
Stan Bergstein's Daily Racing Form columnsWith permission of Daily Racing Form,
Stan Bergstein’s bi-weekly
columns for that publication will appear
here every other week.
September 7, 2005
Boycott - one step backward
Kentucky's
Thoroughbred horsemen - at least some who are represented by the
Kentucky Horsemen's Benevolent and Protective Association - are still
fighting against being dragged bodily into the 21st century.
They lost
another round last Friday when a state circuit court judge refused to
block the new medication rules, first approved by the Kentucky Equine
Drug Research Council, then by the Kentucky Horse Racing Authority, and
then by the governor of Kentucky, Ernie Fletcher.
Now that a
judge has denied them an injunction, they are turning to their court of
last resort - politicians - to keep them from having to accept what is
being accepted in most other racing jurisdictions around the country.
A legislative
committee has to approve the changes, and a few of its members have been
quoted as saying that they see no real need for reform, that they have
detected no public outcry for change. It would be a sad day in the
Bluegrass if politicians who may or may not know anything about racing
rejected the work of dedicated professionals who have worked long and
hard to bring reform to the permissiveness of the state's racing.
The horsemen
- or at least some of them based in the Louisville area - are resorting
to another exercise in folly, if not futility. They did not enter their
horses for Wednesday's opening card at Turfway Park, Kentucky's first
Thoroughbred track to race under the new rules and the first in the
nation to introduce a Polytrack racing surface under actual race
conditions.
Turfway had
to keep its entry box open an extra day to fill its 10-race card, but
happily did so and had some races with full fields. One trainer, Walter
Bindner, said he was sending horses that he had planned to run this week
at Turfway to Chicago's Arlington Park. He did not say whether he
expected to encounter permissiveness there - in which case he would be
disappointed - or whether he was simply registering an expensive
protest.
Marty Maline,
who runs Kentucky's HBPA, was careful during the court hearing last week
to emphasize that the HBPA did not or was not condoning a boycott at
Turfway. He merely said he had heard that horsemen were considering one.
A boycott or
strike or whatever you choose to call it is the route of madness in
racing. The losses suffered can never be made up.
Ten years or
so ago, horsemen in Montreal decided to boycott Hippodrome de Montreal,
once known as Blue Bonnets, over some contentious issue.
They did so
just as Montreal's then gleaming new casino was opening, and it was
pointed out to the horsemen that if track patrons switched to
patronizing the state-of-the-art casino, they were not likely to return
to the racetrack.
The horsemen
struck, the patrons fled and did not return. Not then, not now.
Horse racing
cannot afford to offend its customers with boycotts or strikes. And the
notion that trainers and veterinarians cannot survive under Kentucky's
new rules, when others are doing so under similar rules, is fiction.
There is room
for some compromise, and Jim Gallagher, executive director of the
Kentucky Horse Racing Authority, is working toward it. He notified
horsemen that first-time offenders of the new rules will be issued a
warning rather than a penalty, and he has agreed to discuss withdrawal
times, the lack of which the horsemen and vets claim puts them at huge
risk. Of all things, clenbuterol turns out to be an issue once again.
It is ironic
that while all this is going on, Turfway is introducing, at great
expense, revolutionary racing progress. Its Polytrack surface, hailed in
training trials at Keeneland, gets its first test under race conditions.
Track
president Bob Elliston deserves thanks from horsemen, rather than the
slap in the face he is getting. A gracious host, he probably will take
back, or let in, the horsemen who left him in the lurch.
If Kentucky
horsemen are really concerned about the welfare of their horses, they
should be eager to give them comfortable footing rather than clenbuterol,
which has been one of the substances the horsemen are ready to die for.
They will die
hard, unless the pols step in to help them. What a travesty that would
be after all the diligent work done in the last year to bring
respectability to Kentucky racing. |