The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Horse racing grapples with risks of running during pandemic

- AP Sports Writer

By Stephen Whyno

Horse racing is quickly learning it is not totally immune to the effects the coronaviru­s pandemic has had on other sports, and now it’s grappling with the risks of continuing operations.

The Louisiana Derby for now is still set for Saturday, the world’s richest day of races is scheduled to go on in late March in Dubai and several tracks across the U.S. and worldwide remain open. But a worker in New York testing positive for the new coronaviru­s and shuttering another racetrack and jockeys growing reluctant to ride has put racing on edge.

“I think we’re living on borrowed time,” said trainer Tom Amoss, who put himself into self-quarantine after interactin­g with coronaviru­s positive New Orleans Saints coach Sean Payton at a track last weekend. “We’re one jockey away from getting a positive test or getting sick to close our track down.”

Following the lead of tracks in Japan and Hong Kong, many in the U.S. decided to close to the general public but keep running with only essential personnel. The Kentucky Derby was postponed until the fall with the other Triple Crown races expected to follow, but with no NCAA Tournament and few, if any, other events going on, horse racing for at least a little while has been the only live sport to watch and gamble on.

“If we can operate it and do it at a safe manner, it’s great, and it gives people something to do,” Preakness

and Belmont-winning trainer Mark Casse said said before the latest developmen­ts.

How safe remains a question. Prominent U.S.-based jockeys Irad Ortiz Jr., Luis Saez and Tyler Gaffalione each said they wouldn’t travel to Dubai because of coronaviru­s or quarantine fears, and Ortiz took it a step further by announcing he wouldn’t take any mounts right now.

“After a lot of considerat­ion, I have decided to stop riding,” Ortiz tweeted. “This is the safest decision for my family and myself. Hopefully we can all make it safely out of this quarantine sooner than later and get back to what we all love.”

A backstretc­h worker at Belmont Park on Long Island tested positive Thursday for COVID-19, and Aqueduct Racetrack suspended live racing indefinite­ly. Maryland’s Laurel Park announced it was “pausing” live racing, while Florida’s Gulfstream Park closed Friday with plans to reopen Saturday.

Tracks are taking precaution­s such as temperatur­e checks and limits on the number of people allowed in certain areas at a time. National Thoroughbr­ed Racing Associatio­n president and CEO Alex Waldrop said there’s a focus on protecting and caring for backstretc­h and stable workers who look after the horses, with dorm rooms available for isolation and ongoing communicat­ion with health officials.

“We have to be very careful that even in this circumstan­ce we’re not subjecting people to any undue risks,”

Waldrop said. “If there is an outbreak of any sort, we’ll be on the lookout for that. That may change the situation. It’s a day-to-day situation. We’re doing our best to keep everyone safe.”

In recent days, with longestabl­ished online betting platforms, less reliance on fans at the track, plenty of television coverage and limited contact among people it seemed possible for the sport to continue operating.

“We obviously don’t have as much to lose because we’ve done such a poor job of developing new fans, which would be the people that would come to the track,” Thoroughbr­ed Idea Foundation founder Craig Bernick said. “So, frankly, if they’re not allowing fans on the racetrack, all of that (money wagered) should be protected because they weren’t coming anyway.”

 ?? MARK J. TERRILL - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Horses run in the fourth race at Santa Anita Park in front of empty stands, Saturday, March 14, 2020, in Arcadia, Calif. While most of the sports world is idled by the coronaviru­s pandemic, horse racing runs on.
MARK J. TERRILL - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Horses run in the fourth race at Santa Anita Park in front of empty stands, Saturday, March 14, 2020, in Arcadia, Calif. While most of the sports world is idled by the coronaviru­s pandemic, horse racing runs on.

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