T.I.P. Reveals 2021 Winners

The Jockey Club Thoroughbred Incentive Program (T.I.P.) has revealed the winners and other placings from its 2021 performance awards program and the T.I.P./United States Polo Association (USPA) annual polo awards.

The awards recognize Thoroughbreds that have accumulated the most points at all horse shows through a variety of disciplines and experience levels. In 2021, 726 Thoroughbreds from 42 states and four provinces competed in more than 15,000 classes, divisions, and events. Division awards were calculated in 14 discipline categories, 92 discipline divisions, and eight junior rider divisions.

In addition, Thoroughbred Charities of America (TCA) sponsored awards for a green OTTB category, the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance (TAA) sponsored an award for horses adopted from TAA-accredited organizations, and the Retired Racehorse Project (RRP) provided awards for top-placing RRP Makeover alumni. The T.I.P./USPA Thoroughbred Polo Awards were also added in 2020 and awarded for the second year.

The complete list of winners and participants is available at tjctip.com/PerformanceAwardsWinners.

Performance awards will be available again in 2022 and will be based on show results from Dec. 1 of last year through Nov. 30, 2022.

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Gary Stevens Talks Secret Oath, Jockeys Leaving California On Writers’ Room

Ever-popular retired Hall of Fame jockey and current television analyst for Fox Sports and the New York Racing Association Gary Stevens joined the TDN Writers' Room presented by Keeneland Tuesday afternoon for an expansive discussion on an array of racing topics and issues. Sitting down with Joe Bianca and Bill Finley as the Green Group Guest of the Week, Stevens gave a huge personal endorsement to star 3-year-old filly Secret Oath (Arrogate) as she prepares to take on males, analyzed the shuffling of the California jockey colony, talked about his role on the acclaimed Fox/NYRA broadcast and much more.

When it comes to Secret Oath, who's undefeated by 23 combined lengths in her last three starts and set to try the boys in the Apr. 2 GI Arkansas Derby, Stevens has a unique perspective. It was he who in 1988 piloted Winning Colors (Caro {Ire}) to only the third win by a filly in the GI Kentucky Derby. Like Secret Oath, Winning Colors was trained by the legendary D. Wayne Lukas, never afraid to try something unconventional with his horses.

“Wayne has never been afraid to jump outside the box, and I think in today's times, with a lot of negativity going on surrounding our industry, this is a feel-good story,” Stevens said. “And Wayne has always been about this sport. He's 100% the best ambassador that we've ever had. People have asked me, 'Is [Secret Oath] anything like Winning Colors?' I actually think from what I'm seeing in the mornings, she may be better than Winning Colors. She's got a different style, she loves to sit off the pace and be a stalker and accelerate. She's got brilliant acceleration for a dirt horse–almost like a turf horse. When she drops [her head] and puts in her kick, she gets it over with in a hurry. Now, granted, she's been running against fillies, but I think there's a lot more in the tank than what we've seen.”

Stevens was later asked about the recent news that Southern California's top two jockeys, Flavien Prat and Umberto Rispoli, would be moving their tack to New York this spring, and whether or not he was surprised.

“No, I wasn't at all,” he said. “I thought that this move would have come a couple of years ago, to be quite honest with you. We've all seen the success Flavien has had when he's traveled to the East Coast. He and Umberto are climbing into what I consider the toughest jockey colony, possibly in the world. But you've got to think about the future, and I'm not going to sugarcoat anything. We see the smaller field sizes in Southern California, and that's one reason I'm in Arkansas right now with Geovanni Franco and Tiago Pereira. They're very good riders who were sixth, seventh on the list of people's choices, and when [tracks] are running shorter fields and multiple trainers have multiple entries in these short fields, it doesn't leave a lot of crumbs for the rest.”

Elsewhere on the show, which is also sponsored by Coolmore, West Point Thoroughbreds, the Pennsylvania Horse Breeders Association, XBTV, Canterbury Park and Legacy Bloodstock, the writers reacted to a Franklin County judge denying Bob Baffert a stay of his suspension, celebrated the drastically improved breakdown record of California tracks, and Finley reads an extraordinary reply to his story on Jorge Navarro starting his prison sentence.. Click here to watch the podcast; click here for the audio-only version.

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NJ Commission ‘Politely Declines’ to be HISA Middleman

The New Jersey Racing Commission voted 6-0 Wednesday not to act as a middleman on behalf of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) by collecting fees from state licensees that will eventually fund the yet-to-get started authority's drug-testing and safety initiatives.

The decision was hardly a surprise, and it yielded zero public discussion among commissioners prior to the perfunctory vote.

It had seemed unlikely that the NJRC would be the first regulator in the nation to willingly craft a complex set of rules and set up a payment-collecting process from scratch to fund a work-in-progress ruling body whose July 1 start date looms in the shadow of two federal lawsuits aiming to get HISA voided on constitutional grounds before its programs even go into effect.

Judith Nason, the NJRC's executive director, said at the Mar. 23 meeting that the HISA Act authorizes its authoritative body to impose fees on “covered persons” to pay for anti-doping and safety programs, and that those fees will be calculated on a yet-to-be-determined, proportionate, state-by-state basis depending on how much racing takes place in each state.

Also under the HISA law, Nason said individual state racing commissions may elect to collect the HISA fees from that state's industry participants and then remit those fees to HISA. But if a state commission wants to opt in on that process, she added, it has to notify HISA by May 1.

Nason noted that it would be up to each opting-in state to come up with its own method of assessing and collecting fees from licensees. And since New Jersey currently has no statute, rule or contact in place that spells out that process, the commission would have to go through the difficult work of proposing its own system—which would never happen in time for the May 1 opt-in date, based on how long it takes to get rules passed in New Jersey, Nason added.

Nason told commissioners prior to the roll call that the NJRC staff recommended that the commission vote not to collect the fees. The vote was then unanimous to follow that recommendation.

Although the commission's vote doesn't change a thing in the way it does business, the NJRC now at least has it on the record that it didn't want to be the bill collector for a program that is being opposed by several other state racing commissions and the National Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association in two similar but separate lawsuits.

No New Jersey commissioners articulated their views on what might happen in the near term regarding HISA. But Nason did shed some light on the process when prompted during the public commentary portion of the meeting after the vote.

“It's really up to HISA to figure out how they want to assess the racing industry. And the question for the NJRC was whether we wanted to insert ourselves in that process. And we politely declined,” Nason said.

Responding to a follow-up query, Nason added that it's unlikely New Jersey licensees will be hit up twice at some point in the future to pay for drug-testing costs (as in having to pay once to the NJRC, then again to HISA during the same time frame).

“Pursuant to state statute, the NJRC can assess permit-holders for our racing costs,” Nason explained. “When HISA gets up and running, once they take over an issue such as the anti-doping and medication control program, they will be able to bill the racing licensees for their costs, and the NJRC will be pre-empted—we will not be able to bill. So it will be a shift from the permit-holders paying us to however HISA wants to collect those fees directly from the racing industry.”

Fall dates swap

The NJRC also voted 6-0 to approve the change of two 2022 Thoroughbred dates from the Meadowlands to Monmouth Park.

What would have been the final two programs of the all-turf Thoroughbred meet at the Meadowlands (Friday and Saturday, Oct. 28 and 29) got swapped out for two additional Sundays at Monmouth (Sept. 11 and 18), the latter of which will be the new closing day of the meet. The request was made by Monmouth's management.

Thoroughbred racing at those two Jersey tracks will get a nine-date boost this season compared to 2021.

Monmouth's opening day is May 7 for the 62-date meet. The nine-date Meadowlands grass meet begins Sept. 23.

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New York Claiming Championship Series Returns Saturday

The New York Claiming Championship series returns for the seventh year on Saturday at Aqueduct Racetrack with 10 starter stakes worth $620,000.

The New York Claiming Championship is open to horses which have started for a prescribed claiming price in 2021-22. The 10-race series, each named after some of the most popular claiming horses to run at the Big A, features distances ranging from six furlongs to 1 3/8 miles. A total of 93 horses were entered across the 10 races.

Robert Falcone, Jr. will saddle four starters on the lucrative card.

“Days like this are important,” Falcone, Jr. said. “The claiming rank and allowance horses make up the race cards day in and day out. It's good to have a day for them. They are all really nice horses, but not every horse can be a million-dollar horse. It's nice for them to get a shot to run in a starter stake. These are the types of horses who make the cards go each day.”

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