Tiz the Law Returns to Worktab

Sackatoga Stables’ Tiz the Law (Constitution) returned to the worktab for the first time since finishing second to Authentic (Into Mischief) as the favorite in the Sept. 5 GI Kentucky Derby, breezing a half-mile in an easy :50.07 with regular exercise rider Heather Smullen in the irons.

“It was a nice, easy work,” trainer Barclay Tagg said. “I wasn’t looking for much. I just wanted him to go out there and stretch his legs. He hadn’t done anything in three weeks.”

Prior to his hard-trying runner-up effort in the Derby, the New York-bred had been perfect in four starts at three, including the GI Curlin Florida Derby, the GI Belmont S. and GI Runhappy Travers S. Earlier this week, Sackatoga’s Jack Knowlton announced that Tiz the Law would give the Oct. 3 GI Preakness S. a miss and that the colt would be trained up to his first try against older horses in the GI Breeders’ Cup Classic at Keeneland Nov. 7.

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New Details in Ongoing Standoff Between AZHBPA and Turf Paradise

The latest missive in an ongoing game of epistolary ping-pong between the Arizona horsemen and Turf Paradise management has seen the track re-affirm their proposal to stage a race-meet this winter.

“Turf Paradise has submitted live race dates for an 84-day winter meet–Jan. 2 thru May 1, 2021–to the Racing Commission for their approval at the Oct. 8 meeting,” wrote Turf Paradise general manager Vincent Francia in a letter addressed to the horsemen Thursday.

But again, the proposal comes with caveats. The first is a previously stated desire: That the $2.1 million the Arizona Horsemen’s Benevolent and Protective Association (AZHBPA) moved from the Turf Paradise horseman’s account into its own account be returned.

As per the letter: “With the $2.1 million back in the account and the projected $1 million generated in purse accumulation between now and Dec. 31 plus the purse monies that will be generated during the proposed live race meet, Turf will be able to offer the horsemen a 25% increase (from $80,000 to $100,000 daily) for this proposed meet. Surely the AZHBPA would not object to that?”

“He [Turf Paradise owner Jerry Simms] is trying to get the horsemen wound up with offering them more money,” said AZHBPA president, Bob Hutton, in response to the latest overture from Turf Paradise. “It’s not his purse account. It’s not his signal.”

The second condition is that the AZHBPA approves both exports and imports of the Turf Paradise signal through May 31, 2021. “Those approvals are essential in order to continue generating money into the purse account, and we simply cannot conduct a live race meet with the AZHBPA constantly threatening to withdraw those approvals,” the letter states.

That demand is not a “deal killer,” said Hutton, who explained that the issue would be a matter for the AZHBPA board to decide. “That’s a reasonable request…I’m concerned with the horsemen, not how much money he makes.”

When it comes to purse funds, Turf Paradise management argue that these monies contractually belong to the horsemen that race at Turf Paradise specifically. The horsemen, however, argue that they ultimately wield control over the purse account, as per a prior arbitrated settlement. In a letter last week to Turf Paradise, AZHBPA stated that the purse monies are available for whichever Arizona track stages a live meet.

Details of Turf Paradise’s initial letter to the horsemen last week can be read here, and the AZHBPA’s subsequent response can be read here.

This latest letter also states that the AZHBPA is “willing” to make only weekly payments to the horsemen’s bookkeeper, in the event Turf Paradise hosts a live meet. “As an example, if a horseman wants to withdraw money from his/her account under Mr. Hutton’s plans, they would have to wait a week until the funds are deposited,” the letter states.

According to Hutton, the way the way the AZHBPA proposes to manage the purse strings in the event Turf Paradise conducts a live meet this winter wouldn’t have any effect on the speed at which horsemen are remunerated.

“It’s not going to make a difference,” Hutton said. “It’s like a payroll being due on the fifteenth, and so you fund the payroll account on the fifth. That’s what we’re saying. We’ll fund it.”

According to Francia, the AZHBPA’s proposal misunderstands the role of the horsemen’s bookkeeper, which he describes as a “bank” that fields daily activities.

“That suggestion would not work,” Francia said. “There’s much more that goes on with a horseman’s bookkeeper than just being a repository for purse money. There’s daily activity going on between the bookkeeper and the horsemen.”

And while Francia described the ongoing negotiations as “positive,” he urged haste for a resolution, saying that a live race-meet at Turf Paradise would require six weeks of preparations.

“We have all the essential materials to run a live race meet,” Francia said, in response to suggestions that the track had sold various items necessary to conduct a meet. At the end of the day, “I remain optimistic,” he added. “That’s the best I can say.”

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Mr. Big News Breezes for Preakness

GI Kentucky Derby third-place finisher Mr. Big News (Giant’s Causeway) put in his final work for next weekend’s GI Preakness S. Saturday with a half-mile move in :50.40 (59/68) at Churchill Downs.

With regular exercise rider Tony Camacho in the saddle, the bay went in splits of :13.20 and :25.40 with a five-furlong gallop out of 1:03.20, according to Churchill Downs clocker John Nichols.

“He left the pole really strong, which is how he was working before the Derby,” trainer Bret Calhoun said. “We only wanted an easy work and I told Tony to go in :49 or :50 and gallop out well. He’s been fit after just running in the Derby and it’s been very promising how strong he’s acting in his works after the race.”

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The Best Interests of the Industry: #FreeDataFriday, Final Volume

by Thoroughbred Idea Foundation

This is the final installment of a year-long series we called #FreeDataFriday. We have greatly appreciated your attention and feedback. To share your thoughts with us, please contact us by clicking here.

In March 2019, the Thoroughbred Idea Foundation published a white paper calling for Equibase to do four things:

  1. Provide free, raw data feeds for registered, non-commercial users.
  2. Provide free, basic past performances on all North American tracks.
  3. Provide responsive channels to regularly address errors and omissions in the data.
  4. Partner with universities to study racing data, developing new and advanced metrics for the betterment of the sport.

There have been few positive developments directly from Equibase on these initiatives.

Fortunately, harping on this topic has yielded far more attentiveness to various outlets when it comes to free data. Some tracks have released free past performances for select races (Volume 35). One reported to us thousands of downloads of free PPs from a single day of racing. It has been, and will continue to be, appreciated.

#FreeDataFriday was about drawing attention to the need of racing to embrace data, an improved approach to information delivery as a path to grow wagering and attention on racing. Regardless of Equibase’s actual behavior, this needs to happen.

We occasionally focused on other sports which are doing this in better ways, some directly connected to wagering, too. This series also highlighted data, some old and some new, designed to focus our followers on the plight of racing’s troubled present, and how hopefully to change it in the future, for the better.

Equibase is an incredibly valuable asset for the racing industry, a legacy to the decision making of its founders, and they have undoubtedly performed a useful service to the sport.

With a firm foundation built three decades ago, we believe now is the time to take a giant leap ahead, to transform, offering the data to a public customer far different than the ones that engaged the sport in 1990. The current and potential racing wagering customer possesses programming and processing power the likes of which could never have been envisioned in those days. Enabling public access to racing’s vast data sets would signal a new era for the sport.

Freely available data will grow handle, increasing racing’s competitiveness for new customers and enhancing the retention of current customers. This is a direct benefit to the tracks, who currently enjoy the spoils of data sales. Growing handle several percentage points replaces the dividends tracks received via the data business, and which some also receive as ADW operators and bet processors. Growing it by several more covers Equibase’s costs.

Equibase could take racing ahead into this new era. We believe this will spark participation and engagement. We want racing to have a seat at the analytics table, joining the many mass-market and even niche sports and games which have and continue to benefit from open and available data. How exciting it would be to unfurl the collective intelligence of tech-savvy bettors, fans, researchers and academics on a sport that desperately needs growth.

Equibase, essentially, holds a monopoly on racing’s data. If you want to register a Thoroughbred for racing or breeding, owners relinquish all of their data rights to The Jockey Club (TJC) and its subsidiaries through its registration process. The terms of use on TJC’s website outline this:

“You agree to grant to TJC a non-exclusive, royalty-free, worldwide, sub licensable, perpetual license, with the right to sub-license, to reproduce, distribute, transmit, create derivative works of, publicly display and publicly perform any materials and other information (including, without limitation, ideas contained therein for new or improved products and services) you submit to the Website or by e-mail to TJC by all means and in any medium now known or hereafter developed. You agree that you shall have no recourse against TJC for any alleged or actual infringement or misappropriation of any proprietary right in your communications to TJC.”

Register your horse and TJC can do as it pleases with the data your horses accrue.

Make no mistake, when Equibase was created, it was viewed as a sustainable source of information collection–by the industry, for the industry, not some evil empire. In 1992, as we cited in Volume 2 of #FreeDataFriday, then vice-chairman of TJC William S. Farish offered a noble take on the need for the industry to maintain racing’s data. There had been a fear that if the data was controlled by a private entity, racing’s records could be lost. Here are some of Farish’s remarks from the 1992 Jockey Club Round Table:

“Before Equibase was formed, Thoroughbred racing stood out alone as just about the only major professional sport which was not responsible for its own records…The Thoroughbred industry has the responsibility and obligation to maintain control of those records, and make sure they are made widely available in whatever way suits the best interests of the industry.”

Responsibility. Obligation. Widely available. Best interests.

The world of racing, betting and information delivery has changed substantially since those remarks, nearly 30 years ago.

Equibase has not evolved to the needs of the modern industry, to present-day horseplayers and horsemen. Serious efforts to reform and modernize are needed to make good on Mr. Farish’s salient recommendation from 1992.

#FREEDATAFRIDAY

To borrow from Bill Gates, if we approached some of racing’s problems similar to the way he addresses myriad issues, perhaps there is some hope we can have a brighter future for our sport. The two questions Gates asks: “Who has dealt with this problem well? And what can we learn from them?”

In some parts of the racing world, significant amounts of data, and past performances, are free, or at least less expensive than they are here. Two of the notable locations–Australia and Hong Kong, jurisdictions where racing, at least as measured through wagering participation, continues to grow.

Data alone is not going to change our future, but it is one element of a needed elixir of renovation for our industry.

We conclude this series with a reprint of the comments of Gary Crispe, the CEO of RacingandSports.com, an Australia-based news and information website which includes a plethora of free data for horse racing around the world, including past performances from many jurisdictions. Crispe offered these remarks when TIF spoke with him while researching our white paper, “Embracing a Future with Free Racing Data.”

“There is an infatuation to pricing racing data, but that sort of model seems to ignore the fundamental business of the sport. Data and its derivatives should be used to drive betting.

“Outside of a few relationships with some big clients, nearly all of the data we supply is free to our site’s visitors. We offer full form guides [past performances] for races in 17 jurisdictions around the world, which includes speed maps [pace projections] and a whole host of value-added services. They come in a variety of formats, some of which can be tailored to the site user’s preferences.”

Why wouldn’t North American racing want that?

Well, “racing” might want it and need it, but Equibase and the tracks have turned data into big business off the investments of owners and horseplayers.

Combining this data access with more efficient pricing within wagering markets is a recipe for significantly increased bettor participation–a new way forward which all of the industry should support.

CLICK HERE to read the TIF Biennial Report.

 

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