Daily Mail

All bets are off as equine f lu strikes

- By Christian Gysin

AN OUTBREAK of equine flu has shut down a string of horse race meetings – and could wreck next month’s Cheltenham Festival.

The British Horseracin­g Authority cancelled yesterday’s meetings in England and Wales after three horses tested positive.

Tomorrow’s meeting at Newbury racecourse has also been called off.

While highly contagious among horses, the respirator­y disease cannot spread to humans – but it can affect donkeys and mules. Animals with equine flu can develop a high fever, coughing, nasal discharge and swelling of the lymph nodes. It can take months for a horse to fully recover.

This year has already seen equine flu found in Essex, Cheshire, Derbyshire, Lincolnshi­re, Yorkshire and Suffolk. The outbreak is the biggest headache for the racing industry since the foot-and-mouth crisis in 2001, which saw Cheltenham cancelled.

The BHA has contacted over 50 trainers and vets to assess the risk of flu spreading, with British-trained runners barred from Ireland. The three new cases were found in horses which had been vaccinated against the disease, belonging to trainer Donald McCain’s Bankhouse stables in Cheshire. Mr McCain, son of Red Rum trainer Ginger McCain, said: ‘The BHA were contacted immediatel­y and we are liaising closely with them. We are scrupulous about observing the health status of horses in our care and taking the necessary steps to treat any condition that may affect them.’ He said he did not know if the infection had come from recent yard arrivals or horses returning from racing.

The three infected horses raced at Ayr in Scotland and Ludlow in Shropshire on Wednesday. Trainers at the courses will not be able to race until their horses have been tested and cleared, said the BHA. It will decide on Monday if racing can resume.

Bookmaker Paddy Power was offering odds on when the outbreak would be over.

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