Canterbury Requests 65-Date Season For 2021, Purses Projected To Return To Pre-COVID Levels

Canterbury Park racing officials have submitted a request to the Minnesota Racing Commission for 65 racing dates in 2021 beginning May 18 and running through Sept. 16. With the request came the caveat that future impacts associated with the COVID-19 pandemic may necessitate an amendment to the request. Horsemen purses are projected to return to pre-COVID-19 levels of approximately $220,000 per day, a 13 percent increase over the $195,000 per day in 2020. The meet would feature both thoroughbred and quarter horse racing.

Canterbury Park's 2020 race meet was delayed and shortened but once commencing on June 10 the meet ran uninterrupted for 53 days through Sept. 17 with limited spectators.

“We intend to run a more typical 65-day meet in 2021,” Vice President of Racing Operations Andrew Offerman said. “We have learned a lot about safely conducting a racing season during very trying circumstances. We will build on that knowledge next season knowing that there may be subsequent changes and alterations to the schedule. However, it is important for the racing industry to understand our intention to run a 65-day meet from mid-May through mid-September.”

With a capacity limit of 750 spectators in the recently concluded meet, track officials moved off the traditional Thursday through Sunday schedule and conducted racing Monday through Thursday evenings. The result was a 116 percent increase in out-of-state wagering handle. The request for 2021 is for a Sunday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday schedule with racing on Memorial Day and Labor Day as well as Saturday, July 3.

Canterbury Park's live racing success has been predicated on live crowds averaging more than 6,500 per day generating food, beverage, handle and admission revenues crucial to supporting a race meet that employs more than 1,000 workers, the majority of which was lost in 2020.

“We fully understand the severity and serious nature of the ongoing pandemic; however we remain optimistic and are planning a 2021 season for what might be possible,” Vice President of Marketing John Groen said. “Should venues like Canterbury Park be allowed to safely increase attendance capacity, Sunday afternoon would provide an opportunity to reintroduce popular family promotions tied to live horse racing that we are known for.”

Sunday afternoon racing in 2021 would replace Mondays which produced the weakest results during Canterbury Park's 2020 meet. In past years, promotions such as corgi dog races and fireworks displays have attracted crowds three times larger than the daily average.

The 2021 schedule also includes a nine-day break to accommodate Twin Cities Summer Jam, a three-day music festival held in the racetrack infield July 22 through 24. The event was first held in 2019 but postponed in 2020 as a result of the pandemic.

The Minnesota Racing Commission, a nine-member panel appointed by the state's governor tasked with overseeing the integrity and safety of horse racing at Minnesota's two pari-mutuel racetracks, is expected to consider Canterbury's race date request at its December meeting. Minnesota Administrative Rule 7872.0100 required Canterbury Park to submit for 2021 racing dates no later than Nov. 15, 2020.

Canterbury Park's 24/7 card casino and simulcast racebook remain open daily. For more information visit www.canterburypark.com.

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Albuquerque Outrider Handed Five Year Suspension After ‘Abusive Behavior’ Caught On Video

New Mexico stewards have suspended all state licenses to outrider Roger Franklin Cadwallader for five years for what their final ruling describes as “abusive behavior towards a horse.”

According to the ruling, Cadwallader was captured on video at the Downs of Albuquerque Racetrack during morning workouts on Aug. 20. During a track break, Cadwallader was shown hitting a horse multiple times with his hands and reins. He was also recorded kicking the horse in its legs several times.

“The horse in the video was clearly in distress and tried to lie down multiple times,” the ruling read.

Cadwallader was on summary suspension at the time of his hearing and the ruling on Nov. 11. The suspension runs from Aug. 28, 2020 to Aug. 27, 2025.

According to steward Ron Walker, the horse was returned to its owner after the incident but had no further information on its condition.

Cadwallader has ten days from the date of the ruling to file an appeal.

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‘A Man Of Character’: Aaron Gryder Closing Career Where It All Began

Aaron Gryder's earliest memories of Del Mar are the times when his age was still in single digits, coming down from Los Angeles on the early Saturday morning train with his grandparents, Bill and Vern Gryder.

“We'd get off at the old station (across from what's presently Jake's and the Poseiden restaurants), check in at the Del Mar Hotel, ride boogey boards and then be at the track for first post,” Gryder said. “My grandparents loved to handicap and loved to play the horses, so early bird betting was a big thing on Sunday morning. There was always a big crowd and great energy for the races and I just loved it. Then we'd get back on the train Sunday night and head on home.

“It was great to be a kid and come down here and splash in the water, but splashing in the water wasn't the reason I loved to come down here. I loved coming to the races and I think I knew I wanted to be a jockey from the time I was about four years old.”

On a list of tracks by order of number of races ridden by Gryder — and his career mounts approach 30,000 – Del Mar is unlikely to make the top five. During times when the only live action here was seven weeks from July to September, Gryder was elsewhere for 19 years, 1988-2007. He took whatever he perceived as the best opportunity whether it was Chicago, the Midwest circuit from Kentucky to Arkansas and New Orleans or New York. He journeyed to Hong Kong and other foreign places to see what it was like there.

But if Del Mar isn't No. 1 on his list, it's the place he's chosen for his last ride. Gryder has announced his retirement at the end of the current Bing Crosby meeting.

“I've been thinking about it the last couple months,” Gryder said. “Not many people walk away at the top of their game, and I'm not at the top of my game as far as my business right now. My passion's still there, I feel great on horses, I know I can still ride. But if I can't go out there and be competitive every day it doesn't make sense to keep pushing and pushing until I push the envelope a little too far.

“I'm healthy and I'm happy and after 34 years — to be able to walk away on my own terms — it feels pretty good. I'm at peace with it.”

Born in West Covina, Gryder, who turned 50 in June, broke in at the Caliente track in Tijuana for a brief period, then moved up to Santa Anita as a 16-year-old. He started sharing a jockeys' room occupied by many who were his idols growing up – Gary Stevens, Eddie Delahoussaye, Bill Shoemaker, Chris McCarron, Laffit Pincay, Jr. and others.

“The first or second week that I was riding in Southern California, I was talking to Stevens and Delahoussaye, who had been riding like 10 or 12 years at that time,” Gryder recalled. “I told them I hoped to be able to ride 10 or 12 years and I remember Eddie saying 'Watch what you wish for – 10 years goes by quick.'

“I never thought much about it. Then 10 years goes by and 20 years go by and 30 years go by and I realize, man, Eddie was so right. At 16 I thought 10 years was a long time, and in December it will be 34 years that I've been riding. I've been blessed and fortunate to do something I was passionate about and loved doing for so long.”

On Oct. 25, closing day of the Santa Anita fall meeting, Gryder said it hit him that he was about to make his last ride at The Great Race Place. His mother, who hadn't been to the Arcadia track in many years, was in attendance. So, without fanfare, he made the announcement to Brittany Eurton on TVG. Del Mar's Bing Crosby meeting would be his swan song.

Gryder has eight stakes victories here. The first two came as an 18-year-old in 1988 in since-discontinued events, the Junior Miss (Executive Row) and June Darling (Bayakoa). Then comes the 19-year gap before he's back in the record book with two in 2007 and three in 2008. The biggest of the latter group was the 2008 San Diego Handicap aboard Well Armed for trainer Eoin Harty and owners William and Susan Casner.

Gryder does not jump at the chance to pronounce Well Armed the best horse he's ever ridden. He points out that there have been a lot of good ones.

For one example, Gryder was the only jockey other than Patrick Valenzuela and McCarron to ride Sunday Silence in the Hall of Fame horse's 14-race career. Gryder was aboard in an allowance race at Hollywood Park on December 3, 1988 that concluded Sunday Silence's 2-year-old campaign. Leading most of the way, they lost by a head to another precocious juvenile named Houston.

Another example: the Hall of Fame mare Bayakoa. Gryder got the call from Hall of Fame trainer Ron McAnally for five straight starts beginning with the Osunitas here in August of 1988, through a 10-length victory in the June Darling in September to a December allowance at Hollywood Park, the build-up for momentus campaigns by Bayakoa in 1989 and 1990.

But Well Armed … that's quite a story.

As a 3-year-old, the gelded son of Tiznow had undergone surgery for bone chips in his knees and, while in the recovery phase, sustained a fractured right hip in a stall accident. Bill Casner made it a personal mission to rehabilitate Well Armed with the vision of having him race again. The quest, in part, was therapy for Casner, who had lost his youngest of two daughters, 23-year-old Karri, one of 202 killed in a terrorist bombing in Bali in 2002.

Casner oversaw hours and hours of Well Armed swimming at a facility at his Texas ranch to regain strength and muscle tone for a racing return, then sent him to Harty at Santa Anita.

“Santa Anita had just installed a synthetic surface and they were looking for horses to work on it to test it out,” Harty recalled. “I volunteered Well Armed because I thought it would be a good opportunity to work on a pristine surface, see how well he was doing coming back from the injury layoff and get feedback from Aaron for the owner and myself.

“It was mutually beneficial to all.”

There was, Harty said, a rapport established between Gryder and the horse and the “fit” that trainers often ascribe to a horse and rider was obvious. Gryder was aboard for seven races over a seven-month period that had its ups and downs but generated some extraordinary moments of inspiration.

July 19, 2008 – Well Armed went wire-to-wire in a 1 ¼-length victory in the San Diego Handicap over Del Mar's one-year-old Polytrack surface. “A great race for him,” Harty said. “Once we started working the horse, we knew he had the capability to be a really top class horse and it (San Diego), to be honest was a mere formality.”

Aug. 24, 2008 – Well Armed was second, at odds of 8-1, caught late in the stretch to lose by a neck to Go Between the in $1 million Pacific Classic. “I was surprised he got beat, but the other horse just ran a great race,” Harty said.

March 28, 2009 – With one win to show in four starts since the Pacific Classic, the now 6-year-old Well Armed rockets out of the gate and is never headed, winning by 14 ½ lengths in the $6 million Dubai World Cup. Gryder wears Casner silks that bear Karri's initials on the sleeve.

“She rode that horse with me,” Gryder would say in post-race interviews. “Riding at night, you can watch for shadows to see if there's anybody coming at you and I could see they weren't gaining on me.”

“It was an emotional night, knowing what the horse and the Casner family had suffered through,” Harty recalled. “But it all came together so well.”

By personal count a few years ago, Gryder had made 17 trips to Dubai in his career, 28 to Saudi Arabia and several others to Hong Kong, England and Canada during the globe-trotting career that's he's about to end.

“If I went back, I wouldn't ask for anything to be different in my career,” Gryder said. “I didn't manage it that well; I moved around a lot and made some mistakes. But even so, I wouldn't change it. I wouldn't change it for the world.”

Equibase statistics this week show Gryder with 29,929 career mounts and numbers in the 3,900 range for wins (3,905), seconds (3,905) and thirds (3,924). How's that for consistency?

“I didn't ride a lot of 6-to-5 shots, but I always tried to ride hard on the 20-1 shots and get up for second or third even if I couldn't win,” Gryder said. “People ask me if I feel bad about coming up short of 4,000 wins, but I won 113 outside North America that don't show up in those statistics. So, actually, I did win 4,000.”

Gryder was married for 15 years but is now divorced. He has a 20-year-old son and a daughter who recently graduated from high school. His son is a Marine stationed in, of all places, Dubai, where he's among those guarding the U.S. consulate.

“It's ironic that my son's first station is in Dubai and I won the biggest race in the world there,” Gryder conceded. “It's nice that I know where he's at and I can picture it and in a way it's comforting that he's there.

“I'm lucky to have two wonderful children that have made good choices and are doing well,” Gryder said. “We missed a lot of time together with my travelling so much during my career but their mother raised them to be respectful to everyone.”

Besides riding, Gryder's resume includes TV credits (“The Sopranos,” “Dellaventura,” “Jockeys”), racing commentating and racetrack PR work. He has a wide range of interests outside racing. What's next?

“No definite plans,” Gryder said. “It's been encouraging that I've been contacted by people in different businesses. I want to enjoy riding this meet and think about (the future). I want to make a decision by the end of the year and when I do, I'll know it's the right one for me. Whatever I do, I'm going to go all in and dedicate myself to it the same way I did with horse racing.”

Harty is, undoubtedly, one of many wishing Gryder well.

“He's a man of character and integrity which, in this day and age and in this current time is, unfortunately, not that prevalent,” Harty said. “You meet few people with his level of character and integrity. And that means a lot to me.”

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Report: 77 Percent Of New York Thoroughbreds From Indicted Trainers Were Positive For Clenbuterol After Arrests

At a press conference this week, New York State Gaming Commission equine medical director Dr. Scott Palmer revealed that the majority of New York-based Thoroughbreds with trainers under federal indictment tested positive for clenbuterol in the weeks after the March arrests that rocked the racing world.

Standardbreds and Thoroughbreds that were trained by anyone named in the March indictment of more than two dozen trainers, veterinarians, and drug distributors in an alleged doping scheme were put on the veterinarian's list for 60 days and had biological samples taken for testing. Palmer said this week that the horses were tested at least twice during this period. Of nearly 100 Thoroughbreds based in the New York at the time, Palmer said 77 had levels of clenbuterol in their blood.

Though Palmer is still compiling veterinary records for some of those horses, so far he says none of those records show administration of clenbuterol. That leads him to suspect the drug was not being given as part of a legitimate treatment for a diagnosed condition, but rather for its side effects, which mimic anabolic steroids with repeated usage.

Palmer called the discovery “concrete evidence that clenbuterol was being widely abused in the Thoroughbred horses,” according to the Thoroughbred Daily News.

This isn't the first time testing has revealed widespread clenbuterol usage by the indicted trainers. In September, Kentucky Horse Racing Commission equine medical director Dr. Bruce Howard revealed that similar testing on Kentucky-based horses resulted in “a near 100 percent rate” of clenbuterol administration based on hair testing. Howard said that separately, treatment sheets submitted to the Kentucky commission as part of its veterinary disclosure rules have shown incidents of veterinarians prescribing the drug to entire barns.

Palmer said Mid-Atlantic states will likely tighten restrictions around clenbuterol administration.

Clenbuterol was one of several substances described in federal court documents as being favored by defendants for its performance-enhancing effects. Most of the other drugs listed there, such as EPO-like substances and “pain blockers,” are not permitted in active racehorses at all.

Read more at Thoroughbred Daily News

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