Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Report: No illegal meds in deaths of horses at Santa Anita

- By Beth Harris AP Racing Writer

LOS ANGELES (AP) » A report released Tuesday by the California Horse Racing Board on a spate of horse deaths at Santa Anita found that no illegal medication­s were used on the animals and 39% percent of the 23 fatalities occurred on surfaces affected by wet weather.

However, the report found no singular cause for the deaths.

The long-awaited report focused on 23 deaths as a result of racing or training between Dec. 30, 2018, and March 31, 2019. Seven more deaths occurred from April 1-June 23, 2013, but weren’t included in the report. Another seven deaths occurred at the fall meet last year, including Mongolian Groom in the Breeders’ Cup Classic on national television.

The fatalities roiled the industry and led track owner The Stronach Group to institute several reforms involving safety and medication.

Nine fatalities have occurred this year at the track in Arcadia, where a decline in the horse population has led to fewer races being run.

“There has been a 64% reduction in catastroph­ic injuries at Santa Anita Park this year, and we have not had a single fatality during racing on our main track for the entirety of this season,” The Stronach Group said in a statement Tuesday. “While the first number represents a positive developmen­t, the second number is always the goal. We welcome the opportunit­y to work together with our industry partners to implement the suggested reforms and to make 2020 a year we can all be proud of.”

The report found that 19 of 22 horses’ catastroph­ic musculoske­letal injuries (CMI) included proximal sesamoid bone fractures, which are related to racing and training intensity. Twenty-one of those 22 cases showed “evidence of pre-existing pathology” that is presumed to be associated with high exercise intensity, which predispose­s horses with CMI to catastroph­ic injury.

“The indication is horses are overtraine­d and overraced,” Dr. Rick Arthur, the racing board’s equine medical director, said on a conference call.

Other key findings in the report were that several trainers said they felt pressured to run their horses, although “none blamed the track itself for any fatality,” and there was no evidence of animal welfare violations.

The report found that a majority of trainers hadn’t reviewed necropsy reports on their horses and many didn’t possess “good working knowledge of anatomy.” Also, record-keeping by trainers was “poor” except in a couple instances. The report also noted that in several cases investigat­ors suspected that someone else was overseeing horses’ care other than the listed CHRB-licensed trainer.

Arthur said anatomy will be part of trainers’ 12 hours of continuing education that are required to renew their license.

Rick Baedeker, CHRB executive director, said the rules to obtain a trainers’ license already have changed. Now a person has to serve a year-long apprentice­ship under a CHRB-licensed trainer and appear before the track stewards to obtain a full license.

Among the recommenda­tions in the 76-page report are to establish strict criteria for canceling racing based on weather; to require continuing education for trainers; and to seek industry support for research into sesamoid bone and fetlock injuries, which caused the majority of the fatalities.

“We’re moving to reform racing as best we can over the next year to 18 months,” CHRB chairman Greg Ferraro said on the call.

 ?? MARK J. TERRILL - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This Nov. 2, 2019, file photo shows track workers treating Mongolian Groom after the Breeders’ Cup Classic horse race at Santa Anita Park, in Arcadia, Calif. Breeders’ Cup Classic.
MARK J. TERRILL - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS This Nov. 2, 2019, file photo shows track workers treating Mongolian Groom after the Breeders’ Cup Classic horse race at Santa Anita Park, in Arcadia, Calif. Breeders’ Cup Classic.

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