‘You Can’t Bet Against Yourself’: Leading Parx Racing Jockey Mychel Sanchez Suspended

Jockey Mychel J. Sanchez was removed from his mounts at Laurel Park in Maryland on Friday after officials there learned the former leading rider at Parx Racing in Bensalem, Pa., has been suspended by the Pennsylvania Horse Racing Commission.

J. Michael Hopkins, executive director of the Maryland Racing Commission said he was notified that Sanchez has been suspended 60 days by Pennsylvania stewards on Thursday, Jan. 20, for wagering on horse races.

Pressed for specifics, Hopkins said, “You can't bet against yourself.”

The Pennsylvania Horse Racing Commission has yet to confirm the suspension and no recent rulings against Sanchez are posted on the commission's website.

Hopkins said the Maryland Racing Commission has already begun its own investigation of Sanchez, who has been riding at Parx, Laurel Park, Aqueduct and Gulfstream Park in recent months. His biggest win came at Aqueduct aboard Hopeful Treasure in the Grade 3 Fall Highweight Handicap  on Nov. 28.

Hopkins said Maryland could issue its own suspension of the jockey when the investigation is concluded.

A native of Venezuela where his father, brother and an uncle were jockeys, Sanchez began riding in the U.S. in 2013. He tied for leading jockey at Parx in 2019 and led the standings there in 2020. In 2021 he branched out to ride at Monmouth and elsewhere in the northeast and was a top 10 rider at Monmouth, Laurel Park and Parx Racing meets. Since 2013 he's won 940 races from 6,097 mounts for total earnings of $30.4 million.

Sanchez was named on three mounts Friday at Laurel. Two were scratched and he was removed from the third mount by stewards. He was named on one horse Saturday at Laurel and on multiple mounts Jan. 24-25-26 at Parx.

He last rode at Parx Racing on Jan. 19, winning with three of his six mounts.

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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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Community Meeting To Discuss Maryland’s Stricter Corticosteroid Regulation Set For Sept. 28

Maryland racing stakeholders and regulators have scheduled an online community forum to discuss and answer questions regarding the action by the Maryland Racing Commission to remove testing threshold levels for five corticosteroids.

The Zoom webinar meeting will be held on Tuesday, Sept. 28 at Noon eastern.

Participants include MRC Executive Director Mike Hopkins; MRC member Dr. Thomas Bowman, who chairs the commission's Equine Safety, Health and Welfare Advisory Committee; Dr. Dionne Benson, Chief Veterinary Officer for 1/ST RACING (The Stronach Group); Dr. Mary Scollay, Executive Director of the Racing Medication and Testing Consortium and Alan Foreman, Maryland Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association general counsel and Chief Executive Officer of the THA.

The MRC, upon the recommendation of the advisory committee chaired by Bowman, approved a motion to modify a regulation on the five corticosteroids to eliminate testing threshold levels and employ limit of detection—the lowest level at which a laboratory can, with confidence, detect a substance in a sample.

The change will be filed with emergency status and there will be a public comment period. It is anticipated the updated regulation will be implemented Nov. 1, Hopkins said.

The five corticosteroids are dexamethasone, prednisolone, betamethasone, isoflupredone and triamcinolone. The current 14-day stand-down period for intra-articular injections will remain in place under 2019 model rules approved by the Association of Racing Commissioners International and RMTC.

The advisory committee discussed the proposal at a Sept. 8 meeting as a result of several dexamethasone positives and reports the corticosteroid was being regularly administered by some veterinarians at 48 hours before a race at a lower dose rather than the RMTC-recommended 72-hour withdrawal time at the regular dose.

The webinar is open to all Maryland horsemen and practicing veterinarians. Advance registration is required to join by clicking here.

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Same Rules, New Lab: Maryland’s Leading Trainer Gonzalez Notified Of Two Dexamethasone Positives

Claudio Gonzalez, Maryland's leading trainer for the last four years, scratched all six of his runners entered to race on Sunday, July 4, at Pimlico racetrack in Baltimore, Md., after being notified of two positive tests for the corticosteroid dexamethasone.

Gonzalez said he learned of the positive tests on Saturday, July 3. That night, the Maryland Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association issued the following advisory to trainers:

“Horsemen are advised of the following regarding the use of dexamethasone, a commonly used corticosteroid with anti-inflammatory properties.

“Dexamethasone has a 72-HOUR withdrawal guideline for intramuscular and intravenous administration of dexamethasone sodium phosphate or oral administration of dexamethasone. The dosing specification is 0.05 milligrams per kilogram regardless of the route of administration.

“Under the Association of Racing Commissioners International Uniform Classification Guidelines and Recommended Penalties Model Rules, dexamethasone is a Class 4 substance in the Class C penalty category. In Maryland, a first offense carries a minimum fine of $1,000 absent mitigating circumstances for a trainer and disqualification of the horse and loss of purse.”

Gonzalez admitted that the veterinarians he employs were giving the anti-inflammatory at 48 hours, but with a lower dose.

“The recommendation is 72 hours and 22 milligrams,” said Gonzalez. (Note:  the .05 milligram per kilogram dosing specification converts to about 22 milligrams for a 1,000-pound horse.) “We go 48 hours and give only 10 (milligrams). We give half at two days. Since 2014, they (the vets) have done the same. They've treated 3,000 horses a year from 2014 and never had one positive in Maryland until now.”

These would be the first medication charges against Gonzalez since he received a warning in 2016 for an overage of the ulcer treatment, omeprazole – the only medication violation on his record at www.thoroughbredrulings.com.

Dexamethasone guidelines in Maryland have not changed recently, according to J. Michael Hopkins, executive director of the Maryland Racing Commission.

What has changed is Maryland's official testing lab. Hopkins said when the contract with Truesdail Laboratories of Irvine, Calif., expired in April 2021, the commission switched to Industrial Laboratories in Wheat Ridge, Colo. No formal announcement or advisory on the change of labs was issued by the commission or Maryland Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association.

“They changed the lab,” said Gonzalez. “It can be a big difference.”

Several states have now dropped Truesdail as their official testing laboratory since a 2015 quality control audit by the Indiana Horse Racing Commission found that seven positive tests were missed over a 26-day period, including two for betamethasone. Indiana switched to Industrial, as did the West Virginia Racing Commission. The Arkansas Racing Commission had its testing shifted to Industrial after Truesdail's accreditation was suspended in April 2020 by the Racing Medication and Testing Consortium. Truesdail  has not sought to re-gain its RMTC accreditation.

Shortly after the switch from Truesdail to Industrial, Hopkins said, an unspecified number of positives for Amicar, an adjunct bleeder medication, were called. The Maryland Thoroughbred Horsemen's Association then issued the following advisory:

“Effective immediately, horsemen are urged to discontinue the use of any and all adjunct bleeder medications for horses in training, including in particular, aminocaproic acid—commonly called Amicar.

“Amicar and several other adjunct bleeder medications were placed on the Prohibited List in 2013 under the Association of Racing Commissioners International Uniform Classification Guidelines for Foreign Substances and Recommended Penalties Model Code and the National Uniform Medication Program. Aminocaproic acid, for example is a Class 4 substance and penalty Class C.

“It is important to understand that these medications cannot be regulated by withdrawal time guidance and/or a testing threshold and their use, no matter how far in advance of a race, may trigger a positive post-race test.

“Any trainer who chooses to continue the use of these medications for training in the future will run the risk of a post-race positive test.”

Hopkins said he couldn't comment on any specifics involving the Amicar or dexamethasone positives because of ongoing investigations.

Gonzalez is leading the current Laurel and Pimlico meeting with 27 wins from 110 starts, more than doubling the number of wins by his closest pursuers. Gonzalez said he plans to ask for a split sample to confirm the findings by Industrial and fight the charges if a formal complaint is filed against him.

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