Kiaran McLaughlin Joins TDN Writers’ Room Podcast

It's been a memorable few months for trainer-turned-jockey-agent Kiaran McLaughlin. He's been nominated to the Hall of Fame for the first time and, as the agent for Luis Saez, has his client lined up with many of the top horses in the sport, including top candidates for the GI Kentucky Derby in Tapit Trice (Tapit) and Instant Coffee (Bolt d'Oro). With plenty to talk about, McLaughlin joined this week's TDN Writers' Room podcast presented by Keeneland. McLaughlin was this week's Green Group Guest of the Week.

McLaughlin was asked his opinion of Tapit Trice's win in the GII Tampa Bay Derby, which has not necessarily drawn rave reviews.

“I want to hope that he gets out of the gate a little better next time,” he said. “He was slow to break and was last, but he stayed out of trouble. I never thought he was going to win until the sixteenth pole. But he's got a beautiful stride and a great mind for a Tapit. Luis likes him a lot.”

A Derby win would be Saez's first. He crossed the finish line in front in 2019 aboard Maximum Security (New Year's Day), but was disqualified for interference. Has that experience made Saez even hungrier to win a Derby?

“That was a tough one,” said McLaughlin, who was not Saez's agent at the time. “He handled it great. He doesn't bring it up. He does not want to look back on it. He's always looking to the next Saturday and the Saturday after that. But everybody in the industry wants to win the Kentucky Derby. And for him, I'm sure that he wants to win it even more since he lost it in a disqualification.”

In order to ride Tapit Trice, McLaughlin had to take off the Wayne Lukas-trained GI Kentucky Oaks winner Secret Oath (Arrogate), who won the GII Azeri S. at Oaklawn in her 4-year-old debut. McLaughlin said the decision was all about sticking with a top horse for the Kentucky Derby. Tyler Gaffalione rode Secret Oath.

“We also had to take off Frank's Rockette (Into Mischief), who won the (GIII) Hurricane Bertie at Gulfstream,” McLaughlin said. “So we lost two very nice fillies. But at Derby time, you're always trying to get to the Kentucky Derby. Wayne was hard on me when I first called him and told him that we were not going to be out there on her. He said, 'You're riding the second best one for Todd (Pletcher). What are you thinking?' I said, 'You're probably right.' He got after me a little bit thinking I was making the wrong decision. I was happy that he won and we won.”

Elsewhere on the podcast, which is also sponsored by Coolmore, the Pennsylvania Horse Breeders Association, Woodford Thoroughbreds, The Kentucky Thoroughbred Association, XBTV, 1/st Racing, WinStar Farm, Lane's End and West Point Thoroughbreds, Randy Moss, Zoe Cadman and Bill Finley took a look back at the win in the Tampa Bay Derby by Tapit Trice and the victory by Secret Oath in the Azeri, which the group deemed the most impressive performance of the week. The ever versatile Moss and Cadman also covered what has been a memorable Cheltenham Festival in the U.K. and raved about the wins by Honeysuckle (GB) (Sulamani {Ire}) and Constitution Hill (GB) (Blue Bresil {Fr}). In other news, the group covered the story of the alarming dip in handle that has been on-going since October and tried to figure out what is going on. A possible answer may be the level of play from the Computer Robotic Wagering players, who, by some estimates, now account for 33% of the total handle in the U.S. The trials and tribulations of former owner Ron Paolucci also made the podcast. Paolucci faces up to eight years in prison after pleading guilty to two counts of tax fraud and tax evasion.

Click for the Writers' Room Podcast's Audio or Video.

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Owner Ron Paolucci Pleads Guilty to Tax Fraud

Ron Paolucci, whose Loooch Racing Stables finished second nationally in wins in 2017 and 2018,  pled guilty on Feb. 28 to two counts of tax fraud and tax evasion in a federal court in Texas. Paolucci faces up to eight years in prison on the two counts, as well as $350,000 in fines. He will also be required to pay $13 million in restitution to the Internal Revenue Service.

The story was first reported by The Paulick Report.

The prosecution alleged that, during a seven-year period from 2014 through 2020, Paolucci failed to pay the IRS over $13 million in withholdings for income, Medicare and Social Security that he took from employees at companies he owned, including American Management Staffing.  Paolucci's employees allegedly received false W-2 statements from Paolucci's companies that showed that taxes had been withheld from their pay and sent to the IRS. Instead, it has been alleged that Paolucci took $13,561,116 out of his employees' checks during the period in question but never sent the money to the IRS.

Paolucci also admitted to defrauding the government when it came to his own earnings Paolucci admitted that he failed to report more than $17 million he received in compensation from AMS from 2015 to 2020. On his 2017 taxes, Paolucci reported that his wages for the year were $0 when he actually took in $3.3 million from his company AMS.

Loooch Racing Stables operated from 2011 to 2018 and piled up hundreds of wins, many of them on the Ohio racing circuit. He had 160 wins in 2017 and 215 in 2018. Loooch won a total of 871 races. At times, Paolucci branched out and was a partner on a handful of top horses, among them Ria Antonia (Rockport Harbor), the winner, via disqualification, of the 2013 GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies.

Paolucci was outspoken and in 2018 said he was leaving the sport because he felt he was being mistreated.

“This is a game that says it wants guys like me,” he said. “But it really doesn't. I speak my mind, run where I want to, I don't believe in the politics.”

Paolucci disbanded Loooch Racing but continued to run horses under his own name. Under the name of Ron Paolucci Racing LLC, Paolucci had 799 starts and 191 wins in 2019. He had 45 more wins in 2020 and won 10 races in 2021 . He had just one win in 2022 and has not started a horse since May 17 of last year when he had a start at Thistledown.

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‘Special’ Uno Mas Modelo Preparing For Second Career With Racing For Home

Willingness to adapt to new surroundings and challenges is a hallmark of any successful athlete, equine or human. Uno Mas Modelo embodied that sentiment in a racing career that spanned 2015-19 and produced double-digit wins.

The Kentucky-bred son of Macho Uno, retired this year by Ron Paolucci Racing, produced consistent efforts at tracks across the country as he rose from claim to fame by winning a quartet of stakes races late in his 35-race career. The bay gelding posted a 10-5-1 record, mixing quality and quantity, compiling wins at five tracks in four states.

After registering a successful stint as a claiming horse who won at least one race for his first three trainers, Uno Mas Modelo came into the care of conditioner Anthony Quartarolo in 2018. The move resulted in a late-career resurgence, with all four of his stakes wins coming between 2018-19, when Uno Mas Modelo was 5 and 6 years old.

“He could win anywhere, he was a runner,” Quartarolo said. “We put blinkers on him and did some little things and he just turned it around. He got good and stayed good. He just kept winning. I love that horse. I love all my horses but he's special. He's a neat horse. To get good like that, he makes you look good as a trainer.”

His 5-year-old season also saw Uno Mas Modelo make an impression on New York fans, winning both of his 2018 starts at historic Saratoga Race Course before logging scores in the Bet on Sunshine at Churchill Downs and closing his campaign with a win in the Claiming Crown Rapid Transit at Gulfstream Park. He racked up two more stakes wins in Florida in 2019, taking both the Perseus and Rough and Ready. Fittingly for a horse who improved with age, Uno Mas Modelo ended his career with his first Grade 1 appearance, running 10th in the Churchill Downs going seven furlongs in May 2019.

On the track, a 7-year-old Thoroughbred such as Uno Mas Modelo is a respected old-timer. But as a horse, he is in the prime of his life with his breed's average lifespan between 25-28 years. With all his strength, intelligence, willingness and experience, Uno Mas Modelo just needed a new outlet to begin his career's next phase.

Racing For Home, a non-profit charity for off-the-track Thoroughbreds, is providing support for Uno Mas Modelo's new career. Founded in 2010 by NYRA television analyst Acacia Courtney, Racing For Home's mission is to rehabilitate and re-train racehorses for a second career. Run by Courtney and her mother, Sherrie Courtney, the organization was accredited in 2019 by the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance (TAA), making them one of two such facilities in Connecticut and one of 74 throughout the entire United States.

Located in Ellington, Conn., Racing For Home provides Thoroughbreds with a structured and goal-orientated routine – similar to what was used during their racing careers – to transition to new vocations, which can include a new path as a show horse or preparation for adoption. The organization also provides a sanctuary for horses who were injured during their careers and physically cannot have a second career.

“They thrive on routine and having a job. They are bred to fill a purpose,” said Courtney, a key member of NYRA's America's Day at the Races broadcast team. “They can get bored, so giving them a new career, especially for horses just off the racetrack, is very important. Having a job, mentally, does so much good for them.”

Courtney said there are currently 11 off-track Thoroughbreds [OTTBs] in their care, with Uno Mas Modelo among the latest additions. The veteran horse last breezed in May at Churchill Downs and when his racing career concluded due to injury, Quartarolo's daughter, Ashley, reached out to the Courtneys about finding a new role for a talented horse who had banked nearly $400,000 in career earnings and won as many as five races in a single year.

“He didn't miss many dances, for sure, but he was a horse who came to our farm and is still in that transition period,” Courtney said. “He's the type of horse who you can tell has just received a lot of love and good care throughout his career. He's a total gentlemen and it's been a pleasure getting to work with him.”

A bowed tendon ended Uno Mas Modelo's racing days, but competition can still potentially be part of his future. As he heals, Racing For Home will try to transition him to a possible jumper once he's ready to be ridden and start that path.

“It might take a little bit of time to get there [being a jumper]. He didn't join us until this year,” Courtney said. “He had some foot issues and even walking was difficult for a while, but he's moving in the right direction. He's not able to be ridden just yet, but he has that attitude; the willingness to please, and he has such a good, calm mentality. When he is physically ready, the mental jump to a new career should be no problem at all. He just rolls with anything and is really agreeable.”

Uno Mas Modelo wasn't the first horse formerly trained by Quartarolo to end up with Racing For Home. The conditioner said the first Thoroughbred he got for his daughter, named First Love, didn't end up doing much on the racetrack and was handed over to an acquaintance in New Jersey. Years later, Quartarolo said they found out that First Love was in Racing For Home's care. When it was time to find Uno Mas Modelo a new home, the choice was obvious.

“He was a roan and he's all gray now,” Quartarolo said with a laugh. “We didn't even know she had him. So, after that, when we were looking at things for Uno, my daughter said, 'let me call Acacia because her family does a great job.' It's a great home for him, and they love him. He's a sweetheart.”

Courtney said that love and support from Quartarolo's barn was evident immediately after taking him in.

“His connections trained and treated him so well,” Courtney said.

“Unfortunately, some horses that have raced a lot of times can be very sour. Some of ours, it took them awhile to transition away from the racetrack. The mental side of things is the most important, so Uno is the great example of a horse who can re-train easily. But like people, horses have their own personalities and quirks and some transition more easily than others. You just have to follow their cues.”

Acacia Courtney said earning TAA accreditation was a proud moment as her non-profit is nearing its second decade of existence. NYRA and its horsemen are also committed supporters of the TAA, which accredits, inspects, and awards grants to approved aftercare organizations to retrain, retire, and rehome Thoroughbreds using industry-wide funding.

“For me, given that I work in the industry, aftercare is a huge part of my life and my family's life, so to know our organization meets those high standards, it's a source of pride for me and my mother,” she said. “When you have horses end up in great spots off the racetrack, it's a great feeling. It's not always a success story like Uno Mas Modelo.”

Courtney, who began riding at the age of 8 with training in the hunter-jumper and dressage disciplines, inherited a lot of her skills as horsewoman from her mother, bolstered by their time together when the organization was founded.

While Acacia now travels extensively for her television work, she remains as involved as possible with her schedule.

“She travels so much now and it's a fabulous career for her,” Sherrie Courtney said. “When she's in Florida, she obviously doesn't get to ride as much as she likes to, but early on when we first started, it was day-in and day-out and we did it together all the time. You need to be a soft, kind rider and that's what Acacia is. I think that's what I miss most about not having her with me is that she's not being able to ride as much. But I have myself and a wonderful trainer we work with, because no matter how experienced you are, eyes on the ground are so important.”

Sherrie Courtney said Uno Mas Modelo is thriving in his new surroundings.

“I've never had a horse quite like him where he's just settled in so immediately,” she said. “He's so kind. All the people who took care of him before did a wonderful job, because he's mannerly and kind and sweet.”

A frequent winner on the track, it appears that Uno Mas Modelo is well on his way to a successful second career as he bonds with his new caretakers.

“He likes human contact and loves when you are in his stall,” said Sherrie. “Right away, I blanketed him in his stall, and I don't usually do that because I don't really know the horse, but I just felt like he was so appreciative.”

And the Courtneys are appreciative for the support of the industry as they work to rehome retired equine athletes like Uno Mas Modelo.

“We care and we give the absolute best care for the horses. It's the point of giving them fabulous homes and giving them sanctuary,” said Sherrie. “That's what it is all about; making sure every horse is in a great situation and we're doing the best for them.”

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Altissimo Named 2019 Ohio-Bred Horse Of The Year

The necessary COVID-19 restrictions in the state caused the cancellation of the traditional Ohio Thoroughbred Breeders and Owners Awards Banquet at Darby Dan Farm in Galloway, Ohio. Hoping against hope that restrictions would be lessened as time passed, the O.T.B.O. made secondary plans to hold the event at Thistledown, but the restrictions remain in place for large gatherings.

With the help of director of racing Patrick Ellsworth, the track coordinated public recognition of the 2019 champions and their connections, blended with their “Best of Ohio Series” of divisional races.

Special thanks to trainer Richard Zielinski and Purina Feeds who had coolers embroidered for each state champion and halters personalized for Stallion and Broodmare of the year.  Here are the individuals and horses that garnered year-end awards.

Ohio Horse of the Year, Champion Sprinter and Champion Handicap Horse – Altissimo: Owned by Nancy Lavrich and Ronald Zielinski, the 6-year-old gelding was bred by Nancy Lavrich and Niknar Farm LLC and is trained by Richard Zielinski. A son of Noble Causeway out of Great Going Rose by Albert the Great, Altissimo made seven starts last season with a 4-2-0 record for earnings of $307,250 pushing his career earnings to $781,638.

All four of his wins were in stakes races including the $97,000 Hockensmith at Delaware Park earning a 100 Beyer Speed Figure. Primarily a main track sprinter, Altissimo captured the $75,000 Gendelman Memorial going 1 1/16 miles over the Belterra Park turf course. Perhaps his best effort of the season was a troubled trip in the Grade 3 DeFrancis Memorial at Laurel Park. While making a winning move, he was floated out in mid-stretch and had to take back and alter course to the inside, only to miss the top spot by three-quarters of a length in 1:08.

Owner of the Year – Ron Paolucci: His bright lime green silks were seen in winner's circles from coast to coast, but the native of Stow, Ohio wins most of his races in the state with Ohio-breds. He finished ninth in the nation with a record of 799-191-144-94 for earnings of $4,851,390 with an impressive 24 percent of his starters in the win column.

Breeder of the Year – Blazing Meadows Farm: Owned and operated by Tim and Shawna Hamm, the farm in North Jackson garnered $168,721 in breeders awards alone. The farm is also home to the graded stakes-winning National Flag in partnership with WinStar Farm. The son of the popular Speightstown, bred more mares than any other stallion in 2019 and his first foals arrived in 2020.

Stallion of the Year – Mobil: Standing at Mapleton Thoroughbred Farm in Polk, the now 20-year-old stallion is still making his mark on the state. A son of Langfuhr out of Kinetigal by Naskra, he built a reputation for himself in Canada over four seasons of racing amassing $1,877,136. A multiple graded stakes winner, he had a record of 29-12-9-1 and the Canadian champion retired to stud north of the border before moving to the Buckeye State.

His offspring have earned $12,199,580 and his current leading runner is Mobil Solution ($470,770), who was voted 2019 champion accredited handicap horse.

Broodmare of the Year – Great Goin Rose: While her career was brief, Great Goin Rose did manage to win her only two starts at two and run second in the Royal North Stakes at Beulah Park from her three trips to post. She made up for her abbreviated on-track career with an extended one in the breeding shed where she produced seven foals since 2010.

Her first foal was Uptown Gal (($140,980), winner of the Norm Barron Queen City Oaks and hitting the board in three additional Ohio stakes. Her current success story is two-time Ohio Horse of the Year and sprint champion Altissimo ($811,658). Owner Nancy Lavrich is keeping her fingers crossed for another home run. Great Goin Rose had a filly this year by first-season sire Free Drop Billy and is in-foal to Runhappy.

Champion 2-Year-Old Filly – Moonlit Mission: Owned, bred and trained by Charlie J. Williams. Chestnut filly by Shackleford – Moonlit River, by Maria's Mon; 6-4-0-0 $182,050.

Champion 2-Year-Old Male – Liberate: Owned and bred by WinStar Farm LLC and Blazing Meadows Farm, trained by Tim Hamm. Bay gelding by Gemologist – Southern Silence, by Dixie Union; 5-4-0-0 $206,250.

Champion 3-Year-Old Filly – Totally Obsessed: Owned by Ron Paolucci Racing, bred by Schleprock Racing LLC, trained by Gary Johnson. Bay filly by Tale of Ekati – Dark Obsession, by Grand Slam; 16-6-2 $233,627.

Champion 3-Year-Old Male – Diamond Dust: Owned and bred by WinStar Farm LLC and Blazing Meadows Farm, trained by Tim Hamm. Bay gelding by Paynter – Radiant Sky, byLeroidesanimaux; 16-8-5-1 $379,725.

Champion Handicap Mare & Accredited Female – Leona's Reward: Owned by Blazing Meadows Farm LLC and Michael Friedman, bred by Blazing Meadows Farm, trained by Tim Hamm. Chestnut mare by Parent's Reward – Prime Time Dancer, by Montbrook; 48-19-7-5 $934,056.

Champion Accredited Male – Mobil Solution: Owned by Gerald Silver bred by Mapleton Thoroughbred Farm and trained by Jeff Radosevich. Bay gelding by Mobil – Perfect Solution, by Seeking the Gold; 24-7-8-5 $413,020.

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