Month: October 2022
Tale Of Two Vet Scratches: ‘We Must Respect Modern Science’ Vs. ‘Worst Call I’ve Ever Seen’
In the past 48 hours, a pair of champion trainers were faced with regulatory veterinarian decisions which forced scratches of the likely top wagering choices in graded stakes races.
One occurred in Lexington, Ky., at Keeneland, where the 2022 World Championships of the sport will be held in just a week's time. The other was on the opposite side of the globe in Australia, and came from the country's most famous Thoroughbred race.
Let's first look at the Australian case.
The Melbourne Cup, “The Race That Stops A Nation,” saw Hall of Fame trainer Chris Waller's entrant and presumable third-choice Durston scratched on veterinary advice. Intense veterinary protocols, including compulsory CT scans of all four limbs, became part of the pre-race examination for the Melbourne Cup after seven horses died across eight runnings from 2013 to 2020.
Racing Victoria officials released the following statement:
Racing Victoria (RV) Veterinary Services have advised RV Stewards that, in their opinion, Durston is unsuitable to compete in the 2022 Lexus Melbourne Cup (3200m) at Flemington on Tuesday, Nov. 1.
In accordance with the conditions of the race, Durston was presented at the University of Melbourne Equine Centre in Werribee on Friday, Oct. 21, for compulsory CT scans of its distal limbs.
Reports received from the members of the international imaging panel who reviewed Durston's CT scan results indicate that the horse is at heightened risk of injury.
Acting on the specialist advice received from the international imaging panel, trainer Chris Waller has been informed by RV Veterinary Services that Durston is unsuitable to compete in the 2022 Lexus Melbourne Cup.
Waller, best known for training the brilliant race mare Winx, a four-time winner of Australian Horse of the Year honors, issued a public response via his social media pages.
Unfortunately, Durston is unable to take his place in the 2022 Lexus Melbourne Cup. It is extremely disappointing however according to Racing Victoria Durston's scans show what's called a 'grey area' and there is a small lesion in his left hind leg. The specialists cannot determine whether it is old or new, or whether it is even something to be concerned about, but we must respect this.
It is all about safety, for the horse, and for the rider and the longevity of the horses. It is very disappointing for all connections of the horse, as well as my stable, because so much time and effort goes into these horses. It's just heartbreaking.
Durston is sound, he galloped well on Tuesday morning and my vet trotted him up following this however we must respect modern science and learn from this.
The horse will undergo an MRI scan to investigate further.
Now, consider Friday's case from Keeneland. American racing has been under fire in recent years, especially since a run of equine fatalities in Southern California in 2019. Those incidents helped bring the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act past the finish line, launching the country's first national oversight body for horse racing.
Thus far, HISA has implemented its Racetrack Safety Program, which went into effect July 1, 2022. One of the program's targets was creating a national requirement for pre-race veterinary examinations — something that Kentucky regulators have been doing for years
With that backdrop, four-time champion U.S. trainer Chad Brown brought 5-2 morning line favorite Dolce Zel to Lexington for the Grade 3 Valley View Stakes. Dr. Bruce Howard, equine medical director for Kentucky, told the Daily Racing Form that chief state veterinarian Dr. Nicholas Smith and colleague Dr. Brent Cassady made the decision to scratch the filly from the race after a pre-race exam on Friday morning.
“Both were concerned enough with what they saw that they decided to make the scratch,” Howard told DRF. “Safety of the horse is always our primary concern. They are two of our very experienced veterinarians.”
Brown, meanwhile, vehemently disagreed with the veterinarians' decision.
“She's had a puffy tendon sheath the whole time I've had her,” Brown told DRF. “It's nothing, just something cosmetic. She's completely sound. I told the vet I'd jog her 50 times for him if he wanted. It's the worst call I've ever seen in terms of pre-race evaluations.
“It's too bad that it's come to this with these horses. It seems like there's no room for reasonable discretion when it comes to these pre-race exams.”
Two trainers at the top of their game; two totally different takes.
With the recent emphasis on increased veterinary standards in both countries, it would seem erring on the side of equine safety would be not only in the horse's best interest, but that of the entire industry, as well.
Clearly, not everyone agrees.
That's not to say that trainers never disagree with veterinarians' opinions — after all, veterinarians often disagree with each other. In this instance, Brown may even be correct about the horse's tendon sheath. But state veterinarians don't have a financial incentive to scratch horses, and in this case, two of them agreed that the risk to the horse wasn't appropriate.
Brown's decision to publicly state otherwise could feed into a narrative already far too prevalent in this country: that trainers are willing to risk their horses for a financial reward.
It isn't doing his horse any good, and it surely isn't serving the sport in which he makes his living.
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Sparkle Blue Draws Away In Friday’s Valley View
Catherine Parke and Augustin Stable's Sparkle Blue surged past the pace-setting Bubble Rock nearing the 16th pole and drew off to score a 2½-length victory in the 32nd running of the $298,594 Rubicon Valley View (G3) for 3-year-old fillies Friday afternoon at Keeneland Racecourse in Lexington, Ky.
In the race preceding the Rubicon Valley View, Key of Life was an easy winner of the third running of the $200,000 Myrtlewood for 2-year-old fillies.
Trained by Graham Motion and ridden Joel Rosario, Sparkle Blue completed the mile and a sixteenth on a turf course rated as good in 1:42.42. The victory is the fourth in the race for Motion, who previously won with Colonia (FR) in 2018, Quidura (GB) in 2016 and Tiger Ride in 2015.
Bubble Rock took the field of 10 through fractions of :23.02, :47.77 and 1:12.76 with My Philly Twirl chasing in second as Sparkle Blue was using a ground-saving trip along the rail just in behind the leaders.
Bubble Rock carried her advantage into the stretch and when My Philly Twirl began to retreat, Rosario moved Sparkle Blue off the rail for a clear shot at the leader. By the sixteenth pole, Sparkle Blue had opened a clear lead and cruised to the victory.
Sparkle Blue is a Kentucky-bred daughter of Hard Spun out of the Smart Strike mare Silk n' Sapphire. In posting her first graded stakes victory, Sparkle Blue improved her record to 7-4-1-0 and added $174,375 to her bankroll to increase her earnings to $357,075.
Sparkle Blue returned $11.02, $6.32 and $4.50. California Angel rallied from far back under Rafael Bejarano to get second and returned $4.48 and $3.26 with Turnerloose a neck back in third under Florent Geroux and paying $4.42 to show.
It was another head back to Bubble Rock in fourth with Majestic Glory (GB), Lady Puchi, Bicameral, My Philly Twirl, Sunroof and Heavenly Hellos following in order.
In the Myrtlewood, Flurry Racing Stables and Hoffman Family Racing's Key of Life lived up to her odds-on backing by cruising to a 6 3/4-length victory over Lady Radler.
Trained by Brad Cox and ridden by Florent Geroux, Key of Life ran the 6 furlongs on the fast main track in 1:11.09.
Key of Life shot to the lead out of the gate and was hounded by second choice Somebody's Problem through fractions of :22.34 and :45.91. At the top of the stretch, Key of Life found another gear, gradually opened up on the field and was not threatened in the run to the finish line.
Key of Life is a Kentucky-bred daughter of Mo Town out of the Harlan's Holiday mare Longride to Wisdom. A winner of three of four starts, Key of Life increased her earnings to $263,710 with Friday's $116,250 check.
Key of Life returned $3.34, $2.60 and $2.20. Lady Radler, ridden by Julien Leparoux, returned $16.98 and $7.24 and finished 1¾ lengths in front of Baby Got Backspin, who paid $3.96 to show under Irad Ortiz Jr.
It was another head back to Take Charge Briana, who was followed in order by Satin Doll, Two Minute Drill, Flamand, Somebody's Problem, Willow Bend and Time for Champagne.
Keeneland's 17-day Fall Meet comes to a close Saturday afternoon with a 10-race program that begins at 1 p.m. ET. Three stakes are on the program, highlighted by the $350,000 Hagyard Fayette (G2) for 3-year-olds and up going 1 1/8 miles on the main track. The Hagyard Fayette is scheduled as the ninth race with a 5:16 p.m. post time.
The other stakes are the $300,000 Bryan Station (G3) for 3-year-olds going a mile on the turf that will go as the eighth race with a 4:44 p.m. post time and the $200,000 Bowman Mill for 2-year-old going 6 furlongs on the main track as the sixth race with a 3:40 p.m. post time.
Keeneland will offer a Super High 5 carryover of $8,598.96.
The post Sparkle Blue Draws Away In Friday’s Valley View appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.
Sparkle Blue Claims First Graded-Stakes Victory in Keeneland’s Valley View
Sparkle Blue proved she was aptly named when she kicked home from the nine post to brilliantly take the GIII Rubicon Valley View S. in her first career graded victory ahead of a blanket charge for the minors.
After capping her 2021 season a distant 10th in the GIII Jimmy Durante S. Nov. 27 at Del Mar, her connections gave her some time away and brought their filly back July 2 in Delaware's Christiana S. sporting first-time blinkers. Gamely overcoming contact in the stretch, she held on to win by a half-length at 15-1 over a field which included dominating next-out winner Gizala (Ire) (Invincible Spirit). Resurfacing last out Sept. 6 in Colonial's Woodford Reserve Virginia Oaks with first-time Lasix, she again fought through contact in the stretch to pick up second over familiar face Lady Puchi (Into Mischief) and SP Omixochitl (More Than Ready) at 30-1 odds.
Tracking from third on the fence after the jump here without the diuretic, Sparkle Blue pursued a clearing leader into the upper stretch after :23.02 and :47.77 splits to launch her winning bid outside of that rival at the furlong marker. Sustaining her kick and inching clear to a 2 1/2-length margin, she was comfortably clear of a hard-charging California Angel and Turnerloose, who chased her in to close out the trifecta.
“[Trainer] Graham [Motion] told me to let her be happy, let her be comfortable. She showed a little bit of speed going into the first turn and she was really happy there. She did great and we had a good trip,” said Joel Rosario after the race. “It looked like to the inside there the horse in front was coming in a little bit. I was trying to work it out to get her clear outside, and she did, and after that she just went on. It was perfect.”
Pedigree Note:
Sparkle Blue hails from the sought-after line of Silk n' Sapphire, making her a half-sister to GI Breeders' Cup Filly and Mare Turf heroine Shared Account (Pleasantly Perfect), who would later accomplish the rare feat of producing a Breeders' Cup winner herself when daughter Sharing (Speightstown) planted her flag in the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf in 2020. She would later travel to Royal Ascot in the second start of her 3-year-old season, and finish a game second in the G1 Coronation S.
In addition to the mother-daughter pair, Sparkle Blue also claims GSW & MGSP Colonial Flag (Pleasant Tap). The mare has had a bit more hard luck than their famous shared sister with only two of her first four foals being registered. Of those two, the winning Demimondaine (Tapit) sold for $900,000 at KEENOV in 2020 to Claiborne Farm. Her yearling colt by Speightstown brought $450,000 last month at KEESEP from White Birch Farm and Whitehorse Stables.
Half-sister Secret Jewel (Bernardini)–a $1.2 million KEESEP purchase by Besilu Stables–also flies the female line's flag as the dam of GIII Beaumont S. winner Twenty Carat (Into Mischief) and her four-time winning, older full-sibling Mystic Night. Mark of Success (Mt. Livermore), his dam's lone graded stakes-placed male, found the enclosure on four occasions and ran second in the GIII Risen Star S. Sparkle Blue is the last registered foal for Silk n' Sapphire.
Friday, Keeneland
RUBICON VALLEY VIEW S.-GIII, $298,594, Keeneland, 10-28, 3yo, f, 1 1/16mT, 1:42.42, gd.
1–SPARKLE BLUE, 118, f, 3, by Hard Spun
1st Dam: Silk n' Sapphire, by Smart Strike
2nd Dam: Golden Tiy, by Dixieland Band
3rd Dam: Tiy, by Nalees Man
1ST GRADED STAKES WIN. O-Catherine Parke and Augustin Stable; B-Catherine Parke (KY); T-H. Graham Motion; J-Joel Rosario. $174,375. Lifetime Record: 7-4-1-0, $357,075. *1/2 to Mark of Success (Mt. Livermore), GSP, $153,388; 1/2 to Shared Account (Pleasantly Perfect), GISW, $1,649,427; 1/2 to Colonial Flag (Pleasant Tap), GSW-Can, SW & MGSP-USA, $312,463. Werk Nick Rating: A. Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree or free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.
2–California Angel, 118, f, 3, California Chrome–Sea Mona, by Tiz Wonderful. ($5,000 Wlg '19 KEENOV; $5,500 2yo '21 OBSOPN). O-Chris Walsh; B-Irish National Stud (KY); T-George Leonard, III. $56,250.
3–Turnerloose, 118, f, 3, Nyquist–Goaltending, by A.P. Indy. ($32,000 RNA Wlg '19 KEENOV; $50,000 Ylg '20 KEESEP). O-Ike and Dawn Thrash; B-William Humphries & Altair Farms LLC (KY); T-Brad H. Cox. $28,125.
Margins: 2HF, NK, HD. Odds: 4.51, 3.39, 6.64.
Also Ran: Bubble Rock, Majestic Glory (GB), Lady Puchi, Bicameral, My Philly Twirl, Sunroof, Heavenly Hellos. Scratched: Diamond Wow, Dolce Zel (Fr), Frippet, Oakhurst.
Click for the Equibase.com chart or the TJCIS.com PPshttp://www.equineline.com/tdn/pedigree.cfm?tk=SAR&cy=USA&rd=09/07/2015&rn=9&de=D &ref=9104432. VIDEO, sponsored by TVG.
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