The New Zealand Herald

Tough race rules to combat virus

The overall impact on the bottom line will still be brutal

- Michael Guerin

New Zealand racing is set to continue behind closed doors but with the most extreme measures in its history to combat the spread of coronaviru­s.

And that will include jockeys being forbidden to ride at meetings in the island they don’t live in but with an unheard of 2kg raising of all weights in all thoroughbr­ed races to enable them to be healthier and less at risk of illness.

The heads of all three racing codes — thoroughbr­ed, harness and greyhounds — are hopeful the expected moves announced yesterday will enable racing to continue so the industry can survive financiall­y and not face stable or business closures which could force participan­ts out of racing permanentl­y.

At this stage no race meetings have been cancelled because of coronaviru­s restrictio­ns and none is planned unless there is an increase in the threat or change in Government regulation­s.

But from today no members of the public will be allowed to attend race or trials meetings and there will even be severe restrictio­ns on racing industry participan­ts doing so, with only those working at that meeting allowed to attend.

That will mean trainers, jockeys or drivers, handlers and stablehand­s who usually attend meetings will not be able to unless they have specific duties that raceday.

That will definitely stay in place until April 13 and probably significan­tly longer.

“We will require trainers to tell us who will be coming to the races with their horses and then nobody else will be allowed,” said Harness Racing New Zealand boss Peter Jensen.

There will still be restricted numbers of raceday administra­tion staff but increased security to ensure the new protocols are not breached.

Some of the restrictio­ns will be harder to implement at the harness racing code’s two major tracks, Addington in Christchur­ch and Alexandra Park in Auckland, as both have restaurant­s on their tracks which cater for non-racing crowds seven days a week.

Alexandra Park bosses are still working through the specifics of how that will work with the Grand Park Restaurant, which is among the busiest restaurant­s in Auckland but could remain open as long as no racing industry participan­ts were allowed in so it was treated as separate from the actual racetrack.

Decisions on what measures are

But a move to raise all weights in all races by 2kgs from Friday has been roundly applauded.

put in place for it and other eateries at racetracks around the country during race meetings are expected today.

But the restaurant­s will be able to operate as normal, like any other eatery, outside when race meetings are being conducted at those tracks.

For racing bosses the main focus though is on maintainin­g horse and dog racing in this country. With all racing in New Zealand telecast live on Trackside and able to be shown online at the TAB website, industry bosses will be hoping punters will still engage with it and bet.

There is even potential for increased engagement as many other live sports are cancelled but even if that happens the overall impact on racing’s bottom line is going to be brutal.

The three codes, who have at times been at odds in the last year over the industry’s direction and market share distributi­on, having shown commendabl­e unity with how they have approached the coronaviru­s restrictio­ns and protecting their participan­ts and racegoers.

Thoroughbr­ed racing has implemente­d two new rules, both of which make sense, but one will be popular with jockeys and the other not so much.

Some jockeys are peeved by a new regulation meaning jockeys cannot move between the two main islands: so only South Island-based jockeys can ride at meetings there and North

Island jockeys can ride at meetings north of Cook Strait.

They can still travel between islands for personal reasons but they cannot accept rides at meetings held there.

But a move to raise all weights in all races by 2kg from Friday has been roundly applauded.

Jockeys maintain their weights at often unhealthy levels so they can be available to ride as many horses as possible, some undergoing dramatic 1-2kgs weight loss in the day before a race meeting, called wasting.

That can lead to extreme dehydratio­n and the regular depletion is unhealthy, obviously making jockeys more vulnerable to illness and making any infections, viral or otherwise, more dangerous. So put simply, the raising of the weights scale by 2kgs for every horse in every race will allow jockeys to remain healthier.

 ?? Photo / Sarah Ivey ?? For racing bosses, the main focus is on maintainin­g horse and dog racing in this country.
Photo / Sarah Ivey For racing bosses, the main focus is on maintainin­g horse and dog racing in this country.

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