Daily Mail

We can’t risk losing control

- PETER SCUDAMORE EIGHT-TIME CHAMPION JOCKEY

RUMOURS were flying all over the place yesterday and it makes good sense for racing to be halted until we all have time to see where we are.

Yes, big meetings will be lost tomorrow when newbury and Warwick were due to stage prestigiou­s races, which would have acted as trials for the cheltenham Festival.

But cheltenham might not even take place if this outbreak of an extremely contagious virus is not contained.

it is better to be safe than sorry and the British Horseracin­g authority have done the right thing by closing the sport down. i reckon it will be hard to find anyone who thinks they should have let it continue.

a little bit of breathing space was needed because every stable which had runners at ayr or Ludlow on Wednesday and contains a horse which came into contact with one of the runners from the infected Donald Mccain stable has to be tested. That’s more than 100 stables and as many as 1,000 horses.

The yard of my partner Lucinda Russell, who had runners at ayr, will be tested today. That’s around 80 horses that have to be swabbed and the samples sent for analysis at a laboratory. it is not something that should be done in a rush.

Our horses are split between two yards about 15 minutes drive apart but we are observing strict biosecurit­y protocols. We have split the staff so there is no crossover and even Lucinda and i are making sure we only set foot in one of the stables.

it is a minor inconvenie­nce but if the sport can gain peace of mind by halfway through next week it will be worth it.

There will be a cost of the shutdown to the betting industry, racecourse­s, jockeys, owners and trainers. But the cost of not acting and losing control of the situation would have been far greater.

 ?? PA ?? They’re off: Huntingdon was one of the first meetings to suffer
PA They’re off: Huntingdon was one of the first meetings to suffer
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