‘Profoundly Disappointing’: Dutrow Withdraws Kentucky License Application After Committee Deliberation

Rick Dutrow's long-running quest to return to horse racing hit another roadblock Tuesday afternoon after a Kentucky Horse Racing Commission committee unanimously asked him to withdraw an application for a trainer's license.

The KHRC's license review committee has the ability to grant a license unconditionally, grant a license with specific conditions, deny an application, or grant an applicant the opportunity to withdraw their application. Committee chair Kenneth Jackson explained that the last outcome is provided to the committee as an option because a denial from one commission can negatively impact someone's application in another jurisdiction.

Karen Murphy, attorney for Dutrow, agreed to withdraw the application on his behalf but expressed frustration that the committee provided no overview of its discussion, which was held in closed executive session.

“I don't know what you want,” said Murphy. “I don't know what you considered. I don't know what you sound so unpersuasive that you take this action, which I find to be profoundly disappointing. I'd like an answer.”

Jackson declined to provide any further comment on the matter to Murphy or other meeting participants.

In 2011, Dutrow was handed a 30-day suspension by the New York State Racing and Wagering Board for possession of hypodermic needles and a 60-day suspension for a butorphanol overage around the same time. The Board later revoked his license for 10 years and issued a $50,000 fine for the two offenses. The KHRC denied a renewal of his license the same year. Dutrow did not actually begin serving his ten-year sentence in New York until he had exhausted his appeals process in 2013 and as such, will be suspended there until January 2023.

Dutrow has tried repeatedly to have his sentence in New York shortened, but has been unsuccessful thus far.

“The racetrack means everything to me, my family. It's really been a hard time with this,” said an emotional Dutrow via video conference. “Since I've been away, I've had a chance to reflect on things and look at myself and I know that I'm part of the problem. There's no question about that. But I've done a lot of time for this. I just need an opportunity to train horses. That's all I want to do, it's all I've ever wanted to do. I'm sorry to take up your time and cause all this stuff, I just need to train horses. Please.”

Trainer Dale Romans, surgeon Dr. Larry Bramlage, and former steward Steven Lewandowski also testified on Dutrow's behalf.

“The more I would look into it, I thought, 'I cannot sit on the sidelines and let this happen to one of my colleagues,' because what would ever stop it from happening to me?” said Romans. “What this case, I think, boils down to is a vendetta in New York and with all the evidence that has come out, it's obvious.”

Bramlage, who treated a number of horses in Dutrow's care in his time on the track, said he believed the trainer's management of horses was excellent.

“The legal question is yours, but my experience with Rick is in how he treats his horses, and his approach to training is impeccable,” said Bramlage. “He never takes shortcuts…he always goes with the best alternative for the horse, he never sacrifices the horse's welfare to win a purse before something becomes clinical. He's always done it the right way.”

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Alex Sausville ‘Looking Forward To The Experience’ In Racing Office At Colonial Downs

When horses break out of the starting gate July 27 for the season's first race at Colonial Downs, Alex Sausville will add another check mark to the long list of tracks at which he has seen live racing. The New Kent, Virginia, oval will mark number 70. And when you add in his visits to tracks that have been shuttered, mothballed or are gone completely, the list grows to around 135. Pretty impressive for someone who is just 24 years old.

Sausville, who grew up outside of Saratoga in upstate New York, won't just savor the action as a fan. He has been able take his intense passion for racing and turn it into a budding career. This summer, he will be working in the racing department at Colonial Downs. He made a key connection last fall when he met Colonial's Vice President of Racing Operations Jill Byrne on Breeders' Cup weekend at Santa Anita. Byrne offered him a position during the 2020 meet and he arrived in New Kent two weeks ago.

Come Monday when the track opens for training, he will be a backstretch “gap” attendant every morning during training hours — overseeing the flow of equine traffic on and off the track, to and from the barn area. During the races, he will help insert Equibase timing system chips into each horse's saddle towel as an assistant paddock judge. And in between, he'll do anything else that is needed or asked of him.

“I expect to have some long days but am looking forward to the experience,” he said.

Sausville didn't grow up in a racing family, but his family had a lot of interest in the races given his proximity to Saratoga.

“I'd go to the races and simulcast rooms with my father, uncle, and godfather pretty much every Friday and Saturday when Saratoga was racing,” he said. “We did doubleheaders those days — Thoroughbreds in the afternoon and harness, which was right across the street, at night.”

Sausville enjoyed everything about racing and thought about a career in the field but didn't know how to go about it. After high school, he attended St. John Fisher College in Rochester for four years where he played basketball and got a degree in Marketing. After graduating, he heard about the University of Arizona's Race Track Industry Program (RTIP) from Gulfstream track announcer Pete Aiello and decided to pursue the opportunity.

He ended up spending the next 1 1/2 years in Tucson taking courses in racetrack management, racetrack marketing and animal sciences among others. Students in the program get valuable hands-on experience interning at nearby Rillito Park — the birthplace of Quarter Horse racing — which has an annual six-week winter meet.

The combination of classwork and experience — and treks across the country to visit racetracks — came together quite nicely for him.

“I realized this is what I wanted pretty quickly after I got out there,” he recalled. “The last two years have been the best of my life, from when I started there, to when I graduated from there (in December), to being able to visit tracks and gain new experiences. I loved so much of it and still love every second of it.”

Sausville's fascination with traveling to tracks around the country started eight or nine years ago though.

“I had already been to Keeneland, Belmont and Saratoga at that point, but the next place I visited was Beulah Park in Columbus. It was on its last legs. It was down to its final few race days left. There weren't more than a dozen people in the place the day I was there. It was dusty and dirty. But you could visualize how nice the place was at one time. There was an air to it. I said to my family, if there are other places like this around the country, I want to see them.”

Future track trips would sometimes be as a family, as father and son, and on other occasions, solo. On one trip, he drove from school in Tuscon to New York and visited eight or nine different tracks on the way east. With help from RTIP's Wendy Davis and Mike Weiss, he set up meetings at each with graduates of the program and with former guest speakers they had.

“I found there's such a comradery among everyone. I got to see so many alumni from the program and meet people that all had a common ground. It was great to see the passion that brings everyone together. I grew up watching races from the rail with my dad. This gave me the chance to see racing from the inside.

“I'm trying to learn bits and pieces of everything,” he added. “When you watch racing as a fan, you see some of those bits and pieces. When you get into it more, you see all the avenues it takes — working hands on with the horses, working the sales, breeding. I spent five months helping foal out mares — something I never thought about doing when I was 16 or 17.”

Sausville was asked about some top highlights from his travels.

“Arlington was great,” he replied. “I went to the Million and had an amazing time. Saratoga is my home and I sometimes get spoiled with it. Fairmount Park in Illinois stands out. I was there on a Saturday night when they had an 8:30 PM post time. The place was packed. They ran for lower purses but the crowds were jammed in along the rail. Same with Rillito,” he continued. “They didn't run for a lot of purse money there. Maiden special weight races went for $1,000. But when the horses came down the stretch, people were three- and four-deep at the rail screaming. At every track, there is an experience that separates each one from the other.”

Sausville estimates he has visited between 55 and 57 closed racetracks.

“There is an element about seeing a closed venue. I love seeing what is left. I love the history of racing.  It's what drew me into visiting. I went to Alabama and visited the Birmingham Turf Club.  It was a mecca at one time, but just never made it. To see it was amazing. It's gorgeous to see what they built it for. They had been running greyhounds most recently but aren't any more since the pandemic hit. To see that element of the past is just really exciting to feel it and experience it.”

Garden State Park, Great Lakes Downs and Pinnacle are some of the tracks he has been to that did not survive.

“At Detroit Race Course, there is nothing left,” he said. “It's just a couple of warehouses now. In other places, you can still see the grandstand or the track. Everybody in the industry started somewhere and has experiences. Take a place like Woodlands in Kansas City. Nobody knows what's going on with it now but there are 10 people that started their careers there and had some of the best times of their professional lives there. I've heard some amazing stories about some amazing places and they are all genuine. I don't know if I would have heard these unless people knew I had that level of interest.”

Before arriving at Colonial Downs, Sausville worked for five months at the 2,200-acre Stone Farm in Paris, Kentucky. After the Colonial meet ends, he will head back to Kentucky but instead of a farm, he'll be based at Keeneland to help prepare for this year's Breeders' Cup. Working at Colonial though completes a “full circle” type experience.

“I've always loved watching races on TV and certain simulcast signals would catch my eye,” he recalled. “Colonial was one of them. One of my favorite horses won the 2012 Virginia Derby. I remember watching Silver Max win it upstairs at the Saratoga harness track on a small, dirty simulcast screen. Now eight years later, I get to look out at that beautiful turf course in person every day. It's amazing to realize where I came from and where I am now.”

Colonial's Jill Byrne could not be happier with where Sausville is now.

“I met Alex initially at Breeders' Cup last year where he was working for Dora Delgado in the racing department. I knew if he was Dora-approved he had to have all the necessary qualities for a future in racing operations! Then I got to see Alex in action at the RTIP Symposium and it was even more obvious that he has the drive, knowledge and passion to learn everything about the racing industry and be a positive addition to our team at Colonial Downs. Alex is going to be a major force in horse racing's future.”

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Former Jockey, Media Specialist Ken Church Dies At Age 90 After Contracting COVID-19

Ken Church, a prominent national rider from the 1940s to the 1960s who then transitioned to racetrack Media work in Southern California, died this morning at a hospital in Reno, Nevada, his daughter, Debbie Anderson, reported. He was 90.

Anderson said her father had suffered a case of pneumonia a week ago at the retirement home where he lived in Reno and was moved to a local hospital. The cause of death was listed as the result of him contracting COVID-19.

Church, who was born in Windsor, Ontario, Canada on March 24, 1930, came to the racetrack as a teenager at Woodbine in Toronto, then began riding in the U.S. shortly thereafter. He rode in Florida, New Jersey, Illinois and Kentucky before finished his career in California. He rode in more than 14,000 races and had more than 2,000 winners.

Among the top horses he partnered with were Crafty Admiral, Oil Capitol, Old Hat, Bornastar, Native Diver, Mr. Consistency and Viking Spirit. He was the leading rider at Arlington Park and Washington Park in Chicago and a solid force wherever he competed.

When he retired from racing in 1967, he used his racing knowledge, good looks and personable ways to easily transition into a Media role for the three Southern California tracks, doing television and radio work along with speaking engagements as a racing goodwill ambassador for Del Mar, Santa Anita and Hollywood Park.

He and his late wife Nancy finally settled in Olivenhain near Del Mar and he confined his Media roles to the seaside track, working there from the 1970s through the 1990s. He was extremely popular among San Diego Media representatives who loved his ready laugh and his many racetrack tales. He retired from that role in the late '90s and moved to Reno to be near old friends.

Among his involvements with racing promotions was his participation in Del Mar's unique “Rocking Chair Derby,” the Thoroughbred version of baseball's Old Timers Game. Retired riders came back for a day to ride in a special race and the event, organized by Del Mar director of publicity Dan Smith, proved hugely popular with racing fans during its run from 1973 to 1978. Church rode in those races and won the 1974 version much to the delight of his fellow riders.

He is survived by his married daughters Debbie Anderson of Encinitas, CA, and Laurie Kurluk of Phoenix, AZ, as well as a son, Michael. Additionally, he is survived by nine grandchildren.

The family has indicated that his preference was that there be no services. They have said he will be cremated and his ashes will be combined with those of his wife of 63 years, Nancy, and that they will be scattered together at some point in the future.

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Jack Gilligan ‘Gaining A Lot Of Confidence,’ Enjoying Early Success At Louisiana Downs

What's the story behind the newest addition to the Harrah's Louisiana Downs jockey colony? Jack Gilligan has been one to watch since the meet began last month and his ear-to-ear grin in the winner's circle is just a small part of his allure!

Through the first six weeks of the meet, the 23-year-old jockey has ridden 77 horses, with 21 wins, 14 seconds and 10 thirds. He's currently tied with Joel Dominguez, who has been one of the top riders in Shreveport for the past four years.

Born in Newmarket, England, Gilligan's father, Patrick, is a Thoroughbred trainer and it was not long before his son found a calling with horses.

“I was riding a pony from five on,” said Gilligan. “When I turned 13, I began exercising horses before and after school and on weekends.”

Gilligan was enrolled in the British Racing School at 14 years-old. He explained that he received one day off from high school each week to attend classes at the esteemed program for aspiring riders.

“We were taught every aspect of racing and caring for horses,” he explained. “It was a great foundation.”

He graduated in May, 2013 and two weeks later, at the age of 16, rode in his first race.

Interestingly, his father was born in New York, so with dual citizenship, Gilligan set his sights on a riding career in the United States. Just before he turned 18, he arrived in Lexington, Kentucky and began riding as an apprentice at Turfway Park. He was the third leading rider at Ellis Park and made the move to Louisiana for the 2017-2018 Fair Grounds meet. One of the horsemen who gave him some very good mounts was Bret Calhoun who entrusted him to ride Silver Dust. The victory for the son of Tapit, owned by Tom Durant in the 2019 Mineshaft at Fair Grounds was his first graded stakes.

His momentum was derailed on January 25 of this year when he was involved in a nasty spill at Fair Grounds, suffering at broken collarbone and seven facial fractures.

“I was out until the last week of the Fair Grounds meet,” said Gilligan. “I knew it would be hard for me to get mounts in Kentucky, so I stayed in Louisiana.”

His agent in Kentucky was Liz Morris, but in Louisiana, Gilligan is represented by veteran Richie Price. They were aiming for Lone Star Park, but the uncertainty of when their season would begin prompted Price to consider shifting to Harrah's Louisiana Downs. The enticement of riding for leading trainer Karl Broberg was icing on the cake.

“He's a nice kid and is making the most of this meet,” stated Price, who is also handling mounts for apprentice Kody Kellenberger. “Jack is gaining a lot of confidence here.”

Broberg who has been the North American trainer in wins since 2014, is enjoying his association with the young jockey.

“I heard he was contemplating options and I needed a rider,” said Broberg. “I'm very pleased with Jack; he puts his horses in the right position, and we are winning races.”

Personality-wise, you would be hard-pressed to find two more different personality types than the irascible Broberg and the optimistic and upbeat Gilligan.

“He's hilarious,” acknowledged Gilligan when asked about Broberg. “No filter whatsoever and tells it like it is. But he is fully invested in our industry and I am lucky to work with his assistant, Kevin Martin here at Louisiana Downs. He does a great job!

Gilligan loves the history, culture and food in Louisiana and recently bought a place in New Orleans. Now, riding afternoons with heat indexes in the 100's is another story!

“The first weekend (in June) I thought I was going to die,” he said. “I got some relief by dunking my head in the ice bucket even though all the jocks were laughing at me.”

But he takes it all in stride because the camaraderie in the jocks room is very special.

“I was a little worried about fitting in, but everyone has been very friendly,” said Gilligan. “I love the atmosphere in the room and got command of the Cajun accent when I was in the same part of the Churchill Downs jocks room with Calvin Borel. At first I didn't understand half the words, but I've got them down now!”

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