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- ableson December 2012
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Comments
This thread began with a report from the stewards re: an alleged breach of longstanding and well understood rules by two trainers.
The consensus of posters here seemed to be disgust that a few would see themselves as above the law and have contempt for the rules.
Then you come along in a lather and say this: You may may be right but it is a totally irrelevant and perhaps deliberately diversionary thing to say.
Are you suggesting that if you don't agree with the rule that breaking the law and an gaining an unfair advantage over the respectful is ok?
Rodent and Carlosa have both got this thread back to where it should be
My point is that obsolete treatment rules and I'm talking about treatments that benefit and don't harm the horse, not only do these antiquated rules tie a trainers hands behind their back and contribute to the problem of poor fields sizes, they continually generate needless controversy and shine a poor light upon racing and usually on major race days when their actually is some focus or attention being paid to racing by the mainstream media and the non racing public.
Drug free racing is a myth and always has been and its well past time that a modern considered approach is taken to the treatment of a horse and that includes raceday treatments.
I'm not proposing that it be open slather and that anything goes but I am suggesting that a more considered, enlightened, approach is necessary towards something that is an ongoing problem.
If anyone is naive enough to think that most trainers especially the good ones don't bend or breaks the rules at times then they're either extremely naive or live in some sort of fantasy world as without doing so they will quickly become less effective and owners will drop off.
I ain't naive, but anyone who believes that there is a place for race day treatments and all trainers will abide by the rules is.
Take your soap box to another thread Andrew. Your posts aren't relevant on this one...IMO
Again you're missing the point relatively harmless stuff like what happened on the weekend brings racing into disrepute unnecessarily with the non racing public and generates negative publicity as they don't know the difference between a beneficial treatment and say a stimulant, to them its just another trainer drugging and exploiting that poor horse.
what was the point of putting them under guard in the first place, considering what happened?
I think your stance on the treatments involved is abundantly, profusely, copiously and amply clear.
What does that have to do with the alleged offences/offenders?
I repeat...are you in favour of participants snubbing rules and gaining an unfair advantage simply because they don't like the law?
You haven't expressed any opinion on that but certainly had contempt for others and hijacked a discussion because they were sticking to the thread rather than raising a seperate 'hobby horse' of yours.
The Security guard picked it up, the treatment or syringe was obviously tested, the horses will be drug tested for sure, and they will more than likely come up clean.
I think the majority of the public will see it as racing doing the right thing to make sure everything is straight up.
This is the same. The message is get prior approval and all is well. Don't and you will be bought to task.