Eclipse Awards Return To The Breakers Palm Beach For 2023

The National Thoroughbred Racing Association (NTRA), Daily Racing Form and the National Turf Writers and Broadcasters (NTWAB) announced today that the 53rd Annual Eclipse Awards, honoring Thoroughbred racing's human and equine champions of 2023, will be held on Thursday, January 25, 2024, at The Breakers Palm Beach.

“After a great success this past year, we are excited to bring the Eclipse Awards back to The Breakers Palm Beach,” said NTRA President and CEO Tom Rooney. “The enthusiasm for this event continues to build, and we look forward to welcoming everyone back to Palm Beach at the prestigious Breakers to honor racing's champions.”

Ticket sales for the black-tie Eclipse Awards will begin on Monday, November 20, 2023. Hotel information will be released in the coming weeks. To stay up to date on the 53rd Annual Eclipse Awards and for more information, visit https://www.ntra.com/eclipse-awards/.

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Amoss Suspended 60 Days, To Serve 15 After 2022 Positive For Beta Blocker

Trainer Tom Amoss has reached a settlement agreement with the Indiana Horse Racing Commission regarding a positive for a prohibited substance called sotalol in one of his runners at Horseshoe Indianapolis on Oct. 17, 2022.

A ruling detailing the settlement terms was posted April 17.

Sotalol was detected in a post-race sample from Malibu SS after he won an allowance race on Oct. 17. It was later confirmed in a split sample.

Sotalol is a beta blocker which is used to treat heart conditions in humans and has been used in some situations to treat arrhythmia in horses. According to state regulation, it is a Class 3/Penalty B substance in Indiana.

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The positive is the second Penalty B finding for Amoss in 2022, after one of his runners picked up a positive for lidocaine in a June 2022 race, also at Horseshoe Indianapolis. After that ruling, Amoss said on Twitter that he was “grateful to the stewards for independently recognizing this as a possible cross-contamination.”

Amoss declined to comment on the sotalol ruling.

The terms of the settlement agreement state that Amoss is fined $5,000 and has been suspended 60 days, with 45 days being deferred. He is scheduled to serve 15 days April 15 through April 29 of this year. If Amoss incurs another Class 1, 2, or 3 positive or a Penalty A or B positive between now and Nov. 17, 2023, he will have to serve the remaining time. He has been assessed four Multiple Medication Violation points on his license. Malibu SS has also been disqualified from his win.

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More Than 100 Animal Rights Protestors Arrested After Demonstrating At The Grand National

The Grand National, one of the most recognized steeplechase events in the world, was delayed 15 minutes this weekend after animal rights protestors infiltrated the event.

According to The Guardian, more than 100 people were arrested for their activities at or near Aintree. Some used ladders to climb over barricades around the course and attempted to use glue and locking devices to attach themselves to fences. Others glued themselves to a nearby roadway, causing a three-hour delay for attendees headed to the race. Additional people were arrested on charges related to disrupting public order.

The animal rights group Animal Rising organized the protestors who turned out to the racecourse with signs and branded t-shirts.

The race was won by Corach Rambler, marking the first time in six years the winner had been trained by a British conditioner in Lucinda Russell.

The Grand National has been the subject of much criticism by animal rights and animal welfare groups in recent years. In response, organizers have removed or modified some of the more challenging obstacles and stepped up veterinary resources on site. There were no equine fatalities in the event for a seven year stretch until one horse died at the first fence in 2019. Since then, the race saw one fatality in 2021 and two more last year.

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This year saw one fatality at the first fence, in addition to two others across the three-day Aintree meet.

Trainer Sandy Thomson, who conditioned Hill Sixteen, blamed protestors for his horse's fall at the first fence, which resulted in a broken neck. Thomson told media he believed the horse was overwrought by the chaos caused by the protests and indicated the extended delay in the race's beginning caused Hill Sixteen to become overheated. Thomson pointed out the horse had run over the same course previously and never had an issue until the Grand National.

The tactic by protestors at the Grand National was similar to a strategy used by protestors at Golden Gate Fields in 2021, in which a group of protestors connected themselves to each other and laid down on the track in an attempt to halt racing there. The race card was delayed by six hours. The track later sued the animal rights group for trespassing and interference with economic relations and was hit with a counter suit claiming the track was trying to intimidate members out of protesting. The California Court of Appeals later ruled in the favor of Golden Gate Fields.

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Jockey Club Round Table To Be Held Aug. 3 In Saratoga Springs

The date of The Jockey Club's 71st Annual Round Table Conference on Matters Pertaining to Racing will change from its traditional Sunday to Thursday, August 3, 2023. The two-hour conference will be held at the Saratoga Springs City Center in Saratoga Springs, New York, and will begin at 10 a.m. EDT.

The conference will also be streamed on The Jockey Club's website, jockeyclub.com, and Facebook page, facebook.com/USJockeyClub. 

The Jockey Club Round Table Conference was first held on July 1, 1953, in The Jockey Club office in New York City. The following year, it was moved to Saratoga Springs, N.Y., where it has been held every August since.

Transcripts of every Round Table Conference are available in the “Resources” section of The Jockey Club website.

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