Barry Irwin Calls Bullsh*t
In a letter to the editor in the Thoroughbred Daily News, Team Valor founder Barry Irwin responds to Michael Iavarone’s announcement that IEAH horses will race drug-free (except for Lasix) and his invitation to other owners to make the same committment:
Iavarone told the New York Post that he wasn’t happy learning of Dutrow’s latest violation, especially with news of it breaking the day after IEAH made public their new policy, but that the stable is standing by the trainer for now:
I suppose it’s only fair to mention Steve Asmussen as well. (Throw in Jeremy Rose’s suspension for whip use, and this has really been an embarrassing week for racing — time to get things in order, guys, in case last week’s hearings weren’t enough notice that rules reforms were ripe.) The trainer was given official notice on Thursday of a positive for lidocaine in a filly named Timber Trick, winner of a maiden special at Lone Star on May 10. Asmussen’s case has been taken up by prominent owner-lawyer Maggi Moss, who plans a vigorous defense with co-counsel against the charge, based on the contention that the result is due to environmental contamination. A hearing is scheduled for July 18. If the positive stands, the violation would be Asmussen’s 18th or 21st (depending on how you count one entry in his record, which covers three horses) medication overage and could earn him a six month suspension.
Here’s an enterprise assignment for someone, based on all the recent chatter about the records of Asmussen and Dutrow — what’s the average number of all violations for trainers? The average number of medication violations? What are the three most common drugs cited? How does dosage and testing vary across the jurisdictions? (Jennie Rees has some insight on this question in her C-J blog.) Are there any patterns that emerge when looking across all records? I’d be most interested in reading the 2500-3000 word article to come out of such research …
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