Honoring 50 Years of Vigilance Against Equine Disease

It must have become rather irritating for virologists, over the past couple of years, to hear so many of us appointing ourselves overnight experts on the best ways to tackle a pandemic. But that was a familiar enough experience for Dr. Peter Timoney, thinking back 20 years to the harrowing time when the Bluegrass was gripped by panic over Mare Reproductive Loss Syndrome (MRLS).

At the very time when his skills were most precious, as a world authority on equine virology based right there at the University of Kentucky, so his toil became most literally thankless.

“Oh yes, you feel like you're in the stocks,” he recalls. “And of course the expectation is that you should have had 20-20 hindsight. 'Why didn't you do this, why didn't you do that?' It all became very fast and furious, human nature being what it is…”

He permits himself one of the wry chuckles seldom far away in conversation with this immaculate figure, dapper and courteous, whose true standing in our community can be more accurately judged by the Lifetime Contribution Award he has just received from the Kentucky Thoroughbred Association/Kentucky Thoroughbred Owners and Breeders. As their citation declared: “There is no one more respected or admired on the topic of infectious diseases, either locally or internationally, than Dr. Peter J. Timoney, MVB, MS, PhD, FRCVS, professor and Frederick Van Lennep Chair at the Gluck Equine Research Center.”

But the alphabet soup and formal distinctions, which could be infinitely extended, feel almost incidental to the still greater status implied by the first half of that sentence—nourished, as it is, by a tireless spirit of inquiry and service. In the words of one of Kentucky's leading farm managers, Timoney is “on speed-dial for any equine laboratory in the world where they stumble across something that makes them uneasy.”
While grateful that his community had sought to ease the wrench of retirement, Timoney reflects on his award with resolute modesty.

“It was very thoughtful of them and I was deeply honored in that I didn't deserve it, frankly,” he says. “Not that I haven't been involved in the industry, on both sides of the Atlantic, for a very significant number of years. In fact, it's 50 years since I became species-specialized. But for me there was no greater pleasure or distinction to the day than the presence of Mr. Bassett.”

A significant span even of Ted Bassett's years measures their friendship. They recently shared a meal in the Keeneland track kitchen. John Williams was sitting on the adjacent table and the next thing Timoney knew the pair had broken into song. “Oh, it was choice!” he exclaims—an expression that quaintly captures the Irish lilt, light and precise, he retains after all these years.

And suddenly, no less typically, you realize that we're no longer talking about the latest of Timoney's many awards.

It turns out that he prefers to discuss his own limitations, and those of his field. These latter, of course, diminish all the time–which goes a long way to explaining Timoney's reluctance to take things easier now. But like a general who learns to read the mind of his opponent, through a long siege, he will never lose his awe for the way Nature, in her most aggressive garb, is always one step ahead.

“How many viruses have we truly eradicated?” he asks. “Two, smallpox and rinderpest. That's it. It would be counter-productive for a virus to eliminate the host species it infects. You take African Horse Sickness. In Equus caballus, the domesticated horse, certain forms of the disease can kill 90 to 95 percent of infected individuals within a week of exposure. What about mules? Yes, they become sick but the mortality rate is less, maybe 50%. As for donkeys, it depends on the type under discussion: in European donkeys, the virus can kill 40 to 50%. But this doesn't occur in the case of African donkeys that survive the infection. They've been around for a considerable period of time. Given time, agents and their hosts learn to adapt.

“Nature is amazing. Take bats, the single largest class of Mammalia: an estimated 6,000 different species. Sources of rabies, SARS-1, SARS-CoV-2 viruses: none of which clinically affect them. But by golly, look what they're capable of causing in humans.”

Timoney will always cherish insights obtained as a graduate student in the 1960s, when privileged to sit in on meetings between then prominent pioneers in arbovirology (i.e. studying arthopod vectors like mosquitoes). “Endowed by instinct and very strong observational skills, they had worked out how certain viruses spread to humans and persisted in nature,” he says. “A forerunner to what was subsequently expanded upon in the era of molecular diagnostics. I'll never forgetting listening to Karl Johnson describing what he had discovered in relation to Bolivian hemorrhagic fever, caused by Machupo virus which can give rise to fatal infections in humans. At the time there was no idea how people became exposed to the virus. He investigated a range of species of rodents and found that one, a small mouse, Calomys callosus, was susceptible to the virus and became persistently infected with it–but that the virus didn't kill it. The virus localised in the kidneys and was shed in the urine. Individuals unfortunate to come in contact with contaminated food or any fomite [material carrying infection] ran the risk of being exposed to the virus and many developed the disease.”

One of Timoney's early mentors was “one of the true virus hunters”, a Texan who had spent many years working in Africa and South America and identified a number of arboviruses; and had previously worked under Dr. Kenneth Smithburn, who discovered West Nile virus in Uganda in 1937. Timoney embraces that sense of the baton being passed, from one generation to the next; the perseverance and accretion of science. In that vein, he urges graduate students today to go back and see how remarkable was some of the deductive work published in 19th Century medical journals, when laboratory diagnostics was still in its infancy.

“Some of those papers are tremendous introductions,” he says. “I think our powers of observation and reasoning are not perhaps as finely tuned as they were in early investigators. We're spoilt today by the wealth of advanced diagnostics available to us.”

Now that technology has made deep sequencing far more affordable and rapid than even five years ago, it is possible to identify additional agents that have never been recognised or that used to be described as “orphans” because they couldn't be linked to a specific disease.
Such efficiencies are critical whenever science finds itself in a race against the clock to trace the cause of new disease. It's hard to imagine the sinking feeling that Timoney must have experienced when MRLS hit. While hindsight, as he has already remarked, is all very well, he reflects wistfully on the time, a couple of decades previously, when one of the biggest breeding farms in Kentucky sent expelled foetuses for analysis that could well have represented cases of MRLS.

“A species of streptococcus was being isolated that we felt at the time wasn't the cause of the problem,” he recalls. “But what we didn't know was there was a background surge that year in the population of tent caterpillars. In 2001, the latter were everywhere, they were to be found in the suburbs of Lexington. One couldn't walk outside without scrunching them underfoot. The horses were ingesting them in the course of grazing, and the setae on the integument of the caterpillars were piercing the wall of the small intestine. Bacteria from the alimentary tract were carried via the bloodstream to the pregnant uterus. It was terrible, upwards of a third of all pregnancies being lost that breeding season. A terrible consequence for the industry to bear.”

By the following year, farms were adapting. They cut down cherry trees, and either kept mares indoors or muzzled them at pasture. Timoney's vocation certainly calls for a thick skin. He remembers, as a young vet in rural England seconded to the British Ministry of Agriculture to assist in an outbreak of foot and mouth disease in the late 1960s, how the associated depression in some instances led farmers to take their own lives.

“The first cases I saw of this dreaded disease involved the No. 3 Ayrshire herd in England,'” Timoney recalls. “And all I could do was share in the misery and grief of the farmers affected. The images of the resulting desolation never leave you.”

Timoney had actually been drawn into the horse world in the slipstream of another crisis. He was still working with cattle and sheep diseases when a number of prominent Thoroughbred studs in the south of Ireland were struck by the neurologic form of Equine Herpesvirus 1 in 1972. That prompted the Department of Agriculture to re-assign him to head up a new equine diseases section at the Central Veterinary Research Laboratory.

After an extensive training period in the U.S. and Canada, he established and headed up the new section for six years until in 1979 accepting an associate professorship in virology at Cornell, where he supervised a high volume multi-species diagnostic service. After a couple of years or so, he returned to Ireland to assist in planning and developing an Irish Equine Centre before in 1983 taking a full-time research position in the University of Kentucky Department of Veterinary Science. He served as department chair from 1989 to 2008, and director of the Maxwell H. Gluck Equine Research Center from 1989 to 2006.

Those years encompassed immense changes in racing and breeding, above all in the frequency and range of international horse travel. The challenge today is to facilitate that movement while mitigating the risk of disease transfer to an acceptable level. Timoney is confident that it's possible to achieve this goal using the High Health, High Performance framework and, when indicated, the Equine Disease-Free Zone concept.

“While I'm a very strong proponent of the facilitation of international horse movement, my greatest worry is the risk of introducing a disease into the U.S. that might have catastrophic repercussions,” he says. “At the end of the day, containment of risk is dependent on the actions, or lack thereof, of human beings. The greatest consequences for the equine industry in the U.S. would be if either African horse sickness or Venezuelan equine encephalitis were introduced or re-introduced into the country. Were even one case to occur, it would result in a trade embargo on all horse exports for a minimum of two years. We all know what this industry is worth, not least as one of the few labor-intensive ones that remain. Sometimes one has to err on the side of conservatism. What's at stake is too great.”

First and foremost, Timoney remains animated by a deep respect for the species that has captivated him for decades. After all, there is no more privileged insight into the inner spirit of the Thoroughbred than the relationship of physician and patient. While he has a pragmatic wariness of their unpredictability on occasion, having taken the odd kick in his time, he marvels at their beauty, spirit and performance potential. “The intensely competitive spirit they can have is unequalled among domestic species,” he says. “Horses are such noble creatures. It's easy to see how over millennia, the horse has been the subject of magnificent masterpieces of art and sculpture.”

That this mystique has drawn five decades of diligence and inspiration from Dr. Peter J. Timoney is a profound benediction to our community, though typically he sees it the other way round. “I feel very fortunate,” he stresses. “Both to have been given the opportunity to work in the field I found myself in for the past 50 years, and with an animal species that is a continuing source of wonderment, and an industry that has been so supportive over the years.”

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Asian Racing Federation Updates Report On ‘The State Of Illegal Betting’

A report released last week by the Asian Racing Federation (ARF), “The State of Illegal Betting,” provides a present-day assessment of a variety of troublesome issues impacting racing worldwide.

The report “is intended to assist government policy-makers, regulators, law enforcement officers and those involved in the governance of horse racing and other sports, as well as people in the racing and betting industries, to comprehend the present scale, scope, and harm to society of illegal betting and related financial crime,” writes ARF Chairman Winfried Engelbrecht-Bresges in the publication's foreword.

The ARF, whose membership includes racing jurisdictions across Asia, Australasia and South Africa, has taken the lead in raising industry awareness while presenting a variety of recommendations on the widespread problem. Its Council on Anti-Illegal Betting and Related Financial Crime (ARF Council), established in 2017, published the report.

“Examples of illegal betting's influence on North American racing abound and it should concern every stakeholder across the sport,” said Patrick Cummings, Executive Director of the Thoroughbred Idea Foundation (TIF).

In 2021, TIF's white paper “Wagering Insecurity” highlighted incidents of pari-mutuel pool manipulation at one U.S. track and worked with regulators to take action to minimize its impact going forward.

“Since those initial findings, TIF has conducted its own research, while also being approached by concerned horseplayers, identifying more cases of pari-mutuel pool manipulation, including some in the last few weeks. These are spread across Thoroughbred and Standardbred racing, and while often on races which have smaller pool sizes, bigger circuits might not be exempt either,” said Cummings.

ARF Council member Thomas Chignell added insight on pool manipulation in a bulletin released concurrently with the Council's recent report.

“The bets placed into the tote are placed upon selections which are highly likely to lose and not on the most likely winning selection. The bets are large relative to the tote pool size and significantly shorten the odds on those selections, and in doing so, inflate the final dividend of the most likely winning selection which is subject to much larger bets with illegal betting operators.

“Incidents of dramatic, and often unexplained market movement, can cause confusion with regular bettors and undermine the public's confidence in the sport and the betting markets. Even if a racing authority does not operate the local tote betting, it is in the interest of the sport that customers believe the betting markets are fair and transparent.”

As the illegal market evolves rapidly, Cummings notes, legal betting operations have not kept pace and are susceptible, not just to haveing pools manipulated, but to having customers poached outright.

“The legal offerings to North America's racing wagering customers are practically unchanged for the last two decades,” Cummings said.

“A stagnant betting menu is not attractive and illegal operators are offering far more options to potential customers through online channels where their platforms are pitched adjacent to the most well-known legal brands,” Cummings said.

“And the long-standing issues of funding illegal accounts, or getting paid, is gradually being eliminated as cryptocurrencies become a preferred option.”

ARF Council members James Porteous and Douglas Robinson highlight the state of cryptocurrency funding in the new report. The Council also published a May 2021 paper on this specific topic.

While legal sports betting evolves rapidly in North America, agile illegal operators “will take the opportunity to capitalize on new US betting customers by marketing their online betting portals which are indistinguishable from legal Licensed and Regulated betting operators,” wrote ARF Council Chair Martin Purbrick.

Cummings added: “It can be easy to ignore the problems created by illegal betting when our own legal markets lack modern technology, protocols and oversight. Massive upgrades are necessary to protect customers, strengthen legal markets and build revenue.

“There is much to be done.”

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Seven Days: A Haggas Masterclass

It hasn't been a bad week for William Haggas. The Somerville Lodge stable cat has recently gone AWOL for fear that he might be entered up at Catterick and would have to live up to the extraordinarily rich vein of form currently being exhibited by the larger quadrupeds whose fetlocks he rubs up against during evening stables.

Over the last fortnight 41 horses have been sent out by the trainer and 17 of them have returned home with a trophy to add to the cabinet. Most impressively, 10 of those victories have been in stakes races. Taking up where Baaeed (GB) (Sea The Stars {Ire}) and Lilac Road (Ire) (Mastercraftsman {Ire}) left off the previous this week, the stable's runners over the last seven days have won a Group 1, Group 2 and four Listed races, headed of course by Alenquer (Fr) (Adlerflug {Ger}) trouncing some fairly fancy opposition in the G1 Tattersalls Gold Cup and Maljoom (Ire) pilfering the G2 Mehl-Mulhens-Rennen (German 2,000 Guineas) to become the first Classic winner for his sire Caravaggio.

Haggas is also now the sole custodian in Britain and Ireland of horses in training for the Tsui family's Sunderland Holdings. Their five runners to have taken to the track so far this season have posted some impressive results. Last week alone the half-siblings My Prospero (Ire) (Iffraaj {GB}) and My Astra (Ire) (Lope De Vega {Ire}) each won Listed races–the latter by a whopping 12 lengths at Ayr–and those successes followed the All-Weather Mile Championship win of the eldest of the clan, 5-year-old My Oberon (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}). The latter also won last year's G3 Earl Of Sefton S. before being beaten only a neck when third in the G1 Prix d'Ispahan.

Their dam My Titania (Ire) holds a footnote in racing history as the first black-type winner for her illustrious sire and the Tsuis' pride and joy, Sea The Stars (Ire). He also featured as the sire of another of the Haggas/Sunderland Holdings stakes winners last week, Sea Silk Road (Ire), who was bred by Kildaragh Stud and landed  the Listed Height Of Fashion S.

It will come as a surprise to precisely no-one that Sea The Stars has the makings of a decent broodmare sire, and there has been a flurry of promising activity in this regard of late. He features in this category for the G2 Prix Greffulhe winner Onesto (Ire) (Frankel {GB}), who is bred on the same cross as another from the Haggas stable, the Group 3 winner and G1 Queen Anne S. entrant Mohaafeth (Ire). Saturday's GIII Galorette S. winner Technical Analysis (GB) (Kingman {GB}) is also out of a Sea The Stars mare.

Currently flying up the broodmare sires' table, however, is Darley's Teofilo (GB), whose daughters have now produced three European Classic winners this season. Following the Guineas double in Newmarket of Coroebus (Ire) (Dubawi {Ire}) and Cachet (Ire) (Aclaim {Ire}), Maljoom added to the haul in Cologne.

Legendary Riders Remembered

William Haggas would certainly be the first to admit that his wife Maureen plays a key role in the success of their stable. Her father Lester Piggott was sadly not present to see the unveiling of his statue at the Curragh on Saturday, with Maureen's sister Tracy Piggott performing that honour as her father convalesces in hospital in Switzerland. 

She said of the legendary jockey in Sunday's Racing Post, “He's still constantly watching the racing and is getting a big kick out of seeing how my sister Maureen and William Haggas are flying along.”

Piggott, now 86, was at the Curragh for the opening of the new stand three years ago. His likeness in bronze now stands outside the weighing-room looking towards the track at his request. 

Thoughts also turned to Pat Smullen on Sunday, on the day he would have celebrated his 45th birthday. He, too, would have got a kick out of seeing a runaway Classic winner for Eva-Maria Bucher-Haefner and Dermot Weld, whose stable Smullen was retained by for two decades. The trainer and jockey combined in the Irish 1,000 Guineas victory 16 years ago of Nightime (Ire), who became the first of many Classic winners for Galileo (Ire). 

Smullen rode his first British Classic winner, Refuse To Bend (Ire) (Sadler's Wells), in the Moyglare Stud colours and his long association with the Haefner family extended past his retirement from race riding in 2019 as he was appointed as an advisor to their operation. In the 60th anniversary year of Moyglare Stud there could have been no more fitting Irish 1,000 Guineas winner than Homeless Songs (Ire) (Frankel {GB}), and Bucher-Haefner has a further shot at Classic glory as co-owner of the Moyglare-bred Cheshire Oaks winner Thoughts Of June (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), who is entered in the Oaks and the Irish Oaks.

Homeless Songs, bred on the same Frankel-Dubawi cross as last year's Derby winner Adayar (Ire), appears to be considered as a miler at most by her trainer, and she certainly exhibited a killer sprint kick in her five-and-a-half-length Guineas romp. Here's hoping she turns up at Royal Ascot to face Cachet and Mangoustine (Fr) (Dark Angel {Ire}) in the Coronation S. Homeless Songs also provided a first proper Clasic success for Chris Hayes, who rode Moyglare Stud's Search For A Song (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) in her first of two wins in the G1 Irish St Leger.

Appleby Wears The Crown

Triple Crown winners may not come along too often in this part of the world, but Charlie Appleby has designed a new Triple Crown all of his own in recording the extraordinary feat of winning the 2000 Guineas in Britain, France and Ireland with three different horses. 

For Godolphin, the Dubawi colts Coroebus (Ire) and Modern Games (Ire) would have been extra satisfying, being homebred sons of the operation's outstanding stallion. But of course Godolphin are also in the business of making stallions, and the Haras d'Haspel-bred Native Trail (GB), as a son of Oasis Dream (GB) from an excellent Juddmonte family, would be a worthy addition to any stallion barn. Moreover, it is always good to see the champion 2-year-old continue to be special at three. 

Havana Ball

When TDN visited Karl Burke in Middleham back in January 2018, Havana Grey (GB) was about a month shy of his third birthday but was delighting his trainer ahead of the season in which he would earn his Group 1 stripes in the Flying Five.
“Havana Grey is as hard as nails,” said Burke at the time. “He's a great character and he loves his work. Right from day one all he wanted to do was gallop…he's a real battler with a lot of natural speed.”

The son of Havana Gold (Ire) had by that stage already proved himself to be a hard-knocking 2-year-old, winning four of his eight juvenile starts, including the G3 Molecomb S., and finishing runner-up to his stable-mate Unfortunately (Ire) in the G1 Prix Morny. His early prowess is now being mirrored–and some–by members of his first crop.
Havana Grey, who stands at Whitsbury Manor Stud, has now streaked to the top of the freshman sires' table with 14 winners already to his credit. The most recent came on Sunday for Michael Bell and Middleham Park Racing with Maylandsea (GB), a grandson of Fiona Denniff's increasingly influential broodmare Hill Welcome (GB) (Most Welcome {GB}. He has also been represented by the highest number of runners, with 35 members of his first crop having already taken to the track, giving Havana Grey a strike-rate of 40% at this early stage of the year.
Another freshman off the mark this week was Cracksman (GB), with two winners coming in quick succession, and two of the first-crop sires are responsible for juveniles that have earned a coveted TDN Rising Star this season.
Following the performance of Tajalla (Ire), a son of Tally-Ho Stud's Kessaar (Ire), at Newmarket in April, a gold star went to the 2-year-old who has posted arguably the most impressive win of them all so far this season. Bradsell (GB), by Shadwell's Tasleet, scorched along the Knavesmire on Saturday to win by nine lengths for Archie Watson. Bred by Deborah O'Brien, who has had Bradsell's family for three generations, he was sold for 12,000gns as a yearling and then was brought back to the breeze-up sales by Mark Grant, who sold him for £47,000 to Tom Biggs at Goffs UK. Top hats are surely being readied by his owners, Primavera.

Trading Classics

While William Haggas was plundering a German Classic on Sunday, German trainer Markus Klug popped over to Rome and came home with the Derby Italiano trophy courtesy of Ardakan (GB). It would have been more appropriate for Ardakan to have won the Mehl-Mulhens-Rennen, the race named after the founding family of Gestut Rottgen, near Cologne, where he is trained and was bred, and where his sire Reliable Man (GB) stands.
This colt does not however bear the colours of Rottgen, which has had his family in its possession for a century. Ardakan was sold to Holger Faust on behalf of Darius Racing for €40,000 at the BBAG Yearling Sale and, clearly appreciating the 1m3f of the Italian Classic, he became the second black-type winner for his dam, the Listed winner Alaskakonigin (Ger) (Sternkoenig).
Klug also trains Ardakan's year-older half-sister Alaskasonne (Fr) (Soldier Hollow {GB}), who is already a Listed winner in her homeland and is entered for Tuesday's G2 Prix Corrida at Saint-Cloud. 

Another Star For International Family

The brilliant racemare Stacelita (Fr) (Monsun {Ger}), a Group/Grade 1 winner in both France and America, provided Frankel with his first top-level winner and first Classic winner when their daughter Soul Stirring (Jpn) won the GI Yushun Himba (Japanese Oaks) in 2017. 

Five years later the same family was back in the spotlight for that same Classic when Stacelita's grand-daughter Stars On Earth (Jpn) took another step forward in her quest for the Fillies' Triple Crown after adding the Yushun Himba to her victory in the GI Oka Sho (Japanese 1000 Guineas). As well as both being bred by Shadai Farm, Soul Stirring and Stars On Earth are connected by their jockey, Frenchman Christophe Lemaire. 

Further enhancing the broad international range of the family, Stars On Earth's dam Southern Stars (GB), a daughter of the late Lane's End Farm stallion Smart Strike, was trained in Newmarket for Teruya Yoshida by John Gosden, and won a Sandown maiden.

In the meantime, the Frankel bandwagon has rolled on at pace and he is now the sire of 21 Group/Grade 1 winners in Britain, Ireland, France, Germany, Australia, Japan, Canada and Dubai.

No Squiggle For Sieglinde

When Timeform announced in October 2020 that its Racehorses annuals would no longer be published, outgoing publishing editor Geoff Greetham said, “When the history of the pandemic comes to be written, the demise of the Timeform annuals will merit no more than a footnote, but to the band of loyal readers and to the generations of writers and photographers who have worked on 'racing's bible' this will undoubtedly be a low point. Nothing lasts forever but the Timeform annuals have stood the test of time for longer than most and will still remain as a permanent written history of the sport.”

Indeed they will, and the annuals which date back to 1948 and are collectors' items, are already sorely missed.

Stepping into the breach, however, is Irish pedigree analyst and writer Dr Sieglinde McGee, who has recently published Best Racehorses of 2021. This is her second annual, containing essays, pedigree notes and breeding details of 220 of the top horses in Europe as well as a review of the season. It is a not only a true labour of love but also an incredibly valuable addition to the libraries of racing and breeding buffs. Copies can be ordered via Amazon. 

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Dazzlingdominika To Sell in FT’s Ready Made Flash Sale

Dazzlingdominika will be the lone horse up for bid in the Fasig-Tipton Digital for the “Ready Made Racing Flash Sale,” where bidding opened Monday. Dazzlingdominika. Trained by William Walden, the 2-year-old daughter of Ghoszapper won a Maiden Special Weight at Churchill Down May 13. She is consigned by Taylor Made Sales Agency, agent.

Bidding closes Thursday, May 26, at 2 pm EDT.

The filly is out of a half-sister to Grade I winner Heir Kitty. Her immediate family includes last year's GI Arkansas Derby winner Super Stock.

“Dazzlingdominika is a talented, well-bred 2-year-old filly with a bright future ahead of her,” said Leif Aaron, Fasig-Tipton Director of Digital Sales. “She can be purchased and immediately pointed for stakes company at any number of racetracks for a spring and summer campaign.”

For more information, click here.

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