The Friday Show Presented By PHBA Stallion Auction: Steeplechase Primer From Trainer Keri Brion

Trainer Keri Brion is this week's guest on the Friday Show, where she advocates for steeplechase racing and for Eclipse Awards voters not to skip over that category and abstain in year-end voting for racing's annual championships.

Brion, who opened a public stable in 2021 that includes horses racing over jumps and on the flat, is a former assistant to Hall of Fame conditioner Jonathan Sheppard, who retired from training in 2021. She campaigned steeplechase Eclipse Award winner The Mean Queen in her first full year of training and in 2022 became just the second trainer to exceed $1 million in steeplechase earnings in a single season in North America.

Brion's appearance is a followup to the Jan. 6 Friday Show in which voting for 2022 Eclipse Awards was discussed and both bloodstock editor Joe Nevills and guest Andrew Champagne said they abstained from voting in the steeplechase category. Their comments and an earlier Making Claims column by Nevills elicited a letter from steeplechase trainer Kate Dalton and a subsequent wave of comments on social media.

Brion offers a primer to Nevills and publisher Ray Paulick on the sport itself and efforts to grow its popularity, some of steeplechasing's most important races, differences in race courses, the type of horses she looks for to convert to jumps, and the similarities to training horses for the two disciplines. It's a lively and interesting discussion that Brion hopes will lead to a better understanding of the game and fewer abstentions in future Eclipse Awards voting.

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

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Letter To The Editor: Make Laurel Home Of The Preakness

To the editor:

While the vision for the future of the Preakness continues to improve and excite, the economic reality grows dimmer and more desperate.  Under a law passed last April, the Maryland Stadium Authority was required to submit two progress reports to House and Senate Committees, the first by Sept. 30, 2022, and the second by Jan. 1, 2023. The racing facility redevelopment at Pimlico and Laurel Park was not on the MSA board agenda for their meeting on Jan 3, 2023, and has not been discussed by the board in recent months.

MD bill 897 permits a grand vision for a new Preakness home at Pimlico Race Course, authorizing the issuing of bonds, but contingent on agreements between the Maryland Jockey Club, LifeBridge Health, the City of Baltimore and the stadium authority.  A scan of the required agreements suggests that it is a big nut to crack. Meanwhile, the plan to demolish Pimlico is stalled, and the increasing price of money as time goes forward diminishes the impact of the bond cap.

Rebuilding a new Pimlico at the Park Heights location for a limited race meet in an era of declining popularity and attendance is absurd.  The multi-use vision for the new facility is unlikely to offset the capital and operating costs of a racing facility. It's a roll of the dice to predict if private capital will come in to support the grand Park Heights neighborhood redevelopment plan.  If private capital does come, that would be fantastic provided it does not diminish the current neighborhood housing inventory.

Laurel Park is the most economically realistic home for the Preakness, as well as Maryland racing.  So declaring Laurel as the home of the Preakness and investing in the facility makes sense.

Some have expressed the sentiment that the Preakness is a Maryland issue, not just a Baltimore issue.  Through that lens, keeping the Preakness viable in the state of Maryland is a win.  It does not need to be in Baltimore city.  Indeed, it is not only a Baltimore or Maryland issue, but a racing industry and national event within that industry.  A quality production of the Preakness is important to the image and history of horse racing.  If there was an overarching organization like FIFA deciding on a World Cup venue or NCAA deciding on a March Madness venue, where would the Preakness be situated? (At this point in time my answer would be Delaware Park.)

The key obstacles that I predict will stalemate the effort are found in the necessary pre-requisite agreements to the issuing of bonds.  There are eight agreements, and the ones that on an initial read appear problematic are:

— Agreement #4: Control of the Scheduling Programming Budget and Construction Decisions

— Agreement #5 – Pimlico Long Term Operating Agreement

— Agreement #6 – Pimlico Lease Agreement Associated with Preakness

The plan calls for the City of Baltimore to own the Pimlico property and lease it back to the Maryland Jockey Club.  The cost of that lease is likely to be contentious.  But a bigger obstacle could be who shoulders the operating costs of the facility that would be substantial and ongoing.  The MJC has the operating expertise, but the cost of maintaining two facilities is staggering.

Consolidation to Laurel is the only viable solution.  The report to the General Assembly already stipulates a $150-million shortfall, which will grow as time goes forward and the cost of money, labor, and materials increase.  Acting now, the bonds should provide sufficient investment in the Laurel Park facility.  So many “what if” scenarios are in play here that one could only imagine a long and costly, perhaps fruitless, negotiation period.  Better to get on with a workable plan now instead of sinking more time and money into a luxury yacht design that will never set sail from the Annapolis dock.

The water continues to heat up to boil the horse racing frog.  Paradigm shifts are needed.  The Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority is one of them.  Letting go of Pimlico as the home of the Preakness is another.  City leaders will take heat if the Preakness is lost from Baltimore.  But in the long run Maryland and Baltimore politicians will be true to their mission to support the public good.  The debt retirement of the proposed bonds will come from taxes from video lotteries and casino betting.  But wasn't the legislation to grant betting licenses in the state predicated on using tax revenues to support education if not other public necessities?  It's the economic engine of America that generates the wealth to enjoy luxuries such as horse racing.  Education and public infrastructure are the foundations to keeping our economic engine running.

Adding my 2 cents in on what would enhance the experience of fans onsite and on television at Laurel:  Remove the existing unremarkable utilitarian jockey/official/administration building that sits beyond the circular saddling shed and construct an open-air parade ring surrounded by terraced standing viewing structure.  A paddock/parade ring with a terraced standing area makes the statement that the horse is the center of this drama.  Seeing the participants increases interest and appreciation.  Top tier tracks Sha Tin, Hanshin, Longchamp, Baden-Baden, and Belmont Park are among those that have this feature and throngs visit their parade rings each race.

— Martin Chamberlin

Bluemont, Virginia


If you'd like to submit a letter to the editor, please send it to info @ paulickreport.com along with your name, home state, and relationship to horse racing (owner, fan, horseplayer, etc). We will request consent before publication. 

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Letter To The Editor: Attorney For Michael Jones Jr. Responds To Article On Ramon Preciado

I am privileged to represent Michael Jones Jr..  I have always respected Ray Paulick but I feel compelled to comment on the irresponsible article written about Mr. Jones in your publication (Preciado Surfaces At Fair Hill As Fellow Horsemen Raise Questions About Paper Training, by Natalie Voss).

Mr. Jones has worked his whole life to get the opportunity to train horses for Joseph Klausa's JKX Racing.  He has a string stabled at Charles Town and now trains a string for JKX Racing at Fair Hill.  He also owns horses and his stable earned over a million dollars last year.  The implication that he is a program trainer is totally false.  It is hard enough for a black trainer to get a break in racing without having to read unsubstantiated charges in your pages.  The action of The Stronach Group (owner of Laurel Park) in not taking Jones entries from Fair Hill is evil.

We went to the Maryland Racing Commission to request a hearing so that Mr. Jones might clear his name before he loses his horses.  But the commission's position is that entries are a matter between the track and the trainer.  We requested that the Stronach Group allow us to have a hearing in front of an impartial third party but they did not agree.  We asked if they would take Mr. Jones' entries if he fired Ramon Preciado but they would not agree.

What can Mr. Jones do to clear his name?

Mr. Klausa has been in racing for many years and has always been successful.  He has invested millions of dollars in the game at a time when owners are fleeing from fears of HISA.  Beside the trainers you mentioned he also uses Mike McCarthy, Joe Sharp, Chad Summers and Natalia Lynch.  He is successful with all of them.  He believes people are entitled to second chances so he gave a chance to Ramon Preciado.  Racing is replete with people on second or third chances such as Jerry Bailey, Pat Day, Kent Desormeaux, Richard Dutrow, and Ray Paulick.  Did you ever see Seabiscuit?  It is a story of redemption.

You don't name any of Mr. Jones so-called accusers.  You simply say multiple sources.  That is a cowardly approach to a serious matter of journalism.  You wouldn't appreciate it if I said multiple sources say you don't know what you're talking about.  So I'll come out and say it myself.  I hope you have the integrity to print this as an example of equal time.  Thank you.

Alan Pincus

(Editor's Note: Alan Pincus is a Pennsylvania-based attorney who represents Michael Jones Jr., and has also represented Ramon Preciado.)

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Letter To The Editor: Don’t Abstain From The Steeplechase Eclipse Awards Vote

Bloodstock editor Joe Nevills' decision to abstain from voting in the Champion Steeplechase Horse category of the Eclipse Awards has elicited a spirited response from both readers and members of social media. Here is a letter from one such reader in defense of filling out the boxes in that category.

You can read the original “Making Claims” commentary here.

If you'd like to submit a letter to the editor in response to any of the news, features, or commentary you see on our website, you can send it to info at paulickreport.com. Please include your city and state and a contact email in case we have any follow-up questions.

Dear Editor,

I am a fan of your publication. I would like to respectfully pass a few comments on Mr. Nevills' article regarding the Eclipse Awards. It is a well thought out and well-researched opinion. However, it abruptly shuts down the steeplechase category prefaced with indications that he will get harassed for his abstinence and that he doesn't care.

I am not writing to heckle or harass anyone but I would like to offer a reason as to why he would be. Steeplechase could very well be considered the original “second career” for the Thoroughbred. Long before any of the various Thoroughbred Makeovers, if your horse wasn't getting the job done on the flat, you sent it jumping. It's still racing. It's still run for real money at real racetracks under their regulations. The difference is that it is a sport made up of what could be considered “the castoffs.”

That is what makes it important.

Those involved are not necessary working with the best of the breed, or the large budgets or even the large numbers of horses. The “Eric Reed” scenario happens with regularity in steeplechasing.

So, when you aren't voting because “they hand out the trophy whether I vote in a category or not” you are trivializing the people who might otherwise never be mentioned in Eclipse Award hype. It matters to them. It's the same night and the same award on the same stage as the famous owners, trainers and jockeys. It is a very big deal because a horse that was probably considered to be mediocre at best is now an Eclipse finalist.

So, I would say (respectfully) that perhaps the horses that you “have no professional ties or obligations to” could get thirty minutes of your research time to acknowledge that they are good enough to be counted.

– Kate Dalton
Camden, S.C.

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