IFHA Conference Begins With Discussion Of Pandemic Challenges, Opportunities

The 54th International Conference of Horseracing Authorities began on Monday in a virtual format, with a series of videos to be released over the first two weeks of October. The conference organized by the International Federation of Horseracing Authorities is traditionally held in Paris, France on the day after the Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe, but the COVID-19 pandemic necessitated a virtual format this year.

The first panel was entitled ‘Sustaining the Business of Racing and Sports in the Midst of a Global Pandemic and Economic Uncertainty.’ Hosted by media personality Rishi Persad, it featured Shannon Bishop Arvin (Keeneland Association), Stephen Cook (IMG), Olivier Delloye (France Galop), William Derby (York Racecourse) and Andrew Harding (Hong Kong Jockey Club).

The panelists set the scene by describing some of the less visible challenges they have faced throughout the pandemic. Delloye took it back to the early days of the pandemic when the covering season in France appeared under threat.

“At some stages we were very worried that the covering season would have to be put to an end,” he recalled. “And of course in March it would have been a disaster for the whole industry. That would have cost the whole industry fortunes for many years. There was a lot of discussion and negotiation with the government to ensure the basic [elements] of our industry were not jeopardized.”

Derby described the challenges of operating on public land.

“It’s been a huge undertaking for all racecourses,” he acknowledged. “A unique circumstance of York is that the centre of the racecourse is a public area of land so we had to put up 3 1/2 kilometres of fencing to allow people access to the centre of the course but to keep them away from the racing surface so we could keep up with the protocols of behind closed doors racing.

“We, like a lot of people, had lots of different operating plans depending on what the government would be announcing going forward like welcoming back crowds under pilot schemes, which then didn’t happen at the last minute. So there’s been a huge amount of aborted work to try and anticipate what might happen in this fast-evolving situation.”

Arvin said Keeneland has faced similar challenges in being a cherished element of the local community in Kentucky.

“Our plans have been responsible and well thought out, we’ve submitted them in advance to our government authorities so that they understand we’re being responsible,” she said. “Keeneland is a place that is generally open to the community. We have a lot of people that come here to walk their dogs and enjoy coming to watch the horses work and the sales have always been open to the pubic. So it was a difficult decision for us to have to close our grounds.

“I would say all the tracks in Kentucky have done a great job communicating with each other, with government authorities and the racing commission. We were able to have our race meet in July with the cooperation of Ellis Park because everybody realized it was in the best interest of everybody for Keeneland to be racing those days.”

Derby described some of the challenges racing in the UK has experienced as a crossover between the sports, agriculture and hospitality industries which has been ultimately forced to identify as a sport only.

“We have to stick with one department to speak with government and that has been DCMS [Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport] for the UK,” he explained. “They wouldn’t be one of the biggest departments unlike in France with the department of agriculture, so we have to fight for time with the minister and time with the senior government, and obviously they’re dealing with a pandemic which we have to understand. They’re dealing with schools re-opening and hospitals, so sports takes its part in the queue.

“We got back early racing behind closed doors which was vitally important for the sport but in the UK restaurants and bars have re-opened, and in the York city centre not more than a mile away there is a busy, vibrant feel to the bars and restaurants, but we have huge restaurants on the racecourse that we have not been able to re-open so that’s been a frustration, it feels like a contradiction and a slight unfairness.”

In identifying the greatest challenges that still face the racing industry in the midst of the pandemic, the retention of owners and fans were a common theme.

“Taking care of owners, and keeping as many owners as possible on board [will be the greatest challenge],” Delloye said. “We’ve all witnessed the damage of the pandemic on owners and the yearling market is evidence of this. These people need some visibility on when they can enjoy going back racing.”

Derby added, “Building on Olivier’s point, I think relevance as the world emerges from the pandemic and people get busier and maybe get out of the habit of watching or betting on racing. It’s ensuring that racing seizes the opportunity that has presented itself this summer of limited other sports and people at home.”

Cook, who brought an outside perspective to the panel as the director of content for IMG Studios, said, “my job is all to do with revenue and profitability, and it’s not going to be just the average person on the street that will have less to spend off the back of this, but federations and broadcasters themselves are going to be looking to cut their cloth accordingly. So I think for us it’s a need to continue telling great narratives, great stories, and hope that when crowds do return that the broadcasters and federations will have the money to spend again on the product.”

Harding took the focus of looking at the health of some of the smaller industries that provide a backbone to the larger racing nations.

“I think the greatest challenge globally will be how long it takes for us to get back to normal and whether in some jurisdictions that’s going to be too long,” he said. “As hard as it’s been in the UK and France there are some countries where they just haven’t been able to operate in a manner that is profitable. How long that’s sustainable is something that is terribly troubling. That will have an impact globally in terms of things like the foal crop. That is something that has an impact on Hong Kong. We don’t have a breeding industry, everything that races here is imported, so we do depend on a strong racing ecosystem in other countries.”

Reflecting on what silver linings have emerged from a terrible situation with the pandemic, Arvin reflected on innovations that can emerge in times of crisis.

“Somebody asked if I was an optimist. I think I’m a realist with an optimistic spin, and I think there are definitely silver linings to come out of the pandemic and I think we have to keep looking for them,” she said. “I think the perseverance that so many in our industry have shown and that resiliency is shining through and showing us the silver linings. Winston Churchill said, ‘never let a good crisis go to waste’ and I think of how the Keeneland sales actually started, which was during World War II because we weren’t able to ship horses up to New York so we started our own sale and now it’s such a critical part of our business and a key part of the industry.”

Derby and Harding each touched on the opportunity to get racing into the national spotlight.

“I think from our perspective it’s been that focus on the horse and really using digital platforms and getting behind the scenes access to the racehorses that are at the heart of our business,” Derby said. “We did a big project building up to our flagship meeting, meeting the horses in the yard, traveling with them to the races, seeing them unloaded, really trying to get the fans to see the characters and unearth the personalities both human and equine. I hope we hold onto that going forward, the behind the scenes access.”

Harding added, “as an Australian and as part of the international federation what I see is that globally it has given racing a monopoly on attention. I certainly know that was true in Australia-for a long period it was the only sport you could watch. The viewer numbers went up and people that used to like racing remembered why they liked it and people that hadn’t previously taken an interest in it were exposed to it.”

Cook described how the pandemic and other sociopolitical issues in 2020 have allowed an opportunity to reassess how businesses are run.

“I think it’s helped us reset the dial a little,” he said. “It’s enabled us to look at the structure of our business and ask, ‘are we doing things the right way?’ There have been lots of other things happening around the world while this pandemic has been going on. The Black Lives Matter movement has helped us look at, ‘are we as diverse and inclusive as we should be as an organization?’ Probably not, and we’re going to work on that. We’ve also looked at sustainability. We’re part of an initiative called Green To Screen that looks at our carbon footprint. All these things that get put to one side when you’re on the wheel of making television day in and day out.”

The next video in the International Conference of Horseracing Authorities series, to be released on Tuesday, will feature the conference’s keynote address from Pete Giorgio and Alan Switzer from Deloitte.

The post IFHA Conference Begins With Discussion Of Pandemic Challenges, Opportunities appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

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Helping Orphaned Foals, Outer Banks Ponies, and More Must-Click Links of the Week

Welcome to our link roundup, where we share our favorite stories from around the Internet! Know a link that should be included? Email it to americasbestracing@gmail.com!  Trust me, you are going to want to check out this bull who thinks he’s a showjumping horse. (Good News Network)

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Breeders’ Cup Presents Connections: Grace Encourages Cancer-Stricken Trainer ‘To Keep On Fighting’

The odds were certainly stacked against trainer Shelley Brown last Sunday night at Century Mile in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. A sudden, devastating Stage 4 cancer diagnosis just a few weeks before the G3 Canadian Derby meant that Brown watched the races from her couch over 800 miles away in Winnipeg, exhausted after a weekend in the hospital for treatment.

Her entrant, the 3-year-old gelding Real Grace, had won just one race, the Derby Trial at Assiniboia Downs back in July. He'd not returned to the winner's circle in three subsequent starts, making the running early and fading in the stretch, and was facing the longest race of his career in the 1 1/4-mile Canadian Derby.

The race's post time, nearly 11 p.m. in Winnipeg, meant Brown had to fight through her exhaustion to stay awake if she wanted to watch it live.

Sent to post at 18-1 odds, Real Grace led the field from gate-to-wire for a gutsy neck victory that lifted his trainer's spirits beyond what she'd even considered possible. It was her first graded stakes win, and it was also a win in the biggest race at her home track.

Brown watched via her smartphone as Real Grace entered the winner's enclosure. Track announcer Shannon Doyle said: “Congratulations Shelley, we are all with you.”

Amazing Grace, indeed.

The weeks leading up to the Canadian Derby had been some of the darkest weeks of her life, Brown explained. The 47-year-old was diagnosed on Sept. 3 with cancer, Stage 4, learning that it was in her lungs, bones, stomach, ovaries, breasts, and lymph nodes. Doctors told her that left untreated, she had between three and six months to live.

Considering that Brown had only gone to the hospital that morning for what she'd thought was a torn rotator cuff in her shoulder, the diagnosis was a complete shock.

“For someone to look at you and tell you that, there's a million emotions,” Brown said. “I thought, 'What am I gonna do? I've got horses here, horses in the States, property, horse trailers. … I can't even tell you. I just totally went numb.

“Your brain can be very hard on you. As soon as I got the diagnosis, I didn't want to get out of bed. I felt helpless, overwhelmed, and I just wanted to shut down.”

Brown had 40 horses in training at Assiniboia Downs, and had sent several, including Real Grace, to her friend and former employer, trainer Rod Cone, at Century Mile. She was planning to ship the rest of the string to Century Mile after the Assiniboia meet ended.

Instead, Brown found herself in a downward spiral, researching treatments and treatment centers online, awaiting test results, and trying desperately to understand how the cancer had progressed so quickly without her knowledge.

“As a horse person, we make a lot of excuses,” Brown reasoned. “There's always kind of a way you get banged here and bumped there. I was unbelievably tired, but I kept telling myself there were only three more weeks (until the meet ended at Assiniboia), so I was kind of begging myself to finish off the meet. Of course with COVID there wasn't a ton of help, so I often had to pitch right in. I thought, 'Well, I'm just working really hard and I'm tired from racing three nights a week, it's just the amount of work and racing, and that's why I'm so tired.'”

The days after her diagnosis were a blur. Her longtime assistant kept the barn running, and the news spread around the backside quickly. Just four days later, a friend on the backstretch set up a GoFundMe account to help cover Brown's medical bills.

(https://www.gofundme.com/f/u6f5p-cancer?utm_source=customer&utm_campaign=p_cp+share-sheet&utm_medium=copy_link_all)

Assiniboia even helped to set up an auction for Brown's tack, equipment, and several horses. She wanted to sell off everything, but other horsemen convinced her to keep a few things, some saddles and bridles and a few of the better horses, as a way of giving herself hope moving forward.

“I guess my whole life I've sort of felt like a lone wolf,” Brown said, her voice heavy with emotion. “It was never going to be easy for a woman to be in a male-dominated sport. I've held my own, but even in my personal life I've never really felt like I fit somewhere or belonged together. But, how the horsemen have come together for me through this, to see that, some of them I think we'll be friends for life through this. They've been so amazing and so helpful and so assuring, and these are people that I never expected. I just realize now that I'm not alone and these people are so important to me.

“If there was any doubt before, the question has been answered. These are my family.”

Since her parents had already passed on after battling cancer, Brown reached out to her brother and sister for help with the day-to-day things, like transportation to her doctor's appointments. Both responded immediately, but there wasn't much to do besides wait.

As a lifelong, hard-working horsewoman, and the first female trainer to ever win a training title at Assiniboia (2017), Brown said sitting back and doing nothing was an especially difficult mental challenge.

“Horses are seven days a week; when you commit to this, you commit to a lifestyle,” Brown said. “I guess if I could change anything, I would have listened to my body sooner.

“Now I look back, and I think, 'Oh my gosh, this started a long time ago.'”

She had seen her family doctor several times over the past few years. Last year, she felt a strange sensitivity on her spine, but he told her it was nothing. She asked to be sent for a mammogram, but he insisted she didn't need one. Earlier this season, she'd gone to see him when she felt short of breath for no real reason, but he told her she was just out of shape after gaining weight over the winter.

Sadly, it's not an unusual story for women's symptoms to be overlooked by their doctors.

“I think had I really listened to my body, I would have seen more signs,” she said.

Fast-forward to the week of the Canadian Derby, and Brown was still struggling with her frustrations. Biopsies had been sent away to labs for testing, but she was still awaiting an appointment with an oncologist since the test results weren't back yet.

Logically, she understood that doctors could not implement a treatment plan without understanding the exact kind of cancer ravaging her body. Emotionally, knowing that she had spent three weeks of what was possibly her final three months just waiting around for results was starting to get to her.

Brown had looked into the options, and knew the finances weren't in her favor. She'd decided that a combination of conventional and holistic medicine was the way she wanted to fight the cancer, and treatment centers in Mexico and the United States were both quite expensive.

Mexico was cheaper, of course, but she'd have to drive herself there and wouldn't have any sort of support system in place if things took a turn for the worse. And what if she got sick on the drive down to Mexico? Then she'd be in a U.S. hospital, and the bills would just keep rolling in.

Another trainer, Hazel Bochinski, happened to see Brown's GoFundMe page and sent her a message on Facebook recommending a local treatment center in Winnipeg. It offered several of the holistic treatments that Brown hoped to try, as well as a pay-as-you-go plan.

Now Brown had part of a plan in place, at least, but she still had to wait for the test results before she could start any treatments.

On Thursday, Cone called to check in on her and ask if she'd be attending the race on Sunday night. Unfortunately, Brown had been admitted to the hospital once again, this time with a partially collapsed lung.

“They tried to drain the lung twice, which is so painful because they cut in between your ribs,” Brown explained. “They couldn't drain it and so they weren't able to get fluid off. The pain was intense.”

Brown insisted she be let out of the hospital over the weekend, and felt better Saturday, well enough to take a drive with her siblings.

“Sunday, I wasn't well,” Brown said. “Of course, the race is so late, 11 p.m. at night local time. I don't have a lot of energy. I told my brother, 'The only way I'm going to stay awake is if I watch all the races, see how the track is playing.' With each race I got more discouraged, because my horse is a frontrunner and the track was not playing speed at all.

“I was actually able to stay awake, and I can't tell you the feeling I had to watch that race, watch that horse go to the front. I saw Synergy coming, the heavy favorite, and I thought he would blow right by us. My horse had to dig deep … Actually, the race was showing on a slight delay, because at the eighth pole my best friend's text popped up on screen, 'OMG you just won a Derby!'”

In fact, Real Grace held on through the wire to win by a neck over Something Natural and Rail Hugger. Cone was beyond thrilled as he led the Mineshaft gelding into the winner's circle, the three-time Canadian Derby-winning trainer calling Brown's victory the best win of his life.

Real Grace digs deep to win the G3 Canadian Derby

“No matter what happened, nothing could have made me happier than that race,” Cone told CBC Radio's Edmonton AM. “We did everything for Shelley and we were just overwhelmed.”

(https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/upset-victory-in-canadian-derby-inspires-horse-trainer-battling-cancer-1.5742728)

“All credit to Rod Cone,” Brown said. “If I would have had it in me, I would have loved to have been there. I bought this horse because I believed in him. We were disappointed (when he finished fifth) in the Manitoba Derby, so to win this one was so meaningful. I was a groom in Alberta growing up, so to be able to go back there and win such a prestigious race, it really just put the wind back in my sails.

“When there's no reason to get up in the morning, it was the one thing that made me go, 'You know what? This horse was 18-1, and he showed me what you can do if you just fight.'

“The next day I was a whole different person. It made me feel like, 'Don't you dare give up.' It was almost like a sign to say, 'This is what you can do.'”

On Monday, Brown finally had her first appointment with the oncologist, and her renewed sense of hope led to a surprising development. There was a drug, Ibrance, developed to treat her type of cancer. It was designed for post-menopausal women, so she'd have to be sent through medically-induced menopause first, but the drug was showing promising results.

“They feel like it can buy me three years,” Brown explained. “I was so happy to hear that. I thought, 'I can tie up loose ends, figure out how I want things done, instead of being in such a rush.' Of course, it isn't a guarantee, but now there's a chance.”

According to Brown, Ibrance is designed as more of a blocker that stops the cancer's progress, rather than killing the cancer outright. She plans to combine it with holistic treatments for the next three months, which the GoFundMe account will help pay for, and she has a backup plan in place to head to Mexico if the current plan doesn't seem to be working.

“When someone virtually hands you a death sentence, I can't imagine how, person to person, that would affect somebody,” Brown said. “Now I have possibly three years to work with, but the thought of the chance, maybe in that three years they can come up with something else, it at least that gives me hope to keep on fighting.”

The post Breeders’ Cup Presents Connections: Grace Encourages Cancer-Stricken Trainer ‘To Keep On Fighting’ appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

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New Study Shows Last Line of Defense Against Equine Parasites Beginning To Fail

New research shows that ivermectin and moxidectin dewormers are losing their efficacy again small strongyles. This is particularly troublesome as these drugs are the last lines of defense against the worms and no new dewormers are in the research pipeline.

The study was the first in the world to confirm small strongyle resistance through repeated testing. Resistance to two of the three deworming drug classes was confirmed years ago and it was predicted that small stronglyes would become resistant to macrocyclic lactones, a class of dewormers of which ivermectin and moxidectin are a part.

The study team included Dr. Martin Nielsen, Professor of Equine Infectious Disease at the M.H. Gluck Equine Research Center, Michael Banahan of Godolphin's Jonabell Farm in Kentucky, and Dr. Ray Kaplan, parasitologist in the Department of Infectious Diseases at the College of Veterinary Medicine at the University of Georgia.

The team found that the efficacy of both ivermectin and moxidectin were reduced in a group of 50 imported Irish Thoroughbreds, though 50 US-bred horses on the same farm had no such resistance. The farm rigorously followed current guidelines for deworming and pulled fecal egg counts on all horses on the farm multiple times.

The horses were dewormed and tested multiple times over an eight-month period. The team concluded that the resistance to ivermectin and moxidectin was imported with the Irish horses. They note that this demonstrates how quickly resistant parasites can spread across the globe. They encourage farm and horse owners to utilize fecal egg count tests and to stringently follow deworming guidelines to attempt to increase the longevity of the efficacy of ivermectin and moxidectin.

Read the study here.

Read more at HorseTalk.

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