Cluster of Deaths At Laurel Puts Maryland Racing In Limbo

Seven Laurel Park horses have died since Nov. 6, and eight total have perished this autumn after sustaining fractures while racing or training over the newly installed main dirt track there.

The most recent death occurred in Laurel's eighth race Nov. 28, and training has been curtailed in the three days since then. A portion of the surface has been dug up in mid-stretch to allow an influx of track maintenance consultants to try and discover if there is an underlying problem that needs to be addressed.

Laurel's next scheduled racing date is Friday, Dec. 3, but it could be in jeopardy, according to Alan Foreman, an attorney who represents the Maryland Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association.

“We've looked at every potential factor, and what we're focusing in on right now is the racing surface at Laurel,” Foreman said. “I think everybody understands that's what we're looking at, because with this red-flag cluster of fatalities, most of them were happening at about the same spot on the racetrack,” which he described as being in the middle of the homestretch.

“If there is a short-term remedy, then we'll try to implement a short-term remedy. If it's a longer-term issue, we'll have to address all of those factors. The expectation is that we're going to be able to start training on the surface this weekend, and we can resume racing next week,” Foreman said.

But, Foreman was quick to add, “We should not allow these horses to race on this surface until we feel certain that it's a safe racetrack.”

At 6 p.m. on Wednesday, Mike Rogers, the president of the racing division for The Stronach Group (TSG), which owns Laurel, told TDN via phone that he could not immediately comment on when racing would resume. He said a press release detailing that decision was in the process of being drafted by TSG executives.

No timed workouts have been allowed at Laurel since Sunday, although horses have been permitted to gallop around the cordoned-off section of the homestretch, Rogers said.

Rogers said that on Nov. 23, a “minor maintenance” issue was identified in the homestretch. “It was a minor settlement in the base that we dealt with. Our crew found it. We're dealing with it. So that was the reason that the 'dogs' were up. We pulled up the cushion, and did some maintenance to that little bit of settlement that took place….before the sixteenth pole,” he said.

“We're planning timed workouts for Saturday, Dec. 4,” Rogers said.

The cluster of fatalities is the latest safety blow at Maryland's premier racing and training venue. Laurel had ceased racing back on Apr. 11 to begin an emergency, multi-million-dollar overhaul of the main track, which got rebuilt from the base up over the course of four months in an effort to solve substantial deterioration brought on by years of near-daily usage and piecemeal repairs to fix myriad problems.

“Whenever you put a new surface down, that can create problems of its own, so you have to be careful when you come back,” Foreman said. He added that when the new main track at Laurel opened Sept. 9, “We started out fine with it.”

The Maryland Racing Commission (MRC) confirmed the names and dates of the horses who have perished by providing an equine fatalities report to TDN on Wednesday. Counting only deaths from fractures on the main track since the new surface was installed, Laurel's first catastrophic injury occurred Oct. 3, when a $10,000 maiden-claiming filly named Kyosha lost her action near the three-quarters pole in a seven-furlong sprint. The Equibase chart stated she was vanned off.

There were then no main-track fatalities until Nov. 6, when the 3-year-old filly Bella Thyme died either during or after a workout.

On Nov. 13, Bust'em Kurt, a 2-year-old colt, was racing in the first flight of a pack of horses in a MSW six-furlong sprint when he unseated his rider at the top of the stretch after suffering a fatal injury.

On Nov. 19, the fatally injured 3-year-old gelding Gale Winds was vanned off after being pulled up in the early stages of a six-furlong NW2L $10,000 claiming sprint.

On Nov. 25, the 5-year-old gelding Manicomio fell while on lead at the three-sixteenths pole. The Equibase chart stated he was euthanized on the track.

The MRC fatalities report lists a horse named Golden Sky as having died during or after a Nov. 27 workout (Equibase does not list any currently active horses of racing age under that name).

Two horses trained by prominent Maryland conditioner Dale Capuano also recently perished: One was the 2-year-old gelding American Playboy, who, according to Equibase, was “injured past the eighth pole and had to be vanned off” this past Sunday in a six-furlong allowance/optional claimer.

The other was the promising Moquist, a 3-year-old filly with a 4-for-4 record who was a half-sister to recent GI Breeders' Cup Sprint victor Aloha West (Hard Spun). According to the MRC, she died Nov. 21 during or after a workout.

Michael Hopkins, the MRC's executive director, told TDN that from his perspective, all stakeholders appear to be working together in an effort to solve whatever is causing the fatalities.

“The commission's concerned about it, number one,” Hopkins said. “Number two, TSG has brought their people in from California. [Noted track superintendent] Dennis Moore is here. The horsemen have hired John Passero, who used to be the track superintendent [in Maryland] as an independent party to give his opinion of what he sees one way or the other.

“Hopefully, they'll come to a conclusion of what is best to address any issues that the track may have,” Hopkins continued. “My understanding is that they're being collaborative [and] understanding each other's positions and points of view. [But] where that sits right now I just don't know. John has been here since Monday. Dennis came in Tuesday night, I think.”

One aspect that has been a factor in the stability and safety of previous versions of the Laurel main track could be coming into play right now: the most recent seven fatalities have all occurred since the onset of colder weather, which, when coupled with moisture, can cause unevenness to develop.

During a Nov. 10 teleconference, Laurel track superintendent Chris Bosley said that the clay content in the new dirt track “is higher than was anticipated, so we'll be adding straight silica sand, which is 100% pure and has smaller grains. It will help break up the material a little bit, help loosen up the track, and help dry it out quicker. Moisture stays underneath and the material is bonding, so we'll introduce silica sand to break it up and probably slow down the track a bit. Silica sand is aggressive–and expensive–so we're going to do the process really slow.”

Although both Hopkins and Foreman told TDN the onset of colder weather could be a contributing cause to the racetrack's problems, they both underscored that equine fatalities can be deeply multi-factorial in nature, which makes it difficult to pin down any one issue that needs to be corrected.

“They're looking at everything. They're looking at a very broad spectrum here to make sure everything is right. Just from what we see, something's not right. It doesn't feel right,” Hopkins said. “Are there problems with the horses? I don't know. We have not had the opportunity to gather the facts as far as medical histories, vet records, and those types of things off of those horses to sit down and evaluate them one by one.”

Added Foreman: “It's not the horsemen. It's not medication. It's not running bad horses. You look at everything, but you look for the common denominator. It appears to be the racing surface, and that's what we're focusing in on.”

If the fix ends up being more complicated than expected, the prospect of having to transfer racing over to Pimlico Race Course (TSG's other Maryland track some 30 miles north in Baltimore) would be a much more daunting endeavor during the winter than it was last spring, when Pimlico was getting ready for its GI Preakness S. meet but ended up hosting Maryland racing through August. At that time, all horses were moved out of Laurel and split between stabling areas at Pimlico and the Timonium fairgrounds. But at this point in the year, neither of those venues is winter-ready to host massive numbers of horses.

“The problem with Pimlico is there's no place for the horses to train, unless we allow training at Laurel,” Foreman said. “That's the problem with the consolidation of racing here–we don't have a backup if the dirt surface at Laurel is out of commission.”

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Maryland Horsemen, Veterinarians Urged To Use Online Injury Reporting Form

Horsemen and private veterinarians are reminded that the Maryland Racing Commission has an online Injury Reporting Form that should be used to report injuries during track at all Thoroughbred tracks in the state.

“This is important in our effort to track training injuries,” MRC Executive Director Mike Hopkins said. “It's also important to see if there is a pattern of a type of injury and where it occurred on the racetrack.”

The form asks for basic information as well the location on the track where the injury occurred, the type of injury, whether radiographs were taken, and the veterinary diagnosis for the injury.

The reporting of injuries during training was part of a Nov. 10 discussion among horsemen and Maryland Jockey Club officials in relation to keeping the track maintenance abreast of any issues.

The form is available online at this link: https://forms.gle/uZo7bp1Xa23zJYqW6

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2022 Maryland Dates to Include August Meet at Pimlico

The inclusion of an August race meet at Pimlico Race Course for the first time in 17 years was the only major change in the 2022 slate of racing dates approved Thursday by the Maryland Racing Commission.

Although not discussed at the Oct. 28 meeting, one obvious benefit to the mid-summer move from Laurel Park to Pimlico will be the ability to give Laurel's turf course a break during the hottest time of the year in Maryland.

Pimlico last ran in the late summer back in 2005, when its calendar also included dates in January, April through June, and August.

In 2006, Pimlico's schedule got cut to an April-through-June meet. Between 2007 and 2015 it raced just April and May. In 2016 Pimlico raced May and June, and from 2017 to 2019 the schedule was pared down to only 12 dates in May in conjunction with the GI Preakness S.

The schedule for the last two years at Pimlico got thrown into an aberrational flux.

In 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic wiped out spring racing in the state, so Pimlico raced just six dates over two weeks in September and October in conjunction with the repositioned Preakness.

In 2021, Pimlico had to pick up dates in April through August because of the emergency closure at Laurel to install a new main track.
After years of debate over what to do with the decaying Pimlico, its owner, The Stronach Group (TSG), has recently partnered with the city and the state for a an approximately $400-million redevelopment plan that will keep the Preakness in Baltimore while revitalizing the track's surrounding neighborhoods.

The Washington Post recently described the plan, which is just getting started, like this: “TSG will turn Pimlico over to the city. Its clubhouse and grandstand will be demolished and the racetrack rotated 30 degrees to free up parcels to sell for other development. A new clubhouse and event center will be erected, but horse training and stable operations will be consolidated at Laurel Park. All racing will move to Laurel, except for a short spring meet in Baltimore that will include the Preakness.”

Maryland's full 2022 Thoroughbred calendar follows:
• Laurel (147 dates over four meets): Jan. 1-Mar. 31, Apr. 1-May 8, June 1-July 31, Sept. 6-Dec. 31.
• Pimlico (21 dates over two meets): May 8-31, Aug 1-25 and Aug. 30.
• Timonium (7 dates): Aug. 25-Sept. 5.

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Maryland Horsemen Navigate New Corticosteroid Guidelines In Wake Of Lab Switch

At a virtual meeting on Sept. 28, Maryland horsemen tried to understand what the newest change in corticosteroid testing in the state will mean for them. The Maryland Racing Commission last week approved a motion to remove testing thresholds for five different corticosteroids and begin using the laboratory's limit of detection for all five drugs.

While that sounds like a big change, experts on the call said it's mostly intended to bring testing into line with the regulations the commission approved in 2019.

In the wake of the Santa Anita fatality spike of 2018-19, The Stronach Group and the California Horse Racing Board determined that backing out the last acceptable administration for intra-articular corticosteroids and other drugs was beneficial to equine safety, because it reduced the likelihood that the drugs could cloud a veterinarian's assessment of a horse pre-race and also the chance for a horse with an underlying problem to continue running. In 2019, with this background in mind, Maryland adopted Association of Racing Commissioners International (ARCI) model rules backing up the administration of intra-articular corticosteroids including prednisolone, betamethasone, isoflupredone and triamcinolone, from seven days pre-race to 14 days pre-race.

The problem, officials say, is that the testing laboratory contracted at that time — Truesdail Laboratories of Irvine, Calif., — did not change the threshold they used to determine whether a sample was positive for corticosteroids or not. From that regulation change in 2019 until April 2021 when the contract expired, it was illegal to give the drugs in the joint closer than 14 days pre-race, but the only way the commission could have caught someone was through surveillance, or if they turned in a treatment sheet showing an administration in the prohibited timeframe. Testing was only going to pick up an administration within one week.

(This wasn't the first or only issue racing jurisdictions discovered with Truesdail, which in 2015 was the subject of a quality control audit by the Indiana Horse Racing Commission which found that seven positive tests were missed over a 26-day period.)

When Industrial Laboratories of Wheat Ridge, Colo., began testing for Maryland, it implemented a threshold that would catch corticosteroids at 14 days. The lab also implemented thresholds to match the 72-hour withdrawal requirement given for intramuscular or intravenous administration of dexamethasone, which is also a corticosteroid.

That's when there were a handful of high-profile positives, including one from trainer Claudio Gonzalez. Gonzalez and others told the commission they had been giving dexamethasone inside the 72-hour window but at a lower dose and had previously had no trouble with positives.

The trouble with using a threshold, according to Racing Medication and Testing Consortium executive director Dr. Mary Scollay and The Stronach Group's equine medical director Dr. Dionne Benson, is people get focused on the threshold itself. (And some trainers like Gonzalez figure out how to beat thresholds by giving lesser doses closer in to races.) What regulators are hoping trainers will begin doing instead is following withdrawal guidelines.

“It quite frankly is the best and only way to regulate these drugs,” said Alan Foreman, chairman of the Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association.

By removing thresholds, track officials and the commission believe they can more precisely recognize when someone has violated administration rules. Now, these corticosteroids will be tested at the limit of laboratory detection — which the laboratory generally does not want to publish. All the public knows is that limit of detection is greater than 0. British data suggests that the safest timeframe for IV or IM dexamethasone administration in a “limit of detection” scenario is five days. Scollay stressed that it isn't illegal for trainers to give that drug through either IV or IM injection at 72 hours, but that could come with an increased risk of a positive test. It's also true, however, that different labs have different limits of detection, and that should be worrying to horsemen who travel.

“You should not, with confidence, cross state lines and say I was giving it at 72 hours in Maryland and I'm going to be ok in California doing it the same way, because chances are you may not,” she said. “Their limit of detection may be lower … that's where the five-day guidance comes in. It gives you that added safety for labs that may have a lower limit of detection.”

Intra-articular corticosteroid injections are regulated by date of administration, not lab results, though lab results can help regulators catch someone breaking the rules on those.

According to Benson, these changes will go into effect Nov. 2. At that point, the lab will begin reporting whatever corticosteroids it can see in a sample.

“The risk [of a positive test] is no different than it has been,” said veterinarian Dr. Tom Bowman, who chairs the Equine Safety Health and Welfare Advisory Committee of the Maryland Racing Commission. “The level of awareness [is] — you now know that five days out is safer than three days.”

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