Posts Tagged ‘pimlico’

PAULICK REPORT FORUM brought to you by Breeders’ Cup: WHAT NEXT FOR MARYLAND?

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

By Ray Paulick
If anyone can explain the confusing situation in Maryland regarding slot machine revenue to horsemen and the future ownership of the Maryland Jockey Club racetracks—Pimlico and Laurel Park, owned by Frank Stronach’s bankrupt Magna Entertainment Corporation—I figure it’s Richard J. Hoffberger. A longtime owner/breeder and operator of the equine specialist Hoffberger Insurance Group, Hoffberger has been president of the Maryland Thoroughbred Horsemen’s Association since the group’s formation in 1987.

The Paulick Report caught up with Hoffberger on the road this week somewhere between Baltimore and Philadelphia Park to get an update on the challenging circumstances the Maryland racing and breeding industry is facing, with increasing competition from slots-rich states all around: Delaware, Pennsylvania and West Virginia.

What is the general feeling of Maryland horsemen right now?
Certainly there is a feeling of why didn’t we do this a long time ago? Fifteen years ago I stood at a podium talking to the press and introducing the concept of slots at Maryland racetracks. We said we would send $100 million to $150 million in tax revenue to the state each year and help save the Maryland horse industry. Using the conservative figure of $100 million a year, that was $1.6 billion ago. The state needs the money and the horse industry is in dire straits.

It’s typical political wrangling and it’s happening in too many states on too many issues. I don’t think anybody in today’s world would argue health care doesn’t need reform, but how do you do it? Nobody has really argued that slots at the racetracks is a bad idea, but how to you do it? It’s not just us: Kentucky, New York and some other states are going through the same thing. There is definitely a feeling of frustration.

KEEP

Does the Maryland THA have a preference among the six groups eligible to bid on the Maryland Jockey Club tracks in the bankruptcy auction that’s been delayed several times and is now scheduled for March 25?
We hope a scenario exists where there can be slots at Laurel. We’ve always wanted slots at the racetrack. Our philosophy and desires are unchanged. We want somebody who wants to run races. We are in the racing business and we want somebody who wants to run races. We never contemplated slots would not be at the racetrack (the Arundel County Council approved a plan putting slots at the Arundel Mills Mall and not at nearby Laurel Park). If slots are at the track, they would be required to run 220 days of live racing a year, or less with agreement of the horsemen. But if there are no slots at the track, that provision doesn’t apply.

What is happening with slot machines throughout the state, and in particular Anne Arundel County, where there’s a petition drive to overturn the council decision?
The way it works in Maryland, slots revenue to the horse industry is not location specific. Two locations, in Cecil County and Ocean Downs, will probably be the first of the five specific locations approved for slots to open. The split going to purses is the same irrespective of location. The problem is if the racetrack operator can’t make any money, we could have the scenario of cash available for purses but not have any place to run. That’s the big fear.

Theoretically, higher purses attract better horses and create better wagering opportunities, driving up handle. Could that apply in Maryland if the tracks don’t get slots?
Throughout the U.S. in the last 20 years we haven’t found a scenario where tracks can compete favorably with slot machines. The biggest example is what happened in Illinois when (Richard) Duchossois spent all that money to rebuild Arlington Park and is struggling because of the riverboat competition and actually closed down for a while.

So what’s up with the petition drive to overturn the county commission’s zoning approval for slots at the Arundel Mills Mall?
The law in Anne Arundel County not specific to slots says if the zoning board, the county commission, passes a zoning law, then the citizens have the right to overturn the zoning approval with a petition signed by 19,500 people within 40 days of the zoning regulation being signed into law. It then it goes to a public referendum. Approval of slot machines is predicated on zoning approval. When Arundel Mills got zoning approval, there was a move afoot to overturn the ruling. Enough signatures appear to have been gathered; approximately 40,000 have been submitted though not yet approved. Any referendum would be in November.

If the zoning decision is reversed in Anne Arundel County, the whole bid process starts again, and somebody else has to apply for zoning. It’s back to square one.

What impact does the Anne Arundel situation have on the value of the Maryland Jockey Club tracks and the potential auction?
Obviously if the potential for slots existed, assuming that Arundel Mills gets knocked out, then the possibility exists for them to go back to Laurel. You don’t have to be an economist to see the value of the property goes up. It’s a gamble. But every business is a gamble.

When horsemen do get benefits from slots revenue, how much of a difference could it make to purses?
Assuming the Baltimore City and Anne Arundel County locations are up, we could be looking, by the time the machines are mature, at $70 million to purses each year. That’s the maximum. We could be looking at $100 million a year in total purses in Maryland.

What do you think is going to happen to Pimlico and the Preakness?
I think they’ll stay. Pimlico and the Preakness is a money maker. If you won Pimlico in a poker game this afternoon, you’d be the happiest guy in the horse business.

Have the delays and uncertainty damaged Maryland’s breeding industry beyond repair, or can it bounce back?
Look at what happened in Pennsylvania. That came on pretty quick. Can we bounce back? Yeah. Have horse will travel. We tell politicians it’s very easy to put horses on a van. We talk about the Baltimore Colts packing up everything in a moving van and leaving in the middle of the night. The difference is, in the horse industry, you can ship five mares a day, and in 100 days you’ve lost 500 mares. Your breeding industry is dead.

The key in Maryland, everybody in the horse industry wants to see what happens with the auction of the tracks. Is it going to get delayed again? Magna, in bankruptcy, has been running races, which is good. We’ll see who buys the tracks. There’s six groups putting in proposals, which is kind of like nominating for a stakes. Even if you won the lottery this afternoon you couldn’t become a bidder. Penn Gaming is a potential bidder. Who knows what they want to do. Cordish (which won the Arundel Mills Mall zoning approval for slots) is a bidder, and MID (Stronach’s MI Developments, which struck a deal in bankruptcy court to keep Santa Anita Park, Gulfstream Park, and Golden Gate Fields) is in there. It’s anybody’s guess, and I don’t even think the people bidding know how it’s going to end up. All those players say they are in it to get the job done.

Copyright © 2010, The Paulick Report

Savvy businesses recognize value. Advertise in the Paulick Report.



Sign up for our Email Flashes to get the latest news, analysis and commentary from Ray Paulick

DAMON THAYER: DRUNK WITH POWER?

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

By Ray Paulick
I’ve known Damon Thayer going on 20 years, and I don’t think he’s a bad person. But I’ve seen how good people can be intoxicated with power, and am convinced that is what is going on with the former racing industry executive who is now a Kentucky state senator from Scott County representing the 17th district.

A few weeks ago I reported on an interview Thayer did on the Horse Racing Radio Network (click here for the article), in which he complained that no one from the Thoroughbred industry was contacting him about his proposed constitutional amendment calling for a statewide referendum and local option vote to permit slot machines in Kentucky counties where racetracks are located (not necessarily at tracks, but in counties where tracks are currently located).

Woe is him.

Perhaps the reason no one is interested in calling the senator from Scott is the fact his proposed amendment is outrageous because it would ultimately lead to out-of-state casino companies and developers putting Kentucky racetracks out of business. That’s exactly what is happening in the state of Maryland, where slot machines were approved for a location not at Pimlico or Laurel but at a shopping mall owned and operated by the Cordish Company. Yes, that’s the same Cordish Company that developed Fourth Street Live in Louisville.

If Thayer’s folly is somehow approved as written (very much a longshot at best), Cordish will be salivating over the prospect of getting the slots license in Jefferson County, Kentucky, where Churchill Downs is located. Another well-funded casino company would surely end up with the license in Northern Kentucky. So we’d have Turfway Park certainly out of business as a racetrack, and Churchill Downs severely impaired financially.

But, Thayer says with almost ghoulish delight, we’ll have all that slots money going into purses, based on how his amendment is written. Yes, Damon, just like in Maryland, where there will be money for purses, but no tracks able to stay open to run the races where the purses will be offered.

Sources tell the Paulick Report that employees of the Maryland Jockey Club are being told Laurel is going to be bought by a developer (Cordish?), and closed for live racing. Someone will operate Pimlico for 30 days during the Preakness meeting in the spring, at least as long as the walls of the rickety old racetrack grandstand don’t collapse. And that, along with a short meeting at the state fair in Timonium will be it for live racing.

If true, it will be a devastating and final blow for the once-proud Maryland breeding industry, where the mighty Northern Dancer once stood as the world’s most important stallion. Allowing Thayer’s folly to proceed will cause similar destruction to Kentucky’s signature industry.

So Thayer, in a snit because no one was calling him to discuss his ludicrous proposal, decided to drop another bomb when a reporter from the Lexington Herald-Leader called him to inquire about the horse industry’s exemption on sales tax for certain horses sold at auction (the exemption, which does not apply to all horses sold, is not as comprehensive as that given to the horse industry in other states).

When asked whether the exemptions should be discontinued, Thayer said it is “certainly cause for serious debate.”

It was his way of flipping the almighty bird to a now struggling industry that is not only vital to the economic future of this state, but one that has provided him and his family a very good living for many years.

Speaking of the almighty, it’s amazing to me that a Senate committee chaired by Thayer (the State and Local Government Committee) wasted taxpayers’ time and money on Wednesday, approving along a straight party-line vote (Thayer’s Republican colleagues won the day over Democrats 7-5) something called the 21st Century Bill of Rights. Among other things, this new and improved bill of rights (as if our Founding Fathers weren’t very wise) would prohibit a ban on the Ten Commandments being posted in public buildings. If you get a chance, check out this troubling and funny video clip of a Georgia Congressman, Lynn Westmoreland, who sponsored a bill requiring the Ten Commandments to be posted in public buildings. (Click here to view.) Seems the Congressman has a hard time knowing exactly what those Commandments are…which makes me wonder how Sen. Thayer and his colleagues would do on a pop quiz.

But I digress.

Thayer is essentially drunk with power, sitting on his senatorial throne while waiting for individuals in the horse industry to come to him, hat in hand, begging for some scraps. If he were a true leader, he would have been out amongst the people, meeting with horse farmers, trainers and racetrack owners who are suffering now, watching stallions, mares and racehorses being tugged away from Kentucky by states with more favorable economics and more enlightened legislators. It is the same kind of arrogance and insular thinking that we’ve witnessed most recently in the White House, where a president who was elected under the mantra of change failed to understand how deep the suffering and unhappiness is among the very people who voted for him, leading to an embarrassing defeat for the Democratic Party Tuesday in Massachusets, the most liberal state in the union.

I hold out little hope that my old friend, the senator from Scott, will understand  how wrong he is and how much help the horse industry needs. There is little to do but find and support a strong candidate to displace him from his office in 2012.

Copyright © 2010, The Paulick Report

Savvy businesses recognize value. Advertise in the Paulick Report.

Sign up for our
Email Flashes to get the latest news, analysis and commentary from Ray Paulick

STRONACH STRIKES A DEAL

Monday, January 11th, 2010

Attorneys for Magna Entertainment have struck a deal in U.S.  bankruptcy court with unsecured creditors that will allow Frank Stronach to maintain control of Santa Anita Park, Gulfstream Park and Golden Gate Fields and the account wagering company Xpressbet.com and the Amtote totalizator company, Reuters and Bloomberg have reported.

The creditors will receive nearly $100 million, according to the reports, while Magna sells off the Maryland Jockey Club tracks (Pimlico and Maryland) and Thistledown in Ohio. MI Developments, which, like Magna Entertainment, is controlled by Stronach, will take over ownership of the aforementioned assets. The unsecured creditors claimed in a lawsuit they were owed as much as $260 million from the total MEC debt of nearly $1 billion. Magna officials hope to have a reorganization plan in place by next month to get the company out of bankruptcy.

Here is the story from Reuters.

Here is the Bloomberg story.

After you’ve read the stories,feel free to return to the Paulick Report and comment on this latest development regarding Stronach and his affiliated companies. — Ray Paulick

RACHEL: ‘AMAZING’ … ‘EXTRAORDINARY’ … ‘MAGNIFICENT’

Sunday, May 17th, 2009
Maryland Jockey Club Press Office Notes

RACHEL ALEXANDRA – At 6 a.m. Sunday, just under 12 hours after her impressive victory in the Preakness, Rachel Alexandra left Pimlico for the return trip to trainer Steve Asmussen’s barn at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky. Asmussen said the filly owned by Jess Jackson’s Stonestreet Stables and Harold T. McCormick, would go back to the track on Wednesday and would probably have her first post-Preakness work on Monday, May 25. Since Jackson and McCormick purchased the filly about 10 days before the Preakness, Asmussen and his staff are still getting to know her. She had one workout between the purchase and the race, where she became the first filly in 85 years to win the Preakness.

"This time, we have something to measure it to, as far as how she feels and how she’s acting,” Asmussen said. “It’s our first comparison, so to speak. We’re not going to tell her how she’s feeling. She’ll tell us how she’s feeling."

Asmussen did not rule out the filly running in the Belmont Stakes, but he didn’t commit to it either. He said he will relay information about how Rachel Alexandra recovers from the race and performs in the breeze to Jackson and his wife, Barbara Banke.

"I personally think she’s proven what he set out to prove with her immediately, which doesn’t eliminate anything,” Asmussen said. “But I think it does take a tad of the urgency off it."

Asmussen smiled at a question about the need to win two-thirds of the Triple Crown with a filly.

"The reason she ran in the Preakness is because she was doing extremely well,” he said.  “If you’re doing extremely well, what are you waiting for? I think if they’re doing well, you ought to run them. We’re just going to pet on her and tell her how great she is for a little while and see where that leads her."

With her front-running victory, Rachel Alexandra validated the decision to run her against males just over two weeks after she crushed the field in the Kentucky Oaks.

It was Asmussen’s second win the Preakness in three years. Curlin gave Asmussen his first classic in 2007, rallying to regain the lead from Kentucky Derby winner Street Sense.

“I’ve spent a lifetime trying to get into this position,” Asmussen said. “The overwhelming feeling is pride.”

MINE THAT BIRD – Trainer Chip Woolley reported that his Kentucky Derby winner was feeling fine on the morning after his runner-up finish in Saturday’s Preakness Stakes. Mine That Bird failed to duplicate his last-to-first Derby performance Saturday, but his last-to-dangerously close-second-place finish behind Rachel Alexandra at Pimlico was still mighty impressive.

“Nobody can question his ability. Like I said: in the Derby, he passed 18 horses in a quarter of a mile – 18 of the best horses around in a quarter of a mile. There’s no fluke in that,” Woolley said. “He did the same thing (Saturday). He made a huge move and ran hard. We just didn’t get there.”

Mine That Bird dropped back to last again Saturday before picking up the chase on the far turn. Yet, unlike the circumstances in his rail-hugging Derby run under Calvin Borel, the little gelding’s new rider, Mike Smith, was forced to swing wide to circle a wall of horses in front of him on the turn into the homestretch. Mine That Bird made a strong wide run through the stretch, cutting Rachel Alexandra’s lead from four lengths to one at the finish of the Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown.

“Any time you have a horse that lays last in a 13-horse field, you’ve got a big chance of having traffic trouble. This track, the way it was set up, I was really concerned about getting a good trip around there. Sure enough, the horses stacked up on the turn and hurt us,” Woolley said. “We couldn’t get one smooth run through there and we had to check a few times and were in tight. Mike did a great job riding the horse. I’m thrilled to death. I couldn’t ask more from the rider. Things didn’t quite set up like you’d like. That’s horse racing.”

Woolley plans to van his gelding back to Churchill Downs on Monday to prepare him for a start in the Belmont Stakes on June 6.

“My horse will be much more suited to the Belmont – big wide track, big wide sweeping turns. It should play a little better to my horse. It’ll probably be a shorter field, which eliminates some of the traffic,” the New Mexico-based trainer said. “We’re excited about going. As long as he’s good the next couple days, like he looks this morning, that’ll be the plan.”

Woolley revealed that Smith will have the mount aboard Mine That Bird in the Belmont, even if Rachel Alexandra bypasses the third leg of the Triple Crown, leaving Borel free.

“Like I kept telling people, the key to him was getting him back. He’d never been taken back and sat on like that before, and that’s what I’d been trying to make happen,” Woolley said. “I, finally, in Calvin, found a guy who would lay him back there and do it like I wanted to do. Then, of course, Mike followed suit very well (Saturday) and did a super job for us.”

Woolley credited Smith, a fellow New Mexican, for giving Mine That Bird a heads-up ride, especially during a traffic build-up on the final turn.

“If Mike stays on the fence any longer than we did, we’d have ended up in real trouble,” he said. “They were just stacked up on us, and if we’d have stayed on the fence, we sure would have been in trouble.”

Woolley continues to have great admiration for his hard-trying gelding.

“You’ve got to be super proud of him. The horse runs through his bridle,” he said. Everything you ask of this horse, he just does it, lays it on the line.”

The emergence of Mine That Bird as a star on the Triple Crown trail has been a rewarding experience for his trainer.

“You spend a lifetime working to get here. It’s kind of a stamp on your career when you win that first one. Then, you come back and re-stamp that same stamp on the next on,’ Woolley said. “There’s no doubt we got him where we wanted him.”

Mine That Bird, a 50-1 Derby long shot who was sent to post Saturday as the 6-1 third betting choice, is expected to have a presence in the East this year.

“Hopefully, we’ll run well in the Belmont. Then, we’ll probably spot him again here somewhere. It’s such a long, hard trip from where we are that we’ll keep him out here,” Woolley said. “As long as we’ve got spots were aiming at, we’ll stay in this vicinity, somewhere within a decent hauling distance.”

In the short term, Woolley will concentrate on getting Mine That Bird ready for the Belmont Stakes and a possible rematch with Rachel Alexandra.

“I’m not sure what their plans are, but if she comes, I guess we’ll see her,” said Woolley, perhaps not as much in awe of the filly as the other trainers of Preakness starters. “It would make for a great horse race.”

BIG DRAMA – Owner/breeder Harold Queen dropped in on Big Drama Sunday morning at the Preakness Stakes Barn, reporting that his fifth-place Preakness finisher was doing well, except for “a couple of nicks.”

Big Drama, who bobbled at the start after being fractious in the gate, prompted the early pace from the inside while lapped on by pacesetter Rachel Alexandra.

“If he doesn’t stumble out of the gate, we’d probably have been second.” Queen said. “He stumbled out of the gate, and it was all over for us. We’d never be able to catch that filly. What an amazing filly she is. Unbelievable. They could have gone around there again and they weren’t catching that filly. Our colt wasn’t handling the track, but neither was she. That filly wasn’t handling the track. She strided out so much better at Churchill Downs.”

David Fawkes will ship Big Drama to Monmouth Park, where the Calder-based trainer has a division of horses. He ruled out a start in the Belmont Stakes. The ultimate goal for the son of Montbrook is the Breeders’ Cup Sprint at Santa Anita Park.

FLYING PRIVATE/LUV GOV – Hall of Fame trainer D. Wayne Lukas said Sunday morning that the fourth-place Preakness finisher Flying Private may go on to the Belmont Stakes June 6 at Belmont Park. He wasn’t sure where Luv Gov, who finished eighth Saturday, would run next.

“Flying Private was going around here playing and raising hell,” Lukas said. “He really was full of himself. He’s as sharp as a tack.”

Lukas said that he brought Flying Private to Baltimore even though the colt finished last in the Kentucky Derby because Derby also-rans sometimes return to form in the Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown. Flying Private did perform much better at Pimlico, finishing four lengths behind Rachel Alexandra and earning $66,000 for owners William Mack and Robert Baker.

Flying Private and Luv Gov are scheduled to be shipped back to Churchill Downs on Monday morning.

In the days leading up to the Preakness, Lukas said he was impressed with Rachel Alexandra and predicted that she would run well.

“She is extraordinary,” Lukas said Sunday. “That was a nice effort. She did everything I thought she’d do. I watched her all winter. That didn’t surprise me a bit.”

FRIESAN FIRE – Trainer Larry Jones, as gracious in defeat as he is in victory, said Sunday that he couldn’t explain why the colt dropped out of contention coming off the second turn and finished 10th in the Preakness.

“Everything we ran looks good and Friesan Fire looks just fine,” Jones said. “No major complaints. We ended up scoping him later Saturday and there was nothing. We don’t see any excuses that he could have this time other than the fact that he didn’t come down the lane as fast as he should have. He was sitting in a good spot at that point. Actually, I loved the way he was sitting early in the race. I can’t blame it on anything. The pace was apparently what it should be because the horse that we were following won the race. I wish I could come up with a real good excuse, saying I know how to keep that from happening next time, but there are no reasons that we can see right now.”

Friesan Fire was shipped back to Jones’ barn at Delaware Park Sunday morning.

“We’ll sit down and regroup and see what’s next,” Jones said. “I’m sure we’re not headed for the Belmont, but we’ll see what happens. We’ll find him a spot he’ll fit in.”

Jones said he expected the A.P. Indy colt would be back in action within a month. Friesan Fire won the Louisiana Derby on a muddy track and ended up as the 7-2 betting favorite in the Kentucky Derby, which was run over a sloppy sealed track. He finished next to last and came out of the race with cuts on his legs. He healed quickly, though, and turned in a sharp work for the Preakness.

“It’s quite a humbling experience working with these things,” Jones said. “It’s not that we had a horrible day racing yesterday. We ran five horses across the country yesterday. We won two of them. So we won 40 percent of our races, but we still go home feeling like we’ve had a bad day. That’s what it boils down to.”

Jones was a believer in Rachel Alexandra long before she wowed the nation with her stunning performance in the Preakness.

“What a magnificent filly she is,” he said. “I’ve run against her three times and I see that same thing all the time. I keep looking for tail lights to come on and they don’t ever come on. She just keeps on rolling. We’ve chased her three different times and I think the closest I’ve come to her is 11 ½ lengths. And I’ve taken the best ones I’ve had and run at her. She’s special.”

GENERAL QUARTERS – Trainer Tom McCarthy walked  the son of Sky Mesa in the shed row Sunday morning just before 8 a.m. and said he would return to Churchill Downs Monday with his one-horse stable.

“He came out of it real well, but somebody went down the side of his (left front) leg,” said the 75-year-old retired high school principal, whose colt finished ninth. “It didn’t go deep; it just took the hair off. We got hit on the other side also, and that was just a little deeper. I think it happened when he hit the top of the stretch.”

The son of Sky Mesa appeared to be making a threatening rally and was sixth heading into the stretch.

“Just as he started making his move right where we wanted him to at the quarter-pole, he got hit,” McCarthy said. “I’ll be damned, that’s the second time he got hit in a stake (Tampa Bay Derby). I think it took the breath out of him.”

McCarthy said he’ll give General Quarters some time off (this was his 13th career start), then may look to either the Ohio Derby or the Indiana Derby for his next start.

“I’m going to look for something that will be a little easier,” he said. “We’ve been going against the best horses in America. I just want to back off a little bit and let him regroup and get a confidence builder.”

MUSKET MAN – The son of Yonaguska extended his streak of in-the-money finishes to 8-for-8 by running third in the Preakness, but that’s the end of the Triple Crown trail for the Derek Ryan-trained colt.

“He came out of the race good, no problem,” said Ryan, who stayed around for the sale at nearby Timonium on Sunday. Musket Man vanned back to his base at Monmouth Park Saturday night.

“No Belmont, definitely,” Ryan said. “He’s going home and we’re going to freshen him up and get him ready for the Haskell (Sunday, Aug. 2, Monmouth).”

Musket Man ran third in both the Kentucky Derby and Preakness, finishing only 1 ½ lengths behind Rachel Alexandra in the Middle Jewel of the Triple Crown. He is now 5-for-8 lifetime with three thirds, earning $893,600 for owners Eric Fein and Vic Carlson.

PAPA CLEM – Trainer Gary Stute and his sixth-place finisher were headed back to California Sunday morning after competing in the first two legs of the Triple Crown, and the son of Smart Strike will get some time off from a campaign that has been going virtually since November.

“He came out of the race fine,” said Stute, who was attempting to match the feat accomplished by his father Mel in 1986, when he won with his first Preakness starter (Snow Chief). “He needs a little rest right now. We don’t have anything specific in mind for him; we’ll just kind of play it by ear.”

Papa Clem was a close-up fourth approaching the three-sixteenths pole, but didn’t threaten in the late running. Still, Stute said his entire Preakness experience was an enjoyable one.

The elder Stute was at the track Saturday to see if Papa Clem would become the second Preakness winner for the family.

“He didn’t say much after the race,” Gary said. “He seemed to be more interested in (betting) the 13th race.”

PIONEEROF THE NILE – Ahmed Zayat’s homebred colt left Pimlico early Sunday morning for a flight that would take him back to trainer Bob Baffert’s stable at Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, Calif. Pioneerof the Nile, who finished second in the Kentucky Derby, ended up 11th in the Preakness.

TAKE THE POINTS – Starlight Partners’ colt trained by Todd Pletcher was shipped back to Belmont Park Sunday morning. He came out of the race in good shape. Wearing blinkers for the first time, Take the Points was sitting a stalking trip about five lengths behind Rachel Alexandra for the first half of the race. He was caught six wide on the second turn, was eased in the stretch by jockey Edgar Prado and finished last in the field of 13.

TERRAIN – Trainer Al Stall Jr. reported that Terrain “cooled out well” after his seventh-place finish in the Preakness Stakes. Terrain, who was shipped back to his Churchill Downs base early Sunday morning, ran into traffic on the turn into the homestretch.

“He ran into a wall of horses and lost his momentum,” said Stall, who confirmed that Terrain will not run in the Belmont Stakes. “It looked to me that the track was a little deep, and he didn’t pick it up again.”

Although disappointed in Terrain’s finish, Stall was impressed with Rachel Alexandra.

“I think she was as advertised. Besides showing her talent, she showed some grit. It looked like she was struggling a little bit,” he said.

TONE IT DOWN – Trainer Bill Komlo, a Maryland backstretch fixture for years, will look for more competitive spots for Deborah and Michael Horning’s son of Medaglia d’Oro after finishing 12th in the Preakness.

“He seems to be recuperating fine,” said the 73-year-old conditioner, who trains Tone It Down for his daughter and son-in-law. “He doesn’t look too much worse for the wear. We’ll walk him three or four days and give him a chance to get back to himself. We’re going to give him a little vacation and then look for some races where we can rekindle his mind, so he can get back out there and make some money for us. We knew going in that we were either going to be happy or sad because of the competition in there.”

 It was an otherwise enjoyable Saturday for Komlo, who got a visit from Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley and finished in the money in three races on the undercard.

“He stopped by,” Komlo said. “He knew the Horning family because he was from that area and went to Georgetown Prep. He stayed quite a while with us.”

RACHEL ALEXANDRA BEATS MINE THAT BIRD IN 134TH PREAKNESS

Saturday, May 16th, 2009

By Ray Paulick
Rachel Alexandra won Saturday’s $1.1-million Preakness Stakes and proved to be the super filly owner Jess Jackson thought she was when he paid a reported $7 million to buy her after her 20 1/4-length Kentucky Oaks victory May 1. The daughter of Medaglia d’Oro raced toward the lead from the start from her outside 13 post under Calvin Borel, took command on the turn for home, and held off Kentucky Derby winner Mine That Bird to win by a length. Musket Man was another half-length back in third and Flying Private fourth in the Triple Crown’s MIddle Jewel. 

Big Drama, Papa Clem,  Terrain, Luv Gov, General Quarters, Friesan Fire, Pioneerof the Nile, Tone It Down and Take the Points completed the order of finish. 

Rachel Alexandra was the 9-5 betting favorite and paid $5.60 to win.. Click here to view the Preakness chart.

"She’s the greatest horse I’ve ever been on in my life," Borel told NBC’s Donna Brothers after the race, adding that he didn’t think Rachel Alexandra handled the Pimico surface that well. She completed the 1 3/16 miles in 1:55.05 on a fast track that was not affected by a rainshower that arrived just prior to the 6:15 p.m. post time.

Becoming the fourth filly to win the Preakness and the first since Nellie Morse in 1924, Rachel Alexandra was just the 11th filly to contest the Preakness since Nellie Morse’s victory. The last filly to run, Excellent Meeting, was pulled up in the 1999 renewal. Borel became the first rider to win the Kentucky Derby and Preakness on different horses.

Borel had the option to ride either Rachel Alexandra or Mine That Bird and opted to go with the filly, forcing trainer Chip Woolley to seek another jockey. He wound up with Hall of Famer Mike Smith, who took the Derby winner well off the pace, rallied between horses on the turn for home, checked at the top of the stretch, passed Musket Man inside the final sixteenth of a mile but was never a threat to Rachel Alexandra.

Big Drama, as expected, was sent to the front by John Velazguez after rearing in the gate and delaying the start momentarily. But Rachel Alexandra broke well and raced head to head with Big Drama, volleying with that one through fractions of :23.13, :46.71, and 1:11.01 for the opening six furlongs. Rachel Alexandra put away Big Drama before reaching the mile in 1:35.82, opened a four-length advantage at the eighth pole, then dug in and held off Mine That Bird. "She was really struggling with the track," said Borel, who called the Pimlico surface a little deep . "Every time I asked for more, she couldn’t really get into her rhythm."

Steve Asmussen took over training duties of Rachel Alexandra from Hal Wiggins the week after her Kentucky Oaks victory. Asmussen commented after the race that his major contribution was "just staying out of the way."

Rachel Alexandra was previously owned by Mike Lauffer and breeder Dolph Morrison, the latter of whom said he was opposed to running fillies against colts in the Triple Crown classics because he believes those races are meant to showcase future stallions. Morrison and Lauffer didn’t nominate Rachel Alexandra to the Triple Crown, forcing Jackson to put up a $100,000 supplementary fee if she was going to enter. Her status as a supplementary nomination nearly kept her out of the starting gate when Mark Allen, the co-owner of Mine That Bird, and Ahmed Zayat, owner of Kentucky Derby runner-up Pioneerof the Nile, discussed entering additional horses to fill the field to the maximum 14 starters. Under Pimlico’s conditions for the race, original Triple Crown nominees have priority over supplemented horses. Allen and Zayat backed away from their plan on the same day it surfaced, one week before the Preakness.

Jess Jackson, who bought Rachel Alexandra in partnership with Harold McCormick, said the 1 1/2-mile Belmont Stakes would be "strongly considered," but said he’ll wait to have Asmussen and assistant Scott Blasi assess how she’s come out of the race. "Would we love to run in New York?" Jackson asked. "Yes. Can she win. We think so."

The Preakness was Rachel Alexandra’s sixth consecutive stakes victory, dating back to late November. It was her eighth win in 11 starts.

Jackson said he felt vindicated over the decision made to run Rachel Alexandra against colts in the Preakness. In many ways, he said, that made this victory more satisfying than Curlin’s Preakness win two years ago. Curlin was defeated by the filly Rags to Riches in the Belmont. Jackson said he sees no reason fillies can’t beat colts, but agreed with Morrison’s decision to keep Rachel Alexandra out of the Kentucky Derby because, with its 20 starters, it becomes a "cavalry charge" that may not be in the best interests of a filly.

Asmussen said the race didn’t unfold as he expected, with the filly breaking to the outside at the start and then contesting the pace. "There were a lot of questions to be answered today," he said. 

Rachel Alexandra answered those questions resoundingly, and so did Mine That Bird, who proved that his victory in the Kentucky Derby was no fluke. "I’m thrilled to death with the race my little horse ran," said Woolley. "Everything was according to Hoyle, until the turn when he was fanned a little wide. I thought we had a chance at the eighth pole. But you have to give that filly credit. She’s a great one. The Belmont is next for us."

Borel said if given the choice in the Belmont between the Derby winner and Preakness winner, he’d stick with Rachel Alexandra. He added, however, that if the filly does not run he would love to get back on Mine That Bird.

"He’s a tough little dude," Smith said of Mine That Bird. "He worked his way through there and kept on trying. If we could have gone another sixteenth of a mile, I think he would have tackled her….Honestly, he’s one of the best I’ve been on. He’s very balanced."

Derek Ryan, the trainer of Musket Man, who continued his streak of 1-2-3 finishes in all eight of his starts, called Rachel Alexandra "a filly for ages. My horse ran well, but we got beat by a great one."

The Maryland Jockey Club reported attendance of 77,850, down considerably from last year’s 121,876 and the lowest attendance since 1983. For the first time, fans in the infield were barred from bringing their own beer, a decision that led to the smaller and less rowdy crowd. Handle from on- and off-track sources topped $86.7 million on the 13-race program, a big jump from the $73.5 million bet on the 2008 Preakness program.

Copyright © 2009, The Paulick Report

Support the Paulick Report. Make a
donation today.

Visit the Paulick Report for
all the latest news throughout the racing world.

Sign up for our
Email Flashes to get the latest news, analysis and commentary from Ray Paulick

IF A DRUNK FALLS IN THE INFIELD AND NO ONE’S THERE TO SEE HIM…

Saturday, May 16th, 2009

By Bradford Cummings

Imagine a Christmas where Walmart was not allowed to run $10 DVD player sales out of fear someone would be trampled. How about attending a Poison concert at Madison Square Garden unplugged due to concern of noise pollution? Or what if Major League Baseball used nerf balls so errant objects wouldn’t hurt fans? Those might be ideas to spring out of the minds of Magna Entertainment or Maryland Jockey Club executives.

Like a Catholic picnic without the gambling, this year’s infield experience was a complete flop by past standards after track officials adopted a new rule banning fans from bringing in their own beer. In years past, many of the infield denizens brought in as many cases of beer as they could carry. With estimates from regulars ranging between 10-25% of the usual Preakness crowd, it seems even harder to calculate the exponential difference in enthusiasm and, well, drunkedness. This certainly has its downside for the average $50 a ticket fan, but an orderly and underplayed infield would at least be good for law enforcement, right? You might be surprised.

“I grew up right down the street,” a Baltimore Fire Fighter named Dan told the Paulick Report. “Even as a kid, I remember the excitement of the Preakness. It was something you looked forward to all year. This is just sad.”

He was sitting on his bike with four other co-workers, all slouched in stances more likely to knock back a couple donuts than to help resuscitate a passed out drunk. Asked how many obviously inebriated people they saw by 2:30 in the afternoon, Dan and another fire fighter separately claimed one, caught each other’s eye and concluded they both dealt with the same guy. “It’s just not the same without the beer.” Another chimed in enthusiastically, “There ain’t no tits,” a reference to the many female flashers who partied hard in years past.

But surely they were glad no one was getting hurt this year. After all, Pimlico wouldn’t make these sorts of changes without concern for the average fan’s well being. Guess again.

“It’s not like people were dying out here,” explained fireman Dan. “The most common injury was a laceration on a guy’s index finger. It didn’t get much worse than that.” As Dan described, an infielder would be making his way through a beer, get the impulse to throw it in the air and get his finger caught in the hole.  Stupid? Yes. Tradition changer? Probably not.

Then why did they make this transformation? Our man Dan had a theory. “This is a sign they want to move the Preakness.” Wait! Stop the presses! Does our unassuming fire fighter friend have a connection with the Maryland Jockey Club that we don’t have? Although we started sweating like a kid whose best friend got an X-Box 360 before he did, the odds are significantly in our favor. But this sort of conspiracy theory, especially coming from law enforcement, doesn’t bode well for the good will not being created by the second leg of the Triple Crown.

If Baltimore’s finest were against this move to clean up the infield, surely the fans were at least skeptical. Wrong once more. We found Matt, an Orioles fan and Jager bomb connoisseur, about to throw a drink down the hatch.

“I actually kind of like it,” said our new pal. “When I was in my early 20’s, I got into the party. But now that I’m a little bit older (31), I find myself enjoying the calmer atmosphere. I think this is good for the fans.” Of course, he’s an Orioles fan so his perspective might have been a little off.

So, attendance is definitely down, no doubt. But there still had to be a party somewhere and gosh darn it, we were going to smell it out. With no one in our way, we walked quickly through the “crowd” and towards the bandstand. Surely, there were half-naked women and out of control 20-somethings as far as the eye could see. Once again, we found nothing more than a civil group of respectable citizens sipping $3.50 beers in plastic cups and being exceedingly polite to each other. There were even middle school and high school kids with their ZZ Top-loving parents in tow speckled through the gathering.

But finally, we found it, a tent with the familiar noise of frat guys just inches away from doing something stupid enough to break their bones. We hurried over to catch something nefarious, something to redeem this once rowdy ritual. Something like this video.

And we did find something like it, a video game version of the infamous port a potty beer run. And true to form, no one was playing. Did the video game version get any play throughout the day? “Not much,” the attendant said. Clearly, he was the only person more bored than law enforcement officers.

Done correctly, a move toward extra security is a good thing, effectively threading the needle between fun and safety. But at Pimlico this year, it appears the needle got stuck in their hand. Fortunately, I think we know a fire fighter who can help.

CHICKEN ‘N’ EGGS: PAULICK LIVE BLOGS THE ALIBI BREAKFAST

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

By Ray Paulick

How often do you have a guilt-free chance to get sloppy drunk and chow down on an  honest to goodness Maryland breakfast of fried chicken, biscuits and gravy, and scrambled eggs? At least once a year if you come to the Alibi Breakfast that is part of the Preakness tradition at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore.

(Actually, I’m not sure how many people are drinking the Black-Eyed Susan signature drink. It seems more of those in attendance are dumping out the souvenir glass contents in the nearby bathroom sink and saving the glass to take home.)

Legend has it that the breakfast began at Old Hilltop in the late 1930s when trainers and other horsemen would gather to shoot the bull about the chances of their horses in the upcoming Preakness. It’s grown to be a major media event in the clubhouse of the rickety racetrack. Trainers of most Preakness horses show up to be interviewed, but the concept is to give them a chance to make an excuse ahead of time in case their horse loses.  It’s also an opportunity for the Maryland Jockey Club to honor members of the media for their contributions. This year’s winners are Tom Pedulla of USA Today, recipient of the David F. Woods Memorial Award for best Preakness story of 2008; Old Hilltop Awards  for longstanding coverage of the sport with excellence to Jeannine Edwards of ESPN and Bob Fortus of the New Orleans Times-Picayune; and the Jerry Frutkoff Preakness Photography Award to Rob Carr of the Associated Press.

The late, great Jim McKay, an icon of sports broadcasting and one of the greatest all-time supporters of the Maryland horse industry, used to host the event. Then along came Chris Lincoln, the longtime voice of horse racing on ESPN. The duties this year were handled by local broadcasters Scott Garceau and Keith Mills, who frankly had a hard time filling the big shoes of their predecessors.

The live blog begins shortly….

10:15 a.m. … This could be better than expected. One of the hosts said their job was to keep this from becoming the Alibi Lunch. The invocation used to be about 30 minutes long, but this year’s blessing given by Reverand Monsignor Robert J. Jaskot was quick and to the point. Bless the horses and those around them.

Tom Pedulla’s award winning story focused on Kent Desormeaux and his son Jacob, who suffers from Usher syndrome that cost him his hearing at birth and is taking away his sight. Very touching acceptance speech by a gracious man who asked that we all keep Jacob in our prayers. These guys are going to have me in tears pretty soon.

Bob Fortus said as a racing fan all he ever wanted was to have his ticket paid for to come to such events as the Preakness and to win an award was just gravy. Groovy. 

As for Jeannine Edwards, I’m thankful for the work she’s done in both horseracing and college basketball for ESPN. Her halftime interviews with former University of Kentucky coach Billy GIllispie were classic, and his insulting were a sign that he was a bad fit for the program. When the UK program comes rolling back under John Calipari, we’ll have Jeannine in part to thank!

10:25 a.m. … On to the interviews of the trainers and owners. Kentucky Derby winner Mine That Bird is up first. Trainer Chip Woolley called the last two weeks a whirlwind, saying he’s gotten a lot of phone calls from many of the unsung trainers in the business. "He’s a real patient rider and has great instincts," Woolley said when asked about the change in riders from Calvin Borel to Mike Smith.  Woolley thought the police escort given to the van bringing Mine That Bird was pretty cool. "Last time the police were after me I went to jail," said Woolley. Co-owner Mark Allen (pictured left), who hatched a short-lived plan to keep Rachel Alexandra out of the Preakness and appropriately wore his black cowboy hat, did his talking before the breakfast as he was a popular guest of local television crews.

10:30 a.m. … Bob Baffert, trainer of Pioneerof the Nile, was welcomed back to the Preakness after an extended absence and then asked about being elected to the Hall of Fame this year. Baffert said he was happy it happened while both of his parents were still with him. He said he thought he was going to win this year’s Derby until Mine That Bird rallied from last to win in a romp. "I’d heard stories that having a bird crap on you is good luck, and said owner Ahmed Zayat had a bird make a mess on his glasses in Louisville early Derby week.  "But I think having two birds crap on you (Mine That Bird being the other)" wasn’t so lucky, Baffert said.  Baffert said part of him was happy Rachel Alexandra was in the race and part of him wasn’t.

Trainer D. Wayne Lukas asks Baffert "what part of you wants (Rachel Alexandra) in the race?" Lukas claims Marylou Whitney’s Luv Gov is named after the disgraced New York governor "Ed Spitzer." Wayne doesn’t get off the sports pages much, I’m afraid. "We don’t have any grandiose plans here," he said, referring to his two 50-1 shots.He said he was going to seek advice from the Mine That Bird connections, who won the Derby at 50-1.

10:40 a.m. … David Hawkes, trainer of Big Drama, said his colt got "real comfortable right away" after being the first Preakness starter on the scene. He said the presence of Rachel Alexandra makes the race "real tough." Blinkers are coming off Big Drama, who is expected to be the speed of the race.

Vic Carlson, Musket Man’s co-owner said "we’ll probably be betting him to show," since he’s never been worse than third in seven starts. Carlson said Musket Man will be vanning to Pimlico the day of the Preakness from Monmouth Park.  He said he got a good trip the first half of the Derby, in which he finished third, but in the Preakness he hopes "Pioneerof the Nile will stay in his own lane" down the stretch. Apparently, Eibar Coa considered claiming foul against Garrett Gomez, rider of Pioneerof the Nile, for interference in the stretch of the Derby, but the race was made official before he could.

Larry Jones: "We just glued him back together," he said of Friesan Fire’s cuts and scrapes suffered in the Derby. How about his trip, he was asked. "Well, it wasn’t what we were looking for," though he said some of the problems were "self inflicted. We just hope the other horses will leave him alone." Asked about the speed of the race, Jones said, "I’ll bet David wishes he could put those blinkers back on.(Big Drama) … The field is very tough, but that’s what the Triple Crown is supposed to be about." What about the retirement talk? "I don’t get (sentimental). If this horse runs like he did in the Kentucky Derby, that (retirement) may come on Sunday."

10:45 a.m. …Trainer Al Stall is starting his first Triple Crown runner in Terrain. Nice prank by the emcees to introduce him as Art Stall. (Except I don’t think they were kidding.) Al is happy to be here. We’ll check in with him Saturday night to see if he still feels that way.

10:50 a.m. … They got Gary Stute’s name right as the trainer of Papa Clem, then asked him where he was when his father Mel won the Preakness 23 years ago with Snow Chief. "I was standing right next to him, and four strides before the wire, I said ‘congratulations’ to him," Stute recalled. He got the meanest look from his dad he ever saw, Gary said, in reference to the old tale about never giving someone a "you got it" until the horses cross the wire. "Once he passed the finish he let out a big smile," Stute said of his father. Both of Gary Stute’s parents will be in attendance for hte Preakness. Stute mentioned that he won’t give any riding instructions to Rafael Bejarano.

Tom McCarthy, owner and trainer of General Quarters, has been around the racetrack a long time and said it was a tough thing to tell his wife and kids so many times that he couldn’t be with them on a Saturday because he had a horse running. They didn’t know much about racing, he said, adding he "made up new words" to explain some of the losses his horses suffered. Talking about the Derby, McCarthy wasn’t happy with the messy, wet racetrack on Derby day and said he likes the sandier strip at Pimlico. Referring to Mine That Bird’s stretch run along the rail, McCarthy said, "He was flying while we were swimming."

10:55 a.m. … Don Lucarelli, co-owner of Take the Points, apparently is a sports gambler, saying he "takes tthe points" when betting on games. He likes longshots, which Take the Points will be, as he’s 30-1 on the morning line. Take the Points is vanning in on Saturday morning, from Belmont Park. Take the Points is adding blinkers, Lucarelli said, on the advice of Alex Solis, who rode the colt to a fourth place finish in the Santa Anita Derby in his last start in April.

11:00 a.m. … Scott Blasi wonders why he’s doing the interviews as he had to do with Curlin so many times "because Steve (Asmussen) misses his plane." What about the 13 post for Rachel Alexandra? "I talked about it with Steve and we think it’s a great post. We just hope Calvin doesn’t get confused about the outside rail and get too close to it." Borel loves riding the rail, but it’s the inside rail he takes. "Calvin knows more about her than anybody. He was a big part of her development at Hot Springs (Oaklawn Park) and knows more about her than any of us. We’re just excited to be running her off (former trainer) Hal Wiggins’ training."

That’s a wrap, from what in my memory was the fastest Alibi Breakfast in recent history.

COLLUSION, AN ONLINE FIRESTORM, AND SURRENDER

Monday, May 11th, 2009
By Ray Paulick
For those of you who decided to disconnect from the racing world on Sunday, let me just say that we had a little situation here.

Actually, it wasn’t so little. Collusion between the co-owner of Kentucky Derby winner Mine That Bird and the owner of runner-up Pioneerof the Nile to keep Kentucky Oaks winner Rachel Alexandra out of the starting gate for Saturday’s Preakness Stakes would have, if successfully orchestrated, created one of the biggest embarrassments this sport has seen in my lifetime.

Apparently, and thankfully, the plot to keep the filly out of the race was aborted on the same day it was hatched. And that says something about the world we live and how cable television and the internet not only have changed how we get our news, but have given the public an opportunity to swiftly react to it, and in some ways alter the course of events.

I was enjoying a quiet Mother’s Day brunch Sunday afternoon with my family when I got an urgent message that Ahmed Zayat, Pioneerof the Nile’s owner, during a telephone interview on HRTV said Mine That Bird’s co-owner Mark Allen called Zayat and asked him to enter an additional horse in the Preakness to block Rachel Alexandra’s entry in the race. The filly, newly acquired by Jess Jackson last week and expected to be supplemented to the Preakness at a cost of $100,000, would only get into the starting field if fewer than 14 horses were entered, because early Triple Crown nominees are given preference over supplemental entrants in the Preakness.

Allen said he would enter a maiden in the race, and if Zayat entered a second horse, there was a strong likelihood Rachel Alexandra would not get in. It would also put Derby-winning jockey Calvin Borel back aboard Mine That Bird after he chose to ride the filly.

The Paulick Report linked to Dan Farley’s timely dispatch in England’s Racing Post that quoted Zayat, who repeated part of the conversation he’d had with Allen. Internet forums (Thoroughbred Champions, Pace Advantage, among others) and blogs lit up with comments about “cowardice,” “unsportsmanlike conduct,” and actions that were “terribly unflattering to the sport,” and would take “the racing industry’s massive dysfunction to brand new levels.”

The late Paul Mellon, who for me defined the kind of sportsmen who helped make this game so wonderful, was, I’m certain, spinning madly in his grave over how racing has degenerated and deteriorated.

Officials of the Maryland Jockey Club must have had visions of angry, pitchfork wielding mobs of racing fans descending upon Pimlico Saturday in search of the two would-be evil-doers, Zayat and Allen. One of those officials called Zayat to explain to him that his actions weren’t being very well received and that it might not be such a bad idea to reconsider.

NBC Sports, which pays a handsome sum to televise the Preakness and has been promoting the hell out of the anticipated matchup between Mine That Bird and Rachel Alexandra, might have been a little upset as well if the filly was somehow excluded.

Before sunset, a flurry of online articles was published by Bloodhorse.com, Sports Illustrated, New York Times and others, quoting both Zayat and Allen with abandoning their ill-conceived plan and waving white flags of surrender–but not before humiliating themselves and embarrassing the sport.

The whole news cycle was over in about six hours. I’m convinced the internet reporting and commentaries, along with the public outrage expressed in online forums, drove the decisions of Zayat and Allen as much as the phone call from a racing official in Maryland may have done.

Twenty years ago, before racing had two cable channels and the internet to provide an explosion of instant information, this Sunday storm might not have ever made into the public spotlight. The late Joe Hirsch, the executive columnist for Daily Racing Form, would have gotten wind of the conspiracy first (Joe always got it first), but by the time the Form had its next press run on Monday afternoon, someone (probably Joe himself) would have smacked some sense into Zayat and Allen.

For those of you who on Sunday were plugged in to HRTV (or TVG, which also did its own reporting on the issue), the Paulick Report or other web sites, this whole unseemly saga would be old news by the time your daily newspaper hit the front door Monday morning, or the weekly trade magazines are delivered later this week.

Times have changed.

One final thought: What is it about fillies and the Preakness that brings out the worst in some people?

Twenty-nine years ago, Angel Cordero Jr. used intimidating, and many of us still believe unsportsmanlike, riding tactics aboard Codex to beat the Kentucky Derby-winning filly Genuine Risk in the 1980 Preakness.

In 1988, the late Woody Stephens hit a low point in his Hall of Fame training career when he had jockey Pat Day employ suicidal tactics in the Preakness aboard Forty Niner against Winning Colors, the front-running filly who defeated Forty Niner in the Kentucky Derby two weeks earlier. It ruined both of their chances of victory.

Interestingly, in both cases, the Daily Racing Form published front-page editorials criticizing the tactics used against the two fillies, an extremely unusual occurrence by the Form. The 2009 version of Daily Racing Form might well have an editorial printed on the Rachel Alexandra saga in the next day or two, but by then will anyone care?

Copyright © 2009, The Paulick Report

Support the Paulick Report. Make a donation today.

Visit the Paulick Report for all the latest news throughout the racing world
Sign up for our Email Flashes to get the latest news, analysis and commentary from Ray Paulick

MAGNA SHARE SPIKE ON EVE OF MARYLAND SLOTS VOTE

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

By Ray Paulick

UPDATED TUESDAY EVENING:

 Stock prices soared Monday in Magna Entertainment, the racetrack company that operates Laurel Park and Pimlico in Maryland, where voters are deciding today on an amendment to allow 15,000 slot machines at five locations in the state.

The share price jumped by 92%, from $1.82 at the opening bell to $3.50 by the day’s close. Magna Entertainment, which also operates Santa Anita Park, Golden Gate Fields, Lone Star Park, and Gulfstream Park, among other tracks, trades on the NASDAQ under the symbol MECA. One-day trading was the heaviest that it’s been since Sept. 30, when the stock plummeted from $4.00 to $1.75. Earlier this year, Magna exercised a 20-for-1 reverse stock split to maintain its position on the NASDAQ.

UPDATE: Tuesday afternoon, Magna Entertainment sent out a press release saying the company "is not aware of any specific developments" connected with the sudden increase in share prices. MECA closed at $3.97 Tuesday afternoon, an increase of another $.47 (13.4%). 

Even with Monday’s gains, adjusted share prices are down 95% from what they were when MECA went public in 2000. The company is saddled with hundreds of millions of dollars of debt.

Polls indicate the Maryland constitutional amendment permitting slots will pass, though there is no guarantee that Magna Entertainment will be one of the operators of the slots parlors. Approximately 7% of revenue from the machines will subsidize horse racing purses, with 2.5% going to racetrack renewal.

When Magna Entertainment purchased the two Maryland Jockey Club tracks from the family of Joe and Karin De Francis, the agreement gave the former owners 18% of any future profits MECA earned from slot machines.

The company announced Monday that a previously announced deal fell through to sell excess property near Ocala, Fla., where company chairman Frank Stronach had once hoped to build a racetrack.

 Copyright © 2008, The Paulick Report

Sign up for our Email Flashes to get the latest news, analysis and commentary from Ray Paulick

Visit the Paulick Report for all the latest news throughout the racing world

MAGNA CALLED ‘FINANCIAL SINKHOLE’ BY INVESTOR

Saturday, October 18th, 2008

By Ray Paulick

A major institutional investor in MI Developments, the Frank Stronach-controlled real estate company that has kept Stronach’s failing racetrack entity Magna Entertainment afloat with bridge loans, has threatened legal action against the MI Developments board of directors, alleging they have “flagrantly breached their fiduciary duties to shareholders.”

Richard Fried, a managing member of the San Francisco-based Farallon Capital Management that owns 8.5% of the Class A shares in MI Developments, protested the board’s most recent extension and expansion of a now $125-million bridge loan and delay of a due date of a separate $100 million loan payment. Fried wrote that Magna Entertainment “has been, is, and will remain a financial sinkhole. Continuing to finance it offers no conceivable benefit to MID’s shareholders.”

“There is no possible justification for the Board to approve loans to a near bankrupt horseracing concern, especially one that is hopelessly entangled with irrational, non-economic, and conflicted parties and has a track record of massive value destruction,” Fried wrote. The letter was filed with the Securities Exchange Commission on Friday, the same day that technology entrepreneur and Thoroughbred owner and breeder Halsey Minor went public with an offer to buy out MI Developments’ loans to Magna Entertainment.

The letter said Farallon concludes that “the (MI Developments) Board is pursuing a value-destroying investment instead of a relatively safe and accretive investment because the Board is ignoring common shareholders’ interests and is only interested in pleasing Frank Stronach, even if his desires conflict with the best interests of MID’s shareholders.”

Farallon also went on record as opposing what it called “an ill-conceived transaction” that would have MI Developments buying out Magna Entertainment, whose stock has lost more than 95% of its equity value. MI Developments already owns a controlling interest in Magna Entertainment, which operates Santa Anita Park (host of the Breeders’ Cup world championships in 2008 and 2009), Gulfstream Park, Lone Star Park, the Maryland Jockey Club tracks Pimlico and Laurel, and Golden Gate Fields.

“We believe the Board’s duties require it to end MID’s support of MEC and focus urgently with management on developing a coherent and fair reorganization plan. You must tell Mr. Stronach that his time for self-serving maneuvers is over. It is time for you to meet your fiduciary duties as directors. If you do not, Farallon will consider all legal tools available to it as a shareholder.”

Magna successfully defended a previous lawsuit by Greenlight Financial alleging that Greenlight and other investors were oppressed by Stronach and the MI Developments board.

Click here for the complete text of the Farallon Capital Management letter.

Copyright © 2008, The Paulick Report

Sign up for our Email Flashes to get the latest news, analysis and commentary from Ray Paulick

Visit the Paulick Report for all the latest news throughout the racing world