Fanticipate Launches With Tiz The Law Items For Auction To Benefit Charity

Fanticipate, an online marketplace that allows athletes, teams, and leagues to offer unique experiences and items for their fans to bid on before an event starts, launches its first auction for the 146th annual Kentucky Derby.

Competitors (sellers) are officially verified through Fanticipate to provide unique and authentic items or experiences desired by the fans (buyers), who are competing to win the fan engagement of a lifetime. This process gives the seller the ability to increase fan loyalty, brand identity, and create a lasting relationship with their fans. Additionally, Fanticipate offers a platform for competitors to create a new revenue stream for themselves, their team, or their favorite charity, giving the competitor complete control over the proceeds. Since the auction takes place ahead of the event itself, fans who win the bid have the rare experience of watching their prized items being used in the event before taking a piece of the action home.

“Fanticipate is excited to launch our online marketplace just in time for the 146th Kentucky Derby, so we can elevate the fan experience in new and novel ways,” said Jim Chiapetta, Co-Founder of Fanticipate. CEO and Co-Founder, Ed Blach, added, “Fanticipate gives fans who have an appetite to compete and be a part of the action, the ability to do so. During a time when there are fewer fans in the stands, this new form of engagement allows spectators to feel the excitement from home, and we look forward to building on this concept for all of our future events.”

Items available through the 146th Kentucky Derby auction include:

  • Famed racehorse Tiz the Law's horseshoe
  • A Zoom call with Jack Knowlton, the Operating Manager of Sackatoga Stable
  • Halters worn by 2020 Kentucky Derby competitors and other history-making racehorses

Many of the current sellers will be giving back to the community and donating their proceeds to charities, such as Race for Grace and Old Friends Thoroughbred Retirement Farm. All items purchased at the auction have the potential to increase in value based on the outcome of the event, providing unique opportunities for fans to experience high-level events with newfound engagement and increased anticipation. While the Kentucky Derby is Fanticipate's current live auction, it is only the first of many sporting events that the company will feature, such as hockey and baseball.

For more information on Fanticipate or to view its live auctions, visit: www.fanticipate.com.

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Limited Number Of Owners Will Be Allowed To Attend Races At Belmont Park

The New York Racing Association, Inc. (NYRA) announced Friday that a limited number of licensed owners will be permitted to attend live racing at Belmont Park on the day that their horse is entered to race

To reduce density and adhere to social distancing guidelines, the size of the ownership group will be restricted to 10 individuals per horse.

All owners within the group must be in possession of a valid New York State Gaming Commission (NYSGC) license. Horses with identical ownership will be limited to 10 total admissions regardless of number of horses running that day.

To align with required health and safety measures implemented in New York to mitigate risk and combat the spread of COVID-19, owners will be subjected to health screening prior to entry, including a temperature check. In addition, owners will be required to practice social distancing and to wear a facial covering at all times while on Belmont Park property.

Owners planning travel to New York from any of the states currently listed on the New York Travel Advisory are subject to a mandatory 14-day quarantine. For additional information on the travel advisory, and a complete list of states included, visit https://coronavirus.health.ny.gov/covid-19-travel-advisory.

Owner reservations for race-day admission to Belmont Park should be sent to NYRA's Horsemen's Relations via email at horsemensrelations@nyrainc.com or by phone at 516-488-6008. NYRA will confirm all reservations via email. NYRA cannot consider or accept same day reservations.

The NYRA Office of Horsemen's Relations will begin processing reservations for opening day of the Belmont Park fall meet on Wednesday, September 16 at 10 a.m.

Licensed owners will be permitted within the Belmont Park barn area beginning on Wednesday, September 16. In order to secure access to the barn area, owners must be in possession of a valid NYSGC license and provide NYRA with a negative COVID-19 test.

Owners not previously registered to access the barn area are required to register in advance with racing administrative assistant Zerfana Khan at 718-659-2313 or zkhan@nyrainc.com beginning Wednesday, September 16.

Owners approved to enter the barn area will be required to practice social distancing and to wear a facial covering at all times.

Trainers stabled on NYRA grounds may ship stakes horses to race at facilities outside of New York state. Staff who have traveled with the horse must provide NYRA with a negative COVID-19 test taken upon their return to New York.
Trainers stabled on NYRA grounds may ship horses to run in overnight races at facilities outside of New York state provided that staff does not accompany the horse for the race. The horse may return to NYRA property only if unaccompanied by staff.

Trainers currently stabled off of NYRA grounds [outside of New York state] wishing to run in an overnight race may ship the horse to a trainer stabled at Belmont. Staff cannot accompany the horse into the Belmont barn area. Said trainer will be allowed to saddle the horse in the paddock provided he or she has provided NYRA with a negative COVID-19 test. Trainer is not permitted access to the barn area.

A separate stakes quarantine barn will be established at Barn 16 along with a separate isolated housing cottage for any staff that may accompany horses competing in stakes. A separate training period will be set up for these horses at 10:00 a.m. each day over the Belmont main track so they will train away from the Belmont population.

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Economic Indicators: Average Daily Handle Stays Strong In August

Equibase, LLC released its monthly report on Economic Indicators in Thoroughbred Racing this Friday, Sept. 4. Due to the COVID-19 outbreak, Equibase is currently providing monthly reporting of its Economic Indicators Advisories. The Advisory is typically disseminated on a quarterly basis to provide key metrics used to measure racing's performance throughout the year.

Wagering on U.S. races dropped a bit in August 2020 compared to the same month in 2019, down 1.92 percent, but average daily handle continues to show year-over-year increases as the pandemic continues to wreak havoc on sports schedules. In August, average daily handle was up 13.50 percent in 2020 over the same period in 2019.

Year-to-date numbers show a similar trend, with average daily handle up 35.75 percent for the first eight months of 2020.

Since the Kentucky Derby has not yet been held, it will be interesting to see how much recovery the figure for year-to-date total wagering will make after this Saturday's Run for the Roses, even without fans in attendance. Currently, total annual wagering is down just 6.20 percent, which is already an improvement over last month's 6.96 percent difference.

August 2020 vs. August 2019
Indicator August 2020 August 2019 % Change
Wagering on U.S. Races* $1,154,522,663 $1,177,165,980 -1.92%
U.S. Purses $104,515,752 $128,293,370 -18.53%
U.S. Race Days 445 515 -13.59%
U.S. Races 3,607 4,026 -10.41%
U.S. Starts 26,964 28,895 -6.68%
Average Field Size 7.48 7.18 +4.16%
Average Wagering Per Race Day $2,594,433 $2,285,759 +13.50%
Average Purses Per Race Day $234,867 $249,113 -5.72%

YTD 2020 vs. YTD 2019
Indicator YTD 2020 YTD 2019 % Change
Wagering on U.S. Races* $7,308,988,910 $7,792,183,885 -6.20%
U.S. Purses $518,901,054 $775,638,076 -33.10%
U.S. Race Days 2,144 3,103 -30.91%
U.S. Races 17,793 25,225 -29.46%
U.S. Starts 140,022 185,746 -24.62%
Average Field Size 7.87 7.36 +6.87%
Average Wagering Per Race Day $3,409,043 $2,511,178 +35.75%
Average Purses Per Race Day $242,025 $249,964 -3.18%

 * Includes worldwide commingled wagering on U.S. races.

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Churchill Issues Statement On Racial Justice As Planned Protests Draw National Attention

This Saturday at Churchill Downs, Greg Harbut and Ray Daniels will represent the first African-American ownership to take part in the Kentucky Derby in 13 years. However, leading up to this year's historic, delayed-by-pandemic edition of the Run for the Roses, Harbut has been contacted by civil rights activists about scratching his first Derby horse, Necker Island; a symbol to show he stands with Louisville, Ky.'s African-American community.

“I do agree that Black Lives Matter, and that there should be justice for Breonna Taylor,” Harbut told the Paulick Report last week.

Breonna Taylor's death at the hands of Louisville police back in March was one of the events that turned the city unto one of the country's hot spots for protesters seeking racial justice. Activists have urged Churchill officials to cancel the Kentucky Derby, but their pleas went unanswered as Churchill chose to go ahead with the event, albeit without fans in the stands. As such, several groups are planning protests on Kentucky Derby day: No Justice No Peace Louisville, Black Lives Matter Louisville, the Until Freedom group, and the NFAC, among others.

Those planned protests are getting national media attention as Derby Day draws ever-closer, from local and national news outlets, in the form of both news stories and editorials.

Harbut empathizes with the protesters, but he won't pass up a chance to stand in the grandstand to which his grandfather was unjustly denied access more than 50 years ago.

In 1962, Tom Harbut was the breeder and co-owner of Kentucky Derby contender Touch Bar, but his name didn't appear in the program and he wasn't allowed to watch the race from the grandstand; it was whites-only. (Touch Bar finished 11th that year)

“My grandfather bred the horse and owned part of him and, at the time, his role in what is one of the most prestigious races in the world was not acknowledged,” Harbut told the New York Times this week. “This is part of my family's legacy, and it is a chance to remind people on a big stage — the biggest stage — that horse racing history here begins with African-Americans.”

Fifteen of the first 28 Kentucky Derbies were won by African-American jockeys, beginning with Oliver Lewis in 1875 (Aristides), and six of the first 17 Kentucky Derby winners were conditioned by African-American trainers. That all changed in the mid-1900s, and it took 79 years for another African-American jockey to appear in the Kentucky Derby (from Henry King in 1921 to Marlon St. Julien in 2000).

As award-winning sports journalist Eric Crawford wrote for Louisville's wdrb.com, “This isn't yesterday. This is today. An entire race of people was wiped from involvement in the upper levels of the industry — and they have not returned. For a long time, the memory of those who did succeed in the Derby was forgotten. White-washed.”

Harbut hopes the visual of African-American ownership on racing's biggest stage will help draw more African-Americans back into the sport, but protesters and civil rights activists are hoping for a different image on this historic Kentucky Derby day. While calls to cancel the race have been unsuccessful, the protests planned for Saturday afternoon could continue to bring national attention to issues of social justice.

“The lack of fans has the potential to dull, just a little, the impact of these protests,” wrote Sam Fels for Deadspin. “The visual of protesters merely asking for racial equality juxtaposed with those adorned in Kentucky Derby hats sipping on juleps or meat-headed fratboys headed for the infield would have made for a striking illustration. It also would have been a likelier flashpoint between protestors and police, because it is unlikely that protesters would be allowed anywhere near attendees or the track. There would have been no way NBC could ignore what would have ensued.”

Churchill Downs acknowledged calls to cancel the Derby in a statement released Thursday, which is printed in full below.

“We know there are some who disagree with our decision to run the Kentucky Derby this year,” the statement read in part. “We respect that point of view but made our decision in the belief that traditions can remind us of what binds us together as Americans, even as we seek to acknowledge and repair the terrible pain that rends us apart.”

Meanwhile, the Louisville Metro Police Force will have an all-work day on duty to ensure that the Kentucky Derby event proceeds as planned on Saturday.

“To say the Kentucky Derby is a time of unity when it is the symbol of segregation in our city shows your lack of knowledge about reality,” a frustrated Jecorey Arthur, a local musician and Louisville Metro councilman-elect, told the Courier-Journal. “It's 2020, and if you look at the past 20 years of our inclusion or exclusion when it comes to Derby, we are still very much in the 1920s, still very much in the Jim Crow era.

“There's potential (for unity), but we can't get to that point until you acknowledge the injustice.”

Churchill's statement also acknowledged that “We are not doing enough, quickly enough,” and intimated that it plans to take “real, concrete action to address institutional roadblocks to progress,” but failed to lay out specifics.

“The effects of decisions 120 years ago still work to exclude Blacks from this industry that they once found great success in,” Crawford continued. “The sooner many of us not only acknowledge these injustices but recognize the current effects they have, the sooner we step toward a lasting solution.

“But it's going to take all of us. And many are going to have to crawl out of entrenched positions and walk forward for anything meaningful to happen.”

Churchill Downs released the following statement on Thursday, two days before the 2020 Kentucky Derby:

The Kentucky Derby has been run every year for the past 145 years. It is a great American tradition that has survived depressions, wars, pandemics and myriad changes in our country, large and small.

The first Derby was run just ten years after the end of the Civil War and the end of slavery in America. Over ninety years later, during the 1967 Derby, protesters took to the streets around Churchill Downs, demanding equality and change.

Today, more than fifty years after that, our fellow Kentuckians and fellow Americans are still asking to be heard; for all of us to understand the ongoing inequality that exists, and finally to adopt meaningful change.

We are not doing enough, quickly enough. That is true in our country, in our city and in our sport.

We know there are some who disagree with our decision to run the Kentucky Derby this year. We respect that point of view but made our decision in the belief that traditions can remind us of what binds us together as Americans, even as we seek to acknowledge and repair the terrible pain that rends us apart.

Our sport shares a disconcerting history that led to the exclusion of Black jockey participation through the years. The legacy of the Kentucky Derby begins with the incredible success of Black jockeys. We feel it is imperative to acknowledge the painful truths that led to their exclusion. Churchill Downs strongly believes in preserving and sharing the stories of the Black jockeys who are a critical part of this tradition. This is not a new commitment, but we continue to seek ways to share these stories and honor these athletes.

Our goal has always been that the Kentucky Derby and the way it is observed throughout the city should be inclusive of the entire Louisville community. However, we hear the calls to do more and we have challenged ourselves to do so. We hear the voices that tell us we have not successfully created an environment in which everyone feels welcome or included. That is not acceptable and we need to do more to ensure that our best intentions become a reality. We need to do more, now, to ensure that every member of our community is a part of our traditions. Churchill Downs is committed to engaging in the hard conversations in our city, our sport and within our own organization. We are committed to taking real, concrete action to address institutional roadblocks to progress and playing our part in advancing the changes America so desperately needs.

We recognize that people in our community and across our nation are hurting right now. The atmosphere of the Kentucky Derby will be different this year as we respond to those calls for change. This will be a Derby unlike any other. As it should be.

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