Search
Related Links




 

 

Informative Articles

Making Music As A Lefty
Author Interview with Ryan Thomson, seacoast New Hampshire resident, and author of a new book advocating left handed violin playing by lefties. - Playing Violin and Fiddle Left Handed. This piece started out as an actual interview for an...

Navigating on the Mountain, in Water, or in Woods there is a Garmin eTrex Unit For You.
Truly a small wonder, the eTrex takes the best features of a 12 parallel channel GPS receiver and put them into a six ounce package that is only four inches high and two inches wide. The result is a unit that will literally fit in the palm of your...

Pedro, Beltran, and the Mets as seen by one true Yankee Fan:
Pedro, Beltran, and the Mets as seen by one true Yankee Fan: It’s the middle of the NFL playoffs, and what has grabbed the interest of many sports fans has been the off-season maneuvering and acquisitions of the Mets and Yankees. In the past, the...

Swimming and Shoulder Injuries
Most sports come with injuries to accompany them. Although swimming is, by most standards, not a sport associated with high risk of injury, it does have it’s own problems. By far the biggest source of sidelining swimming injuries is the shoulder. ...

What You Must Know About Trampoline Safety
Tumbling on the trampoline caught on like wildfire in the early 1960s, and still enjoys great popularity today, but the sport also still involves the same potential dangers. Trampolines in the last 45 years have gone from being an institutional or...

 
Breeders Cup For Dummies

The Real Scoop On Breeders Cup

The easiest way to describe Breeders Cup is to picture a pyramid. There are two organizations at the top of the Breeders
Cup pyramid. They are the NTRA (National Throroughbred Racing Association) and the Breeders Cup Limited (Ltd).
Breeders Cup Ltd oversees the Breeders Cup Foal and Stallions Nomination programs in conjunction with the Breeders
Cup Stakes program which will include 125 stakes races in 2005 culminating in the Breeders Cup Championships
October 25, 2005 at Belmont Park. Breeders Cup Ltd works closely with the NTRA to integrate Breeders Cup Purse
and Award distributions into the Purse structures defined by the participating racetracks and their sponsors. Together the
NTRA and Breeders Cup Ltd are a formidable duo and seek to expand public awareness of the U.S. and Canadian
thoroughbred racing industry. They provide a forum in which the best assets of the sport are presented in all their glitter
and glamour to adoring masses.

The plan seems to be working. In the year 2000 the adoring masses wagered over $108 million for the Breeders Cup
Championships held at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Kentucky. If you do the math, you see that about $20 million of that
total went to purses, awards, and track operating expenses, it was a very good day indeed for the NTRA-Breeders Cup Ltd
two-headed giant.

Back to the pyramid, so who is at the bottom? That would be you and me and all our friends, in other words, the adoring
masses. The fans spend money either by betting on the races or by buying racing paraphernalia, or by purchasing the products
advertised on television and the internet and printed matter by Breeders Cup sponsors. We, the betting and buying public, are
one of the the prime targets of this multi-million dollar annual championship series. And boy do we respond, to the tune of
about $100 million wagered on Breeders Cup Day alone.

In the center of the pyramid are the everyday horsemen. These folks are the breeders, owners, trainers, hotwalkers, grooms,
jockeys, racetrack administrators, and anyone else responsible for the day-to-day operations that keep the industry running
smoothly. They are the heart and soul, the backbone of the racing industry and nothing works without them. The owners and
breeders also provide the Stallion and Foal Breeders Cup Nomination fees which in large part fund the Breeders Cup Purse and
Awards distribution programs. And do not forget the Breeders Cup race entry Supplemental fees.

Together the top, middle, and bottom cross-sections of the Breeders Cup pyramid form a three-tiered partnership, and Breeders
Cup Championship Day is the big party where all partners are invited.

So where does it all start? That would be the breeding farm, of course. It starts when a breeding farm forks over $500 to nominate
a promising weanling for future Breeders Cup purse distributions. For instance, the


nomination deadline is October 15, 2005 for
2005 weanlings. The Breeder will receive Breeders Cup Awards distributions every time the weanling finishes first, second, or third
in future Breeders Cup Stakes races. And the future owner will be eligible to receive Breeders Cup purse distributions as well.
In a typical Breeders Cup Stakes race (there are 125 to be run in the U.S. and Canada in 2005) about 2/3 of the purse money is
put up by the racetrack and its sponsors and about 1/3 is put up by Breeders Cup Ltd. If a Breeders Cup nominated horse wins
then the connections get the winner's share of the entire purse. If a non-nominated horse wins the connections get the winner's share
of only the racetrack sponsored portion of the purse. This is a huge incentive for the breeders, owners, trainers, and riders to be
caring for and nurturing Breeders Cup nominated horses.

Not just the weanling gets nominated, but the stallion gets nominated also. In fact, a weanling cannot be nominated unless the stallion
has also been nominated. Of the over 3,000 stallions standing each year, some 1,200 are nominated annually. Stallions must be
nominated every year to maintain eligibility. The Stallion annual nomination fee is equal to the going stud fee but not less than $1,000.
If his progeny finishes first, second, or third in Breeders Cup Stakes races, Breeders Cup awards distributions are presented to the
breeder of the stallion, similar to the awards program for horses nominated as weanlings.

How do the dollars add up?

The Breeders Cup Ltd is funding about $7.3 million in 2005 for Breeders Cup Stakes races, an increase of over $205 thousand
from 2004. There are 15 new Breeders Cup Stakes races this year, bringing the total U.S. and Canadian eligible races to 125.
This does not include the eight races on Championship Day, October 25, 2005, for which Breeders Cup Ltd provides $14 million
in purses. Total purses for the 125 pre-Championship Breeders Cup Stakes races are roughly $22 million. Since 1984, Breeders
Cup Ltd has distributed over $345 million in Purses and Awards. That's quite a bit of cheese.

Of the 125 Breeders Cup Stakes races, 69 are Graded stakes run in the U.S. and 6 are Graded stakes run in Canada. This leaves
a balance of 50 non-Graded stakes races.

Beginning July 1, 2005, all Breeders Cup Grade I events will be run weight-for-age. This is a victory for horsemen and for the
horses themselves, as unruly Handidcap weight assignments are no longer allowed for these events. This is also a victory for bettors,
as weight-for-age is a more fair and thus more predictable circumstance for race handicapping.



About the author:
Jim Lambert

Publisher, Sr. Editor, & Founder of Horse-Race-Handicapping.com

Handicapping Expert and Mathematician for 24 years

Advanced Degree Holder in Mathematics and Statistics



Sign up for PayPal and start accepting credit card payments instantly.