The Week in Review: Though Defeated a Huge Race for Smile Happy

The chart of the GII Risen Star S. run Saturday at the Fair Grounds will show you that the race was won by Epicenter (Not This Time) and that runner-up Smile Happy (Runhappy) was never a serious threat to win. It's just that there is a lot more to this story.

Expectations were high for Smile Happy coming into the Risen Star. He was 2-for-2 last year and his win in the GII Kentucky Jockey Club S. came at the expense of Classic Causeway (Giant's Causeway) and White Abarrio (Race Day). Classic Causeway won the GIII Sam F. Davis S. in his next start and White Abarrio captured the GIII Holy Bull S. in his 3-year-old debut. Colleague T.D. Thornton had Smile Happy on top in his TDN Derby Top 12 and Mattress Mack was out there doing his thing, helping to promote the horse who may be Runhappy's best offspring.

Smile Happy was made the 2-1 favorite, but with the way the race unfolded, he never had a serious chance.

Epicenter, a quality horse, was sent to the front by Joel Rosario and, going into the first turn, it looked like he might face some pressure. But Pioneer of Medina (Pioneerof the Nile) and Boddock (Street Boss) backed off. That left Epicenter alone on the lead. When he got through an opening half-mile in :47.94, it was clear that he was going to be hard to beat.

Meanwhile, Smile Happy was eighth in the 10-horse field down the backstretch. He probably could have won from there if the rest of his trip broke his way, but that didn't happen. Entering the far turn, jockey Corey Lanerie found himself bottled up between horses. Throughout the turn, he couldn't find a running lane and once he did he was still eighth. It looked the best he could do was fourth or fifth. But Smile Happy managed to close a good amount of ground inside the final 100 yards or so and was beaten just 2 3/4 lengths.

Finishing third, Zandon (Upstart) also put in a strong effort. He hopped at the start and was last early behind the slow pace. Despite all that, he lost by just 3 1/4 lengths.

After the race, trainer Ken McPeek said he had yet to decide what would be next for Smile Happy. The GII Louisiana Derby on Mar. 26 would be the logical spot. He'll surely get one more race before the Kentucky Derby to show why so many people were so high on him. Next time, he won't get beat.

Speaking of the Runhappys

Smile Happy, Runhappy's best colt, may have been beaten in the Risen Star, but it was far from a lost day Saturday for Jim McIngvale's favorite sire. At Oaklawn, the 3-year-old filly Happy Soul (Runhappy) came off a layoff of more than eight months to beat a good field in the Dixie Belle S. A decisive winner, she turned in an impressive effort.

When last seen, Happy Soul scored an 11 1/2-length win in the Astoria S. at Belmont. Considering that Happy Soul has never gone beyond six furlongs, a start in the GI Kentucky Oaks might be a stretch, but trainer Wesley Ward said the race is under consideration. Ward said she will make her next start in either the GI Ashland S. at 1 1/16 miles or the Apr. 10 GIII Beaumont S. at seven furlongs. Both races are at Keeneland. A start in the Ashland would mean that Ward is serious about the Oaks.

Breeders' Cup Juvenile Starters Continue to Come Up Short

When Pappcap (Gun Runner) finished eighth in the Risen Star, it marked the latest loss by a horse who had run in the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile. Pappacap was second in last year's Juvenile.

There were 11 starters in the Juvenile and not one has won since that race. They are a combined 0-for-9. Five Juvenile starters have not run since the Breeders' Cup, a list that includes winner Corniche (Quality Road). He has not had a workout this year and there have been no updates on his schedule. It is unlikely that trainer Bob Baffert will have him ready for the Derby.

Perseverance Pays Off For Cordmaker Connections

He may not be a superstar, but there are few horse in the sport that are more admirable than the 7-year-old Cordmaker (Curlin).

He was bought for $150,000 at the 2016 Fasig-Tipton Midatlantic Fall yearling sale by owner Ellen Charles and sent to trainer Rodney Jenkins. It was apparent early on what they had. Cordmaker, who was gelded before his career debut, was one of those tough old pros who just went out there and tried every single time.

He came into Saturday's GIII General George S. at Laurel with 13 career wins overall and nine stakes victories. But he had never won a graded stakes.

As last, he got it done, winning the General George by three-quarters of a length. It was his fourth straight win, all of them coming in stakes. At seven, he's never been better and with $989,640 in career earnings he could go over the $1-million mark in earnings in his next start.

The Marcus Vitali Meth Case

Marcus Vitali should have been thrown out of this sport a long time ago. His record is as bad as it gets. And shame on tracks like Turf Paradise and Presque Isle Downs that have opened their doors to him.

But that doesn't mean Vitali is guilty of the latest charge, a one-year suspension and a $10,000 fine handed down by the Pennsylvania Racing Commission after a horse he ran last summer at Presque Isle Downs tested positive for methamphetamine. Going to bat for Vitali, Todd Mostoller, the executive director of the Pennsylvania Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association, which represents horsemen at Penn National and Presque Isle Downs, said that the methamphetamine positive was a result of environmental contamination and that Vital should not have been suspended

He very well could have a point. Common sense says that giving a horse meth would not result in an improved performance and use of the drug by humans is rampant.

But the bigger issue is whether or not Vitali is being treated differently because he is, well, Marcus Vitali. Mostoller said there have been “three or four” other methamphetamine positives in recent months at Penn National and in all those cases it was ruled that the positive test was the result of environmental contamination and the trainers were not suspended.

In 2017, a Peter Miller-trained horse tested positive for methamphetamine after running in the Pennsylvania Governor's Cup at Penn National. The Pennsylvania Racing Commission ruled that there were “mitigating circumstances” and fined Miller $1,500 but did not suspend him.

Vitali does have rights and should be treated like any other trainer. He's going to fight this and he may just win.

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Pimlico Spring Stakes Worth $3.8 Million

The Pimlico Spring Meet, highlighted by the GI Preakness S., will offer 16 stakes–10 graded–worth $3.8 million in purses.

The $1.5-million Preakness anchors a program of 10 stakes, six graded, worth $2.75 million May 20.

Leading the undercard stakes on Preakness Day is the $250,000 GII Dinner Party S. for 3-year-olds and up going 1 1/16 miles on the turf. To be run for the 121st time, the Dinner Party is Pimlico's oldest race and the eighth-oldest in the country, first run in 1870.

Other graded supporting stakes are the $200,000 GIII Chick Lang S. for 3-year-olds sprinting six furlongs, $150,000 GIII Gallorette S. for fillies and mares three and up going 1 1/16 miles on the grass, and the $150,000 GIII Maryland Sprint S. at six furlongs for 3-year-olds and up.

The 98th running of the $250,000 GII Black-Eyed Susan S. will once again be in its traditional spot as the feature of the Preakness Eve card May 20. The Friday card boasts six stakes, four graded, worth $1.05 million in purses, including the $300,000 GIII Pimlico Special, $150,000 GIII Miss Preakness S. and $150,000 GIII Allaire du Pont S.

The Pimlico spring meet is scheduled to open May 12 and run through May 31.

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HISA: Five Key Areas and Related Questions

Time is barreling onwards towards July 1, when the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) is scheduled to go into effect, and the pulse of the industry appears to be one of growing trepidation over what promises to be a sweeping reorder of its working mechanics.

That is hardly surprising, given the program still lacks a central enforcement agency, thanks to stalled talks towards the end of last year with the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA).

What's more, in Lisa Lazarus, the board of directors has only just formally instated its chief executive officer. Lazarus started her tenure last week.

Under the crunch, the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority–the non-profit umbrella established by HISA to broadly oversee the program–has taken mitigating steps by staggering implementation.

While the racetrack safety program prong of the law is set to begin July 1, the anti-doping and medication control (ADMC) rules aren't expected to go into effect until early 2023.

What does this mean for the industry, on the proviso that pending litigation doesn't further stall HISA's implementation? A quick answer is that there is no clear answer.

The TDN sent the Authority a series of detailed questions, receiving brief answers to several of them, but not all.

The following has been pieced together from those responses, from the latest version of the rules which can be found here, and from background conversations with individuals–including industry and state officials–familiar with the process.

Because of the current lack of specifics, the following is far from a comprehensive overview of where matters stand and is in large part a speculative exercise designed to prompt a dialogue on key parts of this federal bill.

1 – LAWSUITS

There are two main lawsuits seeking to strike HISA down.

The first suit, led by the National Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association (HBPA), is joined by Arizona, Arkansas, Indiana, Illinois, Louisiana, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Washington, and West Virginia.

The suit takes aim at HISA's constitutionality on several grounds, including that in the Authority, HISA cedes governance to a private organization of unelected individuals, and that the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) isn't granted the necessary regulatory autonomy as an oversight body.

The defendants–including HISA and the FTC–dispute this reading of the law and the constitution on various grounds, including that the plaintiffs have misinterpreted the legal precedents underpinning their arguments.

Oral arguments were heard Wednesday in a hearing in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas. Given the July 1 deadline, legal experts say that Judge James Wesley Hendrix could make a ruling within weeks.

If he rules in the plaintiffs' favor, he could grant a stay on appeal, and the law could still go into effect July 1. However the judge rules, appeals are likely and will head to the United States Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals.

The second suit, filed in the United States District Court Eastern District of Kentucky, is led by the state of Oklahoma, and is joined by several entities, including the states of Alaska, Arkansas, Idaho, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Nebraska, Ohio and West Virginia.

Similar to the litigation led by the HBPA, this second lawsuit–filed in April of last year–questions HISA's constitutionality on various grounds, and argues that HISA's broad regulatory and taxation powers violate the Constitution's non-delegation doctrine.

The TDN understands that no hearing has yet been scheduled on this second lawsuit.

2 – COST

What is the deadline for figuring out overall cost?

According to the law, the Authority needs to alert individual states as to their estimated costs by Apr. 1. Individual states then have until May 2 to decide whether they want to remit their fees according to this calculation.

That calculation–recently posted on the federal register–is a little complicated. Essentially, the rules don't break costs down on a fee-per-start basis, but on a proportionate calculation which includes a state's overall purses:

“For example, if all starts in all races at all tracks were treated equally, West Virginia would have a larger proportionate share than Kentucky, even though the purses and entry fees generated by the Kentucky races dwarf those generated by West Virginia races. Instead, the Authority defined Annual Covered Racing Starts in a manner that is consistent with an equitable allocation of the funding needs of the Authority,” the posted rules state.

There are some important caveats. For one, no state's respective annual allocation shall exceed 10% of the total amount of purses in that state.

“All amounts in excess of the 10% maximum shall be allocated proportionally to all States that do not exceed the maximum, based on each State's respective percentage of the Annual Covered Racing Starts,” the posted rules state.

If a state chooses not to remit fees this first way, it'll still have to do so via separate monthly chunks determined by the Authority, and prefaced broadly on the following calculation:

Monthly starts

Total starts per year X Annual Calculation

Vital questions, therefore, appear to be these:

Q: When it comes to final numbers, does the calculation actually disproportionately impact the high purse states (like California, New York and Kentucky) as compared to the high-volume, low-purse racing jurisdictions (like the aforementioned West Virginia)?

Q: If the safety program goes into effect July 1 this year, and the ADMC program at the start of 2023, how does the Authority plan to distribute its available funds between those two very different six-month periods?

As a useful guide, the industry (minus New York) spent in 2019 a little more than $24 million on medication testing, according to a Jockey Club breakdown of those costs.

Q: And finally, what exactly will the funds be used for and how? Will they also be used, for example, to renumerate legal costs and any debts the Authority might have already accrued?

3 – ENFORCEMENT AGENCY

When USADA announced that it had stepped away from the negotiation table, they left the door ajar for reconciliation.

“Though we are unsure what the future holds for USADA–if any–in this effort, we have offered to assist the Authority and others in the industry to ensure that the sport gets the program it needs and that the horses deserve,” said USADA CEO, Travis Tygart, in his statement on the matter.

No further announcements have been made as to USADA's involvement, if any, in ongoing HISA enforcement agency talks. What other organizations could fit the bill?

The Authority declines to comment on what agencies have been approached, if any.

Could the Federation Equestre International (FEI)–the international governing body for equestrian sports–step into the breach, given new CEO Lazarus's pedigree as the agency's former general counsel, therefore? Or would the United States Equestrian Federation (USEF), which oversees equine sports on home soils, be a better fit?

Could another option–one admittedly fraught with possible conflict of interest issues–be that the eventual enforcement agency sub-contracts portions of the ADMC program to organizations with focused experience in a particular field?

Given how Racing Medication and Testing Consortium (RMTC)-accredited laboratories will still be used when the ADMC program goes into effect, could the Authority sub-contract out lab accreditation to the RMTC on a more permanent basis?

In that same vein, is there room for the Association of Racing Commissioners International (RCI) to assume a role? Could management of the nations' racetrack veterinarians fall to the American Association of Equine Practitioners (AAEP)?

Given how inchoate the enforcement agency agenda is right now, specifics are light. Even so:

Q: What will the working relationship between the Authority and the enforcement agency specifically look like? Will they be a service agency, working primarily at the behest of the Authority, or a separate autonomous beast?

Q: Given USADA's emphasis on increased out-of-competition testing under HISA–typically a more expensive endeavour than post-race testing–how will the eventual enforcement agency approach that vital prong of the ADMC program, especially in the beginning when available funds will presumably be tight?

4 – ANTIDOPING AND MEDICATION CONTROL PROGRAM (ADMC)

During its time as an enforcement agency hopeful, USADA didn't sit idly by, putting together program materials, including a proposed results management process, a set of possible sanctions, and an outline of a binary approach to classifying substances, breaking them into primary and secondary substances.

According to the Authority, HISA owns the materials drafted by USADA, which are still posted on USADA's website.

When asked what components of USADA's ADMC program could be kept and what might be jettisoned, the Authority replied with the following:

“The draft ADMC documents developed with USADA provide a strong foundation that reflects significant input from the industry and other experts and this additional time has enabled us to collaborate further with industry stakeholders. Our goal is to build on the progress that has been made to-date with our future independent enforcement agency,” wrote a spokesperson for the Authority.

Ultimately, final say on the ADMC program will surely fall to the future enforcement agency.

While that position remains vacant, it's once again hard to nail down any specifics. Nevertheless, the following appear two important questions, among many.

Q: Will the enforcement agency maintain USADA's binary approach to regulated drugs, treating them all the same despite differences in potency? Or will it choose an alphanumeric system, like that outlined in the ARCI's model rules?

Q: Information management will be key to the enforcement agency's overall efficiency. And so, how far along is the creation of a centralized database capable of handling a vast amount of data?

5 – SAFETY PROGRAM

The public comment period for HISA's racetrack safety program closed on Jan. 19. Provided no drastic revisions occur, there are several key certainties come July 1.

Racetracks already accredited by the National Thoroughbred Racing Association (NTRA) will receive interim Racetrack Safety Accreditation, while non-NTRA accredited racetracks get provisional status. These designations survive at least until the safety committee completes a formal accreditation assessment.

This official accreditation assessment will encompass several areas, including the following:

  • Expanded veterinary oversight, both pre- and post-race
  • Void claim rule
  • Transfer of claimed horses' medical records
  • Surface maintenance and measurement standards
  • Enhanced reporting standards
  • Data reporting: medications, treatments, injuries and fatalities
  • Jockey concussions and medical care reporting

There's wriggle room written into the rules for those jurisdictions and tracks likely to struggle enacting various components of the accreditation program.

“If the accreditation assessment concludes that the applicable Racetrack has not reached full compliance with the accreditation regulations, the Committee may grant provisional accreditation for one year and may extend such provisional accreditation if the subject racetrack is undertaking good-faith efforts to comply with the accreditation requirements and achieve Accreditation,” the rules state.

They also allow jurisdictions to share individuals who fill the role of safety director, responsible for overseeing racetrack risk assessment and risk management, among other duties.

Key questions:

Q: When will the formal accreditation process start? In other words, how long do racetracks and jurisdictions have to get up to speed? And who exactly will conduct these assessments?

When it comes to the adjudication of offenses that fall under HISA's racetrack safety program, there are three broad categories, at least as originally proposed.

One:

The safety committee will seek to enter into voluntary agreements with individual jurisdictions to allow their existing state stewards to adjudicate a first set of rules pertaining to things like use of the whip, the carrying of illegal electronic devices, and the use of shockwave therapy devices.

If the Safety Committee doesn't enter into a voluntary agreement with a state, a separate set of stewards under HISA will adjudicate them instead.

Q: How far along is the Authority in entering into agreements with the individual states to allow their existing stewards to remain?

Two:

The second set of infractions concerns those that don't fall under HISA's wheelhouse, including dangerous riding and minor backstretch violations. These will continue to be adjudicated by stewards within each state.

Three:

According to background conversations the TDN conducted with safety committee officials at the end of last year, there is a third set of infractions which includes prohibited practices like the performing of chemical neurectomies (to desensitize the leg), pin firing and freeze firing.

When it comes to these violations, the racetrack safety committee will decide whether to:

1 – Send the case back to the state stewards

2 – Hear the matter themselves

3 – Refer the case to the independent arbitrators

4 – Or refer the case to the national stewards panel

Q: Given how the ADMC program is responsible for establishing a national panel of arbitrators and stewards, how will the staggered implementation of HISA impact the management of these offenses, if indeed this third prong of the adjudication process remains?

Stepping back to look at the looming implementation of HISA in its entirely, however, perhaps the most pertinent question for the industry isn't rooted in specificity but much more widely encompassing:

When will the Authority and its committees more freely open up lines of communication with stakeholders?

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Mating Plans, Presented by Spendthrift: Sierra Farm

Sierra Farm was founded by Ed and Sharon Hudon in 2006. Following the passing of her husband in 2018, Sharon took over the operation and the farm was recently sold to Matt Dorman's Determined Stud in December of 2021. Sierra Farm sold four mares at last year's Keeneland November Sale and the remaining mares moved to Greenfield Farm.

Sierra farm manager Mike Callanan said that of the current broodmare band, many will point to this year's Keeneland November Sale but added that Hudon may retain several to maintain a small broodmare band. Callanan said they kept that objective in mind as they prepared mating plans for this year.

“This year is a little different with the farm selling,” he explained. “We had to be a little more commercial than usual. We have one eye down the road in November because we plan to have a couple sold then, so that fact has influenced a lot of what we've done. We're trying to do the right thing by the mares but at the same time cover our bases for on down the road.”

ANGEL NUMBER (m, 6, Lemon Drop Kid – Ascending Angel, by Pulpit) to be bred to Constitution

This mare is a half-sister to GISW Nadal (Blame) and she is currently carrying her first foal by Speightstown. She is due any day. She's a big, strong, beautiful mare so physically, we think we could breed her to anything.

We will be sending her to Constitution. He is really one of the most exciting sires out there right now and she is one of our best mares. She's a young mare, so we want to give her every shot and I think no matter what way it plays out in November, we will be great there.

BSHARPSONATA (m, 17, Pulpit – Apasionata Sonata, by Affirmed) to be bred to Silver State

Bsharpsonata has been a very good mare to us. We sold a million-dollar yearling out of her and she is a multiple stakes producer. She had a late foal in 2020, so we gave her a year off last year and then bred her to Nyquist. She is due any day. She is 17 years old now, so we want to be commercial with her without putting an exorbitant amount of money into her.

We love Silver State at Claiborne. He's a big, beautiful-looking horse. She's a Pulpit mare, so a very strong, powerful-looking mare but not the biggest in the world. If you can breed her to something with a little bit of leg, I think it would really help her and you don't often get Hard Spuns with the kind of leg Silver State has. I think he's is a really nice horse.

MISCHIEFFUL (m, 4, Into Mischief – Shanon Nicole, by Majestic Warrior) to be bred to Essential Quality

This filly was stakes placed sprinting at Saratoga and she was very fast as a 2-year-old. We retired her last year and she is going to Essential Quality. We kind of had Essential Quality in mind for another mare, but Darren [Fox] talked us into sending this mare to him. Darren liked the fact that she was a fast-looking horse and physically, would suit Essential Quality. Normally we don't like to breed maiden mares to first-year sires, but I think Essential Quality was an exceptional racehorse. Physically, it ticks the box and if this horse goes to November, it will be a commercial mating.

JUMP UP (m, 14, Jump Start – Susie Joe's, by Bertrando) to be bred to Maxfield

This is the dam of SW Amy's Challenge (Artie Schiller). She's a big, good-looking mare and she has already produced a really nice horse. I think Maxfield is well-priced and he was a really nice racehorse. From a commercial point of view in whatever direction we decide to go, I like this cross a lot. We bred her to Kitten's Joy two years in a row and Amy's Challenge is by Artie Schiller, so we wanted to try something a little bit different.

SCANDALOUS SONG (m, 12, Unbridled's Song – My White Corvette, by Tarr Road) to be bred to Hard Spun

   This mare is a half-sister to champion Stardom Bound (Tapit) and she is already a stakes producer. This year we will be sending her to Hard Spun. I think Hard Spun is a great value at [$35,000]. Every year he produced runners. She's a big, tall mare so I think he should strengthen her up a bit. From a physical point of view, it ticks every box that we're looking for in a mating.

Let us know who you're breeding your mares to in 2022, and why. We will print a selection of your responses in TDN over the coming weeks. Please send details to: garyking@thetdn.com.

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