Your Ask The Experts ID
is separate from your
Order Online Account ID
 Race of the Week:  2023 Breeders' Cup Days Final Figures Santa Anita 3-4 November 2023  • 1 Specials Available
Order Online
Buy TG Data
Complete Menu of
TG Data products
Simulcast Books
Customize a Value
Package of Select
TG Data
Sheet Requests
Order The Last Figure for Any Horse
Free Products
Redboard Room
Download and Review previous days' data.
Race of the Week
With detailed comments
ThoroTrack
Email notification when your horse races
Information
Introduction
For newcomers.
Samples and Tutorials
For Horsemen
Consulting services and Graph Racing
Sales Sites
Where to buy TG around the country
Archives
Historical races and handicapping articles
Handicapping
Hall of Fame
Major handicapping contest winners
Home Page
Noonan speaks! (661 Views)
Posted by: miff (IP Logged)
Date: April 08, 2014 02:06PM

New York learned nothing from PETA video
The New York Racing Association and the state’s Gaming Commission make a big deal of what they call “enhanced security protocols” for four stakes during the year, including Saturday’s Wood Memorial. The protocols require horses entered in the race to be on the grounds three days before and subject to 24-hour surveillance cameras, as well as other provisions.

One of the requirements is a treatment log to be completed by the veterinarian, which the Gaming Commission then posts on its web site in advance of the race. The protocols require a “full daily veterinarian’s record of all medications and treatments.” Both the Commission and NYRA seem content to have an incomplete form submitted unless you consider “pre-race” or “routine” to be an adequate diagnosis warranting the administration of medications.

What is particularly troubling about their lax attitude is that the issue of administering drugs to race horses because you can, and not because it is necessary to treat a condition, is a major issue confronting the sport. It came up in the now famous PETA video where one veterinarian was quoted as saying all horses in Steve Asmussen’s barn were treated with Lasix because it is a performance-enhancer, and not because it was necessary to treat pulmonary bleeding. A California investigation into seven sudden deaths in Bob Baffert’s barn found that Baffert had thyroxine administered to all his horses, although he did not even know what the purpose of the medication was.

In a six-part series in Thoroughbred Daily News last summer, the final segment was entitled “Race Horse is Not a Diagnosis.” Yet we have NYRA and the Gaming Commission not questioning “pre-race” or “routine” as an adequate explanation for their enhanced security protocols. Even those phrases, however, are a mite more adequate than the vet who simply left the diagnosis part of the state-mandated form blank. That vet, by the way, is the one featured in PETA’s video describing Lasix as a performance-enhancer.

In the press release announcing the protocols, New York’s top racing officials spouted the expected pablum about their concern for safety and integrity. There was no explanation for why these steps were taken for only four of the 2,294 races NYRA ran last year. NYRA CEO Chris Kay said the Wood would be “conducted in the safest and most transparent manner.”

That transparency, however, only serves to demonstrate that NYRA and the Gaming Commission are tone-deaf to the forces buffeting the industry. If you are going to boast about publicizing vet records, you should think that people may actually look at them. And if your haphazard acceptance of records that do not even meet your own standards becomes the next subject for PETA or Joe Drape, don’t blame the messenger.

This is an issue about more than how vets fill out a form. For NYRA and the Gaming Commission, it is about what role they will play - if any - in bringing changes to racing. One of those changes must be adherence to a cardinal principle that drugs can only be administered to a horse to address a specific medical need, and that medical need is documented in the records of the veterinarian.

I realize that when you are trying to attract top horses to one of your signature races it is tempting to let some things slide. But don’t go around boasting about your commitment to safety when you are willing to accept “pre-race” or “routine” as justification for drugs.



Subject Written By Posted
Figure Differences (1106 Views) TGJB 04/07/2014 01:59PM
Re: Figure Differences (763 Views) miff 04/07/2014 02:11PM
Re: Figure Differences (796 Views) TGJB 04/07/2014 02:23PM
Re: Figure Differences (758 Views) covelj70 04/07/2014 02:15PM
Re: Figure Differences (667 Views) jimbo66 04/07/2014 02:23PM
Re: Figure Differences (788 Views) TGJB 04/07/2014 02:29PM
Re: Figure Differences (670 Views) covelj70 04/07/2014 02:31PM
Re: Figure Differences (711 Views) jimbo66 04/07/2014 02:50PM
Re: Figure Differences (711 Views) covelj70 04/07/2014 03:16PM
Re: Figure Differences (661 Views) Polamalu43 04/07/2014 03:24PM
Re: Figure Differences (776 Views) covelj70 04/07/2014 03:29PM
Re: Figure Differences (727 Views) TGJB 04/07/2014 03:43PM
Re: Figure Differences (687 Views) ajkreider 04/07/2014 09:19PM
Re: Figure Differences (659 Views) Tavasco 04/07/2014 09:49PM
Re: Figure Differences (634 Views) TGJB 04/08/2014 01:19PM
Re: Figure Differences (579 Views) big18741 04/08/2014 01:26PM
Re: Figure Differences (650 Views) covelj70 04/08/2014 01:43PM
Noonan speaks! (661 Views) miff 04/08/2014 02:06PM
Re: Figure Differences (594 Views) ajkreider 04/08/2014 02:37PM
Re: Figure Differences (694 Views) TGJB 04/08/2014 02:43PM
Re: Figure Differences (603 Views) big18741 04/08/2014 02:45PM
Re: Figure Differences (615 Views) ajkreider 04/08/2014 03:56PM
Re: Figure Differences (652 Views) miff 04/08/2014 04:08PM
Re: Figure Differences (647 Views) Tavasco 04/08/2014 03:46PM
Re: Figure Differences (667 Views) FrankD. 04/08/2014 09:31PM


Sorry, only registered users may post in this forum.
This forum powered by Phorum.

Thoro-Graph 180 Varick Street New York, NY 10014 ---- Click here for the Ask The Experts Archives.