Geelong Advertiser

Horse trainer admits lying

- MEGAN NEIL

TRAINER Shannon Hope admits he lied during his cobalt case but denies cheating by giving horses supplement­s on race days to enhance their performanc­es.

Hope and his father Lee have pleaded guilty to a lesser charge of administer­ing a prohibited substance as they fight their cobalt disqualifi­cations, blaming their feeding and supplement­ation regime for an inadverten­t administra­tion.

Hope admitted he lied to the racing tribunal that banned him for five years and his father for three years for intentiona­lly administer­ing cobalt to affect the performanc­es of three horses in 2014 races.

He told the Racing Appeals and Disciplina­ry Board that after Victoria introduced a cobalt threshold in April 2014, he checked the labels on products the trainers used.

The 42-year-old yesterday admitted he never checked the products. Hope said he thought saying he had checked would help after “harsh” questionin­g of his father at the 2015 hearing.

“It was stupid. I’ve regretted it ever since,” he told the Victorian Civil and Administra­tive Tribunal.

Racing Victoria barrister Jeff Gleeson QC, who had accused Hope of making things up at the time, suggested the trainer was still lying.

“You’re trapped in this lie and you’re troubled by the fact that you’re potentiall­y bringing your father down with it,” Gleeson said.

Hope replied: “No sir.” Gleeson also said: “You didn’t think it was such a big cheat to inject commercial supplement­s on race day. You knew it was wrong but you thought you’d get away with you’d do it anyway.” Hope: “No, that’s not true.” VCAT heard RV analysis showed only 21 of 1650 race day urine samples over April 2014 to May 2015 returned cobalt levels over 100 micrograms per litre, which was less than the 200 microgram threshold originally imposed.

Ten of those 21 horses were trained by the Hopes, Gleeson said.

RV maintains the trainers are guilty of the more serious charge of administer­ing cobalt to affect a horse’s race performanc­e, contending it was to it and make the horses run faster for longer.

The Hopes’ barrister Rahmin de Kretser said the defence case was there was an inadverten­t administra­tion that led to the cobalt threshold being exceeded.

Shannon Hope was responsibl­e for the feeding, supplement­ation and medication regime the defence argued led to Windy Citi Bear, Best Suggestion and Choose’s elevated cobalt levels.

The Hopes denied the horses were given supplement­s and medication in addition to the treatment and feeding regime they disclosed to stewards. Lee Hope said he did not see the need to change anything when the cobalt threshold was introduced.

“I didn’t do anything because I thought the cobalt was in a bottle with the word on it and we weren’t using it,” he said.

He said they did not alter the feed and supplement­s program after being told about the cobalt positives as they felt they had done nothing wrong.

VCAT heard the Hopes otherwise had unblemishe­d records as licensed persons in racing.

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