The Citizen (Gauteng)

No-whip race to be run as part of the Charity Mile meeting

- Jack Milner

In an innovative move, Phumelela will be staging a race at Turffontei­n on Saturday in which jockeys will not be permitted to use whips.

The move to ban the use of whips in the sport is growing momentum in the UK and it has found a lot of support in South Africa. Horseracin­g is seen by many as a sport that encourages cruelty to animals.

Modern whips are made from cushion and they do not hurt the horse if used correctly but it does make lot of noise as it makes contact. However, outsiders watching a race just see that horses get a solid beating from a jockey and that immediatel­y gives the sport a bad image.

The question one needs to ask is to what extent the whip encourages a horse to run faster? Interestin­gly, anybody who watched Race 7 at Turffontei­n on Saturday 20 October would seriously have reservatio­ns about whether it does. Warrior’s Rest and D’Arivee were fighting out that finish and as champion jockey Lyle Hewitson pulled his whip some 150m from the finishing post, it flew out of his hand, over his head and dropped on the turf.

Demonstrat­ing why he is the country’s champion, Hewitson showed no panic but just rode his mount with his hands. It looked as if D’Arivee would pass him but Hewitson got Warrior’s Rest perfectly balanced and came back to win the race by a long head.

In the UK, an organisati­on called Championsh­ip Horse Racing has been set up which is looking to repackage horseracin­g using Formula 1 racing as a model. They point out horseracin­g is the second largest spectator sport in Great Britain and, with a history dating back centuries, one of the longest establishe­d. It generates over £3.7 billion (R69.33 billion) for the British economy and major horseracin­g events such as Royal Ascot and Cheltenham Festival are important dates in the British and internatio­nal sporting calendar. However, sponsorshi­p participat­ion is not at the same level as in other sports.

They want to present horseracin­g to an entirely new global audience and re-affirm its status as a high-profile, much-loved sport. The use of the whip is one perception that needs to be dealt with.

Saturday sees the running of the R1million Peermont Emperors Charity Mile and Clyde Basel, on-course sales and marketing executive for Phumelela, views the meeting as an ideal opportunit­y to introduce whip-free racing to the public. “Being Charity Mile we want to show that we are willing to take a positive step forward for those who support a welfare approach to the role of animals in our lives,” he said.

“This is a perfect trial for Charity Mile day with the newbies (celebritie­s and the like) all watching, and in particular all the horse-related charities who will welcome this concept with open arms.”

Jockey Piere Strydom said: “While the whips do not inflict pain on the horse, it still does a lot of damage to the image of the sport.

“I feel this is a very positive move and I congratula­te the operator for coming up with the concept,” said Strydom.

“The first question we get from newcomers to the sport is ‘why do we whip horses’. It gives the sport a very poor image and I’ve been pushing his idea for months,” said trainer Mike de Kock.

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