Authentic Gets First Look at Old Hilltop

Overnight rains in greater Baltimore resulted in a muddy main track at Pimlico Race Course, but that did not stop GI Kentucky Derby hero Authentic (Into Mischief) from getting his first feel for the track Wednesday morning as he prepares for Saturday’s GI Preakness S.

Under the watchful eye of seven-time Preakness-winning trainer Bob Baffert, Authentic jogged the wrong way on the outside rail one day after arriving from Churchill Downs.

“He just went out there for a little jog. He looked good,” Baffert said. “Coming off that plane yesterday, he was like a keg of dynamite. He has so much energy, that horse. He’s just so full of himself.”

Baffert finds himself wishing that the Preakness were to be contested two weeks after the Derby, given how well Authentic has taken the race.

 

WATCH: Authentic gets a feel for Pimlico Wednesday morning

 

“I would have loved to run two weeks later because he was just full of himself two weeks afterward. It’s just giving horses time to freshen up,” said the Hall of Famer. “You have new shooters now. It’s so turned around now. I feel real good about it. I think he’s going to run his race. He hasn’t regressed. He looks great.”

Baffert admits that the coronavirus pandemic has cast something over a pall over the Classics, but he’s just happy they’ve taken place at all.

“It would have been horrible if we didn’t have the Derby, the Preakness,” he said. “The Belmont was sort of different, more like the Dwyer. The Derby and the Preakness, at least we got to run them. And we have beautiful weather.

“It doesn’t feel like Preakness, but it will the day of. It’s like the Kentucky Derby,” he continued. “It didn’t feel like Derby that day, but when that gate came open it felt like Derby. That’s the way it is. When that gate comes open it’s going to feel like Preakness. That’s what it’s all about. All you are hoping for is that your horses show up and when they turn for home you’re hoping you have something to root for. That’s it. That’s all you can ask for.” (Click here for an interview with Bob Baffert)

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Texas ’21 Thoroughbred Dates Set, Minus Retama

With Retama Park opting to race only Quarter Horses in 2021, Sam Houston Race Park (46 dates) and Lone Star Park (42 dates) will make up the bulk of the Thoroughbred schedule in Texas next year. The Texas Racing Commission (TRC) approved the changes and granted the requested slate of race dates at its Sept. 29 meeting.

Retama had switched its schedule to exclusively Quarter Horses this season, swapping out Thoroughbred dates to other tracks in deference to the COVID-19 pandemic. It will continue that format into 2021.

Sam Houston’s 2021 schedule will span Jan. 8-Apr. 3.

“Their request was originally for a 39-day Thoroughbred meet,” said TRC chief steward Ricky Walker. “But because Retama Park has requested to run a straight Quarter Horse meet this year and has agreed to transfer some Thoroughbred purse money, Sam Houston agreed to add seven days to their request.”

Lone Star is scheduled to race Apr. 16-July 18.

The Texas Thoroughbred Association (TTA), which oversees the accredited Texas-bred incentive program, had representatives testify both in writing and via videoconference at Tuesday’s meeting stating that the organization cannot support any Lone Star dates request that features:

A) fewer than 49 dates

B) anything less than a four-dates-weekly race schedule.

A Lone Star official explained that the track remains open to the idea of requesting additional race dates at a later time, depending on how the pandemic affects business and projected purses over the next six months.

Gillespie County Fair was approved for its traditional eight-date mixed meet over four weekends in July and August.

The TTA stated in a Twitter posting after the meeting that estimated daily average purses at Sam Houston will be $235,000, with seven of the meet’s 13 weeks featuring four racing dates per week. Lone Star, under the three-day weekly format, projects to pay out $225,000.

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After HHR Decision from Court, Racing Considers Next Steps

Still reeling from a decision by the Kentucky Supreme Court that ruled that Historical Horse Racing (HHR) machines are illegal, the racing and breeding industries in the state have continued to work behind the scenes to find a way to keep the gaming machines operating. The machines have proved so popular that they handled $2.2 billion during the most recent fiscal year and contribute tens of millions annually to purses.

The court ruled that the machines, which resemble slot machines, did not fall under the legal definition of pari-mutuel gambling and, therefore, could not be approved by the Kentucky Racing Commission.

Kentucky Thoroughbred Association Executive Director Chauncey Morris said the sport’s best hope now rests with the state’s General Assembly, which could approve legislation that would make the machines legal. One way of doing so would be to pass legislation that changed the definition of pari-mutuel gambling so that it covers HHR. HHR allows bettors to wager on replays of races that have already been run.

“By the looks of it, this may need a legislative fix,” Morris said. “I know that everybody is sitting back and crafting their strategies on how to accomplish that.”

Morris said that he does not expect anything to happen within state government until after the November election.

“I suspect we will learn a lot more about the prospects for this after the election,” he said. “In the absence of a special session you’re going to have to wait for the natural beginning of the General Assembly. To be clear, it was a shocking and disappointing decision, but the decision did provide a road map on how the legislature, if they are so motivated, can change their definitions. Beyond that, everybody can speculate on what is going to happen but it will begin and end with the Kentucky General Assembly.”

Morris said it is hard to predict what the General Assembly would do, but added that some of the most influential lawmakers in the state have always supported horse racing.

“We have had some conversations but you never know what is going to happen until the General Assembly starts and takes up the issue,” he said.  “It’s not dissimilar to what we saw with the Horse Racing Integrity and Safety Act that was introduced five years ago and it just cleared a first hurdle in the House. Legislation, it works in strange ways. I will say that it is no secret that our industry has some very meaningful friendships and allies in the Kentucky General Assembly, not the least of which is Senator Damon Thayer, the Speaker and others.”

Thayer, the Senate Majority Leader, is a former racing executive who has been one of the sport’s biggest supporters in the state capital of Frankfort. But Thayer said he was not ready to commit to an effort to craft legislation that would legalize HH.

“I’m just not ready or willing to talk about a legislative fix at this time,” he said..

“I don’t have a strong level of confidence that a legislative solution is a possibility,” he added.

HHR could be a thorny issue for some legislators. The push to have them declared illegal was led by the Kentucky Family Foundation, a socially conservative group that says it works on behalf of “families and the values that make families strong.” In a conservative state where religious organizations have a lot of clout, there will likely be many politicians who don’t want to come off as pro-gambling.

“This is a conservative state and this kind of caught everybody by surprise and now we have to find another alternative,” Morris said.

Thayer said he was keeping an eye on what steps might be taken by Exacta Systems, an HHR manufacturer. The Boynton Beach, Fla.-based company issued a press release last week that said it will introduce a new HHR system that will be legal based on the guidelines set forth in the Kentucky Supreme Court ruing.

“While we are disappointed with the Court’s decision, we do appreciate the clarity that the Court has provided as it pertains to HHR in Kentucky,” Exacta Systems President Jeremy Stein said in a statement . “After several years of litigation, we now have certainty on how HHR systems must operate in the state. In anticipation of this ruling, Exacta has devoted several months of development time to produce an alternate HHR system that complies with the Supreme Court decision. After reading opposing legal briefs and hearing the questions asked at oral arguments, we wanted to have an alternative system in place that addressed the objections raised by opposing counsel and the various Justices, as a contingency in the case of a negative ruling. The updated Exacta system is fully compliant with the requirements as articulated by the Supreme Court, and we are excited to present our updated system to the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission in the coming days.”

The Supreme Court decision was announced last Thursday, but the state’s HHR operations have yet to be discontinued. The Family Foundation has called on the tracks to cease operating the HHR machines. Kentucky Horse Racing Commission Executive Director Marc Guilfoil was not available Tuesday to clarify why the machines were still in operation.

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Peace and Justice Gets His First Winner at Presque Isle

Like a Saltshaker (Peace and Justice) became the first winner for his freshman sire by War Front with an authoritative victory against open company at Presque Isle Tuesday. Fourth when unveiled at this oval Sept. 10, he worked a bullet half-mile in :46 4/5 here Sept. 22 in company with his stablemate Spankhurst (Speightster), who debuted in this event. Receiving Lasix for the first time in this second attempt, the PA-bred was bet down to 2-1 favoritism from an 8-1 morning-line quote. Breaking on top, the bay he was pressed through an opening quarter in :22.37 and a half in :45.18. Shaking free of his foes in the lane, Like a Saltshaker charged clear with ease to graduate by 3 1/4 lengths. Summerfest (Summer Front) was the runner-up. The winner is the first foal out of With Sprinkles, who produced a filly by Uptowncharlybrown in 2019 and a colt by that same sire this year. She was bred back to Boisterous.

 

5th-Presque Isle Downs, $45,080, Msw, 9-29, 2yo, 6f (AWT), 1:09.22, ft, 3 1/4 lengths.

LIKE A SALTSHAKER (g, 2, Peace and Justice–With Sprinkles, by Harlan’s Holiday) Lifetime Record: 2-1-0-0, $30,030. Click for the Equibase.com chart or VIDEO, sponsored by Fasig-Tipton.

O-Magic Oaks; B-Glenn E. Brok LLC (PA); T-Adam Rice.

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