Friday Show Presented By Woodbine: Where Have The Private Stables Gone?

Private stables once ruled the racing world. Owned by wealthy families with names like Galbreath, Kleberg, Mellon, Phipps, Vanderbilt, and Whitney, these stables bred Thoroughbreds to race them, developing female families over generations and sticking to mostly proven stallions, relying on one trainer and often having a jockey under contract to ride all of their horses.

Only a handful of them remain today, but almost all of the onetime private stables still operating have had to adapt their business models.

Craig Bernick, president and CEO of Glen Hill Farm, is the grandson of the racing and breeding operation's late founders, Leonard and Bernice Lavin. In 1967, the Lavins created the breed-to-race stable that primarily ran its homebreds in Illinois and California while breeding and raising them at Glen Hill Farm in Ocala, Fla. Glen Hill Farm has maintained a longstanding relationship with the Proctor family, with the stable's horses trained by the late Willard Proctor for many years, then by his son, Tom. Harry “Hap” Proctor, also a trainer, was longtime farm manager.

Since taking over the operation in 2008, Bernick has diversified Glen Hill. It still maintains a racing operation (with Tom Proctor as U.S. trainer), but auction purchases and partnerships in Europe and North America supplement the stable, some horses are bred for the commercial market, and Bernick created a division to invest in stallions and stallion shares.

Bernick is this week's Friday Show guest, discussing how economics, combined with a more commercial breeding and racing industry, necessitated diversification.

Watch this week's episode of The Friday Show below:

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Friday Show Presented By Woodbine: Servis Sentencing Closes Curtain On FBI Probe

With disgraced former trainer Jason Servis sentenced to four years in prison, the federal investigation into racehorse doping –  involving more than two dozen trainers, veterinarians, and drug distributors in Thoroughbred and Standardbred racing in multiple states – has come to an end.

Servis was the last to be sentenced of those named in a March 9, 2020, indictment from the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York. Like most of the others, including former trainer Jorge Navarro (who received a five-year sentence), he pleaded guilty. The only jury trials, involving Florida veterinarian Seth Fishman and his employee, Lisa Giannelli, resulted in guilty verdicts. Fishman was sentenced to 11 years in prison and Giannelli 3 1/2 years.

In this week's Friday Show, Ray Paulick and Paulick Report edit0r-in-chief Natalie Voss review the story that rocked the racing world and likely set the stage for federal legislation that in December 2020 created an independent agency, the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority, to regulate U.S. Thoroughbred racing's drug and safety policies on a national basis.

How did the cheaters get away with illegally doping horses for so long without getting caught? What did some of the documents and wiretapped conversations reveal? Why would anyone entrusted with the care and well-being of horses administer some of these substances, with contents largely unknown? And why did the number of indictments not grow, despite the stated presence of voluminous information collected by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, including customer lists for some of the banned substances?

Watch this week's episode of The Friday Show below:

 

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The Friday Show Presented By Woodbine: Evolution Of Horse Racing Data

It's been over 30 years since The Jockey Club and North American racetracks formed Equibase to be the Thoroughbred industry's official record keeper and database. The company not only collects racing data, but supplies it to past performance providers like Daily Racing Form and Brisnet, advance deposit wagering companies, and also distributes or sells its own products to horseplayers and fans.

Kyle McDoniel was recently named president and chief operating officer of Equibase, which is based in Lexington, Ky. A racing fan while growing up in Arkansas, McDoniel remained enthusiastic about racing as his career path took him into management positions in the sports data industry at ESPN, FOX Sports, Yahoo Sports, and Sportradar.

Creating “phone friendly” past performances, incorporating GPS technology into data collection, and competing for customers in the sports betting world where data is plentiful and free are just some of the issues McDoniel will have to address in the coming months and years at Equibase. But he brings considerable experience to the position from the sports world, where fantasy games and more recently legalized sports betting have put a premium on data that helps gamblers make their wagering decisions.`

McDoniel joins Ray Paulick and bloodstock editor Joe Nevills in this week's edition of the Friday Show to discuss the opportunities and challenges Equibase faces.

Watch this week's episode of The Friday Show below:

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The Friday Show Presented By Woodbine: Remembering Funny Cide

Jack Knowlton, operating manager for Sackatoga Stable, joins Ray Paulick and bloodstock editor Joe Nevills on this week's Friday Show to reminisce about Eclipse Award champion Funny Cide, the popular New York-bred gelding who took the racing world by storm in 2003 with victories in the Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes before Derby runner-up Empire Maker turned the tables on him in the Belmont Stakes before a rain-soaked crowd of 101,864 at Belmont Park.

Funny Cide died earlier this week after experiencing complications from colic. He'd been a star attraction at the Kentucky Horse Park's Hall of Champions in Lexington, Ky., since 2008.

Knowlton talks about the formation of the partnership with some old friends from high school, the use of school buses to transport the Sackatoga partners to the track when Funny Cide made his Triple Crown run, and the tremendous publicity the horse brought to racing.

He also hails the work trainer Barclay Tagg and assistant Robin Smullen did to keep Funny Cide competitive and sound through 38 starts over six racing seasons, beginning with a 14 3/4-length maiden win in September of his 2-year-old year up to a three-length victory in his finale in a stakes at Finger Lakes at age 7. Knowlton is a strong advocate for Tagg's election to the National Museum of Racing Hall of Fame.

Watch this week's episode of The Friday Show below:

 

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