Skip navigation
sponsored by 

Jockey Club creates safety committee to study equine health

Slide show
Jockey Kent Desormeaux aboard Big Brown rides to a win on the134th running of the Kentucky Derby horse race at Churchill Downs in Louisville
  Big day for Big Brown
Favorite wins 134th Kentucky Derby, and other images from racing’s big day.

more photos

  Kentucky Derby Red Carpet

Complete Red Carpet coverage and photos of the hat parade.

Presented by

AP
Slide show
  Get your hat on
Slide show of some of the fancy and wacky sombreros on display at the Kentucky Derby this year.

more photos

  Horse Racing on NBC
133rd Kentucky Derby

May 17 - Preakness Stakes
Coverage starts at 4:30 p.m. ET.
  Past Preakness replays

Associated Press Sports
updated 2:18 p.m. ET May 12, 2008

NEW YORK (AP) -The Jockey Club has formed a committee to study equine health, including track safety and the rules of racing, five days after the death of the filly Eight Belles at the Kentucky Derby.

Ogden Mills Phipps, chairman of The Jockey Club, said Thursday that the committee would be asked to review every facet of equine health, ranging from breeding practices to medication, and to recommend actions to be taken by the horse industry to improve the health and safety of thoroughbreds.

The move by the 114-year-old Jockey Club, the breed registry for North American thoroughbreds, was praised by the National Thoroughbred Racing Association.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement

"The Thoroughbred Safety Committee is a major step that will provide the examination of the horse welfare and safety issues so badly needed in the wake of recent catastrophic injuries,'' said NTRA president Alex Waldrop. "Now, more than ever, no practice, policy or tradition is more important than those that best protect and promote the health of the thoroughbred athlete.''

Eight Belles, the first filly since 1999 to run in the Derby, finished 4 3/4 lengths behind favorite Big Brown. Shortly after the finish line, she collapsed with two broken front ankles. The shocking scene reminded racing fans of Barbaro's horrific injury two years ago in the Preakness.

Though her death has sparked renewed interest in improving safety measures within the industry, some trainers remain wary of any quick fixes.

Big Brown trainer Rick Dutrow said Thursday that while he supports "anything that would be safer for horses,'' he doesn't think synthetic surfaces such as the ones installed at tracks in California are the answer.

"You need good track superintendents,'' Dutrow said. "If they had good track superintendents, they wouldn't have to go to all these synthetic tracks (because) you'd have guys that would know what they're doing.''

Reade Baker, trainer for Preakness entry Kentucky Bear, said while artificial surfaces "might be the thing of the future,'' they need more study. Baker said he'd prefer to see more stringent racing standards across the board.

"Everybody needs to be stricter,'' he said. "Vets need to scratch more horses than they do. Sometimes when you run horses in other jurisdictions, they get by in one and wouldn't get by in another.''

Larry Bramlage, the on-call veterinarian when Eight Belles was euthanized, is among seven people on the Thoroughbred Safety Committee.

© 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Rate this story LowHigh
 

Sponsored links