After Trials At Two More Racetracks, Here’s What We Know About What StrideSafe Is, And What It Isn’t

This spring, the racing industry faced renewed criticism of its safety record, after Churchill Downs saw an increased number of fatal injuries during its prominent spring meet. Insiders have been hopeful that a new technology called StrideSafe can one day reduce the number of injuries on America's racetracks.

The system, which is made up of sensors carried in a horse's saddle pad that measure motion in all directions, was trialed in New York on most runners starting in 2021. The sensors are designed to detect and quantify changes in movement that could signal an impending injury. The system was engineered in Australia and has been used on the there and in Tasmania to alert trainers and veterinarians to stride changes that may be imperceptible to the human eye. In New York, the system was used in 6,626 starts. StrideSafe software ranks a performance similarly to a traffic light – red, amber, or green – with green showing no significant deviations from normal movement for that horse, red indicating significant change, and amber indicating that the horse should be monitored with caution.

This year, horses at Rillito Park and Churchill Downs have been wearing the sensors, as researchers and regulators try to get an idea of how it can – and can't – be used to improve equine safety.

We spoke with StrideSafe CEO Dr. David Lambert, and also tuned in to a presentation by Lambert and Churchill Downs equine medical director Dr. Will Farmer before Kentucky horsemen this week. Here's what we know so far about the system and its potential.

The system works better the more times the same horse wears it. StrideSafe is designed not just to compare a horse's way of going to what its software considers “normal” but, more importantly, to establish what an individual horse's “normal” way of moving looks like. It can give you a red, amber, or green rating for a horse when it's used on the horse for the first time, but each subsequent rating becomes more meaningful because the software can learn to look for changes for that individual. That means it's going to be most effective when it's used on the same circuit for a long time, or on multiple regional circuits over time.

This hasn't yet happened outside of New York. The study run at Churchill's spring meeting will end when the Churchill meeting at Ellis concludes July 2. That study was funded by the Kentucky Equine Drug Research Council and included the collection of data from horses in races and breezes. The funding also extended to free diagnostic imaging for horses who received a red rating, in hopes of better defining the best way for horsemen and veterinarians to interpret those ratings. It's still uncertain whether funding will be found to continue readings at the Ellis meet. The StrideSafe system costs $35/horse per use.

It was also used at Rillito Park's meeting earlier this year, with funding provided by owner Jim McIngvale.

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So far, the sensors are good at correctly identifying a horse most at risk of an impending musculoskeletal injury. At Churchill's spring meet, Lambert said seven of eight musculoskeletal breakdowns during racing had sensor outputs that were abnormal. (It's important to note that does not mean they had any physical changes or gait problems that would have been visible to the naked eye; all of them passed pre-race veterinary exams.)

Those statistics – and the 19 of 20 fatal breakdowns flagged in New York – refer to the horse's rating in its last race, however. Data isn't uploaded anywhere in real-time, and in fact isn't collected and analyzed until the race card is over. For Lambert's purposes, it's useful to show that the sensors are not falsely rating very many performances as fine when they're not.

Red and amber ratings also come up in plenty of performances where horses don't suffer fatal injury, and Lambert believes an alteration in a horse's movement may begin several performances ahead of a fatal breakdown. His hope is that red ratings can generate extra scrutiny early enough to avoid breakdowns.

Red and amber ratings can happen for reasons other than an injury. In the New York trial, Lambert found 17 percent of 6,616 starts had red ratings. He further split red ratings into multiple categories depending on severity of the horse's deviation from normal movement. Five percent of starts (or 331 starts) were in the highest-risk red category. These horses, he found, had a 300 times higher risk of fatality than horses with green runs.

But the sensors in StrideSafe are measuring abnormal movement and do so without knowing context. That means that if a horse is checked or bumped during a race, or if they break from the gate awkwardly, the sensor will correctly realize that something is different and may give a red or amber rating. It's also possible a horse running on a new surface for the first time may move differently because they have difficulty with depth or traction, but haven't actually experienced damage that signals an oncoming fracture.

StrideSafe researchers at Churchill watched race video of performances that generated red ratings prior to informing trainers of the red rating so they could try to give them as much context as possible. Lambert also encourages trainers to give feedback to StrideSafe about what they think may have caused an abnormal rating so he can better pinpoint what the sensors are picking up.

That also means there are going to be red ratings which don't show any sign of impending injury on diagnostics, and red ratings that may switch to green in a horse's next start even without intervention. Lambert believes it's still worthwhile to screen those horses and hopefully prevent some fatal injuries.

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There are also some types of injury or death that StrideSafe isn't likely to warn you about. In his presentation at Churchill this week, Lambert said that soft tissue injuries like ligament failure don't have the same pattern of forewarning that bone fractures do, based on human data, and he doesn't expect StrideSafe will see anything abnormal prior to the moment of injury. It also can't anticipate sudden deaths, which are commonly thought to be cardiac or pulmonary in nature and aren't preceded by much change in the horse's movement more than a few steps prior to a fall.

Still, he's encouraged that the sensors can provide useful data.

“Don't let's beat the whole idea to death just because [false greens] will happen,” he said.

For this reason, this is not going to become a regulatory tool. Lambert says there is not likely a world where a horse could be added to a veterinarian's list based on a red rating. In the Churchill trial, horse-specific results were not reported to the state racing commission.

The future of StrideSafe is, to Lambert, as a tool in the toolbox of a trainer and their private veterinarian to let them know which horses may benefit from diagnostic scrutiny.

This system is also not going to tell a trainer what type of injury a horse has brewing. Over time, Lambert said, the system will be able to tell trainers whether it's noticing abnormalities in a front versus hind end, or left versus right side of the body, but that's it.

“It's not a diagnostic tool,” said Lambert. “It's set up for screening.”

Trainers of Churchill horses who received red ratings had the option of getting free diagnostic scans to correlate those ratings with injury risk. Three of those flagged horses received PET scans and one received a bone scan but those results aren't available to the public.

Lambert said there are key points on certain bones that racetrack veterinarians already know are most likely to accumulate stress-related damage that can lead to a fracture, so this should give them a base to work from when they go hunting for any unseen problems.

StrideSafe was tested on horses recording timed workouts this spring. This would have marked the first time the system was used broadly on breezing horses. It does not take data from slower works or from the warm-ups before a horse enters the gate for a race because the horse is moving too slowly and if they're being ponied, that will impact their gait.

Farmer said it has proven difficult to accumulate data on horses in the morning because training plans can often be subject to change and trainers don't have to notify anyone too far in advance that they're planning to work a given horse. He's hopeful that ultimately the sensors could warn of an impending injury based on workout data, before the horse is placed at risk in a higher-intensity race situation, but it's also hard to trace when horses who got red ratings in workouts may not have gone onto the next race as planned and been put on the sidelines for diagnostics instead.

Further details from Churchill aren't available to the public yet. Because the Churchill study was done with the hope it would result in a peer-reviewed publication, Lambert was unable to provide specific numbers on how many horses total were flagged as red, amber, and green, or the results of any follow-up examinations on red-flagged horses. Peer-reviewed journals often require that publishable work not have been shared prior to publication, which binds researchers to some silence as they go through the process of data analysis and journal review.

Practicing veterinarians will soon have a chance to learn about StrideSafe outputs. Lambert said he plans to hold a series of trainings for racetrack veterinarians to help them understand the statistics and charts the system generates, which could give them a better frame of reference for interpreting results and figuring out where to hunt for an injury.

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Wesley Ward Suspended 15 Days, Fined $2,000 Over New Jersey Positives For Naproxen, Metformin

According to a ruling posted Tuesday to the Association of Racing Commissioners International website, trainer Wesley Ward has been suspended 15 days and fined $2,000 over a positive test on July 15, 2022, at Monmouth Park.

Ward trainee Insanity It Seems won the first race on that date, and later returned positive tests for both naproxen and metformin. An evidentiary hearing was conducted before the Monmouth Park Board of Stewards on Feb. 28, 2023.

Under the absolute insurer rule, the New Jersey Racing Commission stewards issued a 15-day suspension, from June 23, 2023, through and including July 7, 2023, as well as a fine of $2,000. Insanity It Seems was disqualified and purse money ordered redistributed.

According to medlineplus.gov, metformin (a Class B drug under ARCI classifications) is used to treat type 2 diabetes by decreasing the amount of glucose absorbed from food and the amount of glucose made by the liver; it also increases the body's response to insulin. Metformin has been examined in several studies regarding equine metabolic syndrome.

Ward had another metformin positive in Kentucky when his trainee Averly Jane tested positive for the drug in the $150,000 Kentucky Juvenile Stakes at Churchill Downs on April 28, 2021. He was issued a 30-day suspension in that case, served in 2022 from Jan. 26 through Feb. 9, inclusive, with 15 days stayed provided Ward did not have an additional Class A or B positive within 365 days from the date of the ruling. The ruling was dated Jan. 25, 2022.

Naproxen is a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory (the human form is sold as Aleve).

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‘I’m All In’: Rick Dutrow Has Returned, But The Swagger Is Missing

Rick Dutrow, Jr. used to have a unique message on his cellphone.

“Yeah, Dutrow!” was all a caller heard before being sent to voicemail.

It somehow fit the middle-age trainer, who exulted in his prominent place in  racing. He would walk into the paddock with unbridled enthusiasm. He had overseen the career of 2008 Kentucky Derby and Preakness winner Big Brown. He had won five Breeders' Cup races, with Saint Liam (Classic) and Silver Train (Sprint) in 2005, Kip Deville (Mile) in 2007 and 2008 and Boys At Toscanova (Juvenile) in 2010.

For all of the controversy that surrounded him based on repeated violations, his swagger was there for all to see. He did not hesitate to snub his nose at authority. On one occasion, he reacted to a suspension by jet-setting to Rio de Janeiro with close friend Ronnie Ebanks, a former jockey agent. Even as evidence mounted that he was a rogue, his personality was irrepressible and, well, he was one of a kind.

“Yeah, Dutrow!” Yeah, that was perfect.

“It was great. I loved it,” Dutrow said. “I don't know what happened to it.”

Now, a caller is sent directly to voicemail, perhaps the first sign that a 10-year suspension, one of the harshest in racing history, took a massive toll on racing's notorious bad boy. He was subdued and, at least initially, concerned about exercising his right to freedom of speech.

“I can't protect myself in the paper because if I say something wrong, I'll get stalked out of here,” he said.

But then his anger surfaced. With certain trainers being scrutinized after their horses suffered catastrophic breakdowns, Dutrow noted, “I went 11 years without a breakdown, I mean morning, noon and night. That's total horsemanship and they banned me for 10 years.”

Although all legal maneuvers were exhausted some time ago, Dutrow continues to fight the suspension emotionally. “I'm still appealing. I don't like what they did,” he said. “I will appeal it until I die.”

He did not deny wrongdoing but said, “I don't feel I did what they accused me of.”

Three syringes filled with xylazine, a legal anesthetic, were found during a search of his barn on Nov. 3, 2010. Rules prohibit possession of such medical equipment by anyone other than a licensed veterinarian. Stephen Lewandowski, a retired steward, in a Nov. 24, 2019, letter to the New York State Gaming Commission, said it was his understanding that evidence had been planted.

Whatever the case, Dutrow finds himself in the position of having to make a comeback at age 63. And he is finding it challenging as he oversees approximately 34 horses as part of an operation that is steadily growing.

“I don't think I forgot how to train, but I need to remember how to train,” he said. “Every day, I'm saying, 'Man, I should have caught that. I would have caught it.' It's a slow process for me to get back to where I was because I had so many horses in so many situations every day and you're on it, on it, on it.”

Dutrow estimated that, at his height, he conditioned approximately 140 horses based at Aqueduct, Saratoga, and Monmouth Park. His initial goal is to have full barns in New York and Kentucky. He had won 1,811 races with earnings surpassing $87 million before years of violations led to his livelihood being taken away.

Dutrow said he spent time at farms in Ocala and even ventured to Saudi Arabia but never trained horses while he was sidelined. “I was basically wasting my time, waiting it out, hoping they would consider a lighter thing,” he said. “But they decided not to.”

At least on the recent morning when he was interviewed, Dutrow was frustrated with himself. “There are things that I'm missing, no question about it. I'm here at Belmont and sometimes I don't know what horse I should be taking to what track,” he said. “There are a lot of things I need to be sharper at.”

As the trainer tries to establish a foothold against counterparts such as Todd Pletcher and Chad Brown, both with massive operations, Ebanks is working to build the morale of his “brother” and former roommate.

“They broke his spirit,” Ebanks said. “They took his life away. All of his life was about horses and being with horses.”

Dutrow had built a strong operation and had grown accustomed to working with quality stock. He has a  long road if he is to get back there. He won with the first horse he started since he return when Prince of Pharoahs, a New York-bred gelding he claimed for $45,000, took the sixth race at Belmont Park on May 6.

He is winless in 11 starts since but has four runner-up efforts and two third-place finishes for earnings of $251,588. Although White Abarrio had been with him for only 2 1/2 weeks, he was extremely encouraged when that 4-year-old colt took third in the June 10 Met Mile. He continues to have high hopes for White Abarrio. Other runners have presented more of a puzzle.

“When something isn't right with a horse, then I have to be better at it,” Dutrow said, adding, “I don't have the same vets I used to use, I don't have the same foreman I used to have, I don't have the same assistant, I don't have the same grooms.”

Dutrow said he is devoting longer hours than ever before. Some of his previous owners have returned and potential new owners are expressing interest.

“All I need to do is win a couple of big races to get my confidence back,” he said. “I'm all in.”

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Ellis Park: Ryvit Enters Maxfield Overnight On Four-Race Win Streak

Bill and Corinne Heiligbrodt's Ryvit, the recent winner of the Chick Lang Stakes (Grade 3) at Pimlico, tops a solid field of 12 3-year-olds that entered Sunday's second running of the $175,000 Maxfield Overnight Stakes at Ellis Park Racing & Gaming.

Run at seven furlongs, the Maxfield Overnight Stakes was carded as Race 8 of 10 with a post time of 3:22 p.m. (all times Central). First post on the stakes-laden program is 11:45 a.m. Along with the Maxfield Overnight Stakes, the card features the $275,000 Hanshin Stakes presented by the JRA (Listed), the $225,000 Bashford Manor (Listed), the $225,000 Debutante (Listed) and the $175,000 Anchorage Overnight Stakes.

Trained by Hall of Famer Steve Asmussen, Ryvit has found the winner's circle in his last four tries. Asmussen's son Keith was aboard for three of the last four victories but was forced to take off the colt in the Chick Lang after he broke his left index finger. In the six-furlong Chick Lang, Tyler Gaffalione picked up the mount and cruised to a front-running 1 ¾-length victory. Jockey Cristian Torres will have the call for the first time on Ryvit and break from the rail.

The Maxfield Overnight Stakes features several intriguing horses including WinStar Farm and Siena Farm's 10 ¼-length maiden winner Mullikin, AMO Racing USA's undefeated New York Thunder, Amerman Racing Stables' recent back-to-back allowance winner Tumbarumba and Michele and Cliff Love's Saratoga Special (G2) winner Damon's Mound.

Here is the complete field for the Maxfield Overnight Stakes from the rail out (with jockey and trainer):

1. Ryvit (Torres, Asmussen)

2. New York Thunder (Ricardo Santana Jr., Jorge Delgado)

3. Determinedly (Francisco Arrieta, Mark Casse)

4. Navy Man (Junior Alvarado, Michael McCarthy)

5. Damon's Mound (Gabriel Saez, Michelle Lovell)

6. Mullikin (Tyler Gaffalione, Rodolphe Brisset)

7. Gunflash (Rey Gutierrez, Karl Broberg)

8. Frosted Departure (Brian Hernandez Jr., Kenny McPeek)

9. Top Recruit (Gerardo Corrales, Mike Maker)

10. Tumbarumba (Luis Saez, Brian Lynch)

11. Squire Creek (Florent Geroux, Brad Cox)

Fans can watch and wager on all the action from Ellis Park on www.TwinSpires.com, the official wagering provider of Churchill Downs Incorporated. Featured on the Ellis Park simulcast signal on Twin Spires are expert handicappers Joe Kristufek, Scott Shapiro and Kaitlin Free.

FanDuel will offer live on-site coverage Friday-Sunday at Ellis Park. Fans can also watch the action on the FanDuel+ app on smart devices.

For more information about racing and gaming from Ellis Park, visit www.ellisparkracing.com.

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