The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Los Alamitos puts down mare after racing injury

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A horse died after suffering a racing injury at Los Alamitos Race Course, state regulators confirmed Sunday — one month after officials said the Cypress track had taken a series of steps aimed at improving safety following a spate of four horse deaths in an 11-day span.

Scream and Shout, a 5-yearold mare, was injured during the fourth race Saturday night at Los Alamitos, requiring euthanasia, California Horse Racing Board spokesman Mike Marten said.

Scream and Shout was appearing in her first race on Saturday. She was owned by Rakoczy Racing LLC and Saratoga West and trained by Jeffrey Metz. Her jockey was Ricardo Ramirez.

Before Saturday, the most recent death at the track occurred March 23, when an un-raced colt named See You At Front suffered a leg injury while galloping during training.

According to the CHRB, Los Alamitos has eliminated the use of “high toe grabs” — similar to cleats worn by football players to give them better traction on turf — on rear horseshoes. The track also eliminated the “breaking bar” in quarter-horse races. The bar is similar to a starting block in track meets, adding traction at the start of a race.

The track is also consulting with a racing surface expert to determine if the track surface is a contributi­ng factor to recent injuries, and it has contacted UC Davis to “fund a study of lumbar fractures in quarter horses,” CHRB officials said.

According to the CHRB, a lumbar — or back — fracture led to the March 19 death of a 3-yearold filly named Fastidious, who pulled up during a Los Alamitos race before reaching the finish.

Wednesday’s death of See You At Front and the March 20 death of Stolen Lives after a race were both the result of euthanasia due to lower leg injuries, according to the CHRB.

The March 12 death of a mare named Ballet Royalty, who collapsed after a race, was attributed to “sudden death,” with a necropsy pending.

A fifth horse — Big Fabuloso, a 4-year-old gelding — died after suffering an injury while racing at the track on Jan. 8.

Eleven horses died from racing or training injuries at Los Alamitos in 2021, and the track was briefly placed on probation by the CHRB in July 2020 due to another spate of racehorse deaths. At that time, at least 20 horses had died at the track in 2020 after suffering racing or training injuries.

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