November 16, 2016,
Louisville, Kentucky---The University
of Louisville Equine Industry Program announced today that Jeffrey Gural, a
long-time New York real estate magnate, Standardbred breeder and owner, and,
more recently, harness track owner and operator in New Jersey and New York, has
been selected at the recipient of the John W. Galbreath Award, given each year
since 1990 to a person or persons who have led successful equine enterprises.
“The Galbreath Award recognizes people who have built successful enterprises
that serve the industry and act in a positive way to build marketing
initiatives that encourage participation in the horse industry by others,” said
Tim Capps, the director of the Equine Industry Program. “Jeff Gural’s
love of horses and of the game of harness racing has driven his desire to
sustain the sport and make it a better place, first for fans, then for
participants. He’s a believer in the sport, and has invested a lot of his
money and time into making it more vibrant and more deserving of peoples’ attention.”
Gural became part of New York’s complex and challenging real estate industry as
a birth-right, growing up in the home of Aaron Gural, who made the commercial
real estate business in New York his passion from the late 1930’s onward.
Aaron Gural would build a large real estate management company which would
become, arguably, the city’s largest in terms of square footage under
management, running more than eight million square feet of real estate.
His son, Jeff, found his way into the same business with his father, but not
before earning a degree in civil engineering from Rensselaer Polytechnic
University, a private school located in Troy, New York, known as an incubator
of promising engineers but not horse racing enthusiasts or participants.
“I got interested in harness racing as a young guy, going to the New York
tracks, in particular Roosevelt Raceway on Long Island. We would gather a
bunch of guys and go out and bet and drink beer and have a great time,” says
Gural, who admits he fell in love with horses along the way, without
recognizing at the time that they, and the industry, would become one of his
chief passions.
Gural began his real estate career in 1966 when he went to work for the
Morse-Diesel Construction Company, joining his father’s firm in 1972. “Of
the things I’m grateful for, one is being born in a real estate family
and another is the things I learned from my father, one of which is that to be
successful in commercial real estate you need to have a long-term perspective,
be in it for the long haul.
Gural would become the head of Newmark Frank in the late ‘70’s, then lead it
through both national expansions and international efforts that would result in
a strategic partnership with Knight Frank, a London-based company in
2006. That would bring them into the international real estate business
in a major way, and would lead to their acquisition by BGC Partners, a public
company traded on NASDAQ.
While at age 74, Gural still manages the buildings the company owns and
operates on a daily basis, he is the practical and spiritual leader of American
Racing and Entertainment LLC, which operates “racinos” at Vernon Downs and
Tioga Raceway in western New York, and perhaps harness racing’s most glamorous
facility at the Meadowlands in northern New Jersey.
“I have two Standardbred farms in New York, and a lot of horses, which I love
being around and watching them,” says Gural. “They have a calming effect
on me!”
Not so calming are the operations of the three tracks, which have been upgraded
and are marketed more than their competitors. While the “Great Recession”
was damaging to the horse industry in general, its impacts on the racing industry
were particularly visible through sharp declines in foal crops, drops in
wagering at virtually all tracks, and cuts in race days across the country.
Gural stepped in as the owner of the two New York tracks---one senior manager
at a New York track in their area credits Gural with making a bad situation
tolerable. “He saved New York harness racing upstate without question. He
was the indispensable guy, the person who made the difference.”
As notable were his efforts at the Meadowlands, where he decided to lease the
operation from the state, then leave the old plant behind and build a new
facility, smaller but more promotable and usable than the prior facility.
Had he done just that he would have satisfied many concerned harness industry
participants who were looking for ports in the storm. However,
………………
Gural has been a strong advocate for cleaning up the sport, “making it something
people can believe in again,” as he puts it, and that has rubbed a number
of people the wrong way. Gural has suspended trainers and owners for
repeated drug use and other bad habits that he feels are not appropriate at a
time when horsemen need to put on a quality show that emphasizes the best in
horse care and management, and a good show, besides.
“We spend real money on marketing, on telling people why this is a good game to
participate in, so we need to make sure that what we tell them is fair and
accurate,” says Gural, whose tone can be charming (he’s a major philanthropist
in New York) or blunt, but rarely both. As a self-acknowledged liberal
Democrat, he knows and has known leading Democratic politicians for years, but
acknowledges that the current political climate is mixed for gaming efforts,
having backed a visible effort to bring a casino to the Meadowlands only to see
it fall in popularity to the point he and fellow supporter Paul Fireman
announced in late summer that they were backing away from the idea for the
moment.
It is taking a longer time than he would like to get the stars aligned in his
harness world, but he’s been going down this road for awhile, so attempts to be
philosophical: “We have to change in order to survive; having said that I
continue to believe that change---positive change---is a possibility, and a
necessity,” says Gural.
The Galbreath Award will be presented at the Speed Art Museum, adjacent to the
College of Business, on Thursday evening, November 17th.