Breeders’ Cup, Kentucky IT Company Strike Partnership Ahead Of 2022 World Championships

Breeders' Cup Ltd. and STEP CG on Friday announced an agreement to make the Kentucky-based IT solutions company an official partner of the Breeders' Cup World Championships, taking place Nov. 4-5 at Keeneland Race Course.

The agreement makes STEP CG the official wi-fi provider of the Breeders' Cup World Championships as Breeders' Cup and STEP CG work together to deliver a best-in-class on-site experience for guests at Keeneland during this year's World Championships.

“We strive to align with partners who help us provide a best-in-class experience for those attending the Breeders' Cup World Championships,” said Drew Fleming, Breeders' Cup president and CEO. “We're proud to work with local partners like STEP CG who recognize the importance of providing an enhanced experience for our guests, and have the strategic prowess needed to execute at Keeneland for the 2022 World Championships.”

“As a Kentucky based company, STEP CG is proud to be chosen as technology partner of the Breeders' Cup,” said Ed Walton, CEO of STEP CG. “Horse racing fans are consuming content and engaging at the racetrack in new and innovative ways, and we're helping the Breeders' Cup embrace the future of horse racing.”

STEP CG will design and install wireless connections in the temporary structures created specifically for the 2022 World Championships. STEP CG will also add additional access points to Keeneland's existing guest wi-fi network to allow patrons to better connect throughout the entire facility. Additionally, STEP CG will monitor hardware and service during the Breeders' Cup World Championships and provide technical support leading up to and on race days.

The 39th running of the Breeders' Cup World Championships, one of Thoroughbred racing's most prestigious international events, will be televised live by NBC Sports.

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‘Dear Lisa’: KTA, THA, TOBA, TOC Respond To Draft Anti-Doping And Medication Control Protocol And Related Proposed Regulations In Open Letter

Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority

Attn: Lisa Lazarus

Dear Lisa:

On behalf of the Thoroughbred Horsemen's Associations, Inc, Kentucky Thoroughbred Association, Thoroughbred Owners of California, and Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association collectively, we thank you for affording us the opportunity to review and provide initial comment on HISA's proposed Anti-Doping and Medication Control Protocols, the Prohibited List, Equine Testing and Investigation Standards for Laboratories and Accreditation and Arbitration Procedures. As previously done with USADA's proposed anti-doping program, we have established a diverse group of experienced horsemen, regulators and veterinarians to review the extensive documents. This letter and attachments are our best effort to preliminarily identify general and specific issues with the drafts in the short time frame afforded to us.

Each reviewer provided written comments and they are attached. We also met collectively on two occasions to discuss our general thoughts. They are reflected herein. We trust that you will view our comments as constructive recommendations that attempt to identify shortcomings or potential challenges that would benefit from further review and discussion. A limitation of this process exists because of the truncated time frame within which we have been asked to respond, we have not been able to sit down with working groups of our members to review the drafts. On a regulatory scheme as important as this and given criticism we are already receiving from some of our constituents, we think a more deliberate approach is required, and we urge HISA to allow sufficient time for this to occur. Further, we urge HISA to engage with our review team to discuss our specific preliminary concerns in an effort to better understand the basis for some of the proposed regulations and discuss to them more fully.

We trust that HISA will take note that our groups have been intimately involved in doping and medication control issues, having developed what became the National Uniform Medication Program, and we are well versed in these issues. We are pleased and encouraged that HISA recognizes, as reflected in these new drafts, that there is a material distinction between the doping of horses with prohibited substances to affect the performance of a horse and damage the integrity of fair play and the use of recognized therapeutic substances necessary for the treatment of illness or injury in the horse or for the horse's general well- being. Fundamental to HISA's program should be an understanding that medication control and the health, safety and welfare of the horse are inextricably linked, and that medication management errors do not constitute doping. We urge HISA to continue to incorporate as much of racing's current regulatory scheme regarding doping and controlled medication as possible to ease compliance, while at the same time addressing those area of current practice in need of reform.

While we have numerous questions, we commend HISA for its revised approach to medication regulation, which we think is far more consistent with current practice than what we have previously seen. In this instance, we think it best to highlight our general comments that we ask HISA to reconsider, while hoping that we will have the opportunity to engage with you more fully in the near future.

Our comments follow in no particular order:

Racetrack vs Training Facilities

There is substantial confusion with the applicability of requirements for racetracks and training facilities. The inclusion of training facilities in the statute was designed to ensure that horsemen could not evade the requirements for racetracks by simply stabling at training facilities. HISA needs to revisit this concern and provide clear guidance on what is permitted and prohibited at training facilities and how such facilities will be regulated. HISA also needs to recognize that access to veterinary care at training facilities, owing often to distance or staffing differences, is different than in the racetrack environment. It is also our recommendation that HISA register and publish an official list of training facilities that are subject to the jurisdiction of HISA

Lasix Prohibition for 2-Year Old and Stakes Horses in Training

We vigorously object to, and oppose, any attempt to prohibit the use of Lasix in the training of our horses. We previously objected to such a proposed prohibition when USADA released its Prohibited List as inconsistent with the statute and not in the best interests of the health and welfare of the horse. There is simply no basis for such a prohibition, nor is it scientifically supported. The statute affords the opportunity to HISA to study whether such a prohibition should apply based upon solid scientific evidence which currently does not exist. If HISA wants to ultimately prohibit the use of Lasix for horses in training, we suggest that it include this issue in the Lasix study to be conducted by the blue-ribbon scientific panel.

The Lists of Controlled Substances and Specified Substances

Our comments are hamstrung by the continued failure of HISA to provide the industry with the list of Controlled Medications and guidance regarding their use. As we have very few, if any, doping violations in racing and the vast majority of violations in racing involve the use controlled therapeutic medications used for the benefit of the health, safety and welfare of the horse, it is essential that we be provided with this information. The same applies to the so-called Specified Substances, as we know that there are Prohibited Substances that may be introduced into the horse via contamination that need to be identified, as well as Prohibited Substances for which a Therapeutic Use Exemption should be provided (See attached ARCI List of Required Conditions for Restricted Therapeutic Use).

The distinctions between Prohibited Substance, Specified Substances and Controlled Medications will be crucial to the success of the program. By way of example, we have included summaries of Mid-Atlantic medication violations for 2019-2021. We suspect that while these results are similar to violations that occur in other jurisdictions and regions, no other region compares to the volume of tests that are conducted annually in the Mid-Atlantic. Region. Only a handful of cases each year would be considered “doping offenses”, and of these, virtually every one involves a substance that we believe would be considered a Specified Substance because of contamination, but we don't know. The success or failure of the HISA Anti-Doping and Medication Control Program will be determined, in part, by its approach to, and handling of, Controlled Medication and Specified Substance violations, as this will have the greatest impact on owners, trainers and the image of the industry.

Arbitration

While we understand the vigorous requirements and due process protections afforded in a case involving “doping/ Prohibited Substances”, we suggest that such cases will be few and far between. On the other hand, imposing similar requirements for Controlled Medication violations is unnecessary, onerous and untenable, and they will have the effect of chilling any opportunity for a horseman to have due process for a routine violation. In current practice, most violations are resolved at the Stewards level, with no need for lawyers, legal filings, expert witnesses and needless costs. HISA's rules will have every violator seeking legal advice and incurring costs for mandatory briefs and legal filings that will be cost prohibitive. This could also negatively affect ownership. While we suspect HISA believes that most Controlled Medication cases will be resolved administratively, there should be no mandatory filing requirements should the horseman choose to have a hearing before a Steward or arbitrator. Further, the cost having a hearing should not fall on the offending horseman. The process of resolving Controlled Medication cases needs to be simplified.

Contamination

We trust that HISA realizes that cases involving Prohibited and related Substances that are not and would not be used in the treatment of illness or injury but get into horses through contamination cause the highest degree of anxiety among owners and trainers. We find that in most, if not in all of these cases, the trainers are longstanding and reputable licensees who are victimized because they could not have prevented such occurrences. These violations, if not resolved in a confidential and expeditious manner, can be unnecessarily career ending and drive owners from our sport.

Further, and more generally, although we understand the need for transparency, it cannot be at the expense of owners and trainers, who are entitled to have their reputations protected until due process is afforded. We know of no sport that publicizes violations before due process is accorded. Indeed, in the international performance horse industry, violations are not publicized until a ruling is issued, and even with that, owners recoil at having their names associated with a drug violation. We urge HISA to be mindful of these concerns and not overreact to current industry matters that are still pending.

Drug Testing of Claimed Horses

It is unclear whether HISA will require all claimed horses to be drug tested post -race. These horses are required to be taken to the test barn to be observed. If it is HISA's intention to drug test all claimed horses, we think it is a costly mistake and untenable. New York's pre-HISA requirement in this regard is instructive. Not a single claimed horse has tested positive, but the cost of doing so has been a waste of time and money, funds which could have been used for far better purposes. Further, given that a claimed horse is transferred immediately and a drug test may take several weeks, voiding a claim could result in chaos involving the horse and unnecessary litigation. For example, if an intact male horse is castrated after being claimed, his return to the original owner if the claim is voided would certainly be contested. Many horses travel great distances to race. If a claimed horse is shipped across the country following a claim, who would be responsible to pay to ship the horse back to the original owner? While we think the requirement should be abandoned, if HISA believes it is important to retain, we suggest that drug testing be conducted only at the request of the claimant and at his/her expense, and that such a claim be voidable at the option of the new owner if the positive test is for a Prohibited Substance.

Stewards and National Stewards Panel

We previously commented on this nomenclature and do so again. We fail to understand the need for HISA to use this nomenclature, since it conflicts with state and local stewards whose daily role is to regulate races and the racetrack environment. By way of example, the HISA reporting requirements for shock wave therapy are through the existing stewards at the racetrack. It appears that HISA envisions a different set of enforcement officials for its Stewards and National Stewards Panel, particularly as it relates to Doping and Controlled Medication cases. There is considerable confusion on this among our constituents and we cannot explain it. We urge HISA to change its nomenclature. For example, HISA might want to use the terms “Adjudication Officer” and “Adjudication Panels”.

Retirement of Horses

We do not believe that HISA should have any role in determining that a horse should be retired nor is there any authority for it to do so.

Responsibilities of Veterinarians and Other Covered Persons

We have said this before and do so again. The thrust of HISA, including the Safety Program, puts all the emphasis on owners and trainers when there are other covered persons who should bear significant and similar responsibility for medication violations. In this regard, we point directly to the veterinary community and the racetracks. HISA needs to put more emphasis on the veterinary-owner-trainer relationship and hold veterinarians account able for their role in doping and medication cases. Similarly, where racetracks can provide support and authority, particularly security, and fail to do so, there appears to be little accountability. We strongly urge HISA to recognize that a successful anti-doping and safety program is a shared responsibility with shared consequences. For example, the New York State Gaming Commission recently penalized NYRA officials and a Lasix veterinarian employed by them for failure to perform their responsibilities. We do not see a similar intent in the documents we are reviewing.

ARCI Penalty Multiple Medication Violation System

The statute requires HISA to use as a baseline, ARCI's Penalty System and the MMV System. We do not see them in the documents. It is important for owners and trainers to know what HISA's penalties will be. Further, the MMV system is one of the great advances that emanated from the Mid-Atlantic. Since its inception eight years ago, only two trainers have been given additional suspensions for points based on multiple positive tests. We have virtually eliminated this problem, which was identified as one of racing's biggest problems 10 years ago at the International Medication Summit at Belmont Park. We trust that HISA plans to use this system.

Reporting Requirements

As HISA works through the numerous bugs and hiccups with its registrations system, we can only imagine the problems that will occur as horsemen seek to comply with the mandatory reporting requirements. We urge HISA to go slow here, as we suspect there will be significant issues with compliance as systems are developed. We know because we are all being inundated with registration issues. Further, the rules place significant burdens, particularly concerning “whereabouts”. Since the vast majority of horses are located at racetracks, why can't this burden be shared with racetracks who already have “in and out” protocols systems in place that would work to help keep track of the location of individual horses, or alternatively, provide a list of private, third party digital providers who comply with HISA's requirements.

Suspension of Horses

Covered horses should be allowed to train should they be suspended. To do otherwise increase the length of a suspension and is not in the best interests of the horse's health, safety and welfare.

Multi-Owner Entities

The decision as to who is the Designated or Managing Owner of a multi-owner entity should rest with the entity and not HISA. There is no requirement that a Managing Owner has to own at least 50% of the entity.  The only requirement should be that such individual must be licensed by a racing commission and registered with HISA. Further, what is the basis for the requirement that a person who owns more than 3% of a horse must register. In many states, there is no such requirement.

Collection of Urine

What is the protocol if a horse will not urinate for a drug test. How long will such horse be required to remain in the test barn? In a high tempo environment, horses cannot remain in the test barn indefinitely for one or more horses to pass urine. We recommend that you consider a provision to allow a problem horse to return to the trainer's barn under direct supervision of a regulatory inspector to collect a urine sample in that horse's own stall.

Definition of Race Day

HISA should recognize that many horses are treated post-race to aid in their recovery from the race. The definition is too narrow and does not afford the opportunity for such treatment, which is in the best interests of the health and welfare of the horse. The definition needs to be revisited. It is more appropriate to either designate the 24-hour period leading up to the published post time of the race to be the definition of “race day” or to designate the period of 12:00 AM through post time of the race as “race day”.

Official Timed Works

The definition of “official timed works” is not consistent with current practice. Many training centers provide published works but not by an “official clocker”, which has repeatedly been referenced as the differentiating factor for “official timed works”.

We will have additional questions and comments and anticipate receiving many questions and comments as our constituents review the proposed regulations We appreciate your giving us the opportunity to comment and hope that you will take the time to interact with us before issuing formal proposed regulations.

Very truly yours

For attached documents, click here.

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McGrapth Sentenced To House Arrest In Animal Cruelty Case

Xavier McGrapth, 25, of Versailles, Ky., has been sentenced to 25 days' home incarceration in an animal cruelty case that left two dozen horses in various stages of neglect and two dead. On June 22, Bourbon County District Judge Mary Jane Phelps handed down the sentence in the case, which included 13 counts of second-degree animal cruelty.

McGrapth, who had offered boarding and breaking services to predominantly out-of-state clients, has also been ordered to pay owners of the neglected horses $8,651.91 starting in August with payments of $500 per month. He is also prohibited from owning or working with horses for two years.

McGrapth advertised his services on Facebook under business names McGrapth Breaking and Training and Whispering Creek Thoroughbreds, offering breaking and training for young horses and broodmare board.

Phelps credited McGrapth for entering his guilty plea to the charges, saying it was unusual for a defendant to “claim responsibility and give wide discretion to the court to decide their sentence,” according to a report from The Blood-Horse.

But prosecutors pointed out that in fact, McGrapth hasn't always been forthcoming about the issues with the horses in his care. The neglected and dead horses were discovered only after one of McGrapth's clients made a visit to the facility he leased on Brentsville Road. When clients began peppering him with questions about the situation, prosecutors said McGrapth didn't resurface for 25 days.

Read our original reporting on the case here.

Had Phelps chosen to hand McGrapth the maximum sentence for the charges, which are Class A misdemeanors under Kentucky law, he could have gone to jail for one year.

In a pre-sentencing document, McGrapth's attorney attributed the horses' neglect, in part, to McGrapth's inexperience.

“Mr. McGrapth has had a few different jobs working with horses in the past; none of those positions dealt with him learning how to properly run a business, much less dealing with clients when they fail to make timely payments directly related to the care of their horses,” read the report, which stated his June 2020 foundation of Whispering Creek was his first time owning an equine business. “This should lead a potential client to question, should they begin a business relationship with someone so new to the equine industry?”

The document blames McGrapth's clients for falling behind in payments, which led him to be late in paying the rent on the facility, which he leased from horseman Steven Johnson. When McGrapth's bills continued to go unpaid, McGrapth said Johnson told him he couldn't come back on the property. McGrapth's attorney said McGrapth “naively believed that the horses were being adequately taken care of” in his absence.

McGrapth's attorneys and Judge Phelps agreed that McGrapth would be unable to pay any restitution if he were sent to jail, and for that reason a short period of home confinement and continued employment was most beneficial to his former clients.

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NYRA, Vitali Reach Confidential Settlement Agreement

After seeking to ban him from its racetracks, the New York Racing Association (NYRA) announced on Friday that the organization has reached a confidential settlement agreement with controversial trainer Marcus Vitali.

“The New York Racing Association, Inc. (NYRA) and trainer Marcus J. Vitali have reached a settlement agreement resolving and discontinuing the administrative proceeding brought against Mr. Vitali on September 10, 2021, which sought his exclusion from participating in racing or training activities at Aqueduct Racetrack, Belmont Park and Saratoga Race Course. The agreement requires the terms of the settlement to remain confidential,” said Pat McKenna, vice president of communications at NYRA.

McKenna declined further comment, and Vitali attorney Bradford Beilly did not return a message seeking more information.

The Daily Racing Form's David Grening cited industry sources who indicated Vitali will not be able to race or stable at NYRA tracks for multiple years.

The dispute between Vitali and NYRA was based on NYRA's private property rights, and does not function as an action against his license. In recent years, Vitali has saddled horses at Turf Paradise during the winter months and Presque Isle Downs in the summer.

In a statement of charges released in September, NYRA asserted that Vitali “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. Further, as detailed in the respective statements of charges, this conduct warrants revocation or suspension of their right to train horses, enter races, or engage in any racing-related activity at all NYRA properties including Aqueduct Racetrack, Belmont Park and Saratoga Race Course.”

NYRA's statement of charges against Vitali begins: “From between in or about 2010 and in or about 2020, Respondent amassed an extensive record of medication violations, lengthy suspensions, improperly using 'program' or 'paper' trainers during suspensions and obstructing an investigation into alleged wrongdoing. In the past five years, Respondent was denied entry, ejected and/or had license applications denied by regulators of Thoroughbred racing in Florida, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, New York and Delaware; and was sanctioned by the Jockey Club for violating a racing statute, rule or regulation relating to prohibited or restricted drugs, medications or substances seven times in a single year.”

Vitali has made headlines many times over the years, first for numerous therapeutic medication violations, then for avoiding sanctions for positive post-race drug tests by turning in his license in FloridaIn 2016, reporting by the Paulick Report revealed Vitali was training horses at Gulfstream Park under the name of Allan Hunter; Vitali and Hunter were subsequently barred from the entry box there and at Tampa Bay Downs. Vitali reapplied for a trainer's license in Florida, where state officials credited him with time served for his medication overages.

The Jockey Club denied Vitali Stud Book privileges for two years, starting January 1, 2017, for being determined to have violated on seven occasions a racing statute, rule or regulation relating to prohibited or restricted drugs, medications or substances in a Thoroughbred on seven occasions within a 365-day period.

Vitali sent out just 29 starters in 2017, mostly at Gulfstream and Gulfstream Park West, but returned with a stronger hand in 2018, with 334 starters, also mostly in South Florida.

In 2019, Vitali's license was suspended for one year when he interfered with a search conducted by Delaware Park security of his employee's dorm, bursting into the room and absconding with an object which was never recovered. Vitali claimed the object was a container of marijuana. His employee at the time said it was an unlabeled vial containing a clear liquid of some type which Vitali asked her to keep in her refrigerator.

In 2020, the Maryland Jockey Club told the Paulick Report that it had given trainer Wayne Potts one week to vacate his barn at Laurel Park, where he keeps 30 horses, after track officials say they discovered Potts was program training for Vitali. Vitali reportedly could not get stalls at racetracks in the area. Maryland officials said they discovered the connection between the two when horses based at Rising Sun Training Center in New Jersey were entered under Potts's name at Laurel and turned up with health certificates that had been altered to white out Vitali's name. A cluster of horses appeared at Rising Sun around that time from longtime Vitali clients, primarily from Florida.

After Potts was told to vacate Laurel, Vitali applied for a training license in Illinois afterwards but was unsuccessful in receiving one. The horses formerly based at Rising Sun ran at Arlington Park and Hawthorne under trainer Dino DiZeo. Many of the same group from Rising Sun posted workouts at Turf Paradise in the days before Vitali saddled his first runner there.

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