Sterling Suffolk Racecourse Names New COO

Michael Buckley has been named the new chief operating officer of Sterling Suffolk Racecourse LLC, the simulcast wagering facility and prospective applicant for a Massachusetts sports wagering license which formerly operated as Suffolk Downs racetrack. Buckley is a principal at Belmont Capital LLC, one of Suffolk Racecourse's three owners.

“On behalf of the SSR ownership, we are pleased to have Mike take on this new role as we work toward implementing sports betting along with our simulcast wagering business,” said Richard Fields, one of Sterling Suffolk's principal owners.

“I'm excited about this opportunity to help lead Sterling Suffolk Racecourse into its next phase as a premier sports wagering company in Massachusetts,” said Buckley.

Buckley replaces Chip Tuttle, Sterling Suffolk's COO since 2007 who had been with the company since 1992.

“We're sorry to lose Chip after his many years of great service to the company,” said Joe O'Donnell, another of Sterling Suffolk's principal owners. “We're grateful for everything Chip has done to move Sterling Suffolk forward and help set the stage for our successes ahead.”

Tuttle said, “I've been affiliated with Sterling Suffolk Racecourse and Suffolk Downs for more than 30 years. It has been a big part of my professional life and I'm very appreciative of the opportunity the ownership gave me and for my time with the company. SSR is well positioned for future success and I look forward to helping Mike in his new role. It is the right time for me to focus more of my attention and resources on my other business interests.”

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HISA Timetable Outlined at Breeders’ Cup Press Conference

As the Breeders' Cup is on the cusp of running its two-day championships for the first time under the regulations of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority (HISA)'s Racetrack Safety Program, and with the roll-out of HISA's Anti-Doping and Medication Control rules expected to be implemented in under two months, HISA chief executive officer Lisa Lazarus detailed a timetable for industry stakeholders at a Keeneland press conference Wednesday morning.

“January 1 will not only be the start of the year, it will be the beginning of a new era in racing,” Lazarus said. “For the first time we will have all 28 or so jurisdictions that run Thoroughbred races operating under one set of uniform anti-doping rules.

“The most critical points to be aware of [are that] every single sample will be analyzed for the exact same substances across every jurisdiction. We are working with the laboratories to make sure that they're all reporting positive results at the same levels. So, you know, it's one thing to have uniform rules. But having uniform implementation is really important to make sure you have a generally uniform system.

“This is what everyone's been waiting for. And we're going to be able to deliver that on Jan. 1. There are 14 states that are racing Jan. 1, and the Horseracing Integrity and Welfare Unit (HIWU) is very, very deep in preparations to deliver that program,” Lazarus said.

HIWU is the entity that will operate HISA's anti-doping program. Lazarus explained that HISA creates the rules HIWU will enforce, and that those  rules first have to be approved by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC). Lazarus said she expects that to happen “in short order.”

According to the FTC, the public commentary period for those new rules ends on Nov. 14.

“What's great about [this regulatory framework] is that you have genuine independence, impartiality, across all of the states,” Lazarus said. “You have consistent enforcement, consistent adjudication. You'll see that cases will be decided quickly. It will be a lot quicker than you're used to. They'll be decided through an arbitration system, and an appeal system through the FTC process, not in state courts. And the importance of that uniformity, we really believe is going to be a game-changer for horse racing.

“It's important, obviously, as we enter into this era that we have cooperation from the states, from the racetracks,” Lazarus continued. “And I'll say that since we've gotten started with the Racetrack Safety Program, that cooperation has gotten better and better every day. Understandably, anything completely new and sort of transformational takes some time, and takes kind of fixing a little bit of trial and error.”

HIWU executive director Ben Mosier noted that “HIWU will maintain its own investigations team, and we hope to also work with state racing commissions and others that can help us with 'boots on the ground' and investigations in live settings. We will also be establishing a tip line for whistleblowers, starting Jan. 1, and it will be a great for information to be shared with us for possible anti-doping and controlled medication concerns.

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All You Need to Know Ahead of the Breeders’ Cup Future Stars Friday Card at Keeneland

The Breeders' Cup returns to Keeneland with five championship races on a 'Future Stars Friday' card. The TDN staff took a deep dive into each race to compile our special Breeders' Cup Friday edition. Get ready for all the action here: TDN's 2022 Friday Breeders' Cup Preview 2022. And we will have all the information you need for Saturday's championship card Wednesday.

Morning-line favorites on the 'Future Stars Friday' program: The Platinum Queen (Ire) (Cotai Glory {GB}) (Juvenile Turf Sprint) (7-2); Chocolate Gelato (Practical Joke) (Juvenile Fillies) (7-2); Meditate (Ire) (No Nay Never) (Juvenile Fillies Turf) (4-1); Cave Rock (Arrogate) (Juvenile) (4-5); and Silver Knott (GB) (Lope de Vega {Ire}) (Juvenile Turf) (3-1).

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Breeders’ Cup Notes: War Like Goddess, Domestic Spending, Tyler’s Tribe Add Intrigue to Turf Races

While all eyes were on where undefeated superstar Flightline (Tapit) would be slotted at Monday's Breeders' Cup draw, and overall the dirt races this weekend have gotten a bit more attention, the fields for the turf contests also bring plenty of interesting storylines.

George Krikorian's War Like Goddess (English Channel) was the beaten favorite when finishing a close third in last year's GI Maker's Mark Breeders' Cup Filly & Mare Turf, and received that betting attention because of her utter dominance over her fellow American turf mares. This year, trainer Bill Mott has decided to try to conquer new territory for the 5-year-old, as she defeated males in her first try in the GI Joe Hirsch Turf Invitational S. last out and this time will take on the boys in the GI Longines Breeders' Cup Turf.

The seven-time graded stakes winner continued her preparations for the 1 1/2-mile test with a gallop over the Keeneland dirt track at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday.

“She's as good a turf horse as we've got in our country,” Mott said. “That doesn't mean she has to win on Saturday, but she's a competitor and she's done very well throughout her entire career. We've won the race a couple times and it would be really nice to win it with a filly.”

War Like Goddess seeks to give Mott a third Turf win, but first since he scored with Fraise in 1992. He also took the 1987 renewal with Theatrical (Ire). Mott explained that the decision to race her in the $4-million Turf mostly has to do with the 1 3/16-mile distance of the $2-million Filly & Mare Turf being too short for the star mare.

“First of all, it's not about the money, it's about winning. Frankly, if you win, the money follows. Sometimes I don't even know the size of the purse,” Mott explained. “With her, it happens to be the distance. I think that she's a true mile-and-three-eighths, mile-and-a-half horse and we wanted to get her in that type of race and that's what we did last time [in the 12-furlong Hirsch]. We ran her against the boys and she pulled it off. She was very good. A mile and three-sixteenths was probably just a little short for her. That doesn't mean she couldn't get up, but I think she's a little more effective [going longer] … and it is a big purse.”

In the GI Breeders' Cup FanDuel Mile, trainer Chad Brown will try something outside the box with Klaravich Stables' multiple Grade I winner Domestic Spending (GB) (Kingman {GB}). Sporting a record of six wins in eight career starts, the gelding figured to be among the favorites in last year's Turf, but had to be sidelined because of an injury. Now, in total, he hasn't raced in over 14 months, having most recently run second in the 2021 GI Mister D. S. in August at Arlington.

“I have thankfully good horses in my barn for him to work with, even if I haven't had the benefit of a prep race for him,” Brown said. “A few weeks ago, I started to watch him work thinking this is a possibility. I know it's a tall order, but all I can do is get him ready to run the best race I can and he's going to have to work out his own trip. We are going to find out if he needed the benefit of that prep race. It's a likely possibility that it will affect him–I'm not confused about that–but there's also a chance that he's such a brilliant racehorse that he can overcome it, especially if the dynamics of the race fall right for him.”

The Cinderella story of the Breeders' Cup is Iowa-based Tyler's Tribe (Sharp Azteca), the undefeated and untested gelding owned by Tom Lepic and trainer Tim Martin who will contest Friday's GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf Sprint. Five-for-five so far in his career, all races coming over dirt, the speedy dark bay got a spin over the Keeneland turf Tuesday morning.

“We did the turf today, will walk Wednesday, go to the gate Thursday and won't go to the track Friday morning,” Martin said. “I'm quarter horse training; I want him fresh and fast!”

Tyler's Tribe drew the 10-hole in the Juvenile Turf Sprint, which Martin says is no problem.

“The 10 is fine; he broke his maiden from there,” he said. “On the dirt, he has a fast cruising speed and I'd like to see him get out of the gate good and then settle. He's a fast horse and the speed [Speed Boat Beach and The Platinum Queen] is outside of us. If they want the lead, they are going to have to go around us.”

The colt is named for the followers of Lepic's grandson Tyler Juhl, who was declared cancer free last week in his battle with leukemia.

“There are going to be watch parties all over the state and there will be about a hundred Iowans here for the race,” said Lepic, who has turned down offers for Tyler's Tribe.

“We never ever had even a thought of selling. We had a lot of awfully good offers but it was never considered,” Lepic said. “He's a family horse, a horse that means so much more than just to our family but to the Leukemia Foundation. He will stay with our family and Tim Martin his entire life.”

Tyler's Tribe also had been pre-entered in the $2-million GI FanDuel Breeders' Cup Juvenile, but the connections opted to stay at a sprint distance and try the grass.

“He's going to Oaklawn Park right after this,” Lepic said. “They have four stakes there and we will stretch him out and see what happens.”

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