Posts Tagged ‘craig donnelly’

MONDAY MORNING QUARTERBACK: CHURCHILL VS. HORSEMEN

Monday, September 15th, 2008
Ray Paulick

What in the world is going on inside the Churchill Downs Inc. executive offices? It’s slashed purses at Calder Race Course in South Florida by 17% and whacked almost $1 million from the fall stakes program at its home track in Louisville, Ky. Key management changes have been made at Calder and Fair Grounds in New Orleans, La., and press releases seem to be blaming horsemen for most of the problems.

Investors haven’t been wild about Churchill Downs stock (CHDN), which closed at $46.45 Friday and hasn’t seen $50 a share since May 1. It’s 52-week high, $57.55, was achieved last December.

CEO Bob Evans and the TrackNet Media Group that was formed with Magna Entertainment to broker simulcast deals has refused to talk seriously with the Thoroughbred Horsemen’s Group, which is negotiating account wagering contracts with racetracks on behalf of local horsemen’s groups such as the Kentucky or Florida Horsemen’s Benevolent and Protective Associations. In fact, Churchill has filed anti-trust lawsuits against the organizations. Evans may be hoping that the longer he puts off dealing with the THG, the less resolve the horsemen will have to stick together in attempting to forge a better contract on account wagering.

That strategy doesn’t appear to be working. To the contrary, it looks more like Churchill Downs’ partner in TrackNet Media is bailing. Frank Stronach, the chairman and acting CEO of Magna Entertainment, sent out a press release a couple of weeks ago saying that Magna recognizes the THG as a beneficial national organization and is negotiating with THG.

For too long, horsemen have been losing ground and losing revenue as the percentage of dollars wagered that goes to purses has declined. The growth of simulcasting to non-pari-mutuel entities such as off-shore rebaters and account wagering companies has been at the expense of horsemen. It’s important horsemen understand why the status quo isn’t good enough and why they need to change the simulcast model, something the THG is trying to do.

SPEAKING OF WAGERING, hats off to Bloodhorse editor Dan Liebman for calling out the Jockey Club after it capitulated to Evans and to Churchill Downs’ biggest shareholder, Dick Duchossois, and decided to no longer provide the trade magazine with meet ending pari-mutuel handle figures. Churchill tracks under Evans and Duchossois have said that handle is no longer a meaningful statistic. Oh, really?

The decision by the Jockey Club to no longer provide this key economic indicator was disgraceful, but I wouldn’t hold out any hope the poobahs there will change their mind.

 

NO ONE PREDICTED KEENELAND’S SEPTEMBER YEARLING SALE WOULD BE UP, so it’s not that surprising to see a 13% drop in the gross receipts through the first six sessions of the 15-day marathon. That 13% equates to a $41-million decline in revenue that will not go into the pockets of breeders this year, and that red number only figures to increase as the sale reaches the second half.  The drop in revenue will ripple throughout all kinds of Thoroughbred-related businesses.

The good news from the first four days (Books 1 and 2) was that the median held up fairly well, declining only 10% from $200,000 to $180,000. The home run horses, those selling for a million dollars and up, didn’t materialize as often as they have in recent years, but the middle market was relatively steady. “Most of us survive off the middle,” one breeder told the Paulick Report. “Getting one of the big horses is like hitting the lottery, but it’s not something you really plan on.”

Smart gamblers don’t play the lottery, and intelligent breeders know there are far more people playing in the middle market than at the top. As long as the middle is healthy, so are the breeders. There is just a lot less icing on the cake this year.

Others who are selling throughout the September sale breathed a sigh of relief if their best horses sold well during the first two books out of fear that the bottom of the market may collapse once the sale reaches books five and beyond.

WHO HAS BOUGHT THE MOST HORSES SO FAR IN THE MONTH OF SEPTEMBER? It wasn’t John Ferguson, or Shadwell Estate or the newly formed Legends Racing.  Hint: It wasn’t at the Keeneland September yearling sale.

September’s busiest buyer so far (though not biggest spender) is a fellow named Mike Gill, the 2005 Eclipse Award-winning owner who has been on a claiming binge this month at Philadelphia Park. By our count Gill has claimed at least 30 horses in September at Philadelphia Park alone after similar buying sprees in Maryland and Massachusetts earlier in the year.

You remember Gill, don’t you? He’s the fellow who built a huge claiming operation earlier this decade, bought a training center, won a bunch of claiming races and then publicly complained when he led the nation in wins and earnings in 2003 and 2004 but didn’t get voted an Eclipse Award as outstanding owner.

The whining did him some good. When balloting was conducted for the 2005 racing season, Gill was once again the owner with the most wins and purse money won. This time, in what may be the worst decision in the history of the Eclipse Awards, voters representing the National Turf Writers Association, National Thoroughbred Racing Association and Daily Racing Form gave Gill the award as “outstanding owner.”

Why do I say that it was the worst Eclipse Award decision in history? I’ve got nothing against claiming operations and recognize it is the bread and butter portion of nearly every racing program in the country. However, in my mind, the Eclipse Awards are about excellence, whether it’s horses or people. Sheer numbers, especially at the claiming level, should not be misconstrued as excellence. In the category of outstanding owner, breeder, trainer and jockey, the leading candidates should be judged by how they performed at the top level of the sport, not the bottom level.

Gill, who was recently in the news because of some regulatory problems at his mortgage company, said he was getting out of the horse industry in 2006 when he accepted his Eclipse Award as outstanding owner. Many people had two words for him: good riddance.

“I’m going to miss racing, and I think racing is going to miss me, too,” Gill told Bloodhorse magazine.

Actually, Mike, we didn’t.

THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER WON’T BE COVERING GILL’S EXPLOITS since it accepted the early retirement of Turf writer Craig Donnelly only a month after the paper, the nation’s eighth largest, dramatically reduced the space allotted racing in its sports section. At that time, Inquirer editors told the Paulick Report it was keeping Donnelly but obviously they had a change of heart.

Newspapers may be an endangered species in the near future. Turf writers at daily newspapers already are.

Copyright © 2008, The Paulick Report

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PHILLY PAPER CUTS RACING COVERAGE

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

By Ray Paulick

Another major market newspaper has cut back on its horse racing coverage in the face of challenging business conditions for the print industry.
The Philadelphia Inquirier, the eighth-largest daily paper in the U.S. with circulation of 700,000, has eliminated daily coverage (entries, results, and selections) of Thoroughbred racing at nearby Delaware Park and harness racing at Harrah’s Chester. The paper will continue to print entries, selections and results for Philadelphia Park.
 In addition, the Inquirer’s Turf writer Craig Donnelly will continue to cover racing as his full-time beat, although it remains to be seen if his articles will appear in print as often as in the past or be limited to the www.philly.com Web site.

Last month, two full-time racing writers, Larry Stewart and Bob Mieszerski, were among those who lost t heir jobs when the financially troubled Los Angeles Times (the country’s fourth-largest paper) reduced its payroll by a significant number.

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HERE’S TO YOU, MRS. ROBINSON

Thursday, July 24th, 2008

Everyone should have a mother like Jeremy Rose’s mom.

Cynthia Robinson is the sometimes meddling mother of the 29-year-old rider who has been in the news for whipping a horse in the face at Delaware Park and receiving a six-month suspension that was reduced this week by the Delaware Thoroughbred Racing Commission to three months.

Robinson apparently sought out reporters to give "her" version of the events that transpired when Rose whipped Appeal to the City in the left eye near the finish of the third race June 23 at Delaware Park. The 5-year-old mare was sent to the University of Pennsylvania’s New Bolton Center in Pennsylvania for treatment following the injury. She spent a week at the equine hospital, though according to published reports, her trainer, Howard Wolfendale, said she now is in good condition.

Jack Ireland, writing in the News Journal of Delaware, said Robinson suspects someone at the racetrack leaked news of the whipping incident to the media intentionally. "He ends up getting turned in by the SPCA, and I feel abused at times by the media over this," Robinson said. "He has lost $70,000 in earnings the past month and is being portrayed as an animal abuser. This is something now my son will have to live with for the rest of his life." 

Excuse me…you feel abused? 

To quote Benjamin Braddock from The Graduate: "Mrs. Robinson, if you don’t mind my saying so, this conversation is getting a little strange."

She wasn’t done. She also got the ear of the Philadelphia Inquirer’s Craig Donnelly, telling him: "We watched a son we are proud of [condemned] through the media and muddied and turned into the SPCA. The price he has paid is greater than the six months’ suspension. He has been portrayed as an animal abuser."

Robinson then told Donnelly a story of how Rose helped bring a retired gelding to the family farm and that he refused to have the horse euthanized even though he was blind.

Again, quoting Benjamin from The Graduate: "For god’s sake, Mrs. Robinson. Here we are. You got me into your house. You give me a drink. You… put on music. Now you start opening up your personal life to me…"

Aside from this unfortunate whipping incident (which Rose claims was an accident, but for which he will attend anger management classes), the jockey is best known as the rider of 2005 Preakness and Belmont winner Afleet Alex. Maybe it’s only right that Cynthia Robinson was given so much credit for her son’s achievements that year in an article that appeared on ESPN.com under the headline: "Preakness Winner Rose Has Mom to Thank." The story detailed her pushing him along on his career path as a jockey.

She also served as Jeremy’s unofficial publicist during his Triple Crown whirl. When I was editor of Bloodhorse magazine in 2005, I received a telephone call from a woman following the Belmont Stakes. The caller didn’t want to give me her name, but said she was a subscriber who was upset the magazine hadn’t profiled Afleet Alex’s winning jockey as it had done three weeks earlier after Afleet Alex won the Preakness.

I explained that when the same horse wins back-to-back Triple Crown races, the Bloodhorse mixed up the editorial package and tried to avoid repeating the same stories from the previous race. That didn’t slow the woman down. She then complained that the magazine had a profile on J.J. Graci, a former trainer and then radio host who was acting as a spokesman and publicist for the Afleet Alex team. Finally, the caller went on to tell me wonderful things about Jeremy Rose and that the magazine’s readers deserved to know them.

"Wow," I recall saying to her. "How do you know so much about Jeremy? You sound like his mother or something."

There was a long pause, followed by, "Well…I am his mother." 

It’s good to see Jeremy’s mom hasn’t changed much these last few years. Here’s to you, Mrs. Robinson!

By Ray Paulick

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