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  #41  
Old 06-20-2008, 11:24 PM
Danzig Danzig is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by blackthroatedwind
I'm confused.....you think that if someone is cheating they are helping the fans?
i was confused as to how larry jones helped oaklawn at all, cheating or not.
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  #42  
Old 06-20-2008, 11:33 PM
Danzig Danzig is offline
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Originally Posted by blackthroatedwind
What am I missing? His horse tested positive for a drug overage....coincidentally after running a remarkably improved race. Are you suggesting the test was incorrect?
but larry jones wears a white cowboy hat, surely he's one of the good guys?
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  #43  
Old 06-20-2008, 11:36 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Danzig
but larry jones wears a white cowboy hat, surely he's one of the good guys?
There are no good guys from Hopkinsville.
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  #44  
Old 06-20-2008, 11:48 PM
parsixfarms parsixfarms is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by blackthroatedwind
While I totally agree with this....I would also like to mention the honest horseplayers that are also being put out of business. Cheating is a disgustingly self-centered activity that is destroying this game.
I agree, but little is done about it. I've often thought that industry leaders, totally obsessed with the casual fan's view of the sport, are afraid to crack down on cheaters. (There was an interesting article in the NY Times on this subject as it relates to track and field - a sport which does impose real penalties, where each suspension/banishment is viewed by some as only reinforcing the notion that the sport is filled with cheaters.) In this age where racing is covered in the mainstream media as a niche sport (most papers don't have a racing beat writer), my sense has been that, if a well-known trainer was sent down, it might be a front page sports story in papers like the Louisville C-J, Lexington H-L, Albany Times-Union, the Saratogian and few others. Whatever minimal damage occurs in the eyes of the casual viewer would be made up in spades by the honest horsemen and gamblers who would invest more $$ in what they perceived to be a sport more on the up-and-up.
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  #45  
Old 06-21-2008, 12:02 AM
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VOL JACK VOL JACK is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by The Indomitable DrugS
Does anyone know what Beyers Pyramyst and Snowydeelite got on June 8th at Del?
Pyramist: 74

Snowy: 22

Stoney: 95
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  #46  
Old 06-21-2008, 12:09 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by blackthroatedwind
What am I missing? His horse tested positive for a drug overage....coincidentally after running a remarkably improved race. Are you suggesting the test was incorrect?
The positive hasn't yet been confirmed.

Yes, tests can be incorrect. The racing jurisdictions know it, as the procedure for split sample testing to eliminate laboratory error as a cause for a positive, and as confirmation of a positive, is built into the system.

The only reason the public knows of this positive is because the owner decided to talk about it.

The track reps refused to talk about it with the press, as the case is still pending and the positive hasn't been confirmed - which if/when it is, will then lead to a hearing, and then to a decision by the part of the racing jurisdiction as to guilt or innocence.

I personally will wait until he's found guilty before calling Larry Jones a cheater.

But you go right ahead.
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  #47  
Old 06-21-2008, 12:21 AM
blackthroatedwind blackthroatedwind is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Riot
The positive hasn't yet been confirmed.

Yes, tests can be incorrect. The racing jurisdictions know it, as the procedure for split sample testing to eliminate laboratory error as a cause for a positive, and as confirmation of a positive, is built into the system.

The only reason the public knows of this positive is because the owner decided to talk about it.

The track reps refused to talk about it with the press, as the case is still pending and the positive hasn't been confirmed - which if/when it is, will then lead to a hearing, and then to a decision by the part of the racing jurisdiction as to guilt or innocence.

I personally will wait until he's found guilty before calling Larry Jones a cheater.

But you go right ahead.


I reread the thread....I never called Larry Jones a cheater. Don't put words in my mouth to suit your agenda.

I will reiterate what I did say.....I believe the people who cheat, whoever they are, are destroying this game.
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  #48  
Old 06-21-2008, 12:22 AM
parsixfarms parsixfarms is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Riot
The positive hasn't yet been confirmed.

Yes, tests can be incorrect. The racing jurisdictions know it, as the procedure for split sample testing to eliminate laboratory error as a cause for a positive, and as confirmation of a positive, is built into the system.

The only reason the public knows of this positive is because the owner decided to talk about it.
As I read the articles, they don't seem to be disputing that the horse had an excessive amount of clenbuterol in his system; rather, they seem only to be questioning how it got there.
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  #49  
Old 06-21-2008, 01:14 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by blackthroatedwind
I reread the thread....I never called Larry Jones a cheater. Don't put words in my mouth to suit your agenda.

I will reiterate what I did say.....I believe the people who cheat, whoever they are, are destroying this game.
Damn, I agree!

Someone said about Larry Jones, "He has been a real boost to the Oaklawn meet. I know many of you don't even recognize that but Larry has made a real difference for us fans."

You then said, "I agree, trainers who cheat do a lot for the fans......they steal money from them."

You're right - how foolish of me to have possibly thought you were referring to Larry Jones in your comment about trainers who cheat
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  #50  
Old 06-21-2008, 01:30 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by parsixfarms
As I read the articles, they don't seem to be disputing that the horse had an excessive amount of clenbuterol in his system; rather, they seem only to be questioning how it got there.
I think it must be a high positive, because the owner is so vocal. But Jones is asking for the retest, so maybe only borderline?

There was a trainer in the past year or two, who appealed a drug charge, had the sample retested, then suddenly the charge were dropped and the jurisdiction refused to talk about the result of the retest? Anyone remember this situation?
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  #51  
Old 06-21-2008, 02:00 AM
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I would wait until the final test is in ... Jones does have a quarter of a century of cleanliness ..

OT a bit, but I remember a horse back in the 60's that came back positive for bute ... The trainer swore up and down nothing was administered to the horse so vociferously, and then tests came back just as loud positive, that someone got creative and quarantined and monitered this horse ... Still positive ...

Turned out the horse was manufacturing a substance that mimicked bute all by himself ... Very weird ... The horse's name was Star Ice, and I believe he was banned from racing because of this ...
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  #52  
Old 06-21-2008, 02:26 AM
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The Indomitable DrugS The Indomitable DrugS is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by prudery
I would wait until the final test is in ... Jones does have a quarter of a century of cleanliness ...
I don't really care what his supposed record is. He gets form reversals on horses at all class levels that make him look shady to me. Because the reversals come with horses he's had all along - it doesn't get the same reaction that it would if the reversals came 1st off a claim or with a 1st time trainer switch.

An overage is overage. It's like when you are driving on the highway and you try to drive as fast as you can without driving fast enough to get picked up.

In some places the cops tend to let you can get away with more than others. In some situations you can have a guy pass you going 100 mph and you speed up 10 mph because you know if they get anyone - it will be the other guy first.

However, you're playing with fire...and sooner or late you'll get caught. It may take many years - but it will happen.

To me - the overage isn't a big deal - my opinion has already been formed by seeing enough of the guys horses.

The big deal here (at least to me anyway) is you have an owner who wants to make this out to be a case of sabotage!
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  #53  
Old 06-21-2008, 02:48 AM
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prudery prudery is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by The Indomitable DrugS
I don't really care what his supposed record is. He gets form reversals on horses at all class levels that make him look shady to me. Because the reversals come with horses he's had all along - it doesn't get the same reaction that it would if the reversals came 1st off a claim or with a 1st time trainer switch.

An overage is overage. It's like when you are driving on the highway and you try to drive as fast as you can without driving fast enough to get picked up.

In some places the cops tend to let you can get away with more than others. In some situations you can have a guy pass you going 100 mph and you speed up 10 mph because you know if they get anyone - it will be the other guy first.

However, you're playing with fire...and sooner or late you'll get caught. It may take many years - but it will happen.

To me - the overage isn't a big deal - my opinion has already been formed by seeing enough of the guys horses.

The big deal here (at least to me anyway) is you have an owner who wants to make this out to be a case of sabotage!
Agreed--an overage is just that ... But as far as the form flip flops, can you consider that in 25 years with these dramatic improvements he still comes clean ??? Or are you suggesting he is that good ...

The guy used Clenbuterol--basically a brochodilator if I am not mistaken ...Legal stuff in legal proportions ... Nothing has been released about how much over the overrages are ... If they were minor, could that said horse suddenly inhale the competition ???

Admittedly, I have not followed the Jones profile like you have ... But I would prefer to wait out the subsequent testing although you make a case, as do those who see his record compared to other more busted trainers, and make a case for a misshap or even a frame job ...

I do agree that the owner was a bit florid in his denial, but the timing ...
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  #54  
Old 06-21-2008, 09:24 AM
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Bobby Fischer Bobby Fischer is offline
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wheres the fatman when you actually need a cycling analogy?

I think more than half of competitive cyclists claim to suffer from exercise related asthma, so that they can take a certain amount of bronchodilator.

they probably know all the good masking agents too.
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  #55  
Old 06-21-2008, 11:01 AM
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Thunder Gulch Thunder Gulch is offline
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The worst part of this is now the major media outlets have free reign to splash news of a failed drug test for a horse by Eight Belles trainer.
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  #56  
Old 06-21-2008, 04:26 PM
Danzig Danzig is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Thunder Gulch
The worst part of this is now the major media outlets have free reign to splash news of a failed drug test for a horse by Eight Belles trainer.
well, why not? it all happened. if racing doesn't want this kind of black eye, they should have taken steps long ago to keep it from happening--rather than smacking wrists and writing inconsequential fines.
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  #57  
Old 06-21-2008, 05:26 PM
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Cannon Shell Cannon Shell is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Danzig
well, why not? it all happened. if racing doesn't want this kind of black eye, they should have taken steps long ago to keep it from happening--rather than smacking wrists and writing inconsequential fines.
What kind of fine or penalty exactly do you want? You guys seem to want blood but if this is the guys first violation in 25 years what exactly should happen to him? We dont know for sure but the medication in question is a legal drug that was probably found in a trace level above the allowable level. Calling him a cheater is a bit harsh especially considering his record. I admit I am a little skeptical about Jones and his seemingly meteroic rise from Ellis Park and his often strange form reversals. But this is hardly the smoking gun. I would like to know what "racing", outside of having a better system of testing and being a bit more open about what is happening with that testing, can do to avoid having positive tests?
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  #58  
Old 06-21-2008, 06:00 PM
Rupert Pupkin Rupert Pupkin is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cannon Shell
What kind of fine or penalty exactly do you want? You guys seem to want blood but if this is the guys first violation in 25 years what exactly should happen to him? We dont know for sure but the medication in question is a legal drug that was probably found in a trace level above the allowable level. Calling him a cheater is a bit harsh especially considering his record. I admit I am a little skeptical about Jones and his seemingly meteroic rise from Ellis Park and his often strange form reversals. But this is hardly the smoking gun. I would like to know what "racing", outside of having a better system of testing and being a bit more open about what is happening with that testing, can do to avoid having positive tests?
"I admit I am a little skeptical about Jones and his seemingly meteroic rise from Ellis Park and his often strange form reversals."

You are only a little skeptical? LOL. I know you are being politically correct. I am more than a little skeptical. As you said, having a slight overage with chlenbuterol is not that big of a deal. I'd like to know what Jones is using in addition to chlenbuterol. I know it ain't oats and water.

It's funny how these dead-average trainers like Art Sherman win at a 10-12% clip for 20 years and then all of a sudden start winning at 30%.
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  #59  
Old 06-21-2008, 06:53 PM
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I don't know Larry Jones at all -- but I think people here are skating on the very same thin ice as the uneducated media. First, if this was a clentbuterol positive, let's wait for the facts. Trace level, drastic, whatever. Second, this is a perfectly legal drug -- PERIOD. Whether you like it or not -- LEGAL. Used everyday all over the backstretch. He used it to close maybe, and he'll pay the price. For those who know jump up and say "See, I told you so, here's the proof" -- no, you didn't tell anything other than show you are being moronic.

Third, the only people who would tie everything that ever appeared skeptical or cynical from Jones to this minor infraction, are showing their complete lack of knowledge about this game. I know -- everybody "just knows" -- yeah, been there, done that.

As far as the form reversals, drastic change in #'s, etc. -- this has nothing to do with a clenbuterol positive. Please. You want to say that where there is smoke there is fire -- great go ahead. There are plenty of trainers who have gradual increases in results, and others who have drastic ones. There are plenty of answers, some valid, some not. Drugs? Sure, in some cases -- those who know can look at the stats and certain trainers who went from low teens to high 20's. OK. But others -- there are valid, perfectly acceptable reasons . . . but not to those who need to lay blame, find guilt, and have to find the smoking gun. Did anyone think Jones wasn't using clenbuterol? What % of trainers aren't?

God forbid a popular trainer here, well liked, etc. had a clenbuterol positive. I am sure the story would be much different.

Eric
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  #60  
Old 06-21-2008, 07:45 PM
Danzig Danzig is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cannon Shell
What kind of fine or penalty exactly do you want? You guys seem to want blood but if this is the guys first violation in 25 years what exactly should happen to him? We dont know for sure but the medication in question is a legal drug that was probably found in a trace level above the allowable level. Calling him a cheater is a bit harsh especially considering his record. I admit I am a little skeptical about Jones and his seemingly meteroic rise from Ellis Park and his often strange form reversals. But this is hardly the smoking gun. I would like to know what "racing", outside of having a better system of testing and being a bit more open about what is happening with that testing, can do to avoid having positive tests?
i wasn't talking about jones specifically. it seems that every time something happens like this, there are folks who would rather it all go away, rather than have bad press. there are cheaters in this sport, some are very high profile, with top horses on the track. but now larry jones is in the mix, and some don't want to face the fact that his horse tested over. how it happened, i don't know. but this sport allows folks like steve asmussen and rick dutrow, with countless black marks on their record, continue to do business as usual.

so, my point in the post you replied to was that it's not the media's fault if they have a story. it's this sports fault for not taking the whole drug issue more seriously-both with what should and shouldn't be allowed, as well as WHO should still be allowed.

i'm waiting, as i'm sure you are, for exactly what kind of overage they are talking about. we all know some horses are given legal meds that must have cleared by race day, and don't. now, if this is a microscopic amount, considering jones' complete lack of past positives, i'd say he should be treated lightly since it's a first offense--but only if BOTH parts of that are true.

regarding what 'racing' can do, for starters they can show the worst repeat offenders the door. maybe the rate of positives would drop with their departure.
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