From Riders Up To Bear Down: Going, Going…GONE! The Auctioning Of Arlington Park, Pt. 1

(First of a three-part series.)

They sold the trees. And even the nacho cheese.

Arlington's assets auction include live (pictured) and artificial trees (GRAFE AUCTION PHOTO)

In its divestiture of Arlington Park's assets, parent company Churchill Downs, Inc. left no stone unsold. Twenty auctions held over six months saw nearly everything sell, from Richard (“Dick”) Duchossois' opulent penthouse furnishings to commercial kitchen equipment to furlong poles. It had the vibe of a fire sale, but unlike 1989, Arlington will not rise from the ashes.

You probably know the sad story. Illinois racing fans lived it. On July 31, 1985, Arlington Park, then 58 years old and already rich in racing history, burned to the ground. In the early-morning hours, a fire that reportedly started in the ceiling of the horsemen's lounge jumped over to the grandstand, spectacularly engulfing it. The inferno raged out of control for 14 hours.

Arson was ruled out, but the actual cause of the blaze was never determined. Most onlookers thought the 1985 Arlington Million, scheduled for Aug. 25, would be canceled, but they should have known better to never bet against Dick Duchossois, the track's managing partner.

Fire rages uncontrollably at old Arlington Park, July 31, 1985. (JOSE MORE/CHICAGO TRIBUNE PHOTO, by permission)

Affectionately nicknamed “Mr. D.,” the affable but hard-charging Duchossois cracked the whip on both the demolition crew and Arlington staff and out of the (literal) ashes rose what came to be known as “The Miracle Million.” Temporary tents and bleachers created a fair-like atmosphere, and over 35,000 fans saw Teleprompter narrowly defeat Greinton. Arlington was given a Special Eclipse Award for pulling off a miracle, the first racetrack to be so honored.

In 1986, Duchossois bought out his partners so he could build the racetrack of his dreams, grander, larger, and inspired by the European racing he loved. Using his personal wealth and sparing no expense, he built – at an estimated cost of $175 million – what many have called “the most beautiful track in the world.” After only 19 months of construction, the track, newly christened “Arlington International Racecourse,” opened on June 28, 1989.

“Mr. D.” was notoriously demanding and frequently irascible, but he developed a team known for world-class customer service in a world-class facility.

Arlington's mantra of superior customer service on a whiteboard destined for auction

You could often spot him strolling through the grandstand, alternately quizzing patrons on what he might do better and stooping to pick trash off the marble floors. Not an inch went unpainted or unkempt; even on dark days the place shone. 

And talk about racing history. Many of the sport's greatest stars – equine and human – won at Arlington. Buckpasser, Citation, Dr. Fager, Nashua, and Round Table (to name a few) all won stakes there. Secretariat's next start after winning the Triple Crown came at Arlington. In 1996, Cigar tied Citation's record of 16 consecutive victories in the Arlington Citation Challenge, a race created just for the occasion. Hall Of Fame jockeys Earlie Fires and Pat Day are Arlington's first and second leading riders by number of races won…and always will be. Large Midwestern stables opted to base at Arlington for the summer, eschewing Saratoga or Del Mar. But all that changed as the 1990s wore on.

Maintenance was not a priority once the track went up for sale

When the Illinois legislature refused his demands for a share of riverboat casino revenue, Duchossois shuttered the track in 1998 and 1999. In September 2000 Arlington Park merged with Churchill Downs, Inc. (CDI). Even hosting the 2002 Breeders' Cup could not revive the track; competition for the local gambling dollar increased throughout the decade and purses invariably slid, hitting a 10-year low in 2008. Marquee jockeys, trainers, and owners left for greener pastures…more money. Illinois horsemen butted heads with management, management sparred with the state racing board, and everyone fought with the state legislature.

Dick Duchossois resigned from CDI's board of directors in 2017 and, at 97 years old, became chairman emeritus of the track and a minority shareholder in CDI. When a long-promised casino license finally became available – revenue to fuel purses – CDI reneged. (It had, after all, become a majority owner in a casino just 10 miles away.)

Racing at Arlington was nearing the finish line.

Overgrown shrubs obscure the once-welcoming stable gate on the backstretch.

In February 2021, CDI hung a For Sale sign on Arlington's 326-acre parcel. Several bidders emerged, including a partnership that wanted to keep racing (and likely offer casino gambling) despite CDI's stated position that it would not sell to anyone who liked horses. Mere days after the last race on Sept. 25, 2021 – the final crowd filed out as “Closing Time” blared over the PA system – the Chicago Bears NFL franchise announced it was the winning bidder at $197.2 million and planned to build a new stadium on the property.

The deal is expected to close early this year, though the neighbors are up in arms about using public money for some of the redevelopment and the City of Chicago has offered incentives for the team to stay downtown. The Bears organization estimates it will take 10 years to transform the property.

A large sign outside Arlington Park advertised the auction.

Before he died last January at age 100, Richard Duchossois was told CDI had sold the grand racing palace he'd built. “It's almost like a statue,” he was quoted as saying. “Even statues get knocked down, too.” His son, Craig Duchossois, was less forgiving about Arlington's demise. He blamed politicians for “killing it.” Another historic racetrack was gone.

Now, it was time to move out.

Tomorrow: In Pt. 2 of this three-part series, author Patti Davis looks at the range of auction items on which the public bid, from the ridiculous to the sublime.

A lifelong racing fan, Patti Davis helped catalog Arlington Park's assets. She is a writer and editor based in Chicago.

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The Friday Show Presented By Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance: The Gold Standard

What does a surgical instrument used to treat cancer  have in common with TV shows like “Seinfeld,” “Frasier,” “The Odd Couple,” and “Peter Gunn,” or with the Grateful Dead band, the late turf writer Bill Handleman, or baseball star Cleon Jones of the 1969 Miracle Mets?

All have been the inspiration for Thoroughbred names given to his horses by Al Gold.

The most famous of them is Cyberknife the two-time Grade 1 winner in 2022, who makes one final career start in Saturday's $3-million, Grade 1 Pegasus World Cup at Gulfstream Park before going off to stud at Spendthrift Farm. The  Gun Runner colt is named for the instrument doctors used to treat Gold's prostate cancer several years ago and he wanted to raise awareness of its effectiveness

Gold is this week's guest on the Friday Show, joining Ray Paulick and bloodstock editor Joe Nevills to talk about the thrills he's had with Cyberknife, his up-and-coming 3-year-old colt Instant Coffee (winner of the Grade 3 Lecomte Stakes Jan. 21), the bloodstock team he's assembled, and the fun he's had naming some of the horses in his stable.

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

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View From The Eighth Pole: Will Casino, Sports Betting Push In Texas Leave Racing In The Dust?

Saturday's Houston Racing Festival program at Sam Houston Race Park in Texas will have 10 races, including five stakes, led by the Grade 3 duo of the John B. Connally Turf Cup and the Houston Ladies Classic Stakes. Purses will total nearly $1 million.

Total wagering will be nowhere near that amount, thanks to the actions of the Texas Racing Commission, which shut down Thoroughbred racing's export simulcast signals from state tracks over a standoff with the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority.

With no simulcast wagering on its races, Sam Houston has had to rely on meager on-track betting and wagering at a handful of tracks around the state.

Last Sunday, total wagering on eight races was $116,342. Purses totaled $150,000, with much of that coming courtesy of 2019 legislation that earmarked a portion of sales taxes from horse products sold throughout the state to go toward purses. An estimated $25 million – to be divided equally between Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse racing – is raised annually for purse money through the sales tax.

With no simulcasting to other U.S. states, wagering on Sam Houston's product is down more than 90 percent this meet, according to reports. It's a massive understatement to say that this is not a sustainable model.

Worse yet, Texas horse racing interests could get stampeded by the army of gambling lobbyists who have descended upon the capitol in Austin for the 2023 legislative session.

According to published reports, there are more than 300 registered lobbyists representing gambling interests, with 72 reportedly hired by Las Vegas Sands casino company alone. Gambling companies aren't just spending money on lobbyists. They are donating millions to the campaign coffers of state politicians in hopes of getting their support for gambling legislation – both casinos and online sports wagering –  that, if passed, would then go on the November ballot as a constitutional amendment for Texans to decide upon. That's the same path horse racing took 35 years ago when voters approved a 1987 ballot initiative to allow pari-mutuel wagering.

Texas does not have off-track betting and there are only a handful of tracks in this massive state that offer wagering on horse racing. It does not permit advance-deposit wagering – at least the legal variety. The Texas Racing Commission also shot down historical horse racing machines as a means to produce additional revenue for tracks and purses.

Rick Perry, who served as Texas governor for 15 years, is the spokesperson for the Sports Betting Alliance that is seeking online sports wagering. Perry has been pushing the theory that Texans are already gambling billions of dollars a year on sports, but doing so illegally through unregulated offshore businesses or bookmakers. Most of the state's professional sports franchises support the legislation.

There is movement among the state's most powerful politicians. House Speaker Dade Phelan has expressed support for destination casinos in major cities. Phelan reportedly received $300,000 from the political action committee formed by Sands casino.

That's peanuts compared to the donations from Sands to Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and his political action committee. Patrick reportedly has received $2.5 million from the Sands PAC in recent years. Patrick, as the presiding officer of the Texas Senate, can control what legislation gets to the floor for a vote. He has not come out in support of either sports wagering or casino legislation – yet.

Despite the wallpapering of money in the capitol, there's a long road ahead for Texas gambling proponents. Just as in 1987 with the pari-mutuel referendum, the Senate and House have to pass any measure by a two-thirds supermajority vote. And then voters will have the final say.

Where does this leave horse racing?

It could be left in the dust, as there will be a lot more competition for the gambling dollar, for sure, if both sports betting and destination casinos are legalized. However, it is possible during negotiations over legislative language that racetracks will be thrown a bone and allowed to have a limited number of slot machines. And it seems unfathomable that online sports wagering would be approved without also legalizing advance deposit wagering on horse racing. So there are some potential benefits going forward if Texas embraces expanded gambling.

That's my view from the eighth pole.

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Dale Romans: ‘Industry Needs To Come Together Now And Work With HISA’

Eclipse Award-winning trainer Dale Romans posted the following op-ed on his website, daleromansracing.com, on Jan. 25, 2023:

No one should be surprised that a provision in the recently passed federal spending bill fixes a Constitutional weakness in the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act, which passed in 2020. Lawsuits against HISA exposed this problem, and Congress rightly repaired it. As far as I can tell, the justices that ruled on HISA did not have other issues with the law, and so strengthening the Constitutional muster of the bill makes sense.

What no longer makes sense is how some in the industry pledge to continue to fight HISA in the courts. They should be in the streets, or shed rows, fighting to make HISA better instead. The industry needs to come together now and work with HISA, not against it, to give it a chance to succeed.

Trainers have legitimate concerns about how the medication rules from HISA will be implemented, and where those increased costs are going to come from. But I also know that horse owners have real concerns about whether the playing field has always been level. HISA will do a lot to address those concerns. Along those lines, I am very encouraged that the widely respected HBPA President, Doug Daniels, was invited to join HISA's Horsemen's Advisory Group. His input has already made a significant impact.

A lot of money is currently being spent to pay lawyers to attack and defend the law. Let's spend some of that treasure now to make sure the law works in every racing jurisdiction, and that real, day-to-day concerns of horsemen are addressed equitably. We need to support HISA and its CEO Lisa Lazarus. I have spent much time with Lisa and she is working tirelessly to understand our industry and to implement HISA in a fair and practical way.

We horsemen know of our love of horses, but outsiders often see a different picture. It does not help that horsemen are leading the charge against a law that protects horses.

Let's put the lawyers out of work. Let's unite and work with HISA to make this new system the best it can be.

I know I plan to.

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