MRI Study Hopes To Turn Skeptics Into Believers

Efforts to stop racehorse breakdowns have increased exponentially in the past decade, with many high-tech tools being brought into play. The learning curve on these advanced diagnostics can be steep and additional complexities surface when veterinarians are expected to draw conclusions from current images without access to previous medical records: Something that may appear “significant” on an image may be an old, non-issue to the horse, reports Thoroughbred Daily News.

A study funded by the Oak Tree Charitable Foundation will be launched in Southern California to help racetrack veterinarians who use MRIs decipher what the images are telling them. The study will use 23 Thoroughbreds Dr. Tim Grande, the chief official veterinarian of the California Horse Racing Board, has deemed lame in their fetlock. The lame horses will be chosen from a pool of horses that are a morning-of or race-day scratch; those that are lame in the test barn or after a scheduled work or race; or those that have a voided claim.

A group of 23 control horses that show no signs of lameness will also be used; these horses will be similar in age, sex, and class to the lame horses. Researchers will be looking for changes in density within the proximal sesamoid bones and distal cannon bone, swelling in the cannon bone, and bone bruising. Each of these relates to fetlock failure and condylar fracture.

Though the MRI is not new, there is still skepticism about what it can “tell” veterinarians. Researchers hope the study will increase belief in the machine's ability to assist horses and their owners.

Read more at TDN.

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The California Series: Art Sherman

   In this TDN series, we curry lessons and wise counsel from veteran Californian figures who, like gold nuggets panned from the Tuolomne River in the High Sierras, have unearthed career riches on arguably the toughest circuit in the States.

   The series started with John Shirreffs and continues here with Art Sherman, son of a barber who would go on to train, for a period, the richest horse in history. Last month, Sherman announced his retirement. His last runner is expected this weekend.

The golf cart plunges out of the soupy early-morning fog swallowing Los Alamitos Racecourse like the focus of a slow-motion action sequence, Wagner's Ride of the Valkyries playing in the writer's ears, before rolling to a stop outside a barn with a plaque memorializing the GI Preakness S. of 2014.

Riding side-saddle on this mechanical rickshaw, Art Sherman springs from it like an elastic band–his 84 years be damned–marches over to a horse, all suds and statue–still on the wash rack, telling the groom and the hotwalker how well their soapy pupil had just schooled in the gates.

Commentary complete, Sherman finally heads for his office.

“That's it, I'm done for the morning,” he says. This, despite the clock hands reading 7:00, and the heavy foot traffic on the equine expressway leading to and from the track telling a far less finished story among the surrounding barns.

There are two reasons for the abbreviated workday–one is familiarity, a habit contracted from his former mentor, trainer Paul Guidotti.

“I'm always the first one on the racetrack. I just like to get my horses in and out and let them relax,” Sherman would later explain. “I don't like to wait for the horses to train and get tacked up and standing there and waiting.”

The other is practicality. With only a handful of horses in his care, the morning's a quick study.

Partly for this reason, Sherman has announced his retirement from training–though he won't disappear completely, looking to maintain an advisory role to his two trainer sons, Alan and Steve, and the occasional dabble in the world of bloodstock.

What the training ranks lose, however, is an important connecting thread between the sometimes sparse returns of California's current industry–short fields, disappearing farms, shrinking foal crops–with the profligacy of the industry's post-war extravagances.

None epitomize this more than owner-breeder Rex Ellsworth, who kept and raised hundreds of horses between farms in Ontario and Chino, inland from Los Angeles, and Sherman's first employer in racing.

“He grabbed my ass a couple of times and put me back in the saddle. I mean, I was airborne,” says Sherman, from his office chair, a hand shot airborne like a rocket as he describes Ellsworth's hands-on approach to breaking his young-stock, the old cowboy accompanying the crew on his pony-terrorizing them, too.

“He'd slap them under the belly. Boom!” he adds, another arm pretzel in the shape of Buckaroo.

For a period in the 1950s and the 1960s, Ellsworth and his trainer, Meshach Tenney, reigned supreme in the West–kings of an empire forged from California's golden sandy loam. But theirs was hardly a show-room operation.

Instead of sturdy white-picket fences, think barbed-wire. Instead of gourmet treats, think dry pellets manufactured on the ranch.

“I can't ever remember being with Rex and having any vitamins,” he says. “But all the horses looked good.”

Tenney shared that same spartan mentality. “He worked his ass off all day long. I used to hold the horses for him and he'd be shoeing them all afternoon, six or seven at a time.”

As for the horses, “They hardly were ever done up. I just used to feed them, no bandages.”

The Ellsworth school of rough-and-ready brooked no favor. “He broke every horse like he didn't care how they were bred,” says Sherman. Egalitarian, certainly. Uncompromising, too.

“You loved to ride their horses because when you rode them in the afternoon, they were broke,” he says. “They had to behave themselves, you know what I mean? This was a no-nonsense type of thing. There was no babying and feeding them sugar and all that.”

Spare the rod and spoil the child–back then, a backbone of a generational approach to raising horse and human alike.

In his own training career, however, Sherman has cultivated the opposite reputation.

California Chrome | Edward Whitaker

Few who followed California Chrome's exploits could have failed to notice the rather doting paternal attention–akin to the proud father of the cocky jock–with which Sherman ushered the colt around the globe.

It's this careful approach that Sherman has used to produce a list of top performers nurtured over more seasons, and campaigned with much more of a competitive appetite, than is now standard.

“It's that confidence you build up between a horse and yourself, that you know you're doing the right thing and having a good rider ride them,” he says, in explanation. “That's very important, knowing your horse. I don't know how to even explain it.”

He doesn't need to explain it–it's right there in the numbers and the records. You have to go all the way back to 1991 to find the most recent winner of the GI Kentucky Derby, Strike the Gold, who raced more times than California Chrome. (The gelding Funny Cide, who won the 2003 Derby, isn't really a fair comparison).

Lykatill Hil, another of Sherman's multiple graded-stakes winning Faberge eggs, started his career two months before Bill Clinton won his first presidential election, and retired 19 wins from 61 starts later, only a few months short of that millennium's end.

Integral to Sherman's success, he says, was his own broad-brush grounding after he turned up on Ellsworth's doorstep without any practical experience with horses, and plunged straight into the breeding operation.

“He taught me everything and it wasn't the money,” he says, of his time with Ellsworth.

At the time, Khaled, sire of Swaps, was kingpin of the Ellsworth empire.

“I used to exercise him and keep him fit around the big pen. It was pretty interesting for a kid that never had been around horses,” says Sherman, bemoaning the lack of comparable opportunities for today's new racetrack inductees. “There are so many kids that have never been there around the breeding season, watching mares foal. Those things. They come to the racetrack now and want to be a jockey in a year's time, you know? But I think that schooling, the background of being at the ranch and working there for a year, really improved my mind about how a horse should be.”

His 22 years as a jockey proved something of a training manual pick-and-mix. “I think that helped a whole lot, getting the basics and watching different people train horses, you know what I mean? What works. Some of it doesn't work for a lot of people. I saw good horsemen-horsemen good with legs-but who could never condition a horse that great.”

But when asked who–or what–has been most influential in shaping his approach to training, Sherman steers straight towards Guidotti, who maintained a small stable in Northern California.

“You know, when I first started training I just decided I would just mostly be like Paul taking care of horses,” he says. “They always looked good. He was a good caretaker, good feed, top notch feed, you know what I mean? He gave vitamins which I do.”

Like Sherman now, Guidotti wasn't one for the morning bullets. “I'm not really for the fast workouts. I like distance. I like endurance. I like them to finish the last eighth of a mile and kick it in.”

Art and Alan Sherman and team accept Horse of the Year for California Chrome | Horsephotos

Moral lessons were also on offer. “He's the only guy I ever seen fire an owner over me. They wanted to take me off a horse that I won a little stake on and then the horse got beat. He told them, 'If you change riders, just take him to another trainer.'”

Unlike Sherman, the horse found lodgings anew.

Home in Sherman's early years with a license consisted of the barn tack room, his wardrobe a bunch of cast-offs from a jockey who quit the saddle to become a Mormon missionary.

“I had a hotplate and a little small fridge. I liked staying in the tack rooms. It was fun. I had the old locker where I had my clothes.”

Some 40 years later, he retires the trainer of 2,261 winners and the fourth-highest earning horse in history.

Gone are the penitential digs.

“I just sold my place here. I had a condo here in Cypress,” he says, of his home near Los Alamitos. “I've got another place in Rancho Bernardo in San Diego.”

But acquired along the way has been one valuable lesson. “Patience is a lot of it, you know what I mean?” he says.

“You just can't, like I said, train every horse the same way. Some horses have got little quirks about them. You just got to realize what capabilities that your horse has. Conditions help you win races. Don't run them over their head. Don't put them in spots where they got to run their eyeballs out and get beat, you know what I mean? Don't over race them to a point where you take the heart out of them.”

In part two next week, Sherman talks Swaps and California Chrome, and gives his thoughts on the evolving shape of the California industry.

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Grade 1 Winner Mo Forza Retired To Rancho San Miguel In California

Mo Forza, a Grade 1 winner and $1-million-plus earner by the very popular sire of sires Uncle Mo, has been retired from racing and will commence his stallion career in 2022 at Rancho San Miguel in Calif., as the property of Taylor Made Stallions and Onofrio Pecoraro.

The 5-year-old horse will make history on two important fronts: as Kentucky-based industry leader Taylor Made Farm's first foray into California's breeding industry and as the first son of Uncle Mo—North America's 2010 champion 2-year-old colt and the sire of the Grade 1-siring stallions Nyquist and Laoban—to stand on the West Coast.

Mo Forza's introductory fee is $9,000, live foal stand and nurse guarantee. A syndication is being formed, with a limited number of shares available.

Campaigned by Bardy Farm and Pecoraro's San Diego-based OG Boss stable, Mo Forza won eight of 15 starts and earned $1,034,460 as one of North America's top turf milers over the past three seasons. His seven graded stakes victories include the 2019 Grade 1 Hollywood Derby and the 2020-2021 editions of the G2 Del Mar Mile at Del Mar, as well as four Grade 2 races at Santa Anita Park: the 2020-2021 City of Hope Mile Stakes, 2019 Qatar Twilight Derby and 2019 Mathis Brothers Mile Stakes.

He is the first foal out of the Unusual Heat mare Inflamed, a full sister to Grade 2 winner and 2011 California Champion 3-Year-Old Male Burns and to Grade 1-placed multiple winner Brushburn.

“Mo Forza was born and raised at Taylor Made, and we have loved him from the very beginning” said Taylor Made Stallions Vice President Ben Taylor. “He is a big, strong, good-looking horse who ran four triple-digit Beyers and showed tremendous heart in winning seven graded races on the grass. As brilliantly as he trained on dirt, we have no doubt that he would have accomplished just as much on that surface if he had been given the opportunity.

“We are looking forward to participating in the lucrative California-bred program with this outstanding stallion prospect,” Taylor added. “We believe Mo Forza is the right horse at the right time for us to launch our entry into the California breeding industry.”

Pecoraro will remain as a co-owner in Mo Forza and will support him with several high-quality mares.

“We have been looking for a son of Uncle Mo to offer to California breeders, and Mo Forza was number one on our list,” said Rancho San Miguel owner/manager Tom Clark. “In addition to winning seven graded races here in California, he is out of a daughter of our state's all-time leading sire, Unusual Heat. He is also a direct male descendant of another multiple leading California sire, In Excess (Ire), through his Grade 1-winning, California-bred grandsire, the great Indian Charlie. He is a perfect fit here.”

“Mo Forza's name translates roughly from Italian to 'more strength,' and that is precisely what I believe he offers to California's breeding and racing program,” Clark said. “We are thrilled to partner with Taylor Made and Mr. Pecoraro on this exciting new venture.”

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Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation: ‘When I Don’t See Them Returning To Prison, That Means Everything’

What inspires someone to fight for those who can't fight for themselves?

In the case of corrections officer Heidi Richards, she jokes that she has “selective hearing” when it comes to the word “No.” It took the horsewoman five long years to convince the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation to implement an equine program at the Pleasant Valley State Prison, but Richards simply refused to give up. 

“I kept on seeing inmates come back to prison,” Richards explained. “I fought so hard because I kept on seeing these kids come back. They were 20, 25, 30 years old and it's their second, third, fourth time coming back to prison. And I'm like, 'Why are you guys coming back to prison?' And they're like, 'Because you guys don't teach us anything.'”

Eight years later, Richards has founded a program that has seen zero of its graduates return to prison. 

“About every three to four months I run their numbers, and when I don't see them returning to prison, that means everything,” Richards said. “Because it means every bit of hard work, every hour I donated to that program has paid off.”

A relative newcomer to the correctional system, Richards made the move from a position at Harris Ranch when her daughter was three years old. She wanted a job with more regular hours, and thought she might spend five years at the 40-hours-a-week gig.

Instead, Richards found she enjoyed the challenge.

Ten years in, Richards heard about the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation's Second Chances program, which offers inmates the opportunity to learn how to work with horses, and decided to capitalize on her own horse experience to bring the program to California.

The TRF backed her right away, but the initial challenge was in convincing the Pleasant Valley warden to allow Richards to implement the program. After five years of wading through the red tape, the next challenge was in applying for the CDCR's Integrative Programming Grants. Only 52 grants were awarded throughout the entire state of California, and though Richards' was approved, it didn't include enough funding to pay for a project manager to put the whole program together. 

“They were like, 'Well, it looks like we can't do it,'” Richard recalled. “And I was like, 'Oh, no, well, we can. We'll do this. It's going to happen.'”

Richards logged over 700 volunteer hours building the program from scratch.

“A lot of people helped me when I was a kid; people in the horse industry gave me horses, gave me tack, gave me lessons for free,” Richards said. “There were people who took me up to endurance races when I was like, 'I don't know what the heck I'm doing, but I want to go do this race.' I had a lot of people volunteer their time to me and never charged me. 

“I always said if I ever got the chance I wanted to give back too, so that's what I did.”

The program includes five of the TRF's herd of retired racehorses. The inmates, in groups of 15 at a time, care for the horses and take college-level classes in anatomy, injury treatment, nutrition, and other aspects of the care of horses. West Hills College pays the instructional fees, which opens the door to possible careers as farriers, veterinary assistants and caretakers.

“By doing this, this pulls them and this gives them something, an option to get out of the gang lifestyle,” said Richards. “It's something they've never even dreamed about, never even knew about, because most of the students I have in my class have never even touched a horse.”

Richards' efforts earned her the 2020 Correctional Officer of the Year Award from the CDCR. The award honors a person who serves as a positive role model and fosters an environment that supports a balance between professional development, professional job performance, and personal wellness.

Today, Richards is preparing to open similar programs at two more California prisons.

“I remember thinking, 'Maybe I could make a difference,'” she said. “When I got the first horse on the grounds, I was like, 'Okay, I did it.' And then to see my first class graduate and these guys go home, and not come back, that just means everything.”

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