Miami Herald

Baffert suspended, disputes test result

Medina Spirit’s win in the Kentucky Derby imperiled by positive test for a banned steroid.

- BY GARY B. GRAVES

Medina Spirit’s victory in the Kentucky Derby is in serious jeopardy because of a failed postrace drug test, one that led Churchill Downs to suspend Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert on Sunday in the latest scandal to plague the sport.

Baffert denied all wrongdoing and promised

to be fully transparen­t with the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission during its investigat­ion. Baffert’s barn received word Saturday that Medina Spirit had tested positive for an excessive amount of the steroid betamethas­one, which is sometimes used to treat pain and inflammati­on in horses.

Medina Spirit’s win over Mandaloun in the Derby stands for now.

“To be clear, if the findings are upheld, Medina Spirit’s results in the Kentucky Derby will be invalidate­d and Mandaloun will be declared the winner,” Churchill Downs officials said in a statement shortly after Baffert held a hastily planned morning news conference outside his barn to announce and respond to the allegation­s.

The track said failure to comply with the rules and medication protocols jeopardize­s the safety of horses and jockeys, the sport’s integrity and the Derby’s reputation.

“Churchill Downs will not tolerate it,” the statement read. “Given the seriousnes­s of the alleged offense, Churchill Downs will immediatel­y suspend Bob Baffert, the trainer of Medina Spirit, from entering any horses at Churchill Downs Racetrack.”

Medina Spirit is expected to run in the Preakness on Saturday, barring some abrupt change in plans or a decision from officials at Pimlico or Maryland’s racing commission that would prevent him from entering the second jewel of the Triple Crown.

Officials from 1/ST Racing, which operates Pimlico, and the Maryland Jockey Club said Sunday they would consult with state authoritie­s and that “any decision regarding the entry of Medina Spirit in the 146th Preakness Stakes will be made after review of the facts.”

“I got the biggest gutpunch in racing for something that I didn’t do,” Baffert said of the failed drug test. “And it’s disturbing. It’s an injustice to the horse. … I don’t know what’s going on in racing right now, but there’s something not right. I don’t feel embarrasse­d. I feel like I was wronged. We’re going to do our own investigat­ion. We’re going to be transparen­t with the racing commission, like we’ve always been.

“He’s a great horse. He doesn’t deserve this. He ran a gallant race,” Baffert added.

The only horse to be disqualifi­ed for medication after winning the Derby is Dancer’s Image in 1968.

Medina Spirit is Baffert’s fifth horse known to have failed a drug test in just over a year. Flanked by his attorney Craig Robertson, Baffert said his barn was told that Medina Spirit was found to have 21 picograms of betamethas­one — slightly more than double what the trainer said was the allowable amount — in a postrace sample.

Betamethas­one is the same drug that was found in the system of Gamine, another Baffert-trained horse who finished third in the Kentucky Oaks last September. Gamine was eventually disqualifi­ed from that finish because of that test and Baffert was fined $1,500. Betamethas­one is legal under Kentucky racing rules, though it must be cleared 14 days before a horse races.

“I’m not a conspiracy theorist,” Baffert said. “I know everybody is not out to get me, but there’s definitely something wrong. Why is it happening to me? You know, there’s problems in racing, but it’s not Bob Baffert.”

Mandaloun, which lost the Derby by a halflength, is not going to the Preakness. If Mandaloun is declared the Derby winner,Triple Crown pursuit for 2021 would end.

If Medina Spirit is disqualifi­ed, his connection­s will not receive the $1.86 million winner’s share of the Derby purse money. But for bettors, anything that happens next won’t matter — those who cashed in on Medina Spirit still win, those who didn’t still lose and those who backed Mandaloun missed out on a winning ticket that would have returned more than $50 on a $2 wager.

Last month, Baffert won an appeal before the Arkansas Racing Commission after he had been suspended by Oaklawn Park stewards for 15 days for a pair of positive drug tests involving two of his horses that won there.

 ??  ?? Bob Baffert
Bob Baffert

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