USA TODAY US Edition

Maximum Security’s legacy still could be significan­t

- Stephen Edelson

OCEANPORT, N.J. – The last arrival I showed up for at Monmouth Park was American Pharoah’s, when the first Triple Crown winner in 37 years triumphant­ly stepped off a van in the late afternoon heat for what would be a historic Haskell Day back in 2015.

On Tuesday morning, just before 6, I was on the backstretc­h as Maximum Security, after a 16-hour van ride from Churchill Downs, made his way down the ramp as the latest lightning rod for a sport that’s spent the last three months under a microscope. Such is your fate as the first Kentucky Derby winner ever disqualifi­ed for interferen­ce at a time when the game is in flux.

Maximum Security’s legacy could ultimately be as significan­t American Pharoah’s, as the 3-year-old settled into Barn 2, joining 65 other Jason Servis-trained runners.

Think about this for a moment. Maximum Security was a claimer anyone could have purchased at Gulfstream Park last December for $16,000, went on to win the greatest American race and now looms as the central figure in an incredibly controvers­ial episode that serves as a metaphor for a racing industry seeking a path forward within the realm of public perception.

It’s all part of the narrative that began this year at Santa Anita, when the death of 23 Thoroughbr­eds in just over two months was nothing short of a reckoning for a sport that’s been slow to change but now better understand­s the shifting landscape.

Whether you think Maximum Security should have been taken down and placed 17th by the stewards for interferin­g with several horses, bearing out on the lead as the field turned for home, is almost irrelevant. The same as whether you think Lasix or other medication­s, or the use of a riding crop, had anything to do with the string of equine fatalities.

Because it was those 22 agonizing minutes spent waiting for a decision on Saturday that had a profound impact, particular­ly on casual fans. When endless replays from every angle imaginable clearly showed how dangerous the sport can be for horse and rider, with legs intertwine­d for several strides.

The winds of change in racing are already swirling, with 20 top tracks poised to phase out the race-day use of Lasix, which reduces pulmonary bleeding. Meanwhile, legislatio­n by Washington lawmakers seeks to unify medication rules and drug testing under a national umbrella, rather than continue with piecemeal state regulation­s.

Perhaps Maximum Security wouldn’t have been taken down a decade or two ago. And maybe the 2019 Kentucky Derby will be the impetus for ending the 20horse cavalry charge if fields are cut back to a reasonable number of qualified contenders, as Maximum Security owner Gary West suggested on Monday.

As for Maximum Security, I have to think a path to redemption awaits over the next few months. It’s still a great story. Although a ruling eliminated his chance to win a Triple Crown even though he’s reached the wire first in each of his five starts, what transpired last weekend could make him, and what happens next, even more significan­t.

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