal helicopter tour or a variety of premium Kentucky bourbons

For additional details or questions, please contact Jeannie Brewer at (859) 231-7066 x 32.

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How Dave Johnson’s Famous ‘And Down The Stretch They Come’ Race Call Continues To Serve The Industry

Announcer Dave Johnson's signature “…and down the stretch they come” call as a field enters the final straightaway is practically as synonymous with horse racing as the “Call to Post.” As Amanda Duckworth writes in Thoroughbred Racing Commentary, those words continue to support various facets of the horse racing industry long after Johnson left the announcer's booth.

In the early 2010s, Johnson trademarked the phrase “and down the stretch they come,” after seeing companies as large as Amazon make money off merchandise with the saying Johnson coined, without his permission.

Though he has brought in more than a quarter of a million dollars off the rights to that phrase over the past decade, Johnson has donated the proceedings to a wide variety of charities within the racing sphere, between both the Thoroughbred and Standardbred realms.

Beneficiaries of Johnson's donations based off the phrase's rights have included New York's Backstretch Employee Service Team (BEST), Churchill Downs' Backside Learning Center, and various scholarships including the University of Arizona's Racetrack Industry Program.

“It wasn't to make money, and I have not kept a nickel from it,” Johnson told Thoroughbred Racing Commentary. “I did it because so many people were using it however they wanted, and they weren't even asking permission. It was just to stop them from doing that. The important thing is that if the phrase is being used, it's then helping those in the game that can really use it.”

Read more at Thoroughbred Racing Commentary.

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‘A Horsemen’s Track Manager,’ Ellis Park’s Jeff Hall Dead At 75

Jeff Hall — Ellis Park's popular director of racing operations who began his more than 50 years at the Henderson, Ky., track by parking cars as a teenager — passed away Saturday morning at University of Louisville Health-Jewish Hospital. He was 75.

A lifelong resident of Henderson, Hall was known for his strong local connections in the Tri-State region, his deep love of horse racing and his knowledge of how the different components of a track worked and were interrelated.

“When we lost Jeff Hall, we lost on both sides of the river,” said Ellis Park-based trainer John Hancock, who had a particularly close association with Hall, including with his work as a Kentucky HBPA board member. “Jeff Hall was a horsemen's track manager. His door was open at all times. He would listen at all times, and he would do his best to get done what needed to get done. He always had a smile. He was always there when we needed him.”

“I started nearly every day at Ellis by getting myself a cup of coffee and spending my first 10-20 minutes with Jeff,” said Ellis Entertainment LLC general manager Jeff Inman. “Just because his optimism and energy gave me a boost to start the day off. He loved this place and he loved the sport; but most of all, he loved the people here. I appreciated his knowledge, but it is his friendship that will always stay with me.”

Hall loved to handicap the races and relished driving his golf cart around the backstretch interacting with trainers. His preferred attire was jeans, boots, ball cap and a T-shirt or golf shirt (particularly of the UK persuasion). If the occasion demanded, he'd put on a dress shirt and sometimes even a sports coat.

Hall's wardrobe reflected his down-home personality that was among the reasons he was so popular among those with whom he worked.

“Jeff was Ellis Park's rudder for racing and an institution,” said Marty Maline, executive director of the Kentucky HBPA. “He knew everybody, knew how everything needed to work. He also viewed the horsemen and the Kentucky HBPA as partners, with everyone having the goal of putting on the best racing possible at Ellis Park. Jeff got such a thrill every time an Ellis Park-raced horse went on to win a big stakes. He took so much pride that (Horse of the Year) Knicks Go and (Kentucky Oaks winner) Shedaresthedevil trained there last summer.”

“Jeff was very dedicated to Ellis Park, dedicated to the horsemen and the fans,” said Henderson Mayor Steve Austin. “I think his biggest contribution in the last couple of years had to do with track maintenance and turf course maintenance. The track was just being praised by all the horsemen how good of shape it was in and how good it was for the horses. Just things like that.”

Marc Guilfoil, executive director of the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission, said he and Hall first met when he was working for the commission and Hall was mutuels manager at the long-since shuttered Riverside Downs harness track in Henderson in the mid-1980s.

“Personally and professionally, there wasn't a better person out there,” Guilfoil said. “Above everything else, he was a good friend. He truly cared. He cared about horsemen and he cared about the community. You know at each race track the person you can call to get things done, and Jeff was our guy. He was our guy at Ellis Park and for a long time he's been that guy. Jeff got things done, or he'd tell you that it can't be done. A lie was not in him. It might not be what you wanted to hear but he would tell you 100 percent the truth: I can do that or I can't do that.

“If you needed a purple left-handed monkey wrench, you'd call Jeff and he knew exactly where one was at. He'd done a favor for somebody in 1987, trading Bobcats or something, and the guy owed him that plus a water pump. And he would get it.”

Hall graduated from Henderson (City) High School and Western Kentucky University. He worked for years at Black Equipment selling heavy equipment and at one stage worked in the oil business. Through most that time, Hall also worked summers at Ellis Park, starting out as a mutuel clerk and advancing to full-time work as mutuels director to general manager to concentrating on the racing component as director of racing operations.

Hall's career in racing spanned six ownership groups at Ellis Park, dating back to when Lester Yeager ran the track for the heirs of James C. Ellis.

“Jeff knew everything about the track: where the wiring was, the pipes,” said Henderson businessman Bill Latta, a horse owner and friend who was two years behind Hall in school. “He'd been there long enough that he knew a lot about the total facility and, for lack of a better term, the politics of the horse business and any idiosyncrasies of them. That's a lot of institutional knowledge that is lost now.

“And he was just a good guy, and I think that's about the best thing you can say about a person.”

Survivors include his wife of 38 years, Raini Smith Hall; two daughters, Kristie Hall Watson and her husband, Mark, of Lexington, Ky., and Ashley Harper Smith of Nashville, Tenn.; brother Tim Hall and his wife, Susan, of Sturgis, Ky.; and granddaughters Charlie Watson and Margot Watson.

A celebration of life will be held from noon until 2 p.m. CT on Saturday, June 11, at Rudy-Rowland Funeral Home, 604 Center Street, Henderson, Ky., 42420.

“To call him a dear friend doesn't do justice,” said Ellis Park racing secretary Dan Bork. “He was a pleasure to work with and just to be around. He will be missed. He meant so much to the racetrack and the community.”

Jimbo Liles, Hall's college roommate at WKU, recalled his lifelong friend as someone who cherished his family and was always ready with a helping hand. And, he said, “He really loved Ellis Park. He was a special guy.”

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