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LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Two days before horse racing’s signature event, the Kentucky Derby, the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission on Thursday scratched all of the horses trained by Saffie Joseph Jr. that were set to race at Churchill Downs, including the Derby entrant Lord Miles, after two of his horses died of unknown causes in the past week.
Two other horses, not trained by Joseph, also died in the past week after sustaining leg injuries, including a colt who was scheduled to run in the Derby on Saturday, prompting an investigation by the commission into the causes of all the deaths.
The racing commission and its stewards cited “the betterment of racing, the health and welfare of our equine athletes and the safety of our jockeys” as the reason for the decision. Churchill Downs subsequently suspended Joseph indefinitely from racing horses at the track.
Wild on Ice, a 3-year-old who had three wins in five career starts and was in the Derby field, was euthanized after he sustained a leg injury while training on the dirt track last Thursday. Take Charge Briana was put down after an injury during a turf race on Tuesday.
The two horses trained by Joseph were Parents Pride, who collapsed on Saturday, and Chasing Artie, who collapsed on Tuesday.
The deaths come at one of the few times each year that the sports world is focused on horse racing: The Derby kicks off the Triple Crown season. The deaths are likely to renew longstanding concerns about the horses’ safety even as the industry contends with doping scandals, competition from other forms of betting and waning fan interest.
“While a series of events like this is highly unusual, it is completely unacceptable,” Churchill Downs said in a statement. “We take this very seriously and acknowledge that these troubling incidents are alarming and must be addressed.
“We have full confidence in our racing surfaces and have been assured by our riders and horsemen that they do as well.”
At the barn where Lord Miles is stabled, Joseph said on Wednesday that he was “shattered” by the deaths of two of his horses. “The odds of it happening twice is in the trillions,” he said. “I run almost 4,000 horses, and it’s never happened. It doesn’t make sense.”
Lisa Lazarus, chief executive of the newly minted Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority, said both the dirt and turf courses had been examined by its experts and were deemed to be safe. Necropsies will be performed on the horses, and hair and blood samples have been taken and are being fast-tracked for laboratory examinations. Joseph scratched a filly on Wednesday out of precaution and said on Thursday morning that he would also voluntarily scratch the horses he planned to run Thursday, Friday and Saturday, except for Lord Miles. The commission later decided otherwise.
On Thursday morning, Joseph watched as Lord Miles was walked outside his barn before he was taken to the track for light exercise. Joseph checked the horse’s legs both at the barn and on the track.
Asked afterward if he would scratch Lord Miles, he responded, “No.” Asked why he was checking his legs, he said, “I always do that.”
While Churchill Downs said it would “continue to take every measure to ensure that we are providing the safest possible environment for horses on our property,” it did not have the authority to require Joseph to scratch his Derby horse because he was already entered in the race. That decision needed to come from the racing commission.
Joseph, 36, a Barbados native, is a leading trainer based in Florida. His 2022 Derby horse, White Abarrio, finished 16th.
According to a database that tracks medication violations, he was fined $500 for a positive test for clenbuterol, a bronchodilator, at Gulfstream Park in Florida in 2015 and $1,000 for a positive test for aminocaproic acid, which treats bleeding disorders, at Monmouth Park in New Jersey in 2021. He is also appealing a 15-day suspension and $500 fine because of a positive test for gabapentin, an anticonvulsant and nerve pain medication, at Presque Isle Downs in Pennsylvania in 2022. His trainee Artie’s Princess was disqualified from the Grade II race.
Horse racing in the United States has long had a culture of drugs and lax regulation and has a far higher rate of horses breaking down and being euthanized than most other places in the world.
Trainers have experimented with anything that may give their horses an edge, including chemicals that bulk up pigs and cattle before slaughter, cobra venom, Viagra, blood doping agents, stimulants and cancer drugs. Detection is difficult as laboratories scramble to keep up.
Common drugs such as anti-inflammatories pose the greatest risk to horse and rider. At higher levels, pain medicine can mask injury, rendering prerace examinations less effective. If a horse cannot feel pain, it may run harder than it otherwise would, putting extra stress on an injury.
That was one reason the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority was established under the oversight of the Federal Trade Commission. The rules and penalties it has written to eliminate doping and abuse within thoroughbred racing will take effect on May 22.
In 2021, Medina Spirit won the Kentucky Derby only to be disqualified after testing positive for a banned substance. Months later, he died during a workout. A necropsy by California scientists suggested he might have had a heart attack, but they said they could not be sure. They cited an international study of exercise-related sudden death in racehorses that found that a cause of death was determined with certainty in about 53 percent of cases, a presumptive cause was established in 25 percent of cases and a specific cause of death could not be determined in about 22 percent of them.
Since 2009, the Jockey Club has kept the Equine Injury Database to track fatal breakdowns on American racetracks and provide a database to analyze how they can be prevented. That first year, thoroughbreds had fatal injuries at the rate of two per 1,000 starts.
Last year, there were 1.25 fatalities per 1,000 starts compared to 1.39 fatalities per 1,000 starts in 2021. It was fourth consecutive year that the rate had decreased and was the first time that the rate had been below 1.3 fatalities per 1,000 start.
“We can say with confidence that the risk of fatal injury is heading in a sustained downward direction both overall and in many specific areas,” Tim Parkin, a professor of veterinary epidemiology at the University of Bristol in England, said when announcing the most recent results in March. He said the six months at the end of 2022 formed the safest six-month period since the database was created.
Still, clusters of fatal accidents have occurred. Last month, Laurel Park in Maryland was closed for three days after a spate of injuries led to five horses being euthanized. Trainers and owners there said the track’s surface was unsafe. Laurel Park’s owner, 1/ST, disputed the claim.
The sport was badly rocked in 2019 after 30 horses died at Santa Anita in a span of six months, news that made national headlines and earned the scrutiny of California lawmakers and animal rights activists.
In response, state and racing officials strengthened regulations around the use of riding crops, medication for horses, education for trainers and jockeys, track safety and recuperation policies for injured horses. Last year, 12 horses died at Santa Anita, and thoroughbred fatalities throughout California fell 54 percent from 144 in 2019 to 66 for the last fiscal year.
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