Application Period for 2019 T.I.P. Awards Now Open
- By Admin
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- 14 Aug, 2018
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NEWS RELEASE

August 6, 2018
Contact: Kristin Leshney (859) 224-2720
Application Period for 2019 T.I.P. Awards Now Open
The application period for horse shows to apply for Thoroughbred Incentive Program (T.I.P.) awards in 2019 is now open. T.I.P. offers high point awards and classes for Thoroughbreds in multiple disciplines, including dressage, eventing, hunter, jumper, pleasure, and Western.
The T.I.P. application period for 2019 shows is open through September 30, 2018. Shows should apply even if the information is tentative. Early applications are appreciated. More information and the online application are available at tjctip.com/About/HSIGI.
In 2018, T.I.P. is offering awards for registered Thoroughbreds at more than 1,200 shows in 43 states and six Canadian provinces.
Created and announced in October 2011, T.I.P. recognizes and rewards the versatility of the Thoroughbred through sponsorship of Thoroughbred classes and high point awards at sanctioned horse shows, performance awards, and non-competition awards. For more information about T.I.P., please visit tjctip.com.
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Equineline and T.I.P. today announced the launch of a new report centered on Thoroughbreds in their second careers. The bespoke report provides information to off-track Thoroughbred owners and those shopping for a Thoroughbred, including pedigree, race record, the last 10 workouts, a list of the horse’s siblings, auction history, and produce record if the subject horse is a mare that has been bred. OTTB Profile (Equineline Report 9OT) is available for $10. For more information, visit https://bit.ly/OTTBProfile or https://tjctip.com/About/FAQ.
As a token of appreciation for 14 years of support, the report is offered for free to any Thoroughbred with a T.I.P. number through your T.I.P. account. New T.I.P. numbers will have access to the report 30 days after application. To access the report, log in to your account on the T.I.P. website and click OTTB Report. For questions and assistance with your account, visit the FAQs at https://tjctip.com/About/FAQ.

f you visit Anne Kursinski’s Market Street facility in Frenchtown, New Jersey, you might notice a striking bay gelding with a broad blaze and four white socks being ridden by one of her students or her partner, Carol Hoffman. You might wonder about his breeding—until you remember that for Kursinski, a member of the Show Jumping Hall of Fame, nothing can beat a good Thoroughbred.
“I am a huge fan of the Thoroughbreds, no question,” said Kursinski, 65, who famously rode ex-race horse Eros to team silver at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics. “Thoroughbreds are intelligent and athletic, brave and light.”
The newest Thoroughbred in her life—Bobby Socks, so named in honor of his four white socks—became part of the Market Street family in 2022, after a chance conversation at a horse show between Kursinski and her longtime friend and retired show jumper Mary Chapot.

Lindsay Turcotte didn’t expect that a morning at Century Mile Racetrack in September 2020 would change her whole world, but it did.The racetrack traditionally held a special open house the week of the Grade 3 Canadian Derby to preview the contenders and allow the public to meet the horses’ connections. In the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, the event was open only to owners and trainers, but Turcotte (no relation to Secretariat’s legendary jockey) got an invitation from a friend and came to watch the Derby horses work out at the Alberta track.

Congratulations to Mikayla Hoffman and her Alberta bred partner Heavenish Hall on receiving the Alberta Horse Trials Association2022 Year End 'Thoroughbred of the Year' Award – Sponsored by the Canadian Thoroughbred Horse Society – AB Division.
Mikayla also received the Top Rider of the Year (sponsored by AHTA).
Heavenish Hall was bred and raced in Alberta by Doug Clement & Darlene Harder. The Fisher Pond gelding started five times but finished no higher than fourth.
Best of luck in the upcoming 2023 season to this outstanding partnership!

Recognizing the growing need to champion an underserved population of the Thoroughbred industry, the Retired Racehorse Project (RRP) announced today that the 2023 Thoroughbred Makeover and National Symposium, presented by Thoroughbred Charities of America, will include a pilot program for a broodmare division of competition. Recently-retired broodmares will compete alongside traditional Makeover entrants in all ten offered disciplines, but will be pinned and recognized separately, competing for a separate pot of $10,000 in prize money.

“If an owner wishes to mark their certificates as 'Retired From Racing,' there's a process to do that for Thoroughbreds that are registered with The Jockey Club,” Bailey said. “It involves returning the completed form, which includes the notarized signature of both parties, photographs so that we can verify the identity of the horse, and The Jockey Club Certificate of Foal Registration to our office so that it can be recorded and stamped accordingly.”

T.I.P. Announces Shows & Youth Ambassadors for 2022, Expanded Championships at Thoroughbred Makeover
The Jockey Club Thoroughbred Incentive Program (T.I.P.) today announced that it has approved more than 7,000 awards and classes at more than 1,400 shows in 46 states and six Canadian provinces in 2022.
Awards are available for multiple disciplines, including eventing, dressage, Western and English pleasure, hunter/jumper, endurance, barrel racing, and polocrosse. A full calendar of shows offering awards is available at tjctip.com/CalendarOfEvents and will be updated as show dates are confirmed.

The 2021 Thoroughbred Owner Conference series held its final session Tuesday, December 7, with a panel focused on the importance of Thoroughbred aftercare. Held virtually this year in lieu of an in-person conference, the series was hosted by The Jockey Club and the Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders Association and presented by Bessemer Trust, Dean Dorton Equine, Stoll Keenon Ogden, and Stonestreet Farm.