Bob Baffert, who won the Kentucky Derby with I’ll Have Another in 2012, is still competing at Santa Anita despite the positive drug test of his mount, Medina Spirit, at the Derby. Baffert was already considering retirement from the sport, but there’s no doubt that the positive drug test will discourage many from following in his footsteps.
Bob Baffert, trainer of Kentucky Derby and Preakness winner Dortmund, won two races Saturday, but he got a different kind of training on Sunday as his horse, Medina Spirit, tested positive for clenbuterol, a substance that is on the banned list for horses. Cologne, Germany, said Monday that a World Anti-Doping Agency-funded testing program has detected clenbuterol in the urine of three horses that participated in the Epsom Derby and Preakness Stakes.
Bob Baffert, the legendary trainer of multiple Grade 1 winner, American Pharoah, continues to compete at Santa Anita despite an unconfirmed positive drug test from a horse he trained in May. “I’m just trying to stay ahead of the game and keep the faith,” Baffert told B/R. “We’ll see what happens.”
ARCADIA (CBSLA) – Legendary horse trainer Bob Baffert will continue competing in California, with state horse racing officials defending their decision after an animal rights group suggested his suspension following Medina Spirit’s positive drug test at the Kentucky Derby.
“The California Horse Racing Board will honor any suspension given by another regulatory body, provided that regulator followed procedures for due process. At this time the CHRB is unaware of any such suspension,” Mike Marten, public information officer for the CHRB, told City News Service on
Saturday.
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LOUISVILLE, KY – MAY 01: Trainer Bob Baffert wins his 7th Kentucky Derby after winning the 147th Running of the Kentucky Derby on May 1, 2021 at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Kentucky. (Photo by Brian Spurlock/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
“The decisions by Churchill Downs and the New York Racing Association to not allow Bob Baffert to run horses at their racetracks were decisions based on property rights, not decisions by either the Kentucky Racing Commission or the New York State Gaming Commission. There is no California statute that authorizes the CHRB to take the action recommended in the statement,” he continued.
Baffert trains As Time Goes By, a 4-year-old filly who won Saturday’s Grade 2 Santa Maria Stakes at Santa Anita. The horse was favored to win.
“I told Mike (jockey Mike Smith), we’ve been going easy on her, not too hard for this race,” Baffert said after the race. “Today, this is the first time she’s come back really blowing. That filly that ran second ran a big race. (As Time Goes By’s) heart and true grit made her hang in there.”
When asked what was next for As Time Goes By, Baffert said, “Right now, with the Breeders’ Cup at Del Mar, we want to keep her here and run her here in the fall.”
Baffert also trains Medina Spirit, whose victory in this month’s Derby is in dispute after the horse tested positive for the steroid betamethasone in post-race testing.
“The California Horse Racing Board has failed horses again by allowing trainer Bob Baffert to race his at Santa Anita today,” People for the
Ethical Treatment of Animals said in a statement Saturday. “The board put no limits on Baffert when seven horses in his barn dropped dead, when he
administered thyroxine to horses who didn’t have thyroid disease, and when Justify tested positive for scopolamine. Despite more than 30 medication
violations, Baffert is still putting horses on tracks, and the board’s refusal to suspend the trainer is as despicable and revealing as it is dangerous.”
In addition to Baffert’s suspension from Churchill Downs, home of the Kentucky Derby, New York racetracks barred him from racing pending an investigation into Medina Spirit’s positive test. Baffert has been fined multiple times for impermissible levels of medications in his horses.
Prior to the Kentucky Derby, all five of Medina Spirit’s races were run in Southern California, four at Santa Anita and one at Los Alamitos.
Justify, the horse cited in PETA’s statement, is a Santa Anita-based thoroughbred who won horse racing’s Triple Crown in 2018. He qualified for the
Kentucky Derby that year by finishing first in the Santa Anita Derby in April 2018. However, he also tested positive for scopolamine, a banned substance that can be performance enhancing, before the Kentucky Derby.
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Rather than disqualify Justify — which would have kept him from running in that year’s Derby — the CHRB conducted an investigation that lasted
more than one month, and eventually decided that the positive results occurred because of natural contamination in the horses’ feed.
Baffert testified that neither Justify nor Hoppertunity — another horse who tested positive — was given the drug.
“Neither I, nor the horses’ veterinarians, nor anyone else involved with these two thoroughbreds, ever administered scopolamine to Justify or
Hoppertunity,” the trainer said.
Baffert could not be reached directly for a comment on PETA’s statement, and a person who answered the phone at his barn in Arcadia declined
to comment.
Also at Wednesday’s meeting, Dr. Rick Arthur, the CHRB’s equine medical director, reported that California is expected to see a 30% reduction
in equine fatalities during the current fiscal year compared with the last. He also anticipates a reduction in medication violations.
In the 2020 calendar year, officials reported 96 racehorses deaths in California — 39 racing deaths, 28 training deaths, and 29 categorized as
“other.”
So far in 2021, 27 horses have died — eight in racing, 13 in training and six “other.”
Santa Anita reported 20 horse deaths in 2020 and eight so far in 2021. The park endured a storm of controversy in 2018-19, as 37 horses died
in racing or training incidents during one racing season, prompting the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office to investigate the deaths. The office
concluded there was no criminal wrongdoing, but made a series of recommendations aimed at improving safety at California race tracks.
A months-long investigation by state regulators in 2019 found no evidence of illegal medications or procedures, but determined most of the
horses had “pre-existing pathology,” according to a report by the CHRB.
Officials with the CHRB and Santa Anita owner The Stronach Group enacted a series of new rules after those deaths, and Santa Anita officials say
they have one of the best safety records in the industry.
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(© Copyright 2020 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. City News Service contributed to this report.)
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