PASSMASTER HANOVER PREVAILS IN ABBATIELLO NJ CLASSIC

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The Official Newsletter of the Standardbred Breeders & Owners Association of New Jersey Vol. 34, No. 4 Representing owners, breeders, drivers, trainers & caretakers PASSMASTER HANOVER PREVAILS IN ABBATIELLO NJ CLASSIC The rain subsided long enough at the Meadowlands on June 13, 2009 to crown winners Passmaster Hanover in the $500,000 Anthony Abbatiello New Jersey Classic and Showerthemoney in the $175,000 Thomas D Altrui Miss New Jersey. Both stakes are sponsored by the Standardbred Breeders & Owners Association of New Jersey. Passmaster Hanover, whose sire Cam s Card Shark won the New Jersey Classic in 1994, got up in the final strides for a head victory over Vintage Master [by Western Ideal] in the seventh race. It was a half-length back to odds-on favorite Dial Or Nodial [Western Ideal] who cut swift fractions [27.2, 53.4, 1:22.3] and was caught in the stretch, finishing third. Passmaster Hanover was a $250,000 yearling purchase for George Segal s Brittany Farms of Versailles, KY and Jeffrey Snyder of New York, NY. Snyder owns Cam s Card Shark, who stands at Hanover Shoe Farms of New Jersey in Lambertville. The colt, driven by Tim Tetrick, improved his record to five wins in seven lifetime starts. The mile was clocked New Jersey Classic winner Passmaster Hanover, Tim Tetrick driving. in a career best 1:50.2 on an off track. "The fans bet him down pretty hard [2-1 second choice]," trainer Blair Burgess said. "It seems like he earned some respect from last week [winning his New Jersey Classic elim]. I thought he had to get brave somewhere in the mile. He still needs that. He's not ready for three moves yet. He had that chance to get brave on the last turn and responded when he got enough room. You win this race, and it's close to the best [horses] that you're going to meet. I think he belongs with them." Presenting the trophy was New Jersey Racing Commissioner and former SBOANJ founding president Anthony Abbatiello. Although driver Brian Sears was denied a New Jersey Classic victory when Dial Or Nodial finished third, he did win seven races on the card, including the Miss New Jersey with Showherthemoney. It marked the second time this season that Sears bagged seven winners. He also accomplished the feat on February 16, 2009. Sears rallied Showherthemoney, a daughter of Cam s Card Shark, off a second tier trip to take the Miss New Jersey by two and half lengths in 1:50.4. A pair of McArdle fillies finished second and third. McGibson benefited from a pocket trip behind the leader Dawn's Legacy to finish second, while Scarlet McZara was third by three and a half lengths in the fifth race co-feature. Miss New Jersey winner Showherthemoney with Brian Sears in the sulky. Photos by Lisa Photo Inc. Showherthemoney picked up her fifth win. She also has one second and five thirds in 15 career starts. She pushed her bankroll over $160,000. It was the first stakes trophy for trainer Bjorn "Bernie" Noren, who opened his public stable less than six months ago. He received the trophy from Miss New Jersey, Ashley Fairfield as well as Tom D Altrui, son of the stakes namesake. The senior D Altrui was unable to attend. The card also included a pair of $200,000 New Jersey Sire Stakes Championships for three-year-old trotters. The colts event went to 2008 Dan Patch Two-Year-Old Trotting Colt of the Year Muscle Hill, a son of Muscles Yankee driven by Sears and trained by Greg Peck, who also won the New Jersey Sire Stakes Championship at two. The Chancellor by Yankee Glide and My Back Pages by Revenue, were second and third, respectively. Margarita Momma, by Yankee Glide with George Brennan driving the Jan Johnson trainee, rallied three-wide on the turn and split horses in the stretch to win by a neck over Gabbys Dream, a daughter of Dream Vacation, in the $200,000 New Jersey Sire Stakes Final for three-year-old trotting fillies. I Wanted Wings, by Muscles Yankee, was third by three-quarters of a length. PACESETTER SBOANJ.COM 1 July/August 2009

While we had an opportunity to celebrate great racing on June 13 with the $500,000 Anthony Abbatiello New Jersey Classic and the $175,000 Thomas D Altrui Miss New Jersey, most of the last couple of months have been spent in the trenches, trying to get our message to the governor s office and the state legislators who hold our future in their hands. We have testified before budget committees, met oneon-one with legislators, tried to spread our message and participated as a member of a pair of commissions. The Governor s Commission on the Horse Racing Industry held its first meeting on Wednesday, May 27, 2009 in the State House Annex in Trenton, and I am one of the 15 members of this group. Our task is to answer the question of whether horse racing is viable and what business model we should adopt in this economic climate, said Robert Bildner, who chairs the Commission. Mr. Luchento mentioned the perfect storm and that might be apt. Atlantic City s revenues are down and construction has stalled, there is new gaming in Pennsylvania and a push for legalization of internet gambling. That was just the opening salvo. This Commission is scheduled to have monthly meetings and produce a report to the Governor. The Commission brings together representatives of the public, state agencies and the legislature. In addition to Luchento and Bildner, the Commission includes Summit Mayor Jordan Glatt, New Jersey Thoroughbred Horsemen s Association President Dennis Drazin, Trump Hotel s Mark Juliano, Harrah s David Satz, New Jersey Sports & Exposition Authority CEO Dennis Robinson, Casino Reinvestment Development Authority s Thomas Carver, Office of Economic Growth Chief Jerold Zaro, Economic Development Authority CEO Caren Franzini, State Senator Jennifer Beck, Assemblyman John Burzichelli, Camden Freeholder Jeffrey Nash and former Rutgers Athletic Director Robert E. Mulcahy III. I was also a representative of the SBOANJ at a meeting of 20 industry leaders who convened on Friday, June 19 at the Meadowlands to address topics that ranged from national and local marketing, the challenges of a centralized commissioner s office, the coordination of race dates and simulcasting schedules, and integrity issues. The daylong session, moderated by Bennett Liebman of the Government Law Center of Albany Law School, was attended by myself as well as Ivan Axelrod, USTA chairman of the board; Frank Antonacci Jr., trainer; Jimmy Bernstein, former horseman and consultant; John Campbell, Hall of Fame driver; Tom Charters, Hambletonian Society and Breeders Crown president; Bill Finley, racing writer; Michael Gulotta, owner of Deo Volente Farm; Jeffrey Gural, owner of Tioga Downs and Vernon Downs; Mark Hunter, owner and businessman; attorney Ken Jackson of Kentuckiana Farms; Phil Langley, USTA president; Bob Marks, Perretti Farms; Dennis Robinson, NJSEA CEO; Allan Schott, racing blogger; Jason Settlemoir, vp of racing and simulcast for Tioga Downs and Vernon Downs; Mike Tanner, USTA executive vp; Tim Tetrick, driver; Chris Wittstruck, attorney and standardbred owner and Frank Zanzuccki, NJRC exec director. I also met with Freehold horsemen on closing day, June 6 and, as this was going to press, scheduled a session with Meadowlands-based horsemen on June 26. It remains essential that our membership remain united and supportive of our efforts. This includes contributing, to the best of your ability, to TrotPAC, the political action committee that represents our interests with the legislators in Trenton. Our future is cloudy without your help. You cannot look to the other guy to save New Jersey racing. You need to do your part, too! STANDARDBRED BREEDERS & OWNERS ASSOCIATION OF NEW JERSEY 64 Business Route 33, Manalapan, NJ 07726 Phone: 732-462-2357 Fax: 732-409-0741 Email: sboanj@optonline.net Website: www.sboanj.com OFFICERS Thomas F. Luchento President Ed Razzetti First Vice President Martin O Hare Second Vice President Kelvin Harrison Third Vice President Alfred B. Ochsner Treasurer Anthony Romano Secretary Leo McNamara Executive Administrator DIRECTORS Robert Baggitt Sr. Gary Bergmann Robert Boni Stephen P. Dey III Mark Ford Jacqueline Ingrassia Dennis Lane Mark Mullen Paul Wojtowicz RACETRACK REPRESENTATIVES Paul Consol At the Meadowlands 201-935-8500 Ext 2105 Linda Goss At Freehold Raceway 732-462-3800 Ext 365 PACESETTER EDITOR Carol Hodes 732-462-2357 Ext 11 Printed By NEWPORT GRAPHICS John DiSomma 212-924-2600 Ext 305 IMPORTANT PHONE NUMBERS New Jersey Sire Stakes 609-292-8830 Harness Horsemen International 609-747-1000 License/Fingerprint NJ Racing Commission Trenton 609-292-0613 Freehold 732-462-3800 Meadowlands 201-460-4137 NJ Trailer Ban NJTP 800-336-5875 PACESETTER SBOANJ.COM 2 July/August 2009

NJ SIRE STAKES CROWNS THREE-YEAR-OLD CHAMPS Margarita Momma [top left], by Yankee Glide with George Brennan driving, and defending divisional champion Muscle Hill [top right], a son of Muscles Yankee with Brian Sears in the sulky, won $200,000 New Jersey Sire Stakes Finals for three-year-old trotters on June 13 at the Meadowlands. The three-year-old pacing crowns on May 30 went to the filly Scarlet McZara by McArdle [bottom left] with Andy Miller at the lines, and Dial Or Nodial [bottom right] with Sears driving the Western Ideal colt. Photos by Lisa Photo Inc. TrotPAC STILL NEEDS YOUR HELP The future of racing in New Jersey is going to depend on the future of gaming at our racetracks. Without the addition of income from slots, sports betting and other forms of gaming, New Jersey s preeminence in the world of harness racing is in jeopardy. But it will take funding to tell our story and make our case both directly to legislators and through the mass media. Without your financial support, we cannot succeed. This is a critical time to make a critical INVESTMENT in racing s future in New Jersey through your support of TrotPAC, the New Jersey standardbred horse industry s political action committee. To make donations, send checks made out to TrotPAC to: 64 Business Route 33, Manalapan, NJ 07726. Check if you do not want to be listed as a donor Name Address Phone Amount Enclosed Occupation $ Employer Return with check made out to TrotPAC to: 64 Business Rte 33, Manalapan NJ 07726 LEVELS: Pegasus [$2,500], Winner s Circle [$1,000], Clubhouse [$500], Grandstand [$250] or Paddock [all others]. Your name will be acknowledged on our website and Pacesetter for Grandstand level and up. Election laws require occupation & employer info. Maximum per person donation to a PAC is $7,200 Paid for by TrotPAC, Leo McNamara, Treasurer PACESETTER SBOANJ.COM 3 July/August 2009

LUCHENTO ADDRESSES HORSEMEN: FREEHOLD WILL BE BACK The first thing Tom Luchento, president of the Standardbred Breeders & Owners Association of New Jersey, told the 70 horsemen who gathered in the Paddock on June 6 was that this was not the last closing day at Freehold. Freehold is coming back, he said, standing in the crowded Paddock Lounge. But we ve agreed to let Freehold cut back its number of racing dates, from 192 to 168. We did not give up the dates; they re not lost for good. The track will have to negotiate with us each year, and if we get gaming revenues to support the purses, we will probably add those dates back. Luchento brought the Freehold-based membership up-to-date on the lawsuit to add sports betting. Just this morning on the front page of the newspaper is a story that Governor Corzine came out in favor of sports betting, he noted. It is going to take time to accomplish this but this is a good sign. We know that the only way to save racing is alternate gaming, Luchento explained. Sports betting is one of the pieces in the puzzle. You need to make the racetrack an event and offer a bunch of different games. We have to stick together and wait it out. I am hopeful we will have slots, too. Luchento reminded horsemen that the Meadowlands is offering bonuses for New Jersey owned and bred horses, lowered its minimum claiming and condition levels and is struggling to fill fields. With Freehold closed for two months, there are opportunities for you at the Meadowlands, he said. But you need to look ahead and improve your stock. If there is slots money, you won t be able to race your cheap horses. Racing is expected to return to Freehold on August 12 with a Wednesday through Saturday schedule. Luchento acknowledged that times are difficult for the horsemen but urged them to donate to the New Jersey harness racing industry s political action committee, TrotPAC. Without your donations, we don t have the money to go forward, he said. We need you to reach down and donate whatever you can afford. LAST CALL FOR JULY 13 GOLF OUTING This is the last call for the 14th annual Standardbred Breeders & Owners Association of New Jersey Golf Outing on Monday, July 13, 2009 at the Gambler Ridge Golf Club in Cream Ridge, NJ. The proceeds from the event are donated to the Horsemen s Benevolent Fund. The player s fee remains unchanged from last year at $135 per person. Those wishing to partake of the dinner only may do so for $50. Registration for the event will begin at 11:30 a.m. Luncheon will be offered from 11:45 a.m. to 12:45 p.m. and the shotgun start will be at 1 p.m. Gambler Ridge is located at 121 Burlington Path Road, not far from the intersection of Routes 537 and 539. Directions are available on the golf club s website: www.gamblerridge.com. To participate as a golfer or contribute a sponsorship, for more information contact the SBOANJ office at 732-462-2357. DATES REDUCTION APPROVED Standardbred permit holders at both the Meadowlands and Freehold will be able to decrease the annual number of racing dates with the bill approved unanimously by both houses of the New Jersey legislature on June 25, 2009. The law permits the Meadowlands to reduce the number of racing dates from 151 to no less than 141 and Freehold from 192 to no less than 168, upon agreement with [the] representative horsemen s organization. We thank Assemblymen Ronald S. Dancer and John J. Burzichelli and Senators Paul A. Sarlo and Jennifer Beck for sponsoring this legislation and shepherding it through their respective house of the legislature, said Standardbred Breeders & Owners Association of New Jersey President Tom Luchento. The reduced racing dates will be subject to the approval of the SBOANJ each year, Luchento explained. With the current fiscal situation and shortage of horses, it is better to have fewer racing dates. But should we have an infusion of capital from slots or other sources, we will have the option to push for more dates. Miss New Jersey Ashley Fairfield had the best seat in the house, next to starter Danny Dale, when she visited the Meadowlands on June 13 to present the trophy for the Miss New Jersey Pace. Photo by Lisa Photo Inc. PACESETTER SBOANJ.COM 4 July/August 2009

A day doesn't go by without a newspaper article or release highlighting the ever-expanding gaming industry around New Jersey. During the past two weeks, articles titled "Little Delaware suddenly poses big threat to Atlantic City" and "Casino forges hope for Bethlehem, Pa., worries Atlantic City" have dominated the headlines. Unfortunately, these headlines miss the big picture. Yes, Atlantic City is being hurt by regional competition, with its casinos showing continual losses in the double digits. But the entire state is suffering from the competition as well. Competition for the gaming dollar affects our horseracing and breeding industries as well as our state Lottery system. Gaming dollars also are tied to tourism, transportation and retail spending, providing the double benefit of helping the state's economy as well as providing much-needed tax revenue. This is why I strongly support the expansion of gaming options at our state's racetracks to include slot machines or video lottery terminals, sports wagering and poker rooms. At the very least, it is necessary to expand these options to the Meadowlands Racetrack because both the population and infrastructure of that part of the state are capable of supporting it. As I stated at a recent Assembly Budget Committee hearing, where a heated debate on the issue occurred, "the idea of not having slot machines or something else to help the racing industry and the state is just crazy." People in Bergen County want to gamble in Bergen County. They do not want to drive two hours to southern New Jersey. Gaming is now local. The horseracing industry is fully on board. It has offered the casinos partnership after partnership, yet the casinos still balk. The economy is not an excuse. Every industry is suffering, and the current health of the casino industry is directly linked with the national economic struggle. I subscribe to the "standard practice of travel," and the fact that a senior citizen does not care who owns a slot machine. What seniors do care about is not driving two hours if an alternative place to wager is closer to their home. Travel time does matter. Gaming has become a By Assemblyman Joseph Cryan regional issue that is no longer unique to Atlantic City. New Jersey's model for gaming is antiquated. We are the only state with a "centralized model" for gaming. Every other state uses a model that disperses gaming destinations strategically throughout the state, capturing populous areas by offering their residents the ability to avoid traveling a distance to gamble. Since their inception in Atlantic City in the mid-1970s, our state's casinos have operated with virtually no competition for the casino gaming dollar. Atlantic City was the only gaming destination on the East Coast. Thirty years later the geography has changed dramatically. Delaware, Pennsylvania, New York, West Virginia and now Maryland have approved the placement of video lottery terminals or slot machines at their state's racetracks. Connecticut has two of the country's top-notch Indian casinos and Rhode Island has video lottery terminals at its dog tracks. The net result is that Pennsylvania's gaming industry has generated $1.9 billion in new revenues from seven of the 14 licensed venues located throughout the state. This new money has resulted in a nearly $200-per-household savings in property taxes and a huge wage tax cut for anyone living and working in Philadelphia. In addition, Pennsylvania has seen an increase of about 9,000 new jobs directly or indirectly tied to the gaming industry and 17,000 new construction jobs attributable to the construction of the facilities. This is all happening while Atlantic City saw a decrease in revenues of 5.7 percent in 2007 and 7.6 percent in 2008 the same years Pennsylvania opened its first gaming facilities at its racetracks. In addition, jobs have been lost. At its height, Atlantic City employed 52,000 individuals. Today, that number is 38,000. Jobs associated with the construction trades also have been lost with new casinos such as the Pinnacle and Revel either on hold or downsized. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out what is happening New Jersey's revenues and jobs are going over the border. A new gaming model for New Jersey might include slot machines and poker rooms at racetracks, as in Florida. Perhaps we should emulate Pennsylvania and allow slot machines at racetracks and a limited number of stand-alone facilities. Indiana allows "riverboat" gaming, where a portion of the money comes back to racing. Delaware and New York both have video lottery terminals at their racetracks. Delaware also has approved sports betting at its racetracks as a way of "kicking things up a notch" now that New York and Pennsylvania are competing for the gaming dollar. Eleven states have joined some form of casino wagering with horse wagering in the perfect partnership. Why can't New Jersey do this too? JULY/ AUGUST 2009 SCHEDULE OF MEETINGS July 13 SBOANJ Golf Outing August 8 Hambletonian Day July 15 ASSEMBLYMAN SPEAKS UP FOR HORSE RACING IN NJ The solutions are out there. New Jersey just needs to tap into them. We must stop exploring the obvious and start acting now before it is too late. Joseph Cryan, D-Union, is deputy majority leader of the NJ Assembly and chairman of the Democratic State Committee. This op-ed piece appeared in the June 16, 2009 edition of the Asbury Park Press. Board Meeting August 22 Breeders Crown July 28 Insurance Meeting August 25 Insurance Meeting PACESETTER SBOANJ.COM 5 July/August 2009

SBOANJ DIRECTORS SPOTLIGHT: MARTIN O HARE Blame it on Rutgers. My interest in horses developed mostly in college while studying animal science at Rutgers University, where I received a BS, Martin O Hare recalled. It is unlikely he would have entered the horse business if he had not attended Rutgers. I guess it's their fault, he mused. For the last six years, O Hare has been managing operations at Joie De Vie Farm in Jobstown, NJ, where 22 broodmares and their offspring occupy 125 acres, as well as overseeing the training center. He is also Marty O Hare an active member of the Standardbred Breeders & Owners Association of New Jersey Board of Directors. My interest really kicked in after taking a summer job at Fair Winds Farm, noted O Hare. That was my first exposure to the breeding business. After that I worked weekends and another tour the following summer. I worked part time through my senior year and after graduation took a position at Heritage Hill Farm with Dr. SP Dey. After several months there I assumed the manager s duties which lasted the next five years. I enjoyed the breeding side especially the foaling. After Heritage Hill, O Hare worked at Lana Lobell in New Jersey and then, for 12 years, he served as general manager at Pennsylvania s Whitehorse Farms We rose to become the third leading breeder in North America behind Hanover Shoe and Armstrong Brothers, he noted. When Whitehorse closed in 1998, O Hare returned to the Garden State. He worked at Perretti Farms, Hanover Shoe Farms of New Jersey and the Garden State Horse Sales Company before accepting a position at Joie De Vie. When O Hare returned to New Jersey, he also purchased 19 acres in the Cream Ridge area where his North Star Farm breeds three to four mares each year and sells the yearlings at Harrisburg. He joined the SBOANJ Board of Directors eight years ago and chairs the Breeders Committee with a mission to keep breeding viable in the Garden State. O Hare and his wife of 23 years, Deb, are the parents of three sons. Ryan just graduated the Rutgers School of Engineering, magna cum laude, with a BS in electrical and computer engineering; Matt is entering his senior year at Rutgers, majoring in environmental policy and practices, and Ben is entering his sophomore year, studying jazz guitar and music education, at the Berklee College of Music in Boston. COYNE, MAAG & FINNIGAN WIN SBOANJ SCHOLARSHIPS Kristen Coyne, Rudolph Maag and Gary Finnigan Jr. were named 2009-2010 scholarship winners by the Standardbred Breeders & Owners Association of New Jersey. Coyne, the daughter of trainer Ronald and Regina Coyne of New Egypt, NJ, won the top award of $5,000. She will be starting Rowan University in the fall and hopes to be a history teacher. Maag and Finnigan will each receive $2,500 awards. Maag, the son of Meadowlands stall man Rudy and Leonila Maag of Old Bridge, NJ, starts Rutgers University in the fall. Finnigan, son of trainer Gary and Mary of Wall, NJ, is a Dean s List student majoring in history and entering his senior year at Rowan. The SBOANJ Scholarship Committee evaluated nine applications based on academic standing, community service, financial need as well as eligibility. The scholarship winners will be presented their checks in the winner s circle at the Meadowlands on July 31, 2009. PACESETTER SBOANJ.COM 6 July/August 2009

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JULY/AUGUST 2009 ISSUE OF THE PACESETTER Both the winning filly Showherthemoney and the reigning Miss New Jersey Ashley Fairfield were all smiles in the winner s circle for the Miss New Jersey [left]. In the photo above, SBOANJ Directors joined Anthony Abbatiello [third from left] with the New Jersey Classic trophy. The directors [left to right] are Tony Romano, Gary Bergmann, Ed Razzetti, Marty O Hare and Al Ochsner. Photos by Lisa Photo Inc.