The Daily Telegraph

Mystery of horse ‘doping’ solved as groom admits his drug use was to blame

- By Tom Morgan

IT IS the antithesis of a performanc­eenhancing doping scandal, not least because the drug in question is designed to tranquilis­e horses rather than make them run faster.

Champion trainer John Gosden was at a loss to explain how his star equine had microscopi­c traces in her system.

However, after his sheepish stable groom came forward as authoritie­s launched investigat­ions, the truth emerged: the young assistant’s recreation­al drug habit was to blame.

A contaminat­ion probe had been launched by racing authoritie­s after a urine test on his horse, Franconia, which had won a race at Newbury in June last year.

There had never been any suspicion on the part of authoritie­s that the drug had been used to boost performanc­e, but it had taken Mr Gosden a lengthy investigat­ion to unravel the mystery.

“It was through an employee,” said Mr Gosden, who has trained more than 3,000 winners worldwide including at the Breeders’ Cup Classic, the Derby, the Arc and the King George.

“He was a rather vulnerable person who came to me.

“His life had somewhat imploded. He’d been thrown out of a job very young, and... during the lockdown he probably got in the habit of messing around with this ketamine, which is obviously used as a drug that sends you into a pleasant trance state or something.”

Although the groom had “cleaned himself properly” when he took Franconia out to exercise, he “used to keep the stuff in his wallet”.

“There was none in there, but there was residual in there,” Mr Gosden added, saying that a credit card may have come into contact with the “bridle on the filly”. A British Horseracin­g Authority panel accepted this version of events this week as they fined Mr Gosden £500 but cleared of intentiona­l wrongdoing. A disciplina­ry panel accepted the most probable source was accidental contaminat­ion by the unidentifi­ed groom, who admitted to using the drug on the weekend before the race.

During the hearing, Mr Gosden had been critical of a report on BBC Radio 4’s Today, which speculated his licence might be suspended.

The BHA have since said the maximum fine he could have received was £5,000 for the low-level contaminat­ion charge.

However, sources close to the corporatio­n say in response that it was not known prior to the hearing that the alleged offence was “low level”.

Mr Gosden, however, cited the report alongside recent claims of bullying raised by the jockey Bryony Frost as evidence his sport was now under siege.

“Due to the recent case of bullying and the Bryony Frost issue, now racing has become the next scapegoat,” he told the panel. “My name was up as having given ketamine to a racehorse, champion trainer looking at a potentiall­y lengthy ban, it was very dramatic stuff on Radio 4.

“Everybody who won’t bother to read the result of this inquiry will all assume that I go round giving ketamine to horses to make them win races.

“I can tell you it was [shocking] to listen to. It puts a stain on your character.”

Mr Gosden appeared on the Today programme yesterday to explain how a “rather vulnerable” employee was to blame for the ketamine.

He denied there was a specific problem with recreation­al drug use in racing, saying instead that it was “endemic” in society.

The trainer was fined for taking most but not all “reasonable precaution­s” to prevent contaminat­ion of the drug, though the sanction was unusually low because of what the panel described as “exceptiona­l circumstan­ces”.

 ?? ?? Franconia, trained by John Gosden and ridden by Frankie Dettori, on her way to victory at Newbury Racecourse in June of last year
Franconia, trained by John Gosden and ridden by Frankie Dettori, on her way to victory at Newbury Racecourse in June of last year
 ?? ?? John Gosden, below, said the investigat­ion had put a stain on his character
John Gosden, below, said the investigat­ion had put a stain on his character

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