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Chief Stipe

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Everything posted by Chief Stipe

  1. When was the last time you went to one of the Hawkes Bay race days? I went to the first two last year and the place wasn't exactly rocking like it was 15 years ago. Arguably there was as many people there on those days as there was at Ellerslie on Saturday.
  2. I posted this in another Topic in response to a plea by @hesi to those in control not to change the Hawkes Bay Spring Carnival. Firstly it isn't a 3 day meeting nor in fact a Spring Carnival. The only 3 day Spring Carnival in NZ racing is Cup Week at Riccarton. The Hawkes Bay - 'Triple Crown' is raced over 5 weeks with 3 weeks between the first two races and two between the last two. Of course there are some good age group support races on the programmes like the Gold Trail and the HB Guineas. I was thinking about possible changes to the Hawkes Bay 3 days. One that came to mind was moving the series ahead two weeks i.e. have the first day on the third Saturday in September instead of the first. Another change would be shortening the 3 week gap between the first two to two weeks. If you kept the 3 week gap between the first two then the final day would be Labour Weekend where the Friday before Labour Day is Hawkes Bay Anniversary Day. Even a 1 week later start would give Spring a chance to kick in. Some minor adjustments would need to be made to some of the age group races at other venues but in my opinion that pattern is all a bit screwed anyway. So for arguments sake in 2026 the dates would be: Day 1 - 20th September + 2wks Day 2 - 4th October +2wks Day 3 - 18th October or Day 1 - 20th September + 3wks Day 2 - 11th October +2wks Day 3 - 25th October
  3. It isn't a 3 day meeting nor in fact a Spring Carnival. The only 3 day spring carnival in NZ racing is at Riccarton. The Hawkes Bay - 'Triple Crown' is raced over 5 weeks with 3 weeks between the first two races and two between the last two. Of course there are some good age group support races like the Gold Trail and the HB Guineas. I was thinking about possible changes to the Hawkes Bay 3 days. One that came to mind was moving the series ahead two weeks i.e. have the first day on the third Saturday in September instead of the first. Another change would be shortening the 3 week gap between the first two to two weeks. If you kept the 3 week gap between the first two then the final day would be Labour Weekend where the Friday before Labour Day is Hawkes Bay Anniversary Day. Even a 1 week later start would give Spring a chance to kick in. Some minor adjustments would need to be made to some of the age group races at other venues but in my opinion that pattern is all a bit screwed anyway. So for arguments sake in 2026 the dates would be: Day 1 - 20th September + 2wks Day 2 - 4th October +2wks Day 3 - 18th October or Day 1 - 20th September + 3wks Day 2 - 11th October +2wks Day 3 - 25th October
  4. So it's all NZTR's fault? The Clubs just meekly followed along accepting what they got. Give me a break. The reality is no one invested in track infrastructure because they all believed that a track was just a big circular paddock that would last forever. But don't let that stop all the moaners looking for scapegoats.
  5. The Clubs? Name one decent track. For that matter name one track that in the last 30 years that was properly maintained and renovated when necessary.
  6. You haven't seen their CV's? Even De Lores says they look more like ENTAIN employees.
  7. Where are the official statistics confirming the 16 deaths?
  8. I saw nothing wrong with any of his posts and I understand fully his reaction. As well all know @Forbury goes off from time to time and generally talks absolute rubbish. I also understand how frustrating to those active in the industry of the constant negativity from some in NZ Racing at the moment. I've experienced first hand how it turns off new participants really quickly even those having an enjoyable and very successful time. Thankfully they've learnt to avoid those people on course and certainly have nothing to do with racing social media.
  9. We had someone who raced 90 horses - that didn't work either did it? At least there are people employed now that understand where the revenue comes from.
  10. Then De Lore shouldn't focus on figures at all and just justifying his opinion. If his and what is obviously your hypothesis is correct then why have so many Clubs been run into the ground by people who "understand racing"?
  11. I'm sure she doesn't nor is it her role to be a BSA spokesperson as @Pete Lane mischeviously suggests. Most people know that the role of spokesperson is the Board Chair and or the CEO.
  12. I think your 218 million is incorrect. Do you mean $21m? In my opinion they aren't spending enough on track infrastructure. They've relied on Clubs to do that and from what I can see most have avoided doing anything. The tracks haven't been NZTR's asset to manage but perhaps they should be.
  13. Does your partner know you access all those sports?
  14. They ran the first race over 1200m in 37 and 33! There's no way unless you are on pace that you can win from further back than 4 lengths. As for the camber they don't even seem to be even trying to improve. The lead in to the apex of the bend is cambered and slow turning. It's the last bit that's flat and sharper. Why can't you pump out of the gates and hold everything together until straightening or improve a few places from the 600m. They only other option is the Damask Rose one - stay on the rails and get up behind them before straightening. That said I know some very capable horses that just can't get round that bottom corner at anywhere near full speed.
  15. Stream the Racing.Com live broadcast for Caulfield. Brilliant coverage. NSW is not so easy.
  16. You can't sit back more than 4 lengths on a slow pace at Ellerlsie and expect to give your horse every chance to win! They seem reluctant to improve on the bend.
  17. Why bother? The vision is not HD and you can stream better presentations online.
  18. If some here think your syndication model is something to complain about they should check out the FRAC Club! Yours seem very fair by comparison.
  19. You should try the other sites and FB for lack of context and accuracy!!!
  20. He is mixing up two sets of figures in his article. On the one hand as @hesi has stated one figure which De Lore calls Operating cost the increase is from $6.3m to $9.6m. The figure of $13m is alleged and it isn't clear . How "is it known"? Note the $1m snuck in there as IT Infrastructure and Network costs - according to De Lore an increase of $900k. That isn't correct as the expenditure in 2015 was $597k NOT $163k!! The leap in staff costs of about $1.4m occurred in the 2021-22 year. If I have time I'll find out what that was for eventually! Regardless of what this 2024-25 alleged figure is the total expenditure in 2015 (less Stakes transfers) was $7.8m. 2023-24 it was $19.6m. Substract Special Projects and Track Reconstruction ($5m for Awapuni) of around $6.3m and the Expenditure is already $13.3m. That is an increase of $5.5m over 10 years. The % increase is 50% however you have to account for the fact that during the 10 period NZTR were lumped with increased marketing costs and ageing IT infrastructure coupled with a failed IT upgrade project. Not the first organisation to get hit by the latter. $13m is still only 10% of revenue i.e. 90% of the income funds stakes. How many organisations have that ratio? The average opex costs to reveneu for most organisations is 60-80%. $13m doesn't go very far in today's economy!
  21. Figures aren't De Lores expertise. The metric of overhead cost per race is spurious at best. I daresay he uses it to incite a reaction from those focussed entirely on stakes. As I and others repeatedly pointed out on BOAY the cost of running NZTR would rise after the decisions made by Mckenzie when he was CEO of TABNZ. He moved cost iems off that balance sheet and forced them into the codes e.g. marketing. (Thankfully ENTAIN has picked up some of that again and seem to be doing a good job). His 10 year comparison doesn't account for inflation and his swipe at Special Projects doesn't consider what those are. NZTR still have a stuffed and not fit for purpose IT system after a failed $2m+ project under Cameron Georges watch. Also from what I've read in the annual reports the majority of the special project expenditure is going on track upgrades and renovations which was well overdue. Where was De Lore 10 to 20 years ago when the capital investment needed to maintain core racing infrastructure wasn't done? The irony of course is the very people he says that should be running the show now with their "racing industry specific knowledge" were in fact running it then!!!! The model he suggests hasn't worked very well for Racing Clubs has it?
  22. Administrative decline is sending racing down a rabbit hole by Brian de Lore Published 17th October 2025 Anyone in racing long enough will be aware of the wonderful history the NZ thoroughbred has carved out over the past 150 years, but they will also know that the headwinds facing the horse business today come only minimally from climate change, and mostly from a sharp decline in the quality of its administration. The incumbents will argue that it’s a global thing, and a modicum of truth exists in that belief, but for NZ, the thoroughbred business has declined in tandem with a series of unsuitable director and executive appointments over the past 20 or so years. From the days of good governance, when the ‘Captains of Industry’ and the leading names of racing and breeding had a lifetime of experience when they went onto boards, the degradation of the decision-makers is matched only by the depletion of clubs, members, racegoers, race meetings, races run, foals born and every other stat that applies to horse racing. A major difference between the people who once made it work and those who now can’t is that they used to be on the inside looking out into the clear blue; now they’re on the outside looking in through a hazy fog that won’t lift. The former typically had extensive experience and a vested interest in the business, remaining in it after serving their time. Institute of Directors a curse for racing Today, decision-makers from outside the industry, often introduced through the Institute of Directors, typically arrive with limited or no knowledge of racing and depart for another sector before the allocated time of their tenure. Their departure leaves the industry with another lemon to suck on. The paradigm shift towards this recurring theme happened around 2005, when it was decided that paid professionals would replace the horse-passionate honorary directors who had industry knowledge. Suddenly, all you needed was a degree in something, completion of a five-and-a-half-day course at the Institute of Directors, and you qualified to sit around the NZTR board table knowing little more than what end bit and what end kicked – enough to collect your directors’ fees. Worst of all, the appointment to the board is made by the ‘Members’ Council’, a hotchpotch of appointed people from around the country, including jockeys and trainers, none of whom would have the qualifications to recognise a good director if one bit them on the arm. Since regional representation was killed off in 2011 and replaced with the Member’s Council, of the 30 NZTR directors appointed that have come and gone, not one has stayed long enough to serve out their full term. Members’ Council also a curse I recently spent an hour talking to a prominent person on the Members’ Council and came away shocked by how little they knew about the problems facing the racing industry. The administrative structure of racing in NZ is broken; the stakeholders all know this, so why haven’t we seen a revolution to bring change? It’s a one-word answer – apathy. They sit on their hands, hoping someone else will do something. When NZTR called for applications for the board in 2021, they asked for “proven corporate governance experience and understanding of governance policies and processes, strategic insight, and guidance of change.” They then requested seven additional skills and attributes in bullet points, all of which were corporate world requirements. Notably, there was no mention of racing knowledge, and the word ‘horse’ did not appear anywhere in the document. You reap what you sow. In the latest ‘Position Description’, extended to four pages, the requirements are much more detailed and corporate-specific. On the last page, in the last paragraph, on the very last line under the heading of “Desirable but non-essential skills of applicants currently include’, it says, ‘An interest or involvement in thoroughbred racing.’ Racing hijacked by corporates If this document wasn’t written by the ‘Institute of Directors, then it was written for them, because it all but eliminates anyone with a deep knowledge of racing and racing experience. The Institute of Directors has gradually hijacked NZTR and now controls it for its own monetary gain. We know that when you have a board weak on racing knowledge, they will fail to deliver on racing’s core mission: to appoint a competent and experienced chief executive and have an educated overview of what to prioritise for the long-term value and sustainability of racing, to know where the problems lie, and provide strong oversight and strategic support to the management. Do we have that at NZTR? Not on any available evidence. But if you had watched the Guerin Report a week or two ago, when he interviewed the Institute of Directors graduate, NZTR CEO Matt Ballesty, you would have heard Ballesty say, “My board is an exceptional board, everyone has an opinion, and they are very knowledgeable about racing and are steering me along the way.” What else is he going to say about the people who employed him? He did, however, virtually admit he knows nothing about racing. “My skills are unique” – Ballesty He said, “My skills are unique; I’m unique in that I have a bit of grassroots mixed with the corporate side of things. Whilst I’m learning the racing industry, I’m learning very quickly – a product is a product – and I believe I can learn it very quickly.” The simple fact is, Matt Ballesty has come to NZTR from the casino business, and three of his new appointees to new key positions come from the same area of experience – one from OlyBet, Tabcorp, and William Hill, another from Tabcorp, Sportingbet, BlueBet and Bet365, and a third from Racing and Wagering Western Australia. You will likely think that these new individuals are better suited to Entain or TAB NZ, and doubt that wagering professionals possess the expertise to make a meaningful impact on NZ racing. Well, everyone knows that racing knowledge is a lifetime of learning, and you cannot absorb it quickly, and it raises more concern when you’re planning to make fast and dramatic changes. There was more arrogance displayed in that interview than has been witnessed by racing people for a very long time, and it should be ringing alarm bells. Quoted in ‘The Straight’, Ballesty talked in platitudes when he said, “These changes reflect feedback we have received from industry participants about the need to enhance our leadership capability and sharpen our focus on delivering better outcomes. Bold change is the theme of our strategic focus going forward, and this restructure is a key part of enabling that.” Relocation of group and listed races??? The numerous changes that Ballesty alludes to include an eight-page policy, currently in draft form, for the relocation of group and listed races. This policy outlines the clubs’ role only as custodians of these time-honoured races and threatens relocation if certain expectations are not met. That appears to be a veiled threat to the Canterbury Jockey Club about losing the 1000 and 2000 Guineas races at Cup time. In recent times, NZTR has markedly increased its operating costs in deference to the contracting industry it presides over. Not including special projects and other one-off expenses, but only the day-to-day running of the organisation, in the ten years between 2014-15 and 2023-24 seasons, the cost per race run has risen from $2200 to $3900. In other words, racing in NZ is now living well beyond its means, and although the 2024-25 Annual Report is yet to be released, it is known that the NZTR spend for the season has risen to over $13 million. The arrival of Ballesty, his new executive appointments, and the projects he intends to undertake, will balloon that figure outwards again for the current racing season; all against the tide of racing, and which costs that will have to be eventually borne by the most underrated and maligned group of people – the owners of racehorses. It’s about time the true stakeholders in racing got together and discussed a complete overhaul of the administrative structure of racing. It badly needs change, and if it doesn’t change, the corporate ‘comers and goers’, who are the takers and not givers, will surely condemn racing to obscurity.
  23. I was just quoting the Scooby Comic Dog. He's the one bagging every Jockey. Running out of options if he actually has a horse racing.
  24. Sir Delius ruled out of Cup, Plate www.racing.com Cox Plate favourite Sir Delius has been ruled out of next week's Group 1 and the Melbourne Cup after failing independent specialist scans. Racing Victoria announced on Friday afternoon that the Gai Waterhouse and Adrian Bott-trained superstar and $2.80 Cox Plate favourite returned scans that showed it was currently at heightened risk of injury. The first scan, a CT scan on the distal limbs, was conducted at University of Melbourne Equine Centre. CT scan results are reviewed by an independent panel of diagnostic imaging specialists which comprises representatives from Australia, UK and USA. That panel then relayed their findings to Racing Victoria. Under the enhanced protocols in 2025, Sir Delius' connections were then given the chance to send the star for a PET scan. This was the first time that connections have been afforded the opportunity to utilise the state-of-the-art PET technology as part of vet protocols for the Melbourne Cup. A PET scan shows activity of bone or soft tissue lesions at the molecular level in 3D imagery. That scan was conducted on Thursday with the results shared with the same independent panel. "Having reviewed the PET scan results alongside the CT scan results, the panel members have advised RV Veterinary Services that they remain of the view that Sir Delius is currently at heightened risk of injury," an RV release read. "Following advice from RV Veterinary Services in relation to the specialist opinions from the imaging panel, RV Stewards have stood down Sir Delius from competing in the remainder of the 2025 Spring Racing Carnival. The Stewards have appraised the connections of the key information that they relied upon in making their decision." Racing.com understands that Racing Victoria remained in constant contact with the Waterhouse and Bott stable throughout the decision-making process. All horses wanting to compete in this year's Melbourne Cup must be presented for a standing CT scan of their distal limbs by no later than Thursday, 30 October. WHAT IS A CT SCAN? Computed Tomography (CT) - The standing CT scanner allows efficient 3D imaging of the lower limb and identification of otherwise undetected bone damage. It is essentially cross-sectional radiographs and provides excellent, high-detailed images of bone. The quality and contrast of images created by CT is far superior to standard x-ray. It requires a mild sedative and scanning takes less than 30 minutes. In Australia, there is a standing CT scanner at the University of Melbourne Equine Centre at Werribee and another in Sydney. WHAT IS A PET SCAN? PET is a unique medical imaging procedure that shows activity of bone or soft tissue lesions at the molecular level in 3D imagery. PET requires a small amount of radioactive material to be injected into the horse 30 minutes before its scan which takes approximately 30 minutes and can be conducted whilst the horse is standing. The only PET scanner in Australia is located at the University of Melbourne Equine Centre at Werribee. Originating in the USA, the technology was trialled successfully during the 2024 Spring Racing Carnival before being adopted into practice in 2025. WHO IS ON THE PANEL? The five members of the independent imaging review panel are as follows: Dr. Bruce Bladon, Specialist in Equine Surgery and Hospital Director at Donnington Grove Veterinary Group in England, UK; Dr. Mathieu Spriet, Specialist in Equine Diagnostic Imaging, and Professor at the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine in California, USA; Professor Peter Muir, Specialist in Veterinary Surgery and Co-Director of the Comparative Orthopaedic and Genetics Research Laboratory at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA; Professor Chris Whitton, Specialist in Equine Surgery and long-time Professor of Equine Medicine and Surgery at the University of Melbourne, AUS; and Dr. Alex Young, Specialist in Equine Diagnostic Imaging and Director of Alex Young Specialist Veterinary Imaging in Queensland, AUS.
  25. Sport Horse Racing Sir Delius out Cox Plate and Melbourne Cup after failing vet scans Cox Plate and Melbourne Cup favourite Sir Delius has sensationally been ruled out of both spring majors. Gilbert Gardiner @gilbertgardiner less than 2 min read October 17, 2025 - 4:46PM Alex Donnelly and Gilbert Gardiner take a deep dive into the Caulfield Cup. Gil also takes us through his Thousand Guineas selection as well as his best bets for the card at Caulfield. Cox Plate and Melbourne Cup favourite Sir Delius has sensationally been ruled out of both spring majors after specialist veterinary advice. Sir Delius, trained by Gai Waterhouse and Adrian Bott, presented this week for compulsory CT scans of its distal limbs. Racing Victoria announced the shock withdrawal on Friday afternoon. This article contains features which are only available in the web version Take me there • PUNT LIKE A PRO: Become a Racenet iQ member and get expert tips – with fully transparent return on investment statistics – from Racenet’s team of professional punters at our Pro Tips section. SUBSCRIBE NOW! An independent three-member panel of diagnostic imaging specialists from Australia, UK and USA reviewed the scans. The panel advised RV Veterinary Services the CT scan results for Sir Delius indicated “the horse is currently at heightened risk of injury”. RV said the Waterhouse-Bott stable was afforded an opportunity for Sir Delius to undergo a PET scan to help determine the area of concern. Sir Delius completed the PET scan on Thursday. The results confirmed the initial CT scan “heightened risk of injury”. Sir Delius, a multiple Group 1-winning son of Frankel, has been stood down for the remainder of the 2025 spring racing carnival. - more to come Join the conversation Search Home ABOUT US MEMBERSHIP CONTACT US OUR NETWORK Our Apps A NOTE ABOUT RELEVANT ADVERTISING: We collect information about the content (including ads) you use across this site and use it to make both advertising and content more relevant to you on our network and other sites. Find out more about our policy and your choices, including how to opt-out.Sometimes our articles will try to help you find the right product at the right price. We may receive payment from third parties for publishing this content or when you make a purchase through the links on our sites. Privacy policyRelevant ads opt-outCookie policyTerms of use Nationwide News Pty Ltd © 2025. All times AEDT (GMT +11). Powered by WordPress.com VIP
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