International Codes of Practice on equine disease for 2023

Article by Victoria Colgate and Richard Newton

Horses are one of the most internationally travelled species, second only after humans, and this mobility, both between and within countries, means that the spread of equine infectious diseases is a very real and ever-present threat.

Indeed, infectious disease outbreaks are often related to new arrivals at, or movement of animals on and off premises, such as to competitions and race meetings. As well as having a negative impact on horse health and welfare, disease outbreaks can have further reaching consequences in terms of treatment costs, economic losses due to movement restrictions and an inability to compete, as well as disruption to the breeding schedule, which may have effects in racing in future years. Additionally, restrictions imposed in the face of the diagnosis of certain diseases can prevent the free export of horses between countries, impacting trade and equestrian sport. Infectious diseases are truly trans-boundary, and such a problem necessitates global cooperation and communication, echoing the mantra that ‘prevention is better than cure’. 

The origins and evolution of the Codes of Practice

International codes of practice 2023

figure 1

In 1977 in Newmarket, UK, there was widespread development of vulval discharge in thoroughbred mares post-covering that adversely affected their fertility and to an extent that caused temporary closure of stallion barns and stud farms. Initially unknown, the cause of this outbreak was later identified as the bacterium Tayorella equigenitalis, the causative agent of contagious equine metritis (CEM) and often referred to as the CEM organism, or CEMO. 

The impact on the 1977 breeding season was significant enough for the Horserace Betting Levy Board (HBLB) to consider a serious need to control CEM in future years and in reaction to this, the Codes of Practice (CoP) were created. First developed by HBLB committee discussion in the summer of 1977 and then formally published in 1978, the HBLB CoP outlined swabbing protocols in the weeks prior to covering in an attempt to prevent the venereal transmission of CEM. 

Despite the perceived draconian nature of these first codes, compliance was high and overall were highly successful—with CEM cases drastically falling following their introduction. In subsequent years, the CEM CoP was extended to include control measures on reproductive disease caused by the other venereal bacterial pathogens: Klebsiella pneumoniae (capsule types 1, 2 and 5) and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Codes on the prevention and management of equine herpesvirus-1 (EHV-1) and equine viral arteritis (EVA) were also added following disease outbreaks of significant concern to the thoroughbred breeding industry in subsequent years. 

Today the CoP are referred to as the ‘HBLB International Codes of Practice’, with the 2020 CoP being the inaugural internationally branded edition and representing a comprehensive manual outlining a series of voluntary standards (codes) and advisories (guidelines), with accompanying appendices. They are intended to assist breeders, trainers and horse owners (in collaboration with their veterinary surgeons) to control and prevent a range of important infectious diseases in equids. The CoP have a broad application among thoroughbred breeders; and the UK, Ireland, France, Germany and Italy are all signatories. Additionally, in a translated form, they have formed the basis of written equine infectious disease advice in many other countries. The initial reduction and then sustained maintenance of low levels of infectious disease outbreaks experienced after the CoP’s introduction is testament to the document’s effectiveness and importance.  

The HBLB International Codes of Practice for the 2023 breeding season

The CoP are reviewed annually by a group of international veterinary breeding and infectious disease experts and stakeholder representatives. This review ensures that all advice is as current as possible regarding the latest scientific evidence and global disease situation. The CoP convey practical recommendations gained considering recent experiences with the occurrence and control of relevant outbreaks. 

The 2023 edition of ‘The CoP Manual’ (title cover, above Fig 1 and table of contents, below Fig 2) comprises:

The 2023 edition of ‘The CoP Manual’

figure 2

  • Six Codes on the following diseases: CEM (covering CEMO, Klebsiella pneumoniae and Pseudomonas aeruginosa), EVA, EHV-1, equine coital exanthema (ECE, caused by EHV-3), equine infectious anaemia (EIA) and dourine 

  • Five Guidelines on equine influenza (EI), piroplasmosis, strangles, West Nile Fever (WNF) and artificial insemination (AI) 

  • Eleven Appendices with a range of  supporting information and guidance 

The CoP are published on the HBLB website (https://codes.hblb.org.uk/); a PDF download  (https://codes.hblb.org.uk/downloads/2023/Codes%20of%20Practice%202023.pdf) is also available. In Great Britain, the Thoroughbred Breeders Association (TBA) produces a spiral-bound printed hard copy for its members. 

The CoP outline each disease sequentially, using a standardised format of sections which include information on notification procedures, clinical signs, transmission, prevention, diagnosis, control, treatment, freedom from disease and export requirements. It is a document that continues to evolve over time in terms of both the diseases included and the expert advice imparted. 

Why ‘codes’ and ‘guidelines’?

Although the logic behind the distinction as to why specific diseases in the CoP are covered by a guideline rather than a code is not necessarily immediately initiative. It is worth remembering that a Code of Practice may be defined as ‘A documented set of recommended or preferred processes, actions or organisational structures to be applied in a given setting’, whereas a guideline is: ‘A general rule, principle or piece of advice’.  Therefore, the diseases applied as codes are those that directly relate to, and have an impact on, breeding and that necessitate particular actions either to prevent or control disease, should they occur. The guidelines, in contrast, are merely advisory measures to those involved in thoroughbred breeding businesses, but cover diseases and practices that are also highly applicable to other populations of horses. The remainder of the article outlines several of the important codes and guidelines.

Strangles

Strangles, caused by the bacterium Streptococcus equi, is a disease affecting the lymph nodes of the upper respiratory tract. Although endemic within the UK horse population, it only occasionally affects thoroughbred stud farms. Accordingly, it was first included in the CoP as an advisory guideline in 2004 and has since been periodically updated in line with developments in diagnostic testing and vaccination. Due to the ability of Streptococcus equi to develop persistent infection, remaining within material (pus/chondroids) in the guttural pouches long after resolution of clinical signs, one of the key elements in prevention and control is identification and treatment of these carrier animals. This involves performing guttural pouch endoscopy and lavage of strangles cases around 30 days after clinical recovery from infection, and also of any new arrivals at a premises during the quarantine period, before they are allowed to mix with the resident herd. 

Equine infectious anaemia (EIA)

Equine infectious anaemia (EIA) code of practice 2006

figure 3

EIA, also known as swamp fever, is caused by the equine infectious anaemia virus (EIAV) and is transmitted between horses by the transfer of infected blood, either by insect vectors or contaminated veterinary equipment or through administration of infected blood products (e.g., plasma or whole blood transfusion). It is found in thoroughbred and non-thoroughbred populations worldwide, including parts of mainland Europe; but it is currently not present in Great Britain, where any suspicion of disease is notifiable by law to the Animal and Plant Health Agency (APHA) and would result in compulsory slaughter of the affected animal. Following an outbreak in Ireland in 2006, a CoP for EIA was developed by Defra in the UK in August that year and was included as an addendum for the 2007 breeding season (Figure 3) and subsequently as a full code from 2008 onwards. EIA has been included as a full CoP since 2008, and it recommends pre-breeding testing of all mares and stallions prior to commencement of the covering season as the best way to establish and maintain freedom from infection. 

Dourine 

A new code on dourine was added in 2012, following its re-identification in Sicily and the Italian mainland during 2011, which necessitated pre-import screening of horses arriving from this area. A notifiable venereal disease caused by the protozoan parasite Trypansoma equiperdum, once widespread, had largely undergone eradication and of late had only been reported in Asia, Africa, South America, Eastern Europe, Mexico and Russia. There is no cure for dourine, and euthanasia is usually the advised treatment option on the grounds of animal welfare and population health. As investigations into the 2011 Italian outbreak indicated subclinical seropositivity to dourine in many regions of Italy, it was evident that the disease was closer to our shores than anticipated. That led to its addition to the CoP in order to keep all owners/breeders informed and appropriately advised. 

Equine influenza (EI)

EI was added to the CoP in 2020 as an advisory guideline following the 2019 European epidemic, which saw a major outbreak in the UK (Figure 4), including cases of clinical disease in vaccinated thoroughbreds. This led to the cancellation of British horseracing for six days in February 2019 as a pre-emptive control measure, but still at significant economic cost to the industry. 

Equine influenza (EI) major outbreak in the UK graph

Figure 4

Although clinical EI is usually fairly mild and self-limiting, the resulting damage to the respiratory epithelium can impact performance for up to six months and leaves the horse vulnerable to secondary bacterial infections and potential pneumonia. Appropriate vaccination, biosecurity protocols and effective quarantining of new arrivals are outlined in the Code as the cornerstone to EI control. With such a highly contagious virus capable of spreading over large distances and with great speed, especially in the immunologically naïve, awareness and prevention are key.

West Nile fever (WNF)

WNF, caused by West Nile virus (WNV), is an infectious but non-contagious disease transmitted through the bite of an infected mosquito. Although the natural host-vector cycle is between birds and mosquitoes, horses and indeed humans can become infected but act as so-called incidental or ‘dead-end’ hosts; importantly, not presenting is a risk for onward transmission as there is insufficient WNV in their bloodstream. Many horses infected with WNV remain without signs, but approximately 10% will develop neurological disease, which can be fatal. Historically confined to Africa and the East, it entered North America in 1999 leading to widespread infection with many equine and human fatalities. Since then it has become endemic in the USA and continues to spread further into northern Europe as climate change alters vector habitats and life cycles. After the development of equine cases in Germany in 2018 and evidence of human and bird cases in the Netherlands in 2020, WNV was considered to pose an increasing threat to the UK horse population, especially animals that travelled overseas for competition and breeding purposes. WNF was therefore added as a guideline to the CoP in 2021. 

Piroplasmosis

The latest disease addition to the CoP was an advisory guideline on piroplasmosis in 2022, following concern that the disease was becoming increasingly important among the international equine population. Piroplasmosis is a tick-borne disease caused by the intracellular parasites Babesia caballi and Theileria equi. Although the UK is currently considered to be free from locally acquired endemic disease (referred to as ‘autochthonous’), cases have occasionally been confirmed in the UK and are endemic in other European countries. With no formal requirements for pre-import screening, infection could re-enter the UK through importation of infected horses. The code gives informative background information to raise awareness among thoroughbred breeders and owners/keepers of other horse populations.  

Improving accessibility and applicability of the CoP

Another way in which the CoP have more recently evolved is through the mechanisms of delivery to stakeholders. In July 2016, the accessibility and reach of the CoP took a further leap with the generation of the smartphone EquiBioSafe app (https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.veterinaryadvances.android.equibiosafe&hl=en_GB&gl=US&pli=1). With the HBLB Codes of Practice and National Trainers Federation Codes of Practice précised into key elements for the control and prevention of infectious diseases, the app allows interactive and stable-side access to advice, as well as assisting trainers to comply with sporting authority vaccine regulations and disease notification procedures. With the ability to send emergency notifications in the event of heightened disease threats in a particular area, the app provides real-time relevant information to assist with implementation of proactive biosecurity measures. This helps safeguard horse health and the socioeconomic livelihoods of all those involved in equestrian sport. Like the CoP, the EquiBiosafe app has mainly been targeted to a European audience, but downloads recorded from North America, Asia and Latin America demonstrate its international application. 

The HBLB International Codes of Practice act as broad, minimum requirement recommendations for the identification, treatment, prevention and control of a range of important equine infectious diseases—equally relevant across international borders and from pleasure to elite competition horses. They are also dynamic, evolving over time in line with the ever-changing disease situation, and therefore acting as a vital education and reference resource to all those involved in the equestrian industry. They form a user-friendly instruction manual of exactly ‘how (not) to’ allow infectious diseases to fulfil their devastating potential.  

How the Chehboub family has become a major player in the French breeding and racing industry

Article by John Gilmore

Kamel Chehboub and  Sealiway at the Haras de Beaumont (France Sire / Baptiste Bourgeais)

Kamel Chehboub and Sealiway at the Haras de Beaumont

The Chehboub family have started an exciting new breeding development in Normandy, through purchasing the Haras de Beaumont stud. The deal also included a part of the adjacent Haras du Quesnay land, which is being sold by the Head family in two parts. The other part is being bought by Businessman Stephane Courbit. “We will know in a few months whether Haras du Quesnay will continue as a stud,” indicated Freddie Head. The stud, which was made famous by his father Alec Head, was originally bought by his grandfather William Head in 1958.  

Buying Haras de Beaumont and part of the neighbouring Haras du Quesnay has certainly created the environment for Kamel Chehboub to develop his racing and breeding interests. His daughter Pauline Chehboub is responsible for day-to-day operations.

The Chehboub family have for the past eight years, owned the Haras de la Gousserie, in the Loire region of France. That farm is due to be sold, with all the mares and stallions being relocated to Haras de Beaumont. As a result, the Chehboub racehorses, which previously ran under the name of Haras de La Gousserie, will now be changed to ‘Ecurie de la Gousserie.’

Rougir

Rougir

Overall, it’s been an eventful past couple of years for the Chehboub family. Their filly Rougir, winner of the Gp 1 Prix de L’Opera, went through the ring at the Arqana Breeding stock sale December 2021 as a 3-year-old for a record €3m, selling to Peter Brant’s White Birch farm and Coolmore partnership.

Rougir is now trained in the United States by Chad Brown and has since justified the high price tag, with a first time out three-length facile victory at Belmont when capturing the Gr3 Beaugay Stakes in May and stepping up in October to take the Gr1 EP Taylor Stakes at Woodbine Canada.

Rougir’s sale was certainly a jackpot pay day for Kamel Cheboub and his Haras de la Gousserie breeding and racing enterprise. Rougir was bought as a yearling for €55,000 at the Arqana yearling sale, after previously being sold as a foal through the same auctioneers for just €11,000. 

Sealiway

Sealiway

The 2021 Champion Stakes winner Sealiway, which the Chehboub family owns in partnership with Guy Parente, will be a major attraction at Beaumont. His stud fee has been set at €12,000.

 Additionally, another high-profile Gp1 winner Intello, who the Wertheimer brothers own and previously stood at the Haras du Quesnay, will be transferred next door to take up stud duties at Beaumont for an €8,000 euro. 

“We thought it was an appropriate stud to place Intello, as Champion Stakes winner Sealiway will certainly be popular, which could also add interest from breeders to our 2013 Prix du Jockey Club winner, stabled in the same place,” said Pierre-Yves Bureau Breeding and Racing manager for the Wertheimer brothers.  

Sealiway was originally a €62,000 yearling purchase at Arqana. Both Rougir and Sealiway’s performances on the racecourse have certainly put Haras de la Gousserie on the map. They have also expanded their racing presence through acquiring a new yard at Chantilly, in addition to their other main training yard in Marseille. 

It’s a far cry from those early days more than 30 years ago for property businessman Kamel Chehboub, which first sparked his initial interest in racing. “My father first started going to the racetrack with friends who were punters and gradually began to enjoy the sport himself”, explained Pauline Chehboub.

“After a while, my father began to take shares in racehorses sourced from claiming races. The first was Onegar in 1987, bought out of Andre Fabre’s stable.” The big breakthrough came with the filly Lavayssiere, who was placed 5 times in 13 runs on the flat but proved a revelation at stud. Lavayssiere produced 5 Black Type horses from 8 runners, including her second foal Gp1 winner Spirit One, born in 2004.

“Spirit One and jockey Ioritz Mendizabel’s enterprising all the way win in the Gr1 Arlington Million race at Chicago in August 2008, trained by Philip Demcastel, was a tremendous boost to my father’s racing operations-enabling him to start developing the business and buy more racehorses.” The €403,504 pot of prize money for the Arlington Million victory, boosted Spirit One’s career earnings to €974,269, which included winning 5 races from 19 starts. 

Spirit One entered the Haras de Lonray in the Herault southern region of France and later relocated to Sablonnets in the Sarthe department (western France) from 2013. The best of his 36 winning offspring was Eleuthera, who won the Gp3 Prix de Royaumont in 2013 and was subsequently purchased by Teruya Yoshida. Spirit One sadly died of a tumour at Haras des Sablonnets in April 2016.

Pauline Chehboub

Pauline Chehboub

Pauline Chehboub has been working for her father and Uncle Bouzid Chehboub’s racing interests for the past 7 years, after obtaining her commercial business licence. Previously in her youth she rode in show jumping events to a high level. “I was show jumping champion of France at 16 years old and have been riding since I was a child. So working within the horseracing industry was always something I wanted to do, especially as my father was very involved in the industry.”  

She added, “My father has had more than 20 years’ experience in this business, through regularly going racing, visiting the sales, and observing the training. Over the past few years, he has taken the trouble to pass on this valuable knowledge to me, concerning key points of what to first look out for in a racehorse and their development through observation, physique and origin.”

Chehboub family training at the Haras de beaumont

Pauline Chehboub is now manager of the family racing and breeding operations, which operates two training yards in Chantilly and Marseille, plus stud activities. She is often seen at the racecourse and regularly on the early morning gallops in Chantilly.

“It’s a seven-day-a-week job, with 35 horses in training at Chantilly, and a further 20 at Calas-Cabriès training centre in Marseille. Apart from keeping tabs on the racehorses, there is also the stud. Not forgetting the administration side, which includes discussing the well-being of the racehorses, future race entries with the trainer, accounts work, buying yearlings, horses to sell and the breeding nominations.” 

“In September 2021, we bought the yard in Chantilly on the Chemin des Aigles as we thought it was important to have a presence for all the main meetings in the Paris region, as well as in Marseille. In this way we can cut down on travelling, through having yards both in the North and South, with the better horses generally based in Chantilly.”

Marseille-based trainer Cedric Rossi trained for a number of different clients, including the Haras de la Gousserie up until December 2021. The subsequent revelation of alleged doping and stopping horses’ investigation by the police three days after Rougir went through the ring, concerning several people including Cedric Rossi, was a major shock for French racing. 

Chehboub family training at the Haras de beaumont

“Cedric Rossi was our principal trainer at the time, and after the alleged doping investigations, we transferred our horses to other trainers, with many at the time going to Richard Chotard and Sealiway to Francis Graffard at Chantilly,” said Pauline Cheboub.

“We transferred Sealiway to Francis Graffard’s stables in Chantilly this season, because his record shows the trainer has a lot of talent. Sealiway has not really had conditions in his favour this season. His best races have been when coming off a fast pace and on soft ground conditions, as in the Champion Stakes.” After a disappointing run in this year’s Arc de Triomphe, Sealiway was subsequently retired to stud.

The Haras de la Gousserie racing and breeding business has worked in a certain tried and trusted way. The stud was bought eight years ago; after the Haras de Lonray, in the South of France Herault region, where the Chehboub breeding stock was previously lodged, went into financial difficulties. Finally they chose to purchase Haras de la Gousserie in the Loire region because it also offered pre-training facilities. 

“We do not sell many of our breeding stock at the sale, as we breed to race. Each year we buy around 20 yearlings at the Arqana August and October sales, looking for French-bred horses with precocity and the possibility to win as two-year-olds, and not by yearlings with expensive leading stallion pedigrees.”

“The objective is to find some good horses each year to eventually add to our breeding stock. Those that turn out to be not future breeding prospects may end up in claiming races to be claimed, or sold through the in-training sales. We like to keep around 20 broodmares to breed from.” 

Now they hope to continue to develop and progress, after transferring their entire breeding stock to their new stud venture in Normandy.

It is clear the Chehboub’s racing and breeding operations has been developing over the past decade, through its policy of buying more and better quality yearlings at the Arqana August and October sales, that has borne fruit as results on the track clearly show. 

In 2013, just 19 racehorses won €573,853  in prize money and premiums; and last year, 41 racehorses earned €2,107,125—nearly 4 times as much. 

They have now progressed to be one of the top ten racehorse owners in France, finishing 9th in 2021; and in early December, nearing the end of the 2022 season, they were once again in 9th position.

It would seem the Chehboub family name has now been firmly established, to become a major player in the French breeding and racing industry. Next year (2023) looks set to be another milestone year.

Haras de beaumont

Haras de beaumont

Investing in All Weather racing

Article by Catrin Nack

The European ‘all-weather’ racing scene has come a long way since racing on an artificial (non-turf) surface was first introduced in the UK at Lingfield Park in 1989. Today, ‘all-weather’ racing accounts for 23% of the French racing programme; and in the UK, racing has recently benefited from a major ‘all-weather’ prize money boost.

‘All-weather’ racing is enhancing the opportunities for those connections wishing to keep horses in training across Europe over the winter months.

But what are opportunities like on a country by country basis? Which countries are investing in ‘all-weather’ racing?

Deauville Racecourse France

France 

While trotting is still the main racing sphere by some way in France – and all their racing is on dirt tracks – all-weather in France has been gathering momentum for over a decade now. Of roughly 5,000 races run in France in 2021, 1,149 were staged on an all-weather surface, thus comprising some 23% of the race program. 

Prestigious tracks such as Deauville and Chantilly have all-weather circuits; in total there are seven all-weather tracks in the country: Deauville, Chantilly, Pornichet, Lyon-la-Soie, Cagnes-sur-Mer, Pau and Marseille-Vivaux.

In contrast to other racing nations, where usually the whole raceday will take place on one surface, French tracks have mixed cards and use the all-weather (all with a Polytrack surface) in summer also.

Fantastic Spirit winning at Cagnes-Sur-Mer

While diversifying the programme, it also takes pressure off the grass tracks, with rising temperatures in southern Europe providing new challenges in turf maintenance. French racing has eight Listed races run on its all-weather surfaces, Cagnes-Sur-Mer stage two, Chantilly one and five at Deauville. A review to enhance the Black-type programme is on the way, but plans are in the very early stages. French tracks are part of the All-Weather Championships programme to qualify for the finals on Good Friday in the UK – something French raiders did to good effect in 2022. 

French racing receives the majority of its income – read prize money – from its betting turnover, as the PMU (the French Tote) has a monopoly on betting. The rise in all-weather racing has naturally seen a rise in betting turnover in this sphere – roughly 18% of all PMU-flat races are run on the all-weather circuit. Recent results suggest that the betting public is gradually switching from traditional jump-races to all-weather racing. 

According to Adrien Cugnasse, all-weather racing also caters well for a new type of owner. With syndicates still very scarce in France, a new type of ‘middle class’ owner has been emerging over the last couple of years – much needed new blood, but a type of owner that relies on a more regular income through prize money. 

UK

It's Year 10 since the creation of Arena Racing Company (ARC) backed All-Weather Championships, and racing on this surface does continue to increase in volume. Six racecourses in Britain stage all-weather racing, on either Polytrack (Lingfield, Kempton, Chelmsford) or Tapeta (Newcastle, Southwell, Wolverhampton); roughly one fifth of all flat races are now on a synthetic surface.  

Huge investments have been made by the operator ARC across their four all-weather racecourses to improve the surface. With Southwell being the latest course to convert to a Tapeta surface (from Fibresand).

Mark Spincer director of ARC racing division

Mark Spincer, managing director of ARC’s Racing Division says that “changing the surface, particularly at Southwell, was the right thing to do and the feedback from trainers and owners has been very positive so far.” 

The creation of the All-Weather Championships 10 years ago can only be viewed as a major success story; the series now incorporates races from Ireland, France, Dubai and even races in Saudi Arabia, as well as the enhanced Fast-Track-Qualifying system. 

The switch of Finals day from Lingfield to Newcastle two years ago was followed by the creation of “All-Weather Vase Day” at Lingfield Park last year, also staged on Good Friday. 

A day that traditionally saw no racing at all now has two high-profile all-weather meetings taking place – a definite illustration of the rise of racing on this surface. Along with geographically diverse racing in the north and the south, All-Weather Vase Day naturally comes with added prize money, the whole raceday is worth around £390,000. 

Highfield Princess ridden by Jason Hart winning at All Weather Championships finals day at Newcastle racecourse

No fast-track-qualifying here, but at least three runs are needed akin to Finals Day, thus creating additional incentive to run on the all-weather. Even the quickest of glances at any given fixture list on the all-weather does reveal the extent to which these races are contested now; with even the choicest-bred horses from big yards coming under starters orders. 

While headline names to race synthetic surface will forever include the mighty Enable and Stradivarius, Godolphin recently raced a half-brother to Guineas hero Coroebus to name just one. Tracks learn about the adaptability of the surface all the time, with the recent extreme temperatures providing a new challenge. “Without all-weather racing, there wouldn’t have been any racing in the recent cold snap,” remarks Mark Spincer.

Newcastle Racecourse All Weather

2022 saw two ARC initiatives to increase the quality of racing their tracks, one of those aimed specifically for (winter) all-weather racing. The mother company of Lingfield Park, Newcastle, Southwell and Wolverhampton announced a further bonus of over £1,000,000 not just added to prize money, but to reward connections of the most consistent performers during the winter months. 

“While it is early days, some eagle-eyed trainers have already seen the chance to bag a bonus, of course we would love to attract more horses and their connections to our four all-weather tracks. We know that, for many, jump-racing is the winter focus in the UK, but all-weather racing during this period has a wide fan base both domestically and abroad,” concludes Spincer.

Coinciding with the exact timeframe of the All-Weather Championships, the bonus aims to reward consistency in given periods, no matter what the rating of the horse. Points scored go towards a “Horse of the Month” prize with rising extra money paid out from February onwards as well as £700,000 in bonuses for the horses with the most points at the end of the season.

The scheme clearly aims to enhance field sizes. Giving trainers, owners, jockeys as well as stable staff monetary reasons to race on at ARC tracks. 

Germany

Germany's all-weather racing scene was quite vibrant at the end of the last century, but it has been in steady decline for some time now. 

In 2019, Neuss racecourse closed its doors for the last time, and along with 144 years of turf racing went the second of the all-weather tracks. 

Winter racing is now taking place at Dortmund racecourse only. Dortmund has a grass and an all-weather track, thus providing racing literally all year round. 

However, the all-weather surface is a dirt track, Germany does not have any tracks with an artificial surface. The surface has not been renewed for some time now and has a huge kickback. 

Racing takes place on roughly 14-day intervals, at time of writing eight meetings are planned this winter. Races are part of the French PMU funding and receive other subsidiaries. Generally, there are six-race-cards, the quality being no better than class 3 handicaps – Germany's second lowest class, with some sellers thrown in for good measure. 

Dortmund Racecourse All weather Germany

Prize money is at basic level for these types of races, meaning total purses per race do not exceed €5.500. Broadly speaking, all-weather racing in Germany caters for the very base level of the sport, with major trainers and owners very rarely venturing into this sphere.

Racing on the sand does count towards the Trainer and Jockey Championships in Germany, and this might lure the odd runner from the bigger stables. Plans for a second track with a synthetic surface have been mulled over by Deutscher Galopp for some time, but along with the general dire financial situation of racing in Germany, it remains only a very distant possibility at the moment. 

Ireland

All-weather racing finally reached Ireland in 2007 with the remodelling and re-opening of Dundalk Stadium. It’s the only track in Europe to combine horses and dog-racing and judging by online reviews. This has been a huge success with fun-loving Dubliners. 

From October till March, the track stages some 43 meetings, with at least once a week racing – mainly on a Friday night with floodlight and dog-racing following. Racing on the Polytrack continues sporadically throughout the year. 

While the quality of handicaps is clearly not premium class, the track does stage a fair share of quite decent 2yo and 3yo maiden races, and these are contested by even the biggest yards in the country.

In addition, Dundalk stages two Gp.3 and three Listed races. Plans for the second Irish all-weather track have been developing for a number of years now, with planning permission for a new track at Tipperary expected to go ahead in early 2023. 

This clearly points to an ever-increasing demand to stage flat racing all year round, largely independent from weather influences. In fact, many races on Dundalk's cards continue to be oversubscribed and operate with reserves – a further pointer to huge demand. 

Smaller yards definitely target horses for Dundalk races and have owners who buy horses for this sphere. While larger yards may pick and choose their races at Dundalk, smaller trainers rely on the extra income to keep the yard going through the long winter months. 

As jump-racing starts losing its tag of catering for the ‘small man,’ the domination of just a few trainers and owners is becoming more and more blatant by the year. All-weather racing gives a different type of trainer and owner a new lease of racing life. 

With added entertainment around the product, Dundalk has created a largely vibrant scene; being in a prime spot no doubt helps, but all-weather racing with regular consistency is clearly a success story in Irish racing. 

Dundalk Stadium

Which products and services should trainers be using in 2023?

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Cavalor - ArtiTech

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The efficacy and especially the synergistic potential of the individual raw materials and botanical ingredients on inflammation, cartilage protection and repair has been studied over 7 years. These findings have led to the final formulation of Cavalor ArtiTec.

Combining botanical ingredients is a widely applied practice to compose effective products. The final result is believed to be of similar or better potency as that of a single herb. The advantage of using suboptimal efficacious dose levels of each botanical ingredient is reducing the risk of potential toxicities associated with the usage of single herbs.

In the follow-up of the results of previous studies, 7 candidate formulations were evaluated (in vitro) to further unlock the mechanism of action of these formulations and their efficacy. The influence on various biomarkers related to joint health and homeostasis were evaluated using primary human chondrocytes isolated from knee joints in various in vitro models. This study has led to the development of the final candidate formulation for evaluation in a combined mechanistic and efficacy horse specific joint inflammation model (Phase III).

In conclusion, Cavalor ArtiTec is a complete multi-ingredient nutraceutical with proven efficacy for optimising joint health in equine athletes. Cavalor ArtiTec delivers everything our equine ‘athletes’ deserve during periods of intense activity and stress. 

For more information contact: Website: www.cavalordirect.co.uk Telephone: +44 1902 213483

Duggan Veterinary - ConfidenceEQ®

Pheromone communication has been at the heart of Duggan Veterinary Supplies expertise for over 40 years, and we are now pleased to announce the launch of the innovative equine appeasing pheromone, ConfidenceEQ®.

Duggan Veterinary - ConfidenceEQ®

A pheromone is a naturally occurring chemical that an animal produces used for intraspecies communication, which means that their presence automatically and predictably affects all members of the same species, regardless of age or gender.

Like many mammals, nursing mares naturally emit a calming pheromone that reassures their newborn foal. When the foal encounters unfamiliar situations and uncharted territory, this pheromone makes the foal feel comfortable, secure, and more self-assured, enabling them to better learn about their surroundings. ConfidenceEQ® is an identical replica of this horse appeasing pheromone. Numerous studies have been conducted since the equine appeasing pheromone was discovered, proving its effectiveness in reducing stress in conditions that occur frequently in horses of all ages.

Donal Duggan is delighted to add ConfidenceEQ® to the Duggan Veterinary Equine armoury, stating: “The ideal time to use ConfidenceEQ® is when you anticipate your horse will be exposed to something new which they may find stressful. ConfidenceEQ® helps reassure horses, helping them focus allowing them to use their own skills to cope with their surroundings and can be used to help build confidence in situations such as: Loading, travelling and recovery after arrival; Environmental changes (new yard, stabling) or competition environment; Social situations (weaning foals, meeting new horses); Dealing with loud noises (large crowds, thunderstorms, fireworks); Breaking young horses and introducing new exercises during training; Farrier, vet, or dental visits.”

Horses in these situations may show signs of stress such as pawing, vocalising, flared nostrils, kicking, lack of concentration, and resistance. These behavioural changes are due to an elevated cortisol level, which when prolonged, also triggers multiple physiological responses like increased heart rate and blood pressure, weakening of the immune system, cribbing, and digestive issues - all of which can develop into significant problems for owners, trainers, and veterinary practitioners.

ConfidenceEQ® is easy and quick to apply. There are no syringes, mixing food, pills or other uncomfortable application methods that can be difficult to administer or add stress to your horse. It takes effect in 30 minutes, lasts 2.5 hours, and can be reapplied as needed.

For more information contact: Email: sales@dugganvet.ie or uksales@dugganvet.com 

Freedom Health - Total Gut Health

Horses actively training and racing commonly struggle with digestive health, problems which manifest most obviously in gastric issues. Additionally, many racehorses experience concurrent hindgut problems less easily recognised. Not eating well, sudden changes in behaviour, resistant and mean attitudes, not fully using the body, and struggling to maintain weight and condition are a few of the problems that can be associated with hindgut health.

Freedom Health - Succeed

It’s important to actively manage the health of the horses’ entire digestive tract to stop the treat-and-repeat cycle and keep your horses in top condition. A healthy gut is a core requirement for a racehorse to perform to its full potential.

Unfortunately, training, travelling, racing, and breeding chronically stress the horse and especially the digestive tract. Management and feeding practices have changed beyond recognition over the last few decades. But the equine digestive tract remains the same, having been accustomed to a low-stress, nomadic lifestyle while consuming a high-fibre, trickle-fed diet. Modern husbandry practices and feeding grain-based feeds, further complicated by competition stresses, can be significant contributors to digestive issues. What, then, can you do for these horses?

Freedom Health - Total Gut Health

Support total digestive health by feeding SUCCEED® Digestive Conditioning Program™ once a day every day. SUCCEED maintains optimal digestive health in athletic horses naturally with science-based, human-food-grade quality, proven ingredients. It serves as an ongoing maintenance program for the health of the entire digestive tract.

Product trials available on a limited basis. Contact Sandra Hughes: shughes@freedomhealthllc.com.

SUCCEED® Digestive Conditioning Program™

The patented and proven SUCCEED formula delivers nutrients the body requires for GI anatomy and function. It provides a variety of benefits including:Oat Oil – specially extracted to preserve polar lipids which support nutrient absorption and bioavailability; Oat Flour – specially processed to preserve ß-glucan, a soluble fibre that provides support for a healthy immune system and a normal, healthy rate of feed transit through the GI tract; Yeast – a combination of a mannan oligosaccharide and a yeast ß-glucan help maintain a healthy, balanced hindgut and natural immunity; Amino Acids – provide fuel for muscles and support production of mucin, a necessary component of the mucus that lubricates and protects the gut lining.

“I have been using SUCCEED, and I couldn’t be happier with the results. You can visually see a big difference in the horses’ condition very quickly. I believe that it is really enabling their digestive systems.”

Richard Hughes, Horse Trainer

For more information visit: Succeed-equine.co.uk or @succeedequine

NAF - Immuforte

Keep the whole yard healthy, and ready to race, with NEW NAF Immuforte. 

The busy racing yard environment presents the perfect storm of challenges for your horses’ immune systems; and any trainer knows when immune challenge hits, training days, performance and results are lost. Keeping them healthy keeps your training regime on track, and ensures the season’s goals remain in sight for every horse on your yard. 

NAF - Immuforte

CREDITED TO JESS PHOTOGRAPHY

Regular travel, intense exercise and being stabled in close proximity, often with shared air space, means a daily assault on every racehorse’s natural defences. Add the challenge of frequent new arrivals, particularly young horses, with naïve immune systems, working closely together, and the risk is self-evident. 

Requested by trainers. Formulated by Equine Vets and Registered Nutritionists. Trialled by trainers, riders and professionals in elite equine sport. BETA NOPS accredited, and designed to meet the highest regulatory and quality standards for racing throughout Europe, and beyond. New NAF Immuforte builds on over 30 years of experience at NAF, in innovative evidence-led solutions, to provide targeted immune support for equine athletes. 

Containing a key natural extract proven to boost the equine immune system, Immuforte supports white blood cell numbers and activity, and targets the oxygen load capacity of red blood cells. Uniquely, Immuforte combines the recognised immune support of echinacea with natural antioxidants and adaptogenic botanical extracts, including, rosehip, turmeric, ginkgo and omicha, to regulate cellular responses, and further support the body’s own defence against unwanted attack. 

NAF Immuforte is available as a palatable liquid, in an easy to feed, auto-measured pump dispense liquid. The perfect solution to your yard’s natural defences.

For more information contact: Website: www.naf-equine.eu Telephone: 0800 373 106

Plusvital - Racing Syrup

The globalisation of racing has eroded the margins of success between trainers. High performance is no longer guaranteed based on pedigrees. A study carried out on winning margins in racing suggests that the overall percentage difference between first place and second place  is 0.32%, the difference between first and third was 0.75%. Never before has optimising recovery and nutrition been as important in gaining percentages of improvement which can be the difference between winning and not. 

Plusvital - Racing Syrup

Days post-race or fast work the body recovers and adapts allowing the horse to become more oxygen efficient and physically stronger. Muscle recovery requires specific vitamins, minerals and amino acids to give the horse the best possible opportunity to maximise its full potential. This vital edge is optimised by correct nutrition. Supporting race horses' mineral and vitamin levels is critical to racing success today. 

Used for 47 years by global racing elite Plusvital Racing Syrup is formulated to provide 30 essential vitamins and minerals exceeding NRC recommendations. Key ingredients facilitate strength and recovery.  

B vitamins are an essential group of vitamins for a horse to perform at its best. The harder they work the higher the requirement for vitamin B is. B vitamins play a vital role in forming red blood cells, responsible for carrying oxygen to muscles allowing the horse to continue galloping at high intensity whilst removing carbon dioxide. When muscle has a high level of carbon dioxide the horse becomes tired and cannot finish the race.

Additional key ingredients include Vitamin E which reduces oxidative stress. Selenium neutralise free radicals supporting the immune system. Branched chain Amino acids and Threonine supports muscle recovery essential for strengthening. Zinc and biotin support cellular repair and hoof growth. Available in 2L or 5L Plusvital racing syrup supports your horse in pursuit of their performance goals. 

For more information visit: www.plusvital.com

Why Choose Pro-Dosa in 2023?
As we all know, horsemen are responsible for the management of horses’ health, wellbeing, and fitness, to ensure they can perform to the best of their ability on the racetrack, but at the same time, a racing stable must be a profitable business and each horse must be economically viable for their owners.  As a result, in 2023, more than ever, horsemen must ensure they are getting the best possible value from the products they purchase.

Pro-Dosa

Quite logically, horses under the added stress of hard work, transport, racing, competition, or illness have increased nutrient requirements.  Unlike people though, who often turn to food when under stress (think chocolate or chardonnay), horses tend to go off feed and drink less than they normally would.  Horses that fail to eat or drink well when travelling and racing will recover more slowly and will often perform below their best.  That is why many stables consider traditional, veterinary-administered, injectable pre-race/pre-travel treatments to be essential. Corrine Hills says “I originally developed Pro-Dosa BOOST, for horses in my own racetrack veterinary practice, as a more economical, less invasive, oral alternative to those treatments.”

Pro-Dosa BOOST is a complete, balanced multi-nutrient paste that I formulated to fill the gap between good daily nutrition and the increased requirements horses have when they are under stress. Pro-Dosa BOOST provides a practical way to deliver essential nutrients to horses that may not be eating or drinking enough, at those times, to support normal metabolism, performance, recovery, and heath.  

It contains a comprehensive range of water-soluble vitamins, trace elements, electrolytes, and amino acids in doses that reflect requirements established in scientific literature.  I have included them in readily usable forms, in good balance with each other, and in balance with the cofactors required for their absorption and function.”

Pro-Dosa International Ltd is GMP registered, demonstrating quality, safety, and security of the product from raw materials through to finished product.  Each batch of Pro-Dosa BOOST undergoes laboratory testing including complete quantitative analysis, demonstrating that each portion contains precisely what is on the label; microbial cultures, to ensure it is safe to feed; and Naturally Occurring Prohibited Substance screening.  

For more information contact: Email: info@pro-dosa.com Telephone: +64 27 238-8482

SPILLERS™ - Perform & Restore Mash

Racehorses need optimum nutrition to help them fulfil their full potential which is why SPILLERS™ has launched their new SPILLERS Perform & Restore Mash. The mash soaks super-fast in under 2 minutes providing convenience especially when travelling and is designed to be fed daily to support optimum condition and recovery.  It’s been formulated to assist hydration and complement the replacement of electrolytes post exercise.  Re-hydrating quickly is important particularly for horses in high intensity exercise as they rely heavily on muscle glycogen (stored glucose) for energy metabolism and although it takes up to 72 hours for glycogen stores to be fully restored, replenishment will be slower in dehydrated horses. 

SPILLERS™ - Perform & Restore Mash

SPILLERS Perform & Restore Mash is a low starch, molasses free blend of highly digestible fibre and oil to support digestive health and includes probiotic live yeast alongside prebiotic MOS and FOS.  The mash offers a high level of the essential amino acid lysine to support muscle tone and topline and includes branch chain amino acids to support muscle synthesis post exercise. What’s more, it supplies powerful antioxidants including vitamin C to support respiratory health and natural, bioavailable vitamin E to support immunity, muscle health and an athletic performance. 

Finally, SPILLERS Perform & Restore Mash includes an appetising apple aroma which is released when soaking to encourage even the fussiest of fussy feeders. 

All SPILLERS feeds are BETA NOPS approved.

For more information contact:  Website: www.spillers-feeds.com Care-Line number: 01908 226626

Fairfax - Better condition – better performance

Resolve to make 2023 the year you take a closer look at the exercise tack your horses wear on a daily basis – and follow the science when it comes to making choices that will improve performance.

Switching saddles could significantly improve a horse’s back health and movement, as well as reducing time off and vet bills this year. In scientific trials commonly-used exercise saddles (1/2 tree, 3/4 tree, and full tree) all caused areas of potentially detrimental high pressure. The Fairfax Exercise Saddle relieves pressure at a crucial point on the back (T13) so in gallop the hindleg is brought forward more and the quarters come further under the horse. The proven result is increased stride length and therefore more power.

If a horse is girthy or aggressive when being tacked up, consider the girth it wears on a daily basis. When straight girths were tested at gallop on a treadmill, the pressure was so high that the pressure mat was unable to record it. To achieve a significantly freer gallop with increased hindlimb extension, make the switch for 2023 to the Fairfax Race Exercise Girth which is shaped to avoid a peak pressure zone behind the elbow. It may also be an effective part of a multi-disciplinary approach in supporting horses with ulcers.

You could reduce or eliminate sore or rubbed withers this year by using a medical-grade closed-cell foam pad with a shaped central webbing spine. The Fairfax Race Exercise Pad provided superior pressure reduction without slipping in a pilot study where foam, gel and polyfill pads were compared. Gel pads increased pressure at the front of the saddle and those without a central spine (such as polyfill pads) slipped down onto the back at speed. In addition, using multiple polyfill pads does not relieve pressure – it increases bulk and instability. 

Scientists have proven that changing to a bridle that reduces pressure at the TMJ has a significant positive effect on the horse’s power, straightness and efficiency of stride. This is because the TMJ area is massively influential when it comes to locomotion. The Fairfax Race Bridle relieves pressure at the TMJ and other areas on the face resulting in improved front and hindleg range of motion. In addition, the Mexican grackle helps keep the bit stable in the mouth reducing sores and hanging associated with bridle pressure.

For more information visit: Fairfaxracing.com

Baileys New Race-Pro Cubes for the “Challenging Temperament”

Baileys’ new Race-Pro Cubes are a reduced starch alternative to oat-based racing feeds, delivering a highly palatable combination of slow and fast release energy to fuel racehorses of all types, in training, racing and recovery, throughout their season.  Ideal for horses whose temperament can be challenging when fed high starch mixes, these high fibre cubes support sustained performance and stamina, while also fueling speed.  

Baileys New Race-Pro Cubes for the “Challenging Temperament”

They contain a blend of highly digestible super fibres and oil, for slow release calories, with micronised wheat for readily available energy, and boosted antioxidant levels support muscle function and recovery.  Digest Plus prebiotic and a live probiotic yeast are included for optimum gut health, while a reduced starch content encourages a healthy gastric environment.  To complete the package, Race-Pro Cubes contain a full performance range of vitamins and minerals, including B vitamins, for healthy hoof growth, bone and tissue integrity and general well-being.

Where a low starch, high energy feed is required, for those prone to gastric ulcers for example, Baileys’ renowned Ease & Excel blend and Ease & Excel Cubes are proven to deliver, with starch levels of just 8%, yet Digestible Energy (DE) contents of 13MJ/kg and 12MJ/kg respectively.  Race-Pro Cubes provide 12MJ/kg of DE with a 17% starch level, compared to Racehorse Cubes (starch 26%/DE 13.5MJ/kg) and Racehorse Mix (starch 32%/DE 14MJ/kg).

For more information contact Baileys UK Racing Specialist, Will Humphries, on 07731 997580 or will@baileyshorsefeeds.co.uk

Outside of the UK, contact Export Manager, Mark Buchan, on  + 44 (0)7711 701565 or mark@baileyshorsefeeds.co.uk  www.baileyshorsefeeds.co.uk/racing

Bloomfields - Professional Raceline

This is the ultimate horsebox for young or difficult horses, stallions, & bloodstock.

Designed and precision engineered in the UK specifically for the transport of Bloodstock, the unmistakable & seamless Bloomfields Professional Raceline oozes class & elegance as well as its evident suitability for the industries demands.

Bloomfields - Professional Raceline

A twist to our popular Professional model, which has been a market leading design used by amateurs and professionals throughout the world for over 15 years, we have designed with the involvement of industry experts to meet the needs of the end user, comfort and practicality for both the travelling staff and the horses.

The Professional Raceline is fitted with our one piece composite floor. Sliding partition, wall, door and roof padding is fitted as standard for superior comfort of the horse. Our woven, thermally bonded panels, doubled with our captive design are, in our opinion, the strongest on the market, but for extra peace of mind we also add an aluminium kick board throughout the horse area.

Bloomfields have designed and developed a slam locking system for the individual doors to each horse. Knowing that some travellers can be difficult, this gives super easy exit and entry to the grooms area without needing to bend down in front of the horses. Our Double catch slam locks make shutting the doors effortless and safe plus super easy access to each horse for easy preparation.

A very popular option for the Professional Raceline is the exquisite sliding partition. Absolutely indispensable for transporters and studs who carry mares and foals. Effortlessly glide the full height partition to the far wall with one hand and back to the centre point when required, meaning there is no need for more than one person to alter the stalls. Our 4 point locking system adds superior strength when in the central position.

The seamless under-sprung ramp gives a progressive lifting pivot meaning opening and closing the ramp is effortless. We never use gas rams, meaning the weight of the ramp will not change from the day of purchase.

What sets the Raceline apart from any other is the careful consideration into the practicality of the grooms area and how it can be a useful and resourceful place for storing everything from tack to veterinary medication and water barrels. Thorough research was undertaken to maximise the use of the space in the grooms area, with this in mind we have the option of a washable removable Hammock that is, as standard, mounted securely on the bulkhead. This allows travelling staff to relax without taking up essential weight or space.

One of the main factors considered when designing the Raceline was to put preventatives in place for cross contamination, particularly in the racing industry this is essential, So we have, as standard, supplied individual storage compartments for racing equipment & feed etc.

With safety in mind, believed to be the safest way to travel horses, The horses are separated by means of a full height, grilled partition, head divider, two full height grilled access doors, eliminating the need for a breast bar. The professional Raceline comes fully padded with an oversized rear door and dual reinforced glass fibre and Coat-X coated wheel arch covers. 

With an expansive list of optional extras to suit almost any requirement, including the 4.5t crewcab option in 2023, the Bloomfields Professional Raceline is the first and only form of 2 horse transportation you’ll need.

Our Professional Raceline is used throughout the world by professional transporters and riders, proving the strength and durability is second to none.

Contact us today to arrange a yard visit or for further details.

Telephone: 01558685117 / 07534849749 Email: BloomfieldsRaceline@Gmail.com Website: www.bloomfields.co/horsebox-models/raceline-professional

Jérôme Reynier - The French horseman’s pathway to success

Jérôme Reynier

Article by Katherine Ford

Take a look at the French trainers’ standings in September, and hot on the heels of the Classic powerhouses of Rouget, Fabre and Graffard in fourth place was Jérôme Reynier. Based in his native Marseille, still a couple of years shy of his 40th birthday, the discreet yet determined professional has climbed step by step to racing’s top table, and his ascension is far from over. 

I met Reynier at Deauville during the August meeting and interrupted his breakfast with half a dozen staff. “We have a family atmosphere and a good relationship. I’m not a difficult boss, but if there are decisions to be made, that’s my job. I don’t want anyone else to take initiatives without consulting me first. That’s why I’m always available in case there’s a problem,” Reynier admits.

What is striking with Reynier is an attention to detail, whether that be in the organisation of his training regime, his assiduous desire to answer any queries from any quarters, or his true passion and almost encyclopaedic knowledge of bloodstock and racing. Going back to the origins of his love of racing, he explains, “I caught the virus from my father who was an architect but passionate about racing and breeding. I was born in 1985, and that was the year that he bred his first horse, called Shaindy.” 

Reynier goes on to recount in great detail the destiny of Shaindy, who was bought back as a yearling and ended up Group-placed as a juvenile and winner of the then Listed Prix Djebel. It is easy to forget from the vividness of the description that at the time he was still in nappies and has no direct memories of the time. “It was magical, for a first homebred, carrying my grandfather’s colours. That caused a snowball effect with my father who bought more mares. He was lucky, but then you make your own luck.” 

Learning the trade

Just a few years later Reynier’s father sold all his burgeoning thoroughbred interests when his son was still too small to remember, in order to devote more time to his wife and family. 

Jérôme Reynier French trainer.jpg

However, the marriage broke down and his son remembers, “My parents separated when I was 12, and I went to live with my father who took me to Deauville sales to see if I took to the bloodstock world. It was all new to me, but I loved it and thought of nothing else from then on. 

“At school, I put sales catalogues inside my textbooks; so during lessons I was engrossed in the pedigree pages. I had never touched a horse in my life—my experience all came from books as there wasn’t even [French racing channel] Equidia at the time.”

At 15 years old, Jérôme Reynier had his first hands-on experience during a summer at Alain Brandebourger’s Haras de Chartreux, and the following summer his father sent him to Newmarket to learn English. “I spent two months with David Shekells at Old Mill Stud. He had two yearlings for Deauville sales, but I was only tiny and not strong enough to hold a yearling weighing 400kg. They were both monsters—a Nashwan and an Unfuwain—so my job for two months was to walk behind them to keep them moving forward. 

“Then during the journey from Newmarket to Deauville, I had to travel in the back of the horsebox at their heads all the way to stop them from fighting. It was a real test of my enthusiasm!”

Full marks for effort

Deauville trainer Jerome Reynier.jpg

Jérôme passed the test with flying colours, and his enthusiasm remained intact, more so than his academic career, which suffered from his obsession with thoroughbreds. “I failed my Bac [baccalauréat], and things weren’t easy then as I had no qualifications, contacts or references. When I went to the races at Deauville, I didn’t have access to any of the reserved areas; I saw racing as a very closed environment. For me, it was unattainable. During that summer, I worked at the Forien’s Haras de Montaigu to prepare the yearlings. After that, I applied to do a season at Coolmore, and they took me on from January to June in 2005; so I went to Ireland and passed my Bac as an external candidate.”

A fascination for pedigrees

Jérôme Reynier has stars in his eyes as he remembers his stint at Coolmore. “I worked in one of the small yards with barren or maiden mares, so there were no foals but some amazing pedigrees, and we took them to stallions like Sadler’s Wells, Galileo and Montjeu. I got to see the stallions and how the system worked. I was always more interested in the pedigrees and breeding aspect than the racing in the afternoon.” 

The Irish National Stud course followed in 2006 and while there, the determined and precocious Jérôme applied for and was accepted onto the Darley Flying Start programme. “I didn’t waste a minute!” he remembers. “In 2008 I was 22 years old and found myself with qualifications from the Irish National Stud and Darley Flying Start. The problem was that I was overqualified for my age. I needed work, but everyone considered that I was too young to take on the jobs in the breeding industry that I was qualified for. At the same time, my father fell ill so I went back to Marseille and as nobody would employ me, I set up my own business as a bloodstock agent. But I soon realised it was very difficult to earn a living without a large volume of trade. I knew a few people, but I didn’t have a network of clients. I was young and based in Marseille, so I didn’t tick the boxes…” 

It was therefore by default that Reynier began his successful training career, initially as a private trainer for the Ecurie Camacho Courses. “I was employed to train around 15 horses for them at Marseille, and in two years we had 38 winners and €800,000 in earnings with modest horses. It was a great way to start off, but after two years, I wanted my independence.” 

Starting from scratch

From four horses at the outset in March 2013, the ambitious professional soon made himself noticed and his stable grew. “I was getting good results, including in the Parisian region where I could find favourable entries and make a name for myself, rather than focusing on local races at Marseille. I’ve always tried to look beyond my immediate horizon. I had horses of a limited quality, but my passion was to find winnable races. I was back to what I loved—really hands on, mucking out in the morning, going to the track, driving the horses to races myself. I wouldn’t hesitate to make a long journey for a made-to-measure entry. I think that was the best period in my career as a trainer.” 

Reynier was hit hard by the untimely death of his father in November 2014 and doubled down to bury his grief in work, “to make him proud from where he is now.”

He was satisfied with his 40-capacity stable but in 2018 received a career-changing offer from powerful local owner Jean-Claude Seroul, whose orange and grey colours were a familiar sight in Marseille. They are now known far beyond, thanks notably to the exploits of prolific top-level winners Skalleti and Marianafoot.

Reynier took on the job as private trainer to Seroul’s 50-55 strong string, based just across the road from his own yard at the Calas training centre, 30km north of Marseille, “Mr Seroul has his own stable, his own horses and his own staff; it didn’t affect my own structure. They are two separate operations, and the strings don’t go out at the same time; so instead of having four lots with 30 riders in each, I have eight lots with 15 riders each time. It’s much more manageable as I like to give each rider precise instructions for including the exact position of every horse in each lot. All the details are indicated on the list, which is sent out the previous evening, and that organisation now allows me to delegate more; and for instance to spend the month here in Deauville where we have an allocation of 14 boxes and a rotation of horses. If we win six races here and a few places, it will be a good result.”

That August target was achieved with the highlight being a Listed victory for the Seroul-owned filly, Rose Premium.

Calas ticks all the boxes

The conversation moves back to Calas, described by Reynier as a “perfect” facility with a main 3km round track, which gives the opportunity to work left- or right-handed depending upon the day. It also offers an incline for interval training, as well as turf, sand and jumps schooling tracks. “We have all that we need, and the results are proof of that. I will never abandon Calas because it is a good training centre with a wonderful climate, and it allows us to create a very progressive programme for the horses. We all—Christophe Escuder, Fabrice Vermeulen and myself—like to run our horses as much as possible rather than over-train them, so we provide a lot of runners for the PMU. Our owners want to see their horses at the races, so as soon as the horse is ready, whatever his level, I find a race for him. I find the French programme clear and simple, with opportunities for all categories.”

Marseille was rocked in late 2021 as dawn raids saw three members of the Rossi family among several professionals taken into police custody under suspicion of the use of forbidden substances and conspiracy to defraud and fix races. Frederic, Cédric and Charley, who were responsible for around 150 horses at Calas, are currently suspended from training and under police investigation. Reynier comments, “It saddened me because I know Cedric and Charley (Rossi) well, and I am sure that they are not cheats. It’s been a tough time for the region to be in the spotlight for negative reasons, and there is also the risk that if we don’t generate enough runners for turnover on the PMU, they will reduce the number of races at our tracks.” 

The city’s best racecourse, seaside Marseille-Borély, is already under threat of closure and Reynier adds, “The lease has been extended until 2024. It’s perfectly situated for development, but it will be a disaster if it is lost; so that’s why it is important to keep an open mind geographically. I wouldn’t exclude creating a small satellite yard in Chantilly to start with to avoid too much travelling for some of the horses. Then why not extend the Chantilly stable to have two bases… But it is certain that the future lies in Paris, or maybe abroad.”

Plotting a path to success

Trainer of Royal Julius, winner of the inaugural Bahrain International Trophy.jpg

Jérôme Reynier has always had the opposite of a blinkered approach and loves to see a well-made plan come to fruition, as his first stable star Royal Julius, winner of the inaugural Bahrain International Trophy, demonstrates. “When Bahrain created the new international race, the prize money was very generous. And the conditions were optimal for Royal Julius, who was a true right-hander who loved a fast surface and ten furlongs, so I set out to prepare and qualify him for that race. He needed to keep a high rating, so I sent him to Italy where it was easy for him to do well in Stakes company; whereas if I’d run him in a Gp. 3 in France and he’d finished fifth, his rating would have dropped and I would never have been invited there or to Qatar. He was a great horse for the stable, as was Master Spirit who was a “second hand” horse we received; and from being a handicapper, we managed to take second place in the Grand Prix de Deauville with him. I’ve been lucky to train some good horses, but it’s important to take good care of them to age well.” 

More recently, flag bearers Skalleti and Marianafoot have rewarded the patience and skill of their handler, along with Thunder Drum who joined Reynier for owner Lady Bamford. “It was particularly satisfying for me to receive beautifully bred horses for Lady Bamford and exceptional to win the Prix du Royaumont (Gp. 3) last year on Jockey-Club day with Thunder Drum, who couldn’t win a maiden in England as a juvenile. We had intended to run her in the Italian Oaks that weekend but made a last-minute change of plan due to a modest field and rain in Chantilly; and it worked perfectly! As for Skalleti and Marianafoot, they both had their best seasons last year at six years old, which is amazing. In fact, I was the leading French trainer on Gp. 1 wins, with the three victories of that pair. Cédric Rossi and André Fabre had two each!”

Prize money for happy owners and trainers

“We don’t have a star this year, but a lot of horses are earning their keep and that keeps the stable going. Take the example of Happy Harry, a son of Zarak that we claimed in January; in six months, he has earned €70,000 (the gelding boosted his earnings by a further €14,000 in prize money and owners’ premiums for a handicap win days after our interview). If I have 50 Happy Harrys, I’m happy! The French system makes this possible if you have a healthy horse who can run regularly. In England, if you have a decent horse, you either try and win some good races or you try the commercial route, win on the debut and then sell it on. It’s impossible to earn money with prize money in England, and I couldn’t train there. It’s a different policy. The French way of constructing a career is with a horse that might be just 80 percent ready for his debut and he will progress as he races. So, we can think of the long term rather than the short term. As long as we can keep our system in France with the PMU and decent prize money, we are privileged. We are the best country for racing in Europe or maybe in the world, but a whole generation of punters is on the way out, and I don’t see many young people betting on racing, so I often feel pessimistic.”

Jerome Reynier trainer of Happy Harry.jpg

Despite his concerns, Jérôme Reynier is, as always, aware of upcoming opportunities and a changing of the guard, which may enable him to move even further up racing’s top table. “There is a whole older generation of trainers in Chantilly who are on the way out, so there will be opportunities. The new trainers who are there now and setting up soon will create a new dynamism. Maybe I will be a part of it and maybe I won’t…” 

One thing is certain, whatever Jérôme Reynier does or doesn’t become a part of will depend upon a carefully constructed plan, leaving little to chance and attracting more good luck his way. 

EIPH - could there be links to sudden death and pulmonary haemorrhage?

Dr Peter W. Physick-Sheard, BVSc, FRCVS, explores preliminary research and hypotheses, being conducted by the University of Guelph, to see if there is a possibility that these conditions are linked and what this could mean for future management and training of thoroughbreds. 

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"World's Your Oyster,” a three-year-old thoroughbred mare, presented at the veterinary hospital for clinical examination. She won her maiden start as a two-year-old and placed once in two subsequent starts. After training well as a three-year-old, she failed to finish her first start, easing at the top of the stretch, and was observed to fade abruptly during training. Some irregularity was suspected in heart rhythm after exercise. Thorough clinical examination, blood work, ultrasound of the heart and an ECG during rest and workout revealed nothing unusual. 

Returning to training, Oyster placed in six of her subsequent eight starts, winning the last two. She subsequently died suddenly during early training as a four-year-old. At post-mortem, diagnoses of pulmonary haemorrhage and exercise-induced pulmonary haemorrhage were established—a very frustrating and unfortunate outcome.

Across the racing world, a case like this probably occurs daily. Anything that can limit a horse's ability to express its genetic potential is a major source of anxiety when training. The possibility of injury and lameness is the greatest concern, but a close second is respiratory disease, with bleeding  from the lungs (most often referred to as exercise induced pulmonary [lung] haemorrhage or EIPH) being high on the list. 

EIPH is thought to occur in as many as 85 percent of racehorses, and may initially be very mild without obvious clinical consequences. In some cases it can be associated with haemorrhage of sufficient severity for blood to appear at the nostrils, even at first occurrence. In many racing jurisdictions this is a potentially career-ending problem. In these horses, an impact on performance is unquestionable. Bleeding from the lungs is the reason for the existence of ‘Lasix programs,’ involving pre-race administration of a medication considered to reduce haemorrhage. Such programs are controversial—the justifications for their existence ranging from addressing welfare concerns for the horse to dealing with the performance impacts. 

Much less frequently encountered is heavy exercise-associated bleeding from the nostrils (referred to as epistaxis), which can sometimes be accompanied by sudden death, during or shortly after exercise. Some horses bleed heavily internally and die without blood appearing at the nostrils. Haemorrhage may only become obvious when the horse is lying on its side, or not until post-mortem. Affected animals do not necessarily have any history of EIPH, either clinically or sub-clinically. There is an additional group of rare cases in which a horse simply dies suddenly, most often very soon after work and even after a winning performance, and in which little to nothing clearly explains the cause on post-mortem. This is despite the fact most racing jurisdictions study sudden death cases very closely.

EIPH is diagnosed most often by bronchoscopy—passing an endoscope into the lung after work and taking a look. In suspected but mild cases, there may not be sufficient haemorrhage to be visible, and a procedure called a bronchoalveolar lavage is performed. The airways are rinsed and fluid is collected and examined microscopically to identify signs of bleeding. Scoping to confirm diagnosis is usually a minimum requirement before a horse can be placed on a Lasix program. 


Are EIPH, severe pulmonary haemorrhage and sudden death related? Are they the same or different conditions? 

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At the University of Guelph, we are working on the hypothesis that most often they are not different—that it’s degrees of the same condition, or closely related conditions perhaps with a common underlying cause. We see varying clinical signs as being essentially a reflection of severity and speed of onset of underlying problems. 

Causes in individual cases may reflect multiple factors, so coming at the issues from several different directions, as is the case with the range of ongoing studies, is a good way to go so long as study subjects and cases are comparable and thoroughly documented. However, starting from the hypothesis that these may all represent basically the same clinical condition, we are approaching the problem from a clinical perspective, which is that cardiac dysfunction is the common cause. 

Numerous cardiac disorders and cellular mechanisms have the potential to contribute to transient or complete pump (heart) failure. However, identifying them as potential disease candidates does not specifically identify the role they may have played, if any, in a case of heart failure and in lung haemorrhage; it only means that they are potential primary underlying triggers. It isn't possible for us to be right there when a haemorrhage event occurs, so almost invariably we are left looking at the outcome—the event of interest has passed. These concerns influence the approach we are taking.


Background

The superlative performance ability of a horse depends on many physical factors:

  • Huge ventilatory (ability to move air) and gas exchange capacity

  • Body structure including limb length and design - allows it to cover ground rapidly with a long stride

  • Metabolic adaptations - supports a high rate of energy production by burning oxygen, tolerance of severe metabolic disruptions toward the end of race-intensity effort

  • High cardiovascular capacity - allows the average horse to pump roughly a brimming bathtub of blood every minute

At race intensity effort, these mechanisms, and more, have to work in coordination to support performance. There is likely not much reserve left—two furlongs (400m) from the winning post—even in the best of horses. There are many wild cards, from how the horse is feeling on race day to how the race plays out; and in all horses there will be a ceiling to performance. That ceiling—the factor limiting performance—may differ from horse to horse and even from day to day. There’s no guarantee that in any particular competition circumstances will allow the horse to perform within its own limitations. One of these factors involves the left side of the heart, from which blood is driven around the body to the muscles.


A weak link - filling the left ventricle

The cardiovascular system of the horse exhibits features that help sustain a high cardiac output at peak effort. The feature of concern here is the high exercise pressure in the circulation from the right  ventricle, through the lungs to the left ventricle. At intense effort and high heart rates, there is very little time available to fill the left ventricle—sometimes as little as 1/10 of a second; and if the chamber cannot fill properly, it cannot empty properly and cardiac output will fall. The circumstances required to achieve adequate filling include the readiness of the chamber to relax to accept blood—its ‘stiffness.’ Chamber stiffness increases greatly at exercise, and this stiffened chamber must relax rapidly in order to fill. That relaxation seems not to be sufficient on its own in the horse at high heart rates. Increased filling pressure from the circulation draining the lungs is also required. But there is a weak point: the pulmonary capillaries.

These are tiny vessels conducting blood across the lungs from the pulmonary artery to the pulmonary veins. During this transit, all the gas exchange needed to support exercise takes place. The physiology of other species tells us that the trained lung circulation achieves maximum flow (equivalent to cardiac output) by reducing resistance in those small vessels. This process effectively increases lung blood flow reserve by, among other things, dilating small vessels. Effectively, resistance to the flow of blood through the lungs is minimised. We know this occurs in horses as it does in other species; yet in the horse, blood pressure in the lungs still increases dramatically at exercise. 

If this increase is not the result of resistance in the small vessels, it must reflect something else, and that appears to be resistance to flow into the left chamber. This means the entire lung circulation is exposed to the same pressures, including the thin-walled capillaries. Capillaries normally work at quite low pressure, but in the exercising horse, they must tolerate very high pressures. They have thin walls and little between them, and the air exchange sacs in the lung. This makes them vulnerable. It's not surprising they sometimes rupture, resulting in lung haemorrhage.

Recent studies identified changes in the structure of small veins through which the blood flows from the capillaries and on toward the left chamber. This was suspected to be a pathology and part of the long-term consequences of EIPH, or perhaps even part of the cause as the changes were first identified in EIPH cases. It could be, however, that remodelling is a normal response to the very high blood flow through the lungs—a way of increasing lung flow reserve, which is an important determinant of maximum rate of aerobic working. 

The more lung flow reserve, the more cardiac output and the more aerobic work an animal can perform. The same vein changes have been observed in non-racing horses and horses without any history or signs of bleeding. They may even be an indication that everything is proceeding as required and a predictable consequence of intense aerobic training. On the other hand, they may be an indication in some horses that the rate of exercise blood flow through their lungs is a little more than they can tolerate, necessitating some restructuring. We have lots to learn on this point.

If the capacity to accommodate blood flow through the lungs is critical, and limiting, then anything that further compromises this process is likely to be of major importance. It starts to sound very much as though the horse has a design problem, but we shouldn't rush to judgement. Horses were probably not designed for the very intense and sustained effort we ask of them in a race. Real-world situations that would have driven their evolution would have required a sprint performance (to avoid ambush predators such as lions) or a prolonged slower-paced performance to evade predators such as wolves, with only the unlucky victim being pushed to the limit and not the entire herd. 

Thoroughbred lungs.jpg

Lung blood flow and pulmonary oedema

There is another important element to this story. High pressures in the capillaries in the lung will be associated with significant movement of fluid from the capillaries into lung tissue spaces. This movement in fact happens continuously at all levels of effort and throughout the body—it's a normal process. It's the reason the skin on your ankles ‘sticks’ to the underlying structures when you are standing for a long time. So long as you keep moving a little, the lymphatic system will draw away the fluid. 

In a diseased lung, tissue fluid accumulation is referred to as pulmonary oedema, and its presence or absence has often been used to help characterise lung pathologies. The lung lymphatic system can be overwhelmed when tissue fluid is produced very rapidly. When a horse experiences sudden heart failure, such as when the supporting structures of a critical valve fail, one result is massive overproduction of lung tissue fluid and appearance of copious amounts of bloody fluid from the nostrils. 

The increase in capillary pressure under these conditions is as great as at exercise, but the horse is at rest. So why is there no bloody fluid in the average, normal horse after a race? It’s because this system operates very efficiently at the high respiratory rates found during work: tissue fluid is pumped back into the circulation, and fluid does not accumulate. The fluid is pumped out as quickly as it is formed. An animal’s level of physical activity at the time problems develop can therefore make a profound difference to the clinical signs seen and to the pathology.

Usual events with unusual consequences 

If filling the left ventricle and the ability of the lungs to accommodate high flow at exercise are limiting factors, surely this affects all horses. So why do we see such a wide range of clinical pictures, from normal to subclinical haemorrhage to sudden death? 

Variation in contributing factors such as type of horse, type and intensity of work, sudden and unanticipated changes in work intensity, level of training in relation to work and the presence of disease states are all variables that could influence when and how clinical signs are seen, but there are other considerations.

Although we talk about heart rate as a fairly stable event, there is in fact quite a lot of variation from beat to beat. This is often referred to as heart rate variability. There has been a lot of work performed on the magnitude of this variability at rest and in response to various short-term disturbances and at light exercise in the horse, but not a lot at maximal exercise. Sustained heart rate can be very high in a strenuously working horse, with beats seeming to follow each other in a very consistent manner, but there is in fact still variation. 

Some of this variation is normal and reflects the influence of factors such as respiration. However, other variations in rate can reflect changes in heart rhythm. Still other variations may not seem to change rhythm at all but may instead reflect the way electrical signals are being conducted through the heart. 

Thoroughbred lungs inflated.jpg

These may be evident from the ECG but would not appear abnormal on a heart rate monitor or when listening. These variations, whether physiologic (normal) or a reflection of abnormal function, will have a presently, poorly understood influence on blood flow through the lungs and heart—and on cardiac filling. Influences may be minimal at low rates, but what happens at a heart rate over 200 and in an animal working at the limits of its capacity.

Normal electrical activation of the heart follows a pattern that results in an orderly sequence of heart muscle contraction, and that provides optimal emptying of the ventricles. Chamber relaxation complements this process. 

An abnormal beat or abnormal interval can compromise filling and/or emptying of the left ventricle, leaving more blood to be discharged in the next cycle and back up through the lungs, raising pulmonary venous pressure. A sequence of abnormal beats can lead to a progressive backup of blood, and there may not be the capacity to hold it—even for one quarter of a second, a whole cardiac cycle at 240 beats per minute. 

For a horse that has a history of bleeding and happens to be already functioning at a very marginal level, even minor disturbances in heart rhythm might therefore have an impact. Horses with airway disease or upper airway obstructions, such as roarers, might find themselves in a similar position. An animal that has not bled previously might bleed a little, one that has a history of bleeding may start again, or a chronic bleeder may worsen. 

Relatively minor disturbances in cardiac function, therefore, might contribute to or even cause EIPH. If a horse is in relatively tough company or runs a hard race, this may also contribute to the onset or worsening of problems. Simply put, it's never a level playing field if you are running on the edge.

Severe bleeding

It has been suspected for many years that cases of horses dying suddenly at exercise represent sudden-onset cardiac dysfunction—most likely a rhythm disturbance. If the rhythm is disturbed, the closely linked and carefully orchestrated sequence of events that leads to filling of the left ventricle is also disturbed. A disturbance in cardiac electrical conduction would have a similar effect, such as one causing the two sides of the heart to fall out of step, even though the rhythm of the heart may seem normal. 

The cases of horses that bleed profusely at exercise and even those that die suddenly without any post-mortem findings can be seen to follow naturally from this chain of events. If the changes in heart rhythm or conduction are sufficient, in some cases to cause massive pulmonary haemorrhage, they may be sufficient in other cases to cause collapse and death even before the horse has time to exhibit epistaxis or even clear evidence of bleeding into the lungs. 

EIPH and dying suddenly

If these events are (sometimes) related, why is it that some horses that die of pulmonary haemorrhage with epistaxis do not show evidence of chronic EIPH? This is one of those $40,000 questions. It could be that young horses have had limited opportunity to develop chronic EIPH; it may be that we are wrong and the conditions are entirely unrelated. But it seems more likely that in these cases, the rhythm or conduction disturbance was sufficiently severe and/or rapid in onset to cause a precipitous fall in blood pressure with the animal passing out and dying rapidly. 

In this interpretation of events, the missing link is the heart. There is no finite cutoff at which a case ceases to be EIPH and becomes pulmonary haemorrhage. Similarly, there is no distinct point at which any case ceases to be severe EIPH and becomes EAFPH (exercise-associated fatal pulmonary haemorrhage). In truth, there may simply be gradation obscured somewhat by variable definitions and examination protocols and interpretations.

The timing of death

It seems from the above that death should most likely take place during work, and it often does, but not always. It may occur at rest, after exercise. Death ought to occur more often in racing, but it doesn't. 

The intensity of effort is only one factor in this hypothesis of acute cardiac or pump failure. We also have to consider factors such as when rhythm disturbances are most likely to occur (during recovery is a favourite time) and death during training is more often a problem than during a race. 

A somewhat hidden ingredient in this equation is possibly the animal's level of emotional arousal, which is known to be a risk factor in humans for similar disturbances. There is evidence that emotions/psychological factors might be much more important in horses than previously considered. Going out for a workout might be more stimulating for a racehorse than a race because before a race, there is much more buildup and the horse has more time to adequately warm up psychologically. And then, of course, temperament also needs to be considered. These are yet further reasons that we have a great deal to learn.

Our strategy at the University of Guelph

Heart rate being taken.jpg

These problems are something we cannot afford to tolerate, for numerous reasons—from perspectives of welfare and public perception to rider safety and economics. Our aim is to increase our understanding of cardiac contributions by identifying sensitive markers that will enable us to say with confidence whether cardiac dysfunction—basically transient or complete heart failure—has played a role in acute events. 

We are also looking for evidence of compromised cardiac function in all horses, from those that appear normal and perform well, through those that experience haemorrhage, to those that die suddenly without apparent cause. Our hope is that we can not only identify horses at risk, but also focus further work on the role of the heart as well as the significance of specific mechanisms. And we hope to better understand possible cardiac contributions to EIPH in the process. This will involve digging deeply into some aspects of cellular function in the heart muscle, the myocardium of the horse, as well as studying ECG features that may provide insight and direction. 

Fundraising is underway to generate seed money for matching fund proposals, and grant applications are in preparation for specific, targeted investigations. Our studies complement those being carried out in numerous, different centres around the world and hopefully will fill in further pieces of the puzzle. This is, indeed, a huge jigsaw, but we are proceeding on the basis that you can eat an elephant if you're prepared to process one bite at a time.

How can you help? Funding is an eternal issue. For all the money that is invested in horses there is a surprisingly limited contribution made to research and development—something that is a mainstay of virtually every other industry; and this is an industry. 

Look carefully at the opportunities for you to make a contribution to research in your area. Consider supporting studies by making your experience, expertise and horses available for data collection and minimally invasive procedures such as blood sampling. 

Connect with the researchers in your area and find out how you can help. Watch your horses closely and contemplate what they might be telling you—it's easy to start believing in ourselves and to stop asking questions. Keep meticulous records of events involving horses in your care— you never know when you may come across something highly significant. And work with researchers (which often includes track practitioners) to make your data available for study. 

Remember that veterinarians and university faculty are bound by rules of confidentiality, which means what you tell them should never be ascribed to you or your horses and will only be used without any attribution, anonymously. And when researchers reach out to you to tell you what they have found and to get your reactions, consider actually attending the sessions and participating in the discussion; we can all benefit—especially the ultimate beneficiary which should be the horse. We all have lots to learn from each other, and finding answers to our many challenges is going to have to be a joint venture.  

Finally, this article has been written for anybody involved in racing to understand, but covering material such as this for a broad audience is challenging. So, if there are still pieces that you find obscure, reach out for help in interpretation. The answers may be closer than you think!

Oyster

And what about Oyster? Her career was short. Perhaps, had we known precisely what was going on, we might have been able to treat her, or at least withdraw her from racing and avoid a death during work with all the associated dangers—especially to the rider and the associated welfare concerns. 

Had we had the tools, we might have been able to confirm that whatever the underlying cause, she had cardiac problems and was perhaps predisposed to an early death during work. With all the other studies going on, and knowing the issue was cardiac, we might have been able to target her assessment to identify specific issues known to predispose. 

In the future, greater insight and understanding might allow us to breed away from these issues and to better understand how we might accommodate individual variation among horses in our approaches to selection, preparation and competition. There might be a lot of Oysters out there!



For further information about the work being undertaken by the University of Guelph

Contact - Peter W. Physick-Sheard, BVSc, FRCVS.

Professor Emeritus, Ontario Veterinary College, University of Guelph - pphysick@uoguelph.ca

Research collaborators - Dr Glen Pyle, Professor, Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Guelph - gpyle@uoguelph.ca

Dr Amanda Avison, PhD Candidate, Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Guelph. ajowett@uoguelph.ca



References

Caswell, J.I. and Williams K.J. (2015), Respiratory System, In ed. Maxie, M. Grant, 3 vols., 6th edn., Jubb, Kennedy and Palmer’s Pathology of Domestic Animals, 2; London: Elsevier Health Sciences, 490-91.

Hinchcliff, KW, et al. (2015), Exercise induced pulmonary hemorrhage in horses: American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine consensus statement, J Vet Intern Med, 29 (3), 743-58.

Rocchigiani, G, et al. (2022), Pulmonary bleeding in racehorses: A gross, histologic, and ultrastructural comparison of exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage and exercise-associated fatal pulmonary hemorrhage, Vet Pathol, 16:3009858221117859. doi: 10.1177/03009858221117859. Online ahead of print.

Manohar, M. and T. E. Goetz (1999), Pulmonary vascular resistance of horses decreases with moderate exercise and remains unchanged as workload is increased to maximal exercise, Equine Vet. J., (Suppl.30), 117-21.

Vitalie, Faoro (2019), Pulmonary Vascular Reserve and Aerobic Exercise Capacity, in Interventional Pulmonology and Pulmonary Hypertension, Kevin, Forton (ed.), (Rijeka: IntechOpen), Ch. 5, 59-69.

Manohar, M. and T. E. Goetz (1999), Pulmonary vascular resistance of horses decreases with moderate exercise and remains unchanged as workload is increased to maximal exercise, Equine Vet. J., (Suppl.30), 117-21.

Probiotics as an alternative to antibiotics to reduce resistance in the gut

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Article by Kerrie Kavanagh

The leading causes of horse mortality can be attributed to gastrointestinal diseases. Therefore, maintaining the balance of the gut microbiota and avoiding a shift in microbial populations can contribute to improved health status. The gut microbiota, however, can be influenced by countless dynamic events: diet, exercise, stress, illness, helminth infections, aging, environment and notably, antimicrobial therapy (antibiotics). These events can lead to gut dysbiosis—a fluctuation or disturbance in the population of microorganisms of the gut, which can contribute to a wide range of disease. The use of antibiotics in horses is thought to have one of the most notable effects on the gut microbiota (gut dysbiosis), which can lead to diseases such as colitis, colic and laminitis.

Antibiotics, which are antimicrobial agents active against bacteria, are important to equine medicine; and bacterial infections can be resolved quite successfully using antibiotics for antimicrobial therapy, but there are consequences to their use. An antimicrobial agent can be defined as a natural or synthetic substance that kills or inhibits the growth of microorganisms such as bacteria, fungi and algae. One of the consequences of antibiotic use is that of antibiotic-associated diarrhoea, which can contribute to poor performance in the horse and even mortality. In antimicrobial therapy, the target organism is not the only organism affected by the antimicrobial agent but also the commensal microbiota too (the normal flora of the equine gut). Antibiotics can promote fungal infections and resistant organisms and impede or even eliminate the more sensitive organisms; and they can have both short and long-term consequences on the gut microbiota composition and function. 

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Research has indicated that antibiotic treatment may adversely affect metabolic function in the gut by decreasing protein expression responsible for biochemical pathways such as glycolysis, iron uptake, glutamate hydrolysis and possibly even more metabolic functions. The use of antimicrobial drugs directly impacts and possibly contributes to the most notable effect on the gut microbiota of the host, leading to gut dysbiosis; and certain antibiotics can have further-reaching consequences on the microbiota than others. The type of antibiotic and mode of action (bacteriostatic versus bactericidal) will differ in their influences on the gut microbiota composition, e.g., clindamycin operates a bacteriostatic mode of action by inhibiting protein synthesis and exerts a larger impact on the gut microbiota compared to other antimicrobials. These influential consequences that are imparted by the antimicrobial agent are relatively yet to be elucidated and may result in the manifestation of illness or conditions later in life. For example, the development of asthma in humans has been linked to antibiotic treatment in early childhood as a result of bacterial infections. It may yield interesting results if researchers were to examine the gut microbiome of horses suffering from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and other chronic respiratory illnesses and to establish if there is indeed a link with antibiotic therapy used in horses from an early age. 

In comparison to the vast wealth of human studies conducted so far, the volume of equine studies falls disappointingly far behind, but that is changing as researchers focus their interest on developing and filling this gap of knowledge. One such study which examined the effect of antibiotic use on the equine gastrointestinal tract, demonstrated a significant reduction in culturable cellulolytic bacteria (>99%) from equine faeces during the administration period of trimethoprim sulfadiazine and ceftiofur in a study comparing responses to antibiotic challenge. That reduction was still evident at the end of the withdrawal period when compared to the control group. In other words, there was a significant reduction in the ‘normal’ bacteria of the gut. The ability of antibiotics to modulate the gut microbiota was evidenced by the proliferation of pathogenic Salmonella and Clostridia difficile (commonly associated with diarrhoea in horses) in the antibiotic challenged horses. This trend of reduction in cellulolytic bacteria associated with antibiotic use was also mirrored in a relatively recent study conducted in 2019, where a short-term reduction in culturable cellulolytic bacteria was combined with a progressive increase in amylolytic bacteria. The heavy reliance on cellulolytic bacteria in the role of equine digestion (without these types of bacteria the horse cannot break down their food) may, therefore, adversely affect the dietary energy available from forage during antimicrobial therapy and may therefore impact performance.

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Another study that compared the effect of penicillin, ceftiofur and trimethoprim sulfadiazine (TMS) on the gut microbiota in horses using next-generation sequencing showed that TMS had the most profound impact on the microbiota, in particular the phylum Verrucomicrobia. This same study also reported a significant decrease in bacterial richness and diversity of the faecal microbiota. A reduction in bacterial diversity is certainly a trend that is commonly seen in gastrointestinal disease in horses. The restoration of the normal gut microbiota after completion of antibiotic treatment can take up to 40 days, but the organisational structure of the bacterial populations can take many years to re-establish the original structure map that was laid out in the gut pre-antibiotic treatment. 

The equine studies certainly show similarities to the human studies, indicating the consequences of antibiotics that can be seen across more than one species. Human studies have reported long-term consequences of antibiotic treatment on the human microbiota. One such human study investigated a 7-day clindamycin treatment and monitored the patients for two years. The impact on the human microbiota remained evident two years post-treatment, where a reduction in bacterial diversity and detection of high-resistance to clindamycin were detected. 

Interestingly, no resistant clones were detected in the control group over the two-year sampling period. Another study focusing on the effects of antibiotic treatment for Helicobacter pylori showed findings mirrored in similar studies of that field. The findings demonstrated the rapidly reducing bacterial diversity (one week) after antibiotic treatment and found that disturbances in the microbiota and high levels of macrolide resistance were evident four years post-treatment. Human studies may predict that equine studies will find similar trends with equine antimicrobial therapy. These studies highlight the impact of antibiotic use and the long-term persistence of antibiotic resistance remaining in the intestinal microbiome, which is a concern for both humans and animals. 

Antibiotics can lead to the selectivity and proliferation of resistant bacteria, which is evidenced by the long-term effects observed on the gut microbiota harbouring drug-resistant encoded genes. Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) commonly occurs in the gut (can be up to 25 times more likely to occur in the gut than in other environments). HGT can be attributed to the close proximity of the microbiota in the gut, allowing the transfer of genetic material via routes such as plasmids and conjugation; in other words, the bacteria in the gut have developed a pathway to transfer antibiotic resistant genes from one generation to another. Resistance to antibiotics is now a global issue for the treatment of many diseases. 

With the unfavourable association tied to Clostridium difficile infections (CDI) and the onset of colitis particularly in mature horses treated with β-lactam antibiotics (commonly used for equine infections), the incidences in which antimicrobial therapy is considered should be minimised and only used if entirely necessary. The use of broad-spectrum antibiotics in recurrent presentations of symptoms of disease such as urinary tract infections in humans or diarrhoea as a result of CDI in both humans and horses is promoting drug resistance.

The antibiotics, by disrupting the gut microbiota (which act as a defence against the establishment and proliferation of such pathogenic bacteria) are allowing the opportunity of growth for these multi-resistant microorganisms such as C. difficile, vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE), and multi-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). The organism C. difficile and its antibiotic resistance has been demonstrated in the treatment of CDI for both humans and animals. The introduction of vancomycin (a glycopeptide antibiotic) in 1959 for the control of CDI remained effective until the 1990s when a more virulent form of C. difficile emerged. This new form of C. difficile with reported broad-spectrum antibiotic resistance resulted in chronic conditions and increased human mortality. C. difficile is most noted with human hospital-acquired infections. C. difficile BI/NAP1/027 has been shown to have resistance to fluoroquinolone antibiotics, moxifloxacin and gatifloxacin, which was not seen in historical genotypes. As C. difficile infections are found to cause gastrointestinal disease in horses as well as humans, this is certainly of concern.

Alternative therapies to antibiotic therapy to restore or modulate the gut microbiome after a gut dysbiosis event could be considered in certain circumstances where antibiotics are no longer effective (e.g., CDI), nor may they not be the best course (presence of Extended-spectrum -β-lactamase producing (ESBL) organisms) nor essential for example, when the diagnosis of the bacterial cause is uncertain. The rationale to using probiotic treatment along with antimicrobial treatment is that the antibiotic will target the pathogenic bacteria (e.g., C. difficile) and also the commensal microbiota of the gut, but the probiotic bacteria will help to re-establish the intestinal microbiota and in-turn prevent the re-growth of the pathogenic bacteria in the case or residual spores of C. difficile surviving the antibiotic treatment. Alternative therapies such as faecal microbiome transplant (FMT) or probiotic solutions can reduce the risk of proliferation of antibiotic-resistant bacteria and also have fewer implications on the gut microbiome as evidenced by antibiotic use. 

Probiotics have been defined by the Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO) and the World Health Organisation (WHO) as “live non-pathogenic microorganisms that, when administered in adequate amounts, confer a health benefit on the host”. The word ‘probiotic’ is Greek in origin, meaning, ‘for life’; and the term was coined by Ferdinand Vergin in 1954. While the mechanisms of action of probiotics are complex and require a deeper knowledge of the modulations of the gastrointestinal microbiota, and the health benefits due to their use are the subject of some debate, there is no doubt that probiotics are considered by many as a vital resource to human and animal health.   

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The use of probiotics in animal production, particularly in intensive swine and poultry production, has increased in recent years, primarily as an alternative to the use of antimicrobials in the prevention of disease. The problem of antibiotic-resistance and antimicrobial residues in food-producing animals (the horse is considered a food-producing animal), as a result of historical antibiotic use with the corresponding reduction in antibiotic efficacy in humans, leads to having to look at more sustainable options such as probiotic use to combat disease. Probiotics in horses are predominantly used as a treatment modality in the gastrointestinal microbial populations to combat illnesses such as diarrhoea—to prevent diarrhoea (particularly in foals) or help improve digestibility.  Shifts or fluctuations in the microbial populations of the equine gastrointestinal tract have been associated with diseases such as laminitis and colic.  

Gut dysbiosis, as mentioned previously is, a fluctuation or disturbance in the population of microorganisms of the gut is now being recognised as a cause of a wide range of gastrointestinal diseases; and in horses, it is one of the leading causes of mortality. The ability of probiotics in conferring health benefits to the host can occur via several different mechanisms: 1) inhibiting pathogen colonisation in the gut by producing antimicrobial metabolites or by competitive exclusion by adhering to the intestinal mucosa preventing pathogenic bacteria attachment by improving the function and structure; 2) protecting or restabilising the commensal gut microbiota; 3) protecting the intestinal epithelial barrier; 4) by inducing an immune response.

It is known that there is a wealth of factors that will adversely affect the gut microbiome, antibiotics, disease, diet, stress, age and environment are some of these compounding contributors. To mirror one researcher’s words echoing from an era where antibiotics were used as growth promoters in the animal industry, “The use of probiotic supplements seeks to repair these deficiencies. It is, therefore, not creating anything that would not be present under natural conditions, but it is merely restoring the flora to its full protective capacity”. In the case of using concurrent antibiotic and probiotic treatment, this strategic tweaking of the microbiota could be used as a tool to prevent further disease consequence and perhaps help improve performance in the horse.

The benefits of probiotic use in horses have not been investigated extensively but as mentioned previously, they are now being focused upon by researchers in the equine field. The most common bacterial strains used in equine probiotic products are Lactobacillus, Bifidobacterium, Streptococcus, Enterococcus, Bacillus and yeast strains of Saccharomyces. Lactobacillus, Bifidobacterium and Enterococcus strains typically account for less than 1% of the microbiota large gastrointestinal populations.

Regulation is lacking regarding labelling of probiotic products, often not displaying content with clarification and quality control (such as confirmed viability of strain[s]) not excised with over-the-counter probiotic products. There is evidence to suggest that host-adapted strains of bacteria and fungi enjoy a fitness advantage in the gut of humans and animals.  Therefore, there may be an advantage in using the individual animal’s own bacteria as potential probiotics. Probiotics and antibiotics used concurrently could be the way to minimise the introduction of antibiotic-resistant bacterial strains in the gut, and in turn, protect future antibiotic efficacy. 

Dermot Cantillon - What it takes to breed winners and run a racecourse

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Article by Daragh Ó Conchúir

“My philosophy is if you’re in something and you can get into a position where you can bring change about for the common good, that’s a thing to aim for. I’m not one for being a hurler on the ditch, give out and not try and do anything about it.” 

Dermot Cantillon, The Irish Field (February 24, 2018)

Living true to his motto, Dermot Cantillon ran for election to Seanad Éireann—the upper house of the Irish Legislature (the Oireachtas)—two years ago. He was prompted to do so, even though he had no political background or experience, by a firm belief that horse racing and the bloodstock industry lacked representation despite their significance to national and local economies.

As an independent candidate, the Co Waterford native was up against the powerful party machines with their established lobbies and financial clout, so it did not come as a big surprise he did not make the cut. But he would not have been true to himself and his ideals had he not had a go.

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Proactivity is a default setting for Cantillon, who along with his equally industry-immersed wife Meta Osborne, owns and runs Tinnakill House Stud in the Laois village of Coolrain. As a man who has walked the walk and continues to do so, he is always worth listening to on matters pertaining to the sport and business of thoroughbred racing.

Apart from being a breeder of multiple Gp. 1 winners and overseeing a flourishing enterprise for two decades, Cantillon has also helped steward the massive strides made by Naas Racecourse in 13 years as chairman. 

In addition, the 62-year-old is chairman of Irish Thoroughbred Marketing, a director of Goffs and board member of the Irish Equine Centre. Previously, he has served as chairman and president of the Irish Thoroughbred Breeders’ Association, chairman of Tote Ireland and director of Horse Racing Ireland. 

He also served as manager of the Smurfit family’s Forenaghts Stud outside Naas for 32 years until standing down two years ago. This is a polymath on breeding, selling and running racehorses.

Osborne is the daughter of Michael, the late Irish Turf Club (IHRB) senior steward and Irish National Stud managing director. He was also the creator of Dubai as an international racing venue and of Sheikh Mohammed’s stud operations in Ireland. Meta would follow in her father’s footsteps by becoming the first woman—and still the only one—to be Turf Club/IHRB senior steward and is a current HRI director. 

She is Kildangan Stud’s chief vet, having worked there for 34 years, while her family has been inextricably linked with Naas Racecourse since its foundation.

She and Cantillon make a good couple and that they don’t agree on everything is a positive. Among the many things they shared a page on was the desire to own their own stud. They bought Tinnakill in 2002 when it was a sheep farm, and the fecundity of the land and broodmares that have inhabited it since has propagated substantial success. Among the stellar cast of those bred there are Alexander Goldrun, Red Evie (dam of Arc-winning Breeders’ Cup heroine Found) and Casamento.

As a four-time Gp. 1 winner in four countries and three continents before injury brought his career to a premature conclusion last month, State Of Rest is the best though. 

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Due to the colt’s astounding feats in adding the Prix Ganay and Prince of Wales’ Stakes this year to last season’s Saratoga Derby and Cox Plate triumphs, Juddmonte made a bid for the son of Starspangledbanner’s 10-year-old Quiet American homebred dam Repose, who is in foal to Frankel. 

“To be perfectly honest, like most Irish people in the industry, I’m a trader at heart,” Cantillon relates. “By definition then, if a big enough offer comes along, you’re gonna sell. Legacy is important but at the same time being able to meet your commitments for a long period of time and the security of that is also very important; and that won it over for me. She became too valuable a mare nearly to hold on to in proportion to the other mares I had. She was worth nearly more than everything else put together. That’s a total imbalance. 

“We have a philosophy to buy taproot-type females in outstanding American and European families, and she was the embodiment of that in that her dam Monaassabaat, who we bought initially, was out of It’s In The Air, who was one of the best mares in America ever (five of her 16 triumphs were Gr. 1’s) and also a fabulous producer. So it was an overnight success that took 15 years.”

Despite the windfall, Cantillon will not be splurging unnecessarily, though he will look to improve the lowest bar. With around 40 mares, Tinnakill focuses on quantity; and thanks to their canny approach and eye for a bargain, that tends to produce some quality along the way.

“We don’t spend a lot at the sales. We buy mares from one grand to maybe seventy five. That’s the comfort zone for us, and that’s where we intend to stay. To be successful at that level, you need a lot of mares; and you hope some will make it big for you. The philosophy is probably to throw enough at the wall and some of it will stick.”

They are willing to sell their homebreds at any stage up to and including as a racehorse but will not be forced into accepting a price that doesn’t match their value.

“I see five different opportunities to sell along the way. The first one is in utero, the second one is the foal, the third is yearlings, the fourth is breeze-ups and the fifth one—the ultimate one—is in training. So within the philosophy of business, all five operate—and I’d say more so now, the fifth one. To show confidence in our own yearlings especially, we’ll keep 25 percent in them in partnership if whoever buys them asks us to do so. We’ll go to the next level on the understanding that if they prove themselves on the racetrack, they will get sold in a commercial way.

“We’d predominantly be known as foal sellers, and we sell a lot of foals in England and Ireland. People want foals that they can bring to the Orby and so on, and we sell those sort of foals. If they make money, so be it.

“We tend to keep any foal after the 15th of April. People have an idea of what a foal should look like—it’s a good, strong foal. As they head towards a May foal, the discount that you’re expected to take can be fairly big, so we don’t tend to bring the later foals to the foal sales; they tend to go on to the yearling sales. At the yearling sales, we bring mostly foals we failed to sell because we didn’t get what we thought the foal should’ve made, and also later foals.”

The demand for precocity and immediate results has inflated that specific market, but that means there is value for discerning buyers.

“What happens at yearling and foal sales is that people have a certain view of what a good foal or a good yearling should look like, and most people have exactly the same view. So if you have that particular product, you get a big premium. But for people buying horses, I think the value is slightly to either side and for a deviation of 10 percent, you might get a discount of 50. 

“So if you can forgive some slight physical flaws, these are going to be discounted significantly; and I think there’s great value if people can get away from perfection to look upon the foal and yearling more as an athlete with slight imperfections but at the same time, an athlete.

“I think for that reason trainers probably make the best buyers because they’ve seen it all, whereas often, agents are under pressure to buy the horse that ticks all the boxes.”

Fashion also applies to stallions and again, Cantillon is imaginative when it comes to where he sends his mares. He has said previously that he likes to go against the tide when selecting stallions.

“I like to breed to middle-distance horses. Last year, I bred five mares to Australia. I think he’s a very good stallion. He can get you a two-year-old, he can get you a good three-year-old, he can get you a horse you can sell to Australia for a lot of money if it shows some form. The demand for middle-distance horses is enormous and very lucrative.

“The only time I would be breeding to ‘expensive stallions’ would be a foal share. I wouldn’t be putting more than 30 or 40 grand into any mare, barring we owned a nomination. I do invest in a lot of stallion shares, and to a large extent, that dictates what my mare is going to.

“I think it’s a great business move. It’s not without risk, but you can buy a stallion share; and in most cases, you’ll get most of your money back within three or four years. And if it hits, you’ll get many multiples of it. So, I think, if you’re in the industry, you have a nucleus of mares that you can use these nominations on, it makes huge sense economically to invest in stallion shares.”

He sees the economics of horse breeding as being cyclical and thus predicts a significant downturn in two or three years, with the thoroughbred industry tending to “have a significant correction” within a couple of years of a societal recession.

There is no hint of doom in these utterances, given that he has always cut his cloth to measure, and he expects any shrewd operator to insulate themselves in preparation for what’s down the tracks. Indeed while he has expressed concern for the smaller breeders in the past, he believes the environment is more conducive to them getting a positive return for their investment now. 

“I think it’s a bit healthier than it was. The top end was very lucrative and is still very lucrative, but maybe there aren’t as many players at the very top end where there’s a lot of players in the middle tier now.

“I think that ITM and the sales companies in Ireland have done a great job in attracting American buyers. There was a significant increase in yearlings going to America from the Orby Sale last year. That’s a tremendous result. To some extent, the American market is replacing the Maktoum market in Ireland. And when you look at history, you always see that major players come and go; but the industry always survives, and I think now the American market is going to get better and better.

“There’s a couple of factors there. The injuries in turf racing are less, the number of participants in turf races are more, and that’s good from a gambling point of view. And the fact we’ve sent a lot of horses over to America now, they’re acting as advertisements for the next bunch, and they’re doing exceptionally well. So as night follows day, I think that at the upcoming yearling sales, the American influence will be huge.

“I think Charles O’Neill (ITM CEO) has done an outstanding job. To see him in action internationally is a joy to behold. That’s a role that takes a long time to get people’s trust. Our industry is based on trust, but he has it now; and a lot of markets have been opened up year-in, year-out by him visiting these places with his team. Over time there’ve been very lucrative transactions, especially for horses in training, as a result of that.”

Back at home the evolution continues, and Cantillon’s entrepreneurial son, Jack, has become a key part of a team in which manager Ian Thompson is also a vital cog.

“I think Jack is a good catalyst because he pushes you. A lot of the accolades have to go to him because I’d be at the sales sometimes and he’d be after buying a mare without me knowing. He’d never buy a mare I wouldn’t have bought myself, but he pushes the boat out more than I would and that keeps me on my toes.”

Among Cantillon Jnr’s interests is Syndicates.Racing, which focuses on the fractional ownership model and has been a resounding success on both codes in a very short span of time. The founder’s proud parents have shared the journey, and Dermot emphasises the importance placed on having a positive race-day experience. This is a central tenet of all the improvements that have taken place at Naas during his tenure.

“In terms of building the new stand, the whole concept of it was to bring the horse into the main focus. You look to your right, and you have the horses in the parade ring along with the actors—the jockeys, the trainers—you have that whole environment there. Then you look to the left, and you see where the horses will be participating. So the whole philosophy of that stand was to bring the horse more into focus.”

Osborne calls Naas her husband’s “fifth child,” and it has certainly flourished in an atmosphere that promotes and encourages imaginative thinking. Former manager Tom Ryan oversaw much of the improvement, and Eamonn McEvoy continues in a similar vein.

“The philosophy is ‘never stop.’ What’s next? Eamonn has done a super job. He’s a very progressive, inclusive person. He tries to bring everybody with him.”

Rewards have come in the form of the upgrading of the Lawlor’s of Naas Novice Hurdle to Gr. 1 status and being asked to take up the slack during The Curragh’s redevelopment. But there is clear impatience about the difficulty in climbing further up the ladder. Not yet having a Gp. 1 race on the flat is especially annoying.

“My big frustration is that within the whole structure of Irish racing there’s no pathway in how you can get better. How do you go from being classed as a second-grade track to being one of the elite tracks? I’ve asked this question five years, six years now, and nobody has been able to tell me. How do we change it so that the 13 Gp. 1 races in Ireland are not divvied out every year to two tracks? Why can’t other tracks that have a good proposition get one of those races? Why don’t we challenge the status quo for the benefit of Irish racing? Nobody’s been able to tell me why not except that they won’t rock the boat.

“Convention is an easy way of management, but it’s not the progressive way.”

In any high performance network, the existence of a clear pathway provides an incentive for improvement and as a consequence, raises standards. Why do more than trouser the media money if it doesn’t matter what you do?

“That’s exactly it. That’s what we’ve been told for generations, more or less. There are little tweaks where they give progressive tracks like Naas additional fixtures; and also, we’ve been able to increase our black-type races. But at the same time, there’s a glass ceiling there, and we need to break that for the good of Irish racing. We need to be progressive. We’re not progressive. We just maintain the status quo.

“There’s two ways we can get a Gp. 1. The first is to have an existing Gp. 1 transferred from another racecourse. The other way would be one of our races, over time because of the ratings, would qualify as a Gp. 1. At this point in time, there are one or two races that we would think could be due to be upgraded, but it hasn’t happened yet and that’s frustrating.”

There are some “outside the box” plans that are being considered at the moment that include some potential ground-breaking global partnerships. Further enhancements for the course are also in the pipeline.

As for the racing product itself, he believes maintaining quality is critical.

“My view of Ireland: we’re like what the All Blacks tend to be in rugby. If a horse wins a good two-year-old race in Naas, then he’s marketable to the whole world as that’s as good as you can get in terms of a young horse and where he’s performing. I have a lot of sympathy that everybody gets a run because I have some bad horses myself that can’t get into races, but I think it’s very important that we maintain the brand.”

He believes that the betting tax should be limited to winnings for off-course bookies but be increased to three percent. This would lead to a likely increase in funding for racing, he argues. It would also go some way to arresting the decline of the on-course betting ring that used to be central to the race-day experience.

“We need to give an advantage to bookies on track. There needs to be something which makes you go racing if you want to bet and a differentiation between off-track and on-track in terms of the three per cent could be a big help.

“When I was on the board at Naas first around 25 years ago, a very good race meeting could turn over a million pounds on-track. Now we’re looking at 150 (thousand). There’s a crisis. We need to do something radical about the crisis. My solution would be to have no tax on-course and increase the tax off-course on winnings.”

This might also help increase attendances, which despite what some industry leaders suggest, has to be a cause for concern with racing’s supporters getting older by the year.

“We’re nearly totally dependent on media rights money to operate the racecourse. You could do a strength-and-weakness analysis, and a massive weakness is its dependence on the media rights. Because of the media rights, we’ve maybe neglected the attendance.

“We now have a new audience, which is the digital audience and… people don’t travel to race meetings like they used to, so the emphasis has to be on the local audience, and we have identified that at Naas. We have taken a number of steps, and we’re going to take more to be more and more part of the Naas community. If we’re going to get people back racing, we see our growth within Naas and its environs.”

It is a recipe that has worked for a number of regional venues but has not yet been utilised, successfully at least, by too many. And as Cantillon has already suggested, media rights income has removed much of the incentive to bother doing so.

That said, he understands the disappointment of some of the smaller racecourses that feel the distribution of the media rights income has been inequitable. 

“Something like an extra seven-to-nine percent went back to central funds when the last agreement was made. I was in the room when the thing was voted on, and people were looking at how much extra they were getting; and they were so happy about how much extra they were getting, they didn’t really think of the implications of giving an extra seven or eight per cent to Horse Racing Ireland. Horse Racing Ireland said, ‘Oh that’ll all come back in grants.’ And as a totality, it came back in grants. But for certain racecourses, it didn’t come back proportionally because if a track couldn’t come up with 60 percent of the cost, they wouldn’t get the 40 percent grant; and I understand their frustration.”

The current deal concludes next year, and he yearns for a “unified approach” towards negotiating the next one. But whatever unfolds, positive or negative, Dermot Cantillon will be putting his best foot forward. He knows no other way.

How will new HISA regulations affect Europeans sending horses to the US this autumn?

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Article by Annie Lambert

Breeders’ Cup contestants travelling to Kentucky this fall will have more to worry about than flight delays and shipping reservations. Owners, trainers and jockeys will need to bone up on new racing regulations now enforced across America. It appears they are well into that task.

The new rules and regulations became United States federal law in December 2020. The Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority (HISA) is responsible for drafting and enforcing safety and integrity rules in thoroughbred racing across the U.S. Overseen by the government’s Federal Trade Commission (FTC), HISA is implementing a national, uniform set of rules applicable to all thoroughbred racing participants and racetrack facilities.

HISA comprises the Racetrack Safety Program, which went into effect 1 July 2022, as well as the Anti-Doping and Medication Control (ADMC) program, which will be implemented in January 2023. The ADMC will impact next year’s Breeders’ Cup.

According to Lisa Lazarus, chief executive officer of HISA, the Racetrack Safety Program includes operational safety rules and national racetrack accreditation standards, seeking to enhance equine welfare and minimise horse and jockey injuries. This program expands veterinary oversight and imposes track surface maintenance and testing requirements. It also enhances jockey (and exercise rider) safety, regulates riding crop use and implements voided claim rules, in addition to other measures.

The ADMC program will create a centralised testing and results management process while applying uniform penalties for integrity violations across the country. The rules and enforcement protocols will be administered by a new independent agency, the Horseracing Integrity and Welfare Unit (HIWU), which was established by Drug Free Sport International (DFS).

HIWU will oversee testing, educate stakeholders on the new system, accredit laboratories, investigate potential integrity violations and prosecute those breaking rules and protocols.

HISA completed and pending rules and regulations can be found at https://www.hisaus.org/.

Shifting protocols

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Not everyone required to opt into the Horseracing Integrity & Safety Act is pleased to oblige. The confusing regulations have left many with less than a clear understanding of what the new rules actually mean. Those details have constantly been modified and most likely will continue to fluctuate as flaws in the statute are arbitrated. 

The legislation timeline—a very rapid implementation—did not leave an abundance of time for the busy and independent members of the racing community to thoroughly digest the new rules and oversights: In a hurry, they are being asked/required to become obligated by registering themselves and their horses. Horsemen felt left in the dust.

HISA is now, however, in the process of adding a means for horsemen to have a bigger voice in forming regulations and protocols—a complaint horsemen have had since the onset is being excluded from the process. Lazarus announced her executive team would be selecting 10–12 horsemen to participate on the Horsemen’s Advisory Group.

Barry Irwin, founder and chief executive officer of Team Valor International, has been promoting additional integrity in the racing industry for two decades or longer. As a turf writer, breeder, owner and bloodstock agent for over 50 years, Irwin looks forward to implementation of the ADMC. He might have hoped for a smoother execution of HISA, but he is glad things are progressing.

“The safety element is so big and all encompassing, some people may think overreaching, that it stalled the implementation of the integrity piece,” Irwin opined. “There is a lot of good in it; there is a lot of confusion in it. Part of the confusion stems from the perceived lack of input and influence of the people to whom these rules apply.

“A lot of trainers are [unhappy] because there are a bunch of [changed] procedures that they have been using for years, such as blistering horses, pin-firing horses—things like that. There are growing pains, so they have invited horsemen to join an advisory committee for input now and in the future, which I found to be a good thing. It’s just a little late.”  

People responsible for registering horses, usually the trainer, are required to keep precise records for each animal. Most horsemen have a vivid aversion to bookkeeping; they’d much rather concentrate on training horses and keeping owners happy and informed.

Most countries require medical and procedural records be kept on their equine competitors. HISA also requires trainers and veterinarians to maintain detailed, daily health and treatment records for equines in their care. This also applies to international trainers temporarily in town for major races. Those records must be made available to regulatory veterinarians, stewards and HISA upon request. Imagine the daily hours to keep up with a barn full of trainees. There is a solution—a software program—to ease the struggle.

Solution for keeping records

Equine MediRecord became operational in 2018. It was the brainstorm of Pierce Dargan in County Kildare, Ireland. Dargan, a fifth generation horseman, is the company’s CEO. Dargan’s system was created for his family’s training operation in Ireland, to help keep current with racing regulations they faced at the time. 

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Trainers can sign up for Dargan’s company platform, which allows them to keep the tedious records required by HISA. Those with multiple stables and facilities can add assistant trainers and veterinarians to assist with inputting information.

“What our system then does is notify the trainer when a record has been put in by someone else for them to sign off, ensuring they know at all times what is being given to their horses,” Dargan explained. “Any horse with an open treatment on our system will [be marked] to remind the trainer to check this horse before entering into any races, as there is still a treatment in the horse’s profile; this ensures the withdrawal period is completed before they race.”

Presently, the cost is $1.50 per horse, per month for the initial year, increasing to $3.00 per horse/month the second year. “We wanted to make sure this was a tool that all trainers, big and small, could afford,” Dargan said. “One of the benefits of having clients globally is we can spread the costs, making it cheaper for all.”

 “We have done the Breeders’ Cup World Championships for the last two years, as well as the Pegasus World Cup, Saudi Cup and Preakness in 2022,” Dargan pointed out.                    

Coming to America

International Breeders’ Cup entries and connections appear prepared to take on HISA, although there could be a few speed bumps on the road to America.

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Not registering for HISA—no matter what continent you hail from—means a person or horse may not participate in U.S. racing. Once signed up, however, being misinformed or not following the rules can land people and equines severe punishments, large monetary fines and/or disqualification from industry participation.

Early in the process, HISA’s website was not particularly user friendly, but those issues have been worked out for the most part. International connections preparing to run in major U.S. races initially registered with HISA prior to entering or declaring to run. However, to register for HISA, one needs to be licensed in the state where they will be running. Some states, like New York, require digital fingerprinting of the licensee by track personnel, causing problems for horsemen in far away corners of the world.
“HISA has made it impossible to do things on race day,” explained Adrian Beaumont, director of Racecourse Services for the International Racing Bureau in Newmarket, England. “Therefore, we had to be proactive and get connections licensed beforehand. This often means having to get connections fingerprinted in advance of the meeting. This was especially true of connections, like owners, who would not be going to the races but still needed a HISA registration. New York Racing Association made their cut-off time for HISA as 10 a.m., scratch time, on the day of the race.”

According to Beaumont, HISA’s Lisa Lazarus organised a Zoom call, for Breeders’ Cup principles, including Japan, on 16 September. “I will be interested to know the timeframe they will require all HISA registrations to be completed by, especially as declarations to run are due on Monday, October 31,” added Beaumont.

While the Lazarus Zoom call may flatten some organisational speed bumps, the initial dismay for HISA created a flurry of ongoing legal actions by several state racing commissions, jockey organisations, different Horsemen’s Benevolent and Protective associations and other groups. North American Trainer magazine contributor and equine attorney Peter J. Sacopulos expressed the issue in the magazine’s Issue #65 - Summer 2022, on page 48. In the article, Sacopulos questions how HISA affects international trainers and owners.

“In registering, the foreign national trainer is responsible for and obligated to fully and completely understand and comply with all HISA requirements. Once properly registered and deemed a ‘covered person,’ the foreign national trainer has certain ongoing obligations. For example, Thoroughbred trainers are required to complete four (4) hours of training annually pursuant to Section 2182(b)(5) of the rules governing the Racetrack Safety Program. Additionally, there are requirements for filing records relative to the medical care and treatment of horses. Also, the licensing and ongoing requirements for covered persons apply to owners of Thoroughbred horses. Therefore, it is recommended that the Thoroughbred trainer who is going through the registration process informs his or her owner of those requirements and sees that the owner(s) are properly registered as covered persons.”

It gets complicated.

Riders, whips, rules & penalties 

Beaumont was somewhat surprised by the requirement for jockeys to have an annual baseline concussion test as part of the HISA registration. Riders in England and Ireland have concussion baselines done every two years. French jockeys are not required to have annual baseline concussion tests.

The chief medical officers at the main European Jockey Clubs and the Jockeys’ Associations are now aware of this test requirement. Beaumont recommended their website as informative and helpful. 

https://jockeyclub.com/pdfs/HISA/HISA_Jockey.pdf

“It is the jockeys [who] require the extra briefing about all the rules,” Beaumont said, “but we will do that with them all before race day. “At the last two Breeders’ Cups, the stewards have also briefed all the jockeys about their rules on the mornings of the races. This will obviously now include any extra regulations brought in by HISA.”

Jockeys with Breeders’ Cup mounts will need to study HISA restrictions for use of the whip, which in some cases are similar to, yet vary from, European rules.

Until the limitations on use of the whip become muscle memory, riders are finding themselves punished for extra strikes or improper handling of the whip. Numerous penalties have been dished out to even the best of the American riding colony thus far. One costly example occurred last month.

Jockey Luis Rodriguez-Castro was fined $500 and suspended three days for his ride on Drafted (Field Commission) while finishing fifth in the Forego (Gr. 1) at Saratoga in New York. The rider’s violation was striking Drafted with the whip ten times during the race. HISA rules allow only six strikes during a race; Rodriguez-Castro’s four strike overage cost the horse’s connections $26,000 in purse money.

But Germany and other European nations are also inflicting stringent rules on riders who are overly aggressive with crop use. 

German-bred Torquator Tasso, winner of last year’s Qatar Prix de l'Arc de Triomphe (Gp. 1), finished a near second to Mendocino in Baden-Baden, Germany. Jockey Frankie Dettori felt the sting of striking his mount one time too many with a 14-day suspension.

Strict German whip rules permit for the crop to be used only five times during a race, with the use of it down the shoulder with hands on the reins still considered as one strike.

Team Valor International races horses in Germany, and Barry Irwin voiced respect for their programs in general and regard for their accomplishments with smaller thoroughbred crops of 750 to 800 foals; Torquator Tasso is an example.

“[Germany] has a lot of rules, and they are different from England, Ireland and France,” Irwin said. “You can’t use a tongue tie, for example. I don’t know any other jurisdiction that does that. They are very good at testing, and they have a lot of rules about bleeders.”

Handling and properly holding the whip have become strict and exacting in many racing nations. A BHA steering group has proposed 20 changes to their current whip rules in four areas—how the whip is used, changes to regulation, changes to enforcement, plus other recommendations. (See sidebar)

“Most of our jurisdictions are run as tightly, if not more tightly, than your new HISA rules over in the states,” Beaumont pointed out. In some countries, such as Denmark, Norway and Sweden, whips are banned. Most other countries have strict rules on the use of the whip in terms of how many times a horse can be hit and where they can be hit.”

“The new rules, which are likely to come into force with BHA, include using [the whip] in the backhand position only,” he added. “There are examples every week of jockeys getting fined and banned for use of the whip, and generally longer suspensions than in the states.”

Nation-to-nation compatibility?

HISA regulations overall are not so dissimilar from other international edicts. There are so many variables, geographically for one, that synchronising worldwide regulations may never come to fruition. But, it’s a thought for the future.

When the ADMC portion of HISA kicks into gear the first of next year, there will likely be even more details to be digested by horsemen and other stakeholders. After all, that was the initial consideration when seeking reforms.

Irwin has “great hope” that those marring the integrity of thoroughbred racing will be prosecuted and severely penalised, and that the punishments will be severe enough to stop the cheating.

“As for the Anti-Doping and Medication Control regulations for 2023, I await their details,” said Beaumont. “Of course, we are already subject to strict restrictions over here, so this should not be an issue. Every horse shipping to run at Breeders’ Cup, for example, will already have done an out-of-competition test sanctioned by the state governing body and carried out by the likes of BHA on their behalf.

“They have a tough task,” Irwin said of HISA. “There are so many elements, groups to try to appeal to—it is a tough job.”

HOW THE WHIP SHOULD BE USED

  1. Use of the whip for safety purposes should continue to be a fundamental principle of regulation.

  2. The Rule requiring the whip to be carried (though not necessarily used) should be retained.

  3. Use of the ProCush whip should continue to be permitted for encouragement, with strong and appropriate regulation for its use.

  4. The whip rules will be amended to restrict use for encouragement to the backhand position only.

  5. Harmonisation of whip rules and penalties is a positive aspiration. The BHA should continue to play a leading role in discussions about harmonisation with its international counterparts, particularly Ireland and France.

CHANGES TO REGULATION

  1. The regulatory approach to the whip should be reframed to drive continuous improvement, both in standards of whip use and in the consistency of stewarding.

  2. Official guidance notes relating to some aspects of the whip rules should be refined and improved, so they are less ambiguous and open to interpretation, and to ensure greater consistency in the enforcement of the rules.

  3. A review panel will be established, which will assess all potential whip offences and apply sanctions or remedial actions where appropriate. The panel will deal with referrals from the Stewards, as well as having the power to initiate its own review.

CHANGES TO ENFORCEMENT

  1. The threshold for the application of some whip penalties will be lowered, to increase the deterrent effect and ensure earlier intervention.

  2. Penalties will be increased for some specific offences where the current penalty is considered inadequate.

  3. Financial penalties applied to amateur riders for whip offences will be increased.

  4. The penalty structure for use of the whip above the permitted level, which are the most frequently committed offences, will be revised to increase the deterrent effect.

  5. Penalty structure for use of the whip above the permitted level in major races to be revised as a doubling of the suspensions for the same offence in standard races.

  6. Repeat whip offences should be addressed at an earlier stage, and the penalties for repeat offences increased to deter further repetition.

  7. Disqualification of the horse will be introduced into the penalty framework for particularly serious use of the whip above the permitted level, where there has been a clear and flagrant disregard for the rules.

OTHER RECOMMENDATIONS

  1. The BHA, on behalf of the racing industry, should commission and support further objective research into the effects of the whip, using any relevant scientific advances to inform policy.

  2. The BHA should regularly consider the design and specifications of the approved whip, with a view to incorporating any technological innovations or advances that could further improve equine welfare and safety.

  3. Reasonable efforts should be made by British racing to explain the design, use and regulation of the whip to key audiences.

  4. While changing the name of the whip is not a direct, formal proposal, racing participants and media should be encouraged and supported to speak about the whip using appropriate and responsible language.

  5. The BHA and racecourses should agree a standard rider contract for charity and legends races, to ensure riders in such races are clear on their obligations in relation to use of the whip.

The effect of whip use on stride parameters and the racehorse

Article by Rhi Lee-Jones

Katie Walker, a recent graduate of the Thoroughbred and Horseracing Industries MBA, presented her research project findings regarding the effect of the whip at the 2022 Horseracing Industry Conference. The project explored how sectional time/stride data could be used to analyse the impact of the whip in the closing stages of races. The project, supported by the HBLB, made use of the data provided by Total Performance Data to determine what insights could be gained regarding both the performance and health of equine athletes. The use of the whip is a prevalent topic in British horse racing, with the British Horseracing Authority’s Whip Consultation Report released in July 2022 recommending research into “the effects of the whip, using any relevant scientific advances to inform policy.”

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For this study, data was collected from two match sets: hands and heels races and whip permitted races. Both sets were drawn from races post-2017, when stride data became available; and a limiting factor must be noted regarding the small quantity of hands and heels races, and therefore, data available.

Stride length and stride frequency in the final three furlongs of each race were extracted, controlling for trip, ground, number of runners, quality of horse and racecourse as far as possible. No significant difference in stride frequency was found; however, a small but significant difference in stride length was found, with horses in whip permitted races having marginally longer strides. This was recorded as follows. 3f – 2f = 0.09m, 2f – 1f = 0.12m and 1f to finish = 0.05m. However, the reasons that trainers run horses in hands and heels races may lead to selection bias, which makes further analysis necessary.

This analysis was performed with both sets of data. In the final three furlongs, it was found that the stride length of whip permitted horses decreased by 0.4m (5.7%), whereas hands and heels horses’ stride length decreased by 0.36m (5.2%). 

Horses placed 1st, 2nd and 3rd in all races were then subtracted to find the stride length declines in the final three furlongs, hence disregarding the horses out of contention. Data showed a similar pattern of a reduced decrease in stride length for horses in hands and heels races. Hence as the table below shows, horses in races with the whip permitted show a larger decrease than hands and heels-ridden horses—a surprising finding.

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No firm conclusions can be made here due to the limitations of the data, but it raises the question of the impact of the whip. The use of stride parameters per second, as opposed to averages over a furlong, and adding whip counts, could produce studies where hands and heels races are not required for analysis. This would allow for a larger data set and more detailed analysis. 

Sensors on the whip could count both the strikes and the force to give an enhanced picture of how the horse is responding and performing, bringing into focus how jockey training would also be influential on these factors. Cardiac monitoring is advised for this deeper analysis to monitor for signs of distress in the horse. Interference between participants is a major safety concern during the running of a race and could be monitored with use of this data and guide future rule reviews. In short, funding for this analysis could be revolutionary in a range of welfare and integrity concerns.

VETERINARY IMMUNOGENICS ARE BACK!

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The company has officially transitioned to day-to-day management under General Manager Fergus Macarthur, who has overseen significant capital investment intended to bolster production capabilities of Veterinary Immunogenics’ Hypermune™ and Hypermune™-RE plasma treatments while still maintaining Veterinary Immunogenics' steadfast commitment to safety and quality. Both Veterinary Immunogenics’ Hypermune™ and Hypermune™-RE products are once again currently available, providing vets, trainers, and breeders with an important tool in treating Failure of Passive Transfer (FPT) in foals and Rhodococcus Equi infections as well as reducing hospitalisation and recovery times for other conditions.  

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Additional investments have also been made to bolster Veterinary Immunogenics’ technical and customer support operations to provide a seamless customer experience. 

“With an impressive track record spanning three decades, we’re grateful for the tireless efforts of Dr Thomas Barr BVMS MRCVS and Eileen Barr to advance plasma-based equine veterinary medicine in the United Kingdom,” said Andrew Macarthur, CEO of Plasvacc UK Ltd. 

“A sure sign that Veterinary Immunogenics was a great fit for the Plasvacc Group of Companies was their unwavering commitment to product quality and exceptional customer service that closely mirrors our own. We’re very pleased to be adding the first-rate Veterinary Immunogenics employees to the Plasvacc Team,” continued Macarthur. 

As always, Veterinary Immunogenics’ 100% traceable, single-source, cell-free plasma is collected exclusively from our donor herd in the United Kingdom. All Veterinary Immunogenics products are thoroughly tested to accurately measure IgG levels, total protein, sterility and freedom from virus, providing unparalleled peace of mind. 

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What we learnt at the Horseracing Industry Conference

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Article by Rhi Lee-Jones

The Racing Foundation was delighted to welcome more than 200 delegates to the fifth annual Horseracing Industry Conference at Newbury Racecourse.

Held on 30 June in partnership with the University of Liverpool Management School, the event was attended by leading figures from across the horseracing industry. 

The conference’s headline topic was titled: “A healthy balance: balancing economic, environmental and social health to ensure a sustainable racing industry.”

The conference gave keynote speakers the opportunity to address the challenges affecting the horseracing industry in Britain.

Rob Hezel, chief executive at the Racing Foundation, said: “When developing the agenda for this year’s Horseracing Industry Conference, we did so with the belief that the long-term sustainability of the sport depends on three things: economic, social and environmental health.

“The growth in the event and its popularity demonstrates to me the real need for a forum for the multitude of organisations and businesses that make up British horseracing to meet regularly and to challenge and support each other.

“We had a vast range of talent in the room from a great variety of organisations. If the Racing Foundation can assist in aligning and coordinating them, then we are adding real value to the industry."

Joe Saumarez-Smith, chair of the British Horseracing Authority, kicked off the conference with his first keynote address since taking on the position earlier in the year.

The importance of data collection and how the British racing industry understands and uses that data was cited by Saumarez-Smith as crucial to the sport’s future.

The economic section of the conference commenced with Peter Hawkings, strategy consultant at Portas Consulting, analysing the funding structure of British racing.

Hawkings warned that the British racing industry would have a low growth rate over the next five years should intervention not take place. Seven potential levers to improve British racing’s financial position were subsequently offered:

·       Build relationships with fans and make the sport more relevant

·       Create new, exciting racing formats and greater narratives across the year

·       Convert more fans to becoming fractional owners (syndicates)

·       Secure owners in new geographies

·       Optimise racing as a betting product

·       Achieve meaningful levy reform

·       Diversify racecourse revenue streams (e.g., becoming more of a 365-day event destination)

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Continuing on the theme of the economic challenges of racing, “How People Bet on Horseracing and the Implications for the Sport'' was the title of University of Liverpool’s Professor of Economics David Forrest’s keynote talk. He took delegates through the findings of the Patterns of Play project, initiated by the Gambling Commission and GambleAware.

The project was intended to yield a description of how people gamble online, primarily with the intention of informing policy for harm reduction and analysed data from 14,000 online betting accounts.

The University of Liverpool professor explained that the Patterns of Play data revealed risks to racing’s implicit business model.

Even relative to the other gambling activities that were studied as part of the project, spending on race betting was found to be very concentrated indeed with its revenue stream very dependent on a small number of the population.

Indeed, the study found that the top one percent of gamblers on horse racing provided 59 percent of total stakes. One risk highlighted by Forrest was the possibility that the activities of these high-spending gamblers may generate regulatory interventions which could curtail their levels of activity.

Forrest then explored the age range of participants in online horse race betting, finding it relatively high in all age groups. Horse race betting was found to attract only a relatively small share of betting spend in younger age groups, with more than 55 percent of horseracing gross gambling yield generated by those aged 45 or above. 

If the younger half of the population maintains these preferences as they age, Forrest warned, there is likely to be a secular decline in racing’s revenue stream. This data illustrates a medium and long-term threat to the sustainability of British racing at its current scale of activity because those who are currently in younger cohorts clearly have a stronger preference for sports betting (predominantly football) than for horse betting.

A fundamental issue for British racing, Forrest warned, is that the senior age range for all British racing’s customer groups, including racegoers, television viewers, gamblers and owners, poses a threat to the future prospects for the sport.

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Crucial to the health of British racing is the sport’s social licence. Next on the agenda, conference delegates heard an analysis on the impact of equality, diversity and inclusion (ED&I) in British racing in a talk that explored whether it was making progress in British racing or was merely ticking boxes.

The talk was hosted by Lee Mottershead, Racing Post senior writer and member of the sport’s Diversity in Racing Steering Group. Mottershead quizzed industry leaders including Chief Executive of the British Horseracing Authority Julie Harrington on the sport’s responsibility towards ED&I. Mottershead was also joined onstage by Urban Equestrian Academy founder Freedom (a.k.a. “FR33DOM”) Zampaladus, who offered honest insight into his experiences in horse racing as an individual from a historically underrepresented background.

Two members of the recently appointed project team at the Horse Welfare Board were next to present and sparked heated debate amongst the delegates present.

Mike Etherington-Smith, equine safety advisor, and Francesca Compostella, aftercare lead, explored racing’s aftercare responsibility towards its equine athletes.

A  number of horse welfare projects were also discussed, including the Racing Foundation-funded Orange to White project.

Currently being phased into British racing, the Orange to White project has seen an estimated 368 fences and 2,132 hurdle panels across 40 racecourses change markings from the traditional orange to white.

The project, which Etherington-Smith and Compostella explained as being delivered by the Horse Welfare Board as part of the ‘Life Well Lived’ strategy, followed intensive research carried out by Exeter University into equine vision between 2017 and 2018.

The study found that changing the wood and vinyl padding of take-off boards, guard rails and top boards to white provided increased contrast and visibility for horses, leading to improved jumping performance.

Rhi Lee-Jones, communications and events manager for the Racing Foundation, said: “The 2022 Horseracing Industry Conference was the biggest yet with 227 tickets allocated.

“I’d like to thank our speakers and panel experts for delivering such thoughtful and challenging dialogue and contributing to insightful debate, which I hope engaged and ignited action in our delegates.

“At the Racing Foundation, our aim is to drive industry improvement. We plan for the conference to keep developing in the years to come as an important means of achieving that end.

“That process of alignment and coordination is crucial, and it needs to be informed by racing’s leaders. They need to be visible and articulate the direction of travel but also be prepared to listen, reflect and respond to what they hear.

"I would like to reiterate our thanks to all those who attended."

Horseracing and Thoroughbred Industries MBA graduate Katie Walker also presented her research on the effect of whip use on stride parameters of the racehorse—more details of which can be found on the insert.

The final keynote address of the day came from Sustainability Consultant Ruth Dancer, who has recently completed a scoping exercise into British racing’s environmental sustainability practices. The White Griffing consultant examined with delegates the findings of the recently published report, looking into the way in which environmental sustainability impacts the British horse racing industry. From water shortages to the potential for biodiversity, Dancer detailed the risks, challenges and opportunities for the sport in this area. The importance of a whole industry approach was emphasised along with how horse racing might move towards Britain’s net zero goal on carbon emissions by 2050. Social licence was again mentioned and was a common theme throughout the day, with Dancer highlighting the importance of environmental sustainability for the next generation. The carbon footprint of delegates’ travel to the conference was also offset by the Racing Foundation through the process of carbon sequestration, reinforcing the Foundation’s commitment to environmental sustainability and its belief that the issue has to be at the heart of not only racing’s future, but its present too.

To conclude the 2022 conference, racing’s leaders formed a leadership panel in which they took questions from attending delegates.

Among the leadership panel was Chief Executive of the National Trainers Federation Paul Johnson, Chief Executive of the Thoroughbred Breeders’ Association Claire Sheppard, and Chief Executive of the Racecourse Association David Armstrong.

Chief Executive of the Racehorse Owners Association Charlie Liverton and Tim Naylor, the director of Integrity and Regulation for the British Horseracing authority, completed the expert panel.

Neil Coster, director of studies for the Thoroughbred Horseracing Industries MBA at University of Liverpool Management School, said: "It has been fantastic to see the conference evolve since it started in 2018—more than doubling in size and this year attracting a record number of delegates.  

“The University is delighted the event continues to showcase the graduates’ research projects, and this highlights one of the philosophies of the conference—that of better informed decision making.  

“It is now seven years since the launch of the MBA, and we are pleased to see a number of our graduates progressing to senior positions in the industry."

To be the first to hear about the 2023 Horseracing Industry Conference, sign up to the Racing Foundation newsletter at www.racingfoundation.co.uk/news



Small wounds leading to synovial infections

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Article by Peter Milner

Most experienced trainers will know from bitter experience that a seemingly tiny wound can have a big impact if a horse is unlucky enough to sustain a penetrating injury right over a critical structure like a joint capsule or tendon sheath. Collectively, joints and tendon sheaths are called synovial structures, and synovial infection is a serious, potentially career-ending and sometimes life-threatening problem. 

A team of veterinary researchers from Liverpool University Veterinary School, published a study in Equine Veterinary Journal that examined factors influencing outcome and survival. This article was first published in European Trainer (issue 50 - summer 2015) but is being republished due to popular demand.

What is synovial infection?

Infection involving a synovial cavity, such as a joint or tendon sheath, is a common and potentially serious injury for the horse. The most prevalent cause is a wound, although a smaller proportion of cases result following an injection into a joint or tendon sheath, or after elective orthopaedic surgery to the area. Additionally, infection can occur via the bloodstream, particularly in foals that have not received enough colostrum.  Left untreated, the horse will remain in pain, and ongoing infection and inflammation can result in permanent damage. This can ultimately result in euthanasia on welfare grounds. 

What factors are important for horse survival?

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When a synovial infection occurs there is a huge inflammatory response, leading to swelling and pain. The horse usually shows severe lameness but following a good clinical examination, the cause is often quickly identified.  Prompt veterinary recognition of involvement of a joint or tendon sheath and aggressive treatment (involving flushing the affected synovial cavity and the correct use of systemic and local antibiotics) will often result in a good outcome for the horse.  Flushing removes inflammatory debris including destructive enzymes and free radicals, and it eliminates contaminating bacteria in most cases. This is performed most effectively by arthroscopic guidance (“keyhole” surgery) under general anaesthesia. Using a “scope” to do this is considered superior to flushing through needles because arthroscopy allows the inside of the problem area to be inspected, foreign material (for example, dirt or splinters of wood) to be removed, and any concurrent damage (such as damage to the cartilage or a cut into a tendon) to be evaluated. In addition, targeted high volume lavage is best achieved via arthroscopy. 

Survival following arthroscopic treatment of synovial sepsis is good – approximately 80-90% of adult horses undergoing a flush are discharged from hospital.  In foals, however, the figure is much lower, at around 55%, and this likely due to complicating factors such as concurrent sepsis involving multiple organs.  Our study, recently published in Equine Veterinary Journal, investigated what factors might be involved in determining survival to hospital discharge in 214 horses undergoing arthroscopic treatment for synovial sepsis. We used statistical modelling to evaluate the interactions with different factors at three key time points during the management of the condition at Liverpool Veterinary School, one of the leading UK referral veterinary hospitals. Information collected on admission to the hospital included when the horse was last seen to be normal, the cause of the infection, the degree of lameness present, and the level of white blood cells and protein in synovial fluid collected from the infected joint or tendon sheath. These lab tests are an important method which veterinarians use to determine how severe the infection is. Additional data collected included whether the surgery was performed out-of-normal working hours, if foreign material was present, the amount of inflammation present in the area, and whether any additional cartilage or tendon damage was found at surgery. Post-operative information gathered included what the levels of white blood cells and protein were in the synovial fluid after surgery and whether the horse needed further surgical treatment.

All horses in this study were greater than six months old and the majority had sustained a wound that communicated with a joint or tendon sheath.  Eighty-six per cent of the 214 horses admitted to the hospital survived to hospital discharge.  Of the 31 horses that did not survive, 27 were euthanised due to persistent infection or lameness.

An angry, protein-soup

A high level of protein in the synovial fluid of the affected joint or tendon sheath on admission and levels that remained high after surgery were strongly associated with a poor outcome and loss of the horse.  Protein concentrations are normally fairly low in a normal joint or tendon sheath, but protein leaks into the synovial cavity from surrounding blood vessels when inflamed. Protein is also produced by cells in the synovial cavity when they are activated in response to a severe insult such as infection. Protein clots trap bacteria in the joint, making it harder to remove infection. The protein soup also includes lots of inflammatory mediators such as enzymes and signalling molecules, and these cause further inflammation, tissue damage, and sensitise pain receptors in the synovial cavity magnifying the inflammatory response and increasing the pain experienced by the horse. Unchecked, this angry, inflamed environment can result in cartilage degeneration, bone damage, and adhesion (scar) formation. This fits well with another observation from this study linking the presence of moderate or severe synovial inflammation at surgery as a negative factor for survival. 

Small wounds can lead to big trouble

Interestingly, horses presenting with an obvious wound (as opposed to a small penetrating injury or no visible wound) were more likely to survive to hospital discharge. This may be due to the injury being noticed earlier and hence prompting earlier veterinary intervention. Alternatively, open wounds may allow drainage of inflammatory synovial fluid and lessen the detrimental effects of increased pressure within the joint as well as reducing ongoing exposure to inflammatory mediators. This finding highlights the fact that trainers should act promptly when faced with a wound – it is easy to underestimate just how much damage may be going on under the surface.

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Horses undergoing surgical treatment of a joint or tendon sheath infection out-of-hours (for example in the middle of the night) were three times less likely to survive to hospital. Often, horses with a synovial infection arrive stressed and painful and not in an ideal state for having an anaesthetic. Early identification of an infection and appropriate management is important but stabilisation of the horse and preparation for surgery appear to outweigh any perceived benefits of undertaking immediate surgery.  This is borne out by the finding that time from initial injury to treatment was not associated with outcome and is in agreement with previous findings from other researchers. It is important to reiterate that prompt recognition and treatment of a horse with an infection in a synovial cavity is essential but that surgical management within 12-24 hours of diagnosis, so that the horse is in the best condition for undergoing anaesthesia, does not affect outcome. 

Do horses return to work after a synovial infection?

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The big question that owners and trainers want to know is whether the horse will regain full function of the joint or tendon sheath after having an infection. Figures for return to function following surgical (arthroscopic) treatment for a synovial infection vary between 54-81%.  Various factors appear to relate to outcome but when looking at a predominately thoroughbred racing population, the statistic for return to training appears to be at the higher end of this range. Factors associated with failure to return to athletic performance include the presence of thickened inflammatory tissue (known as pannus) at the time of surgery and that may relate to the development of fibrous adhesions and scar tissue within joint or tendon sheath longer-term. Some structures are particularly likely to compromise future function, and horses with an infection of the navicular bursa in the foot following a nail penetration generally do worse. 

Take home message

Horses sustaining an infection to a joint or tendon sheath have a good chance of the infection clearing up and surviving the injury, with the likelihood of racing as high as around 80%.  Our key message for trainers from this study is that it is essential that they recognise early when an infection involves one of these structures and have a veterinarian fully evaluate the injury. Aggressive treatment is important and involves flushing the synovial cavity using a “scope” under anaesthesia to remove as much inflammatory and infective debris as possible. 

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International racing returns to Morocco

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Article by Paull Khan

Casablanca will host the latest of its well-established and handsomely endowed International Thoroughbred Race Days. Entries for the four races, which are run on Saturday the 19th of November, close at the end of October. 

Headlining is the €110,200 Grand Prix de la SOREC, one of the international Defi du Galop series of events, run over 2400m/12f for 3yo’s and up. The support card comprises a 1750m/8.75f event for 3yo fillies (€64,300), a race for the 3yo colts over 1900m/9.5f (€55,100) and a 1750m/8.75f for the staying 2yo (€25,700). All races are run on the dirt track. Entry fees are around one percent of the race fund.

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SOREC (the Moroccan racing authority) is eager to see the festival get fresh impetus after the sad interruption due to COVID. Keen to encourage international participation, it will be putting on a plane to transport runners from a central European location (exact departure point to be determined), awarding travel allowances of up to €3,000 per horse, meeting the costs of flights and accommodation for the owner, trainer and jockey and hosting a gala dinner. Stable staff will be put up at the nearby training centre, where the visiting horses will be stabled.

“Since 2015,” explains Hicham Debbagh, SOREC’s deputy general manager in charge of horse racing, “our objective was to install the Morocco International Meeting in the international calendar, through attractive prize money and free air transport, in order to guarantee the best reception conditions for horses and professionals. Prior to COVID, things were progressing nicely, and we were attracting good horses from England, France, Libya, Netherlands, Oman, Poland, Qatar, Spain, Syria and UAE. Now that travel has opened up again, we look forward to building our festival back up as an international destination. Welcome to Morocco!”

Anfa Racecourse is an oasis of calm and beauty in the sprawling metropolis that is Casablanca. Trainers might well consider a Moroccan raid. Prize money extends down to fifth place, and the average field size for the four races in (pre-COVID) 2019 was 11. At the same time, it provides connections with the chance to experience racing in a nearby country with a fascinatingly distinct culture, and it will be helping inject the necessary quality of the runners to enable Morocco to achieve its dream of acquiring its first Black Type race.

New Spanish beach race festival unveiled at meeting in Germany

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Article by Paull Khan

There will be a spanking new venue for official beach racing in Spain this year when the Andalucian village of Zahara de los Atunes opens its doors to thoroughbred racing on Saturday October 29th, the middle day of an attraction-packed three-day beach festival, bookended by jazz concerts and polo. Long known for its beach-bar music scene, horseracing will now be used in Zahara in an attempt to prolong the tourist season in this southernmost part of Spain until the end of October. 

The Costa de la Luz now boasts two beach tracks, with the venerable Sanlucar de Barrameda an hour-and-a-half drive up the coast.

Zahara’s stunning straight beach will accommodate races between 1400m/7f and 1800m/9f. 

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Plans for the Zahara festival were unveiled at this year’s annual meeting of the European Beach Racing Association, which took place in Cuxhaven, on Germany’s north seacoast. Delegates had been privileged to witness the famed Duhner-Wattrennen races, which have been staged on the vast beach for the past 120 years. An attentive and happy-paying crowd of 13,000 attended this year’s renewal, despite poor weather. The programme was varied, with trotting (mounted and sulky) and gallop races for warmbloods in addition to thoroughbred racing. 

Cuxhaven is unique among beach racetracks in that the horses race through a shallow covering of standing water. The resultant spray, from the horses’ hooves and the wheels of the patrol vehicle, creates its own spectacle. The races are recognised as a powerful tourist attraction—a national minister attended and addressed the launch party before proceedings began.

First European Pony Racing Association meeting in Budapest

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Article by Paull Khan

Those in charge of pony racing travelled to Budapest from all over Europe to attend the inaugural annual meeting of the European Pony Racing Association (EPRA) on September 11th. Representatives from Belgium, Czech Republic, France, Great Britain, Hungary, Norway, Slovakia and Sweden had, the previous day, witnessed three pony races that kick-started the quality thoroughbred card at Hungary’s sole track, Kincsem Park. They were universally impressed at the professionalism of the pony racing, the hospitality and the great strides which Kincsem Park has made in recent years. It is a very different racecourse from the one that hosted an early EMHF meeting in 2013 and as striking an example of diversity as one can find. Today, every square metre of the track’s footprint is put to productive use. In addition to the flagship thoroughbred racing, there is greyhound racing, trotting, a training centre, show jumping, four-in-hand driving and more. There is even a rugby pitch inside the greyhound track!

Increased internationalisation of pony racing, with the best young riders having the opportunity to experience race-riding in other countries, is an aim of the EPRA, and it was pleasing to witness history being made. Czech youngster Sophy Bodlakova became the first foreign-based winner of a Hungarian pony race when she scored on her pony Saman!

While for some EPRA member countries, such as France, Sweden and Britain, pony racing is a well-established pursuit; for some, it is a very new endeavour, and for others yet, it is something to be established in the near future. The imparting of knowledge and identification of best practice will therefore be central to the fledgling association. 

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Slovakia’s experience bears witness to the fact that countries need not wait for long, after setting up a pony racing structure, to see the benefits begin to flow, in the shape of new jockeys. It was only last year that the first pony races took place at Bratislava racetrack, but from the alumni of that first cohort, there are this year no fewer than four amateur riders licence-holders. For those many countries experiencing difficulties in sourcing competent race riders, a pony racing structure is a must-have.

At the EPRA meeting, a minute’s silence was observed in honour of Jack de Bromhead, who tragically lost his life in a pony racing incident in Ireland. 

For many delegates, it was the first experience of pony racing outside their own countries. Next year, the EPRA has accepted a kind invitation from France to host.

Botond Kovacs, head of pony racing in this year’s host country, commented: “We have been thrilled to host the first European Pony Racing Association meeting. The rise in profile of pony racing is very refreshing to see. The European Pony Racing community is taking shape and it feels like we’ve been put on the map—a map that the world of racing has a keen eye on.”

Racing in Switzerland - it's not just about racing on snow!

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Article by Paull Khan

Think of racing in Switzerland, and the fabulous White Turf meeting on Lake St. Moritz probably comes to mind. This is no surprise, of course. The EMHF was fortunate to hold its General Assembly there in 2015, and for many of our delegates, including your columnist, it remains among the most memorable racing adventures of all. But there is so much more to racing in that country.

Sadly, St Moritz’s little sister track, which provided racing on the frozen lake at Arosa, is no longer with us. Weather conditions in recent years meant that there had become a worse than even-money chance of abandonment—a situation that was just not financially sustainable.

But the full roster of Swiss thoroughbred tracks still extends to seven. (Although one of the tracks, at Fehraltorf, which had upheld a 75-year tradition of racing over the Easter holiday, remains in a state of hiatus following an altercation last year with a neighbour farmer, who took the dramatic and disruptive decision to plough up the racing surface.)

Jump racing is the primary focus at Aarau and Maienfeld, while the flat dominates at Zurich-Dielsdorf, Frauenfeld (home of the Swiss Derby) and at the track that is the financial powerhouse of Swiss racing, Avenches.

This August saw celebrations for the 150th year of the Zurich race club, which coincided with 50 years of its current racecourse, at the small nearby town of Dielsdorf. A two-day festival was crafted, during which the 1500-metre, pancake-flat turf track staged 14 races: nine thoroughbred flat, two trotting and three pony. This left-hand track also boasts a jump course, but this is used infrequently these days.

Interwoven with the races, there was an appearance of the 250-year-old Bernese Dragoons, a mesmeric display from world-renowned Jean-Francois Pignon’s ‘free dressage’ horses, after-racing musical acts and, notably, a parade of former equine stars of Swiss racing showing off their expertise in new-found careers. Aftercare has long been a feature of Swiss racing. Horses tend to stay in training for longer than the norm on the flat, allowing the public to build up the kind of rapport with them normally associated with jump racing. In addition, they tend to race more frequently than in most countries, averaging nearly eight starts annually and this helps to buoy field sizes and makes for attractive, competitive racing generally.

The substantial crowds were engaged and relaxed, and it all made for a wonderfully rewarding racing experience.  

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When it comes to funding, Swiss racing is swimming against the tide, in many ways akin to the experience in Belgium, described in the last issue of Trainer. This is because, with one principal exception, there is no opportunity for people within or outside the country to place bets on Swiss races unless they are on-track. The twin State-installed institutions (one French-language, the other German), which between them enjoy a betting monopoly, decline to include domestic racing within their product mix. The exception is Avenches, where the bulk of the races has been taken on by the French betting giant PMU, are shown on the Equidia channel, and are available to Swiss and French citizens to bet on, in cafes, bars and kiosks and online. (In 2022, a few PMU races were also held in Frauenfeld and Dielsdorf). The commission from this betting activity is vital to Avenches and also helps support Swiss racing generally, but the other Swiss tracks rely critically on donations and sponsor contributions.

Unsurprisingly, the scale of the industry has suffered a worrying contraction. What had been a slow but steady reduction in the numbers of owners, horses, races and prize money between 2015 and 2019 accelerated dramatically in the COVID year of 2020. Over the past seven years, prize money has halved, and the numbers of horses and owners have reduced by 51 percent and 48 percent, respectively.

The Swiss race programme is heavily weighted towards staying races. While Handicaps are out of bounds to foreign-trained runners, they only constitute a modest proportion of the race programme and all conditions races are open. Average prize money per race remains very respectable, at nearly €10,000. The Grand Prix von St Moritz is, at €100K, clearly the nation’s richest race. Other significant prizes include the Grand Prix d’Avenches (€20k for 3yo+, weight-for-ages, 2400m/12f), Zurich’s Grand Prix Jockey Club (€50k for 3yo+, weight-for-age, 2475m/12f+), and the Swiss Derby (€50K). The country’s main jump race is the €35K Grand Prix of Switzerland, run over (4200m/21f) in beautiful surroundings at Aarau in September with a limited weight range of just 3kgs.

For five years, between 2014 and 2018, both the Grand Prix d’Avenches and the Grand Prix Jockey Club boasted Black Type. Regrettably, neither managed to maintain the strict ratings threshold required of such races in Europe. Fresh hope has been generated by the new scheme, agreed this year, whereby EMHF member countries without a Black Type race can apply for such recognition for a single, flagship event which is allowed a rating 5lbs lower than normal. There is a real desire that one or another of these races can clear this lowered bar but, as is normally the case, this is likely to hinge on their attracting foreign-trained runners rated 95+ on the international scale. And, considering the decent prizes, foreign-trained runners are relatively thin on the ground, accounting for under five percent of starters. British and German raiders are attracted to the snow, Czech runners to some of the jumps races, but foreign runners on the flat have been in single figures over the past two years.

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There was, in fact, a third milestone included within the Zurich celebrations: the tenth anniversary of Horse Park Dielsdorf. The Horse Park brings together the racing and equestrian worlds in a way which could surely be gainfully replicated in many more parts of Europe. Alongside the racetrack and training barns housing 150 horses, there are FEI-standard facilities for show jumping and dressage. A recent addition, completed within the past year, is a large stylish building which, in its restaurant configuration, comfortably seats 250 with a fine view of the racing. Various facilities around the complex are available year-round to the general public for hire. In investing some €8M into this project, Race Club President Anton Kraeuliger has demonstrated both a recognition of the importance of sweating the asset that is the racecourse and an enduring belief in Swiss racing. Let us hope that this confidence is well-placed and that racing in this most beautiful of European countries, can look forward to a thriving future.

Michael O'Callaghan - an up and coming Irish Trainer with a plan

Words - Daragh Ó Conchúir

More melodious than cacophonous, the chirp from the lush foliage enveloping the drive into Crotanstown Stud on a spring morning is louder than anything emanating from the yard itself.

The horses, though fed, are shaking off the influence of Morpheus as first lot is tacked up, dreams of carrots and zoomies, crystallised while immersed in deep beds of Willie Fennin’s winter barley straw, still lingering.

Michael O’Callaghan emerges to proffer a greeting. The canines, Samhain and three-legged Liath bound over to add their greetings. Samhain is everybody’s friend and has no problem with Twilight Jet having a friendly nibble on his ear. 

The pace is brisk but at the same time unhurried; relaxed O’Callaghan won’t be 34 until September, but despite growing up in a housing estate in Tralee without any exposure to equines until the Damascene conversion that occurred when he first sat on a pony as a 12-year-old, he has been involved in the industry long enough to experience plenty of slings and arrows.

He knows what he wants though, in horse and human. The latter is a key element of any successful operation—his wife Siobhain setting the tone with her level of graft and care for the horses. In a time when staffing is a huge problem throughout the industry, from office to rider to yardmen, he has a team he is very happy with. He knows the truth in the old proverb, If you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far, go together.

“Everyone that’s in the yard now is an asset,” O’Callaghan notes.

Success attracted significant owners very quickly and among those, past and present to link up with the Curragh-based Kerryman include Michael Iavarone, Qatar Racing, Chantal Regalado-Gonzalez and Sheikh Mohammed bin Khalifa al Maktoum. Kia Joorabchian’s Amo Racing has lived up to its name by providing significant ammunition this term—Malex and Crispy Cat winning early maidens. One of Joorabchian’s famous clients, the Aston Villa and former Barcelona and Liverpool star Philippe Coutinho, is a part owner of Olivia Maralda.

Twilight Jet—or TJ as he is known in the yard—is the apple of the Crotanstown eye. Kentucky Derby and Breeders’ Cup-winning owner, Iavarone bought half of the Twilight Son colt prior to his Breeders’ Cup run last year, while O’Callaghan and his partners, who include his father of the same name, retain the other half.

A £210,000 purchase at Goffs UK Breeze-Up in April 2021—an outlay that would a fair bit north of O’Callaghan’s average outlay—TJ ran a remarkable 11 times in his juvenile campaign from five furlongs to seven, winning twice at the shortest trip, including a Gp. 3 and finishing third twice more at group level.

Despite not being anywhere near peak fitness, he pulverised the field in the Gp. 3 Lacken Stakes at Naas on his seasonal reappearance over six furlongs last month; and Leigh Roche had to be at his strongest, not to win, but to pull his charge up. Jet has a season of Gp. 1 targets now. That Jet isn’t the only Crotanstown resident for which this may be the case is a testament to the genius of the man who has selected the vast majority of the 40 horses in the yard—and trains them. 

The string leaves on the dot of 7.30am, riders hi-vis jacketed though it is a clear, bright morning. They must cross at least two, sometimes three, main roads however, depending on what gallops O’Callaghan chooses to use on the vast training grounds. This morning, it’s the Old Vic.

“The first thing I do is I’m watching them as they’re jogging over, to make sure they’re not lame or not abnormally so. Some of them have their own way or take a little while to warm up. And this is a very good warm-up. None of them were on a walker beforehand as they jog a mile to the gallop.” 

Anyone from the outside world looking for one magic secret to training racehorses is on a fool’s errand because obviously, there is a conglomeration of factors. What is certain is that while you may have a system, dependent on the facilities available to you, a one-fits-all approach can never work. As far as O’Callaghan himself is concerned, observation is one watchword. Having people that understand horses and their individuality is another integral element.

“Good horsemen, I think, would make good psychologists... [because] what you’re trying to do is think the way horses think. That’s why I say to young people who ask what would make good horse people, ‘Start thinking the way the horses think.’ 

“They might say, ‘How [do] you do that?’ Quite simple. Put yourself in its head space. Why is he after jumping there or acting the fool? Then you learn very quickly and you become a better horse person for it, instead of just fighting them all the time. You can’t rule with an iron fist.”

It must be difficult though, and frustrating, when the horse cannot talk to you or you to it.

“But no animal can talk, and yet they can understand each other. So maybe the talking complicates things. Some people talk for the sake of talking.”

An articulate communicator, he prefers to look and listen. Interestingly, as he gathers information, he doesn’t take notes, even at the end of the day, for the purposes of refreshing the mind when attempting to solve a puzzle.

“Everything’s in my head. If I wrote it down, I’d forget it straight away. If you want to remember it, you’ll remember it, I think. They say if you said something to Michael Stoute after work, and commented that the horse gave two coughs, he’d write it on his hand with his finger.

“Two coughs,” he verbalises, as he traces the words on the palm of his hand, reconstructing how he imagines the most famous non-cricketing Barbadian doing it.

First lot is headed by Twilight Jet and the returning Steel Bull. Also included are three two-year-olds and an unraced three-year-old. We pause as they cross the bridge to the gallop.

“It’s a simple routine. They ride out six days a week and walk on a Sunday. If they’re running next week or need it, they’ll ride out on a Sunday. They do their regular two seven-furlong canters every day—nice pace. And then they work twice a week. Some horses work three times a week, some only once a week. And some fillies, you might only work them every second week.”

He breaks off to draw your attention to his main man.

“Look at Jet. Some boy, isn’t he? Well behaved. Stands there. On the way back now, he will power walk. You wanna see him. He’s power-walking and the others are jogging just to keep up. He’s just so happy with himself, he knows he’s good. And you see him there heading over now, he’s so laid back, with a bed head still on him.”

We move ahead of the string, to be at the top of the rising track. Willie McCreery is ahead of us. 

“You’re looking that they’re going the pace you want them to go so you’re bringing them forward,” says O’Callaghan, when asked what he wants to see. “Ultimately, you’re building, trying to get them fitter from the last day to the next day.”

The horses approach and gallop past—nostrils flaring, hooves rhythmically pounding. The next lot comprises O’Callaghan’s four acquisitions from the previous week’s Tattersalls Goresbridge breeze-up. 

“It’s the first time I watched them stretch their legs. And they weren’t hanging around.”

The feedback is positive, too. Potential starting points are discussed. There are some tracks he likes to kick off on more than others, including Cork (“The new straight course in Cork is the closest thing you’ll get to a perfect flat track.”), Navan, Leopardstown and of course, the home turf at HQ; but wherever you go, the opposition will be fierce.

“It’s mad when you think about it. We were disappointed when Crispy Cat was beaten by Blackbeard, but then he wins a Gp. 3 by six lengths and becomes [the] favourite for the Coventry. I would say the standard of two-year-olds this year in Ireland is red hot. With Ger Lyons and Jessie Harrington having so many well-bred horses; and then you have obviously Aidan and Joseph and Donnacha (O’Brien)—it has never been as competitive.

“There’s no hiding place in Ireland. None whatsoever.”

That makes winning difficult, but it is upon the resultant demand and market for Irish racehorses that can show promise in such an environment that the trainer’s business model is rooted.

The love of racing came first from picking up the Evening Echo newspaper for his granddad, also Michael, to select a few bets on a Saturday, and then waiting for the results to come up on Teletext.

Once he joined a friend at the nearby riding school, he was hooked. Gradually, he dragged his parents, and particularly his father—another Michael but with no clue about horses—into the web. Junior got a holiday job working for Tom Cooper. His dad, who after retiring from ESB set up a utility infrastructural development company (TLI Group) with his partner Thomas Fitzmaurice that was now booming, decided to buy a mare and some land so he could dabble a bit in breeding and share the journey of a new interest.

He is still doing it now, long since sold on his son’s gift. It is in Michael Sr’s now very recognisable silks of dark blue jacket with red epaulettes and red cap with dark blue star that most of the horses run in. 

O’Callaghan prepped yearlings and worked with stallions at Kilsheelan and Castlehyde Studs, where Paul Shanahan was a valued mentor. 

When his father sold a Galileo foal for €200,000, a plan was hatched to embark on a pinhooking enterprise together. He took the Irish National Stud management course in 2008, which is where he met Siobhain, and rented Millgrove Stud in Rathangan as a 20-year-old, when determining that he needed to be more central to continue his trading operation.

“It was a little bit stupid maybe, but for someone that comes from a background that’s not in horse racing, that hasn’t got a yard to walk into when the father retires, or a farm, or any of that crack, you have to kick on.”

O’Callaghan took out a restricted licence in 2012 and Bogini, bought out of Tracey Collins’ yard to breed from, won in Bath, Sandown and Leopardstown. She produced three winners, including Twitter sensation Caribbean Spring, or Bean, as he is known to his near 7,000 followers.

Bogini sadly died as a nine-year-old, but she sent O’Callaghan on his way. When five of the colts he sold at the breeze-ups the following season won on debut, it dawned on him that he could just move a step further down the line, use his breeze-up knowledge to buy at the sales and increase his profits by trading horses with form. For the most part, it has been a phenomenal success.

He began renting Crotanstown in 2013; and Blue De Vega, Now Or Never and Letters Of Note were early stakes winners, having been bought cheaply—the first two bought by Qatar Racing. More recently, Steel Bull won a maiden three weeks after being bought and the Gp. 3 Molecomb Stakes seven days after that. Twilight Jet is the latest to shine a light on O’Callaghan’s talents.

“I don’t look at the catalogue before I go to the sale,” O’Callaghan reveals. “I can’t let the catalogue taint what I’m seeing. You can’t train a piece of paper… when you can’t afford the pedigree, what comes first is a physical.

“I generally don’t look at a horse before I see them breeze. I watch them all breeze first, pick out by eye what I like the look of by the way they breeze. Generally the times aren’t out in time, so I head down the yard and look at 50 horses that I liked the look of breezing. It’s funny how often it works out that the horses I like the look of breezing; and then you get the team sheet and most of them are there in the top. You get a few ones that are there you didn’t like the look of and a few that you liked the look of that are down further, so you just have to weigh it up.”

So, time isn’t the be-all.

“It’s a big jigsaw, and you’re trying to put all the pieces together. There’s lads trying to make it scientific, analysing strides and this and that. My thought is if you can’t see it with your eye… you have to be able to recognise it.”

Physically, he places a good deal of store in the head, the eye and the ears. It was good enough for Vincent O’Brien, after all. After that, there is a physical make-up he relishes, and his description includes geometric lines from back and front that intersect in the middle of the back. It is easier for him to recognise it, than describe it; but you get the picture. 

He deals primarily in mature, fast horses that will hopefully make into milers.

“You’ve a quicker result,” he reasons. “You’ve a quicker debt if they’re no good.”

It is a balancing act around the business model because as a sportsman, he wants to be in the parade ring on the big days, as he was with Malex in the Irish 2000 Guineas earlier this season. Blue De Vega finished third in the Classic six years ago, Now Or Never filling the same slot in the fillies’ Guineas, 24 hours later.

“The whole world recognises that Irish racing is the most competitive racing there is. You run well in any maiden in Ireland, your horse is sellable; and that’s essentially what I’m doing. Now, I’m training horses for other people as well, and you’re still trying to get the best out of everything; but for the ones we own ourselves, we’re training to trade them.

“That doesn’t mean the first day they turn up at the racecourse, it’s their Derby. They still have to progress. People don’t belong copping on if the horses don’t improve. Part of what I pride myself in is in horses going on and being good horses elsewhere, that I haven’t emptied them. You have to do the right thing by the horse because at the end of the day, if you don’t get to sell them, you still want them progressing. This quick flash is no good to anyone.

“And that doesn’t mean that you don’t go and try and win [the] first time with horses, if they’re good enough. If they’re good enough, the way you train them up to that point, they’ll still progress. 

“Look at Twilight Jet last year.”

He is quick to point out that you would not run too many two-year-olds as often as Twilight Jet bounced out, but this rare type has “an unbelievable constitution” and only failed to fire in the final engagement at Del Mar. He doesn’t believe in wrapping up good horses in cotton wool either. If they are fit, they should run.


The relationship with Sheikh Mohammed bin Khalifa al Maktoum was founded on winning maidens with three breezers O’Callaghan had obtained for the Dubai royal. He was subsequently sent eight homebreds with fantastic pages, but they weren’t up to the mark. Lesson learned.

“It was a case in point of being sent horses and not having control in buying them, and what you’re given. If José Mourinho put a pair of football boots on me, he wouldn’t turn me into a footballer. It set me back a couple of years because I wasn’t buying as many horses because I hadn’t the space. I quickly realised that you need to control your own destiny. I had to go back to doing what got me there in the first place: buying horses. 

“It takes a lot of funding—takes a lot of balls. It creates a lot of stress [and] takes a lot of support. At the end of the day, you have to make up your mind in what you’re going to do. You have to commit and believe in it. You have to put enough thought into it that it’s not a shot in the dark. 

“It seems to be working and bringing me in the direction I want to go.”

And that is to a thriving, self-sustaining operation. 

“I don’t want to just train horses for a wage. We’re building a new yard at the minute, on the far side of Gilltown Stud between Craddockstown and Dunlavin. Like anyone in business, I like making money, but it’s not all about that. There’s the competitor in me as well that wants to win races. There’s the person that wants to train these good horses and get to these big meetings. 

“What I really love is going to the breeze-ups, finding the horses and then bringing them home, getting them into our system and getting to the track. That’s where I get a lot of satisfaction from… It’s not just about money, but you need to turn them into money because they cost a lot of money; and they don’t all work out.”

A new premise means a modern, clean building made from concrete and steel, full of air, non-porous and conducive to healthy animals. One of his primary focuses is on the storage barn for feed and bedding, which he says cost as much as building another 40 boxes. He places a lot of store in that element of training horses, recalling the words of Mark Johnston: “If we feed them more, we can train them harder.” And bad bedding can wipe out an entire season.

While he will continue to use The Curragh, he is installing a five-furlong uphill gallop built on land that is already 700 feet above sea level. There will be a 10-horse walker and an indoor covered ride. In time, he would love to put in a swimming pool, having seen the benefits with Twilight Jet and especially Steel Bull recovering from getting badly jarred up.

While the emphasis will always be on breezers, there is always a bit of a spread, such as the small breeding operation. He has an eye on a new angle with Twilight Jet: the possibility of turning him into a stallion. 

“You don’t go around touting it because it’s so hard to do, but it’s another way of getting paid. They’re a very valuable asset if you make them up into that sort of a horse and hopefully, Twilight Jet will make it into a horse that will be attractive to stallion men. He’s by Twilight Son, a commercial stallion; he’s such a good-looking horse, he was so hardy as a two-year-old with so much racing. He was a sale-topping two-year-old out of an Exceed And Excel mare. He’s going to be very commercial as a stallion if we can get him to win a Gp. 1 or even be placed in a Gp. 1 because he was such a two-year-old and he’s still so fast.

“We sold 50% of him to Michael Iavarone to go to the Breeders’ Cup, but we retained [the other] 50% of him. You have to get paid when you’re getting paid.”

Around 40–60 horses is his “sweet spot” at the moment, though he doesn’t rule out expanding that in time. But while there are plenty of rewards and he has prospered, it is a stressful life.

“When it’s getting on top of you, that’s the last thing you think about at night, what you think about when you wake up in the middle of the night, and what you think about when you wake up in the morning.

“With horses, a lot of it is out of your control… you have to be able to realise that.” 

He reminds me that Henry Cecil used to go shopping as an escape. While cutting a dapper figure in his suit on race day, O’Callaghan prefers racing Formula Vee cars at Mondello Park to the high street. He learned to fly planes before that but as well as providing an adrenaline rush, racing has the added benefit of being competitive, without him ever thinking he is going to usurp Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton any day. 

What often strikes this observer is the talent O’Callaghan has for procuring horses—at what often turns out to be value and turning them into a profit, which might quite easily have never been discovered, given his background. Is what he sees innate, or can anyone learn it?

“You can learn. You have to have the head to learn, and maybe there’s an innate ability there. I don’t know. I’ve learned everything. I’ve the type of brain that if I have an interest in something, I’ll immerse myself in it and I’ll learn as much as I can about it. I’ll nearly become addicted to it. I think everybody that excels in a sphere, they have to have that.”

He has certainly immersed himself in this racing world, combining high-stakes poker with a business plan. 

“This game, the way I’m doing it, you’re all-in, every day. A bad year would wipe you out. What you’re doing is you’re trying to get a right beano of a year to put you on a footing with a bit of comfort. But look, Jim Bolger is all-in, every day, too. At this stage of his life he is probably not actually, but there was a point for a long time that he was.

“You have to back yourself.”

And deliver. So far, so good.

Miranda Filmer

MIRANDA FILMER

4th April 1992 - 10th June 2022

We are saddened to report that our beloved publication manager, Miranda Filmer, passed away on June 10th, aged 30, after a brave battle against Neuroendocrine cancer.

Dealing with advertisers, suppliers and subscribers on a day-to-day basis Miranda played an integral role in the management of Anderson & Co Publishing.

Neuroendocrine tumours (NETs) are thought to be rare. Many have never heard of this cancer, it has been called the ‘Quiet Cancer’ as it presents so late and advanced, NETs currently impact more than 15,000 people in the UK alone.

It can affect anyone, of any gender, and at any age.

For many living with the disease the progression of the cancer is slow, with the tumours taking years to develop; but for some it presents aggressively, it may grow rapidly and spread to other parts of the body, causing debilitating symptoms.

Miranda refused to be defined by her disease, she rode everyday through cycles of chemotherapy and other debilitating treatments. Even as her cancer consumed her body, she continued to work - right up to the end.

Clinicians are yet to understand how people develop NETS, and why it presents so aggressively in some.

At the Royal Free London (RFL), Professor Martyn Caplin DM, FRCP has identified a research project which would address this critical research gap. A global specialist in NETs, Professor Caplin oversees the hospital trust’s Neuroendocrine Tumour Research Unit. 

His multidisciplinary team is committed to improving outcomes for patients through pioneering research, clinical trials, and innovative new therapies. Charitable support is urgently needed to kickstart Professor Caplin’s research programme as NET research is immensely underfunded.

To donate to the appeal, please visit  thebiggive.org.uk and search ‘Neuroendocrine Appeal’.

Or contact Delphine Chalmers - delphine.chalmers@royalfreecharity.org / +44 (0)7943 403887. Reference FILMERAPPEAL

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TopSpec Trainer of the Quarter - Karl Burke

Words - Lissa Oliver

Karl Burke took out his licence in 1991 and trains from the historic Spigot Lodge in Middleham, Yorkshire, from where the famous Derby winner The Flying Dutchman was sent out in 1849. With a team that includes wife Elaine and daughters Kelly and Lucy, the Classic winning tradition continued under Burke when Laurens landed the 2018 Prix De Diane.

His first Royal Ascot winner came with the filly Quiet Reflection in the 2016 Gr. 1 Commonwealth Cup, but it’s safe to say the 2022 meeting has been just as memorable—Burke saddling two winners, one of whom, quite remarkably, was winning on debut. 

The last horse to win on debut at Royal Ascot was Dazzle in 1996. Just to put the first time out Listed Chesham Stakes victory of Holloway Boy in context, Derby winner Masar came into the 2017 race with a win already to his name, only to finish third.

“We would have been delighted if he’d finished fifth or sixth,” Burke admits. “While his win was a nice surprise, it was not a shock, as we’ve always thought he’s a very nice type.”

Holloway Boy is owned by Nick White and Burke’s wife Elaine. “We bought him out of the Cheveley Park consignment at Tattersalls Book 2 for £60,000. I trained his full-sister Oppressive for Cheveley Park and thought a lot of her, but unfortunately she injured a tendon and retired before achieving her potential.

“When I saw him, I thought he was a better stamp of a horse than Oppressive; and I bought him on spec’. He was not one of the first to sell; he was never going to be an early one. Then Nick White rang me and said he would like to buy a horse. So we showed him a couple of the yearlings, and he bought a half-share in Holloway Boy,” Burke explains.

“Holloway Boy was always a good size and strong. I like to get them through their early education up to Christmas, then we start the early ones in February; but he was never going to be one of those. He got very strong during the spring and came to hand very nicely and was ready to run a couple of weeks before Ascot. 

“We were going to go to Musselburgh for his first race, but he tweaked a muscle. Nick White wanted an Ascot runner, and I looked at the Chesham Stakes, half-heartedly thinking we’d run Holloway Boy. After he worked well, I thought we'd let him take his chance in the race and give the owners a nice day out.”

It proved to be a very nice day out, with many more still to come. “We’ve had a lot of interest in him, but we’re not going to sell him,” Burke says. “He did his first canter this morning since Saturday (the Thursday after the meeting) and has taken the race really well. The Superlative Stakes at Newmarket will be his first option, but if we feel that’s a bit too soon for him, then it will be the Vintage Stakes at Goodwood. 

“He looks all over a three-year-old already; he’s a good 500kg and stands over 16.1. There’s a little bit of speed in the pedigree, and the Two Thousand Guineas will be the target.”

Burke acknowledges he has a great team at Spigot Lodge—a young team with a nucleus of staff who has been with him since he began. They will certainly have plenty to dream of over the winter, as the One Thousand Guineas looks just as likely a target for unbeaten Dramatised, the filly Burke sent out to win the Gr. 2 Queen Mary Stakes at Royal Ascot.

“We’re very lucky to have a good team of two-year-olds; we have at least half a dozen good two-year-olds still to run. Dramatised should improve on her run and will go for the Prix Morny, and then she’ll have one more run in the Cheveley Park Stakes. 

“She is a great feather in her owner Steve Parkin’s cap. She is one of the first homebreds from his Branton Court Stud, so it was a huge result for him.”

Burke now has 130 boxes at Spigot Lodge, situated perfectly between Middleham’s High and Low Moor gallops. “We have several post and rail grass paddocks for turnout during the summer and an all-year-round turnout pit. We have recently developed the centre of our 300m indoor ride, adding a new lunge pen and an Aqua Equine Treadmill. 

“The Aqua Equine Treadmill is already making a great addition to our facilities, building the power and performance of our horses. The treadmill will also prove very useful when bringing horses back into work after holidays or injury.”