Symposium: HISA Panels Light on Specifics

Over the course of three panel sessions Tuesday during the latest Race Track Industry Symposium (RTIP) at Tucson, Arizona, more flesh was publicly added to the bones of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act (HISA).

Nevertheless, overall specifics were pretty light on the ground–frustratingly so, for many–with an overarching message that the various medication and safety programs are very much a work in progress.

Looming over proceedings was yesterday's news that Kentucky Derby winner, Medina Spirit (Protonico), suffered an apparent sudden cardiac death after a scheduled workout at Santa Anita.

Indeed, Charles Scheeler, chairman of the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority–the broad non-profit umbrella established by HISA and commonly referred to as just the “Authority”–kicked the presentations off by warning that the sport is viewed by many to be in an “existential crisis.”

Highlighting how the U.S. has the worst catastrophic musculoskeletal injury rate among five major global racing jurisdictions–comprising the UK, Hong Kong, Australia/New Zealand and Canada–Scheeler called this a key metric for HISA.

“We have to understand that we've deferred maintenance here,” Scheeler said, of the industry's broad approach to equine health and safety.
Arguably the most salient tidbit Scheeler shared–at least in regards to a practical implementation of HISA—was that individual states will continue to conduct race-day testing and sample collection, if indeed HISA goes into effect on July 1 next year. Initially, the United States Anti-Doping and Agency (USADA) will manage the out-of-competition testing program, according to Scheeler.

However, when the 2023 season rolls around, USADA will then assume responsibility for both race-day testing and the out-of-competition testing program.

Scheeler explained that this staggered implementation allows for a number of key adjustments (which were laid out in a subsequent press release and posted again here):

  • A less disruptive transition to race-day testing from the middle of the racing season to the beginning of a new season
  • State Racing Commissions to synchronize budget cycles more easily
  • Laboratories more time to adapt to new standard
  • Greater opportunities for additional education on the new procedures and protocols for covered persons
  • More thorough testing and implementation of needed new technology solutions

And who adjudicates any medication violations during this time? Because of staggered implementation, individual states will continue to adjudicate the post-race samples they're charged with collecting, Scheeler explained.

If USADA encounters a violation of the out-of-competition testing program, “they will prosecute that according to the rules they have promulgated,” Scheeler said.

Scheeler also used his presentation to emphasize some of HISA's main selling points, such as a centralized database which identifies trends to reduce fatalities and catch cheats, as well as a “powerful, rigorous investigations program.”

And what about cost? Here, Scheeler didn't have an answer, explaining that the Authority was still working on that, though emphasizing an oft-repeated expectation that HISA will eventually produce economies of scale.

HISA Anti-Doping and Medication Control Committee

While this constituted the third HISA-related panel of the morning, it had arguably the most practical relevance for the industry, comprising, as it did, information on the everyday drug-testing and enforcement program proposed under HISA.

The panel was led by Jim Gates, director of the Anti-Doping and Medication Control standing committee. Adolpho Birch, committee chair, Scott Stanley, another committee member, along with USADA's Tessa Muir and Jeff Cook, all joined via Zoom.

The bulk of the first half of the presentation constituted a rundown of information that has been made public for a while, including the proposed results management process and an overview of the possible sanctions. Arguably the most salient information came via the public question period, towards the end, even though much sought after specifics were generally left dangling.

Under the new rules, a positive finding might not necessarily be publicly disclosed after the relevant parties have been notified, but when the violation has been confirmed via a B sample analysis. The panelists explained that the trainer and/or the agency have the discretion to disclose the finding before confirmation B sample analysis–especially in circumstances like an upcoming big race–but that the idea is to protect undue reputational damage.

Another key new ingredient to the way medication violations will be handled is the possibility of a sanction for a horse who tests positive–a seismic shift away from the current system.

Under the proposed guidelines, a horse will be automatically disqualified in the event of a race-day violation. But a horse also faces the possibility of a maximum 14-month sanction, depending on the substance and what is described as the “method.”

When asked about the philosophy behind these kinds of sanctions, Gates explained that “in most cases, when a horse is suspended, it is to give time for any medication to clear their system so that they would not have a competitive advantage going forward.”

It should also be noted that a horse can also face a sanction in the event of whereabouts violation. This is the intended system that horses can be tested anywhere and at any time with no advance notice from the moment they fall under the purview of the program until the moment they are permanently retired from racing.

A horse falls under HISA's auspices at one of four moments: the date of their first timed and reported workout at a track, the date of their first timed and reported workout at a training facility, the date of their first race entry, or the date of their first nomination to a race.

Under the new rules, a whereabouts violation could lead to a 12-month sanction for the respective horse. Just don't expect to see this whereabouts program go into effect immediately, with USADA warning that the practical working logistics need to be hashed out and phased in.

Another key bone of contention among industry stakeholders has been the lack, thus far, of a publicly available therapeutic substance list–in other words, those medications that would largely fall under the “secondary substances” umbrella.

Muir explained that the list is still being worked out. She added, however, that it will use a hybrid model of thresholds and screening limits. Read here for a more detailed explainer of what that difference means. Screening limits, Muir said, will be especially applicable for those substances commonly found in a horse's environment, and therefore a genuine threat of inadvertent contamination.

The panelists also explained that the committee was using as a key reference point the International Federation of Horseracing Authorities' (IFHA) thresholds for therapeutic substances. The IFHA's screening limits for urine can be found here. For blood, it's here.

In other talking points, the panelists explained the reasons behind deviating from the current multiple medication penalty system towards a much more punitive one. The change “allows for more stringent sanctions for those who commit more egregious violations or more frequent violations,” said Cook.

Cook also explained that the new system provides “more discretion to provide proportional sanctions based on the degree of fault of those involved.” Fines are permitted, for example, but not specified because “we want the fine to be meaningful to deter behavior,” Cook explained.

The panelists confirmed that veterinarians could face charges for certain offenses, though failed to provide any specifics.

Similarly, when asked exactly how the National Stewards Panel would work, the panel explained the goal was to employ the most qualified individual available but added scant other details.

Interestingly, when it comes to the education component, the panel explained that the general plan was to have an easy-to-use education module in English and Spanish to be taken by every “covered person.” But once again, it's unclear when that would be implemented and what the education module would specifically entail.

The draft Anti-Doping and Medication Control rules are expected to be submitted to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) later this month.

HISA Racetrack Safety Committee

The second HISA-related presentation was a Q&A between Sue Stover, chair of the Racetrack Safety standing committee and the one who took the hot seat, with Ann McGovern, the committee's director, asking the questions.

This was a statistics-heavy presentation, with Stover broadly connecting the dots between plans under HISA to start collecting relevant data in a uniform manner and what is already known about the underlying factors predisposing racehorses to catastrophic injuries.

From the industry's standpoint, arguably the most immediately pertinent information concerned racetrack accreditation standards under HISA. According to the panel, current National Thoroughbred Racing Association (NTRA) accredited tracks will receive interim HISA accreditation that will last for three years, provided they comply with program requirements. Other non-NTRA accredited tracks will receive provisional accreditation lasting for one year.

The panelists provided a slide of some of the key ingredients of the accreditation program. The list included:

  • Expanded veterinary oversight
  • Void claim rule
  • Transfer of claimed horses' medical records
  • Surface maintenance and measurement standards
  • Enhanced reporting standards
  • Data reporting: medications, treatments, injuries and fatalities,
  • Jockey concussions and medical care reporting

The panelists warned, however, that accreditation isn't automatic nor assured for any length of time once given.

According to McGovern, “there are processes out there to help the smaller racetracks to get accredited and to learn what to do to meet the standards that are outlined.”

Stover warned, however, that “if a track were to lose accreditation, they will lose the ability to conduct interstate wagering.”
Earlier in the panel presentation, Stover–a long-time UC Davis professor–guided the audience through her research into some of the main factors underlying catastrophic breakdowns in racehorses, such as:

  • The mechanical loading and cyclical wear and tear on the fetlock joint
  • The relative safety of different surfaces
  • A horse's regulatory and medication history
  • The significance of under-conditioning and over training

Stover then explained how a key component of HISA's data collection program would be focused on these factors, at the heart of which is this statistic: That 85% of catastrophic injuries in racehorses are associated with pre-existing conditions.

Stover also explained that horses returning from a layoff are at greater risk of injury, and that, under HISA, they would be looking for information that explains what constitutes a good or bad lay-up program.

As such, “We are also asking trainers when they do send a horse for a lay-up period that they submit the training and medical records of the horse for that lay-up time,” explained McGovern.

A member of the audience asked the panel if, ultimately, this kind of data collection would lead to a scenario whereby a trainer, attending veterinarian and owner would have minimal say in a horse's training and racing program.

“That is not the intent,” McGovern replied. “The intent is to give the trainers and the vet the information so they can make the decisions on how they train the horse and how they race their horse.”

The Racetrack Safety proposed rules have already been submitted to the FTC for review, though the public will have the opportunity to tweak the document further during the mandatory public comment period.

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Bobby Flay Talks Breeders’ Cup Triumph On Writers’ Room

Still riding high from a scintillating victory in the GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf with fast-finishing Pizza Bianca (Fastnet Rock {Aus}), celebrity chef, restaurateur and owner/breeder Bobby Flay joined the TDN Writers' Room presented by Keeneland Tuesday afternoon. Calling in via Zoom as the Green Group Guest of the Week, Flay appreciated the significance of winning on racing's biggest stage with a homebred, teased a potential Royal Ascot trip with Pizza Bianca and discussed how he would approach racing's marketing challenges and more.

Flay made a huge splash at the 2014 Tattersalls October Sale when going to 1,250,000 guineas (around $2,122,050 U.S.) to purchase a regally-bred daughter of Galileo (Ire)–the highest-priced filly sold in the Northern Hemisphere that year–he named White Hot (Ire). But the filly never made it to the races. Flay could've cut his losses and sold the mare back at auction, but instead held onto her to breed, putting trust in her pedigree, and she rewarded him with a Breeders' Cup winner as her first foal.

“She has a lights-out pedigree,” he said. “She's by Galileo, she's a half to Pour Moi (Montjeu {Ire}), who won the English Derby, and that's just the beginning of the pedigree. It goes on for pages. It's a Coolmore family. And one thing about buying into a Coolmore family, those guys are so focused on making their families better and better that they're going to spend money all over that pedigree until the end of time. So I made that bet. I took a leap of faith and it didn't work out. The horse never ran, just wasn't good enough. But I knew I was going to keep this horse for the rest of her life. My feeling was, at some point, the blood will show up. If it's that good, something has to happen, directly or indirectly, that's going to help your family. But you have to be patient. You may have to invest more money actually to continue to breed, but at some point it will work. And I obviously did not expect it to work with the first foal, but it did. It's all gravy from here on out.”

Flay has become a breakthrough celebrity and, as a result, a de facto ambassador of racing. He was asked about how receptive people in his world are to the sport and what can be done to introduce more potential owners and bettors into the game.

“There's only one way to do it. You have to expose them to it,” he said. “If you ask me for a recipe and I just hand you a piece of paper or tell you to go download something off a website and you make it, it's going to be one way. But if I actually show you how to do it, it's going to come out differently and probably better, because I'm showing you as opposed to telling you. It's the same thing for racing. If I tell people about my experience, they're like, 'Oh yeah, that's great.' I take people to the big events, because I want them to see racing at its best, see the best horses and the biggest crowds, and then they're hooked. They're like, 'I can't believe I've never done this before.' I hear that all the time. Every year, I take about 25-30 people to the Belmont Stakes. Half of them have never been to a race before. They become racing fans.”

Elsewhere on the show, which is also sponsored by Coolmore, West Point Thoroughbreds, XBTV, Lane's End and Legacy Bloodstock, the writers discussed their takeaways from last week's interview with Travis Tygart and Tessa Muir of USADA, debated whether or not Lasix-free racing is a big deal anymore and addressed potential remedies for the wagering public in situations like the Breeders' Cup Juvenile Turf mess. Click here to watch the podcast; click here for the audio-only version or find it on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.

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The Week in Review: Tygart, USADA Out to Clean Up the Game

We heard from the United States Anti-Doping Agency (USADA), its CEO Travis Tygart and the Director of Equine Science Dr. Tessa Muir last week when USADA released its anti-doping guidelines, rules and protocols. Once again, we saw that these are no-nonsense, dedicated people with a track record of cleaning up other sports. The release of the guidelines was an important step toward what will be a welcome change for racing–competent, dedicated policing from an outside entity replacing the current system, which just doesn't work.

(Quotes from this story were taken from Tygart and Muir's appearance on the TDN Writers' Room podcast and from Dan Ross's coverage in the TDN and his Q&A with Tygart and Muir.)

With Thursday's release of the details, there was a lot to digest. Here's what resonated with me:

(*) USADA is not going to rely solely on drug testing, which has been proven to be a woefully inadequate way of catching cheaters. There are always a number of potent drugs out there that can't be detected by standard drug tests. USADA may not have all the tools, including wiretaps, that the FBI had when it took down Jason Servis, Jorge Navarro and others, but Tygart made it clear that there are more ways to catch cheaters than just through drug tests.

“Can you bring a case if you don't have a positive test?” Tygart said. “In some states today, I don't think that's even possible under the rules. But if you look at Article Two of the rules, it identifies about 12 different types of violations. Only one or two of those includes a positive test. So possession, trafficking, complicity, attempted administration, retaliation against a whistleblower, those are things that can be anti-doping rule violations.”

He said that scientific evidence will be combined with “buckets of evidence”, much like what you see each week on shows like Law and Order and NCIS.

Tygart said they will also rely on a tip line that is already receiving calls. All of which is a step in the right direction. Neither Navarro nor Servis had any serious violations on their records that were the result of testing, which just goes to show that a lot more beyond testing needs to be done.

(*) USADA appears to understand the importance of going after more than just the trainers. It stands to reason that in most cases where performance-enhancing drugs are used, a veterinarian is involved. And what about the owners? It's hard to imagine they don't know what's going on when their trainer is wining at 30% and 50% off the claim. They should have to pay the price when their trainer is caught.

“When the horse is in training, the owner, the veterinarian, anyone else involved with the horse, they can be held accountable if they're complicit and part of a doping or a medication issue,” Tygart said. “The strict liability of the positive test doesn't apply to them. So there will be a slightly different way that this is prosecuted, but they absolutely can be held accountable under these rules.”

He added: “It's not just the trainer training the horse that has responsibility for this culture of a clean sport. Everybody within the sport should have a responsibility to ensure that it's being done the right way.”

(*) One thing that was not addressed last week was the obvious problem of having a trainer turn the stable over to an assistant once they are suspended. Life goes on largely uninterrupted for that stable with the head trainer getting what amounts to a vacation. There's not nearly enough of a deterrent here. At least with the more serious violations, the stable should be penalized along with a guilty trainer.

(*) USADA is going to rely heavily on out-of-competition testing and trainers must let USADA know at all times where a horse is located. He also said that out-of-competition tests won't be done on a random basis. For obvious reasons, the focus will be on trainers whose results suggest they might be using something to get an edge.

“It's what we call intelligent testing,” Tygart said. “It's not random. Some call it smart testing. Some call it target testing. We will use data.”

(*) You might want to call this one the “Baffert Rule.” While USADA will distinguish between violations that involve performance-enhancing drugs and overages of therapeutic medications, Tygart believes that there is a point where enough is enough when it comes to overages. Four minor infractions or therapeutic overages within five years could result in a sanction of up to two years.

(*) Just because a horse passes post-race urine and blood tests doesn't mean that they can't be caught later on. If someone uses something illegal and a new test for that substance comes around after the fact, they could get nailed. This is another welcome development.

“We will have the ability to do what is called retrospective testing,” Tygart said. “Samples will be put into storage. And then when you develop new tests in the future, we're going to be able to bring those samples out of storage and actually then analyze them with the new methodology for those prohibited old-time substances. That's also a great deterrent to people using things where they say you can't detect it. But in the future, when those technologies and the capabilities are enhanced and changed, then we can go back and you will still be subject to sanction (for a positive test).”

(*) More than six months after the race, the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission has still not acted when it comes to this year's GI Kentucky Derby and the reported betamethasone positive on winner Medina Spirit (Protonico). That, Tygart said, will not happen after USADA takes over.

“I was pretty stunned to hear that (Medina Spirit's) Kentucky Derby case hasn't been resolved yet,” Tygart said. “That's not going to happen on our watch. I mean, it's crazy that it's taken that long to get to a final resolution, particularly when someone is competing the entire time.”

Lawsuits have been filed by horsemen's groups and six states to shoot down the Horseracing Safety and Integrity Act (HISA), which is what created the need for a new method of policing the sport, and USADA has yet to sign a contract with the Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority. Both factors could mean that the projected start date for HISA, July 1, 2022 will not be met.

But if and when HISA goes into effect, USADA will be ready. Tygart called the new rules a “gold standard program for the industry.” He's got that right. It's time for a new era.

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