In Sweden, It’s a Dog Versus Dopers

In Swedish racing, there's a new tool being used to catch drug cheats, one with four legs and a wet nose.

A 2 1/2-year-old Giant Schnauzer named Lykke (Swedish for happiness) has been put to work by the Swedish Trotting Association (ST) as part of its efforts to wipe out cheating. Lykke is able to detect the presence of illegal substances in a horse by smelling their urine.

“It is impossible to say how common doping would be in Swedish trotting, but it would be naive of me to think that doping does not exist at all,” said Mattias Falkbage, head of investigations at Swedish Trotting. “We take our anti-doping work very seriously and Lykke is our newest tool in the fight against doping.”

Lykke is not yet being used with Thoroughbreds, which is a minor sport in Sweden and far less prevalent than Standardbred racing.

Owned and trained by Fia Mardfelt, Lykke was enrolled in the Hundcampus dog training program, where dogs are taught during a one-year program to smell for such things as explosives, illegal human drugs and gas leaks. It was Mardfelt's idea to teach Lykke to look for illegal drugs in horses and she reached out to Swedish Trotting with a proposal that they enlist the dog in the fight against dopers.

“Lykke has proven to have all the qualities needed for a dog that will work with search assignments at this level,” Mardfelt said. “His personal qualities combined with an enormous analytical ability make him a fantastic tool.”

Falkbage and his team liked the idea and brought Lykke on board in the spring and began training him specifically to find drugs in horses. Lykke officially began his duties about three weeks ago. His handlers use him at the racetrack on race days and also at training centers, where Lykke is used for out-of-competition testing.

“That's what is unique, I haven't read about any other dogs that smell urine in that way,” Falkbage said. “If the dog smells a substance in the urine, it makes a mark and then we take samples, blood, urine, hair. The dog points us in the right direction so far as who we should test. What he does is not enough to get a positive in the courts. We have to take samples also. Lykke just points the way for us.”

Agneta Sandberg, an animal welfare specialist with Swedish Trotting, said Lykke is just getting started.

“Since the spring Lykke has been trained in several preparations and we will train more and more as time goes on. Lykke's capacity is large and there are almost no restrictions for his sensitive nose,” she said.

Lykke is just one tool for a sport intent on ending cheating and has already implemented many of the tools the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) said it will use in U.S. Thoroughbred racing when and if it is put in charge of policing the sport. Samples are being frozen and retested at a later date in the hope that new tests are developed to find previously undetectable substances. A tip line has been installed and whistle blowers are encouraged. Samples are being sent to international labs. Additional manpower has been brought in to ramp up the enforcement efforts and out-of-competition tests are done frequently.

“It should be taboo and shameful to try to give oneself benefits by cheating through doping. Those who try to dope, they should know that we are working against them and we will never stop working against them. They should feel that we are there. They should feel our presence,” Falkbage said.

Having Lykke on board is a big help.

“A lot of people in Sweden are talking about this,” Falkbage said. “Anyone who tries to cheat with the horse, they are probably scared now. They don't know how much this dog can find.”

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Sweden: Local Government’s Ban On Driver’s Whip Use Could Set Dangerous Precedent

A harness racing driver in Sweden is at the center of a unique controversy this week: his local municipal government, rather than the sport's governing body, has handed the driver a one-year ban from using the whip anywhere in Sweden, reports Harness Racing Update.

Joakim Lövgren drove his trainee Picadilly at Jägersro in April, after which veterinarians noticed marks on the horse's body consistent with whip use. By rule, the veterinarians must report those marks to the county board in which the races were held.

The board responded with a $420 fine and a 10-day suspension for Lövgren, as well as the one-year ban from using the whip.

Sweden has some of the strictest whip use regulations in the world, and the harness racing governing body, Svensk Travsport, is diligent about punishing those who break those regulations. Nonetheless, the local government decided to hand down a major whip ban, a decision which could have worldwide implications for horse racing if other governments follow suit.

Read more at Harness Racing Update.

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Women Jockeys’ World Cup Cancelled For Second Year

The Women Jockey's World Cup has been cancelled for the second year running due to continuing COVID-19 pandemic restrictions. Started at Bro Park in Stockholm, Sweden in 2017, the event is traditionally staged in June and has seen riders from 12 countries compete during the first three editions.

Dennis Madsen Svensk Galopp's Director of Racing said, “It is very frustrating to have to cancel the Women Jockeys' World Cup for a second year running.

“The international nature of the event requires early planning and even with the concessions that are made for international sports, uncertainty around quarantine rules for jockeys returning home from Sweden forced our decision.

“We remain committed to creating high profile opportunities for top female riders and hope to return the event in 2022. Racing in Sweden continues to grow in popularity, and we recently announced a record entry for the Swedish Derby and Oaks series. The Women Jockeys' World Cup is our most popular international event and we look forward to reinstating it at the earliest opportunity.”

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