Letter To The Editor: An Outsider’s Perspective On The Baffert Conundrum

I almost guarantee that you wouldn't know me even if I included my name; however, a few times weekly I am asked what horse racing is planning on doing about Bob Baffert, about doping, about horses breaking down and much more. I get to work with the amazing community in the City of Arcadia, and that gives me a somewhat unique perspective on horse racing.

Though I am no expert, I will sit and talk horses with anyone who wants to chat. I love and adore horse racing while hating all its faults. I understand horse racing is valuable for Arcadia, and I also know Arcadia takes great pride in this part of its history and loves having horse racing within its city limits. For Arcadia, it's not all about the money. Many community members see it differently, however, especially as Santa Anita continues to host the Bob Baffert barn, which many community-folk see as support of something they disapprove of: i.e., drugging horses.

Maybe I know more on horse racing than the average community member, maybe I don't, but I see both sides of this problem, and I am of the opinion that horse racing lives in a bubble. Horse racing, as a community in and of itself, sticks squarely to its bubble, and rarely leaves it. It's not easy to find folks who work in racing, from the backside employees to the owners, the trainers and beyond, who openly interact with the community at large, and that has a huge effect on how the community views horse racing overall. This leads to the citizens of Arcadia turning to people like me for answers. Except … I can only give opinions, because even though I flutter back and forth between both worlds, I can't get the answers the community deserves.

Arcadia folk perceive racing as an economic value for their city but deadly for the horses, and the question I think I get asked most is, “When do you think Santa Anita will ban Bob Baffert?” It doesn't matter how much they know about Lasix or betamethasone, because they've definitely heard about Medina Spirit. As long as the perception is that Medina Spirit was doped, Baffert will remain a black mark on the local public's view of horse racing, yet no one in racing steps into the limelight to speak with the Arcadia public who lives with a racetrack (some literally) in their backyard.

The long and short of this vein of public perception concerning Bob Baffert, as it has been communicated to me, is this: He broke the rules, he should be banned, and this goes for any trainer who does the same. It doesn't matter how or why or even if Medina Spirit tested positive for a banned substance on Kentucky Derby day. It doesn't matter how or why Medina Spirit died. What matters to those on the outside, those who might not even spend a minute at the racetrack, is the way they perceive horse racing overall, based on what they perceive as the actions of a single trainer, and based ever still on what they see on their social media or hear around town.

Never mind that some of these people have never heard of Jason Servis, Jorge Navarro  or Seth Fishman, because none of those names have been in the forefront of their racing image.

That image in their head belongs to Bob Baffert.

I have no answers on how to change this perception; I'm nobody in the racing world. I just listen to their comments and complaints, but it isn't as if there is an 800 number they can call in order to direct their comments to the right person who will listen. There's no email address, no public relations person. So, I listen, folks know that, and their general perception is that trainers caught drugging horses, in any way, should go, for the safety of the horses. Rules are rules. You shouldn't get a free pass because you are a big money-making trainer.

There are terrible things going on in the world right now that deserve our attention, but the public still cares about the welfare of our horses.

Tomorrow will come, and I know my personal feelings toward racing won't change. Still, I know that, out there in my community, people will continue to alter their perception of racing from good to bad, as long as the image in their mind is of a white haired trained who may (or may not) have caused the death of a little black horse with a small white mark on his forehead, and there is no one in horse racing who is out there trying to ease their thoughts.

For horse racing in general, it might be time to listen to the community.

Name Withheld
Arcadia, Calif.


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Diodoro Fined $1,000 at Oaklawn After Class 4 Positive

Robertino Diodoro, currently second in wins and fourth by earnings in the Oaklawn Park trainer standings, had a fifth-place finisher from three months ago disqualified via stewards' ruling Monday because of a Class 4 dexamethasone positive.

Although the DQ ruling itself did not impose a fine upon Diodoro, a separate stewards' ruling fined him $1,000 under the “absolute insurer” clause.

By issuing a separate fine, the Oaklawn stewards handled Diodoro's Class 4 positive similar to how they did in 2020 when Diodoro had two winners and a fifth-place horse disqualified for the prohibited use of two different Class 4 substances detected in post-race testing.
The DQ'd horse from the Mar. 7 ruling was Storm Advisory (Weigelia), who now gets demoted to sixth and last in the first race from Dec. 10, 2021. Split-sample testing confirmed the result, and Diodoro waived his right to a hearing. It was not immediately clear if any appeal would be lodged.

Dexamethasone is an anti-inflammatory listed as a Class 4/Penalty Category C prohibited substance on the Association of Racing Commissioners International's uniform classification guidelines for foreign substances.

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Side Reins Help Grade 1 Winner Express Train Focus, Strengthen On The Way To The Starting Gates

All eyes were on Express Train the Grade 1 Santa Anita Handicap on Saturday as he held off a late-charging Warrant to give trainer John Shirreffs his first win in the Big Cap. Eagle-eyed viewers of the TVG coverage of the day's stakes races may also have noticed something interesting before the race, as the 5-year-old headed to the paddock.

While most horses approach the saddling enclosure wearing only a bridle and halter, Express Train had a schooling pad and a pair of straps running from each side of the pad to his bit. Sport horse may recognize these as side reins, which come in many forms, often made of leather with some length of elastic and attached to a surcingle or saddle girth.

Shirreffs said that Express Train isn't the first of his horses to wear side reins on the way to the paddock, and he finds they have a couple of benefits for this particular horse. For one thing, they mimic the rein contact a rider will have when one is aboard, which Shirreffs feels helps Express Train focus.

“I use those because he doesn't really like a lip chain on him,” Shirreffs said. “He can get to playing and jumping around quite a bit. I put the side reins on, and it gives him a sense of control. When the rider gets on and picks up the reins, he calms down.

“I do it with a lot of horses who want to play too much.”

Of course, a groom walking with a horse in hand will often have a shank clipped to one side of the bit, but that provides one-sided directional control and could still allow a determined horse to wheel his hind end to hop and play. The dual-sided contact of the side reins seems to help Express Train focus forward as he awaits instruction.

Shirreffs said side reins also accomplish something similar in his racehorses that they can for dressage horses. For sport horses, they're most often used on a non-mounted horse who is being lunged or long lined to change the shape of a horse's stride by stretching and strengthening the back and hind end.

“That's the one thing racehorses don't get enough – they're not collected and riders don't use their legs to engage the hind end very well, so obviously this helps,” said Shirreffs.

Express Train and Victor Espinoza winning the Santa Anita Handicap

In the sport horse world, side reins are not without controversy. Like any piece of equipment, they can become harsh in rough or inexperienced hands. They should be introduced gradually and adjusted carefully so a horse isn't surprised or panicked by the sudden presentation of pressure on the bit. According to FEI dressage competitor Lisa Zinger, writing for Practical Horseman, side reins should not be used as shortcuts to force a horse's head down or his nose back, but rather should gently teach the horse that relaxing into a rein that has some tautness or “contact” in it. This will encourage a horse to develop the muscles over their topline and stretch through their back and neck.

Shirreffs has found, when he's able to lunge a horse, that adding a side rein on the horse's outside will help straighten the horse's body because it can offset the one-sidedness of the lunge line.

“They collect themselves a little better and it strengthens their topline,” he said.

Trainers and riders of horses on the track are increasingly bringing over principles and practices from the sport horse (and particularly the dressage) worlds into race training. Shirreffs said he has found some of those principles beneficial, and tries to employ them with exercise riders where possible.

“As far as training is concerned, I always tell the riders that as a horse pushes off with his hind legs, you need to just go down a little bit so he learns to extend off his hind legs, rather than to be in front of him and trying to get him to put his front feet down fast,” he said.

In dressage, riders usually refer to this as having the horse “in front of the [rider's] leg,” meaning the horse's momentum is coming from the hind end pushing the front half of the body forward, rather than the front end dropping down and pulling the back half along passively. For that type of riding, this is thought to produce a longer, more fluid stride and a more efficient use of the body.

Shirreffs said he's not sure whether he thinks this kind of cross-training will become more commonly accepted with time, but a lot will depend on the background of the people on the racetrack.

“It all depends upon the riders that are available, because it's something that's difficult to teach a rider, especially when they're used to galloping horses,” he said. “They're used to taking ahold of horses as they gallop around there. It's hard to tell them, 'You should push them.' It's a difficult concept for people to get.

“It's funny because I think one of the things riders don't realize is they can reward horses just by relaxing a little bit on the horse. Racehorses are big, strong, tough, and they're taught to pull. Obviously jockeys have very little use of their legs other than to stay on. The only thing they really have contact with the horse is their ankles. It's always the mouth. I always try to tell my riders, when the horse relaxes, relax your arms so there's a connection between, I did something right and I'm getting rewarded for it … pretty soon the horse is going to figure out his reward comes from not pulling so hard.”

Express Train is doing well after his effort on Saturday, Shirreffs said on Monday afternoon. At five years old, the horse has achieved a level of fitness and physical maturity that makes Shirreffs' job a bit easier. Ideally, a horse would go into a race on a fitness high but may lose some ground after a big effort; Express Train has reached a stage where Shirreffs said those peaks and valleys are much smoother, and it's more about maintaining fitness than building it back up.

“He's feeling very well,” said Shirreffs. “If you look at his past performance, he has run not every month but pretty close, every five weeks or somewhere in there. Now he comes out of his races almost as well as he went into his race.”

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TDN Snippets: Week of Feb. 28-Mar. 6

It was a jam packed weekend of action from coast to coast. Here's a small, bite-sized sample of its impact on the bloodstock world.

All The Time…

Few sires are hotter right now than Taylor Made's Not This Time, who has the fewest crops of any of the top 10 sires on the 2022 general sire list. In addition to his one-two finish by Simplification and In Due Time in the Fountain of Youth, his Epicenter is also on the GI Kentucky Derby trail.

McGrath's Seal Of Approval…

Not This Time's 17 black-type winners include six graded winners and his sustained success recently prompted Chris McGrath to name Not This Time possibly Giant's Causeway's “principal American successor.”

No One Said It Was Easy…

Morello, who won the GIII Gotham S. Saturday, was the third-priciest Classic Empire 2-year-old sold at last year's Fasig-Tipton Midlantic sale when he brought $250,000, but is out of a mare who once RNA'd for $1,500. Stop the Wedding eventually sold in 2020 at Keeneland January for $11,000 to Robert Tillyer–co-breeder of Morello–while in foal to Cairo Prince. Her offspring at the sales have been all over the place, with some RNA'ing for the low four figures, and another bringing $525,000 as a juvenile.

Not Just California Dreamin'

Although the top three money earners for Union Rags, standing for $30,000 this year, have all excelled in California–Saturday's GI Santa Anita H. victor Express Train, Paradise Woods, and Catalina Cruiser–the Lane's End sire is by no means a one-trick pony. He's had a Grade I-winning 2-year-old colt, as well as two Grade I-winning 2-year-old fillies, a Grade I-winning 3-year-old filly, and now a Grade I-winning older horse. He's had graded winners on dirt and turf, short and long. Along the way, he's accumulated 13 graded winners among his 23 black-type winners.

Brilliant Racehorse, Brilliant Sire…

“It's a great day for Pharoah horses. American Pharoah has meant so much to racing.” — Bob Baffert

American Pharoah has four graded stakes winners on dirt in North America this year, topping TDN's General Sire List by that metric. He's more than the real deal.

Lev Miller Picks Up A Gem…

GII Davona Dale S. heroine Kathleen O. (Upstart) is the first foal out of Quaver, who has been a frequent visitor to Tapwrit in recent years, resulting in a 2-year-old colt named Tap Collector (a $65,000 OBS yearling purchased by PJ Campanella) and a yearling filly. Gainesway, Bridlewood, and the Tapwrit syndicate had bought Quaver with Kathleen O. in utero for $90,000 at the 2019 Keeneland January sale, then resold her at last year's Keeneland November sale in foal to Tapwrit for $140,000 to Lev Miller.

Rising Star Update For Yeguada Centurion…

Taiba, a $140,000 Fasig-Tipton October yearling turned last year's Fasig-Tipton Gulfstream second topper at $1.7 million, became the fourth 'TDN Rising Star' for Gun Runner. Interestingly, his dam, Needmore Flattery (Flatter), racked up more than $730,000 having never earned better than a 75 Beyer Speed Figure while competing mostly in Ohio-bred company. Needmore sold to Leopoldo Fernandez Pujals's Yeguada Centurion for $195,000 at Keeneland November in 2019 before being exported to France and foaling a filly by Uncle Mo.

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