SARATOGA SPRINGS, NY, November 13, 2009--Was it me, or did you also get the sense that this year’s Breeders’ Cup didn’t feel like the usual championship event until Goldikova unleashed that powerful kick midway through Saturday’s program?
Whether this perception is accurate or not, Breeders’ Cup Ltd. Ultimately must decide whether it wants to stick with the original model and mantra, “Racing’s Crowning Event,” or whether it wants to be the Breeders’ Cup International Racing Festival.
As currently structured, it falls a bit short of achieving either goal.
Don’t misunderstand. Breeders’ Cup will crown its share of champions again this year. It never has failed to do so. But unlike in the early days of the event, the overall quality in majority of the races was lacking.
The only notable progress--which may be the only measure that interests current organizational hierarchy--has come in the area of betting handle.
Just as expansion has reduced the overall quality of the four major sports leagues, large-market Major League Baseball teams notwithstanding, so, too, has expanding the championship format to two days and doubling the number of the original seven events failed to achieve the desired results.
It remains early in the Filly Friday experiment but thus far it’s been much ado about very little, except for the negative publicity generated by the renaming of the Distaff to Ladies Classic. In my view, the name isn’t as politically incorrect as it is pedestrian.
The filly concept hasn’t really caught on or ignited a fire under the brand. Ironic, too, that in 2009, “the year of the filly” featuring the two best thoroughbreds in America, one was a no-show and the other raced on Saturday--and gave the boys a fine spanking, at that.
Was I the only observer that found it curious that Filly Friday began with an open 14-furlong marathon? Facetiously, did Breeders’ Cup run out of fillies or only filly races? And, come to think of it, why is the Filly & Mare Sprint seven furlongs and not six?
Why does that race even exist? Very Subtle’s 1987 victory at Hollywood Park gave that renewal of the Sprint a special excitement. And even if she were lucky to take advantage of the gaffe made by shadow-jumping Dayjur, was anyone at Belmont Park, bettors notwithstanding, upset when Safely Kept became the Sprint beneficiary?
And was a F & M Turf really necessary? All can surmise the answer but that’s still not a good reason. So maybe Miss Alleged wasn’t all that compelling when beating the boys at Churchill Downs in 1991, but Pebbles Turf victory at Aqueduct in 1985 was an unforgettable Breeders‘ Cup moment.
Wouldn’t the Turf renewals of 2004 and 2006 been better off with Ouija Board than without her? And what about Banks Hill in 1991? Certainly, Midday would have been a welcome addition to this year’s Turf, easily the weakest running in recent memory.
The Dirt Mile was not run this year although history will recognize Furthest Land as the 2009 winner. The notion was a poor conception from the outset. Two-turn milers simply don’t enjoy the same stature as one-turn milers but most tracks lack a mile chute.
Sprinting eight furlongs proves something, especially to potential breeders. Two-turn milers might appear black-type attractive in sales catalogues but the uninitiated don’t know any better. Maybe that was the point all along.
Turf sprints are fun unless, of course, you spend summers in Saratoga where the novelty wears off in a few weeks. Why any “championship race” exists without a nominal champion in that category is lost on most fans, myself included.
Juvenile turf racing, however, like grass racing in general, is easier on the youngsters and can help predict the success of future campaigns. It probably will have its own Eclipse category before long although it’s not critical to the success of this program.
As long as future Breeders’ Cups are held at venues in Lexington or Chicago or Southern California or Toronto, for that matter, Eclipse Awards should recognize accomplishment on all three surfaces; dirt, turf and synthetics.
“Dirt” horses went zero for the last two Breeders’ Cups. Until and unless some venue can offer championship racing on all three surfaces, or concurrently at different locales, many of America’s best dirt horses will continue to avoid Breeders’ Cup day, especially if the following year’s campaign is predicated on winning traditionally prestigious dirt fixtures.
Finally, it is hoped that the tweaking of the wagering menu--following the lead of handle-hungry racetracks--will cease. Back in the day of the original seven-race event, the Sprint opened the program and the Classic closed it; the Turf has always been the penultimate race and it followed the Distaff every year. Races were set in stone and fans could name them in order. So much for building tradition.
And so Breeders’ Cup Ltd. must decide what it wants to be. CEO Greg Avioli has said the event could remain in a state of flux for the next few years until planners can grow the brand going forward, hopefully recapturing the excitement of its early days.
If this truly is its aim, to give Breeders’ Cup an identity with sports fans that it doesn’t enjoy now because of seasonal competition from the World Series and college and pro football, it has an enormous opportunity to shake itself and the sport out of its lethargy come next November.
Call it “The Breeders’ Cup: Late Night Filly Friday” or “Breeders’ Cup Friday Night Lights” as a prelude to the next day’s program. Or simply go all out for two days and call it “Breeders’ Cup Prime Time.” With clever promotion and unprecedented support from horsemen, wouldn’t this grand one-time experiment be worth the risk?





13 Nov 2009 at 09:33 pm | #
You are the nicest guy in the biz but are so delusional
14 Nov 2009 at 03:17 am | #
The new races exist so nominators have more opportunities and more folks can experience BC Championship weekend.
Friday’s handle is close to 50M. It’s a success.
East Coast Dirt horses didn’t win in California before synthetic. See 2003
The BC should keep expanding a la Melbourne/Ascot. It’s a celebration of the sport.
14 Nov 2009 at 04:44 am | #
John, are you aware of the context Greg Avioli made the comment, ‘the event could remain in a state of flux for the next few years..’?
Taken simply as it reads, one can conclude that there is no plan and it will take a few years to develop the plan. Even if such is true, to make a public omission will certainly not inspire confidence among partners and sponsors during the ‘state of flux’!
If the statement was meant as it reads, it is time to change the Breeders Cup leadership!
14 Nov 2009 at 05:44 am | #
Some of the ideas and terminology in John’s post are from a Blood-Horse article called “Raising the Cup.” You should give proper attribution rather than pretend that Friday Night Lights, competition from football etc. are your thoughts.
14 Nov 2009 at 08:23 am | #
Criticisms of the race selection are certainly fair but please get a couple of facts straight.
1) Breeders’ Cup NEVER called it Filly Friday. That was a media creation. Breeders’ Cup has consistently used Championship Friday and Championship Saturday.
2) Wasn’t the 2008 sprint winner a “dirt” horse? He won the Forego at the Spa and the 07 Sprint at Monmouth. People conveniently leave out horses that don’t fit their pre-conceived biases on synthetics.
3) US handle is either flat or falling. It is no coincidence that as more int’l horses have run in the BC, more int’l handle has followed.
4) BC Friday, in three short years, has become on of the top ten handle days in North American racing (maybe one of the top five). Should they abandon that and go backwards?
They could go back to 8 races and, who knows, they may have to cut 2-3 of the current races due to purse considerations. But this industry can’t criticize people for lack of innovation and then by hyper-critical when someone tries to innovate.
P.S. Eric, Even though Avioli’s candor doesn’t always make for great copy, BC seems to have little trouble maintaining sponsor confidence. The current leadership team that you’re so anxious to get rid of has brought more sponsor support into the sport in the last five years than ANYONE, including the Triple Crown tracks. In the worst sponsorship market in professional sports in a long time, they kept high-level sponsors this year and even added partners like Montblanc and Dos Equis.
14 Nov 2009 at 08:23 am | #
John… Love the prime-time idea. But at Churchill next year, we may have to add a fourth surface. Ice.
14 Nov 2009 at 10:39 am | #
Hey Slim-condor is respected. State of flux or lack of a plan is the issue. I am not aware of top line sponsors who would continue to support a brand that is in a ‘state of flux’. Simply put, sponsors would be unable to determine if there sponsorship goals would be achieved with a brand that lacks definition.
14 Nov 2009 at 12:32 pm | #
LOL - the Dirt Mile wasn’t run this year.
I like the two day format but wish they’d split the races up differently. I don’t care for the fillies day gimmick. I think a better option would be to divide the races by type, like sprints and juvie races on one day (or something like that).
Agree that Eclipse Awards should be tweaked to recognize accomplishment on all three surfaces. Even though Midnight Lute certainly qualifies as a dirt horse, that makes it ONE dirt horse win to how many losses? And didn’t Lute prep/train exclusively on synthetics in 2008?
14 Nov 2009 at 01:22 pm | #
Knew this one would shake the trees. Some more random thoughts:
Lova ya: I’m delusional, it’s true. You posted at 4:13 AM. What does that make you? I know: “Sleepless In Desaddle.”
L? My point exactly; it’s become about handle. And personally, I don’t care which model is used. I can live with an accent on championships or an international racing festival. Just not sure these aren’t mutually exclusive. But, then, I’m delusional.
Eric, I was paraphrasing Mr. Avioli. The point was that the BC may be a work in progress for a while. No harm there.
Larry, I read “Friday Night Lights,” can’t remember, 20 years ago? And saw the movie. Loved the NBC show, too, but apparently the quality was a bit too good for primetime.
Of course, scheduling it on Fridays never gave it a fair chance to gain ratings. Too bad they didn’t give it the Seinfeld treatment. In any event, we know one thing for sure: Derek Jeter never missed an episode.
Competition from football? You’re right Larry: too deep for me. Actually, a friend wants to go Saturday and Sunday. “What difference does it make? It’s going to do a 1.5 anyway?”
Ron, they do ice in Russia, right? Why should they have all the fun?
Slim, you’re right about the hyper-critical part; good point. And guilty as charged; Filly Friday is a media confection. But so what; who’s being hyper-critical now?
Why shouldn’t Friday handle be that high? The races are great, just not as compelling as the original Big Seven; one man’s opinion. Wow, $50 million. About a little more than a quarter of what they handle on a typical Thursday in Hong Kong. It’s always a compared to what, right?
And, finally, Eastern horses never did well shipping to California. Pre-synthetics, it was the pace they couldn’t handle. No easy leads on SoCal. Now it’s about the surface but a dirt horse is a dirt horse anywhere, not just on the East Coast.
Marie? Balanced commentary, a voice of reason. (And you liked my joke)!
But, seriously, folks, thanks for taking the time. Much appreciated as always.
JRP