Laurel Re-Gifts Stakes Program

Winter Storm Elliott is expected to bring gusty winds, arctic cold and threats of flash freezing to the Mid-Atlantic over the weekend. To prepare, the Maryland Jockey Club has postponed its Dec. 26 Christmastide Stakes Day program.

“Due to the weather conditions expected throughout the weekend, we decided to cancel our Monday program early and accommodate our fans as well as the horsemen and horsewomen who will be participating in this exceptional day of racing,” said Mike Rogers, Acting President of the Maryland Jockey Club.

The entire 11-race slate will shift to Friday, Dec. 30 with a post time of 11:25 a.m. Live racing is scheduled to resume Thursday, Dec. 29 with the 48-day fall meet finale set for Saturday, Dec. 31.

Featuring six $100,000 stakes, the Christmastide program includes, the Heft S. for 2-year-olds and Gin Talking S. for 2-year-old fillies at seven panels, each; 6 1/2-furlong Willa On the Move S. and 1 1/8 Carousel S. for older fillies and mares; and six furlong Dave's Friend S. and Robert T. Manfuso S. going 1 1/16 for 3-year-olds and up.

The post Laurel Re-Gifts Stakes Program appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Dec. 22: Leading First-Crop Stallions Seek a Little Extra Christmas Money

by Margaret Ransom
A quiet week for the top-three stallions battling it out to earn the crown as 2022 leading first-crop sire–Bolt d'Oro (Medaglia d'Oro), Good Magic (Curlin) and Justify (Scat Daddy)–has led to a busy pre-Christmas week with Justify and Good Magic each picking up a winner and all three having multiple runners both here in the U.S. and abroad over the next two days heading into the quiet holiday weekend.

Justify scored first on Wednesday with his daughter Diamondsareforever breaking her maiden at first asking at Dundalk in Ireland and earning $11,154 for the win. Other runners for Justify this week include Amisfield in a $50,000 Msw at Fair Grounds on Friday, and O'Gangster at in a $70,000 Msw at Gulfstream Park on Christmas Eve. Also on Saturday, his filly Jasper Tiara will race 1800 metres in an about $101,196 newcomers race at Nakayama Racecourse in Japan. A win from any of his runners could help Justify make up ground on the two stallions in front with nine days left in 2022. His sons and daughters have now earned $2,411,394.

Good Magic had a quiet week last week with no winners, but his son Devil's Cay was successful in a $50,000 Moc at Gulfstream Park on Thursday to earn $25,800, extending his lead over Justify ever so slightly though not closing much ground on Bolt d'Oro. On Saturday he will be represented by Instinctual in a $32,000 Msw at Tampa Bay Downs. His current active runners have earned $2,485,673.

Bolt d'Oro will have a sizeable contingent assisting his effort to annex the title once and for all with four runners on Friday alone. A trio–St. Elmo, Itzos, and Fast Forward–are set to contest Turfway's 2nd race, a $70,000 Msw, while Roxy's Ball–a $650,000 OBSAPR 2-year-old–is entered in a $50,000 Msw at Fair Grounds carded as the 8th. His final runner before Christmas will be Carcano in a $32,000 Msw at Tampa Bay Downs on Saturday. Bolt d'Oro still maintains a significant advantage over his two main rivals with progeny earnings of $2,641,366.

Note that Japanese earnings are added every Sunday night, and there may be delayed reporting from other countries, which could postpone the final results in a very tight race into early January. We will also be providing a preview of 2-year-olds entered the next day in North America and beyond.

Current Earnings Standings through racing of Dec. 22:
1st—Bolt d'Oro, $2,641,366
2nd—Good Magic, $2,485,673
3rd—Justify, $2,411,394

The TDN sire lists contain full-dollar earnings of Northern Hemisphere foals winning anywhere in the world. To view the current standings updated overnight, click here.

The post Dec. 22: Leading First-Crop Stallions Seek a Little Extra Christmas Money appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Grassley Amendment Fails; HISA `Fix’ Language in Omnibus Bill

After a week of political uncertainty, the Senate has passed a version of the full year-end omnibus spending bill with language affording the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) more rule-making authority in the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA), according to a source close to the process.

The language is designed to address a ruling in the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals from November, which found the law as written doesn't afford the FTC enough latitude in the rule-making process.

The Senate voted in favor of the bill 68-29, but it must first pass the House of Representatives before heading to the president's desk.

It's currently unclear what specific language the Senate's version of the $1.7-trillion spending bill includes regarding HISA and the FTC's modified role.

But language in a prior version of the bill allows the FTC to “abrogate, add to, and modify the rules of the Authority promulgated in accordance with this Act as the Commission finds necessary or appropriate to ensure the fair administration of the Authority, to conform the rules of the Authority to requirements of this Act and applicable rules approved by the Commission, or otherwise in furtherance of the purposes of this Act.”

Currently, the FTC can only accept or reject a proposed rule constructed by the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority, the private entity given broad umbrella power over implementing the act.

In a statement immediately following the news, National Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association (HBPA) CEO, Eric Hamelback, praised last-minute efforts by a group of lawmakers led by Senator Chuck Grassley to strip the language from the omnibus spending bill.

“We know there were several Senators who would have supported removal language. However, the amendment did not get that opportunity and the HISA “fix” language remains in the Omnibus bill. With that said we are on firm ground to remain focused as the “fix” language changes very little about the Act as it remains unconstitutional,” wrote Hamelback.

HISA spokesperson, Mandy Minger, said that the Authority would have a comment after the bill is signed.

If enacted into law, questions swirl about what this legislative fix possibly means for HISA. Various avenues were detailed in a recent conversation with constitutional law expert, Lucinda Finley.

Last week, the FTC announced that it had disapproved “without prejudice” the program's anti-doping and medication control (ADMC) rules because of the law's constitutional holes.

In the near-term, with this new language HISA can resubmit the ADMC rules with the FTC. It would then take approximately 60 days for these rules to go into effect, “assuming that the FTC was going to approve them substantively,” HISA CEO Lisa Lazarus previously explained.

There remains a ruling pending in the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals concerning similar constitutional questions to the Fifth Circuit. It is currently unclear when that ruling will land.

But if the amended language in the omnibus spending bill is sufficient in the judgement of the Fifth Circuit, it could essentially render the current cases before the Fifth and Sixth Circuits legally moot in a practical sense.

It could also make the possibility of the Supreme Court taking them up altogether highly unlikely.

Even then, don't expect the legal fireworks to end, with a case in the U.S. District Court of Texas–Northern District, Amarillo Division–a potentially nasty looking legal blackthorn for the law.

Finley told the TDN that the case raises several additional constitutional arguments that the Fifth and Sixth Circuits did not rule on, including HISA's investigative, subpoena and punishment power as a private body, and the way in which individuals on the HISA board are appointed.

“It argues that the whole structure is a delegation of not only too much executive authority, but can amount to a delegation of legislative and judicial authority as well,” Finley explained.

If the judge in the case agrees that HISA indeed delegates too much power to a private entity, the plaintiffs in the case are seeking an injunction to suspend enforcement of the law, said Finley.

Would such an injunction apply nationwide or just in Texas?

“You've actually asked what is one of the most raging controversies in U.S. law,” Finley replied, leaving the answer open-ended.

The post Grassley Amendment Fails; HISA `Fix’ Language in Omnibus Bill appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

It’s Official: Arlington Million Moved To Colonial Downs

Churchill Downs Inc. (CDI) is set to go ahead with plans to move the GI Arlington Million, the GI Beverly D S. and the GII Secretariat S. to Colonial Downs, where the races will be run on Aug. 12. CDI acquired the New Kent, Virginia, track in August of this year.

The three races were long-time fixtures at Arlington Park, which closed at the conclusion of its 2021 meet. The Million and Beverly D. and Secretariat S. were all moved to Churchill Downs for the 2022 racing season, but the Secretariat was canceled owing to concerns over the condition of the Churchill Downs turf course.

The move of the races to Virginia was officially announced in a press release released Wednesday by Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin.

“It is an incredible honor to continue the legacy of these exceptional races by hosting them in our Commonwealth,” Youngkin said in the release. “I am deeply committed to growing our equine industry and as we work to revive the rich traditions of this sport in Virginia, these stakes races will accelerate our progress and ignite excitement for the fans.”

Youngkin's release also quoted CDI CEO Bill Carstanjen, who said: “Churchill Downs Incorporated remains steadfast in our goal to increase the relevance of the racing product at Colonial Downs and in Virginia. We appreciate the American Graded Stakes Committee for their approval of this move, which is an important step toward that goal in terms of wagering growth and entertainment value. We are also committed to increasing the flow of purse revenue from historical horse racing to allow for expansion of race dates in the future.”

The move to bring the races to Colonial had been in the making for weeks, but CDI had been awaiting approval from the American Graded Stakes Committee (AGSC), which had to decide whether or not the races could keep their graded status after being moved to a new track. For the AGSC to approve the move was not a formality as the committee's rules call for a race losing its graded status if it is moved from a track in one region of the country to another. Despite that rule, the committee approved the changes.

“The American Graded Stakes Committee has reviewed the unique circumstances around the move of these races and had a lengthy debate about the positives and negatives of allowing the races to maintain their current grades, even after moving regions,” read a press release from the AGSC. After careful consideration the committee voted to allow the GI Arlington Million S., GI Beverly D. S., and GII Secretariat S. to maintain their current grades for 2023 provided all conditions of the races, except region, are substantially similar to previous years after moving to Colonial Downs.”

The move to Colonial will allow the Arlington Million to go back to its traditional distance of a mile-an-a-quarter and the Beverly D. will once again be contested at a mile-and-three-sixteenths.

The post It’s Official: Arlington Million Moved To Colonial Downs appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights