Tampa Bay Downs Increases Purses For Second Time Of 2021-’22 Meet

Tampa Bay Downs in Oldsmar, Fla., has announced its second 6 percent purse increase of the current meet, which will take effect with the Friday, Feb. 25, card. Horsemen will be competing for an additional $1,000 per race in all overnight races (all races except stakes). The first increase, which took effect Feb. 10, also raised purse money by $1,000 a race.

The increases continue an upward trend that saw the track hike overnight purses four times during the 2020-2021 meet.

“Several factors have contributed to our ability to raise purse money again for our horsemen,” said Peter Berube, the track's vice president and general manager. “First and foremost is the quality product our horsemen continue to provide, which has led to an increase in wagering handle.

“Our racing office, headed by racing secretary Allison De Luca, works diligently to provide competitive races with large fields that attract bettors both on-track and from our simulcast outlets around the country. We have also enjoyed good weather much of the season, which has been reflected in our attendance figures,” Berube said.

Tampa Bay Downs handled in excess of $12.1-million on its Feb. 12 Festival Preview Day card, headlined by the Grade 3 Sam F. Davis Stakes for 3-year-olds. The figure was the seventh-largest in track history.

Track officials are optimistic the March 12 Festival Day card, which includes the Grade 2, $400,000 Lambholm South Tampa Bay Derby for 3-year-old Triple Crown prospects and three other graded stakes, could exceed the track record of $15,229,366 set on Festival Day last season.

The post Tampa Bay Downs Increases Purses For Second Time Of 2021-’22 Meet appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Pimlico Spring Schedule Includes 16 Preakness Weekend Stakes

Highlighted by the 147th running of the Preakness Stakes (G1) for 3-year-olds, Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown, the Maryland Jockey Club will present 16 stakes, 10 graded, worth $3.8 million in purses over Preakness weekend, May 20-21, at historic Pimlico Race Course.

The Preakness Meet at Pimlico is scheduled to open Thursday, May 12 and run through Tuesday, May 31.

With a history that dates back to 1873, making it the second oldest of the Triple Crown races, the $1.5 million Preakness going 1 3/16 miles anchors a program of 10 stakes, six graded, worth $2.75 million Saturday, May 20.

Rombauer's victory in the El Camino Real Derby at Golden Gate Fields earned him a spot in the 146th Preakness last May, where he sprung an 11-1 upset defeating nine rivals including millionaire graded-stakes winner Midnight Bourbon and Kentucky Derby first-place finisher Medina Spirit.

Leading the undercard stakes on Preakness Day is the $250,000 Dinner Party (G2) 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 Chick Lang (G3) for 3-year-olds sprinting six furlongs, $150,000 Gallorette (G3) for fillies and mares 3 and up going 1 1/16 miles on the grass, $150,000 Maryland Sprint (G3) at six furlongs for 3-year-olds and up, and $100,000 Arabian Derby (G1) for Arabian 4-year-olds and up at 1 1/16 miles.

Sophomores will also be in the Preakness Day spotlight in both the $100,000 Sir Barton going 1 1/16 miles on dirt and $100,000 James W. Murphy at one mile on the grass. Rounding out the stakes are the $100,000 Jim McKay Turf Sprint, a five-furlong dash for 3-year-olds and up, and $100,000 Skipat for females 3 and older sprinting six furlongs.

The 98th running of the $250,000 Black-Eyed Susan (G2), one of the premiere events in the country for 3-year-old fillies and contested at 1 1/8 miles, will once again be in its traditional spot as the feature a Friday, May 20 Preakness Eve card boasting six stakes, four graded, worth $1.05 million in purses.

Also on the program are the historic $300,000 Pimlico Special (G3) for 3-year-olds and up at the Preakness distance of 1 3/16 miles, $150,000 Miss Preakness (G3) for 3-year-old fillies sprinting six furlongs, and $150,000 Allaire du Pont (G3) for fillies and mares 3 and up going 1 1/8 miles.

Two grass races round out the Black-Eyed Susan Day card – the $100,000 Hilltop for 3-year-old fillies going a mile and $100,000 The Very One, a five-furlong dash for fillies and mares 3 and older.

Live racing is currently being conducted in Maryland at Laurel Park, which will host a special nine-race Presidents Day holiday program Monday that begins at 12:25 p.m.

The post Pimlico Spring Schedule Includes 16 Preakness Weekend Stakes appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Trial Date Set For Vet Connected With Federal Doping Case

A tentative trial date of July 11 has been set for Dr. Michael Posner, a veterinarian prosecutors say worked with Scott Mangini to help Mangini cover up his distribution of adulteration and misbranded drugs for racehorses.

Pharmacist Scott Mangini and his former business partner, Scott Robinson, have entered guilty pleas in the case and been sentenced for their role in creating and distributing adulterated and misbranded drugs which were given to racehorses.

Posner and Carl Garofalo Jr., were included in a superseding indictment filed after the well-known cluster of March 2020 indictments against Mangini, Robinson, and others in the harness and Thoroughbred worlds. Garofalo, who stands accused of helping Mangini with product manufacturing, has entered a guilty plea to one count of drug adulteration and misbranding and is awaiting sentencing at the end of the month.

Earlier this week, U.S. District Judge J. Paul Oetken denied a motion from Posner to dismiss the indictment.

At a status conference held Feb. 18, there seemed to be a possibility Posner, 75, may eventually change his plea.

Sarah Mortazavi, assistant U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, indicated to Judge Oetken there had been some discussions “about a potential resolution” in the case but that both sides wanted to schedule a trial date in case those did not prove fruitful. Gordon Mehler, attorney for Posner, disputed that.

“We have not had any discussions whatsoever,' said Mehler. “For reasons we won't bore the court with, essentially we didn't think our client would ultimately be indicted.”

According to documents filed by the prosecution in opposition to Posner's motion to dismiss, the government indicated that Posner had charged Mangini $400 to $800 a month to use his veterinary license for false prescriptions. The prosecution claims that Posner, who primarily operates as a small animal veterinarian, was aware Mangini wanted to use his license to create false prescriptions, which were to serve as a cover, should Mangini ever be audited by the Food and Drug Administration or the Florida Department of Health. Posner allegedly gave Mangini access to his veterinary office's internal software so Mangini could enter the false prescriptions there, giving Posner a paper trail should he ever be audited himself. The false prescriptions seemed to be primarily be centered on the omeprazole products Mangini illegally manufactured and sold. Mangini seemed to believe that the presence of a prescription could negate the legal questions around his company's mass production of omeprazole paste, despite not being an FDA-approved manufacturing facility.

The post Trial Date Set For Vet Connected With Federal Doping Case appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Arapahoe Park Could Close Its Doors If State Senate Bill Isn’t Passed

The future of racing in Colorado is in doubt, as operators of Arapahoe Park told the Colorado Horse Racing Association this week the track will shutter without the passage of Senate Bill 22-117.

The bill seeks to better define the term “gross receipts” as applied to money wagered on Colorado races from out-of-state.

The bill is summarized this way on the Colorado's General Assembly site:

“Current law prohibits a racing or simulcast facility licensee for the racing of greyhounds or horses to take more than a certain percentage of the gross receipts of any pari-mutuel wagering on the races or simulcast races. The bill states that, when 'gross receipts' is used in reference to money received by a licensee from an out-of-state simulcast facility, the term means money received by the licensee after the out-of-state simulcast facility has deducted the costs, signal fees, and taxes that it is required to pay to its regulatory and taxing authorities.”

The impetus behind the bill seems to be a change instituted by the state's Division of Racing Events partway through last racing season in the way the division calculates how much money the track may keep and how much is owed to other entities, including the horsemen's purse account. Attorney Tom Downey, who appeared at the meeting on behalf of Arapahoe Park, said the bill seeks only to formally define gross receipts in the same way they have been interpreted in practice for years.

“It is not a redefinition of gross receipts,” said Downey. “What is in the statutes currently, there is no definition of gross receipts so this creates a definition.

“The way the track has been run, the way the state auditors, for nearly two decades have interpreted the current statutes … [they've] interpreted the statute in exactly the same way.”

Downey described the reworking of the payout formula by the state's racing commission as “a bomb dropped on us in the middle of the season.”

Donia Amick, director of the Racing Events Division for the Colorado Department of Revenue, appeared on a teleconference meeting with the Colorado Horse Racing Association earlier this week, but because the legislation is pending, declined to give many details about the differences between the formula previously used to calculate the horsemen's portion of money wagered out-of-state and the formula the division began using sometime last year. Amick would not speculate on the difference in potential weekly or yearly payout to the horsemen's purse account under one formula versus the other, and would not comment on why the division had changed the way it required that money to be divided.

The closest anyone got to really defining the differences between the two methods of calculation was an analogy by Downey likening the process to purchasing a car out of state and bringing it into Colorado. Buyers pay sales tax on the vehicle in the state purchased, but do not pay it a second time when bringing the car into Colorado. Downey equated the division's new formula with double-taxing the income from out-of-state wagers on Colorado racing.

Shannon Rushton, director of racing and racing secretary for Arapahoe, said at the meeting he had been told the track would owe another $500,000 in taxes and money due to the horsemen's purse account under the commission's new interpretation of the formula in addition to what the track already pays.

Rushton also revealed the track lost $900,000 operating live racing two years ago, and $700,000 before that. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, it was just about breaking even – which raised questions for some horsemen as to whether Arapahoe would keep going even with the aid of the bill.

If the bill doesn't become law, the track has indicated it will shut down. Rushton said he has been instructed not to put out condition books for this year's racing season – just in case.

The Colorado Horse Racing Association voted 5-1 on Tuesday to oppose the bill, with two abstentions. Among other issues, the organization said it received no request from any of the parties for input from the horsemen.

“We gave Bally's Arapahoe Park and the bill's co-sponsors in the Senate every opportunity to provide any numbers at all that might demonstrate why this bill is necessary and they would not do it,” said Kim Oliver, CHA President, in a release. “This proposed legislation was filed without ever notifying or consulting with the horsemen's group despite the fact that the horsemen's purse account would be impacted.”

Amick did acknowledge during the Monday meeting that the Department of Revenue, together with the Thoroughbred Racing Protective Bureau, is in the middle of an inquiry as to whether Arapahoe has previously been paying into the horsemen's purse account improperly. Jim Mulvihill, CHA interim executive director, said he was told the results of that inquiry should be available in a couple of weeks, though it's not clear whether that will be too late to have an impact on the legislation.

SB22-117 is currently scheduled to be heard by the state's Finance Committee on Feb. 23 at 1:30 p.m.

The post Arapahoe Park Could Close Its Doors If State Senate Bill Isn’t Passed appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights