Raclette Joins Yorkshire Oaks Cast

Group 2 winner Raclette (GB) (Frankel {GB}) has been supplemented to the Aug. 18 G1 Yorkshire Oaks, according to trainer Andre Fabre. Named a 'TDN Rising Star' at Deauville last August, the bay won the Listed Prix Melisande at ParisLongchamp two starts back in June, and triumphed in the G2 Prix de Malleret in the colours of the late Prince Khalid Abdullah on July 14.

“She will be supplemented for the Yorkshire Oaks,” said Fabre. “She is beginning to mature now and the step up to 12 furlongs suited her last time out, she really stays well.

“I think she wants good ground–good to firm, fast ground is what she wants. Hopefully it will stay dry in August because sometimes for that meeting it can go soft.

“I don't think she will be a filly for the Arc this year as she is still a little bit weak. Perhaps next year when she is stronger.”

The trainer also had an update on Group 1 winner Mare Australis (Ire) (Australia {GB}), who was unplaced in the G1 Grand Prix de Saint-Cloud.

“He had a valid excuse, he became unbalanced on the track and was pushed out of the race and another horse galloped into his heels,” said Fabre. “Saying that, he's been to Saint-Cloud before and disappointed, so he might just not like the course.

“He'll go for an Arc prep and then the Arc, he likes Longchamp so it makes sense to run him there.”

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Equine Ethics: A Case for Teaching the Language of Horses

Editor's note: This column is the first in our new series about the strides horse racing is making to advance the ethical treatment of racehorses.

On many levels, those in horse racing and breeding are working to ensure the sport is humane and ethical. New studies and standards about track surfaces, stress, medications, diagnostics and more, shed light on how to ensure the safety and comfort of racehorses. Enforcement of anti-doping regulations has reached a new level with better use of surveillance, hotlines and other anti-crime tactics. And in the U.S, there is a major attempt at regulation uniformity and centralization of enforcement efforts.

Good horsemen will tell you it's important to have a horse in a positive mindset no matter what you ask of him or her. The use of force, fear and intimidation to make a horse comply are not only seen as inhumane and unethical by today's moral standards, but are ineffectual.

But one big question remains: how do we ensure that horses are treated humanely and ethically by the people who handle them every day at the barn and on the track?

A good groom can be the companion that a horse needs in its unnatural lifestyle on the track. But a frustrated, fearful or untrained groom or hotwalker can be a daily living nightmare for a horse.
In more than one way, the starting gate is where the 'rubber meets the road' as far as the relationship between humans and horses on the racetrack. To successfully enter the race, a horse must safely enter the starting gate, stand quietly (sometimes for several minutes) and then break from the gate efficiently. This process is often done on television in close-up where millions of people can see it go well or go badly.

In the not-too-distant past, horses were often dragged, pushed, punished or tricked into going into gate, after spectators witnessed an unfortunate battle of wills between the assistant starters and the fearful, reluctant horse. When a horse is in the wrong mindset, the gate is a dangerous place for the horse as well as the rider and the assistant starter. If the horse does get through the process of being forced into the gate, it will likely break and race on an adrenaline rush, the least optimal way to perform in the race.

We asked retired New York Racing Association (NYRA) Head Starter Robert (Bob) Duncan, renowned for his success at transforming starting gate protocol, to talk about his experience in running the gate-schooling and starting-gate program at NYRA and how he came to be a proponent of natural horsemanship at the gate and throughout all elements of the training, racing and breeding process.

TDN: You are credited with revolutionizing the starting gate process. What about your experience on the gate caused you to go on that quest?

RD: During my early years as an assistant starter, we had been following traditional methods of gate work that often called for more insistent ways to get horses into the gate with the intention to mimic the pace of the race day experience. When coaxing failed, we would, at times, resort to using force, fear or mental intimidation. This caused the horses to become fractious, and at times explosive. So, we found various ways to restrain and contain them. We were treating the symptoms but not the disease. Frustration led to anger and escalation as we had no understanding of the instincts or needs of the horse.

I liken it to being a five-year-old entering school for the first time only to find out that everyone there spoke a different language than you. The school is spooky and the classroom is loud and crowded with threatening-looking people who speak gibberish. When you don't respond to their instruction, they get frustrated and speak louder and louder at you. Now they are surrounding you with angry expressions on their face. Now they start pushing you then slapping you while you struggle to figure out what they want. You feel like your life is being threatened and you want to escape.

TDN: What changes did you first implement in your experiment?

RD: While still a foreman, I was given the freedom to take a fresh look at our gate procedures with an eye toward finding more horse friendly ways of preparing horses at the gate.
Traditions die hard, especially in the insular world of horse racing. For instance, when I started on the gate, the wisdom of the day was that horses had to be wound “tight as a watch” to give their best efforts at leaving the gate. Horses were drilled from the gate with bells ringing, doors slamming and a slap on the rump if there was a moment's hesitation. Truth is, horses are taught to react to the movement of the front doors. All the other commotion is background noise. If the horse needs to react to the bell, he missed the break because the bell rings a split second after the doors open.

Duncan in his early days at NYRA | Coglianese photo

The changes started with us slowing the schooling process down and allowing the horses the time and environment to learn the gate process in an unthreatening way. We also broke from the old “one size fits all” regimentation and concentrated on each horse as an individual needing particular care.

We started to see improvements. The atmosphere at the gate was calmer, more conducive to learning. But we were still stumbling along like a blind pig searching for an acorn.

Also, in the early stages much thought was given to making the gate more habitable. More padding was added to the stall space at the horses' hips to stabilize them as they reset their feet at the start. The extra padding reduced stumbling. It also prevented knee injuries that were so common among gate crews. (When a horse broke awkwardly, it often drove its hip into the assistant's calf, torqueing the knee.) The Japanese Racing Association had an interesting schooling gate at its Mijo training facility. Stalls were graded from a large walk-through stall down to an actual racing stall, allowing their horses to acclimate to the constriction of the small racing gates. All our schooling gates now have a similar adaptation.

Later, as I learned the natural body language of horses and how to establish oneself as a leader worthy of a horse's trust, we changed our approach and steps to gate schooling. We no longer needed buggy whips, forceful loading from behind or even, except in the rarest of cases, blindfolds.

TDN: Were those initial changes acknowledged and well received?

RD: Word of our changes started to get around and we found trainers to be less resistant when asked to school a problem horse. Joanie Lawrence, a friend of mine who worked at The Jockey Club offices in NYC, called one morning, to ask if she could come out to Belmont to write an article about what we were doing.

Joanie's one page article was read by Stu Kirshenbaum, a television short films producer for Winner Communications. He brought a crew out to do a short piece on our “new” methods and the ball started rolling. To this day, I credit Joanie for opening up a life-changing world to me that I didn't know existed.

Later in that same summer of the short film, the legendary horseman Monty Roberts sought me out at the races in Saratoga. At the time, his book, “The Man Who Listens To Horses”, was on a long run at number one on the New York Times best seller list. Monty was in Saratoga for a book signing but he had seen the piece we did and he was impressed. He complimented the crew and proceeded to invite me out to his Flag is Up Farm in Solvang, Ca. A couple of weeks later, in early September, I received a letter from the University of Arizona, asking me to participate in the Symposium on Racing. Tom Durkin moderated and Monty Roberts was also on the panel. Directly after the Tucson panel, I went to his ranch to be a part of his work with a horse that was having 'severe gate issues.'

TDN: What were some of your “aha” moments as you developed this knowledge and plan?

RD: The first of many aha moments occurred the next spring after the Tucson conference. Monty called to invite me to a demonstration he was doing in Topsfield, Massachusetts. My 15-year-old son David was with me. Monty had us placed in the arena in the front row of a small group of people that surrounded a round pen. The arena behind us held a couple thousand people. Monty explained that the horse he invited was a 14-year-old mare who had never loaded into a horse trailer without being staggeringly tranquilized.
A step-up trailer was backed into the opening of the pen. It was easy to see that the mare was on edge in these unfamiliar surroundings with a fairly vocal crowd. Monty held a coiled line that was snapped to the mare's halter. While he spoke, he asked the mare to step backward and then forward, using only as much pressure on the lead line as needed to get a response. The second she responded, he released the pressure. With each ask, he became lighter, eventually just barely leaning towards her and she quickened in her response until it seemed they were connected with an invisible thread.

He paused for a moment and asked someone in the immediate area to note how long it took to load the mare. With that Monty turned, dropping lengths of the lead to the floor, and walked briskly toward the trailer. Even before the slack went out of the rope the mare hustled up behind Monty following him directly into the step-up trailer, turning inside and hanging her head over Monty's shoulder. It was a show stopper.

He finished his demo by asking the crowd not to applaud just yet. He then unsnapped his lead and walked back to the far side of the arena. He said when I tip my hat you can applaud. He did so and at the burst of applause the mare hopped out of the trailer and ran over to Monty hanging her head over his shoulder again. It was all about the mare accepting Monty as a leader and finding safe haven with him. With his technique of creating a connection with her, she found a leader she could understand and trust. He was speaking her language.

This was exactly what I had been searching for. This was an unspoken language that all horses understood. David and I drove back to Belmont late that night. We went straight to the starting gate and napped until the first two horses showed up to school.

We snapped a lead on each one and mimicked the moves that Monty used. It worked so well that both horses almost jogged into the starting gate. We were on our way.

In Wednesday's TDN: Part II of Ethics: A Case for Teaching the Language of Horses

Diana Pikulski is a partner at Yepsen & Pikulski Public Affairs, and a former criminal defense attorney who served as the first Executive Director of the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation. She is married to Bob Duncan. 

 

Watch Alayna Cullen's 2017 interview with Duncan below:

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Basler: ‘Major Concern Over HISA Permeates The Industry’

Recently Tom Rooney of the NTRA released a statement regarding the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA). I agree with Mr. Rooney that change is never easy, especially when the change is being forced by a private entity given governmental authority through what many believe is an unconstitutional piece of legislation. I am pleased to hear Mr. Rooney admit that one of the most common concerns he has heard since becoming NTRA president and CEO revolves around the bipartisan bill signed into law by President Trump in 2020 known as HISA. I, as well as my members, have been expressing these concerns throughout this process yet very few to none of the concerns seem to get addressed by the HISA Authority.

Mr. Rooney states as a matter of fact that Thoroughbred racing has needed change for quite some time. I would like to see those facts. What proof does Mr. Rooney point at to say “the path we were going down was not sustainable”? The reality is our industry has been positively changing for many years. There have been dramatic changes limiting the use of many therapeutic medications as well as their proximity to when a horse races. These changes, in part, have been responsible for a 30% decline in equine racing fatalities since the inception of records kept by The Jockey Club in 2009 to an all-time low of 1.39 per 1,000 starts in 2021.

As the saying goes, “No one writes about the banks that don't get robbed,” and we cannot say all the facts point to an unsustainable industry if HISA is not in place. The reality is that Saratoga set an all-time handle record in 2021. A host of other tracks have done the same over the past several years. I have heard for the past quarter of a century comments such as “the industry isn't sustainable” over one issue after another, none of which have proven to be true. There certainly is zero proof that anything in HISA will improve the sustainability of the industry. I do agree with Mr. Rooney about being optimistic, and that if allowed to work together there is a way to preserve horse racing's future.

Mr. Rooney proclaims that HISA officials are doing all they can to educate and communicate with industry stakeholders. If anything, HISA's education arm is almost as poor as its communication arm. Therefore, it's important to dissect some of Mr. Rooney's “facts” from his recent release.

You can find Rooney's op/ed here.

To begin with, Mr. Rooney states that HISA regulations are very similar to those long used by state horse-racing authorities and courts usually affirm those powers.

“Licensed individuals are able to participate only under the terms of their license and if rules are violated, that license can be revoked,” he writes.

That is true. However, participants in racing are not licensed by HISA; participants are “registered” with the Authority. The fact that HISA staff is now conflating the two makes the Authority look as though it is a regulatory body. It is not. It is a private entity that has been given governmental authority. That is a critical distinction: the terms of a racing license grant powers to a governmental authority, not a private entity.

Mr. Rooney states that “HISA provides a long needed, nationwide voided claim rule which will standardize the process for all claims, eliminate confusion and protect owners and trainers.”

Rooney further states “it will require a claim be voided in five specific circumstances (death, euthanasia, bleeding, being vanned off the track or testing positive for prohibited substances) making the rules clearer and leveling the playing field.”

Rooney conveniently leaves out the most criticized and controversial section of rule 2262, which requires a claim be voided in cases where “the Regulatory Veterinarian determines within one (1) hour of the race that the Horse will be placed on the Veterinarians' List as Bled, physically distressed, medically compromised, unsound, or lame before the Horse is released to the successful claimant.”

This section of the rule requires a completely subjective determination by regulatory veterinarians whose qualifications to judge such matters vary widely from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. Further complicating this section of the rule is that there is ZERO guidance given in the rule as to how the post-race “unsoundness” or “lameness” of a horse is determined by the regulatory veterinarian. Post-race voided claim exams currently vary widely from track to track with some being as simple as the horse being observed walking while regulatory veterinarians at other tracks are flexing the horses' legs as part of this determination. This is anything but a standardized process which eliminates confusion and protects owners and trainers as Mr. Rooney states.

Mr. Rooney states: “HISA has worked with stakeholders from every facet of the industry to make the Advisory Committees as representative and inclusive as possible. HISA has also sought and received public comment on every proposed rule and regulation, so that any parties not directly represented on the Committee could share their input. While it is impossible for everyone to have a seat at the table, the Authority has made every effort to have the representation and input be as wide-ranging as possible.”

Where do I start with this one? There is NO horsemen's representative on ANY of the standing committees despite the fact that the majority of these rules are directed at the horsemen. While it is true that HISA received public comments on the proposed safety rules, the Authority made NO substantive changes to them despite over 700 pages of public comments being submitted by every facet of the industry.

Hall of Fame jockey Johnny Velazquez was appointed to one of the HISA Advisory Committees but his suggestions were seemingly completely rejected by the Authority. Subsequently the Jockeys' Guild, which Velazquez serves as the Co-Chairman of, became one the plaintiffs in the federal lawsuit filed in Louisiana opposing HISA.

Further proof that industry input was ignored by HISA can be found in the implementation delay of two of the safety regulations until August 1, 2022: the banning of traction devices on horseshoes on both front and hind feet and requiring a new riding crop that simply wasn't available in adequate quantities and produced by a single source at the time the rule was promulgated.

Put aside the highly questionable wisdom of either regulation. Industry participants' early concerns about available supply of permitted horseshoes and whips went unheeded, requiring delayed implementation that demonstrates the HISA Authority wasn't prepared to launch and hasn't listened to industry concerns. To this date, only seven days from implementation of these rules, there isn't an adequate supply of compliant horseshoes forcing blacksmiths around the country to grind off toe grabs in order to try to comply with the rule.

Regarding the costs of the HISA Assessments, Rooney concludes, “In the end, if it leads to a safer sport with a higher degree of transparency and integrity, then it will be money well spent.”

There is no evidence to indicate based on the highly flawed rollout of HISA in July that it will lead to a safer sport with a higher degree of integrity. In fact, I would say the evidence points to the contrary. Here in Ohio we have already had a horse wrongly disqualified for wagering purposes for a violation of rule 2282 for overuse of the whip, which should have been for purse purposes only and incorrectly penalized people who had wagered on the horse. This mistake has been acknowledged by the HISA Authority.

Additionally, the registration process has been nothing short of terrible, with thousands of individuals and horses not registered to this day. Practicing veterinarians have become so frustrated with the glitches in the electronic reporting system they have resorted to emailing the daily records they are required to report to HISA directly to HISA CEO Lisa Lazarus. I could fill three more op/eds with the list of issues with HISA — and that doesn't count the current medication proposals that have yet to be submitted to the FTC and which are nothing short of a disaster. Oklahoma Racing Commission Chairman Joe Lucas recently summed it up very well, stating, “The Authority has failed to uphold the duties on which their foundation exists.”

When I got into Thoroughbred racing nearly 40 years ago it was the greatest sport in the world. I believe, like many others, it is still the greatest sport in the world today. The people who care for these horses are some of the most dedicated, passionate people you will ever meet. I want future generations to be able to enjoy and participate in this industry as I have.

While for various reasons many of the people and groups in the industry aren't as vocal with their concerns regarding HISA as I am, make no mistake, major concern over HISA permeates the industry. Go to the barn area at any track operating under the HISA regulations and speak to trainers, owners, jockeys, exercise riders, grooms, blacksmiths and veterinarians and you will hear these concerns. They are not a whisper but rather a roar.

My hope is that the Authority, HISA staff, and members of Congress do not dismiss these concerns but rather hear them and begin a meaningful dialogue with industry participants before it is too late.

Dave Basler is in his 16th year as executive director of the Ohio HBPA. He is also the long-time chairman of both the model rules and medication committees of the National HBPA. Basler previously was a trackman for Equibase for 16 years, calling charts at over 20 tracks across the country during that period. He has also served as a track handicapper, freelance reporter for Daily Racing Form, racing official and has been an owner. Basler is also an avid handicapper who has qualified for the NHC five times.

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“You Live In Hope” – Retired Vet Bids to Build on Biggest Breeding Success

Fergus Cousins, the retired vet who bred GII San Clemente S. winner Bellabel (Ire) (Belardo {Ire}), described that Del Mar triumph as his best moment in racing.

Bellabel, formally trained by Jessica Harrington in Ireland, won the Grade II contest on debut for Philip D'Amato, sparking hopes that bigger and better things could be coming in the sales ring for her breeder.

Cousins has four broodmares at his base in Dunshaughlin in County Meath. He bought Fashion Line (Ire) (Cape Cross {Ire}), the dam of Bellabel, for €32,000 at the November Mares Sale at Goffs in 2017 off Darley.

He explained, “I have four mares at the moment. For some reason or another, I have had a lot more fillies than colts.

“I am a retired vet. I worked with the Department of Agriculture. We bought the farm in Dunshaughlin 30 years ago and I have been breeding for over 10 years now.”

He added, “This would be my biggest success and hopefully we can do even better with the mare's progeny. You live in hope.”

Peter Kelly of Ballybin Stud has consigned horses for Cousins for over 10 years. He recalls Bellabel being “big and backward” as a yearling and revealed how he couldn't help but smile to himself when he read her trainer's comments about the filly in the TDN last week.

He explained, “We've been selling for Fergus for over 10 years now. We've had some great days with him, in the ring and cheering on his stock on the track, but he hasn't enjoyed anything like what Bellabel achieved over the weekend. It was his best moment in racing.

“He bought the mare from Godolphin and we had Bellabel for the yearling sales. She was quite big and looked a bit backward. She was in a couple of sales but it was the time when some of them were moved to England so we threw her out into the field for six weeks and it was the best thing we ever did as she came back in and we went for the later sale–the Tattersalls Ireland Flat Breeding Stock Sale–in December.

“She bloomed and was a totally different filly for those extra six weeks or so that she got. We were expecting that she might stand out a little bit and she made €33,000, which wasn't a bad price, and Belardo had done well with his first crop at that stage so everything had fallen into place for her. She walked her way into a sale–she was a massive walker, quite typical of the mare actually.”

He added, “We were reading Phil D'Amato in the TDN last week. He was speaking about the European fillies that he bought and mentioned that he backed off Bellabel and gave her time. We were saying, 'that's the story of her life,' as she's a big filly and the bit of time has been her friend.”

 

Fashion Line has a Holy Roman Emperor (Ire) yearling filly (lot 424) and Profitable (Ire) filly foal that will soon go under the hammer. With the mare back in foal to Belardo, hopes are high that Bellabel's success can be built upon.

Kelly said, “There's a yearling half-sister by Holy Roman Emperor and she's going to Fairyhouse Part 1. She's a big mover, a similar type to the mare. She also has a Profitable filly foal and he went back to the well with Belardo as she's in foal to him. I'm delighted for Fergus.”

 

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