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Related: About this forumWhat is horse racing doing to prevent catastrophic injuries? Dark week at Churchill Downs
What is horse racing doing to prevent catastrophic injuries?
The deaths of seven horses at the home of the Kentucky Derby has once again intensified the debate over the safety of horse racing
BETH HARRIS The Associated Press May 8, 2023 Updated 4 hrs ago
The deaths of seven horses at the home of the Kentucky Derby has intensified the debate over the safety of horse racing.
Two of the deaths occurred as the result of race injuries on Derby day, when more than 150,000 people jammed Churchill Downs.
While each incident reported has been unique, it is important to note that there has been no discernible pattern detected in the injuries sustained, the track said in a statement that called the incidents unacceptable.
In recent years, the industry has instituted a series of veterinary and medication reforms, which led to the fatality rate dropping. ... Heres a look at what horse racing is doing to try to prevent injuries and deaths.
{snip}
The deaths of seven horses at the home of the Kentucky Derby has once again intensified the debate over the safety of horse racing
BETH HARRIS The Associated Press May 8, 2023 Updated 4 hrs ago
The deaths of seven horses at the home of the Kentucky Derby has intensified the debate over the safety of horse racing.
Two of the deaths occurred as the result of race injuries on Derby day, when more than 150,000 people jammed Churchill Downs.
While each incident reported has been unique, it is important to note that there has been no discernible pattern detected in the injuries sustained, the track said in a statement that called the incidents unacceptable.
In recent years, the industry has instituted a series of veterinary and medication reforms, which led to the fatality rate dropping. ... Heres a look at what horse racing is doing to try to prevent injuries and deaths.
{snip}
HORSE RACING
Dark week at Churchill Downs sparks questions about horse racings future
By Chuck Culpepper
May 7, 2023 at 1:42 p.m. EDT
Horses leave the starting gate during Saturday's 149th running of the Kentucky Derby. (Brynn Anderson/AP)
CORRECTION
This story has been updated to correct the rate of horse deaths in 2022.
LOUISVILLE When the chief veterinarian from the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission visited Barn 39 at Churchill Downs on Saturday morning, he did so in the milieu of May 2023. The old days had gone. The nations sensibilities about animals had changed at least somewhat. A sport with 1.25 horse deaths per 1,000 starts in 2022, down by almost half since 2009 while still exceeding that of other lands, reeled in the bizarre nightmare of a venerable track on the biggest stage, with five horses dying in the previous nine days ahead of two more fallen later Saturday.
The scratching of Kentucky Derby favorite Forte, about 10 hours before post time, owed to a bruised right foot, the kind of ailment shy of injury that very well might not have forestalled a run 50, 25, 10 or even five years ago. It happened after Forte had galloped and jogged under observation. It left some ticklish scenes.
It left the veterinarian, Nicholas Smith, declining comment to Louisville TV station WDRB as they walked, a baffling failure of communication given all the accepted arguments for caution. It left Mike Repole, a co-owner of Forte, to relay in various interviews that Smith had said in discussions Forte had seemed a tick off.
By Sunday morning, it left a telltale rearrangement of a sentence from mega-trainer Todd Pletcher, spoken as Forte stuck his gorgeous head out of his stall down the way just before an angry thunderstorm kicked in. ... There are different levels of disappointment, he said, and when you have to scratch the or have the Derby favorite scratched
{snip}
By Chuck Culpepper
Chuck Culpepper covers national college sports as well as some tennis, golf and international sports for The Washington Post. He wrote previously for Sports On Earth/USA Today, The National (Abu Dhabi), the Los Angeles Times (while London-based), Newsday, the Oregonian, the Lexington Herald-Leader and, from age 14, the Suffolk Sun/Virginian-Pilot. Twitter https://twitter.com/ChuckCulpepper1
Dark week at Churchill Downs sparks questions about horse racings future
By Chuck Culpepper
May 7, 2023 at 1:42 p.m. EDT
Horses leave the starting gate during Saturday's 149th running of the Kentucky Derby. (Brynn Anderson/AP)
CORRECTION
This story has been updated to correct the rate of horse deaths in 2022.
LOUISVILLE When the chief veterinarian from the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission visited Barn 39 at Churchill Downs on Saturday morning, he did so in the milieu of May 2023. The old days had gone. The nations sensibilities about animals had changed at least somewhat. A sport with 1.25 horse deaths per 1,000 starts in 2022, down by almost half since 2009 while still exceeding that of other lands, reeled in the bizarre nightmare of a venerable track on the biggest stage, with five horses dying in the previous nine days ahead of two more fallen later Saturday.
The scratching of Kentucky Derby favorite Forte, about 10 hours before post time, owed to a bruised right foot, the kind of ailment shy of injury that very well might not have forestalled a run 50, 25, 10 or even five years ago. It happened after Forte had galloped and jogged under observation. It left some ticklish scenes.
It left the veterinarian, Nicholas Smith, declining comment to Louisville TV station WDRB as they walked, a baffling failure of communication given all the accepted arguments for caution. It left Mike Repole, a co-owner of Forte, to relay in various interviews that Smith had said in discussions Forte had seemed a tick off.
By Sunday morning, it left a telltale rearrangement of a sentence from mega-trainer Todd Pletcher, spoken as Forte stuck his gorgeous head out of his stall down the way just before an angry thunderstorm kicked in. ... There are different levels of disappointment, he said, and when you have to scratch the or have the Derby favorite scratched
{snip}
By Chuck Culpepper
Chuck Culpepper covers national college sports as well as some tennis, golf and international sports for The Washington Post. He wrote previously for Sports On Earth/USA Today, The National (Abu Dhabi), the Los Angeles Times (while London-based), Newsday, the Oregonian, the Lexington Herald-Leader and, from age 14, the Suffolk Sun/Virginian-Pilot. Twitter https://twitter.com/ChuckCulpepper1
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What is horse racing doing to prevent catastrophic injuries? Dark week at Churchill Downs (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
May 2023
OP
mahatmakanejeeves
(60,789 posts)1. Opinion: Why horse racing is stuck in a very bad place
Opinion | Why horse racing is stuck in a very bad place
By David Von Drehle
Deputy opinion editor and columnist
Updated May 5, 2023 at 7:02 p.m. EDT | Published May 5, 2023 at 2:09 p.m. EDT
Horses get an early workout at Churchill Downs in Louisville on Friday. (Charlie Riedel/AP)
This was supposed to be the year when things finally began to improve in one of the worlds worst-operated and most beautiful sports. ... The recently enacted Horse Racing Integrity and Safety Act promises to bring uniform standards for the care and training of racehorses to the United States for the first time. One of the critical problems facing the sport of kings would finally be tamed: the hodgepodge of regulations and athlete protections from one state to another, one track to another, even one stable to another.
Instead of renewal, horse racing is stuck in a very bad place. While industry leaders resist reform, the biggest event on the horse racing calendar, the Kentucky Derby, is shadowed by the specter of premature death among the magnificent creatures known as thoroughbreds. Churchill Downs in Louisville, scene of the venerable Run for the Roses, saw at least four seemingly healthy horses either die or be euthanized after life-ending injuries in the fortnight leading up to this years race.
Though Churchill Downs on Friday suspended the trainer of the two euthanized horses, not all the specifics of the deaths have been determined. But the root causes are widely understood: Follow the money, as the saying goes.
Audiences for horse racing have shrunk steadily across the decades as Americans have drifted away from rural pastimes and gained more options for gambling their money away. A day at the track, once the only legal game in town, lost luster compared with garish casinos, online poker, professional sports books, meme stocks, crypto investing you name it, just pay your money and take your chances on the boardwalk of the 21st century.
{snip}
Opinion by David Von Drehle
David Von Drehle is a deputy opinion editor for The Post and writes a weekly column. He was previously an editor-at-large for Time Magazine, and is the author of four books, including Rise to Greatness: Abraham Lincoln and Americas Most Perilous Year and Triangle: The Fire That Changed America. Twitter https://twitter.com/DavidVonDrehle
By David Von Drehle
Deputy opinion editor and columnist
Updated May 5, 2023 at 7:02 p.m. EDT | Published May 5, 2023 at 2:09 p.m. EDT
Horses get an early workout at Churchill Downs in Louisville on Friday. (Charlie Riedel/AP)
This was supposed to be the year when things finally began to improve in one of the worlds worst-operated and most beautiful sports. ... The recently enacted Horse Racing Integrity and Safety Act promises to bring uniform standards for the care and training of racehorses to the United States for the first time. One of the critical problems facing the sport of kings would finally be tamed: the hodgepodge of regulations and athlete protections from one state to another, one track to another, even one stable to another.
Instead of renewal, horse racing is stuck in a very bad place. While industry leaders resist reform, the biggest event on the horse racing calendar, the Kentucky Derby, is shadowed by the specter of premature death among the magnificent creatures known as thoroughbreds. Churchill Downs in Louisville, scene of the venerable Run for the Roses, saw at least four seemingly healthy horses either die or be euthanized after life-ending injuries in the fortnight leading up to this years race.
Though Churchill Downs on Friday suspended the trainer of the two euthanized horses, not all the specifics of the deaths have been determined. But the root causes are widely understood: Follow the money, as the saying goes.
Audiences for horse racing have shrunk steadily across the decades as Americans have drifted away from rural pastimes and gained more options for gambling their money away. A day at the track, once the only legal game in town, lost luster compared with garish casinos, online poker, professional sports books, meme stocks, crypto investing you name it, just pay your money and take your chances on the boardwalk of the 21st century.
{snip}
Opinion by David Von Drehle
David Von Drehle is a deputy opinion editor for The Post and writes a weekly column. He was previously an editor-at-large for Time Magazine, and is the author of four books, including Rise to Greatness: Abraham Lincoln and Americas Most Perilous Year and Triangle: The Fire That Changed America. Twitter https://twitter.com/DavidVonDrehle