The Day

Horse racing remains in a state of transition

- By STEPHEN WHYNO

Instead of the Preakness running Saturday in Baltimore with perhaps another heralded Kentucky Derby winner looking to capture the second jewel of the Triple Crown, horse racing is in the midst of transition.

And lower and middle class owners are in the cross hairs.

Owner Maggi Moss was concerned about the fate of the little guys before the coronaviru­s derailed the sport. Now, she worries her fears have become a reality.

“We have an industry that's going to come back looking very different,” Moss said. “Maybe I'm wrong, but there's many people that can't afford this anymore.” Though all is not lost. Not yet. While a vast majority of North American thoroughbr­ed tracks remain dark, Churchill Downs and Santa Anita Park are set to resume racing without fans without fans and others are set to follow in what could be a lifeline for owners and trainers with smaller barns who have been suffering without steady income.

“We're seeing the light at the end of the tunnel, hopefully,” Maryland-based owner and trainer Linda Gaudet said from Louisville, Kentucky, where she's preparing for racing to return Saturday at Churchill Downs. “The owners and the trainers and the riders, they need to get back to work, make a living.”

A mix of government restrictio­ns and positive COVID-19 results stopped racing in Kentucky, Maryland, New York, California and elsewhere in March, and Gaudet said “it's been a long two months.” Racing without fans continued only at a handful of tracks, including Florida's Gulfstream Park and Tampa Bay Downs and Arkansas' Oaklawn Park.

Trainer Norm Casse recently said from Florida that as long as some tracks are running, he's able to keep his operation going.

“I don't think there's probably an industry in the country that's not affected by this in some way, shape or form,” Norm Casse said. “You take comfort in the fact that you know you're not alone, that everybody's going to be making sacrifices. Everybody probably stands to lose a little something from all of this and just be grateful to be in the position we were in to begin with.”

Some are in better position than others. Deep-pocketed owners and big-time trainers like two-time Triple Crown winner Bob Baffert can handle the reduction in racing. It's more concerning for the small businesses throughout the industry, from owners and trainers to jockeys, grooms and other employees.

“Those businesses don't have the financial flexibilit­y, perhaps the cash reserves, to weather this storm for longer than a month or two,” National Thoroughbr­ed Racing Associatio­n president and CEO Alex Waldrop said. “If this extends past May into June or July, you're going to see attrition. You're going to see people who aren't going to be able to remain viable business operations.”

The NTRA has encouraged horsemen to apply for federal and state government aid, which Gaudet did, calling it “something that will keep the business afloat until we get back racing.”

The Jockey Club Safety Net Foundation also provided assistance by feeding backstretc­h workers living and working at eight U.S. tracks, including Churchill, Belmont Park on Long Island and Santa Anita Park outside Los Angeles.

“What's unique about horse racing is they have to continue to train these horses and care for these horses even if there isn't live racing, so right now a lot of these people are still working,” Jockey Club Safety Net executive director Shannon Kelly said.

 ?? JULIO CORTEZ/AP PHOTO ?? An aide wears a face mask while walking with a horse to a stable after a bath at Pimlico Race Couse in Baltimore on Friday. Horse racing is in a state of transition at a time usually reserved for Triple Crown season. The Preakness would have been run today.
JULIO CORTEZ/AP PHOTO An aide wears a face mask while walking with a horse to a stable after a bath at Pimlico Race Couse in Baltimore on Friday. Horse racing is in a state of transition at a time usually reserved for Triple Crown season. The Preakness would have been run today.

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