San Diego Union-Tribune

IMPORTANT MEET AT SANTA ANITA

Arcadia track opens today with most scrutiny in 85 years

- BY JOHN CHERWA

ARCADIA

Yet again, beginning today, Santa Anita is faced with the most important meeting in its 85-year history. At stake is not just the future of the track, but perhaps the sport itself, not just in California but around the country.

During the last winterspri­ng meeting, which traditiona­lly starts Dec. 26 and runs for almost seven months, the track had 30 horse fatalities, even after it was closed to racing for more than three weeks while the deaths were investigat­ed.

The casualties led to intense scrutiny and the installmen­t of unpreceden­ted safety measures led by The Stronach Group (TSG), the track’s owner. Earlier this month, the L.A. County District Attorney’s office concluded a nine-month investigat­ion and found Santa Anita not guilty of any criminal wrongdoing.

In January, the California Horse Racing Board is expected to announce the results of its investigat­ion, focusing on informatio­n drawn from the necropsies on the horses. If the results are consistent with previous catastroph­ic injuries, it will find at least two-thirds were caused by pre-existing conditions that go undetected because of the lack of equipment or medical procedures.

TSG realigned its corporate structure and hired Craig Fravel, a former longtime Del Mar executive and CEO of the Breeders’ Cup, as head of its racing division. He took over in early November.

“Running a track like Del Mar or the Breeders’ Cup is a fairly compact organizati­onal structure,” Fravel said. “Moving into a company that has five race tracks is a much more farflung operation. It’s harder to get my arms around. But there are a lot of good people, particular­ly at Santa Anita.”

Fravel knows the Arcadia track is his top priority and understand­s the task and the gravity of the situation.

“We’re in a rebuilding mode and we need to instill confidence in our customers, horsemen on track and our wagering and attending pubic,” Fravel said. “Our whole industry needs a new level of confidence.”

TSG is banking on safety as the catalyst to the rebuilding project. It has instituted more stringent medication and veterinary oversight protocols. And it is a proponent of eliminatin­g the riding crop or whip. There seems little doubt the survival of the sport, especially in California, could be in jeopardy if the frequency of casualties doesn’t decrease.

Gov. Gavin Newsom and U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-calif.) have been critical of racing in California and its inability to stop horses from dying on the track. Both have said if it problem doesn’t get fixed, there could be dire consequenc­es for the industry. Animal rights’ groups have been a constant sight at tracks and CHRB meetings, mostly calling for the eliminatio­n of the sport. There is the possibilit­y of a ballot initiative that, if passed, could eliminate racing in the state.

On a national level, there is the bipartisan Horse Racing Integrity Act, which would call for consistent medication rules throughout the country. Currently racing is controlled solely by state-run bodies. In an effort to get in front of the pressure, the major tracks and ownership groups formed the Thoroughbr­ed Safety Coalition, which hopes to standardiz­e safety measures across the country.

The Santa Anita meeting was supposed to start Thursday but was delayed until today for concerns about the track condition after bad weather was forecast. In addition, the track would have had to take major races off the turf, making for a lousy wagering experience after anticipate­d scratches.

“We spent a lot of time looking at the CHRB inclement weather policy,” Fravel said. “We’re not taking any chances. Sometimes you just have to make those calls.”

The track is expected to be in near-perfect shape today, with a backdrop of the snow-topped San Gabriel Mountains. There are 11 races, seven of them stakes races, including three Grade I events.

The most anticipate­d race is the Grade I $300,000 Malibu Stakes with Omaha Beach, who was the favorite for the Kentucky Derby before scratching with a throat issue. He was second in the Breeders’ Cup Mile. Also in the race is Roadster, winner of the Santa Anita Derby.

Today’s card is filled with quality horses and goodsized fields, except the Malibu, which has five entrants. But the other challenge Santa Anita faces is a dwindling horse population in the wake of all the troubles the track has endured.

Santa Anita mainstay trainers such as Richard Baltas, Phil D’amato, Peter Eurton, Peter Miller and John Sadler are sending some horses to Oaklawn Park in Arkansas, keeping their options open should things turn bad at Santa Anita. Jerry Hollendorf­er, who was banned from TSG tracks after his fourth fatality at Santa Anita and two at Golden Gate Fields, will also run horses at Oaklawn.

“(The horse population) is down, no question,” Fravel said. “And we’re going to do the best we can to race four days a week. We’re going to write races that fit our horse population. We need to send a message to our owners and trainers that we appreciate them and want them to run and be part of our program.

“It’s all worth saving.”

“Our whole industry needs a new level of confidence.” Craig Fravel • The Stronach Group

Cherwa is a freelance writer for the L.A. Times.

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