The Citizen (KZN)

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INVESTMENT: MORE INCLUSION WOULD HELP WITH TRANSFORMA­TION

- Mike Moon news@citizen.co.za

Staff ownership schemes at breeding establishm­ents have proved successful.

Authentic, the horse that won the Kentucky Derby in the US at the weekend, has no fewer than 4 600 co-owners. Imagine all those folks trying to cram into the winner’s circle at Churchill Downs’ racecourse, eager to pat their champion on the hindquarte­r?

Perhaps it was a good thing a pandemic ban prevented crowds from attending the 146th running of the famous old race.

In South Africa, we have a fair amount of syndicate ownership, with sometimes up to a dozen people on hand to proudly lead in their winner. Though there is nothing locally on the scale of the Authentic operation, perhaps there could – and should – be.

With racing about to be restructur­ed following the collapse of large operator Phumelela, inclusivit­y and transforma­tion are top of the agenda.

What better way to aim for those targets than by spreading ownership as widely as possible; giving thousands more people some skin in the game?

Racing is not known as the sport of kings for nothing. It’s a damn expensive business, dominated around the world by royalty and other mega rich individual­s.

Yet, in a world consumed with redressing inequaliti­es – and in an industry desperatel­y seeking new models and new fans – fractional ownership seems an obvious road to take.

Most of three-year-old Authentic’s 4 600 owners are members of two syndicates – Spendthrif­t Farm and MyRaceHors­e. The latter, which owns just 12.5% of Authentic, has an internatio­nal membership base of 12 500 – some of whom took the opportunit­y offered by Spendthrif­t Farm’s owner B Wayne Hughes to get a slice of the action.

The smallest share is a mere $206 (about R3 470).

“Wayne really took to the idea of being able to bring horse ownership to literally every man and woman, of any economic status,” Spendthrif­t president Eric Gustavson said after an exciting finish that saw 8-1 shot Authentic hold off the challenge of 5-8 favourite Tiz The Law.

“Wayne is a real advocate for racing. He literally put his money where his mouth is and invested with MyRaceHors­e and he’s just a champion for it.”

Spendthrif­t bought Authentic in partnershi­p with yet another syndicate, Starlight West, for $350 000 at the 2018 Keeneland Yearling Sale.

MyRaceHors­e founder Michael Behrens told horseracin­gnation. com how Hughes reacted when approached about selling part of the star colt.

“He told me, ‘The reason I do this is because the sport is better than the NFL [the US National Football League or American gridiron]. We just got to let people know’. So, he wanted everybody to compete at the highest level. He wanted to do it in a way that had never been done before.”

Even Authentic’s trainer, Bob Baffert, winning a record sixth Kentucky Derby, owns a tiny slice of the glory in a partnershi­p with members of his family and a clutch of US celebritie­s.

It is often noted that grooms are closer to racehorses than their official owners or trainers, as they spend so much time with them, looking after their every need and ensuring their welfare.

That might be somewhere to start with fractional ownership. Discontent among South African grooms has seen protest action disrupting race meetings in recent years, but a real stake in the progress of their charges will surely make these essential workers feel part of the game and invested in its prosperity.

Staff ownership schemes at some local breeding establishm­ents have proved successful, with workers ploughing their profits back in and growing enterprise­s that feed many mouths.

It’s long been a lament that there are so few black African racehorse owners. Though black entreprene­urs have grown notably in wealth in the past three decades, few have ventured into an arena they probably see as risky.

Racing will always be risky, but the rewards are well worth it for true converts. If an initial investment is cheap as chips, so to speak, many more people might be inclined to tata ma chance.

Millions of avid black punters are proof of an appetite for some racing risk. Indeed, these pillars of the game would be odds-on to buy into promising racehorses if the price was right.

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