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Borel resumes riding career with third, fourth, lots of love

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‘He could be on a couch for a year and we’d ride him. He’s the best.’

For immediate release

HENDERSON, Ky. (Aug. 27, 2016) — Three-time Kentucky Derby winner Calvin Borel resumed his race-riding career Saturday at Ellis Park, with a third and fourth in two mounts, and you’d think he’d been retired five years rather than five months from the love-fest he received.

Fans lined up for more than the scheduled hour autograph and picture-taking session in the grandstand with the 49-year-old Hall of Fame jockey. The 2-year-old Kiss My Note, a first-time starter, was 9-2 in the morning line but bet heavily in early action and still went off the 2-1 favorite. He was head-and-head for the lead with eventual winner Chargin Storm, who had run well in his third prior starts, before tiring in the final sixteenth to finish third, a half-length out of second.

“It felt real good,” Borel said afterward. “He needed the race more than anything. He got a little tired. He ran third, ran a big race. Yes, I would have loved to win, that’s why I’m here — to win. I wouldn’t be here if I didn’t want to win, but the colt ran a big race.”

And about his first race in five months?

“I feel good. I got a little more tired than I thought I would, but I feel good.”

So who got more tired?

“I don’t know, to tell you the truth,” Borel said with one of his frequent laughs. “I had to carry him the last part, trying to run second at least. He got a little heavy, just like me — we both needed it.”

“I’m just happy to see him here. I’m a huge fan,” said Julie Spear, adding of the movie about his 2009 shocking Kentucky Derby winner Mine That Bird, “He was so funny in the movie ‘Fifty-to-1.’ He was hysterical in it. I’m surprised he hasn’t taking up acting since then.”

Borel is the only jockey to win the Kentucky Derby three times in four years: Street Sense in 2007, Mine That Bird in 2009 and Super Saver in 2010. He’s also the only jockey to talk off a Kentucky Derby winner for the Preakness, when Borel opted to ride the filly Rachel Alexandra, who had won the Kentucky Oaks by a record 20 lengths. Rachel Alexandra defeated Mine That Bird in the Preakness two weeks later and went on to beat the boys again in Monmouth Park’s Haskell and Saratoga’s Woodward against older males en route to Horse of the Year.

Borel is such a fan favorite that his sudden retirement March 27, 2016 with three weeks left in Oaklawn Park’s meeting was so out of character. He talked to few people and didn’t respond to overtures from Oaklawn and Churchill Downs about holding days in his honor.

Asked if that was because part of him thought it wasn’t final, Borel said with a laugh, “Not part of me, all of me. No, I wasn’t ready to retire. I just had to get away for a little while, get a load off and come back. That’s life. I’m too young and I’m too healthy, and I love to do it. I was far from ready to quit. So I’m back. Wouldn’t trade it for the world.”

Borel has acknowledged that last winter he was trying to work through what proved the disintegration of his relationship with his long-time girlfriend, that it impacted his riding and that he quit to join her in Florida. But the slower pace of the hunter-jumper world made him realize that he needed to be back in horse racing.

“It’s awesome,” Borel, a two-time riding champion at Ellis Park, said during the autograph sessions. “I’ve been here and did it for a while. And I’m back. Believe me, it’s good to have good fans. If you’re a little successful, they kind of follow you. I’ve had a lot of fans follow me my whole life. I’ve been very fortunate. After you win the Derby, you become a little special, I guess. There’s nothing like the Derby. You can win every race you want. But when you get on a plane, I don’t care if you win the Breeders’ Cup, Preakness, Dubai World Cup, everybody knows the Derby. And when you can say you won three out of four years, that’s pretty strong. That’s real strong. It makes me happy, proud of who I am. Since then, my fans have followed me.

“I got away for awhile, for different reasons. But I’m back and I love it that they haven’t forgotten about me.”

One of the first people Borel confided in about his return was Buff Bradley, owner-trainer of Kiss My Note. In fact, he stayed at Bradley’s farm near Frankfort when he came for a visit in early July. Borel has said getting back to the track just made him want to return more.

“For a first-timer for me, I thought if he could hit the board, I’d be very pleased,” Bradley said. “Turning for home, I was very excited that he was very much in the race. You could tell he got tired at the end. But he got a race under him now. He’ll be ready to go.”

That was an apparent reference to Borel as much as Kiss My Note.

“I know his fellow jockeys like him, too,” Bradley said. “They’re excited. A lot of people had talked to me about it, and other jockeys. They’re glad Calvin is back.”

Agreed Jon Court, who has ridden with Borel for what is becoming decades: “We love to have him back. We missed him. He’s the old Calvin, great to be around. His retirement surprised everybody, but he had to take some time. I could tell something was bothering him, I didn’t know what it was. He was always cheerful, never disclosed what was bothering him. Not that it was obvious, but being around him so long, I knew there was something. Great rider.”

Borel also picked up the mount on Tiz Too, who rallied late in the mile turf allowance and narrowly missed third, for trainer-owner Tim Richardson of Louisville. Richardson said he learned Saturday morning that his scheduled rider couldn’t make it because of a riding obligation elsewhere.

“I saw Calvin was open,” Richardson said. “Calvin and I go way back. My wife, Renee, used to pony horses at Churchill, so we know Calvin. He rode a filly for us the same week he rode Mine That Bird and Rachel Alexandra. She won that day. Matter of fact, he mentioned her on the ESPY Awards. They interviewed him on ESPN and said, ‘How did your week start? You had one heck of a week.’ He said, ‘Well, I started out winning on a little mare called La Rockette.’ I said, ‘My gosh, that’s the most famous $5,000 horse in America right now.’ Calvin doesn’t forget the little guy. He gave her the kudos for getting his week started off right.

“We love Calvin. He could be on a couch for a year and we’d ride him. He’s the best.”

“It was an awesome day,” Borel said. “The colt (Kiss My Note), he ran good. This one (Tiz Too),  he ran OK. Turning for home, I thought I had a little bit more horse. He kind of faltered a little bit. I don’t know why, but he did. But the first-time starter for Buff, he ran a good race. First-time starters for Buff, I think it takes a race, the way he trains his horses and gets them ready.

“I’m pretty fit. I feel real good. I’ve got another filly I ride tomorrow, in fact for Buff, that I like a lot. I feel good, and I’m happy to be back.”

He said of the fan reaction: “Unbelievable. In fact, it scared my horse. But it’s awesome. I mean, you can’t beat the fans. When you’re in this business, they love you and you love them.”

“I felt real good. I finished up good on him, looked good on him. I came back and watched the replay. I feel good. It will take maybe two or three more races to get everything back in my brains. But that’s something you win and don’t lose, like riding a bike.”

Rodriguez named to All-Tournament Team as Aces finish weekend

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Aces fall to IU and NKU

 BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – Sophomore Mildrelis Rodriguez earned a spot on the All-Tournament Team as the University of Evansville volleyball team finished up its opening weekend at the Indiana Invitational.

“We definitely had our ups and downs throughout the tournament, but it was great to play this kind of high level opponents. It will help us get ready for Conference competition,” head coach Manolo Concepcion said.  “The highlight of our weekend was probably the way that we played against a Big Ten team like IU. It showed our girls the kind of team that we have the potential to become, seeing themselves battle toe to toe, putting ourselves in a position to win every set. Now we need to get back into the drawing board, and keep bettering our mistakes and improving our systematic habits.”

In the day’s opener against the Hoosiers, Mildrelis Rodriguez led the way with seven kills while Rachel Tam finished with six as UE (0-3) dropped a 3-0 decision..  Erlicia Griffith got the job done offensively with six block assists.  Kendall Beerman led IU with 11 kills while Victoria Brisack kept the offense rolling with 34 assists and three kills.

After IU took the opening set by a final of 25-18, the Purple Aces put their best foot forward.  Tam posted four kills as the Aces battled down the stretch before Indiana pulled out a 27-25 victory.  Evansville took a 3-1 advantage as Montana Schafer had an early kill.  IU battled back to tie it up at 5-5.

Each point was tied leading to an 11-11 score.  That is where UE took advantage of three IU errors to take their largest lead at 14-11.  The Hoosiers came right back with four of their own to retake the lead.  The Aces continued to play well, retaking a 17-16 lead before holding a 24-22 advantage.  IU forced a pair of Evansville errors to tie it up at 24-24 before a Beerman kill helped them finish with a 27-25 triumph.

Rodriguez did her best to keep the Aces rolling in the third frame, recording six kills.  Indiana led throughout the majority of the set, but Rodriguez paced a late rally.  Trailing 23-18, Evansville forced five errors in a row to tie it up at 23-23.  Rodriguez did the serving in the run as the Aces showed great fight.  Just as they had throughout the match, IU had the answer as a Brisack kill put them up 24-23 before a Taylor Lebo service ace saw the Hoosiers hang on once again for a close win.

Northern Kentucky earned a 3-0 win over the Aces in the second match of the day.  The Norse opened up with a 25-17 win before holding the Aces to 13 points in the second set.  In the third frame, NKU put the finishing touches on the win, taking a 25-16 win.

Tam had her best match of the weekend, notching 10 kills while hitting .227.  Deja Clark registered five kills and had two digs while Rodriguez had seven kills of her own.

Next weekend, the Aces head west to Edwardsville, Ill. for the SIUE Tournament.  UE faces Green Bay on Saturday at noon before taking on SIU Edwardsville at 7 p.m.

Weiner Dog Championship

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‘Mini Corndog’  sets track record again to nip Turbo Dutch in final

They call her Mini, but she’s the max when it comes to the Wiener Dog races at Ellis Park.

The leggy and long-haired yellow dachshund officially named Mini Corndog with Ketchup, set a track record for about 50 yards for the second straight week to prevail in a three-dog photo Saturday for the title of Ellis Park’s Top Dog. Mini edged Turbo Dutch, who nipped Molly for runner-up status in the field of the eight finalists that had finished in the top two in the previous weekend’s qualifiers. Molly had narrowly lost to Mini the week before.

“I think we’re going Disney,” Brad Huebner of Newburgh, who owns Mini with wife Bethany, said with a laugh.

Mini needed to break her own record of 6.91 seconds set in last weekend’s qualifiers to prevail, which she did in 6.76. Brad Huber said he wasn’t sure that they had won. “I actually wasn’t even ready when they opened the gate,” he said. “We were squeaking and hollering and she made it. But it was a photo finish, definitely a close race.”

The Huebners have all the respect for Turbo Dutch, who looked like he was going to blast to victory in his qualifier last weekend until in deep stretch he stopped and wheeled around to see where the other dogs were, playing around for a bit with his pals before getting back to business to narrowly lose.

“We got to practice with Turbo two weeks ago,” Bethany Huebner said. “That was her toughest competition, so we knew it was going to be a tough one. And she nosed it out. They had a little words before the race.”

“Yeah, they were talking a little trash before the race,” Brad said. “I think Mini got under his skin a little bit.”

Bethany said they have another a wiener dog who was in the final about five years ago. “One of the cameramen actually stepped in front of him and he got a little spooked and ended up third,” she said. “He was on course to win. So I feel redeemed, we feel vindicated that we got this one in and got the championship.”

Chuck Chapshaw, owner of Turbo Dutch, gave kudos to Mini. “The No. 4 dog raced really good in the qualifiers,” he said. “He was right behind her, started off a little bit slower. She had a great start and great finish. He was right behind her, and we’re really proud of him. He ran straight today.”

LEGEND, JOHN FOGERTY, ROCKED FORD CENTER SATURDAY NIGHT!

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Forgerty fans piled into the Ford Center and were ready for a great night. Energy was high as John Fogerty took the stage. With no opener, it was a full night of Fogerty and his band. Fans heard some new hits, some old hits and all of their favorite Creedence Clearwater Revival hits.

“John Fogerty kept the high energy up throughout his entire performance and he did it like it was done years ago with just a guy and his band,” stated Ford Center’s Executive Director, Scott Schoenike.

Continuing Ford Center’s five year anniversary celebration is Cirque Du Soleil: Toruk – September 2-4, WWE LIVE – September 17, I Love the 90’s – September 22 and Indiana Pacers VS Milwaukee Bucks – October 12.

MINERS CLINCH DIVISION AS OTTERS STAY IN PLAYOFF HUNT

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 The Miners clinch the division after a seven to two win over the Otters. The Otters late rally was not enough to come back.

Hunter Ackerman started on the mound for the Otters and moved to six and six with the loss. Ackerman pitched for seven innings allowing two runs, six hits and had five strikeouts. Kyle Tinius received the win for the Miners and moved to three and one with the win.

The Miners put up the first run of the night with Toby DeMellos solo shot over the left field wall to take an early one to zero lead. In the third, the Miners put up one more run with Aaron Gates being brought in by Craig Massey.

In the eighth, Alex De Leon took the first pitch over the left field wall to extend the lead three to zero. Willi Martin earned his first hit on the night and it brought home one run. Gates brought in one more run in the eighth to make it five to zero.

In the top of the ninth, De Leon hit his second home run on the night. Nolan Earley would follow De Leon and hit a bomb over the right field wall. The Otters first run on the night came in the bottom of ninth after a wild pitch from the Miners to bring home Chris Breen. Chris Sweeney brought in John Schultz with a SAC-fly deep into right field.

The Otters (50-38) take on the Miners (59-30) in the home season finale Sunday, August 28. First pitch is scheduled for 5:05pm at Bosse Field. Tickets available at www.evansvilleotters.com or by phone at 812-435-8686 ext. 21.

AUGUST 27 And 28 “READERS FORUM”

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WHATS ON YOUR MIND TODAY?

“IS IT TRUE” will be posted on this coming Thursday or Friday.

Todays READERS POLL question is: If the election was held today for Indiana Governor who would you vote for?

Please take time and read our newest feature articles entitled “HOT JOBS” and “LOCAL SPORTS” posted in our sections.

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Monarch Affiliate Gets Big Win In Effort To Sell Liquor

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Monarch Affiliate Gets Big Win In Effort To Sell Liquor

Kayleigh Colombo for www.theindianlawyer.com

A Marion County Superior Court judge has ruled in favor of a Monarch Beverage Co. affiliate called Spirited Sales LLC in its quest to gain a permit to wholesale liquor, a win in Monarch’s years-long effort to enter the spirits business.

Marion County Special Judge Heather Welch found the Indiana Alcohol and Tobacco Commission was “arbitrary and capricious” in its decision to deny the company’s wholesale liquor permit application in 2014.

It is unclear whether the state plans to appeal the ruling or request a stay.

The 52-page decision, issued Wednesday, criticized a “disturbing and inappropriate” relationship between the ATC, the Indiana Governor’s Office and Monarch’s rivals in the liquor wholesaling industry, all of which appeared to lobby the commission behind the scenes for the denial of the permit and other requests from Monarch dating back to at least 2009.

The decision details situations in which staffers working for then-Gov. Mitch Daniels intervened or tried to intervene at the ATC in opposition to a proposal by a liquor wholesaler that had hoped to transfer its permit to Monarch’s Pendleton Pike warehouse and use its transportation services. And the ruling discussed ex parte conversations—meaning talks that involved only one side of the argument with other side absent—that took place between the ATC, Gov. Mike Pence’s administration and competitors regarding the Spirited Sales application.

Phil Terry, CEO of both Monarch Beverage and Spirited Sales, told IBJ that the companies are “pleased with the decision and think it’s correct.”

“We think this will allow Spirited Sales and Monarch to provide some local competition inside the liquor wholesale tier. It will increase competition and provide good value to retailers and ultimately consumers. This is a pro-business, pro-Indiana decision.”

But Terry called the process Monarch and Spirited Sales went through to try to get approved by the ATC “long and frustrating.” He also accused the Daniels administration and the agency of a lack of transparency and consistency.

The company applied to the ATC for the permit in September 2013. After six months without an investigation into the application, the ATC “expressed its intent” to deny Spirited’s application.

At a hearing about the denial requested by Spirited Sales, none of the commission members who voted on the application attended. And groups that represent Monarch’s competitors—Wine & Spirits Distributors of Indiana and Indiana Beverage Alliance—remonstrated against the application. They were allowed to act “as if they were parties to the proceeding,” including being allowed to make objections during testimony, cross-examining witnesses and delivering closing arguments, the ruling said.

The hearing judge—ATC Executive Secretary David Rothenburg—recommended denial of the application in December 2014, five months after the hearing. The commission voted to deny the application in January 2015.

Monarch, Indiana’s largest beer and wine distributor, has for years attempted to sell liquor in Indiana, but it has been shot down by the Legislature and in two previous lawsuits in which it tried to argue the state’s regulatory rules were unconstitutional.

The state has a three-tier alcohol-regulatory system that requires manufacturers, wholesalers and retailers to be separate entities. Indiana is the only state in the country that restricts beer wholesalers from holding a liquor wholesale permit.

Monarch’s competitors have argued that changing the system would unfairly give the firm a competitive edge in the market.

State law also prevents Indiana alcohol wholesalers “from directly or indirectly having an interest in both a beer wholesaler’s permit and a liquor wholesaler’s permit.”

Monarch and Spirited Sales are separate companies with separate ownership structures. But they do have a lot in common.

Spirited is wholly owned by EF Transit Inc., which provides transportation services to Monarch and other companies. The same shareholders that own Monarch also own EFT.

EFT and Monarch also share the same CEO and board of directors, but their day-to-day operations are separate. They have distinct alcoholic beverage permits, maintain separate insurance, keep separate financial books, and have separate bank accounts, tax returns and payrolls.

The commission argued that giving Spirited a liquor license when its owner is a closely held organization owned by the shareholders of Monarch would violate state law and present a threat to Indiana’s three-tier system.

But the court found that “Monarch shareholders’ interests in the parent company do not create an indirect interest in the property of its subsidiary.”

The judge also said she was not persuaded by the Indiana ATC’s argument because it had a long history of granting permits to companies in similar situations. The court pointed out several examples.

For instance, while Spirited’s application was pending with the ATC, the commission granted a three-way retailer permit to Repeal 1205, which is owned by William and Theresa Webster. William is also an owner of Fountain Square Brewery LLC, which has a retail permit, and Theresa is an owner of 15-05 Distillery LLC, which has a distiller permit.

“”It is clear from prior decisions that the commission has … elected to find that corporate separateness is a suitable safe harbor from an owner violating the Prohibited Interest Provisions,” the ruling stated. “To now argue otherwise seems disingenuous given the commission’s previous rulings and statements.”

Kara Brooks, a spokeswoman for Gov. Mike Pence, said the governor’s office had no comment on the ruling.

Tina Noel, a spokeswoman for the Wine & Spirits Distributors of Indiana, said in a statement: “We believe this decision is legally incorrect and has the potential to do great harm. It ignores numerous prohibitions in the Indiana Alcoholic Beverage Code on monopolization of alcohol wholesaling, and is contrary to legal precedent throughout the country. This decision will result in Monarch having a unique advantage over every other alcohol wholesaler in the state of Indiana.”

The Indiana Attorney General’s Office, which is the state government agency lawyer, said that it “will review the court’s ruling with our client ATC and will decide on next legal steps, if any, by the appropriate court deadlines.”

Improving Local Roads by Wendy McNamara

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Dear Friend,

This week, many of our local communities received state matching grants to improve roads and bridges.

This year, I supported legislation establishing the state’s Community Crossings matching grant fund, which will provide about $160 million to Indiana cities, towns and counties on a 50/50 matching basis.

As part of the program, Posey and Vanderburgh counties each received $1 million for road and bridge improvement projects. In addition, five local communities were awarded grants, including Cynthiana ($60,876), Darmstadt ($98,740), Evansville ($707,750), Mount Vernon ($447,434) and New Harmony ($43,665).

Projects eligible for funding through Community Crossings include road resurfacing, bridge rehabilitation, road reconstruction and Americans with Disabilities Act compliance in connection with road projects. Material costs for chip sealing and crack filling operations were also eligible for funds.

More information about Community Crossings can be found by clicking here.

Our transportation infrastructure touches every sector of our economy and drives economic development. I’ll work hard next session to ensure we develop a responsible, long-term funding solution that maintains and improves our roads for future generations.

Sincerely,

State Rep. Wendy McNamara

Governor Pence Makes Appointments to Various Boards and Commissions  

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Governor Mike Pence Recently Made Appointments To Various Boards And Commissions

Indiana Arts Commission

  1. Susan Hardwick [Warrick County], reappointed to serve a four-year term through August 31, 2020

 State Board of Dentistry 

Kelley M. Merritt [Marion County], appointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

Dr. Mark R. Stetzel [Allen County], reappointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

 Indiana Executive Council on Cybersecurity

Tracy E. Barnes [Boone County], appointed to serve at the Governor’s pleasure

 Great Lakes Commission

Daniel W. Schmidt [Hamilton County], appointed to complete a four-year term through December 31, 2018

 Insurance Producer Education & Continuing Education Advisory Council

Kevin L. Bell [Hamilton County], appointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

 Indiana Land Resources Council

Elizabeth M. Tharp [Putnam County], reappointed to serve a four-year term through August 31, 2020

 Indiana Pesticide Review Board

Dr. Raymond S. Brinkmeyer [Marion County], reappointed to serve a four-year term through August 31, 2020

 Indiana Plumbing Commission

Robert S. Synko [Marion County], reappointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

 Real Estate Appraiser Certification Board

Dennis K. “Matthew” Kruse II [DeKalb County], appointed to serve a four-year term through August 31, 2020

 Indiana Board of Registration for Architects & Landscape Architects

Jerome F. Eide [St. Joseph County], reappointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

 Rehabilitation Services Commission

Dee Ann Hart [Delaware County], reappointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

 Serve Indiana Commission

Alan M. Witchey [Marion County], reappointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

Stefonie D. Sebastian [Hendricks County], reappointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

Aleeah Livengood [Clinton County], reappointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

David A. Reingold [Tippecanoe County], reappointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

Johnathan M. Perez [Grant County], reappointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

Media M. Oakes [Hendricks County], appointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

Colton C. Strawser [LaGrange County], appointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

Sheila M. Corbin [Hendricks County], appointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

Elizabeth D. Savich [Monroe County], appointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

Sarah J. Waddle [Marion County], appointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019

Amanda K. Johnson [Madison County], appointed to serve a three-year term through August 31, 2019