Sunday, May 16, 2010

Sasscer Hill's Story on the Thoroughbred Racing New York Site

This story is by Lynda Sasscer Hill, TRNY Member of the Week 111. 


Pictured below, twenty-one year old In Her Honor leads the yearlings in a dash across the field.




I was born with horses in my veins and started galloping about the family farm on a stick horse when I was four years old. By the time I was seven or eight, I was sneaking rides on the Belgian plow horses. I did this because my father didn’t like horses and considered ponies dangerous. So instead, I drummed my heels on the sides of a 2,000 pound draft mare, while grasping whatever string or rope I managed to tie to her halter.


This year, with my first book being published, I’ve looked to that past and dedicated my horse racing mystery to the two people who recognized and nurtured the horses that raced in my veins – Rhoda Christmas Bowling and Alfred H. Smith, Sr.


Rhoda is probably America’s first female sports writer. She wrote a racing column for the Washington Times Herald in the nineteen forties. She bred Maryland racehorses, and held a trainer’s license, too. She had a fiery temper, often cursed like a sailor, and threw society parties that could turn Mary Lou Whitney green with envy. Rhoda’s brother, Edward Christmas, trained the legendary Gallorette, the mare that won the Metropolitan and Brooklyn Handicaps, the 1948 Whitney Stakes, and beat the champion colt Stymie. Beat him three times.


Rhoda had a lovely estate in Upper Marlboro named Bellefields where she gave me my earliest riding lessons on a dappled, grey rescue horse named Blue Bantam. I first met Rhoda at a birthday party held for her niece, Edward Christmas’s daughter, Kitsi. It was one those dreaded events where I was forced into a fussy little dress and patent leather shoes. Kitsi, a motherless child with curly red hair, squirmed in an equally frilly outfit. Like me, she was only five or six, but must have recognized a kindred soul, for we snuck off, found a creek, and returned covered in mud. Kitsi and I have been friends ever since, and my only regret is that I never met her father, who died not long after that party.


Rhoda visited my father at our farm, Pleasant Hills, when I was seven or eight. It was summer, and we sat on wicker chairs on the front porch, where I soon realized Rhoda was intent on persuading my father to buy me a pony.


It was ridiculous, she said, when he owned a farm and had a tenant who kept plow horses, anyway.


I sat, tensely watching them bat the argument back and forth. I prayed Rhoda would win, but my father wasn’t having it. When Rhoda left, I was crushed. I’d been so close.


My father died when I was sixteen, and Alfred H. Smith Sr., owner of 1966 Eclipse Champion steeplechaser, Tuscalee, took me under his wing, probably because my mother told him I was a handful and headed for trouble.


Mr. Smith, as I always called him, took me out horseback riding with his family, and after determining I could ride, he took me foxhunting, putting me on a just-off-the-track Thoroughbred, named Hillmar. Those were some wild hunts. I confess I committed the sin of “passing the master” several times, pulling vainly on the bit stuck firmly between Hillmar’s teeth. But I’d found a place to channel that teenage passion, and my grades improved steadily. I wound up graduating from Franklin and Marshall College with honors and a degree in English Literature.


I bought my first broodmare in 1982, to keep my lonely hunter company. I raised her foals, prepped them, and sold them at the Timonium yearling sales. My husband, Daniel Filippelli, and I had no help. We worked full time and took care of the farm ourselves. Work was something to get through until I could be home with the horses.


In 1985, the Smith family gave me another retired steeplechaser named Circus Rullah. A grandson of Nasrullah, that horse would jump anything and carried me to a win over the timber fences at the 1986 Potomac Hunt Races. I’ve never been so focused or so scared in my life. You don’t race to the fences – they rush straight at you.




Above, Sasscer Hill on the lead aboard Circus Rullah on the way to winning the 1986 Potomac Hunt's Foxhunter Timber Race.


By 1992, Barry G. Wiseman – currently the top assistant to Jonathan Sheppard -- was training my home-breds, and I was looking for a new broodmare. Barry liked a Hero’s Honor filly that belonged to Maryland trainer Gary Capuano. Bred by Jim McCay’s wife and named In Her Honor, she was sore and laid up on a farm on the Eastern shore of Maryland. Trusting Barry, I paid for the horse sight unseen. We drove across the Bay Bridge in a terrible rain and wind storm, in November of 1993 with the horse trailer whipping behind us. We reached the farm and Gary’s uncle, Lou Capuano, led us into a dimly lit barn, pointed to a stall and said, “There she is.”


A small horse resembling a woolly mammoth glared at us from the depths of the stall.
“Watch yourself, when I bring her out,” Lou said, “she’s mean and she’ll kick you.”


What had Barry gotten me into?


But when Lou led her out, she stepped up from that deceptively low stall and towered over me. She had a bowed tendon the size of a melon. Her hair was matted, dirty and wet. We loaded her on my trailer, took her home, and put her in a paddock with a run-in-shed. Disdaining the shed, she stood outside. The hard, cold rain slicked her coat down and revealed a powerful, classic body. As usual, Barry was right.


I bred that mare to the new sire, Not For Love. I named the resulting colt For Love and Honor, and no doubt some of you New Yorkers will remember him running and winning at Saratoga and Aqueduct. He won around $418,000 and so far is the best horse I’ve bred. But you never know, he has yearling half-brother, named Out For Honor. The colt is by Outflanker, and when he flies around my front field, I recognize the racing in his veins.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

BACK IN THE DAY: Hill Racing Over Timber

Top photo taken approximately one second after I crossed the finish line on the lead. Second photo was the last fence of this 2 and 1/2 mile race. The gal behind me was on a Graustark colt, and I never thought we'd beat them! I was so tired afterwards, I had great difficulty pulling "Circus Rullah" up. He galloped out another half-mile. The rest of the five horse field was far behind by the end.  This was the greatest and most terrifying day of my life.  I discovered you don't race to the fences, they come straight at you.

Monday, April 5, 2010

READ FIRST CHAPTER AND PRE-ORDER SASSCER HILL'S NEW HORSE RACING MYSTERY

Read the first chapter of Sasscer Hill's new mystery.  The red link that follows takes you to first chapter as well as a link to the publishers order page with a Discount Coupon!
 New Nikki LatrelleHorse Racing Mystery


Or order from Amazon.com

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

WHY DOES MAGNA HAVE TO BE A BAD THING?

Since the March 23 announcement that the Maryland tracks will not go to auction, but will instead be picked up by Frank Stronach’s real estate company, MI Developments, I have read one sour comment after another.


I understand the disappointment of Maryland horsemen and their fear that Magna is responsible for the downfall of Maryland racing.  I, too, have lost money.  I’m in debt to my feed company, the bank, and a good friend, and though I have two beautiful Outflanker Maryland-breds, I will have a lot of trouble selling them, and if any money comes in, it will only pay off debts.  


But remember, it was the Maryland legislators who bought the nails and the hammers to pound the lid down on Maryland racing.  Magna DID COME UP WITH THE MONEY -- in an escrow account.  Isn’t it obvious Magna’s escrow money was rebuffed by the Slots Commission because the politicians were already in bed with Cordish?


But the citizens got irate and passed a referendum to allow the voters of Anne Arundel County to vote on whether or not to have slots at Arundel Mills. So next fall, Magna may be able to file for re-zoning and have the slots go to Laurel where they belong.


Has anyone been to Magna's Gulfstream Park recently?  It is beautiful.  It is clean, aesthetically pleasing, has upscale restaurants and shops.  What sense would it have made for them to rebuild a grandstand and paid tax dollars on a huge space that remained empty for all but a few days of the year?


Years ago you could not watch racing all day long on TV.  Except for a few races a year, if you wanted to see a race, you had to show up.  Now people watch and bet from their couch.  So stop moaning about how it used to be.


Start thinking about how it could be.  Laurel Maryland is a fabulous location halfway between D.C. and Baltimore.  It has a train track that goes to the grandstand.  It has two major highways close by.  But it has no upscale shopping or restaurants.  It is NOT a trendy area.  If Magna does a job on Laurel like they did on Gulfstream, Laurel will be a must go destination. 

See Baltimore Sun Article here:
http://www.baltimoresun.com/business/bal-bz.magna24mar24,0,1745345.story?page=1&utm_medium=feed&track=rss&utm_campaign=Feed:%20baltimoresun/business/rss

Monday, March 15, 2010

AWESOME REVIEW!! FULL MORTALITY Book Signing on PREAKNESS Weekend! New Short Story Available!


Full Mortality just received a totally awesome review:

"If you like the work of Dick Francis or Sue Grafton, you will like Sasscer Hill. With a true insider’s knowledge of horse racing, Hill brings us Nikki Latrelle, a young jockey placed in harm’s way who finds the courage to fight the odds and the heart to race for her dreams.” – Mike Battaglia, NBC racing analyst and TV host, veteran track announcer, and “morning line” odds maker for the Kentucky Derby.







I'm totally thrilled to be doing a novel signing event at Pimlico on Black Eyed Susan's day!  


So excited, I forgot that my short story "Venemous," the second in the Janet Simpson series is now available through the latest edition of the anthology, "Chesapeake Crimes."  This anthology it titled, "They Had It Comin'." Take a look at
http://www.amazon.com/gp/search/ref=a9_sc_1?rh=i:stripbooks,k:chesapeake+crimes+they

Sunday, February 14, 2010

NOW THAT THE ARUNDEL MILLS ANTI-SLOT PETITION MIGHT SUCCEED, WHAT HAPPENS NEXT?





The following blog entry is taken from Hill's article at http://equiery.com/blog/


On February, 4, 2010, the coalition of petitioners that included the Maryland Jockey Club and the local activist group, "Stop Slots at Arundel Mills," surprised skeptics by submitting over 23,000 signatures to the Anne Arundel Board of Elections, exceeding the 18,790 needed to override the County Council’s approval of the Cordish slots zoning request (known as Bill 82-09), instead putting the request before the voters.

“Without question, there is overwhelming opposition by Anne Arundel County citizens to placing a casino at Arundel Mills Mall,” claimed Rob Annicelli, president of the citizens group Stop Slots at Arundel Mills. “The mall is not the right location for a slots casino and is not in the best interests of the citizens of Anne Arundel County.”

Tom Chuckas, president of the Maryland Jockey Club, said, “We are confident, that if given the choice, the people of Anne Arundel County will choose a more appropriate location for 4,750 slot machines that will benefit our county, our state and the thousands of jobs in the horse racing industry.” 

However, according to a February 5 Baltimore Sun article, Cordish managing partner Joseph Weinberg has charged that there are “massive irregularities” in the petition drive.  “Upon review, we are confident the referendum will be struck down as both legally invalid and lacking in the requisite valid signatures.”


When I called the Anne Arundel County Elections Board on the afternoon of the deadline for the submission of signatures, five hours into the biggest Maryland snowstorm in decades, I was astonished when David Garreis, Deputy Director of the elections board, answered the phone himself on the second ring. He said he’d grabbed the phone because his staff was too busy processing the “Stop Slots at Arundel Mills” petition forms.
Apparently, the democratic process is still working in Maryland.

Readers interested in the list of county codes regarding petitions – the difficulties already faced and that lie ahead, read here:  http://www.amlegal.com/nxt/gateway.dll/Maryland/annearundelco_md/annearundelcountycode2005?f=templates$fn=default.htm$3.0$vid=amleg.

SO WHAT HAPPENS NEXT?

Slots are “not dead” in Maryland. There is a written state law naming Anne Arundel County as a location for slots gambling. The Anne Arundel County Council voted to accept both bills: Bill 81-09 and 82-09. The specific location written into Bill 81-09 allows slots gambling only at Laurel Park. The second bill, 82-09 allows gambling at either the Arundel Mills location or at Laurel Park.

Council Executive John R. Leopold, however, vetoed 81-09, which left 82-09 in place – the bill allowing slots at either of the two locations. Currently, only the Arundel Mills site has the green light from the Video Lottery Commission (i.e., the “Slots Commission”).

The De Fancis family has aggressively campaigned that Laurel Park spent from 2003 to 2009 successfully securing Federal, State, County and Local permitting and regulatory approvals, and that the track is poised to begin immediate construction of a Video Lottery Terminal gaming facility, if they could get zoning approval from the Anne Arundel County Council. 

The MJC would still need to submit a bid to the Video Lottery Commission, a process that MJC’s parent company, Magna Entertainment was denied last spring when they produced the necessary funds in escrow -- a customary and sensible business practice that the MD slots commission chose to deny.

NO COUNTY QUICK FIX

In an attempt to settle this issue I contacted Anne Arundel County Council Member Catherine Vitalem, and asked if there is any fast track legal procedure that could take place to push the zoning through more quickly, if, for example, Magna Entertainment were to ask for slots zoning at Laurel Park? Is it possible for the Council to avoid a lengthy application process?

The short answer is "no."

According to Vitale , when County Executive John R. Leopold vetoed bill 81-09, the bill for slots at Laurel only, the bill expired and is considered “dead.” If the current petition for “Stop Slots at Arundel Mills” is successful, then the second bill, 82-09 will be “stayed” and remain in that status until the November 2010 elections. The voters will decide whether to vote for, or against bill 82-09, the bill that allows slots at either Laurel or Anne Arundel Mills.

Since the Cordish Companies were granted a slots license – and by law only one license is allowed in Anne Arundel County – if the bill is voted down, then this issue will have to come up before the new council that will take office in December of 2010.

However, the MJC or whoever will own the Maryland tracks can seek zoning after the 2010 elections. The decision will rest with the new county council which will take office immediately after the November elections are finalized.

Vitale explained that while the Council cannot “fast track” slots zoning before the 2010 elections, they are still very interested in receiving a share of revenue from slots.  Vitale seemed certain the Council will remain open to slots zoning somewhere in the County.
Since there is no “quick fix,” the process that must be followed, starting with the petitions,  is outlined below.

THE ZONING PROCESS (You may skip this section; I probably would.)

* These petitions must be duly processed and  certified by the board of elections.  If they are, this zoning ordinance will be placed on the 2010 ballot and will allow Anne Arundel County citizens to vote on whether or not to permit the state’s largest slots casino at the Arundel Mills Mall.
* If the County Council’s decision to place the slots at Arundel Mills is overturned by the voters in November, then whoever owns Laurel Park must file an application for a zoning change with the Anne Arundel County Office of  Planning and Zoning if they wish to secure slots zoning.

* Once the application is filed,  the Office of Planning and Zoning will submit a list of applications to the Administrative Hearing Officer to schedule hearings. 

* Not more than 30 days after receipt of the applications list, the Administrative Hearing Officer will schedule a hearing and notify the applicant. 

* The Administrative Hearing Officer will conduct a public hearing on the application. The hearing may be continued from time to time, with the time and place of the next hearing date announced publicly.

* The applicant, the County, and any other person deemed qualified by the Administrative   Hearing Officer may introduce evidence and testify. 
 
* The Administrative Hearing Officer will grant or deny an application in accordance with   law. The Administrative Hearing Officer's decision will be based on the evidence   presented at the hearing and observations made during any site visit.

It seems obvious the Laurel Park track owner will hire a zoning attorney to guide them through this morass.  

If you are a glutton for punishment, you may read the entire list of codes regarding Anne Arundel County zoning applications here:   http://www.amlegal.com/nxt/gateway.dll/Maryland/annearundelco_md/annearundelcountycode2005?f=templates$fn=default.htm$3.0$vid=amlegal:annearund

HOW WILL THIS EFFECT THE TRACK AUCTION BIDDERS?

Jeffrey Seder of the Blow Horn Equity group still plans to bid on the race tracks whether or not the slots finally go to Laurel, and he is now expecting a bidding frenzy at the auction (currently scheduled for February 23).

“We could get slots up and running at a temporary facility as fast at Laurel Racetrack as Cordish Co. can at the Mall. And, there is a HUGE difference to Maryland racing whether the 1/3 of all the slots take goes to the slots operator, who is an enormous corporate real estate development company in Florida, and all over the country, etc. or to the local MARYLAND racetracks.”

While Weinberg has ominously warned that a successful petition will cause Maryland to slide  down the slippery slope of not having slots at all, Seder vehemently disagrees.

 “The slots approval will not go away — the voters have already spoken decisively and the state desperately needs the money.”

Seder noted that Penn National lost in its bid for gaming in New York and will probably take those funds and put them toward a Laurel bid. He indicated there are a number of bidders that are deeply funded, and the bidding could get rough.

This writer fears track ownership by a company that doesn’t have the horse racing industry at heart would only strengthen the grasping hands of Maryland politicians who will siphon the income away from the Maryland Horse Racing Industry.  Indeed, Delegate Frank Turner of Howard County had already filed House Bill 40 that would take 50% of the money that was “guaranteed to the purse fund” and hand it over to the Maryland Lottery Commission.

But after contacting Delegate Turner about this bill, he stated in an email to me on February 4 that he will “either withdraw the bill or have a hearing and ask the Chairman not to bring the bill to a vote.”  He said, “Since the bill was first drafted, Anne Arundel County has taken an inordinate amount of time to make a decision on the slots at Arundel Mills. Baltimore City’s bid has been cancelled, and will have to be rebid.  The need for any additional money for state of the art machines is not needed in the 2011 budget.”

But it may be only a matter of time before another such bill is raised.

Horsemen are anxiously awaiting the auction, hopeful that the new owner will have both deep pockets and an abiding love of the sport. Seder is playing on those desires and fears, aggressively marketing Blow Horn Equity as “the” horsemen’s choice, based on experience, love of the sport and plenty of capital, while simultaneously pointing out that some companies, such as Cordish and Penn National, have other motives for owning the tracks, such as gaming or land acquisition.

Many in the horse industry fear that track ownership by a company that doesn’t have the horse racing industry at heart will only strengthen the hands of Maryland politicians intent on siphoning the income away from the Maryland horse industry.

In Karin De Francis’ passionate speech at the Maryland Horse Council Meeting January 21, many saw in her the spirit of her father, Frank De Francis, who put his whole heart and soul into Maryland racing, leading it to unprecedented heights in the 1980s. That legacy is firing the De Francis siblings to promise unequivocally that no other track bidder will try as hard or care as much about making Maryland racing successful as will they.

A FLICKER OF LIGHT

While we wait to see what happens between the track auction – now rescheduled for February 23 -- and further machinations of the Anne Arundel County Council, I still see a light in this story.

How American for two normally opposed groups to form an alliance to achieve a goal that will benefit both parties.  Rob Annicelli and his activists don’t want slots in their neighborhood.  They don’t want the additional traffic, or the strain on fire and police departments.  They did everything good citizens can do to protest the Arundel Mills slots location, and were ignored by their County Council.
Many in Maryland racing were appalled at the idea of the slots going to a shopping mall instead of at the customary, expected location of the racetracks. It just makes sense, many thought, to have the slots at the racetracks.  

The definition of Democracy is “government by the people.” It was good to see Maryland citizens insist on using their legitimate right in a government process!

It will be interesting to see how the next chapter unfolds.  I pray, that whatever is best for Maryland racing, is the winner in the end!


Respectfully submitted, Sasscer Hill     


Thursday, February 4, 2010

"NO SLOTS AT ARUNDEL MILLS" PETITION EXCEEDS EXPECTATIONS

February 5, 2010


PETITIONERS SUBMIT 23,000 SIGNATURES TO PLACE "NO SLOTS AT ARUNDEL MILLS" ON THE NOVEMBER BALLOT.  
ONLY NINETEEN THOUSAND WERE REQUIRED.






 “Opposition To Slots At The Mall “overwhelming”


Rob Annicelli, spokesperson for “Stop Slots at Arundel Mills” reported today that his group, whose forces were joined by the Maryland Jockey Club, had secured substantially more than the 9,500 signatures necessary to meet the February 5 deadline set by the elections board.


The Press Release Follows:

ANNAPOLIS, MD (February 4, 2010) –  A coalition of petitioners submitted over 23,000 signatures to the Anne Arundel Board of Elections this afternoon in support of a referendum to allow county citizens to vote on whether to permit the state’s largest slots casino at the Arundel Mills Mall. The signatures submitted today far exceed the interim requirement of 9,395 signatures needed by Feb. 5 and surpass the 18,790 signatures ultimately required to place the zoning ordinance on the ballot in November. 


 “Without question, there is overwhelming opposition by Anne Arundel County citizens to placing a casino at Arundel Mills Mall,” said Rob Annicelli, President of the citizens group Stop Slots at Arundel Mills. “The mall is not the right location for a slots casino and is not in the best interests of the citizens of Anne Arundel County. I would like to thank the volunteers and ask them to continue to collect signatures until the Board of Elections certifies the petition question.”


 “People are voting with their signatures. They want the zoning ordinance on the ballot,” said Heather Ford, Coalition Coordinator for Citizens Against Slots at the Mall. “Despite bad weather and attempts to block our efforts, we know we will have more than enough validated petition signatures by the time we are done to place the zoning question on the November ballot.”


 According to Tom Chuckas, President of the Maryland Jockey Club, “We are confident, that if given the choice, the people of Anne Arundel County will choose a more appropriate location for 4,750 slot machines that will benefit our county, our state and the thousands of jobs in the horse racing industry.”


End of Press Release

Meeting this deadline would have given signature collectors another 30 days, or until Monday, March 7, to reach the goal of 19,000 signatures.  But as over 23,000 were secured, the final deadline is moot.


How American for two normally opposed groups to form an alliance to acheive a goal that will benefit both parties.  Rob Annicelli and his activists don’t want slots in their neighborhood.  They don’t want the additional traffic, or the strain on fire and police departments.  The did everything good citizens can do to protest the Arundel Mills slots location, and were ignored by their County Council.


Many in Maryland racing were appalled at the idea of the slots going to a shopping mall instead of at the customary, expected location of the racetracks.  Racing fans wondered why, if the State of Maryland and its counties wanted to earn slots gambling money from lucrative Northern Virginia, they couldn’t see that Laurel was a far more accessible location to Virginians than Arundel Mills.  And closer to Washington, DC, as well.


Since Laurel, Maryland, is already a high density area and Anne Arundel Mills is not, more open space and farm land would be lost by the Anne Arundel Mills development. Laurel has two major highways that access it -- the Baltimore Washington Parkway, and I95.


It just makes sense, many thought, to have the slots at the racetracks.  


Perhaps the biggest concern of all was how the Maryland tracks could last initially if they did not receive the 33% of slots revenue that goes to the operator of the facility.


It will be interesting to see how the next chapter unfolds.  I pray, that whatever is best for Maryland racing, is the winner in the end!


Respectfully submitted, Sasscer Hill