Cross Country Pick 5 Features Stakes From Aqueduct, Oaklawn, Keeneland

The New York Racing Association, Inc. [NYRA] will host a Cross Country Pick 5 on Saturday, April 10, featuring racing action from Aqueduct Racetrack, Oaklawn Park in Hot Springs, Arkansas and Keeneland Race Course in Lexington, Kentucky.

Free Equibase past performances for the Cross Country Pick 5 sequence are now available for download at https://www.nyra.com/aqueduct/racing/cross-country-wagers.

The Big A will kick off the sequence with a one-mile allowance contest for 3-year-olds and up on the main track in Race 7 at 4:42 p.m. Eastern. An eight-horse field will see the Rudy Rodriguez-trained Yankee Division, who was third in the Alex M. Robb in December at the same track, take on challengers including Arham, a Todd Pletcher trainee making just his third career start after a debut win and a runner-up effort last out.

Keeneland will open the Cross Country Pick 5's stakes action with the $100,000 Giant's Causeway for fillies and mares 3-years-old and up going 5 ½ furlongs on the Haggin turf course in Race 8 at 4:57 p.m. Into Mystic, trained by Brendan Walsh, is the 2-1 morning-line favorite and boasts a record of 17-5-4-3 with purse earnings of $340,273.

Aqueduct will feature the first turf stakes of the year on the NYRA circuit when three-time graded stakes-winner Decorated Invader will take aim of the $100,000 Danger's Hour for 4-year-olds and up going one mile in Race 8 at 5:19 p.m. Decorated Invader, trained by Christophe Clement, enters his 4-year-old year after posting three victories in six starts as a sophomore, including back-to-back Grade 2 scores in the one-mile Pennine Ridge by 4 3/4 lengths in June at Belmont Park and following with a 1 1/4-length victory in the Hall of Fame in July at Saratoga Race Course.

Trainer Chad Brown will send out two in the Danger's Hour with Analyze It and the British-bred Delaware. Analyze It is also a three-time graded stakes-winner, including the Grade 3 Red Bank going one mile in September at Monmouth Park.

Action shifts back to Keeneland for the Grade 3, $200,000 Lexington for 3-year-olds competing at 1 1/16 miles in a qualifier for the Grade 1 Kentucky Derby with 20-8-4-2 points on the line to the top-four finishers. The Lexington, slated for Race 9 at 5:30 p.m., will see Proxy look to add to the 34 Derby points he has already accumulated after runner-up finishes in the Grade 3 Lecomte and the Grade 2 Risen Star before running fourth in last month's Grade 2 Louisiana Derby. Hall of Famer John Velazquez has the mount and will break from post position seven aboard the Michael Stidham trainee. Bezos, a maiden winner last out on March 26 at Santa Anita, will make his first stakes appearance for Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert.

Oaklawn will get in on the stakes action with an exciting conclusion, hosting the $400,000 Oaklawn Mile for 4-year-olds and up in Race 9 at 5:49 p.m. By My Standards, who earned more than $1 million as a 4-year-old in 2020, will make his first start as a 5-year-old when trainer Bret Calhoun sends the multiple Grade 2-winner out to face an accomplished field that includes fellow Grade 2-winner Rushie, who is also Grade 1-placed. Wells Bayou, who won the 2020 Grade 2 Louisiana Derby, will also be in the mix for reigning Eclipse Award-winning trainer Brad Cox.

The minimum bet for the multi-track, multi-race wager is 50 cents. Wagering on the Cross Country Pick 5 is also available on ADW platforms and at simulcast facilities across the country. Every week will feature a mandatory payout of the net pool. The Cross Country Pick 5 will continue each Saturday throughout the year. For more information, visit www.NYRABets.com.

Cross Country Pick 5 – Saturday, April 10:
Leg A: Aqueduct– Race 7 (4:42 p.m.)
Leg B: Keeneland – Race 8 Giant's Causeway (4:57 p.m.)
Leg C: Aqueduct – Race 8 Danger's Hour (5:19 p.m.)
Leg D: Keeneland – Race 9 G3 Lexington (5:30 p.m.)
Leg E: Oaklawn – Race 9 Oaklawn Mile (5:49 p.m.)

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Friday’s Stronach 5: Three Tracks, Two Turf Races, 50 Minutes

Races from Laurel Park, Gulfstream Park and Golden Gate Fields, along with an industry-low 12-percent takeout, will highlight Friday's Stronach 5.

The multi-track wager continues to show a strong return on investment. Last week's Stronach 5, with three of the five winners returning $7 or less, had 42 winning tickets with each worth $2,752.

A field of nine 3-year-olds and up kick off Friday's Stronach 5 at Laurel. The seven-furlong starter optional claimer has a 5-2 entry in Shanghai Superfly and Shane's Jewel trained by Jamie Ness. Even Thunder and Beyond the Victory are both turning back in distance while Walk Away Joe goes out first time for trainer Dale Capuano.

The first of two turf races from Gulfstream makes up the second leg of the Stronach 5. The mile allowance optional claiming event for fillies and mares has a field of seven Lashara the 2-1 favorite. The daughter of American Pharoah will make her second start off a six-month layoff for Mark Casse. Hotsy Totsy enters the race after winning here for trainer Christophe Clement Feb. 18 off a 13-month layoff. Joe Bravo will be aboard.

Back to Laurel for the third leg of the sequence and a waiver maiden claimer for 3-year-olds. Portal One (8-5) will try to break his maiden off three consecutive second-place finishes. Mosler Safe debuts for Michael Trombetta while Buzzhound, trainer by Capuano, steps up a bit off a third-place finish in his debut.

Gulfstream's ninth race, the fourth leg of the sequence, brings together nine 3-year-old fillies going 7 ½ furlongs over the turf in a wide-open starter optional claimer. Trainer Mike Maker will have a strong hand with Lullula and Italian Twin, who was claimed for $35,000 after breaking her maiden last out.

The Stronach 5 wraps up out west with Golden Gate's third race, a claiming event for fillies and mares at 5 ½ furlongs. Moon Rocket, 5-2, goes for her second consecutive victory over Real Keeper, the 2-1 morning line favorite.

Friday's races and sequence

  • Leg One –Laurel Park 8th Race: (9 entries, 7 furlongs) 4:45 ET, 1:45 PT
  • Leg Two – Gulfstream Park 8th Race: (7 entries, 1 mile turf) 4:50 ET, 1:50 PT
  • Leg Three –Laurel Park 9th Race: (9 entries, 6 furlongs) 5:16 ET, 2:16 PT
  • Leg Four –Gulfstream Park 9th Race: (10 entries, 7 ½ furlongs turf) 5:22 ET, 2:22 PT
  • Leg Five –Golden Gate Fields 3rd Race: (7 entries, 5 ½ furlongs) 5:27 ET, 2:27 PT

Fans can watch and wager on the action at 1/ST.COM/BET as well as stream all the action in English and Spanish at LaurelPark.com, SantaAnita.com, GulfstreamPark.com, and GoldenGateFields.com.

The Stronach 5 In the Money podcast, hosted by Jonathan Kinchen and Peter Thomas Fornatale, will be posted by 2 p.m. Thursday at InTheMoneyPodcast.com and will be available on iTunes and other major podcast distributors

The minimum wager on the multi-race, multi-track Stronach 5 is $1. If there are no tickets with five winners, the entire pool will be carried over to the next Friday.

If a change in racing surface is made after the wagering closes, each selection on any ticket will be considered a winning selection. If a betting interest is scratched, that selection will be substituted with the favorite in the win pool when wagering closes.

The Maryland Jockey Club serves as host of the Stronach 5.

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Australia: Four Group 1 Races Friday Night In The Championships At Randwick

Australia's equivalent of the Breeders' Cup commences this Friday night, as Day One of “The Championships” at Randwick features a quartet of rich Group One races. Sky Racing World's racing expert Jason Witham will be trackside at Randwick for live crosses to the TVG broadcast (First Post: 9:35pm ET / 6:35pm PT).  

Just as America's season-defining event takes place in the Fall, a couple of months before the season concludes, The Championships fall within Sydney's “Autumn Racing Carnival” a few months before the end of the Southern Hemisphere racing season. Like the Breeders' Cup, The Championships is a two-day event, except the two days are staged a week apart. More than $21 million in purses are up for grabs across the next two Friday nights, and each day of The Championships features an eagerly awaited rematch. Next week's Queen Elizabeth Stakes will be the culmination of a pulsating rivalry between Australian mare Verry Elleegant and English stayer Addeybb. In the meantime, two world-class sprinters will knock heads again this Friday night in the G1 TJ Smith Stakes (Race 8).

Nature Strip, Australia's reigning Horse of the Year, is 5-2 favorite to repeat in the $2.5 million equivalent of the Breeders' Cup Sprint. However, he will need to overturn a narrow loss five weeks ago to the rejuvenated Eduardo (7-2). The pair knuckled out a thrilling finish in track record time for five furlongs at Randwick (watch replay), and the stage is set for Friday's rematch at six furlongs. Eduardo is a lightly raced 7-year-old who had shown flashes of promise at Group level. In the 12 months since transferring to Joe Pride, a trainer who has worked wonders with older “tried” horses, Eduardo has blossomed to the point that Pride believes “he's the best sprinter in Australia and might be the best sprinter in the world.” While Nature Strip has been trained up to the TJ Smith by Chris Waller, Eduardo scored a runaway win in a 5-1/2 furlong G1 race two weeks ago.

Nature Strip's rider, James McDonald, sits on the cusp of becoming the youngest jockey to reach 50 Group One wins and could achieve the feat in the first feature race of The Championships. The 29-year-old New Zealander has the mount on Godolphin colt Anamoe, 6-5 favorite for the Sires Produce (Race 6). The seven-furlong distance will be ideal for the son of Street Boss, whose runner-up performance in the Golden Slipper was exceptional from a horror post position draw. The $1 million Sires Produce provides an enticing blend of Golden Slipper participants and fresh faces, with potential to excel over increasing distances.

Increased distance is also the theme for 3-year-olds contesting the $2 million Australian Derby (Race 7). This test of stamina at 1-1/2 miles has two traditional prep races, each at 1-1/4 miles. Last week's G2 Tulloch Stakes has produced the past four Derby winners, but its trifecta horses (Yaletown, Prompt Prodigy and Young Werther) are all double-digit odds. The G1 Rosehill Guineas is perceived to be the stronger prep this year, providing three of the top four contenders in Derby wagering. Montefilia (5-2 favorite) will strive to become only the 10th filly to capture the Australian Derby, and already boasts a Group One victory against colts – one of her two G1 successes at Randwick early this season. Montefilia's 3rd-place finish in the Rosehill Guineas was full of merit, considering it was just her second run this campaign and the race had been delayed a week. Guineas runner-up Skylab (4-1) is yet another strong mount for James McDonald, while Lion's Roar (8-1) stays under notice after a checkered passage in the same race. 

A notable absentee from the Australian Derby is Rosehill Guineas winner Mo'unga. Fresh off celebrating her first Group One success, trainer Annabel Neasham has decided to bring her star colt back in distance to the mile of the $3 million Doncaster Handicap (Race 9). However, the 3-year-old's chances were dealt a blow when drawing post position 19 in the capacity field of 20. Consequently, Mo'unga's odds have drifted to 7-1 but 3-year-olds have a good record in the Doncaster under its handicap conditions. Mo'unga will carry 14 pounds less than co-highweight and favorite Mugatoo (7-2). Just as the “50 Group One” milestone is imminent for James McDonald, Mugatoo's jockey Hugh Bowman is two short of becoming the third Australian rider to amass 100 Group One wins. Bowman, who has the great Winx to thank for significantly bolstering his total, has engagements in each feature race this Friday. Apart from the Doncaster favorite, he bears watching on 4-1 shot Bivouac in the TJ Smith Stakes and 7-1 chance Tiger of Malay in the Sires Produce.

The Randwick card will be broadcast live on TVG this Friday night (First Post: 9:35pm ET / 6:35pm PT) alongside cards from Doomben, Newcastle and Gold Coast. All races will be live-streamed in HD on the new Sky Racing World Appskyracingworld.com and major ADW platforms such as TVG, TwinSpiresXpressbet, NYRABets, WatchandWagerHPIbet, and AmWager. Wagering is also available via these ADW platforms. Fans can get free access to live-streaming, past performances and expert picks on all races at skyracingworld.com. 

A native of Brisbane, Australia, Michael Wrona has called races in six countries. Michael's vast U.S. experience includes; race calling at Los Alamitos, Hollywood Park, Arlington and Santa Anita, calling the 2000 Preakness on a national radio network and the 2016 Breeders' Cup on the International simulcast network. Michael also performed a race call voiceover for a Seinfeld episode called The Subway.

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Wagering Insecurity: Thoroughbred Idea Foundation To Examine Current State Of Oversight

The Thoroughbred Idea Foundation (TIF) will launch “Wagering Insecurity,” a multi-part series which will examine the current state of oversight of North American Thoroughbred racing and wagering, beginning Tuesday, April 13.

In the aftermath of the infamous “Fix Six” at the 2002 Breeders' Cup, the American racing industry pledged millions of dollars to improve the monitoring of pari-mutuel betting and create a central office to oversee wagering security. While plenty was spent, the oversight never materialized. Vulnerabilities still exist, late odds changes impact many races and transparency is nowhere to be found.

TIF believes improved measures of integrity will boost customer confidence, which will lead to increased participation and put racing on a path to a more sustainable future, particularly in light of the rapid expansion of legal sports betting across the continent.

Customer confidence is crucial to any business, especially gambling, but North America's racing industry has done little to instill it over the last two decades.
“Automated bingo card devices in church basements have more independent monitoring than the tote systems,” said Kevin Mullally, Vice President of Government Relations and General Counsel for Gaming Laboratories International.

Track operators seem indifferent. As one 25-year U.S. state racing regulator told TIF for this series:

“Most tracks, confronted with a wagering integrity issue, would either bury the information or bury their heads in the sand and it would never see the light of day. That's not every track across America, but the majority would not want to make public any information that would question the integrity of wagering on their product.”

In 2005, when speaking of the racing industry's post “Fix Six” efforts to upgrade wagering oversight which eventually failed, then Del Mar Thoroughbred Club President Craig Fravel acknowledged the track operators might fall short of the mark.

“We [track operators] are a little suspect because we are maybe overly confident at times. I think to allow customers to have sufficient levels of confidence in us, we have to not only demonstrate we are capable of reviewing things, but that there is a sufficiently independent and authoritative organization out there than can be the ultimate arbiter of those kind of decisions.”

Such a group still does not exist.

THE TRPB

The Thoroughbred Racing Protective Bureau (TRPB) is North American racing's only provider of any wagering oversight, but the group has been defunded over years and is not independent. It is a wholly-owned subsidiary of a consortium of North American racetracks.

The TRPB provides member tracks a platform to monitor wagering on their own races and assist them when needed. The tracks essentially monitor themselves.

Given the consolidation which has taken place in horse racing over the last 20 years, tracks control most of the levers of the greater business. They own most of the online betting platforms which process the majority of bets on North American racing, known as ADWs. They own two of the three main tote companies which handle most betting activity. One conglomerate even owns at least part of a major off-shore rebate shop whose few customers account for an enormous amount of total handle.

Tracks fund the TRPB, which was once called horse racing's own “little FBI,” but has seen its policing functions largely reduced. Horse racing may have been once described as “the best policed sport of all,” but that has changed.

“It was an erosion, over time,” Paul Berube told TIF of the TRPB which he ran for nearly two decades after working as an investigator with the group for another two decades before that.

“Today, there is no national unity, but in the heyday of the TRPB, that was our strength.”

Despite several attempts from TIF, the TRPB's Executive Vice President Curtis Linnell declined the opportunity to answer questions for this series.

SUSPICIOUS BETTING

While the TRPB has taken on an almost invisible profile to most bettors, there is an unexpected group which has started paying more attention to North American racing,

Unbeknownst to most American horseplayers, a large bookmaking market has emerged in Europe offering fixed odds bets on North American racing. Total handle is believed to exceed $1 billion annually. Contracts enabling these relationships are often facilitated by XB-Net, a subsidiary of 1/ST, formerly the Stronach Group.

Bookmakers have their own monitoring group which examines wagering on all sports, investigates suspicious wagers and raises alerts to regulatory authorities with whom they have information-sharing arrangements. For the first time ever, they identified suspicious wagering on U.S. races in the fourth quarter of 2020.

According to Matt Fowler, Director of Integrity at the International Betting Integrity Association (IBIA), the recent alerts on U.S. races go “well beyond just an unusual betting pattern or unexpected price movements.”

European fixed odds betting operators are identifying activity involving U.S. racing that should be concerning to all U.S. racing stakeholders. Where is the American oversight on American races?

At present, there is no reporting relationship between European bookmakers and any American counterparts, the TRPB, North American track operators or regulators. For now, the findings will inform bookmaking decisions but not the patrolling of American races, where pari-mutuel handle vastly exceeds bookmakers.

A world-wide market requires world-wide supervision. The TRPB is the closest thing North American racing has to self-regulation, which is fine…until it isn't.

What we have now is insufficient.

Racing on the continent in the 2020s is run with an integrity infrastructure better suited to the 1970s and a business model from the early 1990s. The oversight measures for the races themselves and their wagering systems have degraded over time. Racing's integrity infrastructure is falling farther behind that of the rest of the developed racing world, where more robust monitoring of all markets is far greater, transparent oversight is commonplace and customers are far better protected. Examples of these modern steps are plentiful throughout the series.

OPPORTUNITY

Improvements to racing's integrity infrastructure will improve customer confidence, increase participation in the sport and lead to a more sustainable future.

“Wagering Insecurity” provides several recommendations for North American racing to consider.

Notably, the new Horseracing Integrity & Safety Authority (HISA) must include elements of bet monitoring to its practices once launched.

Global sports and racing integrity expert Jack Anderson of the University of Melbourne, who was the keynote speaker at the University of Arizona's Global Symposium on Racing in 2018, highlights several key points throughout “Wagering Insecurity” which support this conclusion.

“Effective doping control is of course a vital element of the integrity objectives of a sport such as racing but it should not be the sole integrity concern and should not be seen in isolation. Doping in a sport such as racing is often intertwined with gambling interests,” Anderson said.

“The prevalence of doping in a racing jurisdiction may also be reflective of weaknesses in that racing organization's race day operations such as:

– stewarding and standards of veterinarian oversight,

– lack of capacity in intelligence gathering on and knowledge of industry participants,

– vulnerabilities in the licensing and registration of industry participants,

– and the ability of the racing organization or jurisdiction to punish misconduct by industry participants.”

The role of HISA can and should go farther than its more commonly understood functions which have dominated early dialogue around it – namely its racetrack safety and anti-doping and medication control programs.

The legislation which established HISA empowers much more, declaring that HISA shall “exercise independent and exclusive national authority over the safety, welfare and integrity of covered horses, covered persons, and covered horseraces.” The definition of covered horseraces includes those with interstate wagering and ADW account betting.

TIF makes several other recommendations in the series related to adopting modern, transparent best practices, many of which are in place in other racing jurisdictions and sports. Significant upgrades are possible and, fortunately, the proverbial wheel does not require reinvention.

The opportunity for significant reform is real, lifting the standards of North American racing like never previously considered and importantly, rebuilding confidence in racing's voluntary participants – horseplayers and horse owners.

“TIF's advocacy has focused on improving the business for horseplayers and horse owners as their participation in racing fuels everything,” said Craig Bernick, President and Chief Executive Officer of Glen Hill Farm and founder of TIF. “We need confidence in both groups to sustain the industry, and as the various installments of the series will reveal, it is frightening just how far behind we are in protecting customers.

“Industry consolidation of track operators, technology companies and other service providers has not improved the sport,” Bernick added. “As we move forward over the next two decades, racing needs to compete for customers. Meaningful integrity controls and better pricing are needed to meet the expectations of modern bettors. Right now, we are falling woefully short and present an increasingly uncompetitive wagering offering.”

TIF's Board of Directors established the Wagering & Integrity Issues Steering Committee in July 2020, which was instrumental in the development of this series.

Patrick Cummings, TIF's Executive Director, said: “We are incredibly appreciative of the dozens of current and former racing and gaming industry executives as well as regulators from North America and abroad who provided so much insight, both on the record and for background in this series.”

“This project pulled together many pieces that have not been connected previously, and I believe readers will walk away with a much greater understanding of what has happened for the last 20 years, the extent of the threats facing the business and the tremendous opportunity to bring about changes through HISA. We look forward to sharing the various installments in the coming weeks.”

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