Equitana Tickets Available

The inaugural Equitana USA show, postponed from 2020 due to the pandemic, will be held Oct. 1-3 at the Kentucky Horse Park in Lexington. Ticket sales to the event, which is designed for all riding levels, disciplines, and breeds, as well as enthusiasts of all ages to come together to celebrate the horse, are now open.

The event will showcase a variety of popular equestrian personalities, professional performers, authors, veterinarians and other top professionals sharing their expertise on a wide range of disciplines and topics, with more than 150 sessions.

Among the scheduled sessions are: Laura Graves (Dressage clinic), Ronny Riemer (Jumpers clinic), a Retired Racehorse Project Masterclass, the EQUUS Foundation Adoption Day and a variety of panels covering sustainability, horsemanship, social responsibility, DEI, accessibility and traditions and changes in the industry.

Featured presenters on tap for the event include Micah Deligdish, Max Corcoran, Shawn Flarida, Colton Woods, Pat Parelli, Sydney Collier, Lindsey Partridge, Cole Cameron, Jim Masterson and Stephanie Bulger.

Each day will feature a trade fair, showcasing equestrian related products and services, along with the special evening performance of EQUUS Evolution at the Alltech Arena, which will be ticketed separately.

Tickets may be purchased online by visiting equitanausa.com and start at $27 (ages 13+), $10 (ages 6-12), and free for children five and under.

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Dinerman to Announce at Grants Pass

Matt Dinerman will announce the races at Grants Pass Downs for the final five days of the track's 2021 spring/summer meet. Dinerman, the voice of Golden Gate Fields, is filling in for Jason Beem, who begins his term as track announcer at Tampa Bay Downs this week.

“I'm really excited to pinch-hit for Jason Beem at Grants Pass Downs,” Dinerman said. “It's fun to call races at a new venue and equally enjoyable to meet new people who share the same passion in horse racing.”

One of the races Dinerman will call is the $90,000 Firecracker Futurity July 4. The Futurity is the richest race in the history of Grants Pass Downs. The track's closing day is July 6.

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The Week in Review: A Throwback, Letruska is Horse-of-the-Year Material

Apparently, trainer Fausto Gutierrez, whose main base is in Mexico, didn't get the memo. Top U.S. horses just don't run back in three weeks or start four times over the span of 85 days. They don't go from track to track and take on all challengers. Owned by St. George Stable, Letruska (Super Saver) is doing what just isn't done anymore.

Coming back in three weeks after winning the GI Ogden Phipps S., Letruska romped Saturday at Churchill Downs in the GII Fleur de Lis S., winning by 5 3/4 lengths. It was her fifth race this year and her fourth win, which may not seem like a lot, but is commendable in an era where the less-is-more theory of training a horse has been taken to ridiculous extremes. Mystic Guide (Ghostzapper), the top contender at present for Horse of the Year, has raced just twice and not since winning the G1 Dubai World Cup Mar. 27. Domestic Spending (Kingman {GB}), the best turf horse in the country, has also raced just twice. And not a single horse ran in all three Triple Crown races this year.

Not only has the 5-year-old mare stood up to the “punishment,” she has thrived. Entering the Apr. 17 GI Apple Blossom H., she had never run a triple-digit Beyer number, but did so when upsetting champion Monomoy Girl (Tapizar) by a nose to earn a figure of 102. She came back June 5 and got a career best 103 in her win in the Phipps. In the Fleur De Lis, she ventured into the triple digits once again, getting a 102.

Afterwards, Gutierrez would not commit when asked where Letruska would run next, but as long as he keeps the kid gloves off, the Aug. 28 GI Personal Ensign S. at Saratoga seems like a logical spot.

Wherever she starts next, she will be after her 16th career win from 21 starts and her sixth graded stakes win. All this from a horse who started her career in Mexico.

The combination of Letruska and St. George dominate Mexican racing. St. George is owned by German Larrea, who, according to Forbes, is worth $16.3 billion and is the second richest man in Mexico. She broke her maiden in a $3,400 race in Mexico City then won three straight allowance races worth a combined $13,700. After shipping to Gulfstream to win a race in the Caribbean Classic Series, she finished 13th in the 2019 Tropical Park Oaks in her first in the U.S. in open company. There was nothing to suggest what was to come.

With the year she is having and after beating Monomoy Girl at Oaklawn, she's the leading contender for the older filly and mare dirt championship. Gutierrez isn't ruling out a Horse-of-the-Year title, and why not?

“We know she's a really nice dirt horse and is supposed to win at different racetracks and different conditions for a possible Horse of the Year campaign,” he said. Gutierrez went on to tell reporters that a start in the GI Breeders' Cup Classic is a possibility.

Letruska may not be the very best horse in the sport and there may be some worthy Horse-of-the-Year candidates out of the dirt male or turf male divisions. But Horse of the Year is supposed to go to the horse who did the most from January through December and not the horse who ran four times and won some big races. If voters follow that criteria, Letruska should have a good shot at the sport's most coveted year-end honor.

Meadowlands Issues Its Own Ban For Driver Who Violated Whip Rules

As reported last week in the TDN by T.D. Thorton, harness driver Joe Bongiorno was fined $5,000 and suspended 20 days by the Meadowlands judges for over use of his whip. The judges ruled that Bongiorno's actions caused a spill that led to one horse being injured and euthanized. Unlike jockeys in New Jersey, harness drivers are allowed to use their whip to encourage horses, but there are severe restrictions placed on its use.

Bongiorno received a stay, but will nonetheless be sidelined. Starting last Friday, he began a 20-day ban put that was put in place by track owner Jeff Gural, who is never afraid to take matters into his owns hands. He was also banned at the two other tracks Gural owns, Vernon Downs and Tioga Downs.

Gural took action because he was concerned about an on-going pattern when it came to Bongiorno and the whip. The Meadowlands issued a statement, which read: “The Meadowlands, Tioga and Vernon Downs are excluding Joe Bongiorno from driving in races at any of those three tracks beginning Friday (June 25). This action is being taken due to track management's observation of Mr. Bongiorno's driving over a lengthy period of time. Most recently, in the seventh race on Saturday (May 29), Mr. Bongiorno was driving the horse Pat Stanley N when that horse fell while in contention in the very late stages of the race, resulting in a three horse accident where one of the horses suffered a catastrophic injury. Fortunately, the other two horses and all three drivers were able to walk away with minor injuries.”

Bongiorno can resume driving July 16 at the Meadowlands.

Rich Glazier, RIP

If you never paid attention to the simulcasts from Delaware Park and caught Rich Glazier's act, the loss was yours. Glazier, who worked for 30 years at Delaware Park as their TV host and paddock analyst, passed away Tuesday at the age of 73.

Glazier was much older than most racing talking heads and he was not nearly as pretty. But what this rumpled septuagenarian might have lacked in style he more than made up in substance. He knew his stuff, especially when it came to turf racing, but never took himself too seriously. He had his jokes and his shtick, all of which worked. He always reminded you of your favorite uncle who first took you to the track when you were a kid.

Mr. Delaware Park, Glazier was so devoted to his hometown track that he missed only one running of the Delaware H. (with the exception of the 1982 through 1985 runnings when it was held in Saratoga.) And he had a pretty good excuse–he was in Vietnam at the time. But that didn't keep Glazier from getting down a bet. For the 1968 Delaware H., he called his mother and told her to get to the local bookie and get a bet down for him on Politely. Politely won.

Chris Sobocinski, the track's morning-line maker and public relations director, worked alongside Glazier for years.

“He's almost synonymous with Delaware Park,” Sobocinski said. “I grew up with him being the replay show host for many, many years. In many ways, a part of Delaware Park died when Rich Glazier passed away.”

He loved horse racing like few others. One of the very best people I have ever come across in the sport, Glazier will be missed.

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Juvenile Market Completes $200-Million Bounceback

It may still turn out that we're living under a volcano. For now, however, the first major bloodstock cycle after the trauma of 2020 represents an almost symmetrical, V-shaped recovery–right back to the $200-million breakthrough made by the American 2-year-old market in 2019. Despite restocking with a diminished pool of horses, compared with then, this sector has resembled a giant stress ball in retrieving all its former buoyancy the moment the squeeze was released.

It was the juvenile consignors, of course, that were first broadsided by the pandemic last year. Somehow they got through OBS March, though an air-raid siren might as well have welcomed every horse into the ring, before a dazing series of cancellations or postponements. From the catalogs that were salvaged, the ratio of scratchings approached two-in-five as alternative solutions were improvised with trusted clients, from private sales to racing partnerships. Those that persevered into the ring did so very much with a “fire sale” mentality: cut your losses, get your jabs, start over. The final reckoning, at public auction, obviously didn't represent the full picture but offered a vivid measure of the pain: aggregate turnover collapsed by 38% from $203,206,700 to $125,956,800 and average transactions by 24.4% from $95,807 to $72,388.

A $200-million juvenile market in 2019, remember, had represented a fresh landmark in a breathless bull run for the whole bloodstock industry. Some of us then responded with wiseguy finger-wagging: since perennial growth had historically proved impossible, capitalism instead depended on cyclical correction of overheated markets. But just as nobody could have predicted this particular needle, nor could anyone confidently assert that a new balloon might be inflated virtually overnight.

But that is just what has happened. With obliging neatness, the 2021 2-year-old market–rounded off at Santa Anita last week–has rebounded 59.4% on last year's crash landing, to $200,782,050. The average, similarly, recovered by 28.2% to $92,826. Removing the freak 2020 market from comparisons yields a remarkably solid match-up with the giddy trade of 2019, turnover falling short by just 1.2% and average by 3.1%.

Unsurprisingly, consignment was somewhat leaner this time round. Pinhookers had tightened their belts, while yearling vendors were no doubt less ambitious with their reserves (being less inclined simply to retain a horse and try again next spring). Nor should we forget an ongoing decline in the available pool, the North American foal crop having subsided from 35,000 to around 20,000 since the previous economic shock of 2008. That narrower base has improved the solidity of this market. The RNA rate at juvenile sales in 2007 was around one-in-three, and has in recent years consistently been one-in-four or better.

Indeed, the clearance rate is the more spectacular of all the indices of recovery in 2021, with no fewer than 83% of animals into the ring finding a new home, up from 77.4% in the booming (and bigger) 2019 market. In other words, the symmetry of this 'V' rally can be pretty well ascribed to pure demand. And perhaps that's no surprise, given the forecasting consensus. Yes, the pandemic has been catastrophic for many businesses. On the other hand, those whose affluence is unimpaired find themselves straining with pent-up spending capacity.

For around a decade, leading up to the pandemic, the entire international bloodstock market had been nourished by the fiscal response to the 2008 crisis, with quantitative easing and marginal interest rates fostering liquidity. Then came the tax breaks lavished upon the wealthiest during the last presidency. Throw into the mix a universal suppression of indulgence over the past 15 months–everyone, after all, has been freshly reminded that life is for living–and you have a perfect recipe for a renewal of demand for luxury goods. (And that, as we who view them as a vehicle of subsistence are apt to forget, is precisely what the Thoroughbred racehorse is.)

Some commentators on the wider economy admittedly consider this too fragile a foundation for sustainable recovery. Their fear is that the distribution of wealth, which has not been so unbalanced for a century, leaves too many people unable to contribute to the consumption that drives the economy. If that is so, the stakes are plainly high for the various stimulus programs.

Indeed, those instead predicting a 'K'-shaped recovery see many of the ingredients that fed the Great Depression back in place, with spending power only able to meet production capacity by personal debt. Marriner S. Eccles, chairman of the Federal Reserve under Roosevelt, famously compared the Depression to “a poker game where the chips were concentrated in fewer and fewer hands, [and] other fellows could only stay in the game by borrowing… When their credit ran out, the game stopped.”

So while the resilience of this particular market is a massive relief for many professional horsemen, making a modest living by their skill and sheer hard work, you can bet that some analysts are lining it alongside prices for art and sportscars and sensing trouble ahead.

Be that as it may, for now we can be extremely grateful for such an enthusiastic resumption of investment in our industry. As a result, many a humble household is back on its feet. The juvenile sector, after all, is perhaps the one that trims its sails most bravely into the weather. It tries to eke out extra value from an adolescent Thoroughbred that may already have been through the ring twice, as weanling and yearling–with no backstop, no Plan B. A very strong yearling market, moreover, simply elevates the base costs and places a daunting premium on firing a “bullet” at the under-tack show.

So we're looking at horsemen of unusual flair and endurance. Volatility is embedded in their program. We all read the “home run” headlines, but each of those must repair the damage made by the duds. A market that fluctuates so wildly, then, only adds to a routine precariousness.

Let's take a snapshot of the middle market, where so many pinhookers operate, via the median at Keeneland September–and compare that with the average juvenile dividend.

 

Obviously we're not comparing like with like, but we can see that even at the best of times consignors find themselves either stranded on the beach or catching a rising tide, with very little middle ground. The pinhooker who had operated in the middle market at Keeneland in 2019, with a $47,000 median, last spring sold into a market averaging $72,388. That didn't leave a lot to work with, once the intervening bills had all been paid.

Conversely, they could restock much less expensively–the Keeneland median down to $37,000–and this time round a $92,286 average will have allowed many to patch up some of the holes in the roof.

But they're a hardy crew, for sure. Albeit this is a fairly eccentric gauge of their work, in percentage terms the 2019-2020 cycle, brutal as it was, was little different from those of 2013-14 and 2015-16. What a way to make a living!

As for those stallions who best served their cause, I always consider the table of juvenile averages misleading. Many stallions are represented by so small a sample at the 2-year-old auctions that a single knockout price can conceal a multitude of deficiencies; while often even the highest averages fail to match the same crop's performance at the yearling sales. Let's take a look at the top 20 sires (minimum four 2-year-olds sold) by average–but let's also compare those yields with their averages/medians with the same crop at the yearling sales.

We see that even class leader Quality Road, with a $1.5-million colt to boost his average, actually had an unchanged median. Runner-up Uncle Mo, similarly aided by a $1.3-million sale, made a presentable advance by average but his median was down by half. And third-placed Nyquist, who made impressive gains by average, made only a modest advance with his median.

In fairness, the remarks about a small sample cut both ways. The median, from so limited a group, is perhaps not that instructive. Nonetheless hats off to Flatter, Liam's Map, Maclean's Music, Twirling Candy and Frosted for doubling (or better) their medians in passing stock through 2-year-old consignors. Practical Joke's fine debut in this sector is also clearly legible, whether by average or median. But one or two of the bigger hitters missed their mark this time, for once even champ Into Mischief. His rise had been very well measured by this sector, but in 2021 he rehoused only 21 of 35 juveniles, with his average and median both receding. A rare blip, and if a whole market can bounce back from one dull year, so can the stallion of the decade.

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