AZ Breeders: ‘No Future’ Without Commission Help to Kickstart Live Racing

Thursday’s Arizona Racing Commission (AZRC) meeting opened with the chairman Rory Goree asking stakeholders to “refrain from discussing anything” related to a controversial appeal over who controls purse account money that is scheduled for the October meeting. And it ended with Turf Paradise owner Jerry Simms apologizing for the frustration the state’s Thoroughbred community feels over his decision not to incur liability by running a 2020-21 meet during a pandemic.

In between those brief, book-ended statements that define the currently closed status of racing in Arizona, commissioners heard a slew of impassioned pleas from breeders, owners, and trainers all desperately imploring the AZRC to take some form of action so that live racing can get back up and running in the state for the first time since March.

Last month, Turf Paradise withdrew its request for a traditional autumn-through-spring meet, citing COVID-19 concerns. Arizona Downs months ago called off its summer race meet after failing to secure permission top open from local health officials. Beyond the pandemic, a prolonged fight over off-track betting (OTB) privileges, simulcast signals, and how the horsemen’s purse money can be used has been batted back and forth in the courts and during commission meetings, clouding the future of the state’s two commercial tracks.

“Anybody sitting within the Arizona breeders has seen the value of their horses drop 50%-plus, with no place to run our horses in-state,” said Kevin Owens, a board of directors member of the Arizona Thoroughbred Breeders Association. “There’s a couple of big farms and there’s a lot of people who have people who have ‘backyard’ horses that count on Arizona as a state to facilitate a racing facility to bring these Arizona-breds to track. I don’t know what’s going to happen. I would certainly hope the commission is getting behind Arizona Downs to try to assist them in any way possible to get their meet open [and] operating.

Owens was referring to the possibility of Arizona Downs taking on some winter race dates, an idea that is feasible but depends in part upon the yet-to-be-decided status of the purse account.

“We have no future,” Owens continued. “We’ve been destroyed in this business. Our studs aren’t worth anything. We have a sale coming up [Nov. 19], that by all potential is going to be a bloodbath. We are continuing with our sale, [and] I would encourage the commission to maybe show up at the sale and see what we’re about. We haven’t had much interest from you guys in actually getting into our business and seeing what we do and what it costs to sponsor a sale like this and raise a bunch of horses.

“We’ve given more than one chance to Turf Paradise, and it’s time to move on. There’s been no good faith put forth by that facility at this point, and I believe that we should put everything that we have behind Arizona Downs, as it seems like they are the only ones that are going to have a chance to survive in this state. We need to go forward with an entity that’s concerned with the racing public, the horsemen, and the breeders.”

Breeder, owner and trainer Stacy Campo told commissioners that, “We really need this to happen. I have 18 horses ready to go into training immediately. Twelve of them are Arizona-breds. And you know, we’ve worked very hard to be able to sit here and be the backbone of racing in Arizona. And I hate to say it, but the breeders in Arizona are the backbone. We do supply the stock [and] we need to get live racing. Arizona Downs can do it. I’ve got the horses and the supply to go up there and run.”

Cynthia George, who said she is an owner, trainer, pony person, and exercise rider, underscored that, “the time is critical, because people can’t hold on much longer. Many [out-of-state] meets are coming to a close, and we all need a place to go…. If there’s [an in-state] track available, we need to open.”

Owner Freddy Alvarez added that, “Arizona Downs is the future for the horsemen. We need a place to go. We own 12 horses…. I know [the commission does its] best, but all it takes is a couple of eyes at Turf Paradise to see there’s nothing going on there,” with regard to reopening in the conceivable future.

Robert Hutton, the president of the Arizona Horsemen’s Benevolent and Protective Association, said that, “the horsemen of Arizona are not looking for handouts, but only the opportunity that is offered when a live meet takes place…. It is time for this industry to move forward without the constant distraction that has hindered us for years.”

Not a single one of the 10 horse community members who spoke at the meeting expressed constructive or encouraging sentiments for Turf Paradise over Arizona Downs.

Yet despite all the support thrown behind Arizona Downs, Tom Auther, an owner and partner in Arizona Downs, said he had “nothing to report” in the section of the AZRC agenda devoted to updates from the tracks.

Jerry Simms, the owner of Turf Paradise, did have something to say during the public commentary period after most of the horse community members had spoken. He began by saying that he understood their frustration, but that he felt like he was in a “no good deed goes unpunished” position.

Simms said he has been involved in the Turf Paradise ownership for 20 years, and that the track has been operating at a “huge negative” in recent years.

“The track owes me $8 million. And there hasn’t been a distribution since 2005. But I was happy—and am happy—to continue doing that,” Simms said.

But then, Simms added, COVID-19 changed everything.

“I made the decision that I didn’t want to have the liability,” Simms said. “There are many lawsuits out there where people are suing, and claiming that [business owners are negligent for operating in a pandemic]. And it was a difficult decision for me to make. But we sat down with my top management and realized this is what we had to do. We just didn’t want the liability of putting people in that kind of risk. But I completely understand the frustration that the folks have had. I’m sorry about that part. That’s all.”

Although no immediate lifeline for the return to live racing was proposed by the AZRC, Goree said that moving forward, his organization needs to “start looking at what the requirements are regarding live racing versus having an OTB. I would just want the department to maybe start looking at that and report back to us as to what powers we may have regarding if [a licensee is] not offering live racing [but still operating] OTB networks.”

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Pharoah Half to Recent ‘Rising Star’ Lights Up Board at Fasig

A son of Triple Crown winner American Pharoah was the first to set off fireworks at Fasig-Tipton Thursday, igniting a spirited round of bidding between a trio of powerhouse connections in Donato Lanni, Coolmore and Marette Farrell, acting on behalf on Speedway Stables. Lanni was the first to throw in the towel, leaving Coolmore and Farrell to duke it out and it was Farrell left to sign the winning $1.25-million ticket on behalf of her longtime clients, Speedway’s K.C. Weiner and Peter Fluor.

“K.C. Weiner and Peter Fluor are two of the best owners a person could possibly have,” said Farrell, who said she was shocked to find out she had outbid the Coolmore team. “They are game. They are very successful in their own business world and they apply all of those principles to our little horse world. They have done very well so far. They love being part of the game. They love working with Bob Baffert.”

Consigned by Denali Stud, Hip 400 was bred by Fasig’s Bayne and Christina Welker, who purchased the MSW mare Swingit (Victory Gallop) for $50,000 in foal to Bodemeister at the 2016 Keeneland November Sale. Already the dam of MGISP millionaire Neolithic (Harlan’s Holiday) at that time, her second foal for the Welkers was new ‘TDN Rising Star’ Travel Column (Frosted), who was purchased by Larry Best for $850,000 at last term’s Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Sale.

“We just thought he was an absolutely stunning horse,” Farrell said. “We were the underbidder on his half-sister last year, who was the ‘TDN Rising Star’. We had seen this horse on the farm and knew how much his connections thought of him and Bob Baffert, who is going to train him, loved him. I was on the phone with K.C. Weiner, who coached me through this. We are thrilled to get him. We think he is a really special horse and it looks like the mare has already produced a couple of very good horses. He fits what Speedway wants and what Bob Baffert is looking for.”

Baffert and Speedway have enjoyed a successful partnership over the years, campaigning the likes of Grade I winners Collected (City Zip), Roadster (Quality Road) and Noted and Quoted (The Factor). —@CDeBernardisTDN

Watch our interview with Marette Farrell below.

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Del Mar Releases Fall Stakes Schedule

Del Mar Thoroughbred Club outlined its fall stakes schedule consisting of 16 stakes worth $2,250,000 and will be presented through its 15-day Bing Crosby Season, beginning  Oct. 31.

Del Mar has added a pair of California-bred sprint stakes for juveniles that were not on its agenda the past two seasons.

Nine of the 16 fall stakes are graded; nine of the 16 stakes will be run on turf; seven of the stakes–all of them on grass–will be presented over the track’s extended closing weekend which begins Thanksgiving Day, and continues through closing day Nov. 29.

“Given the current climate of things, we are very pleased to keep our fall stakes purse levels intact,” said David Jerkens, Del Mar’s racing secretary. “The response to our summer racing program was exceptional. We are expecting similar results this fall. I am especially excited about our Thanksgiving stakes weekend, which has taken on national prominence.”

The track’s two premier stakes will be presented on its closing weekend–the GI Hollywood Derby for 3-year-olds at nine furlongs Nov. 28 and GI Matriarch S. for fillies and mares at a mile Nov. 29. Additionally, closing weekend also will feature the GII Hollywood Turf Cup Nov. 27 and GII Seabiscuit H. Nov. 28.

Racing will be conducted Saturday and Sunday for opening weekend, then Friday, Saturday and Sunday for the next three weeks, finishing finally with a four-day week around Thanksgiving. First post daily will be 12:30 p.m. on all racing days with the exception of the track’s special holiday card on Thanksgiving when racing begins at 11 a.m.

There will be six stakes offered for juveniles, including a trio of Grade IIIs–Bob Hope S. Nov. 15; Jimmy Durante S. Nov. 28, and Cecil B. DeMille S. Nov. 29.

For the complete stakes schedule, visit http://www.dmtc.com.

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OwnerView Conference Held Virtually Breeders’ Cup Week

OwnerView’s seventh Thoroughbred Owner Conference, presented by Breeders’ Cup, Bessemer Trust, and Dean Dorton, will be conducted in a virtual format in Lexington, Kentucky, Nov. 3-4. The conference originally planned for July 19-22, in Saratoga Springs, N.Y.

“We are committed to offering the owner conference in a safe format for attendees, so we made the decision to move our event online given the COVID-19 pandemic,” said Gary Falter, project manager for OwnerView. “Registrants will be able to watch nine panels on a range of topics relevant to Thoroughbred ownership and submit questions to our expert panelists from the comfort of their home or office.”

The registration fee for the virtual conference is $425. For more information about the owner conference, including the full schedule of panels and registration, please visit www.ownerview.com/event/conference.

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