Santa Anita Park Welcomes Fans With Promotions For Opening Weekend

In addition to a full slate of world-class racing, fans will be treated to a bevy of promotional events throughout the Autumn Meet's opening weekend beginning Friday, Oct. 1 at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, Calif.

With three Breeders' Cup “Win & You're In” Challenge Race qualifiers and the $200,000 Grade 2 Eddie D Stakes at about 6 ½ furlongs down the Camino Real Turf Course highlighting a nine-race program Friday, the meet will no doubt get off to a fast start with tremendous betting opportunities from start to finish.

As will be the case on all Fridays throughout the 16-day Autumn stand, parking and admission will be free of charge on Oct. 1. Additionally, $3 beers and $5 Specialty Cocktails will also be served on Fridays.

The following is a schedule of promotional events throughout opening weekend:

 

FRIDAY, OCT. 1

–JOHN SHEAR DAY, come join us as we honor Santa Anita's beloved Paddock Captain, who retired following six decades of service at age 100 this past June. A special plaque acknowledging John's horsemanship, humility, and heroism will be dedicated in the East Paddock Gardens prior to the races.

–$3 Beers & $5 Margaritas at Sirona's Bar and the Horseshoe Bar on the Grandstand Mezzanine each Friday

–Free General Admission and Parking each Friday

–$80 Win/Place Feeder Tournament for Xpressbet Members

 

SATURDAY, OCT. 2

–OKTOBERFEST on Trackside Apron—WALK-UPS WELCOME!

–Free Santa Anita Hat Giveaway, sponsored by Yaamava Resort & Casino at San Manuel (Available to Thoroughbreds and XB Rewards Members). FREE & EASY SIGNUP FOR NON-MEMBERS AT PICKUP SITES.

–$5 Infield Admission, includes Parking & Program each weekend through Gate 6 off of Colorado Place

–Infield Family Fun Zone

–Infield Biergarten (each Saturday & Sunday)

 

SUNDAY, OCT. 3

–OKTOBERFEST on Trackside Apron—WALK-UPS WELCOME!

–$5 Infield Admission, includes Parking & Program each weekend through Gate 6 off of Colorado Place

–Infield Family Fun Zone

–Infield Biergarten

Entries for Santa Anita's Autumn Meet opener on Oct. 1 will be drawn Tuesday, Sept. 28. For additional information regarding racing and promotions through closing day, Oct. 31, please visit santaanita.com or call (626) 574-RACE.

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Churchill Downs Excludes Broberg After Track Says He Failed To Properly Care For Injured Horse

Churchill Downs has revoked stalls from trainer Karl Broberg and banned him from the entry box at its parent company's racetracks after an incident involving a voided claim. Broberg owns and trains 5-year-old gelding Rockandahardplace, who contested the second race on Churchill's Sept. 18 card.

The Kentucky track released the following statement to the Paulick Report on Sept. 24:

On the night of Sept. 18, Karl Broberg's Rockandahardplace finished sixth of seven in a $10,000 claiming race at Churchill Downs. A claim for the 5-year-old gelding was voided after the race by rule when the horse was declared lame by a KHRC veterinarian at the test barn. The horse was returned to his stall by a paid hotwalker, but a subsequent investigation revealed that there was no responsible representative of the trainer on-site to make veterinary decisions or to take appropriate steps to protect the welfare of the injured horse. As a result of Karl Broberg's failure to properly care for the horse, Churchill Downs Incorporated has indefinitely revoked his stalling and entry privileges at all Churchill Downs Incorporated properties effective immediately.

“Churchill Downs and the horse racing industry is committed to improving accountability when it comes to horse safety and racing integrity. We place the highest priority on the health, welfare and safety of our equine and human athletes, and we expect the same from people who race and train at any of our facilities.

“Rockandahardplace did receive basic veterinary care on the night of Sept. 18. The following day, the horse was transported from Churchill Downs to a private farm for long-term care.”

Rockandahardplace has a record of six wins from 40 starts, with one win from 12 starts so far in 2021. Prior to the Sept. 18 race, the gelding had started Sept. 9 in an allowance contest at Remington Park, where he finished third.

For his part, Broberg disputes Churchill's assertion that he did not have proper care available to the horse.

“I am obviously appalled by the insinuation through the CD press release that Rockandahardplace was improperly cared for,” Broberg told Paulick Report publisher Ray Paulick via email. “Rockandahardplace was evaluated and treated with bute and banamine following the race by a licensed veterinarian at our request. He was correctly diagnosed as having a medial sesamoid fracture which x-rays confirmed the following morning. He was sent to a farm the following morning to recover and we can happily report aside from the injury he is in perfect health.

“We have kept the steward's office at Churchill apprised of his well-being.”

Broberg said that Churchill officials seemed focused on the fact the horse's injured leg was not wrapped or placed in a cast overnight after the race, but said wrapping wouldn't have been effective for a suspected sesamoid fracture. The horse was left in the Churchill receiving barn because he was too sore to step onto the trailer to make the trip back to the training center. He said the gelding is now at a facility in Bedford, Ky., and is sedated on stall rest under the care of a veterinarian. He expects Rockandahardplace will need at least six months off, and will then be evaluated for a return to racing or a start of a new career.

The trainer told the Paulick Report he was surprised CDI had taken this action against him and insisted there must be more to the story than the incident with Rockandahardplace. It's true, he said, that he did not keep his stalls at Churchill's training facility full and that he had been interested in claiming horses there. He also pointed out that Kentucky stewards had initially made contact with him and suggested they were conducting their own investigation into whether his actions constituted animal cruelty; he has since been informed by the stewards that they are satisfied and do not plan on issuing any ruling in the case.

“I don't understand how this has become what it currently is,” he said. “It just makes no sense to me whatsoever … they still haven't asked me any of the questions they should have asked. They didn't even get my side.

“Meanwhile they have [Marcus] Vitali at Presque Isle like nothing's wrong in the world. It just doesn't make sense to me … there has to be more to this.”

Broberg said he believes he's usually top ten in starters at the Fair Grounds meet, and plans to fight any attempt to ban him from the entry box there.

Broberg has been ranked first or second in North American trainer standings by wins each year since 2013, and has amassed 4,119 victories from 17,091 starts since he began training in 2009. His business model depends on keeping strings of horses in multiple states and relies heavily on claiming races. He is currently ranked ninth in North America by earnings and second by wins.

Broberg has also been a controversial figure at times, having been excluded from Remington Park in 2013 after The Jockey Club suspended privileges from him for having four medication violations in close succession. Broberg fought the Remington ban in court and was ultimately allowed back, but saw his stalls revoked again in 2020. More recently, the trainer spoke out about testing issues in Louisiana, where the state's laboratory detected found three drugs, including a Class 1 substance, in a post-race sample from one of his horses. Split sample testing was negative for all three substances.

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Community Meeting To Discuss Maryland’s Stricter Corticosteroid Regulation Set For Sept. 28

Maryland racing stakeholders and regulators have scheduled an online community forum to discuss and answer questions regarding the action by the Maryland Racing Commission to remove testing threshold levels for five corticosteroids.

The Zoom webinar meeting will be held on Tuesday, Sept. 28 at Noon eastern.

Participants include MRC Executive Director Mike Hopkins; MRC member Dr. Thomas Bowman, who chairs the commission's Equine Safety, Health and Welfare Advisory Committee; Dr. Dionne Benson, Chief Veterinary Officer for 1/ST RACING (The Stronach Group); Dr. Mary Scollay, Executive Director of the Racing Medication and Testing Consortium and Alan Foreman, Maryland Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association general counsel and Chief Executive Officer of the THA.

The MRC, upon the recommendation of the advisory committee chaired by Bowman, approved a motion to modify a regulation on the five corticosteroids to eliminate testing threshold levels and employ limit of detection—the lowest level at which a laboratory can, with confidence, detect a substance in a sample.

The change will be filed with emergency status and there will be a public comment period. It is anticipated the updated regulation will be implemented Nov. 1, Hopkins said.

The five corticosteroids are dexamethasone, prednisolone, betamethasone, isoflupredone and triamcinolone. The current 14-day stand-down period for intra-articular injections will remain in place under 2019 model rules approved by the Association of Racing Commissioners International and RMTC.

The advisory committee discussed the proposal at a Sept. 8 meeting as a result of several dexamethasone positives and reports the corticosteroid was being regularly administered by some veterinarians at 48 hours before a race at a lower dose rather than the RMTC-recommended 72-hour withdrawal time at the regular dose.

The webinar is open to all Maryland horsemen and practicing veterinarians. Advance registration is required to join by clicking here.

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Training Begins Over Gulfstream’s New Tapeta Surface; Racing Scheduled For Next Thursday

Training on the newly installed Tapeta track got underway Friday morning at Gulfstream Park, where horses galloped on the all-weather surface that is tentatively scheduled to open for races next Thursday afternoon.

Jockey Chantal Sutherland said she was impressed with the Tapeta surface after galloping Leon McKanas-trained Thenorthremembers, a 5-year-old Violence gelding who captured a mile turf race for $25,000 claimers in his most recent start.

“Of all the Tapetas and Polytracks this is, by far, one of the better ones. This is beautiful. The horse went over it effortlessly. It was super-soft, and you could not hear horses beside you making any noise on it. My horse, I couldn't hear hitting the ground,” Sutherland said. “They've done a great job on it. It seemed all level and really soft, very forgiving for horses.”

Joe Orseno-trained Timmy M. was among the first horses to gallop over the track that replaced the outer turf course. Twice stakes-placed on turf during his juvenile campaign, Timmy M., a 5-year-old son of Morning Line, has been competing in allowance optional claimer and claiming races since a fourth-place finish in November of 2019 in the Millions Turf Preview at Gulfstream Park West.

“He just ran the other day and we thought he was in a good spot where he could win. He didn't run very well. I was actually going to sell him, but then I said, 'You know what? Tapeta – let's try him,'” said Orseno, who was pleased with how Timmy M. looked getting over the new surface Friday. “We're going to run him at the end of the month on it, but today was just galloping for the sake of galloping. I thought it was a good experiment.”

Although most horses will be entering unknown territory on the Tapeta track, the new surface provides trainers with hope that some of their horses will improve over the new surface.

“You might get that odd horse that will go right up the ladder on it. Everyone's hoping that they have the one,” Orseno said.

Kathy Mongeon-trained Anonymous Source, a 4-year-old Florida-bred filly who won a $12,500 maiden claiming race on turf three starts back, was the first horse to step onto the Tapeta surface Friday with veteran exercise rider Walter Blum Jr. up.

“This felt amazing on the horse I was on. I think she really loved it,” Blum said. “People ask how do you know? When she first stepped on it, she was very light-footed, and when I went to pull her up, I could barely pull her up. She didn't even get tired and I let her clip around there finishing up.”

Blum has a wealth of experience galloping and breezing horses over all-weather surfaces.

“I rode Polytrack at Keeneland and Santa Anita. [The Tapeta surface] was so soft and nice. It had a lot of cushion to it, a lot of bounce,” Blum said. “I think it's going to be a fantastic surface once it works in in a week's time, once these guys are able to work on it, they're going to like this.”

Due to the closure of Gulfstream Park West, Gulfstream Park is scheduled to conduct racing year-round, prompting the construction of the Tapeta track. The new surface will provide a measure of relief to the turf course while offering a varied racing program for horses of all abilities. Gulfstream Park will become the first track to offer racing on dirt, turf and all-weather surfaces.

Thursday's program will mark the opening of the Fall Meet, during which races will not be scheduled on the turf course, which will undergo renovation for the Championship Meet. Six stakes, formerly run on turf, will be renewed on the Tapeta course.

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