Disregarding Bettors: Modern Games And The Future

The Modern Games “scratch” and subsequent fiasco tells us plenty about the state of rule-making and pari-mutuel wagering technology.

It might even offer signs into the future of betting on the Breeders' Cup and other big American racing events, too.

Regardless, every stakeholder in the American racing industry should hope the future will be improved from the present.

According to the California Horse Racing Board (CHRB), and confirmed with a review of tote data by the Thoroughbred Idea Foundation (TIF), Modern Games is first reflected as a scratch at 5:35.35 P.M, approximately 138 seconds after Albahr is reported as scratched from the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf.

For racing veterans, including experienced horseplayers, there is seemingly no coming back from a scratch.

J. Curtis Linnell, head of the Thoroughbred Racing Protective Bureau, an organization which includes tote security and monitoring under its duties, said as much in comments to the Daily Racing Form.

“Once a horse is scratched, it's impossible to undo that…”

Shortly after 5:37 P.M., according to the CHRB, the impossible happened.

The state's racing regulator, in a follow-up release the morning after the race, said “Modern Games was reinserted into the parimutuel wagering pools at 5:37.01.”

Reinserted?

“There are too many things that happen automatically,” Linnell said before the CHRB follow-up was released. “It's not like [the pools are] sitting in suspension until the race goes official. That's why everybody has to be very careful to not scratch a horse on a mistake.”

AmWager, a small ADW, offers a graph that depicts odds changes over the entirety of betting information for each race. Their graph below shows the betting changes of three horses from the Juvenile Turf: Modern Games (red), Albahr (white) and Dakota Gold (blue).

It is noticeable when Albahr scratches, the odds of both Modern Games and Dakota Gold drop as a result. When Modern Games is first reported as a scratch, Dakota Gold's odds decline while Modern Games disappears entirely.

But what about when Modern Games is “reinserted,” his price returning to where it was prior to the scratch, while Dakota Gold reverts as well?

As Linnell stated, both his expectation and that of nearly every regular horseplayer is that once the horse is scratched, a series of automatic actions take place, which includes triggering refunds for all bets that included Modern Games in intra-race pools (win, exacta, etc).

That does not seem to have happened, and contrary to Linnell's perspective shared to the Daily Racing Form, the win pool on Modern Games did appear to sit in a suspended state during the time of his original scratching.

The expectations of horseplayers once Modern Games was scratched would be a timely refund of all intra-race bets. Despite an initial scratching and a reinstatement, Modern Games was an active player in the pools for another six minutes, his price drifting higher the entire time.

The entire situation begs many questions. Among them:

– If this can happen unexpectedly in these circumstances, can it happen on a random Tuesday at a track with far fewer eyes than the conclusion of Future Stars Friday at the Breeders' Cup?

– Is it possible for a horse's pool to be temporarily closed in the moments before betting, only to be reinstated as if there were no issues, before such actions are noticed or reported to officials? Could it jeopardize the integrity of the pools, albeit for a short period?

– If automatic processes normally occur once the scratch is made, why did that not seem to happen here, with Modern Games being reinstated to the pools at the same odds when he was originally scratched? Why weren't refunds processed at his original scratching? Why did the pari-mutuel system perform outside the expectations of normal behavior?

– Like the “Fix Six” fraud, which uncovered antiquated processes in tote technology in 2002, has this situation revealed any similar findings?

The incident would have occupied an entire chapter of TIF's early 2021 series “Wagering Insecurity,” which questioned the evolution of tote technologies in the American market, threats to the integrity of wagering pools and more.

Answers to those questions are unknown at present. The public will have to wait to learn more as the CHRB commences an investigation into the incident. Mistakes happen, but human errors aside, are there weaknesses with the pari-mutuel system that this incident exposed?

“We look forward to the results of the CHRB investigation and working with all industry stakeholders, including horseplayers, to improve and modernize both existing rules and wagering infrastructure,” said Breeders' Cup chief executive officer Drew Fleming.

In response to questions from TIF regarding the incident, Del Mar provided the following statement:

“Our regulator, the California Horse Racing Board (CHRB), is investigating the matter. Del Mar is fully cooperating with that investigation. We are very sympathetic to those bettors who had their wagers negatively impacted by Modern Games running for purse money only. We are withholding any further comment until the CHRB review is complete.”

DISREGARDING BETTORS

Under CHRB rules, Modern Games was permitted to run in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf for “purse only.”

The rules were followed, but they are flawed and disproportionately unfair to bettors.

American bettors are accustomed to the purse-only situation mostly through experiences in New York, where horses can be coupled due to shared ownership and a late scratch of one entrant requires the other horse or horses in the coupling to run for purse only.

This more frequently applied New York rule provides customers a modicum of protection, but still falls short of the mark.

Both states' situations can be considered here, though the focus will be on California's rule, reprinted below.

“Rule No. 1974: Wagering Interest…

“(b) If a horse is removed from the wagering pool due to a totalizator error, or due to any other error, and neither the trainer nor the owner is at fault, the horse shall start in the race as a non-wagering interest for the purse only and shall be disregarded for pari-mutuel purposes.

The philosophy behind CHRB Rule 1974, and any rule enabling a horse to race for purse-only, seems fair on the surface – don't penalize one horse's connections for an error beyond their control and let it run for purse money only.

It is anything but fair.

Allowing any horse to run for purse only creates two races, one for owners and one for bettors.

If consideration was given by a regulator to the concerns of bettors, such a situation would never be memorialized in rules. Such a rule engenders the opposite of a customer-centric approach.

The outcome of the race for bettors is then allowed to be impacted by an interest that is not part of the wagering options. Modern Games could impact the pace. Modern Games could swing wide and force other horses out too. Modern Games could back-up on the rail and disturb other horses.

Disregarding a horse for “pari-mutuel purposes” and then running the race with that horse in it is equivalent to disregarding the interests of betting customers altogether.

For one longtime regulator, steps must be taken to change rules which demote the interests of the betting public. Instead, their interests should be a primary concern.

“If Modern Games was scratched, and it was irrevocable, that would have been a really bad beat for his connections. It would be unfair,” said Joe Gorajec, who served as executive director of the Indiana Horse Racing Commission for 25 years.

“Having said that, if the only other option is to have them race as a purse-only participant, that is actually more unfair to the betting public.

“In the hierarchy of special interests, the horse and rider are paramount. Next in line is the betting public. A distant third is everyone else. The interests of the horsemen should never supersede those of the betting public.”

The wagering impact of a horse running for purse only is never known until after the race. But there is some impact, and that yields an outcome that should never be forced onto customers.

An act which is believed to be incredibly fair to the connections of the horse, allowing the horse to run for purse only, is fundamentally unfair to the bettors of the “same” race.

Any rule in any state which permits a non-wagering interest to race adjacent to wagering interests, when such situations are fully known prior to the race, should be abolished. The rules of racing have not evolved favorably for betting customers.

The lack of a customer-centric approach on these matters, in California and New York particularly, is disturbing.

“Generally speaking, when commissions make or amend rules and regulations, they look at the interested groups in front of them and the positions they take,” said Gorajec.

“Most times, those interests tend to be horsemen and track operators and more often than not, bettors are never even considered. My experience has been that a lot of regulators are ignorant about what is in the best interest of bettors. That is a problem now and it has always been a problem.”

A fairer outcome to a greater number of stakeholders is a laudable goal for the future, and it goes beyond just updating American state rules on these matters. More could be within reach as internationalized pari-mutuel wagering markets evolve.

GLOBAL APPROACH COULD REVOLUTIONIZE OPPORTUNITIES AND BETTORS' INTERESTS

If such a mistaken scratching occurred in Hong Kong, where the per-race pools are the highest in the world, there would have been no betting permitted altogether.

All wagering pools would have been refunded, the track would have received no revenue on the race and multi-race bets would have paid to every horse, respecting the bettors while still paying the purse.

The opinion of betting operators outside America is increasingly meaningful in these matters as pari-mutuel pools globalize through commingling.

For the first time since 2014, bettors in Hong Kong had a chance to wager on American racing as both the Breeders' Cup Mile and Turf were offered via separate pools in the early hours of Sunday morning. After witnessing the Juvenile Turf fiasco, the Hong Kong Jockey Club made their thoughts known to the Breeders' Cup hours before presenting two American races to their customers.

“I think it is something which is definitely of concern,” Winfried Engelbrecht-Bresges, the Hong Kong Jockey Club's (HKJC) chief executive officer, told the South China Morning Post the day following the 2021 Breeders' Cup.

“We had a discussion and we informed the Breeders' Cup after the incident that we respect the rules they have but that if something like this would happen with our simulcast races, we would void the race and pay back the bets as our customers would not accept it.”

Engelbrecht-Bresges, who is also the new chairman of the International Federation of Horseracing Authorities (IFHA), asserts all bets on the race would be refunded, while all horses would be treated as winners in multi-race sequences.

The HKJC prepared for a repeat of the Friday fiasco on Breeders' Cup Saturday and their policies were tested immediately. Another Godolphin-owned, Charlie Appleby-trained runner was scratched at the gate in the first American race with Hong Kong betting in eight years.

Master Of The Seas got fractious prior to the Breeders' Cup Mile and was withdrawn. The HKJC tote, which operated its own pools on the race, did not scratch and refund bets on Master Of The Seas until after the race had started and it was abundantly clear he would not be “reinserted” or allowed to run for purse only, like Modern Games.

The betting operator protected customers and sacrificed a higher commission by holding its scratch until a repeat occurrence of the Juvenile Turf was not possible.

Hong Kong has been growing its business as a global hub of betting on major race days and is actively pursuing vastly enhanced pari-mutuel wagering protocols on a worldwide level. Executives from the HKJC and Australian wagering behemoth Tabcorp co-chair the World Tote Association, formed in 2020.

The HKJC has advanced the reality of globally commingled betting pools since welcoming pari-mutuel punters to its famously massive pools on its own races since 2013 and has grown substantially. Across its 2020-2021 season, 17% of total handle on Hong Kong racing came from commingled sources, an amalgam of 60 betting partners from 26 countries and jurisdictions, including the U.S.

Concurrently, the HKJC has evolved its role as the central pari-mutuel hub for major European race days, one which has been branded “World Pools.”

“Under World Pool, punters from around the world bet into a single pool hosted by the Hong Kong Jockey Club, providing huge liquidity and ensuring more stable dividends, meaning a significant bet no longer results in plummeting dividends,” wrote Bill Barber, industry reporter for the Racing Post, in October.

Where were the pari-mutuel pools at Royal Ascot and Glorious Goodwood hosted in 2021?

Hong Kong.

Irish Champions and British Champions Day too.

Total pari-mutuel handle for the 17 days of British and Irish racing with betting hubbed in Hong Kong was reported by the Racing Post to exceed the equivalent of $480 million. The HKJC served as the global betting hub for the 2021 Dubai World Cup and its final local prep day too. American customers had access to wager into all of them.

With global betting comes the need to improve the transaction protocols and rules which govern such wagering.

Betting snafus such as that in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf are unpalatable at any time, but should be mitigated in the future, particularly as the push towards global commingling of big race days reaches American shores.

In his October address at the IFHA's annual conference, Engelbrecht-Bresges tasked a new commercial committee within the organization, chaired by France Galop CEO Olivier Delloye, to pioneer a more integrated, advanced set of betting protocols.

“There will be a particular emphasis on driving growth through simulcasts with a focus on commingling, especially with World Pools, which has already provided significant revenues for its participant and presented an unprecedented growth opportunity for our sport,” said Engelbrecht-Bresges.

“To support the further development of World Pools and commingling, we should develop a new racing, wagering, information and transaction integrity protocol.

Basically – better technology to process bets from all over the world.

Eventually, it could be possible to centralize all Breeders' Cup betting through World Pools or whatever emerges from the concerted efforts of the IFHA, a development that could significantly increase total wagering on U.S. racing's big season-ending championships to previously unconsidered levels.

“Whatever steps can be taken to drive more uniform, global standards, not only with respect to horse safety and medication, but commercialization and wagering, are vitally important for the future of the sport,” said the Breeders' Cup CEO Fleming.

“We look forward to helping that process along in any way that we can.”

“It was a significant step to have customers from both Japan and Hong Kong betting on some of our championship races and we are hopeful that relationship can expand in the future.”

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TIF: Fixed Odds Betting For Racing Is A ‘Once-In-A-Generation Opportunity’

Launched in the summer of 2018, the Thoroughbred Idea Foundation (TIF) has sought improved outcomes for American Thoroughbred racing's “voluntary” participants – horse owners and horseplayers. As the sport's primary investment sources, horse owners and horseplayers drive much of racing's value chain – buying/breeding horses to race and betting on those races. Every stakeholder in the sport depends on these two groups participating financially, paying bills and placing bets.

TIF believes that by improving outcomes for those groups, the entire ecosystem of the sport will be improved. TIF published a series of foundational white papers in its first year, outlining a series of ideas that could yield such outcomes. Among them: reduced bet pricing, modernized rules, increased transparency, improved access (and reduced cost) to data used to inform bettors and an introduction of fixed odds betting for racing to complement existing pari-mutuel offerings.

While some industry organizations have spent years focusing on other important issues – notably safety and welfare – the ball has otherwise been dropped as it relates to the sustainability of the sport through wagering.

Many racetrack operators have pivoted into multi-platform technology businesses as wagering has shifted largely from in-person, brick-and-mortar betting to online, mobile and computer-robotic wagering. Relative to racing-related purse generation, this has not benefitted horse owners. In 2020, TIF estimated mainstream horseplayers, those betting less than $1 million annually, reduced their share of total racing wagering by approximately 63 percent from 2003.

The future might be different.

NEW JERSEY AND THE WORLD

In February 2020, Monmouth Park operators Darby Development signed a 10-year deal with Australian firm The BetMakers to manage the fixed odds betting business. In early August, New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy signed a bill which enables such betting on the sport – for live and simulcast races – for the state's customers.

“We feel the support for fixed odds as a solution to facilitate growth in the horse racing industry in the U.S. gaining momentum throughout the industry,” said BetMakers CEO Todd Buckingham after the vote. “We are excited about what this opportunity means for the racing industry in New Jersey and more broadly in the U.S.”

One notable concern often raised about introducing fixed odds to racing is the loss of business from higher revenue-sharing bets in pari-mutuel pools, typically win betting, which shift to the new option where odds are locked-in, but revenue back to purses is often lower.

TIF supported the concept, publishing a white paper on the topic in February 2019, and is excited by the possibilities it brings for the industry.

“The American pari-mutuel monopoly has not been kind to the sport or horsemen in the internet era,” said TIF Executive Director Patrick Cummings.

“Pari-mutuel wagering has been allowed to stagnate – there has been little innovation in the space. Adjusted for inflation since 2000, overall pari-mutuel wagering on racing is down 50% in the U.S., and most of that occurred while racing had a veritable monopoly in online betting. Our customer base has changed, the market has changed, but racing's betting business stagnated. Fixed odds competition should be good for racing, introduce racing to legal sports betting customers across America and offer an additional option for existing customers.”

But BetMakers is not banking on fixed odds for racing in America alone.

The Australian company recently completed the acquisition of the racing, tote and digital assets from Sportech, one of three companies which had provided pari-mutuel betting services to North American racing.

In an interview with SBC Americas, BetMakers chief operating officer Jake Henson outlined the long-term vision for the firm.

“Our mission is to create the world's largest global racing network that rewards all industry stakeholders and provides a sustainable ongoing funding model for the sport,” said Henson.

The first fixed-odds service provider in U.S. racing is also a big pari-mutuel betting player too. The complement of fixed odds betting to existing pari-mutuel offerings is attractive to one of America's biggest operators.

OPTIMISM FROM NYRA, HORSEMEN

David O'Rourke, the New York Racing Association's chief executive officer, glowed about the possibilities of fixed odds bets for racing in his address at the Jockey Club's Round Table in mid-August.

“A marketplace where most sports books offer racing should be our goal. Fixed odds on simpler wagers alongside pari-mutuel exotics is a potential winning combination, offering the new player a familiar entry point while maintaining deep exotic pools for our more experienced players.

“There are a lot of risks, challenges, hesitations, and hurdles to realize a market where fixed odds and ADW offerings come together. But we here at NYRA believe the rollout of sports betting is a once-in-a-generation opportunity.”

Joe Applebaum, president of the New York Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association, embraced fixed odds as “inevitable” a day after O'Rourke at the Racing & Gaming Conference in Saratoga Springs in mid-August.

“Typically, horsemen sit on a panel like this and throw up all sorts of reasons why we shouldn't change and we should stick with pari-mutuel,” Appelbaum said. “But I would say that it's inevitable, maybe in six months or maybe in six years, there will be a mix of bookmaking and pari-mutuel wagering in this country, and in just about any jurisdiction. We should keep our eyes open, and we shouldn't be scared.”

FIXED ODDS ONLY NEW FOR U.S. CUSTOMERS

Cummings notes that American track operators, and a subsidiary of 1/ST (formerly The Stronach Group), have enjoyed revenue from fixed odds betting for years through contracts between tracks, the subsidiary (XB Net) and foreign bookmakers.

“Several European bookmakers have shared with TIF, separately, that total betting on U.S. racing at fixed odds from European customers exceeds 1 billion British pounds annually, the equivalent of nearly 13% of total U.S. pari-mutuel handle. It is beyond time for the American market to expand and offer such bets to American customers on American races.”

Upon the publishing of fixed odds regulations by New Jersey's Division of Gaming Enforcement, followed by the completion of agreements between New Jersey bookmakers, American tracks and their representative horsemen's groups, fixed odds bets can be offered by registered New Jersey betting operators to their customers. Pari-mutuel betting remains unchanged.

The New Jersey Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association (NJTHA) has been at the forefront of sports betting legalization in America. Their suit against the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and professional sports leagues, later combined with one from then New Jersey Governor Chris Christie (and assumed by Governor Murphy) paved the way for legal sports betting to be adopted by states.

Through the end of July 2021, more than $17.3 billion has been bet, with over $1.2 billion in revenue to the state, through legal New Jersey bookmakers since June 2018.

When fixed odds bets for racing are first offered for New Jersey customers, the numbers will undoubtedly be small to start. More states are believed to be considering expanding offerings to include racing, but there is no doubt New Jersey is going first…again.

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Brothers: Time To Face What’s Right And What’s Wrong With Racing

It's time for racing to stop apologizing for who we are. Dating back to the rash of breakdowns that occurred in Southern California during the winter/spring of 2018 -19 that sent a ripple effect throughout the industry, we have all worn a cloak of contrite sheepishness adorned with remorse.

Santa Anita and the Stronach Group led the way on major industry reforms and the industry as a whole has come a long way in a short period of time. We are still far from perfect.

In this article I will acknowledge the ways in which horse racing has improved by the things we're doing right. I'll then look at a couple of things we could simply be doing much better: what's wrong.

In a subsequent commentary I'll dive into the abysmal—things we have a long history of doing wrong. And, hopefully, impress upon readers the importance of cooperation. Let's begin with what's right.

What's Right with Racing

Fatality Rates

Catastrophic breakdowns are down—way down. A quick look at the Equine Injury Database (EID) reveals that the risk of fatal injury declined 7.8% from 2019 to 2020 and that it has declined 29.5% overall since 2009. The 2020 rate of fatal injury is the lowest number since the EID started collecting data in 2009. That's a pretty big deal.

Statistical Summary from 2009 to 2020 (Thoroughbred Flat Racing Only)

These stats indicate that in 2020, 99.86% of racing starts at the racetracks participating in the EID were completed without a fatality. In other words, a catastrophic breakdown happened 0.14% of the time—less than a quarter of 1%. That they are truly a rare occurrence, is one of the things that makes them so difficult to completely eliminate.

When something happens frequently the events surrounding each occurrence can be studied and measured in great detail. But because catastrophic breakdowns are actually rare events, it makes it more difficult to study them in great numbers and form reliable conclusions about their causality. And even so, horse racing has managed to reduce these occurrences by nearly 30% in 11 years. The veterinarians, researchers, horse trainers, track maintenance crews, and anyone else who had a hand in this massive reduction deserve congratulations.

We are not done and zero is our goal. While no equine discipline has yet to be able to achieve zero, we are aiming high to hit our mark. Ten years of data show that not only are we aware, not only are we trying, but we are actually finding success and doing a really, really good job at it.

The formation of the Horse Racing and Safety Authority (HISA) is another step in this positive direction. There are pros and cons, supporters and detractors, and there are sure to be ups and downs. But horse racing obviously needed a hand in getting its act together and the HISA has the potential to offer much more good than bad.

Aftercare

This is the only topic that will appear in both the “what's right” and “what's wrong” sections. (Full disclosure, I'm on the board of directors for the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance (TAA) and have been on the advisory board since its inception in 2012, so I have witnessed their exponential growth and impact over the past nine years.)

  1. The development of the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance (TAA) in 2012. Before the TAA there was no accreditation for aftercare facilities and there was little or no sharing of information and resources between these aftercare organizations. Transparency was hit or miss for potential buyers and adopters, and there was no required standard of care for individual organizations to maintain. Thanks to the work of the TAA, Thoroughbred racing now has a group of accredited aftercare organizations working together to support retired Thoroughbreds. The TAA now facilitates a monthly meeting where TAA accredited organizations get together on a largely attended Zoom call to share ideas and help each other, offering a constructive forum for each organization and for aftercare development.
  2. The evolution of a first exit from racing. Thanks to placement programs in California, New York, South Florida, and Maryland, there is a direct path for horses leaving the track to enter into a TAA accredited aftercare organization, and due to the success of this program, it continues to expand and influence. For example, while Pennsylvania has a program that does not work directly with the TAA, there are 1,200 Pennsylvania horses that have to date, gone to TAA accredited organizations.
  3. The New York Racing Association (NYRA) 1.5% Aftercare Assessment in claiming races that is due at the time of the claim, with 40% going to the TAA and 60% going to the New York Thoroughbred Horseman's Association (NYTHA) OTTB program Take the Lead.
  4. Inventory and tracking. Historically, where a horse ended up was anyone's guess. With an active post-racing sales scene (this is where show and pleasure trainers put a little training into an OTTB and then move it on – otherwise known as “flipping”) a horse may have changed ownership several times over the course of a couple years. As a part of the TAA program, the reporting of Thoroughbred Inventory to the TAA has allowed the TAA to trace more than 13,000 Thoroughbreds so far. These horses are given more oversight and future security than any horse ever offered in private sale.
  5. The visibility and development of new careers for Thoroughbreds. We have long known Thoroughbreds could be good sport horses in disciplines such as eventing and show jumping but it turns out that, owing to their versatility and huge hearts, they can excel in everything from trail riding to various English disciplines such as dressage, western disciplines such as barrel racing, equine assisted therapy programs, and everything in between.

What's Wrong  

Wagering Insecurity

Pat Cummings from the Thoroughbred Idea Foundation (RacingThinkTank.com) did such a masterful job of writing about what's wrong with racing—and, importantly, how to fix it—that, rather than opine with my own thoughts, I will refer you to his “Wagering Insecurity” series here.

Cummings covers everything from the problems surrounding illicit drug use, wagering insecurity, an eroding fan base, grey and illegal betting markets, and more.

In addition to identifying the challenges, Cummings also makes recommendations of how the industry can improve. Two of my favorites:

Recommendation #1: The Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority may be our only hope—if they are willing to take up the challenge. Of course, we're already tasking them with the formation of uniform medication rules, uniform riding crop rules and infallible drug testing.

Recommendation #2: Reporting all test results—as in all test results. As things are now, aside from the general assumption that the winner will report to the detention barn for a post race test, we have no idea which horses have been tested—pre or post race. Here's the Thoroughbred Idea Foundation's recommendation:

“Every pre-race, post-race or out-of-competition sample should be reported publicly, soon after it is processed. The results should be reported regardless of the finding – most will be negative.”

I like it.

[Story Continues Below]

I also love the recommendation for steward transparency and face-to-face discussions with jockeys and trainers. One of the stewards' reports used in the article showed that a horse racing at Lingfield Park in Great Britain had visibly bled and lost a shoe. U.S. bettors never get that type of information.

Another stewards' report from Hong Kong — on a horse named Golden Mission who turned in a very disappointing effort as the favorite — shows how much information is being given to the public elsewhere, and shows us, sadly, how little we're getting in America. The Hong Kong stewards' report was 135 words long. A US version, which really only comes from the Equibase chart callers, would simply say, “pulled up and walked off”.

Aftercare

I have long believed that the Jockey Club should charge $1,000 to register a foal with something like $800 of it going directly into aftercare. No, this will not solve the problem of funding aftercare but it may discourage people from breeding and registering Thoroughbreds who are unlikely, at best, to be productive at the racetrack. Right now the Jockey Club charges $225 to register a foal with $25 of this going to aftercare, and while I applaud their participation, I believe they can do more.

The Jockey Club seems to be concerned that if they charge a higher fee for aftercare at the point of registration, then the breeder/owner will believe they've paid into aftercare and they no longer need to contribute. This is a valid point. The latest research from the TAA indicates that, on average, it costs about $644/month to care for an off track Thoroughbred so the $800 in their bank account will not even cover two months room and board. Which is why everyone who participates in Thoroughbred horse racing must understand that funding aftercare is not a donation, it's our obligation.

Referring back to the NYRA 1.5% Aftercare Assessment fee that is charged for each horse purchased through the claim box, why is NYRA the only group of tracks doing this? Every racetrack in the United States and Canada should be doing the same thing. Buyers and sellers are assessed at auction. Breeders are assessed through the mare fee they pay to the Jockey Club (that goes to the TAA). But the people who are playing the game predominantly through claiming are paying nothing. Meanwhile it is the claiming horses who most often end up in need of an aftercare solution.

Aftercare also has a public relations problem. Many people think the problem is solved. It is not.

We talk about this a lot at the TAA. In the words of Stacie Clark, TAA Operations Consultant: “I now believe no amount of advertising or article writing seems to push the awareness button. In order for aftercare to succeed (and in turn help our industry and the image of our sport) we need commitment to awareness. In short, the discussion of aftercare has to matter more to the industry at large. It has to matter to everyone and it does not. There is a willful misconception that, because some aftercare is going on, it is enough. People are generally happy to want to believe that the horses leaving racing are going to be ok: out of sight out of mind.”

Again, the good news is that if the industry works together, we can solve these problems. In the next installment I'll get into the need for industry-wide cooperation.

Donna Barton Brothers is a retired jockey, award-winning sports analyst, author, and chief operating officer for Starlight and StarLadies Racing. She serves on the executive board of the TAA and TIF, and is on the advisory boards of Boys & Girls Haven and the University of Kentucky Research Department's Jockey and Equestrian Initiative. 

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Thoroughbred Idea Foundation Preparing To Launch Third Annual Summer Prop Contest

The Thoroughbred Idea Foundation will launch next week its third annual BetMakers Summer Prop Contest to benefit racing charities. At least $25,000 will be distributed overall across three, 501 (c)(3) charities – the Backside Learning Center at Churchill Downs, New Vocations Racehorse Adoption Program, and the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund.

Free for all to enter, the 2021 edition of the contest is sponsored by BetMakers Technology Group, the Australian-based wagering solutions provider best known in America as the contracted facilitator of fixed odds betting for New Jersey customers. BetMakers signed a 10-year deal with the New Jersey Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association and Monmouth Park operator Darby Development to manage and distribute fixed odds.

New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy is expected to sign the legislation permitting fixed odds betting on racing shortly. Fixed odds betting will be available on select American and international races.

The contest will begin with props fashioned around next week's Haskell card and the big races opening weekend at Saratoga.

Each week of the eight-week contest, participants face 12 questions and a tiebreaker which are presented in the form of prop-style bets. A participant's best four scores over the course of the contest will accumulate towards the overall standings. The top three finishers in each week of the contest will direct $2,000 across the three charities ($1,000 – first, $600 – second, $400 – third) while the contestants with the top three highest accumulated scores at the end of the contest will direct an additional $9,000 ($5,000 – first, $3,000 – second, $1,000 – third).

Last year, Matt Miller of Northbrook, Illinois won the 2nd Summer Prop Contest on a tiebreaker after a weeks-long battle with Doug Slayton. In 2019, long-time racing official and horseplayer Rick Hammerle won the inaugural contest.

TIF believes that wagering on American racing must evolve to include fixed odds wagers, presenting customers with modern wagering options to complement pari-mutuel betting.

“The recent legalization of fixed odds betting for New Jersey customers is a great first step to help present existing customers with more options and to reach new customers to racing through New Jersey's popular sports betting platforms,” said TIF Executive Director Patrick Cummings.

“The BetMakers Summer Prop Contest seeks to introduce existing racing fans to the potential of a future with more wagering options while raising awareness to incredibly important industry charities. American racing's obligations are greater than ever while the sport's business has waned. We must seek every possible measure to grow racing's proverbial pie and meet these obligations.”

Contest players can enter each week at RacingThinkTank.com or through links posted by TIF's Twitter account @RacingIdeas.

Contest Dates (Key Races)

Week 1 – July 17 (Haskell – Monmouth Park, Diana – Saratoga)
Week 2 – July 24 (Coaching Club American Oaks – Saratoga)
Week 3 – July 31 (Vanderbilt / Jim Dandy – Saratoga, Bing Crosby – Del Mar)
Week 4 – August 7 (Whitney – Saratoga)
Week 5 – August 14 (Mister D – Arlington, Fourstardave – Saratoga)
Week 6 – August 21 (Pacific Classic – Del Mar, Alabama – Saratoga)
Week 7 – August 28 (Travers – Saratoga)
Week 8 – September 4 (Jockey Club Gold Cup / Flower Bowl – Saratoga)

The post Thoroughbred Idea Foundation Preparing To Launch Third Annual Summer Prop Contest appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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