JC / Railbird

Friday Morning Notes

– On Thursday, Big Brown galloped a mile and a half at Pimlico, got a new pair of glue-on shoes on his front feet, and probably got a shot of the legal steroid Winstrol:

“I give all my horses Winstrol on the 15th of every month,” Dutrow told the Daily News.

Asked recently why he uses the supplement, Dutrow replied:

“You’d have to ask the vet what the purpose of that is,” he said. “I don’t know what it does. I just like using it.”

Prompting this hilarious follow-up conversation, which was reported by the Baltimore Sun:

You like using it, but you don’t know what it does? Why would you like using it if you don’t know what it does? You must see something?
“No,” he said. “I don’t.”
Do you see something from not using it?
“No,” he said.

Right, he knows nothing about what Winstrol does or why he likes it. I wonder if Dutrow, who maintains he has had only one medication violation in his career, knows more about the phenylbutazone overages at Gulfstream and Calder that went on his record this year (PDF).
– More about Big Brown’s new shoes and heels at Hoofcare.
Behindatthebar is out of the Preakness. The Lexington winner came up with a bruised left front foot this morning.
– Dick Powell, pondering the Preakness, gets conspiratorial: “Why are a dozen mediocre sophomores willing to take him on? What do their connections know or suspect?
– The stud deal for Big Brown, which was to be announced on Thursday, is on hold. “Legal issues and time constraints proved too much to overcome,” said IEAH president Michael Iavorone, “and we will revisit all options following the Preakness” (ThoroTimes).
– Thoroughbred Safety Committee chairman Stuart Janney said the day after the committee met for the first time that there were “relatively few” things the Jockey Club could do to enforce recommendations that might emerge from the panel’s deliberations and so the committee would mainly serve “as a bully pulpit to be persuasive on certain matters” (Blood-Horse). This is when I miss being a reporter: Such a statement, which suggests no forthcoming threats to the status quo, brings up several questions I’d love to ask. For instance: As the official breed registry — the organization through which every thoroughbred must be registered in order to race and breed — what hinders the Jockey Club from establishing rules regarding the age a horse enters stud service or forbidding the use for breeding of horses that ran on certain raceday medications? Surely, TJC has more power than just approving racehorse names.
– The Wall Street Journal follows Jess Jackson to Argentina, where the prominent owner scouts for sturdy breeding stock.
– Magnificience returns! Sunday, Hollywood, third race.


1 Comment

As Ed pointed out, at least those IEAH guys are honest about their intentions. I could almost give Dutrow a teeny, tiny small break if he could cough up something other than the equivalent of the “blame the vet” and take some ownership of why “he likes it.”

Posted by dana on May 16, 2008 @ 12:31 pm