Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Under-Tack Show Starts Wednesday

The three-day under-tack show ahead of next week’s Fasig-Tipton Midlantic 2-Year-Olds in Training Sale begins Wednesday morning at 8 a.m. at the Maryland State Fairgrounds in Timonium. The breeze show continues with sessions Thursday and Friday. The auction will be held next Monday and Tuesday. A total of 563 juveniles have been catalogued for the sale and bidding begins each day at 11 a.m.

Fasig-Tipton will debut its new online bidding platform for the auction and has also increased phone bidding capacity. To register for online bidding, visit http://bidonline.fasigtipton.com.

The sales company will also be utilizing a new repository system for the auction with a cloud-based system, the Asteris Keystone Repository, allowing attending veterinarians to review radiographs remotely, instead of having to do so on the sales grounds.

The Midlantic sale, originally scheduled for May, produced its most recent Grade I winner when 2019 graduate Gamine (Into Mischief) won the GI Acorn S. last Saturday. The filly topped last year’s sale when bringing a final bid of $1.8 million.

The post Fasig-Tipton Midlantic Under-Tack Show Starts Wednesday appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Jockey Club Announces 2020-2021 Academic Scholarship Recipients

Grace Clark has been selected to receive The Jockey Club Scholarship and Eric DeCoster has been selected to receive The Jockey Club Jack Goodman Scholarship, The Jockey Club announced Tuesday.

The Jockey Club Scholarship provides $15,000 ($7,500 per semester) to a student who is pursuing a bachelor’s degree or higher at any university and has demonstrated interest in pursuing a career in the Thoroughbred industry.

The Jockey Club Jack Goodman Scholarship awards $6,000 ($3,000 per semester) annually to a student at the University of Arizona Race Track Industry Program (RTIP) and is based on academic achievement, a proposed career path in the Thoroughbred racing industry, and previous industry involvement. Goodman was a longtime member of The Jockey Club and one of three founders of the RTIP.

Clark is a senior at the University of Kentucky and is majoring in Community and Leadership Development with a minor in Agricultural Economics. In addition to being a marketing intern and tour guide for Godolphin, she has worked in various roles for Kentucky Downs and is active in the National FFA Organization. Upon graduation, Clark hopes to work in educational outreach and promotion of the Thoroughbred industry.

DeCoster is an incoming freshman in the RTIP this fall. An Arizona native, he worked as an assistant manager at a local barn and cohosts “Racing Rundown,” a horse racing podcast. DeCoster aspires to be a bloodstock agent.

“The Jockey Club’s two academic scholarships are part of the portfolio of initiatives designed to support the Thoroughbred industry, and we are proud to assist Grace and Eric in their efforts to pursue careers in the Thoroughbred racing and breeding industries,” said James L. Gagliano, president and chief operating officer of The Jockey Club.

The post Jockey Club Announces 2020-2021 Academic Scholarship Recipients appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Keeneland Online Auction Tuesday

Keeneland will host its first-ever online auction when its digital sales ring opens for bidding at 9 a.m. Tuesday. The initial June Select Horses of Racing Age Sale features an offering of 31 horses and, while bidding begins on all lots at 9 a.m., closing on each lot is staggered. Bidding on Juddmonte Farms’ Breithorn (Into Mischief) (hip 1) will close at approximately 2 p.m. and bidding on Summer Love (Summer Front) (hip 37), a recent maiden winner and half to stakes winner Mihos (Cairo Prince) consigned by Niall Brennan, will close at approximately 3 p.m.

Hidden Brook will consign eight horses of racing age to the online auction on behalf of D J Stable and partners.

“Horses in training or of racing age is the first step in trying this out as people don’t actually see the horses,” said Hidden Brook’s Dan Hall. “This is the first level of it and we are going to give it a try and see how it goes.”

Each catalogue page includes a location where the horse can be inspected. The Hidden Brook offerings have been available for inspection at Hidden Brook’s Florida farm for the last 10 days.

“There hasn’t been a lot of action that way,” Hall said of inspections. “But with racehorses, people are primarily shopping based on the PPs and they can see what the purchase price was as yearlings and as 2-year-olds and in the vetting. Bidding online is just an advanced level of claiming, so to speak, because you have the vetting in front of you as well.”

With the many disruptions to the sales season brought on this year by the coronavirus pandemic, Keeneland moved up the launch of its online auction platform to accommodate people impacted by travel restrictions. The new format provides another outlet for sellers in uncertain times, according to Hall.

“I would still prefer seeing them on the sales grounds,” Hall said. “It is the best possible way to sell a horse, but given what we’ve been dealt this year, this is another avenue to try and see how successful we can be at it.”

Among horses up for sale Tuesday is Tempers Rising (Bayern) (hip 25), runner-up in the Mar. 21 GII TwinSpires.com Fair Grounds Oaks. Also in the catalogue is Juddmonte homebred 3-year-old Juror (Tapit) (hip 8), runner-up in his June 1 debut at Tampa Bay Downs; 2-year-old filly Queen Arella (Speightster) (hip 17), a first-out winner at Gulfstream Park May 29; and Wondrwherecraigis (Munnings) (hip 30), a two-for-two sophomore gelding.

Buyers have two options for bidding Tuesday, either direct bidding manually throughout the sale or by establishing a maximum bid with the software automatically bidding on the buyer’s behalf up to the top price.

Visit keenelanddigital.com for more information.

The post Keeneland Online Auction Tuesday appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Monmouth Park Can Open With Fans

New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy announced Monday that, as of July 2, the state’s casinos and racetracks can open at 25% capacity.

Dennis Drazin, who heads the operations team at Monmouth Park, said that while some details still need to be clarified by Murphy’s office, he is of the belief that Monmouth can allow as many as 15,000 people a day at the races. Drazin bases that number on Monmouth being able to accommodate as many as 60,000 fans, roughly the number that attended American Pharoah’s GI Haskell Invitational in 2015.

“I think this is huge,” Drazin said. “This is a great development for us now.”

Monmouth was already scheduled to begin its abbreviated meet July 3.

Should Monmouth be allowed to have 15,000 people in attendance that would mean that, for most days, no one will be turned away.

The only day during the meet where the demand would likely exceed 15,000 people is Haskell Day. The race usually draws about 40,000 people. Drazin thinks that this year there may only be about 15,000 people who want to see the race in person.

“How many people are not going to want to come simply because they are afraid to come out?” he said. “I think we will lose a lot of our customers anyway. People aren’t ready to venture out yet. I think we will be ok with 15,000.”

Drazin said if it becomes clear that more than 15,000 people want to attend the race, he would reach out to the governor’s office and seek a one-day exception to the 25% rule. Monmouth had planned not to charge for admission or parking throughout the meet, but Drazin said an exception could be made for Haskell Day in an effort to keep the crowd down.

Monmouth experimented with having fans in the building last Saturday as it opened up the Lady’s Secret Cafe and let fans come in and watch and wager on the GI Belmont S. Drazin said that was permissible because the cafe is considered an outdoor dining area. Drazin also said that, starting this Friday, owners will be allowed in an area near the top of the stretch and will be able to watch their horses train from there.

Murphy said that face masks will be mandatory in the Atlantic City casinos. It is likely the same protocols will be in place at the state’s racetracks.

“If any visitor refuses to comply with these simple safeguards, you will be escorted out of the casino,” the governor said. “We are not going to tolerate any knuckleheads trying to ruin it for those who want to enjoy themselves responsibly and those who need to get back to work, especially if those knuckleheads could be spreading Covid.”

Drazin said it is imperative that patrons, horsemen and frontside employees strictly follow all the guidelines Murphy imposes.

“There will be further guidelines coming out over the next several days,” he said. “There will certainly be social distancing and mask requirements. We plan to screen people before they can enter the track. Whatever the governor says we have to do, that’s what we will do. I do not think that the governor will let us stay open if we don’t make sure that there is social distancing. If we don’t do our job, frankly, he should tell us we have a problem. We need to do our job and we need to keep people six feet apart when they are standing in line and six feet apart when watching races. We just can’t let people get carried away.”

The post Monmouth Park Can Open With Fans appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights