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Spa day 9 trivia question

Posted by noonante on July 28, 2013
Posted in: Horse Racing, Saratoga thoughts. Tagged: Saratoga race meet. Leave a comment

Hall-of-Fame jockey Mike Smith came in from California to ride Palace Malice to a victory in the Jim Dandy.  Saratoga has a notably strong jockey colony with two additional Hall-of-Famers who ride regularly in the Spa.  Of all the regular riders, including Smith, who has the highest winning percentage for 2013 of all the jockeys?

Go to the Horse Racing page for the answer.

The facts are from the Sunday edition of the Daily Racing Form.

Spa day 8 trivia question

Posted by noonante on July 28, 2013
Posted in: Horse Racing, Saratoga thoughts, Uncategorized. Tagged: Saratoga race meet. Leave a comment

Since there was an Eclipse Award for Horse of the Year in 1971, only three winners of the Jim Dandy were a Horse of the Year.  Who are they?  Hints:  Two of them won the Belmont Stakes and one answer is kind of a trick.

Go to the Horse Racing page for the answer.

The facts are from Wikipedia and the late, much-lamented Thoroughbred Times Racing Almanac.

Spa day 7 trivia question

Posted by noonante on July 26, 2013
Posted in: Horse Racing, Saratoga thoughts. Tagged: Saratoga race meet. Leave a comment

These two trainers each had a 36% winning percentage for starters on the turf at least year’s meet.  They were the highest percentages for any trainer with more than three starts on grass.  Who are they?

Go to the Horse Racing page for the answer.

The facts are from the Daily Racing Form’s Ultimate Saratoga Players’ Guide.

Random thoughts from the Spa’s first week

Posted by noonante on July 26, 2013
Posted in: Horse Racing, Saratoga thoughts. Tagged: Saratoga race meet. 3 Comments

With the first full week of racing over, here are some random observations:

  • NYRA dodged a bullet running on the first day.  When last week’s heat wave entered its sixth or seven day, with the Opening Day forecast predicted as the hottest one yet, I was certain racing would be cancelled.  The safety of equine and human athletes has been a major focus of NYRA ever since the release last year of a report on that very topic by a blue ribbon panel of experts.  And, it was damn hot.  But I have not heard of any problems resulting from Friday’s heat, so the extra precautions taken were either effective or not needed.  Equidaily.com is carrying a report from the The Sacramento Bee about a two-year old filly collapsing and dying following a race last Thursday in California on a day when the thermometer hit 99, although the cause of death is not yet known.
  • NYRA deflected a bullet on the second day.  When complaints were made about the name of a food truck on the grounds  –  The Wandering Dago  –  NYRA ordered the vehicle off the grounds.  I don’t know how it got on in the first place, although it is a slur I have not heard in decades, so perhaps its unfamiliarity allowed it to slip by.  But what are these folks thinking?  They were banned from the Empire State Plaza, and even though they profess to be of Italian heritage, they don’t know the word is offensive?  I thought the goal of most businesses is to make money, so why would you name your business a word that will cause many people to avoid it for that reason?
  • Are you as excited as I am about the pending battle for the ownership title?  From what I have read, Ken Ramsey and Mike Repole will be slugging it out for bragging rights for whomever emerges as the meet’s leading owner.  The jockey title is of legitimate interest because it is a contest among a group of remarkable athletes who go through a lot to stay on their game.  The trainer title has nothing to do with horsemanship, instead coming down to who attracts the most well-healed owners.  Do we really need to pay attention to a contest between a couple of rich guys?  Particularly when one fears they will start running horses near the end of the meet who should not be racing, just so they can satisfy already inflated egos.
  • Speaking of Repole, isn’t it time to cease the ridicule of his wife?  I understand that if you own a lot of horses, it may be difficult to come up with good names.  (I once heard an owner actually complain about this.)  But, we now get it.  Repole thinks his wife shops too much because we have names such as Stopshoppingmaria, Stopchargingmaria and Unlimited Budget.  While there may be some who think that one such name is cute, they are becoming increasingly tiresome.  Why doesn’t he instead think of clever monikers for billionaires who spend a lot of money buying and training horses?
  • NYRA has been running interesting cards at the Spa.  Last year I was critical of the surplus of state-bred and claiming races that had little variety.  This year’s cards have been significantly more interesting, and credit should go to NYRA’s Director of Racing, P.J. Campo.  As just one example, Wednesday’s 6th race was an “Allowance Optional Claimer” with several stakes winners, including graded stakes, for a purse of $95,000  –  and that was not the day’s feature.
  • NYRA’s new web site also deserves kudos.  It’s clean, crisp and is loaded with useful information.
  • Is attendance going to be the story of the meet?   If it is, my fear is that it will be a negative one.  On Wednesday, a summer day that could not have been more perfect, only 10,119 showed up, a decline of 21% from the same day last year, although Thursday’s attendance bounced back.  Through the first six days of racing, four saw a decline from last year, with total attendance down 5%.  NYRA’s new CEO Chris Kay has identified women and young girls as an audience that he hopes to attract.  Here’s a crazy idea:  Why not see if there is a top woman rider somewhere in the country and bring her to Saratoga to make some ads promoting the sport?  For a game that too often is portrayed in the media as one of older white men with gambling problems, putting a fresh face on the sport cannot hurt.  No rush, however.  We still have five weeks and four days to go.

Spa day 6 trivia question

Posted by noonante on July 25, 2013
Posted in: Horse Racing, Saratoga thoughts. Tagged: Saratoga race meet. Leave a comment

Today’s card has two Maiden Special Weight races for two-year olds.  Todd Pletcher has two colts and one filly entered, each making their first career start.  At last year’s meet, 40 (sic) of his horses made their first start.as a two-year old here.

1)  How many of the 40 won?

2)  How many trainers had more wins in total than Pletcher’s first time two-year old starters?

Go to the Horse Racing page for the answer.

The facts are from the Daily Racing Form’s Ultimate Saratoga Players’ Guide.

NYRA keeps details of CEO’s contract secret

Posted by noonante on July 25, 2013
Posted in: Horse Racing, Political/Social commentary. Tagged: Andrew Cuomo, Christopher Kay, David Skorton, new NYRA Board, New York racing, NYRA. 2 Comments

At Bill Clinton’s impeachment trial in the United States Senate, his attorney, former Senator Dale Bumpers, observed, “When they say it’s not about the sex … it’s about the sex.”  A corollary theory exists when a politician vows to be transparent  –  even running the most transparent administration in history  –  because then it’s time to get out the hip boots.

Governor Andrew Cuomo designated David Skorton, President of Cornell University, to chair the New York Racing Association’s Reorganization Board following the state’s takeover of the “old” NYRA last year.  At the first meeting of the Board, Skorton announced his decision to “voluntarily” comply with New York’s public records law and open meetings law, and had the Board pass a motion affirming that desire.  The new NYRA Board, consisting of  17 members, 12 of whom are appointed by the Governor or legislative leaders, however, is now actually a government agency for purposes of those two laws and must comply with them whether it wants to or not.

When it came time to hire a new CEO, the chair of the Compensation Committee expressed a concern about a government agency paying a salary equivalent to the prior CEO’s, and suggested a bifurcated approach.   While a consultant to the Compensation Committee had advised that a salary for a comparable position would be in the range of $600,000 to $1 million, the Committee’s recommendation was for a salary of $300,000 and eligibility for a bonus of $250,000.  Chairman Skorton endorsed this approach, assuring the Board members that a bonus would be based on a “real, balanced score card” with milestones.  After the NYRA Board decided to hire Chris Kay as its new CEO on June 18, Chairman Skorton in a press statement again referenced the “balanced score card” which contained both quantitative and qualitative “metrics.”  He further stated that he wanted to be “very public about this.”

So at Kay’s first press conference at Saratoga last week, he was asked to identify the benchmarks that would be used to measure his performance.  He refused.  When pressed, Kay told the questioner to ask Chairman Skorton.

It turns out I had already done so, making a request for the scorecard and a copy of Kay’s contract under New York’s public records law.  This week I was informed that I would not be given the documents by the deadline set forth in the  law, but may get them in another month.  While the law does permit extending the deadline for “reasonable circumstances,” there are no valid reasons to withhold documents that are unquestionably public ones and readily available in NYRA’s offices.

Even more troubling than the refusal of NYRA to both follow the law and Skorton’s stated desire to be “very public,” however, is why NYRA would want to withhold them?  The most obvious explanation, of course, is that there is something in the documents that would be embarrassing to NYRA.  One could also conclude that in the Cuomo Administration  –  this is a Governor who once risibly said his would be the most transparent in New York history  – cares little for the niceties of laws that are supposed to guarantee New Yorkers reasonable access to what their government is doing.

While those are both convenient, and perhaps accurate, explanations, I am puzzled that a NYRA that desperately wants to break from the recent past will not let us know how they will be different.  The Cuomo team now fully in charge not only has no track record in racing, but has yet to provide any evidence they have even a remote clue of what they are doing.  The Governor has no interest in a signature New York industry, and has admitted having no knowledge about the sport.  His pick to head NYRA’s Board has also conceded lacking knowledge (at least at the time he assumed his position).  And now the guy running the show can only point to track visits that were more than 40 years ago as his racing background.

So while New York’s horsemen and horsewomen wonder what the future will bring in an economic environment that is increasingly fragile, why won’t NYRA’s leadership tell us what their vision is by releasing the ballyhooed goals of the new CEO?  Why won’t they tell existing fans, as well as the much-needed new ones, what they hope to accomplish to make the sport as prominent in this state as it has been in the not-too-distant past?

In his press conference last week, CEO Chris Kay spoke of the re-privatization effort as being his primary concern.  He said he had thoughts about attracting more people to the track, particularly focusing on women and young girls.  Given that he was barely in to his third week on the job, it is not surprising that he could not be more specific.   But he was able to parrot some of the tired tropes about the discredited old NYRA.  When he was asked to give a concrete example of how NYRA’s now being “aligned” with state government would result in an improvement going forward, he could not do so.  NYRA’s new leaders appear to be operating under a delusion that all they need to do to build the public’s trust and support is to continually denigrate the prior leadership  –  even though that leadership left almost 15 months ago.

If all NYRA is doing is marking time until yet another governing structure is in place in 2016, it would not only be a colossal waste of time, but a grave disservice to all those whose livelihoods depend on the sport, as well as to a sport in which New York has been a national leader.  That’s why it would be nice to know what Chris Kay’s performance goals are.

Spa day 5 trivia question

Posted by noonante on July 24, 2013
Posted in: Horse Racing, Saratoga thoughts. Tagged: Saratoga race meet. Leave a comment

Today’s 10th race has been taken off the grass and will be run at 5 1/2 furlongs on the main track.  With two scratches from the body of the race, the Also Eligible draws in as does the Main Track only, and will break from posts 11 and 12 respectively.  The AE, Harrier Hill, was the morning line favorite at 2-1 when the race was carded for the grass.

Last year, 26 horses broke from posts 8 through 12 when racing 5 or 5 1/2 furlongs on the dirt.  How many won?

Go to the Horse Racing page for the answer.

The facts are from the Daily Racing Form’s Ultimate Saratoga Players’ Guide.

Spa day 4 trivia question

Posted by noonante on July 22, 2013
Posted in: Horse Racing, Saratoga thoughts. Tagged: Saratoga race meet. Leave a comment

Ramon Dominguez and John Velazquez led all jockeys in numbers of wins over the past five years (2008 through 2012) with 233 and 203 respectively.  Who are the next five jockeys by number of wins over that period?

Go to the Horse Racing page for the answer.

The facts are from the Daily Racing Form’s Ultimate Saratoga Players’ Guide.

Spa day 3 trivia question

Posted by noonante on July 20, 2013
Posted in: Horse Racing, Saratoga thoughts. Tagged: Saratoga race meet. Leave a comment

While there are nine trainers who will likely race at Saratoga this summer who are in the Hall of Fame, there are only two jockeys.  Who are they?

Go to the Horse Racing page for the answer.

The facts are from the web site of the National Museum of Racing. 

Spa day 2 trivia question

Posted by noonante on July 19, 2013
Posted in: Horse Racing, Saratoga thoughts. Tagged: Saratoga race meet. Leave a comment

Who are the nine trainers in the Hall of Fame you can expect to see at Saratoga this summer?

Go to the Horse Racing page for the answer.

The facts are from the web site of the National Museum of Racing. 

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