The Friday Show Presented By Woodbine: Travers Day Is Upon Us

Saturday's 13-race card at Saratoga Race Course features six graded stakes, five of them Grade 1, topped by the $1.25 million Runhappy Travers Stakes, first staged in 1864 and to be contested for the 153rd time.

Highlight of the summer meet at the Saratoga Springs, N.Y., track, the Travers will be shown on FOX as part of a 90-minute telecast from 4:30-6:00 p.m. ET. The 11th race on the card, Travers post time is at 5:44 p.m.

In this week's Friday Show, publisher Ray Paulick and bloodstock editor Joe Nevills discuss the role of the Travers as a stallion-making race and assess this year's field, which includes Rich Strike and Early Voting, respective winners of the Kentucky Derby and Preakness, along with Epicenter, runner-up in both races as the betting favorite.

Nevills was on hand at Woodbine for last week's stunning performance by the filly Moira, who won Canada's most prestigious race, the Queen's Plate, beating male rivals handily by seven lengths. He shares his thoughts about the Plate winner along with what could be next for the daughter of Ghostzapper.

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

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Letter To The Editor: The ‘Williams Doctrine’ And A Defense Of A State’s Sovereignty

Alan Foreman, moderator of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority panel at the recent Racing and Gaming Conference in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., got it just right when he said, “Rob Williams is not ubiquitous.”

Mr. Williams is the executive director of the New York State Gaming Commission.  Rob does not hide, but he rarely seeks the spotlight.  Rob Williams does not make public pronouncements often, but when he does, it behooves the racing world to listen.

It is understandable that the headlines coming out of the panel would be about horsemen's frustration with the rollout of the new federal regulatory regime and HISA CEO Lisa Lazarus' pledge to be more inclusive and transparent.  But that focus misses the most important message coming from the panel: the “Williams Doctrine.”

HISA requests (some argue demands) that state regulators collect the fees from the industry that will fund the Authority and, more importantly, allow the state regulatory workforce to be deputized into service for HISA.  In his soft-spoken but frank statement, Williams issued a stunning rebuke to Congress and to the Authority.  In the heart of Saratoga, where some of the best horse racing in the world happens every summer, the man in charge of New York's horse racing regulatory scheme said, “No.  No, New York will not yield its sovereignty and authority and be conscripted by a private, quasi-governmental at best, authority created by Congress. ”

Mr. Williams' logic is as simple as it is unassailable.  He pointed out, quite correctly, “I work for the taxpayers of New York; my authority to regulate comes from the people of New York as expressed through their elected state representatives. As much as Congress and the Authority may want it, I will not allow my workforce to be deputized by some other entity; they work for the people of New York.”

If that were all there is to the Williams Doctrine, it would hardly be worthy of the name.  Rob Williams is not a political grandstander pontificating about states' rights; nor is he a petulant child like his counterparts in Texas and elsewhere.

There is a second part to the doctrine that is just as important as the first.  Williams recognizes that he is charged with regulating and serving the horsemen and all parts of the racing industry in New York. He knows he cannot do that by getting into a political food fight with the Authority.  So, the second part of the doctrine, as articulated by Williams, states that while New York cannot allow its unionized workforce to be deputized into federal service, it will make New York's regulatory talent and expertise available where appropriate.  Although Lisa Lazarus would clearly like to have New York simply sign up, she praised Williams for his cooperation.

Rob Williams is protecting the horse racing industry by helping the feds get it right all while refusing to yield the sovereignty of the state.  That is why he has served with or for six governors. Good on him.

– Patrick Brown, Albany, N.Y. Organizer of the Racing and Gaming Conference at Saratoga and a New York horseman.

The post Letter To The Editor: The ‘Williams Doctrine’ And A Defense Of A State’s Sovereignty appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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Horowitz: Until It’s Addressed, Irad Ortiz Jr.’s Riding Style Will Put Horses And Riders In Harm’s Way

“Life is good” if you're Irad Ortiz Jr.

The three-time Eclipse Award winner  as outstanding jockey has won more races than anyone else in the United States in every year since 2017 and currently has more victories than any other rider in America in 2022.

These aren't just any wins. Through Aug. 20, 11 of the 30-year-old's victories have come in Grade 1 races this year, including two aboard a horse that happens to be named Life Is Good.

It's clear that Ortiz has figured out a winning formula. Either fortunately or unfortunately, depending on your perspective, that winning formula when it comes to sports includes getting an edge by exploiting a gray area that the best of the best either know how to do or how to get away with, again depending on your perspective.

For example, in basketball, it's sometimes that extra step when driving to the basket that doesn't get called for traveling by the referees. LeBron James has referred to it as the “crab dribble,” whatever that means. Although one thing it does mean is that LeBron is now the spokesperson for the GMC Hummer EV, which includes a “CrabWalk” mode.

Similarly, in horse racing, Irad—because, like LeBron, the truly great sports stars are recognized by their first names—has figured out how to swerve his horses toward the finish line, often getting in the way of the opposition, in a way that is generally deemed acceptable by the stewards, at least in the United States. I'm not sure if Ortiz has come up with a cute nickname for his riding technique, maybe something like the “dolphin swerve,” because it could land him a car commercial down the road.

Take Ortiz's ride in the homestretch on Life Is Good in the Grade 1 Whitney Stakes at Saratoga on Aug. 6, for example. The Equibase chart, as unbiased a source as there is in horse racing, describes that Life Is Good “came under one pop of a right-handed crop at the furlong marker, was guided inward in front of HAPPY SAVER but with clearance shortly thereafter, kept finding while drifting out slightly under a strong-hand ride to the wire and prevailed under good handling.”

None of the description in the Equibase chart suggests that Ortiz did anything wrong, and neither did the stewards nor opposing jockeys find fault in Ortiz's maneuvers. But, putting them all together, they're contrary to the message the horse racing industry is trying to project about the wellbeing and safety of its two-legged and four-legged athletes. Here's why.

Because jockeys ride with short stirrups, their communication cues to their horses are not exactly subtle, as opposed to how dressage riders can adjust their horses' movements with the slightest change in position of their legs. So, it's pretty noticeable what actions Ortiz took in order to execute what were deemed to be legal maneuvers in horse racing with Life Is Good in the Whitney.

“Came under one pop of a right-handed crop at the furlong marker”: After multiple taps on the shoulder with the crop, Ortiz used a strong overhand right to Life Is Good's hind end. Ironically, this use of the whip is what has attracted the most debate when it comes to horse welfare, but it's the least egregious of Ortiz's actions. In fact, Life Is Good responded positively to the crop. The horse never broke stride and pressed further into the lead.

“Was guided inward in front of HAPPY SAVER but with clearance shortly thereafter”: Immediately after using the whip, Ortiz adjusted his weight in the saddle to his left and pulled the left rein wide, effectively opening a door for Life Is Good to shift to the inside. As soon as Life Is Good came in front of Happy Saver, John Velazquez had to switch paths on Happy Saver from the inside to the outside. Ortiz looked over his left shoulder, as if to admire what he had done.

“Kept finding while drifting out slightly under a strong-hand ride to the wire and prevailed under good handling”: Ortiz then looked over his right shoulder and saw Happy Saver to his outside. He quickly rebalanced himself and funneled Life Is Good back outward toward the new path of Happy Saver.

Was all of this really necessary? It secured the win for Life Is Good, but it came at the expense of forcing Life Is Good to shift his weight multiple times while the horse was fully exerting himself. That caused Happy Saver to switch paths as well. Yes, there was physically room for Life Is Good to move over both times, but that's kind of like saying there's physically room for that impatient driver to cut over into your lane on the freeway, regardless of whether you have to react or not. Eventually this type of maneuvering is going to cause a wreck.

In fact, this type of riding caused a wreck four days later when jockey Dylan Davis moved Montatham to the outside into the path of On Our Way Boyz in a starter allowance race at Saratoga on Aug. 10. The horses clipped heels, and On Our Way Boyz went down, unseating jockey Eric Cancel.

“All's it takes is a tick, especially on the turf,” analyst and jockey Gary Stevens said on the Saratoga Live broadcast. “It doesn't take much of a clipping of the rear heel of the horse in front of you with the front foot of your horse. They're out of sync. They're out of stride. And, you're going to hit the deck.”

What Gary then described as “ever so slightly, and like I said, it doesn't take much” would be considered by the NYRA stewards as “careless.” Montatham was disqualified after crossing the finish line first. The stewards suspended Davis for seven days.

“We've seen aggressive riding this meet,” Laffit Pincay Jr., the host of Saratoga Live and son of a riding legend, said about Davis on the broadcast in the aftermath of the incident. “These guys, they're some of the very best in the world. They want to win. There was nothing malicious about what happened there.”

The stewards saw a huge distinction between how Ortiz and Davis rode, the latter being deemed “careless” and worthy of a seven-day suspension. The NYRA broadcasters also saw a distinction, although in the opposite way. While Pincay said Davis' ride was “nothing malicious,” analyst and jockey Richard Migliore said about Ortiz's ride that he was “not a fan of this move” and “sometimes [Ortiz] just gets carried away.”

“You're on the best horse, you're going to win, the wire's in front of you, it's not to the left of you, it's not to the right of you,” Migliore said on the broadcast (hyperlink: https://paulickreport.com/news/ray-s-paddock/migliore-irad-ortizs-unnecessary-jockeying-took-credit-away-from-life-is-good/). “Making these horses move all their weight, or shift all their weight and momentum one direction, to me, this is when horses get injured.”

The key distinction is that, in the case of Life Is Good, no one clipped heels. So, Ortiz is free to continue riding like he does because he is on one side of what Gary described as “ever so slightly,” while Davis is on the other.

Horse racing's public image is in a precarious situation if “ever so slightly” is effectively what distinguishes the rides of Davis and Ortiz and how they're policed.

And, unfortunately, at the end of the day, it all comes down to image in horse racing. NYRA would not post the replay of the Davis race, although it's still viewable through the replay of the entire Saratoga Live broadcast.

Image is what's ultimately guiding the debate over the use of the whip in horse racing. At The Jockey Club Round Table held at Saratoga in the week following the rides by Ortiz and Davis, Swedish horse racing was celebrated because the whip was eliminated in the country. (hyperlink: https://paulickreport.com/horseplayers-category/round-table-scandinavian-racing-let-go-of-the-riding-crop-heres-what-happened-next/)

“They're still fighting for the win. And it looks acceptable in my eyes,” Dennis Madsen, the head of racing for the Swedish Horseracing Authority said, summing up whip-less racing.

Horse racing has become too concerned about what “looks acceptable,” because the way Ortiz rides is more dangerous and harmful to horse welfare than the use of the whip. There is a hard line when it comes to whip use, where below a certain number is fine and above it is not. There should also be a hard line about maintaining a straight path in the homestretch when horse and rider are capable of doing so. Life Is Good did not maintain a straight path because Ortiz chose not to.

Unnecessary bullying or, the way Ortiz justified it in comments made to the NYRA press office, “I know if he felt somebody that he would give me another run and more,” should not warrant swerving into the path of other horses, regardless of whether there is physically enough room there or not.

At least the stewards in Great Britain felt this way when handing Ortiz a five-day suspension at Royal Ascot for not maintaining a straight path on Love Reigns in this year's Queen Mary Stakes. Ortiz made it a total of one day at Royal Ascot before coming under scrutiny for the same type of riding he's known for in the United States.

Embed tweet: https://twitter.com/jjhorowitz/status/1537425213918527489

Granted there are other jockeys that do what Ortiz does, but he is the poster child for a type of riding that exploits a gray area that American stewards will seldom address. If basketball referees ignore an extra step driving to the basket and don't call traveling, the consequence may be an extra basket that shouldn't have counted. But, if American stewards continue to ignore or even celebrate Ortiz' race riding, it could lead to injuries for horses and riders. At a minimum, it puts unnecessary strain on horses fully exerting themselves, and you'd think with all of the outcry about horse safety and welfare, this is something those that could make a difference would care more about.

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The Friday Show Presented By Woodbine: Will Another Filly Win 163rd Queen’s Plate?

The Queen's Plate, Canada's oldest horse race and North America's oldest continuously run race, was first contested in 1860. It was known as the King's Plate before Queen Elizabeth ascended to the throne in 1952.

To celebrate and handicap Sunday's 163rd running of the Plate from Woodbine in Toronto, Ontario, Canadian horse racing journalist and handicapper Jennifer Morrison shares her knowledge of the mile and a quarter race with Paulick Report publisher Ray Paulick as this week's special Friday Show guest.

Morrison has seen every Queen's Plates since first attending in 1981 and was a member of Hall of Fame trainer Roger Attfield's staff when Kinghaven Farms' Izvestia won the 1990 Plate en route to a sweep of the Canadian Triple Crown and his native country's Horse of the Year honors.

Thirty-seven fillies have won the Plate, and this year's edition is led by the Ghostzapper filly Moira, 10 3/4-length winner of the Woodbine Oaks in her most recent start on July 24. She'll have her work cut out against the likes of Grade 3 Marine Stakes winner Rondure, speedsters Ironstone and Causin' Mayhem, and stretch-running Hall of Dreams.

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

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