TDN en Espanol: La Pionera Jessica Paquette Debutara Como Locutora de Parx

Jessica Paquette nunca imaginó que se convertiría en la narradora a tiempo completo en un hipódromo importante y tampoco nadie más lo hizo. El trabajo, desde que existe este deporte, ha sido una profesión que excluía en gran medida a las mujeres. Pero cuando se estén llegando al punto de salida de Parx Racing para la primera carrera del martes, Paquette estará en lo alto de la tribuna, nerviosa pero emocionada, y lista para hacer historia.

“Lo mejor que todos podemos esperar en este deporte es dejar el juego un poco mejor de lo que estaba cuando lo encontramos”, dijo. “Espero dar un buen ejemplo y hacer el camino más fácil para la generación que viene detrás de nosotros. Si puedo inspirar a una niña que piensa que esto es posible para ella y luego viene y lo hace mejor que yo, entonces estaría encantada”.

Los ejemplos de mujeres narrando carreras son pocos y distantes entre sí. Angela Hermann ocupó brevemente el puesto en Golden Gate Fields en 2016 después de que Michael Wrona se fué, pero finalmente fue reemplazada por Matt Dinerman. A principios de los años 60, Ann Elliott se desempeñó como locutora en Jefferson Downs en New Orleans durante unos cuatro años. Casi 60 años después del tiempo de Elliott en Jefferson, ninguna otra mujer había sido contratada como relatora a tiempo completo en un hipódromo en Estados Unidos.

Paquette entró en esto por accidente. En 2014, trabajaba en los departamentos de marketing y publicidad en Suffolk Down cuando el locutor habitual y colaborador de TDN, T.D. Thornton, no pudo llegar a la pista porque se retrasó, entre otras cosas, por un tornado. Se le pidió que reemplazara. Thornton finalmente llegó a la pista y Paquette volvió a sus otras funciones, que incluían servir como presentadora de transmisión simultánea del hipódromo y analista de paddock.

Permaneció en Suffolk hasta 2019 cuando la pista cerró sus puertas definitivamente. Ella se sintió perdida. “Cuando Suffolk cerró, fue una gran crisis existencial para mí”, dijo Paquette. “Trabajar en las carreras no es sólo algo que hago, es lo que soy. No sabía cómo sería el futuro”. Paquette no le importaba viajar y se daría a conocer como analista de la transmisión simultánea en Colonial Downs y Sam Houston. En Sam Houston el verano pasado, la gerencia le permitió narrar algunas de las carreras de Quarter-Horse. Ella estima que ha narrado 50 carreras en total.

“Cuando relaté los Quarter-Horses en Sam Houston el verano pasado, la pasé muy bien”, dijo. “Al tercer día comencé a sentirme menos como si fuese un reemplazo y más como si fuese algo que realmente quería hacer. Estaba dispuesta a tratar de encontrar un puesto de locutor en alguna parte. Cuando resultó que Chris [Griffin] se estaba mudando, apareció mi nombre y dije '¿Por qué no? Hablemos'”. Tenía el respaldo de Griffin, quien también fue contratado como locutor en Monmouth Park.

“Ella sabe lo que esto significa y significa mucho para muchas personas”, dijo Griffin. “Espero con ansias que ella entre en la cabina y estoy emocionado de que haga su debut el martes. Tenemos un tremendo equipo en Parx y ella encajará perfectamente, es genial verla. Es hora de algunas voces nuevas en este deporte. Ella es una profesional de pies a cabeza y puede manejar esto. Estoy muy emocionado de que ella tenga esta oportunidad y, como todos los demás, estoy deseando que llegue”.

Paquette dijo que Griffin se encuentra entre un grupo de hombres locutores que la han tomado bajo su ala y la animaron a buscar un trabajo de narradora. “Algunos de mis amigos más cercanos en la industria son narradores”, dijo. “Jason Beem es uno de mis mejores amigos. Chris Griffin y yo nos hemos vuelto muy cercanos. Ambos fueron realmente alentadores. Por supuesto, pasando por Suffolk Downs tenemos a Larry Collmus y T.D. Thornton y pusieron la marca muy alta. Frank Mirahmadi ha sido extremadamente alentador y ha ofrecido críticas constructivas desde que empecé con los Quarter-Horses”.

Habiendo tenido relativamente poca experiencia como relatora, Paquette dijo que se ha estado preparando practicando carreras en la televisión. “No es lo mismo cuando no es real porque no tienes esa sensación de pánico que te palpita en el estómago cuando las puertas están a punto de abrirse”, dijo. 'Eso es algo que no puedes imaginar'.

¿Desaparecerá esa “sensación de pánico” el martes? “Espero que no sea así porque se trata de la emoción y la adrenalina que implica ser parte del deporte que amamos”, dijo. “Mi nivel de ansiedad es probablemente un 7 1/2 en una escala del 1 al 10. Entonces, voy a estar emocionada y nerviosa. Pero eso es algo bueno”.

Ella recuerda ese último día en Suffolk Downs y dice que vio la última carrera en la pista de East Boston desde el techo y estaba llorando. Nunca imaginó lo que estaba por venir.

“He sido muy afortunada de que los caballos y las carreras de caballos me hayan llevado a lugares que nunca creí posibles en la vida”, dijo Paquette. “Para mí, en este momento de mi carrera, me he divertido mucho en el paddock, hablando de handicap y carreras. Pero esto, el trabajo de narrador, es una oportunidad de hacer algo donde puedo ser la única. Es un verdadero honor.”

 

Traducción de Herman Guanipa. Para suscribirse a la TDN en español email noticias@thetdn.com.

The post TDN en Espanol: La Pionera Jessica Paquette Debutara Como Locutora de Parx appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Private Property Rights Under HISA

The legal threads connecting the rights of licensees to ply their trade and racetrack owners to police their grounds have been pulled tighter than a rip cord these past few years, thanks to a series of high-profile battles involving Hall of Famers Jerry Hollendorfer and Bob Baffert.

These same threads hamstrung the years-long dispute between California's trainers and racetracks about what should be written into the race-meet agreement about fair procedures for trainers facing potential banishment from a facility.

It all boils down to this: How best to balance the rights of track owners to protect their businesses from bad actors alongside the rights of trainers and others from becoming targets of arbitrary bans—actions with often huge implications for their professional futures?

As Jan. 1 looms, when the full remit of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) is scheduled to go into effect—including most crucially HISA's anti-doping and medication control program—how will federal oversight of the sport alter exclusionary rights, if at all?

“HISA is finalizing its policies in this area and will have more to share in the weeks ahead,” wrote HISA spokesperson, Liz Beadle, when TDN asked to discuss the issue with a HISA representative.

So instead, the TDN reached out to three legal experts in the field. Their main takeaway? Other than a tightened regulatory world, don't expect much to alter—at least for now.

“I don't think it will really change the legal analysis,” said Bennett Liebman, Government Lawyer in Residence at Albany Law School and an adjunct professor of law.

Nuances

First and foremost, “I don't think HISA preempts the common-law right of a racetrack to exclude someone for whatever reason they want absent some protective civil right,” said Alan Foreman, CEO and chairman of the Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association (THA).

This means that if a track or racing association decides that a trainer has contravened moral or ethical boundaries—irrespective of whether that same person has fallen foul of any rules and regulations—they have the authority to do so independent of HISA, Foreman said.

“HISA can regulate in areas which they're authorized to regulate, but they can't tell me who I have to allow on my property and who I don't,” Foreman said.

Such actions are rarely cut and dried, of course.

Private properties are required to afford licensees the legal framework of “fair procedure” when seeking to bar them from their grounds. For a state agency—including a quasi-state agency non-profit organization like the New York Racing Association (NYRA)—the legal standard is “due process and equal protection.”

With this in mind, racetracks try not to specify detailed reasons for excluding an individual “in almost all cases,” said Liebman.

“When they do that,” Liebman explained, “there's potential that they might damage the individual's reputation and perhaps give way to constitutional protections.”

Therefore, “the normal approach by most racetracks is to say, 'you're being excluded for our best business interests,'” said Liebman. And he doesn't expect that broad legal dynamic to change much under HISA.

There are nuances, of course.

Even if a racetrack in West Virginia or Pennsylvania excludes a licensee from its grounds, that licensee can then petition the racing commissions in those states to overturn the ban, said Foreman.

In the hypothetical scenario a racetrack in those two states excludes a licensee for a reason that falls under the remit of HISA—for a welfare and safety related issue, for example—and the licensee then tries to take their case to the requisite commission, the relevant track “is going to make the argument that HISA deprives the racing commissions of any jurisdiction over drugs and safety,” said Liebman.

“I don't think it's going to be successful,” Liebman added, about such an argument made by the tracks. “But they're going to raise it.”

Foreman is less sure. Although HISA pre-empts state law, he said, it's unclear whether HISA nullifies the right of those commissions to independently arbitrate track exclusions in their jurisdiction.

“Maybe HISA does have the right to stand in that area,” he wondered. “Maybe not.”

Right of Private Property

This leads to another hypothetical.

In the event a racetrack in other states excludes a licensee for a reason that falls under HISA's regulatory umbrella, there's a strong possibility that person will litigate the action on grounds that HISA should be the one to adjudicate the alleged offense, not the track owners.

“If I was a lawyer representing an individual, I'd argue, “HISA does have jurisdiction here, and HISA has to tell the track what to do because HISA preempts state law,'” said Foreman.

But even then, individual tracks wield enormous legal clout, Foreman added. “If I'm the track, I'd say, 'I'm not acting under state law, I'm acting under right of private property.'”

As Foreman sees it, a more streamlined regulatory environment under HISA—including more expeditious case handling times—should negate the need for tracks to weed-out so-called bad actors (more on this in a bit).

“I think the actions the tracks have been taking recently is because they thought the regulatory system was failing to address offenders, multiple offenders, or those who were giving the industry a bad name,” said Foreman.

As such, “I think it's unlikely we're going to see tracks take actions against individuals because of their records,” said Foreman.

“I think with the enactment of HISA and the implementation of HISA, that probably goes away somewhat,” he added, “unless HISA's a failure.”

But how much latitude does HISA really have in this sphere?

 

Fair Procedure

Earlier this year, trainer Juan Pablo Silva was handed a 180-day ban from Turf Paradise after a 1-20 shot he trained and owned was pulled up and eased shortly after the start of a race.

This past June, trainer Marcus Vitali reached an undisclosed settlement with NYRA, after the latter claimed the trainer had “engaged in conduct that is detrimental to the best interests of the sport of Thoroughbred racing or potentially injurious to the health or safety of horses or riders.”

These two trainers subsequently found a home at Mountaineer—alongside another trainer, Burton Sipp, who has faced multiple allegations involving insurance scams and dead horses, animal neglect cases at a zoo he operated, race-fixing stings and regulatory malfeasance over a 40 year period.

Interestingly, Vitali and Silva have recently saddled horses at Turf Paradise, which kick-started its latest 2022-2023 winter meet on Nov. 4.

The question raised by the professional conduct and inter-state activities of these individuals is this: Does HISA have legal sway to independently step in and exclude licensees it deems a detriment to racing's image when a racetrack fails to do so?

For many watching HISA closely, this particular question is where the rubber meets the road.

There's language in the rules that appears to give HISA fairly broad authority over conduct detrimental to the sport and to equine welfare. As Foreman explains it, however, HISA has the ability to “fine, suspend, or revoke registration” from a licensee registered with HISA, but only if that individual is found guilty of violating stipulated HISA rules, and afforded due process.

Ultimately, “If a person is suspended, that's HISA's jurisdiction. HISA is the new national racing commission,” Foreman said, before hammering home how “that has nothing to do with a track's private property rights.”

An important caveat is that every licensee begins life under HISA with a clean slate.

“Remember, everybody starts at zero when the medication rules go into effect on January 1,” said Foreman. “They're not allowed to take into account their prior record.”

And Foreman said he is hopeful that HISA's new stricter set of rules and sanctions in general will motivate better overall standards of equine care.

One salient example of how this stricter regulatory theater will look surrounds Boldenone, an anabolic steroid better known as Equipoise.

In September, the stewards at Gulfstream Park suspended trainer Nagib Aboughaida 15-days and fined him $500 for a Boldenone positive. Under HISA, Boldenone is a prohibited substance, a positive for which necessitates an ineligibility period of up to 14 months.

Still, beyond the purview of actionable conduct, HISA's wrists are still fairly tightly tied, Foreman conceded. This of course includes there being “no mandatory reciprocity among racetracks if a racetrack chooses to exclude an individual for reasons it determines are appropriate,” Foreman added.

“That will still remain moving forward.”

Penalties for Equine Injuries?

That's not to say HISA doesn't have the potential authority to exclude trainers for actions or behaviors that aren't currently specific violations, said Drew Couto, an attorney who has represented trainer Jerry Hollendorfer in the many-splintered litigations stemming from his exclusion from The Stronach Group facilities in June of 2019.

The trick, Couto said, will be to devise a set of objective criteria to specifically delineate expectations of ethical equine care.

Crucially, such criteria must be relayed to trainers and others in clear, easily understandable fashion, said Couto.

“I don't think somebody should be left alone without any idea that their license is in jeopardy and all of a sudden be blind-sided,” said Couto.

In other words, “being congratulated one week in the winner's circle for your winners, and then the next week being told you've got to get out of Dodge,” Couto added.

In this regard, what HISA would have to do is similar to what the California Horse Racing Board (CHRB) attempted last year, when proposing regulations that would have penalized trainers for certain equine injuries or fatalities.

The CHRB shelved that idea in favor of a blue-ribbon panel to review equine injuries, stymied—at least for now—by the practicalities of framing sanctionable regulations around what is often such a nuanced and multi-faceted issue.

As for HISA intervening in private property matters, Couto believes that in the early days of the law, the new federal Authority will prove reluctant to weigh in on many matters where licensees have been excluded from private facilities.

Absent that clear set of standards in cases where licensees haven't broken any specific rules, “I suspect HISA's not going to want to jump into the deep end of that pool—not at the outset,” said Couto. “Their lawyers are going to say, 'do we want to be the defendants in a Jerry Hollendorfer-type of case?'”

Given the sheer scale of litigation costs as well as the enormity of the undertaking still ahead in ensuring that HISA works as intended, said Couto, “does HISA want that?”

The post Private Property Rights Under HISA appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

TAKE2 to Recognize Tbred Hunter, Jumper Divisions at USEF Shows

The TAKE2 Second Career Thoroughbred Program will recognize the results and count the points earned by TAKE2 Thoroughbred League members competing in the rated Thoroughbred Hunter and Thoroughbred Jumper Divisions at all USEF horse shows. This rule change will be retroactive to the beginning of the current TAKE2 season, which kicked off Aug. 29, 2022, and runs through Aug. 27, 2023.

“When we started TAKE2, we required the USEF-rated horse shows to complete an application to affiliate with our program,” TAKE2 Executive Director Andy Belfiore explained.

“Unfortunately, there were horse shows that offered the rated Thoroughbred Divisions but did not submit the application and as a result, we had League members who missed out on points. We felt it was in the best interest of our League members, and would best help us fulfill our mission of promoting second careers for retired racehorses, if we modified our rules, discontinuing the application requirement and expanding the TAKE2 network.”

Celebrating the 10th Anniversary in 2022, TAKE2 has grown from just a handful of horse shows in three states to more than 400 horse shows nationwide. The program was created by the late Rick Violette Jr., then president of the New York Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association (NYTHA), in 2012 to put the spotlight on the success of Thoroughbreds in the show ring.

“Rick would be overwhelmed by the support TAKE2 has received not only from the racing industry, but also from the many Thoroughbred lovers in the sport horse world,” Belfiore said, adding, “We encourage horse shows to brand the rated Thoroughbred Divisions as TAKE2, so we can continue to raise awareness and create second career opportunities for retired racehorses.”

The post TAKE2 to Recognize Tbred Hunter, Jumper Divisions at USEF Shows appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Finley Joins TDN Writers’ Room Podcast, Talks Flightline

Within a 48-hour period, Flightline (Tapit) won the GI Breeders' Cup Classic, was then retired and then a share in the future stallion sold for $4.6 million at Keeneland. With that in mind, the TDN Writers' Room presented by Keeneland called upon co-owner Terry Finley of West Point Thoroughbreds to wrap up the horse's racing career and to look ahead to his next career as a stallion. Finley was this week's Green Group Guest of the Week.

On the decision to retire Flightline, when asked if he understood why people were upset that the horse would no longer be racing, Finley said that he did, but added that he was comfortable with the way things worked out.

“There are a lot of factors that went into it,” he said. “We fully acknowledge that there are some other ways to look at it, but we are very comfortable in the spot that we're in and the impact that Flightline has had. I love to talk about that because when you step back in the light of day, I think he had an incredible amount of impact on our business. There were stories in the Athletic, the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, USA Today. There were all the blogs, all the videos, all the chatter on social media. He had an impact, and that impact is going to continue. So when you put all that together, yes, we had to make a tough decision. That's what leaders do, they make tough decisions.”

Because Flightline only ran six times some pundits are saying he does not deserve to be compared to the all-time greats who had much longer careers. Finley wasn't necessarily ready to disagree.

“I think that foundationally that viewpoint is sound,” he said. “I've had discussions with people who I really respect that have been in the game for a long time and are leaders. Their outlook is exactly the outlook that you put forth and I don't argue with them.  Now, I'd like to think that if anybody owned this horse, albeit a piece of them like we do, you'd focus on the good things. You'd focus on his charisma and his brilliance and his undefeated status and the fact that he's given our industry a jolt. But you can't have everything.”

Finley was indeed “focused on the good things” after Flightline's Classic win, so much so that he wept for joy.

“I just thought it was probably our best moment in the business,” he said. “And on top of that, I was able to share it with my family and with other people. You put all those things together and if you can't get emotional in a moment like that, I'm not sure you ever can get emotional.”

Finley gave an update on the stallion plans for Flightline, revealing that he will be bred to about 160 mares and added that “it's going to take a very significant mare with a pedigree and a race record to get to Flightline.”

Elsewhere on the podcast, which is also sponsored by Coolmore, the Pennsylvania Horse Breeders Association, XBTV and https://www.threechimneys.com/ West Point Thoroughbreds, Randy Moss and Bill Finley talked more about Flightline's place in racing history and a revelation from a voter that he will not be voting for Flightline for Horse of the Year. Flightline's retirement also brought about a conversation regarding whether or not there is any way for racing to keep its stars on the racetrack. Moss and Finley wondered out loud if it's not time for the Thoroughbred industry to allow, like all other racing breeds, artificial insemination. In other equine sports that has allowed horses to continue to race while being bred in their off seasons. Another topic was the incredible year turned in so far by Beverly Park (Munnings), who made his 26th start this season in last week's Claiming Crown at Churchill Downs. Click here to watch the podcast; click here for the audio-only version.

The post Finley Joins TDN Writers’ Room Podcast, Talks Flightline appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights