Zedan Offers Passionate Defense of Baffert on Saudi Telecast

Amr Zedan, who sat down with Nick Luck on the world feed of the Saudi Cup Day races Saturday, offered a passionate defense of his trainer and friend Bob Baffert, pledging to take their Kentucky Derby title defense of Medina Spirit (Protonico) all the way to the U. S. Supreme Court if necessary, using his substantial means to do so.

“Myself, my means, my resources are at Bob Baffert's disposal,” Zedan told Luck. “We are going to see this 'til the end, and if it takes going to the Supreme Court, I will throw every single bit of me into this. That man is a good, decent family man and I will not stand for any more insults, any more criminal allegation to a man that has been nothing but great to this sport that we all love.”

The comments were made hours before their Country Grammer (Tonalist) posted a second-place finish in the G1 Saudi Cup.

“This sport is barely hanging on by a thread,” he continued. “The last thing we need is personal biases, jealousy to kick in. All we're asking for is an opportunity to present our case objectively.”

Eight days after Medina Spirit's win in the GI Kentucky Derby, Baffert told a gathering of media outside his Churchill Downs barn that he had tested positive for the presence of betamethasone in the race, and said he hadn't injected the colt with the substance. Two days later, he revealed that the horse had been treated with the ointment Otomax, which contains betamethasone, for a skin rash.

But Zedan told Luck he didn't understand–after they took a split sample of Medina Spirit's urine to the New York Equine Drug Testing and Research Laboratory Director George Maylin, to prove that the betamethasone in the colt's system came from the Otomax used for his skin rash–why the distinction between betamethasone valerate from the topical ointment and betamethasone acetate, which was absent from the sample, wasn't considered by the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission (KHRC) stewards, who disqualified Medina Spirit on Monday, Feb. 21, suspending Baffert for 90 days.

“Why did we go to Dr. George Maylin?” said Zedan. “To prove distinction. Why wasn't that distinction considered in the hearing? Was it just a waste of everyone's time? If you're really so adamant about avoiding the facts, why did you waste everyone's time and prolong the agony and suffering for all these months if you knew you weren't even going to consider what you were supposed to consider? That's a question mark. But, I firmly believe again, there are calm minds, there's a lot of wisdom that will come together.”

If, however, the final judgment is that he should be disqualified–which Zedan said he does not believe will happen–he said he was ready to accept it.

“If, at the end of the day for whatever reason, Medina will be disqualified, fine, if that's what the Supreme Court or whoever the highest court authority rules. But we all need to come together for this sport that we all love. I'm very objective, and I have clearly said that at the end of the day, if we get disqualified by the proper objective panel, whichever that may be, I will take it on the chin and I will be a big boy about it. But I think once this case is in the public domain and we've had an impartial objective judge within the court system, there is no doubt in my mind that we will win this.”

Zedan was equally passionate in his support for his friend, prompting Luck to ask him if he was able to be objective about the subject because of their friendship.

“I trust in the integrity of the whole process and I choose to stand by the greatest trainer the sport has ever witnessed. It's not my emotional friendship with Bob. I read all sorts of articles. I know the man, and I know the man's emotions. When Medina passed away, it was like one of his kids passed away. The man loves horses. He will never endanger his horses.

“Bob Baffert has been great to me,” Zedan continued. “He has been nothing but great to the sport and he does not deserve all this misinformation. He does not deserve to be compared to people whose names I don't even want to mention, because it's not even proper. This guy loves his job and he's been great at what he does, and nothing but great to everybody around him. Do you know how many people in his barn (for whom) he has saved loved ones and lives? There are stories that you guys don't even know. He doesn't talk about it. I know. I am his friend, and it hurts me so much to see a good man's reputation tarnished as such.”

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Moquest, Full Brother to Nyquist, to Stand in California

Moquest (Uncle Mo–Seeking Gabrielle, by Forestry), a full-brother to champion Nyquist, will stand the 2022 breeding season at Milky Way Farm in California. Moquest will stand for $4,500 LFSN. An injury during training prevented the $650,000 Keeneland September yearling purchase from making it to the races. Bred in Kentucky by Hinkle Farms, the 3-year-old will be supported in the breeding shed by his owners, EAS Alliance LLC.

Last year, Uncle Mo's sales yearlings averaged $270,915 including two yearlings that sold last year for $1.6-million and $1.1 million. His juveniles averaged $287,786, among them a $1.3 million purchase.

In 2021, Nyquist, who closed out the season as the second Leading Second-Crop Sire, was responsible for yearlings averaging $151,826, while his juveniles averaged $328,167, including the $2.6 million Fasig-Tipton March topper.

In addition to Nyquist, Seeking Gabrielle is also responsible for a colt by Tapit, that realized $2.6 million in the sales ring. To date, her progeny has sold for $5.4 million.

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KHRC Denies Baffert a Stay of Suspension

The Kentucky Horse Racing Commission (KHRC) has denied trainer Bob Baffert's request for a stay of a 90-day suspension handed down to him earlier in the week for Medina Spirit (Protonico)'s betamethasone positive in the 2021 GI Kentucky Derby. The KHRC also denied a stay of its decision to disqualify Medina Spirit from first place in last year's GI Kentucky Derby.

The Louisville Courier Journal and the Daily Racing Form were among the first to report the story. In most circumstances, once a trainer or owner has appealed a racing commission decision, stays of a suspension are a formality and they remain in place throughout the appeal process. Craig Robertson, one of two lawyers working on the Medina Spirit case for Baffert and owner Amr Zedan, told the Courier Journal that a denial of a request for a stay “is unprecedented in my experience.”

The KHRC's decision will force the Baffert legal team to head to the courts in an effort to receive a temporary restraining order that would force the KHRC to put the suspension on hold.

“Denial of the stay is consistent with arbitrary and capricious manner in which the stewards have ignored the facts and law in this manner,” said Baffert's other attorney, Clark Brewster. “Fortunately, we will soon procedurally eclipse the biased actors and have the ear of adjudicators that adhere to the rule of law instead of man.”

According to the DRF, a letter signed by Marc Guilfoil, the executive director of the KHRC, was sent to Brewster and Robertson in which Guilfoil wrote: “I do not find good reason to grant a stay.” Guilfoil also wrote:  “your clients have the right to petition for a review of this decision.”

At present, Baffert is under a suspension that will prevent him from entering any horses in the Derby or any other races at Churchill Downs and Churchill Downs-owned tracks. His status at the NYRA tracks remains up in the air as NYRA has granted Baffert a hearing, which may be a precursor to it also suspending him. A decision in the NYRA matter has not yet been announced.

But the Churchill ban and the potential NYRA ban are not reciprocal and do not have to be recognized by other racetracks. Prior to his being suspended by the KHRC, nothing stood in the way of Baffert competing in the GI Preakness S. or in the Derby preps at Oaklawn Park, Santa Anita and elsewhere.

But if his lawyers are unable to get a court to go against the KHRC's decision, Baffert's stable will have to shut down completely, with the suspension set to begin on Mar. 8.

There's little doubt that the KHRC is determined to play hardball with Baffert. Though it took nine months to even hold a hearing into the matter, once the wheels were set in motion, Baffert was quickly suspended and given 90 days rather than a lesser penalty. The KHRC based the 90-day suspension on Baffert having had four drug violations within a 365-day period. In making their decision, the stewards representing the KHRC dismissed the contention from Baffert's side that the betamethasone got into the horse's system through an ointment, which, they argued, is not a violation of the rules. Denying a stay is the latest sign that the KHRC is not going to back down.

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CDI to Abandon Online Sports Betting

Bill Carstanjen, the chief executive officer of Churchill Downs, Inc. (CDI), said during a quarterly conference call with investors Feb. 24 that after only a brief foray into online sports betting, the gaming corporation plans to phase out operating in that sector by mid-2022.

“When the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the federal ban on sports betting in May of 2018, we had high hopes for the potential to build a profitable business in this space,” Carstanjen said. “Our initial strategy was to leverage a variable cost technology model and be disciplined in our marketing spend with a focus on bottom-line profitability as states legalized online sports wagering and iGaming.

“We have profitable retail sports books in four of our casinos,” Carstanjen said. “However, the online sports betting and online casino space is highly competitive with an ever-increasing number of participants that the states have licensed. Many are pursuing maximum market share in every state with limited regard for short-term or potentially even long-term profitability.

“Because we do not see for us a path in which this business model delivers predictable and acceptable margins for at least several years, if ever, we have decided to exit the business-to-customer online sports betting and iGaming space over the next six months…

“We are always committed to building long-term value for our shareholders. And consistent with this commitment, when we see that an investment is not progressing as we had planned, we will redeploy the resources and capital to other growth projects or return the capital to our shareholders,” Carstanjen said. “We have proven with our past decisions that we are willing to walk away from businesses where we do not see a secure enough path to consistent profitable growth with an acceptable return for our shareholders.”

The Thoroughbred industry is painfully aware of the gaming corporation's previous decisions to abandon aspects of its business. Under CDI's stewardship, horse racing has ceased over the past decade at Hollywood Park in California and Calder Race Course in Florida. A sale is in currently the works to turn historic Arlington International Racecourse near Chicago into a football stadium.

CDI currently owns four active Thoroughbred tracks (Churchill Downs, Turfway Park, Fair Grounds and Presque Isle Downs). Because of its recent history of shuttering racetracks, an announcement by CDI earlier this week that it intended to acquire Colonial Downs and its Virginia gaming properties drew widespread social media chatter among racing industry participants and fans, with skepticism and concerns for Colonial's future far outnumbering comments that considered the deal to be a positive one for the sport.

“This isn't the result we wanted when we started [online sports betting] back in late 2018, but it is the prudent next step forward for our company,” Carstanjen said. “We remain absolutely committed and excited about TwinSpires Horse Racing as its top line, bottom line, and margins continue to demonstrate that this is a special online business with a sustainable, scalable and unique business model that delivers profitable growth today just as it has since we started the business well over a decade ago.”

At a later point in the call when investment analysis were permitted to ask questions, Carstanjen responded this way to one query about the decision to exit online sports betting:

“[G]ambling ultimately is a margin-driven business, and you have to set up your teams and you have to set up your processes to guarantee that you can drive margins. We can do that with TwinSpires Horse Racing, but we just don't see that for us in the broader online segment. So, we'll keep watching that business over time. We'll watch the others that are in it. And we'll see where the future takes that space.”

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