Kodi Bear’s Go Bears Go Wins the Railway

Runner-up in a gruelling renewal of the G2 Norfolk S. at Royal Ascot last Thursday, Go Bears Go (Ire) (Kodi Bear {Ire}) demonstrated his toughness to back up quickly and edge out the G3 Marble Hill S. first and second Castle Star (Ire) (Starspangledbanner {Aus}) and Masseto (GB) (Territories {Ire}) in a strong edition of The Curragh's G2 GAIN Railway S. on Saturday. Shadowing the leader The Acropolis (Ire) (Churchill {Ire}) in second throughout, the 17-2 shot who sported the Amo Racing silks was in front two out and refused to buckle from there under Rossa Ryan as he registered a 1 1/4-length success from Castle Star, with the same margin back to Masseto in third. TDN Rising Star Dr Zempf (GB) (Dark Angel {Ire}) was a neck away in fourth.

Successful from the front on debut over five furlongs at Ascot May 8, Go Bears Go was the winner on his side as the stand's-side runner Perfect Power (Ire) (Ardad {Ire}) swooped late in the Norfolk, so he has yet to be beaten when directly engaged in a race. Rossa Ryan was understandably delighted to mark his return from recent injury with the high-profile win. “He ran a super race in the Norfolk–he was just the wrong side,” he said. “We were so positive that he'd stay six furlongs and it was a big toss-up before Ascot between the Norfolk and the Coventry. Dave [Loughnane] took a massive risk coming here a week later, so we're glad it's paid off. He's a top-class sprinter in the making, I think. He's got the best attitude and a big up to Robson Aguiar and his team, who did prep this lad for the breeze-ups and they prep a good few of our yearlings. They did a fantastic job with him. To David Loughnane and all his team, they've been rock-solid. I have the easy job of steering them and I can only say thanks to everybody. I have to give a massive thanks to my boss Kia [Joorabchian] and everyone at Amo Racing, because they had the faith in me to get back on these on such a big weekend and do it.”

Go Bears Go is the last known foal out of In Dubai (Giant's Causeway), a daughter of Bahr (GB) (Generous {Ire}) who captured the G2 Ribblesdale S. and G3 Musidora S. and was runner-up in the G1 Epsom Oaks and third in the G1 Irish Oaks. She was responsible for the G1 Prix de l'Opera and GI Flower Bowl Invitational heroine Nahrain (GB) (Selkirk), who in turn produced the G1 Dubai Turf, G1 Caulfield S. and G1 Grosser Dallmayr-Preis hero Benbatl (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}). Bahr is also the ancestress of the G3 Palace House S. winner Far Above (Ire) (Farhh {GB}).

Saturday, Curragh, Ireland
GAIN RAILWAY S.-G2, €100,000, Curragh, 6-26, 2yo, 6fT, 1:12.80, gd.
1–GO BEARS GO (IRE), 131, c, 2, by Kodi Bear (Ire)
1st Dam: In Dubai, by Giant's Causeway
2nd Dam: Bahr (GB), by Generous (Ire)
3rd Dam: Lady of the Sea, by Mill Reef
1ST BLACK-TYPE WIN; 1ST GROUP WIN. (£50,000 Ylg '20 TATIRY; 150,000gns 2yo '21 TATBRE). O-Amo Racing Ltd & P Waney; B-Micheal D Ryan (IRE); T-David Loughnane; J-Rossa Ryan. €60,000. Lifetime Record: GSP-Eng, 3-2-1-0, $104,216. Werk Nick Rating: A+. Click for the eNicks report & 5-cross pedigree.
2–Castle Star (Ire), 131, c, 2, Starspangledbanner (Aus)–Awohaam (Ire), by Iffraaj (GB). O-Craig Bernick & Antony Beck; B-Churchtown Bloodstock, Grouseridge & Carhue (IRE); T-Fozzy Stack. €20,000.
3–Masseto (GB), 131, c, 2, Territories (Ire)–Never Change (Ire), by New Approach (Ire). (62,000gns Wlg '19 TATFOA; 65,000gns Ylg '20 TATOCT). O-Leonard Green; B-Ciaran Paterson (GB); T-Donnacha O'Brien. €10,000.
Margins: 1 1/4, 1 1/4, NK. Odds: 8.50, 3.50, 7.50.
Also Ran: Dr Zempf (GB), Twilight Jet (Ire), Andreas Vesalius (Ire), Cadamosto (Ire), The Acropolis (Ire), The Entertainer (Ire), Pinar Del Rio (GB), Albion Square (GB), Dukebox (Ire), Strapped (Ire), Arges (Ire). Click for the Racing Post result or the free Equineline.com catalogue-style pedigree.

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Defining Moment

How High Definition (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) would have fared at Epsom will forever be the stuff of conjecture, but Saturday sees Ballydoyle's TDN Rising Star return to his safe hunting ground of The Curragh to prove his worth in the G1 Dubai Duty Free Irish Derby. Renowned for his trademark late flourish at two, he swooped from rear to collar Wordsworth (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) on debut over a mile here in August before repeating the trick in the G2 Beresford S. the following month. If his comeback effort when third in the G2 Dante S. over an extended 10 furlongs at York May 13 is taken at face value, he will need to find extra to ward off the kind of strong challenge that has been lacking in this Classic in recent times. “I think he's versatile ground-wise, but we think the better the ground, the better it will suit him,” commented Aidan O'Brien, who has won this a staggering 14 times since 1997.

Since 2006, Ballydoyle have been denied on only four occasions, with the biggest gap between victories coming from 2014 to 2017 while the operation have also enjoyed an amazing seven clean sweeps of the first three places including in the last two renewals. It falls on Van Gogh (American Pharoah) and the aforementioned Wordsworth to attempt a repeat this time, with the two outsiders Arturo Toscanini (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) and Matchless (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) thrown in for good measure. Van Gogh was third behind Mac Swiney (Ire) (New Approach {Ire}) in the G1 Irish 2000 Guineas here May 22 before finishing 10th under Colin Keane in the G1 Prix du Jockey Club at Chantilly June 6, while Wordsworth is backed up 10 days after his second in the G2 Queen's Vase at Royal Ascot.

“It's Van Gogh's first time over a mile and a half. We were happy with his run in France–he didn't have a good draw, but we thought he ran very well,” O'Brien added. “Wordsworth is in good form. He only ran in Ascot last week, but he seems to have come out of the race well. We always thought he would stay well. It was the first time he ran over that distance in Ascot and obviously his brother [Kew Gardens] stayed very well.”

Unusually, none of the Ballydoyle representatives were in action at Epsom, with Bolshoi Ballet (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}) tasked to go it alone. In the June 5 Derby, Amo Racing's Mojo Star (Ire) (Sea the Stars {Ire}) was clear of Godolphin's Hurricane Lane (Ire) (Frankel {GB}) and Mac Swiney, but Hurricane Lane holds High Definition on the form of his Dante success and he lost both front shoes at Epsom. Since 2000, there have been 15 winners of this that came from the Derby and Charlie Appleby is hoping that Hurricane Lane can continue to build on his early promise. “We were pleased with Hurricane Lane's effort at Epsom Downs and he has more experience under his belt going into this,” he said. “He was an inexperienced horse going into the Derby and it may have found him out slightly, but he has definitely sharpened up for the run. The style of the track at the Curragh should suit him better and, if he can repeat his Derby effort, it will certainly make him very competitive.”

Jim Bolger feels that Mac Swiney has more to offer than he did in the Derby and said, “I don't believe we saw the best of him at Epsom.  It was just one of those runs, that I don't think on the day he was on top of his game so I'm hopeful he can reverse the placings with the ones that finished in front of him. It won't be easily-won, but we feel we have a fighter on our hands and hopefully he'll be 100 per-cent on Saturday. If he is, I don't expect him to be too far away.”

Since 1994, there has been only one British-trained winner in Jack Hobbs (GB) (Halling) which does not bode well for Ballylinch Stud and Aquis Farm's Lone Eagle (Ire) (Galileo {Ire}), but the Martyn Meade representative is more than worthy of his place in this line-up. Fourth when considered under-par in the notorious Apr. 23 G3 Sandown Classic Trial, he went on to give that race's runner-up Yibir (GB) (Dubawi {Ire}) five pounds and a four-length beating in Goodwood's Listed Cocked Hat S. over an extended 11 furlongs May 21. Denied his opportunity at Epsom due to a dirty scope, he is a fascinating contender here. “We couldn't be happier with him,” Meade said. “It's not easy with all the travelling and everything, but he's going in as a fresh horse, having missed Epsom and we've got a good man on his back to run against the Irish. What will be will be, but it would be nice to think if he runs up to his best he should have a really good chance.”

Elsewhere on the card, the G2 GAIN Railway S. sees Craig Bernick and Antony Beck's Castle Star (Ire) (Starspangledbanner {Aus}) bid to confirm the form of his ready defeat of Masseto (GB) (Territories {Ire}) in the course-and-distance G3 Marble Hill S. May 22. The runner-up has since franked the form by finishing 1 3/4-lengths fourth in the G2 Coventry S. at Royal Ascot last Tuesday, where the re-opposing The Acropolis (Ire) (Churchill {Ire}) was ninth. Castle Star's trainer Fozzy Stack said, “It looks a strong renewal, but he's got a nice draw and he seems in good order, so we're hopeful of a good run. The ground won't be as soft as it was in the Marble Hill, but I don't see that being a problem for him.”

Aidan O'Brien, who has saddled 13 winners of this, needs one more to equal the record of Dr Vincent O'Brien and along with The Acropolis also has a key contender in Cadamosto (Ire) (No Nay Never). He was fourth in last Thursday's G2 Norfolk S. at Royal Ascot and is the pick of Ryan Moore. “The Ascot run was Cadamosto's first for a good while and he seems to have taken it well,” the trainer said. “The Acropolis ran well at Ascot. He just got a little bit hampered about a furlong and a half down, but he ran well.” Moore added, “He has plenty of pace, but the step up to six furlongs should be fine here given the way he finished off his race at Ascot. The Acropolis's run in the Coventry can also be marked up given he was not ideally drawn there and it wouldn't surprise me at all if he were to run very well.”

David Loughnane pitches the Norfolk runner-up Go Bears Go (Ire) (Kodi Bear {Ire}) back into action and he said, “He came out of Ascot really well, so we said we'd take a crack at it. If he turns up in the same form as he went to Ascot, I think he'll put up a big show. I still very much believe he's the best we've trained and I think we've plenty to look forward to with him.” Given the strength in depth of this edition, Peter Brant's TDN Rising Star Dr Zempf (GB) (Dark Angel {Ire}) will have to be every bit as good as looked on his winning debut over this track and trip June 2. The form of that contest has subsequently been boosted and jockey Colin Keane is expecting a bold show. “He looked nice on his first start–he was a good winner I thought on the day,” he said. “He seems to be training well for the race. It looks a very good renewal, but hopefully he can give a good account of himself. Siskin had won his maiden and the Marble Hill en route to the Railway, whereas this horse has only had the one run. We'll know where we stand after Saturday, I think.”

In the G3 ARM Holding International S., Jessie Harrington relaunches Cadillac (Ire) (Lope de Vega {Ire}) after his lengthy absence. Fourth in the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf at Keeneland in November, Alpha Racing's G2 Champions Juvenile S. winner is upped in trip to 10 furlongs to meets two smart older fillies and mares in Newtown Anner Stud Farm's June 9 G3 Munster Oaks winner Thunder Kiss (Ire) (Night of Thunder {Ire}) and the May 23 G1 Tattersalls Gold Cup third True Self (Ire) (Oscar {Ire}).

There is also group action on Newcastle's Northumberland Plate card, with Friday's G1 Commonwealth Cup withdrawal Diligent Harry (GB) (Due Diligence) taking on his elders in the six-furlong G3 William Hill Chipchase S. on the Tapeta. Runner-up to the subsequent G3 Pavilion S., G2 Sandy Lane S. and Wokingham H. winner Rohaan (Ire) (Mayson {GB}) at Lingfield Mar. 10, the 3-year-old went on to capture the Apr. 2 3-Year-Old All-Weather Championships Conditions S. there and trainer Clive Cox believes he has what it takes to take a hand in competitive sprints like this. “Conditions didn't allow us to run at Ascot and that was it,” he said. “He's in good form. He's proven on the all-weather and it's a good step to take at this point.”

Diligent Harry meets two smart Shadwell performers in last year's G3 Hackwood S. winner Tabdeed (GB) (Havana Gold {Ire}) and Khuzaam (Kitten's Joy), who impressed when winning the Apr. 2 All-Weather Mile Championships Conditions S. at Lingfield before finishing last of four in the Apr. 23 G3 Sandown Mile. The latter's trainer Roger Varian is dropping him back in trip and said, “He has loads of pace. He won over seven furlongs at Chelmsford before stepping up to the mile at Lingfield. His work is as good as ever and a stiff six furlongs at Newcastle on the Tapeta should suit him. It's an experiment, but it's an interesting one.”

Newmarket's July Course is in full swing again and Saturday's action sees the 2019 G1 St Leger hero Logician (GB) (Frankel {GB}) bid to get back to winning ways in the Listed Fred Archer S. Frankie is in action at The Curragh, so Rab Havlin takes the mount on the 5-year-old and he said, “It is great to get back on him and he is a nice horse to pick up. I rode him on Wednesday and he felt in great shape and has come on since the last day. He is a big horse that is hard to get fit and the whole way through it has always taken a run to get him right. He seems to have come out of his race the right way. It is well-documented that he nearly died. The fact they managed to get him back and keep him alive is a massive achievement, let alone to get him back racing. If there was any time that he didn't want to race again, we wouldn't have risked it but he is showing great enthusiasm for the game again and let's hope it continues. There are a few horses in there that are decent on their day but he is clear on ratings and we are hoping for a big run.”

In the seven-furlong G3 Criterion S., TDN Rising Star Kinross (GB) (Kingman {GB}) looks to defy a three-pound penalty for his success in the G3 John of Gaunt S. at Haydock May 29 and trainer Ralph Beckett is hoping he has finally got the talented 4-year-old on track. “Kinross is in great shape. It is a race that he has got a penalty in, but it is a race that really suits him,” he commented. “I've been very happy with him since Haydock, where he looked back to his old self. He did it really well the last day and we will be sticking to seven furlongs with him. I think gelding him has been a significant help. Hopefully this is a stepping stone to bigger and better things.” Charlie Appleby saddles the similarly smart Royal Crusade (GB) (Shamardal), who beat Glen Shiel (GB) (Pivotal {GB}) in the six-furlong G3 Prix de Ris-Orangis at Deauville last July and was last seen finishing seventh in the Mar. 27 G1 Al Quoz Sprint. “Royal Crusade was a little disappointing in Dubai, but has definitely been training better since coming back to Newmarket,” he said. “It's his first time over this distance since his two-year-old days but, if you look at the pick of his form, he should be bang there. We hoped that he would be a real out-and-out sprinter, but he doesn't seem to have that natural dash about him and looks like a seven-furlong horse these days.”

In the Listed Maureen Brittain Memorial Empress Fillies' S., Abdullah Saeed Al Naboodah's impressive June 15 Thirsk novice scorer Najat (GB) (Ardad {Ire}) takes on the likes of Highclere Thoroughbred Racing's TDN Rising Star Cachet (Ire) (Aclaim {Ire}).  Fifth and not disgraced in Friday's G3 Albany S. at Royal Ascot, the latter is back over the six-furlong trip of her impressive winning debut on the Rowley Mile course May 15 and trainer George Boughey said, “It is a quick turnaround from Royal Ascot, but she has come out of that race in great shape. I walked the track on Thursday and it is far quicker than at Ascot where it was an extreme of ground. It probably found her out and it was only her ability that got her home. She has got a great attitude and she showed that on debut when quickening away well on better ground on the Rowley Mile and the ground is closer to that here. She will improve when she goes up to seven, but hopefully she can get some black-type here.”

Ed Crisford said of Najat, “She won very well first time up at Thirsk and she is deserving of her place in a stakes race and this looked a suitable option. She was breezing nicely before her debut, but I like the way she put the race to bed quickly at Thirsk. The way she won, there could be a lot of upsides to her.”

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Chrono Genesis Defends Title In Takarazuka Kinen

Japan stages a pair of 'all-star' races each season, the G1 Takarazuka Kinen in early summer and the G1 Arima Kinen at year's end, giving fans a chance to vote for their favourite runners. The last four runnings of these events have been won by females–Lys Gracieux (Jpn) completed the double in 2019, while Chrono Genesis (Jpn) (Bago {Fr}) repeated the feat last year. The latter, who scored by six lengths last June, is back to defend her title in the final top-level test of the first half of the season, which offers the winner a fees-paid berth into the GI Breeders' Cup Turf at Del Mar in November.

Winner of half of her 14 career trips to the post, the gray mare was a sound third to Almond Eye (Jpn) (Lord Kanaloa {Jpn}) in the G1 Tenno Sho (Autumn) over 2000 metres last November before taking the 12 1/2-furlong Arima Kinen by a neck Dec. 27. She was most recently beaten a neck into second by Mishriff (Ire) (Make Believe {GB}) in the Mar. 27 G1 Dubai Sheema Classic (2410m), the form of which was franked when Loves Only You (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}) returned to take the G1 FWD QE II Cup in Hong Kong.

“She got bumped quite badly last time in the Dubai Sheema Classic and it was an unlucky race for her, but she still ran well,” her trainer Takashi Saito said. “She came back to the stable on June 2, and in her first piece of work after that, she seemed a little heavy, but soon got switched on in her usual way of doing things.”

Further female power comes in the form of Lei Papale (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}), who has yet to taste defeat in her six career trips to the post to date. Winner in Group 3 company at the tail end of her 3-year-old season, the bay got the litmus test in the G1 Osaka Hai over a rain-affected turf course at Hanshin Apr. 4, but she proved more than equal to the task in scoring by four lengths from Mozu Bello (Jpn) (Deep Brillante {Jpn}), with the likes of Triple Crown hero Contrail (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}) and champion Gran Alegria (Jpn) (Deep Impact {Jpn}) left further back in her wake.

Aristoteles (Jpn) (Epiphaneia {Jpn}) finished first or second in his first seven starts, then put a real scare into Contrail in the G1 Kikuka Sho (3000m), going down to a narrow defeat in that final leg of the Triple Crown last October. A Group 2 winner to begin this season, he exits a fourth in the May 2 G1 Tenno Sho (Spring) over two miles of this course. Kiseki (Jpn) (Rulership {Jpn}), winless since the 2017 Kikuka Sho, was runner-up in this event in each of the last two seasons.

Unicorn Lion (Ire) (No Nay Never) cost 850,000gns at Tattersalls October in 2017 and enters the Takarazuka Kinen on a two-race winning streak, including a 19-1 upset of the G3 Naruo Kinen at Chukyo June 5.

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EFTBA At Forefront Of Easing Mare Movements

The 2021 breeding season was hit by the perfect storm of ongoing Covid travel restrictions and the end of the transition period that meant Britain's exit from the European Union is now complete.

Brexit has been a thorn in the industry's side for five years. For those in Britain who were opposed to it, it has long been considered a gratuitous act of economic self-harm for the country, but the damage done is not restricted to that island. Brexit has affected modes of operation for untold businesses within neighbouring European countries, and it has destroyed what has for more than 40 years helped to maintain a largely disease-free European Thoroughbred breeding herd: the Tripartite Agreement (TPA).

Increased red tape surrounding equine transportation between the UK and the EU post-Brexit, not to mention the uncertainty of potential delays at the borders, has led to a decrease in the movement of breeding stock of more than 60% this year among the former TPA countries. Keeping mares at home and using domestic stallions is understandable amid such turmoil, but in an industry that prides itself on its increasing globalisation, this is clearly not a situation which can be allowed to continue.

Breeders can be reassured, however, that work behind the scenes in regard to easing current restrictions brought about by the demise of the TPA has continued apace. At the forefront of these discussions and working parties is the industrious Dr Des Leadon, Chairman of the Veterinary Advisory Committee of the European Federation of Thoroughbred Breeders' Associations (EFTBA).

In this role, Leadon and EFTBA chairman Joe Hernon are in close contact not just with their colleagues in Ireland, but with representatives of the 20 association members in Britain, France, Germany and beyond, as well as national governments.

“The International Codes of Practice for the control of equine infectious diseases were the basis of the TPA, and the TPA could never have existed without these codes. The codes ensure that mares can only be covered if they have certificates from accredited laboratories to state that they are free from CEM, EVA and EIA. That industry-led system of testing and certification of freedom was recognised by the governments of the UK, Ireland and France over 40 years ago as the basis for the Tripartite Agreement and it is one of the most effective, proven disease-control systems that has ever been developed,” Leadon explained.

“With Brexit, the Tripartite Agreement was forfeited and we struggled to find something we could use in a way that we had used the TPA–not as a substitute but as something new. There is a degree of serendipity in this, however, because of the evolution of the digital passport. Weatherbys has played a pioneering role in the development of the ePassport, which will carry the horse's identity, pedigree and vaccine records, but the flexibility of that platform allows for the incorporation of the certificates of freedom from CEM, EIA and EVA.”

The Weatherbys ePassport, which is now available as an app and can be used by owners, breeders, stud farm managers and vets, came into existence last year in Ireland and the UK. It has been particularly useful in regard to the Return to Racing protocols set out in July 2020 with its facility to show the vaccination records of racehorses. The next step for the breeding industry will be the incorporation of that facility for breeding stock who can be denoted as being a 'High Health Breeding (HHB)' animal.

This term was officially approved at Wednesday's meeting of the International Codes of Practice Committee. Leadon will now be conferring with Simon Cooper of the International Stud Book Committee (ISBC) and Russell Ferris, chief executive of Weatherbys, with a view to progressing the insertion of this term into the ePassport format.

“Weatherbys have been in dialogue with EFTBA and its national member associations on the intrinsic value of the Weatherbys ePassport which is the first digital passport for equidae globally,” Ferris explained. “The Weatherbys ePassport will complement the paper passport for all Thoroughbred foals registered in the UK and Ireland this year. The incorporation of HHB into the ePassport is technically feasible and would be a value add once adopted and applied for the movement of elite breeding stock.”

Adoption of the HHB status will be discussed at EFTBA's meeting on July 5 with the hope being that it will approved in time for representation to be made to national governments, the EU, and the OIE , otherwise known as the World Organisation for Animal Health.

“The OIE meeting will take place in October and so we want to have national governments' and EU Commission's acceptance of HHB in place, ready for tabling in October,” said Leadon. “That narrow window of opportunity is an important one because there has been a significant decrease in exchanges of breeding stock between the former tripartite countries, which is highly damaging to the industry. As an industry we are reliant on self help and this is our way of solving difficulties for the regulators.”

He continued, “Adoption in October by the OIE is crucial because our French colleagues are expressing anxiety that the initiation of the UK's border control posts in January of next year will further compromise the existing damage the industry has suffered. There's an awful lot of work that has gone into this development by the EFTBA advisory board–and I'd like to pay a tribute to all of its members–and of course there's work been done by member associations as well.”

With no extra cost implication for the breeder, the hope is that uploading the requisite certificates to the ePassport will negate the current need for lengthy veterinary-approved documents to accompany the mares. Simply, they should be able to be designated as having HHB status.

“It is a simple, straightforward recognition of the system that already exists, and the International Codes of Practice have served the [Thoroughbred] industry very well. Now that it is recognised as the truly International code of practice it transcends international boundaries, because these certificates can only be issued by laboratories that are recognised by national governments,” Leadon added.

“In an era in which animal welfare is rightly such a high priority, then that priority must include an awareness among the authorities of the need to avoid unnecessary delays [when travelling mares] and this ePassport would certainly do that.”

Leadon is confident that the collective desire among the various breeders' associations for the development of this system will help to forge a smooth path for its adoption provided there is sufficient attention from the national authorities.

“I hear much about 'post-divorce' symptoms associated with Brexit and I can say that in my interactions with the UK government and the European governments I see a willingness to sort problems out,” he said.

“The International Codes of Practice go beyond the Irish Sea interface, they also include our friends in France and importantly into Germany and Italy as well. They are truly international codes. I think our scrutiny of health standards in breeding are even higher than they are in racing, so to find ourselves in a situation in which racehorses can move more easily than breeding stock at present is one that needs resolving. EFTBA is perfect for the this as it's a truly pan-European association. Its title does not imply limiting its horizons solely to countries that are membersof the European Union. It includes Switzerland, Norway and the United Kingdom, which are not EU members, but we are all still European countries working towards common goals in Europe.”

He added, “EFTBA is also working with the International Horse Sports Confederation (IHSC), which conjoins the IFHA (International Federation of Horseracing Authorities) and the FEI (International Equestrian Federation) and is an OIE member. so it is well placed to lobby the OIE on the HHB concept and for the wider benefit of our industry.”

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