Nearly 100 Horses, Some Thoroughbreds, Removed In Virginia Neglect Case

Nearly 100 horses were removed this week from a property in Mt. Jackson, Va., after law enforcement discovered they were living in inadequate conditions with little food.

The Shenandoah County Sheriff's Office released information about the seizure on its Facebook page and said the incident is part of an ongoing investigation. The owner and farm name were not listed.

“After deputies viewed poor living conditions, they found several severely malnourished horses with visible hip bones, ribs, and little fat cover,” read a Facebook post from the Shenandoah County Sheriff. “This large operation required four teams of VA veterinarians working to examine the whole herd. The property was deemed inadequate living conditions for the animals, with an insufficient amount of food and they were seized from the residence.”

One rescue that assisted law enforcement with triaging horses indicated on social media that many of them are Thoroughbreds.

Seized horses have been taken in primarily by three horse rescues in the area — Shenandoah Valley Equine Rescue Network, Central Virginia Horse Rescue, and Hope's Legacy, which is accredited by the Thoroughbred Aftercare Alliance. The non-profit organizations are reliant in part on foster homes to help house the seized horses while the investigation continues and are asking for the public's help with financial and in-kind donations.

Read more at WSET

Click here to read our previous reporting about why equine neglect cases happen.

The post Nearly 100 Horses, Some Thoroughbreds, Removed In Virginia Neglect Case appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Letters to the Editor: Texas Horse Racing Needs HISA

The horse…inquisitive, sensitive, totally aware, much smarter than you think, fearful, and a creature of habit. When my daughter returns to our family barn after training in Florida for six months, her retired horses greet her with a whinny. An old friend has returned.

The horse is a fabric of historical Texas. The horse represents how we all arrived here, and how we survived in the earliest days. Some horses are bred to run–that's their job. All animals need a job and thrive when working. The thoroughbred's instinct is to run as fast and as far as it can. As long as there are horses, there will be horse races, and men and women will admire the sheer determination, stamina, strength, and speed of the majestic horse.

The tragedy at Churchill Downs this past May, in which twelve horses broke down on the racetrack, fractured their lower legs and needed to be euthanized, should never be repeated. The cause of this rash of sudden breakdowns is uncertain: the current American thoroughbred may be bred too strong up top across the chest with lower legs that are relatively too thin and fragile, or changes in the surface of the track due to humidity and weather variations may increase the risk of a ligamentous injuries which can then predispose to falls and catastrophic fractures. Most horses can survive the surgery, but few can survive the confinement and partial weightbearing needed to allow these fractures to heal.

The Jockey Club, in recognizing this problem, sought relief from Congress and in one of the few truly bipartisan pieces of legislation in the past 10 years, the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA) was passed. This lifesaving legislation allows the government to designate a corporate entity to unite the horse industry, to find ways in which horse tragedies can be eliminated, and drug abuse can be regulated at the Federal level.

The model is not a new one. A Federally sponsored corporate entity serves to regulate the Securities and Exchange Commission. The needs are similar. Regulation among multiple states with multiple interests are consolidated under a single governing body with superior resources and a single purpose-driven goal.

In response to the HISA act, most states have supported and endorsed this model, but a few outliers, including the State of Texas represented by the Texas Racing Commission, have sought to preserve the status quo.

The Commission's stated rationale is that only the Texas Racing Commission may regulate parimutuel racing and simulcast wagering in Texas. Although National regulation affects all aspects of our life living in Texas, the Texas Racing Commission, due to this perceived legal technicality, has been unable to find a compromise solution. As a result, the Texas racing industry suffers, the Texas patrons who enjoy horseracing suffer, and our thoroughbred gladiators suffer the most.

A second consequence of this stalemate is that racetracks in Texas can no longer simulcast Texas races to other communities and states and receive wagers allotted for their racing program.  Without the ability to simulcast, the betting handle at Sam Houston Racetrack during the winter meet fell 90% and the handle at the current Lone Star spring and summer racing meet is not significantly better. Tracks survive by taking approximately 15% of the betting handle to support their operations and purses. The current situation is unsustainable.

Having served on the Texas Racing Commission for 10 years, including four years as Chairman, I can attest that the Commission staff, stewards, and the working regulators are superb and unmatched in their quality and dedication. The political appointees of the Commission, however, have lost sight of their designated purpose.

In this one rare instance, Congress has actually provided us–and our horses–a solution. Ultimately, HISA has the resources, the regulatory power, and sophisticated lab testing that can root out illegal drug use, research track surfaces, and analyze breeding patterns. HISA has the potential to improve the sport and create a safe horseracing animal that can thrive in a newer environment.

The Texas Racing Commission needs to recognize its responsibilities and protect our animals in an ever-changing world. The consequences of the Texas Racing Commissioners' opposition to these efforts simultaneously leaves our horses at risk and our tracks on the path to ruin.

Texas deserves better.

 

Robert Schmidt, MD is a Fort Worth based orthopedic surgeon specializing in joint replacement surgery of the hip and knee. He and his wife had bred and raced thoroughbreds under the colors of Oak Meadow Farm. He was appointed by Govenor Perry to the Texas Racing Commission and served for 10 years, including 4 years as chairman. He currently serves as Mayor of Annetta North, Texas.

The post Letters to the Editor: Texas Horse Racing Needs HISA appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

My Heart’s On Fire First U.S. Winner For Darby Dan Farm’s Flameaway

My Heart's On Fire came out running in her career debut on Monday night, June 19, decisively winning a maiden special weight event at Prairie Meadows to become the first U.S. winner for Darby Dan Farm's Flameaway. My Heart's On Fire is her freshman sire's second winner overall as Flameaway has also been represented by Scat Lady Crown, a winner in Mexico earlier this month.

Owned by Dick Clark and Otto Farms and trained by Clark, My Heart's On Fire won the 4 1/2-furlong race by a measured 1 1/2 lengths after opening up by as many as four lengths on her rivals at the head of the lane. She covered the distance in :53.68 under jockey Glenn Corbett. Bred in Iowa by Minnehan Agg, My Heart's On Fire is produced from the A.P. Indy mare My Heart's Love and hails from the family of graded stakes winners Mo Cuishle and Tricky Squaw. My Heart's On Fire is a graduate of the 2022 Iowa Thoroughbred Breeders' and Owners' Association Fall Mixed Sale.

Flameaway, a multiple graded stakes-winning son of Scat Daddy, was an ultra-consistent near-millionaire earner on the racetrack for owner John Oxley and trainer Mark Casse. Flameaway was a stakes winner each year he raced from ages two to four and was a rare horse who won on traditional dirt, turf, and synthetic surfaces at distances ranging from 4 ½ furlongs to 1 1/16 miles.

All told, Flameaway won five stakes, including the Grade 3 Bourbon Stakes at Keeneland and Saratoga's Skidmore Stakes at two in just his second start after breaking his maiden on debut. The following season, he captured the G3 Sam F. Davis Stakes at Tampa Bay Downs, defeating future Grade 1 winners Catholic Boy and Vino Rosso, as well as the Kitten's Joy Stakes on turf at Gulfstream Park. He returned to annex the Challenger Stakes at Tampa at four, and in addition to his stakes scores, he finished a close second in the G2 Blue Grass Stakes to 2-year-old champion Good Magic and was runner-up in the G2 Jim Dandy Stakes and the G2 Tampa Bay Derby.

Bred by Phoenix Rising Farms, Flameaway was a $400,000 Fasig-Tipton Saratoga Select Sale yearling. He is a son of Scat Daddy, the sire of 2018 Triple Crown winner Justify, No Nay Never, and Mendelssohn, and is his only son at stud to win stakes at two, three, and four. Flameaway hails from a deep female family—his dam, Vulcan Rose, by Fusaichi Pegasus, is a half-sister to Grade 2 winner Essential Edge, and his third dam, Flame of Tara, produced Grade 1 winners Salsabil and Marju among her five black type offspring.

Flameaway's first 2-year-olds at auction have lit up the board this year and they include a filly that sold to Justin Casse, agent, for $370,000, the highest-priced horse by a freshman sire at last week's OBS June Sale and the highest-priced filly of the sale overall. All told, he has had 35 2-year-olds in training sell from 41 offered for total sales of $2,324,000, good for an average of $66,400.

The post My Heart’s On Fire First U.S. Winner For Darby Dan Farm’s Flameaway appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Guineas Heroine Mawj Withdrawn From Coronation With Cough

Godolphin homebred Mawj (Ire) (Exceed And Excel {Aus}), who won the G1 QIPCO 1000 Guineas at Newmarket in May, has been withdrawn from Friday's G1 Coronation S. at Royal Ascot due to a cough, trainer Saeed bin Suroor announced.

Successful in the G2 Duchess Of Cambridge S. and third in the G1 Cheveley Park S. at two, the daughter of Modern Ideals (GB) (New Approach {Ire}) has won all three of her 3-year-old starts. The 'TDN Rising Star' appeared twice at Meydan in conditions races and won the Jumeirah Fillies Classic over seven furlongs and the Jumeirah Fillies Guineas going a mile this winter.

“Mawj appeared quiet after exercising this morning and produced a dirty scope,” said bin Suroor. “She is coughing at moment, so won't be able to run in the Coronation S.

“It's disappointing to miss Royal Ascot, but we will give her time to recover and we can hopefully look forward to the rest of the season.”

The post Guineas Heroine Mawj Withdrawn From Coronation With Cough appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights