Posts Tagged ‘v foundation’

GOOD NEWS FRIDAY sponsored by Liberation Farm: BREEDERS’ CUP OR BUST - A FAMILY AFFAIR

Friday, November 6th, 2009
By Ray Paulick

While the BREEDERS’ CUP OR BUST fundraising drive has reached the end of the road in Arcadia, Calif., it’s not too late to donate. Please click here to send a tax-deductible donation to Breeders’ Cup Charities. All proceeds will be divided evenly between two vital organizations: the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund and The V Foundation for Cancer Research.

This cross-country journey to raise awareness and money for PDJF and the V Foundation would not have been possible without the encouragement and support of many individuals and organizations, beginning with Breeders’ Cup president Greg Avioli and members of his staff. We would also like to acknowledge and thank Gerard Cunningham, president of Betfair USA/TVG, the racing network and account wagering service that has been instrumental in promoting the 10-day tour as our exclusive media partner on this venture.

Keeneland, Hawthorne, Remington Park, Zia Park, the Wynn Hotel Las Vegas, and Oak Tree/Santa Anita rolled out the red carpet and made us feel welcome in our stops along the way. Each track promoted the fundraiser with special events, and did so on relatively short notice, and we thank them for that. Scott Wells and his team at Remington Park, along with horsemen, jockeys and fans at the Oklahoma City track, and especially Remington’s new owners, Global Gaming Solutions, deserve special recognition for their extraordinary efforts in fundraising and FUNraising (if you saw the video of me and my Paulick Report partner, Brad Cummings, participating against Remington Park’s jockeys in a “hippity hop” race on bouncing rubber balls, you’d know what I mean).

Nancy LaSala, the executive director of the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund, was extremely helpful in opening doors for us and letting us get to know some of the recipients of the PDJF’s benevolence. We are grateful for meeting the likes of Dennis Keehan, Jo Hayes, Stacy Burton and Michael Straight, who with his family are in the early stages of dealing with a tragic racing accident. LaSala is a tireless advocate for these disabled athletes, many of whom feel abandoned by an industry they love.

Finally, we would like to thank all of those who made contributions, no matter how small or large, to Breeders’ Cup Charities or directly to the PDJF or V Foundation as a result of the BREEDERS’ CUP OR BUST fundraising drive.

As a result of their generosity, we are pleased to say that $75,000 has been raised for the two charities.

Those sponsors and contributors are listed below (a number of them asked for anonymity).

SPONSORS
- Barry Irwin/Team Valor International
- Bill Casner/WinStar Farm
- Bill Young family/Overbrook Farm
- Bob Baffert
- Brereton Jones/Airdrie Stud
- Cot Campbell/Dogwood Stable

- Darley America
- Del Mar Thoroughbred Club
- Global Gaming Solutions/Remington Park
- Kate Lantaff/Tahoma Stud
- National Horsemen’s Benevolent and Protection Association and the following affiliates and officers (Arizona, Arkansas, Charles Town, Finger Lakes, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana, Michigan, Mountaineer Park, Ohio, Oklahoma, Ontario, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Robin Richards, Tampa Bay, Virginia, Washington).
- Penn National Gaming/Zia Park
- Rick Porter/Fox Hill Farm
- Robert and Blythe Clay/Three Chimneys
- Suffolk Downs
- Terry Finley/West Point Thoroughbreds
- Tommy Simon/Vinery
- TVG
- Will Farish/Lane’s End Farm
- Wynn Hotel Las Vegas

CONTRIBUTORS
-Ace and Rancy Hare
-Anne Faulconer
-Carol Ricks
-Cesar Benavides
-Chris and Hillary Hartman
-Danny Caldwell
-David Ashforth
-Dana Byerly
-Danny and Sabina Pish
-Diana Phipps
-Donald Reed
-Donald Veronneau
-Dr. Robert H. Zoellner
-Duane and Joyce Salisbury
-Dustin Orona Photography
-Eric Clemenic
-Eugene G. Kershner
-Francine Rose
-Gary Thomas
-Gina Peters
-Glen and Joy Murphy
-Grace Sheehan
-Heidelberg Family
-Heritage Place
-Jeffrey Lewis
-Jeff True
-JoAnn Adams, Duane Harrel and Jimmy Harrel
-Joan Fiedler
-Joe and Hazel Lucas
-Joe and Karen Offolter
-John McEvoy
-John Roach
-Kenneth Meng
-Kenny and Sally Nolen
-Linda Jahn
-Lynda Tanner
-Margaret Burlingham
-Mark Sommers
-Mary Schweitzer
-Michael Sheridan
-Michael “Roxy” Roxborough
-Mohammed Sayed
-Noelle Driscoll
-Oklahoma Thoroughbred Association
-Pasquali and Palumbo Law Firm
-Patricia Clark
-Patricia A. Mulderig
-Paul Hasken
-Petalino Racing Stable
-Randy Morse
-Randy Patterson
-Remington Park Jock’s Room
-Remington Park Jockey’s Agents
-Richter Family Trust
-Rob Whiteley
-Robert Penchina
-Robyn Roach
-Roger Engel
-Ronald Gibson
-Rusty Roberts
-St. Philip Neri Church and School
-Stephen Husberger
-Steve and Julie Asmussen
-Susie Sourwine
-Terry Edwards
-Thomas Jenkins
-Thomas Pauly
-Thomas Squires
-Tim and Terry Doocy
-Tommy and Claire Page
-Von Hemel Family
-William Huntington
-William Landes

Thanks to one and all for their generosity and for showing that this truly is an industry that cares.

 
 

BREEDERS’ CUP OR BUST: AN INSPIRING STORY OF SURVIVAL

Thursday, November 5th, 2009
By Ray Paulick

Please click here to donate to Breeders’ Cup Charities benefiting the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund and V Foundation for Cancer Research. Give a minimum of one penny per mile and you will be eligible for a drawing to win one of 10 Breeders’ Cup caps to be signed by the winning jockeys of all 14 Breeders’ Cup races this Friday and Saturday.

I had heard that the story of former jockey Stacy Burton was an amazing and inspirational one, but it wasn’t until I spent some time with her that I realized just how tough, courageous and full of life she really is.

By all accounts, Stacy shouldn’t be alive. The injuries she suffered in a freak racing accident at Prescott Downs in Arizona on Aug. 26, 2000, were severe. The damage to her skull was so bad that a portion of it was surgically removed so her brain would have room to expand from the swelling. She was in a coma for three weeks and doctors had nearly given up hope that she would survive.

But Stacy Burton is a fighter who refused to give up. Nine years later, she is nothing short of a miracle. She can now walk, talk and get out and about with the assistance of a full-time caretaker. Her gait is unsteady, and her speech at first is difficult to understand—the result of a stroke she suffered while in the hospital. Her memory is spotty. She remembers her childhood and her days as a high school economics teacher, which she left in her 30s to pursue a career as a jockey. She can’t remember anything about the terrible accident or any of her time in horse racing.

But she is sharp as a tack mentally. Brad Cummings and I had the opportunity to spend an afternoon with Stacy and her longtime companion, Jan Hortyk (pictured, left, with Stacy Burton), at Turf Paradise in Phoenix, Ariz., during the Paulick Report’s BREEDERS’ CUP OR BUST fundraising drive to raise money for Breeders’ Cup Charities to benefit the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund and The V Foundation for Cancer Research.

Jan did a lot of the talking, filling in the details of Stacy’s amazing recovery, her will to live and her intense dedication (she does therapy seven days a week to improve her physical and verbal skills). At one point, I asked Jan and Stacy how much the months in the hospital and the aftercare cost. “A whole shitload,” Stacy said.

“Thank God she was a member of the Jockeys’ Guild,” Jan said. “Their $1-million accident policy really helped, but it didn’t take long for it to max out. She was in the hospital for eight months and at one point weighed just 88 pounds.”

Stacy’s story was profiled by the cable network Animal Planet. The program sensationalized the accident, repeating over and over the video of a loose horse running the wrong way up the stretch and smashing head-on into the horse Stacy was riding. It was an ugly accident caused by a horse that slipped and fell rounding the first turn, then took off running back up the stretch. Stacy was sitting just off the leaders, and when one of the jockeys ahead of her saw the loose horse he switched to the outside, leaving a hole for her to go through. It was right in the path of the loose horse. The collision was so violent both horses died.

Estaban “Steve” Gomez, the rider who swung his horse out of harm’s way is haunted by the accident. “I have felt so much guilt,” he told Jan and Stacy. Gomez said the muddy track was unsafe and felt he should have told the stewards he wouldn’t ride because of the conditions.

“I blame no one,” Stacy said.

Film of the accident is used by Chris McCarron to teach aspiring jockeys at the North American Riding Academy “to show them what can happen in a horse race,” Jan said.

There was no riding school when Stacy decided to switch careers, but it wasn’t done on a whim or without planning. She grew up riding horses, and a visit to Yakima Meadows racetrack in Washington as a 6-year-old inspired her to someday become a jockey.  She spent several years preparing, exercising horses on the track, took a leave of absence from her teaching job in 1999 and began to ride at county fairs in Utah before moving back to Arizona to ride at Turf Paradise and the Arizona fairs. She also spent some time at Mountaineer Park in West Virginia before returning to Arizona.

Stacy and Jan traveled to Arlington Park this summer to take part in the “Dining With the Dynasty” fundraiser to benefit the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund and Racetrack Chaplaincy of America. The event brought to Chicago a number of Hall of Fame jockeys and several disabled former riders who depend on the PDJF for assistance, Fans or horsemen who purchased tickets got a chance to spend some time with them. “Everyone was so nice to me. It was wonderful,” Stacy said.

“When Stacy got hurt there was nothing like this,” Jan said. She said the PDJF has come a long way in a relatively short time, thanks in large part to Nancy LaSala, its tireless executive director. “Nancy is really fighting for these jockeys,” Jan said.

Stacy is dispensed medication regularly through a hockey puck-sized device doctors implanted in her midsection. “It ruined my bikini line,” Stacy joked.

She and Jan have shared a lot of laughs and many tears throughout Stacy’s remarkable recovery. At one point in our conversation, Jan was trying to come up with a word to describe a certain procedure when Stacy interrupted her and said “simulation.”

“Spoken like a girl with a brain injury,” Jan said.

Jan wants to put the entire experience into a book she hopes will inspire both caregivers and those who have suffered crippling injuries or illnesses. “I know it can help people out,” she said.

The BREEDERS’ CUP OR BUST fundraising drive is in the home stretch, as we arrive at Santa Anita on Thursday afternoon following a brief stopover in Las Vegas. Meeting people like Stacy Burton who have shown such courage in the face of disabling injuries has, without question, been the highlight of our journey.

Thanks to Suffolk Downs, the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club, trainer Bob Baffert and the  Wynn Hotel in Las Vegas for sponsoring this segment of the drive. Previous sponsors were Robert and Blythe Clay’s Three Chimneys Farm, Cot Campbell’s Dogwood Stable, numerous affiliates of the Horsemen’s Benevolent and Protective Association, Zia Park, Global Gaming Solutions and Remington Park; Terry Finley and his West Point Thoroughbred partners; Tommy Simon’s Vinery; Rick Porter’s Fox Hill Farm; TVG; Bill Casner and WinStar Farm; Barry Irwin of Team Valor International; Kate Lantaff of Tahoma Stud; William S. Farish’s Lane’s End, Sheikh Mohammed’s Darley, Brereton C. Jones’ Airdrie Stud and the Young family’s Overbrook Farm. A special thanks to our media partner TVG and TVG’s online community for playing such a big part in promoting the drive.

PHOENIX TRACK NO PARADISE

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

By Ray Paulick
Driving from Kentucky to California for the Breeders’ Cup and stopping at racetracks along the way to raise money for the Breeders’ Cup Charities to benefit the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund and The V Foundation for Cancer Research has been a terrific experience.

For starters, I got to go to a couple of racetracks I’d never been to before (Zia Park, Turf Paradise) and revisited two others I hadn’t been to in some time. There were a couple of unscheduled stops: Indiana Downs (though the live racing program was finished for the night) and Will Rogers Downs in Oklahoma for some simulcast betting.

One thing that stood out is that racetracks with slot machines—Indiana Downs, Will Rogers Downs, Remington Park, Zia Park—are thriving, and those without, Hawthorne, Turf Paradise and Santa Anita, where we will arrive on Thursday—are struggling.

Keeneland, where the BREEDERS’ CUP OR BUST fundraising drive kicked off last Wednesday, is in a separate category, since a significant portion of purse money comes from auction commissions. But with sales down significantly this year, Keeneland will be hard-pressed to sustain its purse levels in 2010.

Brad Cummings, my partner in the Paulick Report, handled many of the logistics for the journey, working with track marketing departments to set up promotions (jockeys autographing Breeders’ Cup caps, handicapping contests, etc.), and he was pleased with how most of the tracks responded to the fundraising effort. The tracks did not have much time to plan, since this idea came to us only a few weeks ago, so any level of participation was much appreciated.

It was great to see that the willing participation of the tracks to raise money for the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund went over big with many members of the local jockey colonies we met. A common theme at every stop was a feeling by jockeys that they’ve been abandoned to some extent by the racetracks and the racing industry, especially when they are injured. So it was heartening to them to see the tracks promoting their cause.

The only track we visited that showed no interest in helping raise money for the two charities was Turf Paradise. At our earlier stops on the drive, we were warned by horsemen and others who had previous experience with the Phoenix, Ariz., track not to expect too much in the way of promotions or cooperation.

Much to our dismay, they were right. Track management didn’t return numerous phone calls we made to them and ultimately did nothing to promote the two charities. The track was virtually empty for our Tuesday visit, and I’m really not surprised. If the fans are treated with the same indifference we felt, they’re going to find somewhere else to spend their entertainment or gambling dollars.

It’s too bad. Phoenix is a major league sports market, the racetrack is attractive, and many retirees (perfect for racing’s older demographic) winter in the area. The employees we dealt with were cheerful and helpful, but management certainly left a lot to be desired.

The one thing Turf Paradise did for us was buy us lunch. After the day was over, though we decided they probably need the money more than we do. We’ll be sending a check to Turf Paradise to cover the cost of the lunch.

Just remember, if you start to hear the folks from Turf Paradise complain about economic hardships due to tough times, know that is only part of the truth. In economic climates of all shapes and sizes, good business generally gets rewarded. When an opportunity to help a good cause falls into a racetrack’s lap and they don’t seize on it in any way, it’s indicative of a greater problem. Racetracks that operate likeTurf Paradise need to reassess their priorities if they want to find success in our industry.

Copyright © 2009, The Paulick Report

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BREEDERS’ CUP OR BUST: HORSING AROUND IN OKLAHOMA

Saturday, October 31st, 2009
By Ray Paulick
Please click here to donate to Breeders’ Cup Charities benefiting the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund and V Foundation for Cancer Research. Give a minimum of one penny per mile and you will be eligible for a drawing to win one of 10 Breeders’ Cup caps to be signed by the winning jockeys of all 14 Breeders’ Cup races this Friday and Saturday.

Saturday was supposed to be strictly a driving day for the BREEDERS’ CUP OR BUST fundraising drive, but Brad Cummings and I never met a racetrack we didn’t like, so when we saw that Will Rogers Downs was just a couple miles from the Claremore, Okla., exit on I-64, we felt compelled to stop.

The fundraising drive, done in partnership with Breeders’ Cup Charities, will benefit the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund and the V Foundation for Cancer Research.

There was no live racing going on at WRD, but plenty of slot machines, simulcasting and a friendly staff. We even saw a patron arriving on horseback—not something you see every day.

The simulcast room was relatively full, and we talked with one of the regulars, a fellow who looked like a love child of Yosemite Sam and ZZ Top. He was a serious player, bringing a briefcase full of trip notes on tracks around the country, but said he was looking forward to the live meeting that begins at WRD in February. “The racing’s gotten pretty good here,” he said. “Some of the horses from the Fair Grounds and Oaklawn Park will show up.”

This is one of those racetracks that probably wouldn’t be in business were it not for slot machines, or in this case Indian gaming.  Will Rogers Downs is owned by the Cherokee Nation, one of three Indian tribes that own racetracks in Oklahoma. The Choctaw Nation owns Blue Ribbon Downs in Sallisaw. That’s the track where jockey Mark Pace died earlier this month. Since that tragedy, the Choctaws announced they will be closing the track because of economic reasons related to the track’s location.

Tomorrow, we’ll be visiting Remington Park, which recently was purchased by Global Gaming Solutions, a subsidiary of the Chickasaw Nation. No track has taken ahold of the bit on raising funds for the BREEDERS’ CUP OR BUST drive like Remington Park has, and I think we’ve got an exciting and gratifying day ahead of us tomorrow. Scott Wells and his staff have gone above and beyond any of our wildest expectations, and we owe a special thanks to Joy Rose Murphy, the track’s promotions coordinator.

I’m not sure I’ll feel the same way after tomorrow’s “Hippity Hop” race, when Brad and I mount giant rubber balls and bounce our way down the track against members of the local jockey colony. But if you’re going to be humiliated, you might as well do it for a good cause.

On a serious note: If our experiences with Remington Park under its new ownership are any indication, horse racing is going to benefit from the Chickasaws’ involvement in the industry. It appears they understand the value of good corporate citizenship.

The visit with Michael Straight and his family at the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago will be with us for a long time. Sadly, just in the last 24 hours we’ve learned of more spills and mishaps involving jockeys, beginning with an accident at Keeneland involving Julia Brimo, a Sovereign Award winner as leading apprentice in Canada. She was listed in critical condition at a Lexington hospital. Apprentice Amanda Casey, who earlier on Friday at Aqueduct celebrated her first win of the meeting, ended up at a New York hospital with a bruised liver after getting kicked in a paddock mishap. Earlier today, we learned that Omar Moreno was involved in a spill at Woodbine in Canada.

The beat goes on, and so does the industry’s need to help provide for jockeys who are permanently disabled from riding accidents. If you haven’t made a donation to Breeders’ Cup Charities to benefit the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund and the V Foundation for Cancer Research, please do so by clicking here.

After Friday’s visit with the Straight family, we headed south and encountered heavy rainfall alongo the way. We thought we’d stop in and catch some racing at Fairmount Park’s simulcast room late in the afternoon, but didn’t bring our waders to walk through the parking lot to the front door. Apparently we’d just missed a heavy storm that flooded the parking lot and other businesses in the St. Louis area. 

Our Saturday began with a tasty breakfast at a Waffle House in Springfield, Mo., in the Ozarks. I thought I’d walked into a bizarre rehearsal for the Rocky Horror Picture Show, but Brad reminded me that it was Halloween morning, and the crew was just having a little fun. Too bad. I think the Rocky Horror Waffle House could be the next big thing in the franchise world.

Sponsors for the Chicago to Oklahoma City portion of this fundraising drive are: Global Gaming Solutions and Remington Park; Terry Finley and his West Point Thoroughbreds partners; Tommy Simon’s Vinery; and Rick Porter’s Fox Hill Farm.

Sponsors for our previous segments were TVG; Bill Casner and WinStar Farm; Barry Irwin of Team Valor International; Kate Lantaff of Tahoma Stud; the William S. Farish’s Lane’s End, Sheikh Mohammed’s Darley, Brereton C. Jones’ Airdrie Stud and the Young family’s Overbrook Farm.

A special thanks to our media partner TVG and the TVG’s online community for playing such a big part in promoting the drive and raising awareness and money for these charities. All sponsorship dollars go directly to Breeders’ Cup Charities, to be divided evenly between the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund and the V Foundation for Cancer Research.

PAULICK REPORT PRESENTS BREEDERS’ CUP OR BUST: A CHARITY FUNDRAISING ‘DRIVE’

Monday, October 26th, 2009
By Ray Paulick
Some people think I’d do just about anything to not get on an airplane. One of those folks is Brad Cummings, my partner in the Paulick Report. A couple of weeks ago, knowing that I’ve had  my fill of bad experiences with commercial airlines, he asked if I’d be driving out to the Breeders’ Cup from my home in Lexington, Ky., to Santa Anita Park in Arcadia, Calif.

“Are you nuts?” I asked. I told Brad I was in the process of booking a flight but then, for some reason, said, “Why don’t you drive out there with me.” We had just been discussing our disappointment in not being able to get a group of people together from Central Kentucky to fill a chartered bus and attend a Chicago-area fundraiser Oct. 25 for apprentice jockey Michael Straight, who was seriously injured in a riding mishap at Arlington Park this summer. Brad had really been hoping to show that people in Kentucky had the young jockey in their thoughts and prayers, but understood that giving up a Sunday and Monday to attend the event was a tall order for many folks.

“Maybe we can put together our own fundraiser,” I told Brad, stopping at tracks along the way, and somehow raising awareness and money for not just Michael Straight but for all the injured riders who depend on the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund. It’s an organization that provides sorely needed financial assistance to more than 60 jockeys who have suffered some form of paralysis, head trauma or other debilitating injury.

From that lunchtime meeting in Lexington came the idea for BREEDERS’ CUP OR BUST: A FUNDRAISING ‘DRIVE’ that gets under way at Keeneland this Wednesday (Oct. 28), continues at Hawthorne in Chicago on Thursday (Oct. 29), Remington Park in Oklahoma City on Sunday (Nov. 1), Zia Park in Hobbs, N.M., next Monday (Nov. 2)  and Turf Paradise in Phoenix, Ariz., next Tuesday (Nov. 3). We’ll stop at a Las Vegas racebook next Wednesday (Nov. 4) and then arrive at Santa Anita Park on the eve of the Breeders’ Cup.

Click here to read the full details about the BREEDERS’ CUP OR BUST FUNDRAISING ‘DRIVE’.

We made a few phone calls after our initial discussion, including one to someone at the Breeders’ Cup to see if the organization was interested in partnering with us on this crazy idea. To my astonishment, they were immediately supportive. So was TVG, the racing network and account wagering company, which will help promote this fundraising effort on both their telecasts and online through the TVG community as our exclusive media partner.

Breeders’ Cup Charities officials suggested we branch out and consider a second charity to benefit from this drive, specifically The V Foundation for Cancer Research, founded by ESPN and the late North Carolina State basketball coach and television commentator Jim Valvano. Coach V, who died from brain cancer in 2003, gave the foundation its motto, “Don’t give up…Don’t ever give up,” during an unforgettable speech at the inaugural ESPY awards when he received the Arthur Ashe Courage & Humanitarian Award, just eight weeks before his death.

We’ve all lost friends or loved ones to this disease, and the absence of stricken Hall of Fame trainer Bobby Frankel from this year’s Breeders’ Cup will serve as a sad reminder of how devastating cancer can be. The V Foundation has funded vital research into unraveling the mysteries of cancer over the past 15 years. It ranks among the top 2% of all charities ranked by the independent organization, Charity Navigator, for maintaining extremely low administration and fundraising expenses.

While these two organizations deal with serious medical issues, we plan to have some fun while raising money on behalf of Breeders’ Cup Charities and the two organizations.  We’ll be raising awareness for them, too, chronicling each stop on the zig-zagging, 2,835-mile road trip with live blogs detailing our experiences.

We hope you’ll stop by the Paulick Report, beginning Wednesday when BREEDERS’ CUP OR BUST starts at Keeneland, where the jockey colony will be autographing Breeders’ Cup caps and I’ll be participating in a one-on-one handicapping challenge with local radio personality Tom Leach, the voice of the Kentucky Wildcats. Breeders’ Cup is staking us to a bankroll that we hope to increase throughout the trip with help from the TVG community and handicappers and horseplayers at each track.

Other promotions along the way include a race pitting the two traveling partners of the Paulick Report against members of the Remington Park jockey colony riding big, bouncing rubber balls. I think I’m at least 50-1 to win that contest.

You’ll have an opportunity to support the ‘drive,’ too, by pledging a specific amount per mile at the Breeders’ Cup Charities secured web site and making a tax-deductible online donation. Please click here to donate now.

In addition, for each of the six segments of the drive, we are soliciting individuals, businesses or charitable foundations as sponsors willing to donate a minimum of $2,000 to the charities. Please email us at  info@paulickreport.com if you are interested in sponsoring a segment, which will be acknowledged throughout the trip in our daily blogs.

It’s been less than 18 months since the Paulick Report launched as an independent source of news and commentary for the Thoroughbred industry. As many of you know, in our early days we were sustained by the support of readers like you who contributed during National Public Radio-style fundraising drives. Since then, we’ve been blessed with overwhelming growth in both readership and advertising support from businesses throughout the racing and breeding communities.

Because of that support, we feel privileged to be able to put our energies toward something that truly is a worthy cause. We are asking you to give again. Please join us in supporting Breeders’ Cup Charities to benefit the Permanently Disabled Jockeys Fund and The V Foundation for Cancer Research.

Copyright © 2009, The Paulick Report

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