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Flatter: Presenting 5 potential new hosts for the Breeders’ Cup

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Flatter: Presenting 5 potential new hosts for the Breeders’ Cup

Photo:

Scott Serio / Eclipse Sportswire – edited

As I put off packing until the last minute for next week’s
trip to San Diego, I already can hear announcer Larry Collmus making his
introduction to the well-heeled crowd at Del Mar.

“Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the 41st annual Breeders’ Cup. Now please rise and remove your hats for the assembling of your hotel and
food bills.”

Breeders’ Cup Classic 2024 top speed figures.

Ah, San Diego. Maybe that should say $an Diego. A visit to
the annually self-anointed world championships comes with some serious sticker
shock, something we get to enjoy this year and next at the junction of turf and
surf.

Somewhere up there, ol’ John Gaines is watching. For you
youngsters out there under 50, he of the blue blood was the last person to unite
the horse-racing industry. That was when he wrestled everyone onto the same
page to foal the Breeders’ Cup in 1984.

Gaines’s original idea was to rotate the big day, just the
one back then, to constituent racecourses across North America. Six different tracks
hosted the first seven. Two different countries staged the first 13.

That all changed the year the bettors’ bacchanal expanded
from one day to two on a sodden visit to Monmouth Park for the Curlin coronation in 2007. Coincidentally,
that was the last time the Breeders’ Cup was run outside California or
Kentucky. The last six years of a four-decade history comprising 12 venues have
turned into a three-track rotation between Keeneland, Santa Anita and Del Mar.

“I think they’re still trying to rotate it everywhere,”
training legend D. Wayne Lukas said this week. “But the Breeders’ Cup in their
greed is not making it very attractive for a track to have it, as I understand.
Not every racetrack is jumping at the opportunity to have it. They probably are
going to have to adjust that in order to get to the point where somebody will
want it.”

The hushed negotiations over the divvying of every cent from
takeout to taxes merely confirm what Lukas said and reconfirm the old Don
Ohlmeyer line to Tony Kornheiser. “The answer to all your questions is money.”

Nevertheless, we can dare to dream. Let’s say the quaint
table for three can be expanded to a party of eight. The inspiration is not
easy. Of the first 12 tracks to host the Breeders’ Cup, we have lost Hollywood
Park and Arlington. Aqueduct is soon to follow. Gulfstream Park has been
miniaturized. Churchill Downs is under construction 11 months a year with turf
that still shows up on the injured list as questionable.

We are getting Belmont Park back, perhaps as soon as the
2026 Breeders’ Cup, but a jury of our peers is still out on how that is going
to be as a fan experience.

With the help of some diphenhydramine that hopefully is not
on some federal regulator’s no-no list for equine or human consumption, here
are five venues that I propose to add to the current trio of host sites for the
Breeders’ Cup.

1. Fair Grounds. While Churchill Downs the racetrack continues
to undergo the rebuilding of the grandstand and braces for a massive infield
project, Churchill Downs the corporation could strut its stuff in New Orleans.
It was my favorite city to cover Super Bowls. Why not transfer that experience
to horseplayers? There is no shortage of good hotels and food, and the weather should
be all right. There is the small matter of going to a racetrack that never has
hosted a Grade 1 race. Add some TLC and the same type of temporary stands and
marquees that work at Keeneland, and this could be doable.

2. Saratoga. There are two huge concerns here. Hotels
and weather. The New York Racing Association successfully addressed the first
concern when it hosted a wildly successful Belmont Stakes week this year. For
those who cannot get a room walking distance from the track, that drive from
Albany, N.Y., to the Spa is no more gruesome that the time someone might spend
in Southern California traffic coming and going from Santa Anita. Now what to
do about the threat of cold. It does drop into the 30s these days in upstate
New York. Someone find me an agronomist to advise on the turf while I look for space
heaters for the clubhouse.

3. Monmouth Park. The 2007 regatta is the lasting memory
of the only Breeders’ Cup visit to the Jersey Shore. What many do not remember,
however, was how balmy a day it was when the draw took place that week. Something
else forgotten was how well the event was organized and how many people
actually showed up for it despite the antediluvian conditions. With management there
being bullish on racing, it might be worth trying again there. That dice roll
certainly would be in a nicer setting at Monmouth than any crap shoot in seedy Atlantic
City.

4. Gulfstream Park. As the old Dr. Frasier Crane and
his good, original writers would say, please roll those eyes back into the
forward position. Hotels, check. Weather, check. A rebuilding of the original grandstand?
Even that is a dream too far. But those temporary stands and marquees that work
at Keeneland that I already have committed to Fair Grounds could be hauled
here. Revitalizing a turf course that gets beaten throughout the year more than
the Miami Marlins might take some doing, but it is only three weeks before the
traditional winter meet starts. Of the major U.S. racing colonies, New York and
Florida are the two biggest that are not in the Breeders’ Cup rotation. That
really ought to be changed.

5. Japan. Whoa, what? If the NFL can make noise about
putting the Super Bowl in London, then allow me please to be a copycat. Some
sugar daddy or mommy either is going to have to write an enormous check to get
all the good U.S. horses over there one year, or we merely can accept that the balance
of power may be shifting across the Pacific anyway. Maybe this is just my
excuse to float the idea and hope a magic carpet finally will carry me to a big
Thoroughbred event in a country that has the most passionate racing fans on the
planet. Let’s see how many of the 19 horses who have made the flight from Japan
for the 2024 Breeders’ Cup win next week.

Like Lukas said, there is the legitimate question of what
the Breeders’ Cup will do financially for these racetracks in exchange for taking
advantage of squatters’ rights to run 14 races.

I think I hear the alarm going off. Dream time is over. Time
to find out if next week’s breakfast really will be free.

Ron Flatter’s column appears Friday mornings at Horse
Racing Nation. Comments below and at RonFlatterRacingPod@gmail.com
are welcomed, encouraged and may be used in the feedback segment of the Ron Flatter Racing Pod, which also is posted every Friday. The new episode includes
plenty of feedback from last week’s column about social-media reaction to jockey
Luan Machado’s finish-line mistake at Keeneland.

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