The chairman of the California Horse Racing Board, Chuck Winner, owns an interest in horses trained by Baffert. Two other board members employ trainers and jockeys they regulate.” It is an incestuous business.

Bob Baffert, "Thoroughbred trainer"
Everyone who knows us knows we are no fans of Thoroughbred trainer Bob
Baffert. He is a cheater, a liar and a doper.
I had written a dear colleague a day or so ago stating it is my opinion that
when all is said and done, Baffert’s Triple Crown Winner, Justify, would go
down in history with an asterisk by his name, marking that the horse had won
during the Chemical Age, and his victory would count for little. The next
day she wrote back saying, did you see this . . . . ?
“This” turned out to be Joe Drape’s The New York Times article, “Justify
Failed a Drug Test Before Winning the Triple Crown”.
In it Drape states:
“On June 9, 2018, a colt named Justify thundered home to the
full-throated cheers of a capacity crowd to win the 150th running of the
Belmont Stakes and claim horse racing’s Triple Crown, one of the most
storied achievements in sports.
“It was the perfect ending to an improbable journey for a talented horse,
his eclectic ownership group, and his Hall of Fame trainer, Bob Baffert.
“Only a few people, however, knew the secret that Baffert carried with him
into the winner’s circle that day: Justify had failed a drug test weeks
before the first race in the Triple Crown, the Kentucky Derby. That meant
Justify should not have run in the Derby, if the sport’s rules were
followed.”
“. . . . if the sport’s rules were followed.” But they don’t follow the
rules, do they? And in the case of Justify’s doping prior to the Derby,
documents reviewed by The New York Times show they did not enforce the rules
in the case of Baffert and his horse.
Drape continues:
“Instead of the failed drug test causing a speedy disqualification, the
California Horse Racing Board took more than a month to confirm the results.
Then, instead of filing a public complaint as it usually does, the board
made a series of decisions behind closed doors as it moved to drop the case
and lighten the penalty for any horse found to have the banned substance
that Justify tested positive for in its system.
“By then, Justify had become just the 13th Triple Crown winner in the last
100 years, and his owners had sold his breeding rights for $60 million.
“Only a handful of racing officials and people connected to Justify knew
about the failed drug test, which occurred April 7, 2018, after Justify won
the Santa Anita Derby. He tested positive for the drug scopolamine, a banned
substance that veterinarians say can enhance performance, especially in the
amount that was found in the horse.
“Justify was undefeated at the time, but he still needed to finish first or
second in the Santa Anita Derby to qualify for the Kentucky Derby, on May 5.
While the colt won at Santa Anita, the failed drug test would mean
disqualification and forfeiture of both the prize money and the entry into
the Kentucky Derby that came with the victory.”
“None of that happened, though.
“Test results, emails and internal memorandums in the Justify case show how
California regulators waited nearly three weeks, until the Kentucky Derby
was only nine days away, to notify Baffert that his Derby favorite had
failed a doping test.”
The rest of the article talks about the actions the California Horse Racing
Board took, or perhaps I should say didn’t take. Interestingly, “The
chairman of the California Horse Racing Board, Chuck Winner, owns an
interest in horses trained by Baffert. Two other board members employ
trainers and jockeys they regulate.” It is an incestuous business.
Insofar as the drug itself, “Scopolamine cases have resulted in
disqualifications, purse reimbursements, fines and suspensions over the
decades.” Not it seems, however, if it is used by Bob Baffert.
Justify was “retired” almost immediately following the Triple Crown and
shipped off to stud. What about Justify’s Triple Crown? Bring on the
asterisk.
In the meantime. . . .
Horse racing is gambled on. Horse doping is race fixing. How this so called
“sport” is still running is criminal in every sense of the word in my view
and should be banned from being gambled on, which would sink the industry.
More on that in another post.