Horowitz On OTTBs, Presented By Excel Equine: Understanding The Diet Of Thoroughbreds On and Off Track

If the expression “you are what you eat” holds true, then understanding what Thoroughbreds eat, particularly the diets that are necessary for their success both on and off the racetrack, will give us better insights into how we can relate to them and what their responses are to what we ask them to do.

Given that most Thoroughbreds attempt a racing career before embarking on another sport, let's start with the racetrack. A quick glance of a horse race compared to a show jump course, dressage test, or barrel race pattern suggests that racing is a relatively simple and straightforward activity. Run fast. And, if it's racing in the United States, run fast in a left-handed direction.

That's not the case.

“The Thoroughbred is such a unique individual,” Kent Thompson, the co-owner and managing partner of the Louisville, Ky.-based feed company Excel Equine said. “It can sprint four or five furlongs, but then you're asking that same exact breed to go out there and run a mile and a half. Two totally different types of exercise for performance.”

Even a horse that's exclusively a sprinter will occasionally train over longer distances, and route horses will do speed work.

With this understanding of the Thoroughbred breed, combined with an education that includes a Ph.D in animal science from the University of Kentucky and an ability to translate his knowledge into layman's terms understandable on a racetrack backside, Thompson and partner David Williams have grown Excel Equine from its founding in 2014 to feeding approximately 60 percent of the horses at their hometown track of Churchill Downs.

A lot of complex training goes into being successful on the track, similar to, for example, excelling at track and field or swimming in the Olympics. Both of those sports could theoretically also be reduced to “run fast in a left-handed direction” or “swim fast down and back.” Since racehorses are elite athletes, they require the nutrition of an elite athlete.

“It's not a hay-and-oats kind of situation anymore,” Thompson said. “There are some things you can do with something as simple as calories coming from fat or vitamins. Just because you've been doing it for years, it's a sport that's driven by so much tradition, and that includes nutrition. There are some things that you may want to consider doing differently.”

Thompson explains how faster-burning sources of energy like oats and corn can combine with slower-burning sources of energy like fiber and fat to meet the complex nutritional needs of racehorses.

“What you really look at is to provide them with various sources of energy to support that wide range of exercise levels we ask them to do,” Thompson said.

When horses finish their racing careers and embark on the next chapters of their lives, they require a different diet to match what they're being asked to do.

“They're still a performance horse, still have to meet some performance levels, but it's not that sort of high-performance exertion levels that a racehorse has,” Thompson said.

Thompson recommends adjusting a horse's diet slowly over 30 to 45 days. Cutting back grain and introducing turnout gradually. Feeding grain from typically three times a day on the track to two times a day off the track. From about 14 pounds on the track to about 10 pounds off the track.

“Let's pull some of those carbohydrate calories out and replace them with fat calories,” Thompson said. “It changes some of the circulating levels in a horse's body, and those hormones can be behavior-related.”

He also recommends treating retired racehorses for ulcers in light of the change in environment and work load they will experience. One way to do that, he says, is through alfalfa, which can act as a buffering agent thorough its fiber and calcium content.

As much as science goes into all of this, there's also an element of human, or equine, nature that goes into feeding horses because whatever you put in front of a horse, the horse gets to choose whether or not to eat it.

“The horse has to eat the feed,” Thompson said. “The fresher the feed, typically the better the horse eats it. And I would say our feed is more than likely the freshest feed on a racetrack, like at Churchill Downs for example. The cleaner the tub, that's what the trainer wants to see.”

I'd like to finish this column on a personal note and say how much of a pleasure it was to speak to Kent Thompson at Excel Equine. Their support has given me the opportunity to share stories about my adventures with OTTBs and to explore topics about the breed that are crucial to the success of the many equine sports industries in which the Thoroughbred features so prominently. It's been a fascinating source of personal growth to simultaneously be a voice for the breed to others while also learning about how enchantingly complicated these horses are.

The post Horowitz On OTTBs, Presented By Excel Equine: Understanding The Diet Of Thoroughbreds On and Off Track appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Australia: The Championships Begin At Randwick Friday Night

More than AU$20 million in purses are up for grabs across the next two Friday nights in Sydney, as “The Championships” at Randwick showcase equine talent from Australia, New Zealand and America.

TVG's international analyst, Adam McGrath, will join Sky Racing World's Jason Witham for a live broadcast on-site, as racing media enjoy renewed global travel for major events.

Day One of The Championships includes four Group Ones on a 10-race card, with first post at 9:10 p.m. ET / 6:10 p.m. PT

Race 9, the Doncaster Mile, includes Lighthouse (15-1), a gray daughter of Mizzen Mast formerly trained by Simon Callaghan. Lighthouse broke through with a last-start Australian Group One win for American owners LNJ Foxwoods.

LNJ's Jaime Roth explained: “We were interested in building a bigger presence in Australia, where there are far more options for grass sprinters than in the USA.” 

The Roth family have delighted in some uniquely Australian training updates.

“Once, we received a video of Lighthouse swimming with dolphins!” exclaimed Roth. “There's no other place in the world where an owner would get to see that, and it's one example of what makes participating in racing there so enjoyable.”

Race 8, the T.J. Smith Stakes, is the tenth – and possibly last – edition of the world's greatest contemporary turf rivalry. Nature Strip (9-5) seeks a third straight “T.J.” victory. Eduardo (5-2) beat his great rival last start, and a repeat result would square the ledger at five apiece in head-to-head clashes across a three-year period. (Despite the neck-and-neck record between the pair, Eduardo has never started favorite.) Nature Strip, the world's highest-ranked turf sprinter, is likely to venture overseas for a tilt at Royal Ascot this June. 

Race 7, the Australian Derby, sees Hitotsu (5-2) try to replicate his unorthodox preparation of last campaign, which saw him jump in distance straight from a mile to win the Victoria Derby (1-9/16 miles) in Melbourne. Hitotsu resumed from a layoff with a terrific win in a Group One mile race, again in Melbourne, and makes his clockwise debut on Friday night with another sharp hike in journey (to 1-1/2 miles). He would become the first winner of both derbies since 1994. Regal Lion (5-1) looms an ominous danger for retiring New Zealand trainer, Murray Baker. The 75-year-old training legend has made a fine art of plundering the Australian Derby, winning five of the last 14 runnings. Regal Lion put the writing on the wall in his Aussie debut, with a hard-charging 2nd in a prep race that has produced four of the last five Derby winners.

Race 6, the Sires Produce Stakes, is the middle leg of Australia's “Triple Crown” for 2-year-olds. In a season (which started last August) that has seen fillies hold an edge over their male counterparts, Sires Produce wagering is headed by the field's only two females. Fireburn (8-5) dominated the world's richest juvenile race, the six-furlong Golden Slipper, two weeks ago at Rosehill. The rise to seven furlongs this Friday night should not prove an obstacle to Fireburn stretching her win sequence to five (from six starts). Extreme Choice (7-1) was shorter odds than Fireburn in the Golden Slipper and can improve on her midfield finish, having encountered a checkered passage in the stretch.

The Randwick card (AUS-A) will be broadcast live on TVG this Friday night (First Post: 9:10 p.m. ET / 6:10 p.m. PT) alongside cards from Eagle Farm (AUS-B), Goulburn (AUS-C) and Gold Coast (AUS-D). All races will be live-streamed in HD on the new Sky Racing World Appskyracingworld.com and major ADW platforms such as TVG, TwinSpiresXpressbet, NYRABets, WatchandWagerHPIbet, and AmWager. Wagering is also available via these ADW platforms. Fans can get free access to live-streaming, past performances and expert picks on all races at skyracingworld.com. 

About Michael Wrona

A native of Brisbane, Australia, Michael Wrona has called races in six countries. Michael's vast U.S. experience includes; race calling at Los Alamitos, Hollywood Park, Arlington and Santa Anita, calling the 2000 Preakness on a national radio network and the 2016 Breeders' Cup on the International simulcast network. Michael also performed a race call voiceover for a Seinfeld episode called The Subway.

The post Australia: The Championships Begin At Randwick Friday Night appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Twitter Research Reveals Europe’s Most-Trolled Jockeys; Murphy, Dettori, Doyle Among Top Three

The nature of a jockey's profession requires the ability to withstand pressure, manage expectations and make good decisions in a matter of seconds. However, when applied to negative Twitter responses, it becomes a little more complicated.

While jockeys must endure the physical demands of their job which requires strength and stamina, it goes without saying that having to endure the trolling comments of fans on top of this can be a little overwhelming, to say the least.

Myracing, a website which provides daily horse racing tips for every meeting in the UK and Ireland, conducted research on the most trolled jockeys on Twitter, taking a closer look at the total number of Twitter responses.

This information was then categorized into the number of negative and positive tweets as well as the percentage of negative and positive tweets each jockey received.

Top 12 jockeys with the highest number of negative tweets

Ranking  Name  Flat/NH Number of Negative Tweets Percentage of Negative Tweets Total Number of Tweets Received
1 Oisin Murphy Flat 8,740 65.52 13,340
2 Frankie Dettori Flat 4,389 66.17 6,633
3 Hollie Doyle Flat 3,276 59.15 5,538
4 Irad Ortiz Jr Flat 2,938 63.48 4,628
5 Tom Marquand Flat 2,337 62.64 3,731
6 John Velazquez Flat 2,070 65.69 3,151
7 Jamie Spencer Flat 2,068 78.33 2,640
8 Hayley Turner Flat 1,764 64.47 2,736
9 James Doyle Flat 1,260 70 1,800
10 Paul Mulrennan Flat 1,156 58.62 1,972
11 Harry Skelton NH 975 76.47 1,275
12 Jim Crowley Flat 962 76.47 1,258

The results show that, of all tweets received by jockeys in the last year, between 58-78 percent of them included negative sentiments.

Of all public Tweets sent to three-time champion jockey Oisin Murphy, 65.52 percent of them included a negative sentiment after a controversial year that culminated in a recently announced 14-month ban. The Irishman received a total of 13,340 tweets, 8,740 of those being negative.

Other jockeys with the most negative tweets received included Frankie Dettori (4,389) in second place and Hollie Doyle (3,276) in third.

After 50 years of competing along with their male counterparts, it seems women still face huge challenges on the racecourse. Not only is Doyle in the top three for receiving 3,276 negative tweets out of 5,538 in total, but fellow female rider Hayley Turner received an even higher percentage of negative tweets than Doyle – recording a concerning 64.47 percent.

*Myracing stands firmly against social media or any form of abuse. This campaign simply highlights how more needs to be done to protect our sports personalities.

The post Twitter Research Reveals Europe’s Most-Trolled Jockeys; Murphy, Dettori, Doyle Among Top Three appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

2022 Jeff Ruby Steaks at a Glance

The Jeff Ruby Steaks offers 170 qualifying points for the Kentucky Derby Presented by Woodford Reserve like most prep races at this time of year, but there’s a hitch. The Jeff Ruby will contested on a synthetic, all-weather surface, so even if the winner and runner-up move on to the run for the roses, there will be question marks about their ability to handle a dirt track.

Read More...

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights