There's
quite a buzz surrounding the possibility that I'll Have Another will cross the
finish line first in the Belmont Stakes on June 9 and become the first Triple
Crown Winner since 1978. The subtext to this public discussion is a lot
seedier: I'll Have Another's trainer, Doug O'Neill, has a long rap sheet
of drugging violations .
For
more than a decade, O'Neill has been in trouble over and over again for
administering substances illegally to horses. Just last week, the California
Horse Racing Board suspended O'Neill
for 45 days
in that state and fined him $15,000 for a drugging violation. Statistics show
that the horses he trains suffer catastrophic injury at twice the rate of the
national average--an indication that somehow (anti-inflammatory drugs? Painkillers?
Muscle relaxants?) horses are raced when fatigue and injury should dictate rest
and recuperation.
So
here's a message to the racing industry: Stop blaming your bad image on the
animal protection organizations that work to improve living, racing and
retirement conditions for thoroughbreds. Quit your griping and clean up your
act .
"Zero-tolerance"
means that repeat offenders need to find a new career.
Retired
Hall of Fame jockey Gary Stevens recently testified before Congress on the use
of drugs to keep horses running: "Horses need down time. " Horses need
time off to heal naturally. " [A] lot of good horses would still be running
today, if medications weren't used in the way they are. Would you inject your
son or daughter so they could run in a track meet? I don't think so. You would
let them heal and miss a race or two until they could come back and not damage
themselves more. So why would we do it to horses?"
Because
there's no federal oversight of horse racing, the Jockey Club, too, is trying
to deal with the deadly proliferation of drugs. They've proposed sensible rules
and penalties that could get the worst of the offenders out of racing
altogether. But they need every one of the racing boards in 38 separate states
to buy into the plan.
Until
this happens, don't go to a
race and don't bet on one . If the racing industry won't do the right thing
for the right reasons, let's make sure their already plummeting profits fall
through the floor. Maybe then they'll quit doping the horses.
Kathy Guillermo is a vice president of People
for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), 501 Front St., Norfolk VA 23510; www.PETA.org .