12 Questions: Kevin Blake

First job in the Thoroughbred industry?

Working a breeze-up season with Con Marnane in Bansha House when I was 18. It wasn't my first rodeo there though, as I had learned how to ride on ponies up in Con's (before he became the King) when I was a child.

 

Biggest influence on your career?

Naming one individual would be tough as I've had a bunch of editors, colleagues, and friends from when I started in racing up to the present day that have been a huge help. It probably sounds a bit odd but opening a Twitter account 12 or so years ago turned out to be a very important decision for me. Since then, the vast majority of the work I do has been posted on there to be scrutinised and analysed by what is a very informed audience, many of whom specialise in very specific areas of the sport/industry and can offer a very high level of comment. The criticism and feedback I've got over the years has been a big factor in driving my standards forward. Every day is a learning day in this game.

 

Favourite racehorse of all time, and why?

The obvious answer is Frankel, as I'll be surprised if I ever see a horse that approaches his greatness in my lifetime. More personally, I have a mare here called Midnight Oasis that was bought very cheaply and delivered a series of very important results in the sales ring and on the track that allowed me to expand my breeding operation. She'll always be very special here.

 

Who will be champion first-season sire in 2023?

I'm much happier evaluating racecourse performance than engaging in First-Season Sire Bingo, but I had a couple of Ten Sovereigns's colts through my hands and saw as many of them as I could in the last year. An awful lot of them have very good hind legs, plenty of action and the ones I dealt with had notably good minds.

 

Greatest race in the world?

The Derby has still got a hold on me. Perversely, I think the passing of the great Galileo might well lead to the most exciting and competitive middle-distance scene for quite some time in the years ahead.

 

If you could be someone else in the industry for a day, who would it be, and why?

Any jockey with a fancied ride in the Grand National would be a fair day to experience, win or lose.

 

Emerging talent in the industry (human)?

I don't really like talking up young jockeys as making the transition from promising apprentice to top-class jockey is really difficult, but I have a great amount of belief in Dylan Browne McMonagle.

 

Name a horse TDN should have made a Rising Star, and didn't?

Al Riffa. Considering how rangy he is, I thought what he did last season in winning the National S. in such style off the back of a maiden win was genuinely remarkable. He could be special, and I don't say that lightly.

 

Under-the-radar stallion?

Coulsty.

 

Friday night treat?

Dominos and Dundalk!

 

Guilty pleasure outside racing?

True crime podcasts and long runs.

 

Race I wish I'd been there for…

State of Rest winning the Cox Plate, as none of us could travel due to Covid-19 restrictions at the time. No horse has ever been made to jump through as many invasive veterinary requirements and logistical hoops to be allowed a run in a Group 1 as he had to in the months leading up to it. For him to go down there and beat the best in Australia after all that was just incredible. The stewards' inquiry threatened to take it from him, and it was as close to a 50/50 decision as you'll see, but I'd say the whole of Tipperary heard the roar when the result was announced as unaltered!

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Voss: The Trainer/Veterinarian Relationship In Racing Is Broken

When perusing a recently-released series of wiretaps in the federal doping case, one passage stuck out to me. This set of transcripts is of conversations between trainers Michael Tannuzzo and Jorge Navarro, both of whom would later enter guilty pleas to felony charges of drug adulteration and misbranding related to doping horses in their care.

Navarro has begun serving his five-year federal prison sentence, after which his attorneys have said he'll almost certainly be deported. Tannuzzo was sentenced in November to 27 months in prison.

When wiretap evidence is entered into the court record by the prosecution, it sometimes includes an exact transcription of relevant portions of dialogue and other times includes the transcriber's summary of less-relevant parts of the conversation. (Note: JN is Navarro, MT is Tannuzzo, UI is unintelligible conversation.)

The portion that jumped out at me read:

“Michael Tannuzzo calls Jorge Navarro.

JN talks about how he wants to fire his vet because the vet won't milkshake. MT says the vet is a pussy. JN wants to shove the $400 shot up the vet's ass.

JN: What's up, Mikey?
MT: You called me?

JN: Yeah. Man I'm f******g [UI] now I-I almost fired this f*****g vet, man.”

The vet isn't named, and it's not clear whether Navarro ever convinced him or her to milkshake the unnamed horse. What is clear though is that if this person wasn't going to do what he wanted, he was going to consider that a fireable offense.

In the transcripts that have been released so far, it's clear Navarro is fascinated with the process of milkshaking horses. The procedure involves running a nasogastric tube to deliver sodium bicarbonate and other minerals straight to the horse's stomach with the goal of reducing lactic acid build-up in muscles during exercise and thereby improving stamina. It's been illegal for years and many of his co-defendants warn Navarro in these transcripts that it's not something just anyone should try doing, because an improperly-placed tube can kill a horse.

Clearly, Navarro did not care.

The exchange reminded me of a truism that most people at the racetrack know, but people away from it may not – the veterinarian/trainer dynamic on the track is, in many cases, broken. Many trainers, not just Navarro and his co-defendants, seem to see veterinarians as employees whose main purpose is to act as vending machines for prescription drugs. This isn't limited to the use of performance-enhancing substances or procedures like milkshaking – people have talked openly in this business about trainers who see the veterinarian pull up in their truck and give them a list of horses and which joints they want tapped with which drug combinations.

This was reiterated during a round table discussion at the recent American Association of Equine Practitioners convention. The session I was sitting in on was filled almost totally with veterinarians who were assembled to talk about the relationship between the regulatory vet and the private practitioner on the racetrack. As these things often do though, the discussion amongst the audience and panelists wandered to other challenges with veterinary oversight at tracks.

One audience member there that day was not a veterinarian. Monti Neal Sims is a trainer and usually comes to the AAEP conventions alongside his wife, veterinarian Dr. Kate Papp. Sometimes Neal goes to sessions with her and one of the panelists recognized him. I don't remember what their original question was to him, just that he was asked for his input on how to improve the care for horses on the backstretch.

“You need to protect the veterinarians from the trainers and owners,” he told the room. “because they're going to take advantage of those vets.”

My dynamic with my horses' veterinarians is very different. I want them to tell me what they think is ailing the horse and provide a few options of how we can try to address the problem. I think treatments should be a joint decision between me as the owner and the vet. I also try to learn from my vets along the way because I think it's my responsibility as someone who cares for horses to try to become more knowledgeable about it, and because the vet went to school and a lot of debt in order to know more than I do.

Part of the reason I probably think about it that way though, is because my veterinarians are usually charging me examination fees that are much higher than the cost of any drugs they may dispense to treat an illness or injury. I'm conditioned to think of these experts as experts because their time and consideration of my horse have a price tag attached.

The racetrack has, by all accounts, become an anomaly in this regard. At some point years ago, racetrack vets began waiving examination fees or trip charges to see and diagnose horses on the track. Eventually, it became largely true that vets were charging a trainer for the injections it would take to address an arthritic ankle, but not the lameness exam they conducted before doing radiographs to decide the horse had arthritis.

You can see how it may become a slippery slope. If it costs a trainer little to nothing for a veterinarian to provide them a diagnosis, it might start feeling more like the vet is really just offering an opinion. Everyone has opinions. Trainers have opinions. And trainers spend more hours with their horses than their vets do. If it does cost a trainer to have the vet dispense a drug though, that drug starts to seem like the more valuable thing that vet is offering. It also probably raises the temptation for trainers to try finding cheaper versions of drugs themselves, drawing them to illegal online compounders willing to sell prescriptions to people without veterinary licenses.

Veterinarians have really backed themselves into a corner on this one. Once that pricing model became accepted, it's hard to imagine how it could change. If one vet decided to try to turn the tide, trainers would probably fire them and go to their competitor. At the same time, I've heard track vets complain (probably rightly) that anything that's going to result in higher bills going to trainers is going to encourage many of them to try to handle problems themselves, cutting the vet out of the loop entirely. That's not good for horses, either.

The requirement of some states (California and Kentucky being the first) that a private vet examine a horse and certify its condition prior to race time has, by some accounts, done a little to shift the status quo as it gave vets the opportunity to charge for at least pre-race exams. The racetrack safety regulations of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority do require that “the medical judgments of the Veterinarian are independent and are not dictated by the Trainer or Owner of the Horse” but doesn't give a standard for how that is to be measured.

It's a tough time to try to tell anyone they're not paying enough to care for their horses. Everyone from the feed man to the farrier is raising rates, because they have to. We all feel it, whether we have horses on the track or in the dressage ring. But I have to wonder – if you're not willing to pay an expert to help you make a horse healthier, happier, and safer, what are you doing in the horse business?

If the racing industry wants its culture of horse care, it's going to need to start with the way it's willing to compensate a dwindling and precious resource – its veterinarians. And everyone is going to have to buy in.

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Hearts Concerto Looms a Double-Digit Danger in Hopeful

Wednesday's Hopeful S. is the last of 24 Group 1 events on the JRA circuit for 2022 and the event has attracted a wide-open group of juveniles who will try to prove their mettle over the 2000-metres.

Hearts Concerto (Jpn) (Heart's Cry {Jpn}) could offer value relative to what he's accomplished in his two racetrack appearances to date. The bay dismantled a group of newcomers by eight resounding lengths as the 9-10 chalk going this trip at Chukyo Sept. 18 and was the hot favourite for the nine-furlong G2 Tokyo Sports Hai Nisai S. at headquarters Nov. 19. It all went wrong when he walked out of the stalls, spotting his rivals several lengths, but he closed off in a race-best :33.8 to finish a good third to the re-opposing Gastrique (Jpn) (Just a Way {Jpn}). He was trading at better than 10-1 on the JRA tote as of this writing.

“He missed the break [last time] and was left behind, and that really hurt,” said trainer Ryo Takei. “His preparation after that race has all gone smoothly. I think the extra distance is a plus and the conditions are better for him here.”

Mikki Cappuccino (Jpn) (Epiphaneia {Jpn}) is perfect in his two starts, each over 10 furlongs. A narrow debut winner, with future Group 3 winner Gruner Green (Jpn) (Lovely Day {Jpn}) third, at Tokyo Oct. 9, he jumped out of the ground in the final furlong and shot away to take a course-and-distance allowance by a widening 3 1/2 lengths when last seen Dec. 3. Keita Tosaki will have to work out a trip from barrier 18.

Since finishing third in an 1800-metre heat at Hakodate in July, King's Reign (Jpn) (Rulership {Jpn}) has won back-to-back races, including a 1 1/2-length tally in a one-win class allowance over the 2000 metres at Tokyo in early November. Christophe Lemaire retains the ride.

J Palms (Jpn) (Just a Way {Jpn}) is a son of the American-bred mare Killer Graces (Congaree), making him a half-brother to last year's Hopeful hero Killer Ability (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}). He got his career off on a popular and winning note in his lone career start, carrying Lemaire to a three-length victory at odds of 2-5 in a Tokyo newcomers' event Nov. 5. David Egan, who has ridden nine winners from 52 rides on his current short-term contract in Japan, takes the call for Noriyuki Hori.

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