(SARATOGA SPRINGS, NY – July 12, 2010) In the last several weeks, Frank Stronach, Mace Siegel and Mike Pegram have said that they will lead West Coast horse racing out of the darkness. It’s been a good spell for horse racing saviors. And why wouldn’t it have been?

California horse racing is having trouble getting more than five horses to enter a race, Santa Anita has squandered the opportunity for Oak Tree to host the Breeders’ Cup and owners have fled for the East where casino-augmented purses remain relatively lucrative. The dread isn’t regional.

On the fortnightly eve of its Saratoga meet, New York’s horse racing future is as bleak as it’s been in a decade. NYCOTB is $20 million in arrears on the NYRA account and won’t pay for the product it’s buying. The State is left with one option for running the Aqueduct VLT casino. Come December, the franchise will have run through the $25 million advance it received.

In Kentucky, Turfway Park has cancelled all the Kentucky Cup stakes races but one. Keeneland has sliced $1 million and two graded stakes from its 17-day meet this October. In Illinois, the sport faces a legislative thumbs-up or down on having slot machines at the racetracks – but don’t count on it. Nationwide attendance and handle figures dropped again, causing head-scratching, shoulder-shrugging and clock-watching in ivory towers, as if all that a revival requires is a reversal of fortunes in the overall economy.

In the meantime, horseplayers and fans throughout the USA continue to proffer naïve suggestions for making the sport popular. Their ideas range from lowering the takeout to providing lessons in handicapping. Except for a thought from the “King of Car Parts” to create a Geo-sized wager with a Humvee-sized payout and give the racetracks Carte Blanche on their seasons, no seer stood ready to present a plan; each just issued a promise.

“What great changes have not been ambitious?” Melinda Gates, co-founder of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, a philanthropic organization devoted to solving the world’s biggest health and educational problems, has asked. Gates, the wife of the world’s richest man, believes that everything in life, no matter how far it has traveled off course, can be put on a path that benefits the entirety of the population it passes. Right now, the path that horse racing is on appears contrary to that cheery philosophy.

The business of horse racing wasn’t meant to be the way it is now – an enterprise that relies on a revenue stream produced by the competition. It wasn’t meant to be one in which partner is enemy, or one in which special interests are separated from common benefit. There’s supposed to be a chain that begins with the premise that men will gather to test their abilities to produce a faster horse. It’s assumed that the contest that proves which is fastest becomes intriguing enough to convince people to watch it.

Horse racing’s current path makes the lives of everyone involved in it less fulfilling. From the top to the bottom, industry members are feeling hurt. The problems might not harm every individual with the same impact. But they’ve dragged horse racing down to a level that disables it from functioning effectively. Who remembers the last time “the good of the sport” was a function of a decision?

As a brand, thoroughbred racing has become a product that will do anything for sales. This short-sighted view has created racetracks that nobody will visit, horse races that nobody can bet on, seasons longer than the bettors can subsidize. Lacking leadership, the industry operates without conscience. Until a compact that unites various elements emerges, there will be no cooperation. The sport is one nationally-televised accident away from having the Feds on its doorstep. In the age of faux rightiousness, a subject like horse racing with its gambling and animal rights issues will be grist on which politicians can grandstand.

The destruction of horse racing has occurred bit by bit over the decades as the forces in each of its segments reacted to challenge. But the world moves so fast now, the luxury of patience to allow time to reverse things can’t be tolerated. People must let go of their individuality and embrace a collective attitude immediately. Believing that things can get better by enabling the sport to evolve slowly is the most ominous theory.

It seems incomprehensible that the NTRA, Breeders’ Cup, TOBA, The Jockey Club and leaders of this country’s top racetracks don’t know that each problem has an effect on another. But often it appears that these entities move to action without recognition of consequence. No person or group is concerned with the sport’s overall welfare. That’s because each person or group is focused on putting a fire out.

Horse racing’s self-proclaimed saviors aren’t serious in respect to their status when they underestimate the cure needed to rid the ailing sport of unhealthy practices. The challenges require more than simple adjustments to the present tense paradigm. Saying the sport needs to function more in the free market or claiming that an improvement in the number of available runners will change the environment doesn’t address the key issues adequately.

The real savior will bring about consolidation of the sport, develop an International outlook, abandon the limiting factor of dirt tracks in favor of reliable synthetics, stop medications entirely, redefine the schedules of when and which racetracks operate, enact graded stakes standards that discourage breeders from raiding the sport of its stars, create a market for horses of stamina, promote the sport collectively and provide full betting access to everyone.

In other words, horse racing requires a salvation that delivers the industry to an entirely unfamiliar place. In the Old Testament’s Book of Genesis, the story is told that Yahweh promised Abraham that he would become the progenitor of a blessed tribe if he left his father’s home for a land he had not heard of. If horse racing’s new saviors believe in that prophecy, they will prosper. If they won’t, the sport’s only salvation will be in the afterlife. So, thus, it is written.


Vic Zast posts his observations about horse racing and related topics at Facebook.com/viczast and Twitter.com/viczast. Beginning on Friday, July 23, Vic Zast’s Saratoga Diary begins its fifth year on bloodhorse.com.