VIDEO: Where Are The Horses Of The 2014 Kentucky Derby Today?

The 2014 Kentucky Derby is remembered as the launching point for California Chrome's near-miss Triple Crown bid, but the horses that finished behind him have made their mark around the world.

Bloodstock editor Joe Nevills takes a look at where every member of the 19-horse field is today, nine years after the race. Some have gone on to prominent stud careers, some have ended up standing at stud overseas, some have gone on to succeed in fields outside of the racing and breeding industry, while others left us too soon.

This video is a compilation of a “Where Are They Now” series from the Paulick Report's TikTok account. We'll be doing special shortform video content on TikTok, with short visual features, opinions, and anything else that we can shoot with our phones that might be fun for racing fans to watch.

To follow and subscribe to the Paulick Report TikTok account, click here.

Find out where the horses of the 2014 Kentucky Derby are in the video below:

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The Friday Show Presented By Woodbine: Putting Aftercare Front And Center

“Aftercare is not an afterthought.”

That's the mantra that drives CARMA – the California Retirement Management Account – to fulfill its mission to help fund the retirement of California-raced Thoroughbreds and educate the public and racing community about aftercare.

Lucinda Lovitt, executive director of CARMA, joins Ray Paulick and editor-in-chief Natalie Voss on this week's Friday Show to talk about this critical element of the Thoroughbred industry that, only a few decades ago, was discussed in hushed tones among industry insiders.

“The general public has taken a good look at our industry and one thing they expect,” Lovitt said, “ is that these horses have something to do when their racing careers are over. “

CARMA, along with other regional organizations and the national Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance, has helped bring about a “formalization” of the retirement process over the last 15 years, Lovitt said.

'It's important for owners to remember,” Lovitt said, “that – now especially – a retirement plan needs to be part of an owner's business plan from the beginning.”

Watch this week's episode of The Friday Show below:

 

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The Friday Show Presented By Woodbine: Maggi Moss On New Challenges In The Claiming Game

Claiming races are often called the meat and potatoes of horse racing, but the game has evolved in recent years from what many considered high-stakes poker to a more regulated and less risky endeavor for horse owners. Greater pre-race veterinary scrutiny, tighter medication restrictions, and voided claim rules have improved health and welfare conditions for horses and made claiming more competitive for owners.

Maggi Moss has won more than a dozen graded stakes since she entered racehorse ownership in 2000, but the primary focus of her stable over the years has been claiming races. Based in Iowa, Moss has won 2,432 races overall, captured leading owners titles at several tracks, led the nation in wins in 2006, and has been top 10 nationally by wins on 18 occasions. And she's just as well known for her commitment to aftercare as she is for winner's circle visits.

Moss joins Ray Paulick and bloodstock editor Joe Nevills in this week's Friday Show to talk about the claiming game, some of its challenges, and how it has changed over the years.

One current challenge in Kentucky, where Moss has run many horses, is the absence of regulatory “claiming jail” rules designed to prevent out-of-state trainers and owners from depleting a track's horse population by claiming horses and sending them to their home track. Churchill Downs recently imposed house rules to make up for the absence of claiming jail regulations that are in effect in most other racing states. Moss even goes so far as to suggest the time has come to look for alternatives to claiming races.

Watch this week's episode of The Friday Show below:

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The Friday Show Presented By Woodbine: Keeping Hope Alive For Racing In Arizona

The announcement earlier this week from the ownership of Turf Paradise that the 67-year-old Phoenix, Ariz., racetrack would no longer conduct live racing left employees, horsepeople, and fans reeling. With no live racing, the off-track betting facilities operated by Turf Paradise owner Jerry Simms would also be forced to close, shutting down key revenue streams that would produce purse money for racing at other tracks.

A deal to sell the track fell through when efforts stalled to persuade state lawmakers, including Gov. Katie Hobbs, to approve Historical Horse Racing machines.

Stacy Campo, a trainer whose family has been breeding and racing horses in Arizona for decades, joins Ray Paulick and bloodstock editor Joe Nevills on this week's Friday Show to discuss the Turf Paradise closure and the prospects for the continuation of live racing at Arizona Downs in the Prescott Valley and other smaller tracks in the Grand Canyon State.

“The writing was on the wall just by the way the place looks and how it's just kind of fallen apart around us,” Campo said of Turf Paradise. Nevertheless, she added, “It was just a shock. People are crying. People have been fired. … It's just devastating.”

Campo called Arizona Downs in the Prescott Valley, about 90 minutes north of Phoenix, a “viable” alternative, but that track is also for sale with no certainty about its future. She remains hopeful the industry can survive.

Watch this week's episode of The Friday Show below:

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