Dr. Greg Beroza offers his perspective on the horse fatalities and the scratch of Derby favorite Forte in a special interview with Mike Gandolfo.
Find more from Dr. Beroza at WuzUpDoc.com
Dr. Greg Beroza offers his perspective on the horse fatalities and the scratch of Derby favorite Forte in a special interview with Mike Gandolfo.
Find more from Dr. Beroza at WuzUpDoc.com
Alright. Hello everyone.
I am joined by dr. Greg Barossa dr.
B, or horse doc as he wants to be known.
Listen, we had a wild and crazy weekend at Churchill Downs last
weekend. And it was, it was definitely
tainted by the the horse deaths on the track and I for one
doctor. Broza dr.
B. Whatever you what do you want me
to call you first off? Just great, just call me Doc,
I'm just cutting Sakurai. Oh yeah, I can do that.
I for one doc think that, you know, sometimes horse-racing
shies away from From these things that are unfortunate part
of the sport. I think we all would love to get
to a point. We have zero horse fatality, but
we also understand that that's a goal that is not attainable.
And then we have all these horse fatality is, I think it's our
job to educate. So we brought on what I think is
the expert. Dr. Broza has worked on
countless big horses, charismatic, Swale even before
he was a vet, he was there working on Secretariat, so I'm
very excited to have doc on with us today and hopefully, we'll
all learn something so you weren't at Churchill Downs?
No, I wasn't. But I was glued to my TV and I
was also at Gulfstream this year where I saw the Florida Derby.
Pegasus takes a lot of the races leading up to it with all the
big horses in the big trainers, while trying to figure out if
they had enough points. Also, I was very fortunate
because I got an interview with the trainers from mage.
The delgado's and very wonderful people and I was very happy to
see they won but you're right. I've been at the track since
1971, walking hots for Johnny Campo, senior and work my way up
through the rungs of veterinary school and got to a much higher
level than my high school advisor, ever thought I'd get.
But it was, it was, it was an unusual year.
It was where since we're in the industry, we know these things
happen quite a bit, but on Derby Day to announce to the world
that these Of problems exist is is embarrassing.
All right. Well, let's start with the
scratch of forte first off the bat before we get to the desk.
So we're going to we're going to focus on those two things just
because they are veterinarian things.
The the vet, basically, we basically had, we had video on
Thursday, I think of for Tate's, taking a little bit of a stumble
and is morning workout. Then there the rumors started
flying as you can. Imagine the rumors started
flying love what was going to happen.
We first learned about it, maybe.
Thursday afternoon started hearing that there were some
Rumblings and then it looked like from the workout Friday
that the horse was good to go for pulley came out and said
he's going to run them and then the vet came and watch the horse
work out on Saturday morning and then the vet for the horse
racing commission decide to make the scratch.
I want to make sure we're very clear, the Kentucky Horse Racing
commission and Churchill Downs are not one in the same.
They're two different entities, the vet made that a cop Decision
to scratch the horse. One of the things I want to ask
you when they're going through that process.
I noticed that they were really judging more of how he worked
out on the pavement versus how he worked out, how he walked up
and down the pavement, versus how he walked on the tracker.
How he looked on the track is that common practice?
Well we try and look at him and every angle I mean some lameness
has our infirmities or problems occur more on a hard surface,
others occur more in a soft surface.
So more of your 10 In injuries, suspensory injuries, things like
that. Will show up a little bit more
in a soft surface such as the track and some of the ones that
are more Orthopedic like fracture or a deep bruise, will
show up more on a hard surface. So a complete exam which I'm
glad was done. Show, you have to examine the
horse in many elements because what you see on the track
sometimes is different than what you might see jogging up and
down the pavement and what kind of leads into the decision for a
vet to scratch a horse, you know, Looked like they took Todd
Pletcher Xandra Pollies. At least they were willing to
talk to them about it. I think that speaks volumes
again for those guys is what who they are as Horsemen personally.
But what kind of goes into that decision Well, the decision by
who by the Vets by Pletcher Myra Poli.
It's one huge bag just for the public sake.
Horse racing is a very difficult sport but it's no more difficult
than human sport to where every athlete comes out.
I mean, we looked at Mahon or Mahone play this year, we know
we had infirmaries, we've seen, Brady play with infirmity.
So the question is, is it something they can handle it out
on the field? Especially for a Super Bowl.
You don't want to sideline them, they have no more time to wait
to rest, to do all that stuff. So the question is, how do you
get them back and you get them back maybe by putting their arm,
their leg, or their foot in a bucket of ice for a while or
sometimes you resort to other modalities.
The question is, is it fair and Equitable and racing is illegal?
I can tell you this, from 45 years on the track that that
everyone is concerned about the horse neighing sound, so they're
all playing whatever Advantage they can play.
I mean, think about even the way the jockeys is advantage or
disadvantage just in Sing in general.
But they're all play every Advantage.
They can they want to win that race and sometimes it comes down
to fractions of seconds. So I can only tell you from my
my experience for probably and Pletcher.
Very aboveboard. People they want to do what's
right for the industry. Can you imagine the pressure on
them though that Forte was the eclipse Award winner.
From the previous year, he was horse of the year for that.
He won the two-year-old, not horse of eclipse award, but 12
year old Breeders Cup Championship for that.
Potentially potentially what I saw coming into that race if he
held up in the derby, like he didn't every other race and he
won. And that's an if he could be in
line to be the next Triple Crown winner, which he'd be going down
in the annals of sports. Not only for the prestige, but
for the breeding value down the line.
So it's hard for any of us to imagine the millions of dollars
of pressure on someone's head to say.
No, we have a problem here, let's address it.
I give credit to Doug O'Neill who Voluntarily scratched his
horse. I'll have another I was there
for that too. And you know he believed the
horse was a little bit sore and Dougie come under scrutiny and
the media is continued under scrutiny and I think more and
more of the real Horseman. And I mean and I consider
Pletcher O'Neill, people like that or Horsemen there in the
game and they dedicate for their whole life because they loved
the horses I do to. That's why I ended up in this
crazy business. But having said that that
typical Flinch test where you saw the veterinarian squeeze on
the bulbs of the heel. Cause of work Forte, I could get
that on almost for nearly any animal but I can't judge just
like you can't judge how much pressure you actually put.
There was it with, just a light touch or was it with a heavy
touch and the media is under tremendous scrutiny to.
You've got NBC Sports coverage, the whole world is watching this
most important race with the biggest whore.
So less than they need is an accident or breakdown.
Now, you also have to put in perspective that whole week
they'd had breakdown after break down that have problem after
problem. All they needed was one more of
these with the next potential Secretariat.
So they're all on edge and there's now a third element in
racing. We now have the hiss aboard we
have the horse racing Integrity, Safety Authority and those
people are looking down. They come into full Focus, I
believe in July but there's a host of rules that go with it
and all the tracks that have joined to be part of that
Network to give some common ruling to all the sports
activities and racing and all the medication.
Shoes and soundness issues, they each of those tracks cooperate.
So, from my understanding once and I don't know that Pletcher
and repelling to this at the time, I'd have to think Todd's
really sharp. He knew that, but I used to do.
I also do a lot of Standardbred work and what happens is when
you scratch a horse, when the vet scratches a horse in that
Arena, the owner has to come back and qualify with the horse
again and the Thoroughbred world is different.
They decided that 15 days, of course, couldn't run, which
meant an automatic scratch from the derby.
In automatic, scratched in the Preakness.
I didn't know that until I read the details of the history
rules. So there's no way tied in theory
could race unless there's extenuating circumstances.
So we're going to make an extenuating just for Todd
Pletcher. He's probably the best trainer
out there today or how they're going to act and then you were
the one that alerted me that. Now they've drawn blood and done
medication and and we'll see where all that pans out.
Whether they'll be another issue or not another issue.
I'm not forecasting. There is I'm not forecasting,
there isn't I don't like anyone being judged without having all
the facts, right? Speaking of judging, with all
the facts in the horse fatality, let's go onto.
We had 77 horse deaths that week at Churchill Downs and if we
even want to go back and include the the horse I was on the Derby
trail that that had to be brought down after training, was
it fire? How much?
There was a horse that was taken off the track but the winner of
the Sunland Derby you grafting. Okay, so you're right there were
seven out of eight horses that were involved in soundness
issues that That were affected that weekend.
So going back to that, just that whole week, which is, you know,
I've been on Churchill Downs, backside a whole lot.
It was a very unusual thing for us to experience at Churchill
Downs. We had two of those death so
that happened not because of racing injuries.
They had happened more, I don't know.
There's some I don't know if it's a heart attack or whatever
it was not from an injury that happened in the same day with
the same. Shane trainer and both Churchill
Downs and the horse racing commission, made a decision to
suspend the common denominator, and safie Joseph.
Knowing that they would not have any kind of answers really, at
least a minimum of 10 days from the incident.
So when we go through that is it isn't even plausible for us to
get answers of what happened from the from those horses that
passed away. Well, the bottom line answer is
it's improbable we will get an answer but is it possible?
Yes. I was there for the post-mortem
of soil actually. I had a pretty interesting role
in determining that there was some issue with the heart based
upon some Scar Tissue. I saw on the heart that call was
finally made by Helen a clean and new bolt and Center lead
pathologist in the country but there was nothing else that
showed up on that horse and he had won the Belmont few days
before. He was just going out for route.
Gallop. But having said that, it made me
think a lot about what's going on with these sudden deaths and
we see them even in human Athletics, all of a sudden we
saw that one with the Bangles bills this past year.
It wasn't something. I luckily, luckily, the athlete
did well in the long run, but they had immediate medical care
or horses, a different subject, different animal.
So we never know. But these passing out Out on the
track or whatever it's called they can be instigated just by
an electrolyte imbalance, too much potassium.
Something like this, so it could be in the hydration dehydration.
Flu is not fluids, and it could be medications.
Let's not kid ourselves that is in the formula, but to determine
it is tough. And most people are pretty
shrewd about complying with that absolute number of Medicaid
within the medication law that they can get by.
That should just be acceptable on all.
Playing field. Should I say so whether we'll
get an answer or not. I think there's there's
pathologist and I think they would tell you that we get the
answer, maybe 40% of the time. I'm making up that number off
the top of my head because we don't examine all the ones that
maybe happened in the past, so we really don't know.
But could it be medication? Yes.
Am I here to say it was no, do I suspect it?
I hope not. Let's just put it that way.
Could it be an electrolyte imbalance?
It could be, it could be any number of things.
And the other part that We can get into this a little bit more,
which also ties into the breakdown issue which are
Orthopedic injuries, which are more commonly.
Seen not just the horse exercising and dying but there's
the bleeding rules and regulations and the medication
for it and all sorts of things are crop in here at which the
trainers are really trying to do the best they can.
I think the potential fatalities in the thoroughbred racing
industry, you might have a number of better than me but
it's something like less than 1% now.
It used to be higher but everyone's paying attention but
the Opportunity to find a problem is incredibly Manute.
And so I'll introduce here that I have a good friend who
mentioned this several times. There's ways of doing blood
tests in advance of the races, and things called the health
passport, which we could do the problem with that is a
tremendous expense to do that. Every horse would ever races,
maybe we could start with some of these graded stakes races
that are under the most scrutiny.
Also, if you want me to keep going, the other, the other two
factors is the these horses. Currently our following under
the greatest competition I've ever had, because to get into
the Derby, you know, have to have a number of points, so
these races are more competitive than ever.
The best for going against the best of the best just to measure
up to that. I think it's an extremely
important way to say, we're getting only the best of the
best someone distant getting because they want one big race
and had a pot before that it went by purses.
So of course, could win a big race and then be off.
Four weeks, six weeks, go to a lighter race, just to stay in
shape and race against so many horses racing over and over and
over again. So that could be a factor
because the stress of racing think about it like a boxer or
UFC guy. I mean, you can't do it every
week. You need some down time to heal
and recuperate, even if you don't get beat up too badly, so
that's another factor. And then the other four third
factor that I think is extremely important, is the racetrack.
Now, I'm not here to blame Churchill Downs because I think
they're, That's about as safe as any track in the country, most
of the tracks today are safe. But what I will tell you is that
each one of the tracks has a slightly different racing
surface. Yep.
You're not identical. We I learned that I wrote an
article about the breakdowns. I called it.
The Perfect Storm, and Aqueduct. We having a run of breakdowns.
There was nothing wrong with the Aqueduct Racetrack.
What was wrong with? We had a mild winter in New
York. That was the key factor.
There was about five things, but we had a mild winter in New York
and on a certain date. Claire.
Well with the racing goes to the winter track, which is Aqueduct
which they did, but that track was built with a lot of sand
deep and a hard base believing there was going to be freezing
in the just before they hit face.
Well, there was no freezing and horse were going fatigue right
through the sand and smacking the base and there are coming up
and I have to give credit to a number of really sharp trainers
have been around a long time. That keep me into this being a
major problem because everyone is running around trying to
figure it out. Well, the same thing here, I'm
not trying to criticize anyone. Rach butt.
I know from the veterinary perspective that bone takes time
to remodel, you know, takes time to heal.
Well, they were models to, and that's why these two year olds.
They're not really fully mature yet and their bones.
Remodeling, same thing for soft tissue, that tendons of this,
you know, the suspensory zits, Etc.
Check ligaments if they're to get bigger and stronger just
like muscles it, okay? It's over time.
You can't stress them to the breaking point.
You build up? Anyone works out knows you build
up, but you don't break yourself down and then you give you time
off and then and then you build up.
The same thing here, but some of these horses shipped all over
the country just to build up points, they raced on different
tracks, different surfaces, this will not be a simple problem to
solve and they'll be all sorts of theories, but I will throw in
the mix that the various tracks. The amount of competition of
that day and all the previous races, a number of competitions,
the best going against the best before they meet in a Triple
Crown Series. That should be keyed into this.
So when you say the best of the best going against each other,
you think that adds more More stress to the Bone or stress, to
the to the orthopedic in, that could cause Orthopedic injuries
to the horse. Well, let's face it, they're
going faster and harder than ever before.
I mean, no one's broke Secretariat's record but, you
know, and I don't know if we will with the point system,
honestly, I don't know if we'll have someone set the pace that
we need early on in the race. Although the last couple
Derbies, there's been a quick Pace, the those first half a
quarters. But yeah, well, you know, I can
relate to the Standardbred industry to that.
In the early days the standard bread's all race on one mile.
That's it, it's time. And I remember when, you know,
Noah would break a two minute mile, and now it's down to one
40s and what they used to do, unbeknownst to the public is
they would put rollers out on the racetrack and press that
track down to get the fastest time to say that.
The 19, whatever hamiltonian. And this particular track was
right at the fastest time anyone's run.
And we had the horse here to prove it.
But they were too many injuries popping up.
And I think, now, everyone and, I mean, everyone is concerned
more about the safety than they are about the time, but as far
as the Secretariat record, most people forget the second fastest
horse, in the history of the Derby.
Yeah, because no one pays attention to who came in second,
sham, and that was sham, and Sham broke down.
Theoretically in the final race in the Belmont, he broke
something in the rear leg. I think it was a sesamoid in his
rear, fetlock, or Like that. But I know that, you know, I
know the I did some work for Pancho Martin and I know Carlos
Martin very well and they're all, they all assured me that he
broke down, that's why he got pulled up.
He didn't even he came in last, so no one wants to be less.
They want to be first second, third fourth, to get points and
nothing money for a reason. Right?
Yeah. So I'm listen, I'm not a genius.
I mean, I tell you my high school guidance.
Counselor told me to pick a different career, but I did.
Okay. And the reality is common sense
dictates that these horses are running harder and faster and
sometimes traveling to a different track in a different
state just to pick up another five or ten points so they can
be in the derby. So the last time so that brings
up an inch and I wouldn't actually plan on asking you
this. So so major wins without racing
as a two-year-old, right? Last time we saw that was
justified just if I got through the three Triple Crown Races won
all three but then that was it. I mean got severed.
His aunt injury. Still with us, you know the
horsemen did what they got to do to keep him around, they retired
him. Does that make it almost like if
your Mage and you run all three of these Triple Crown Races if
you win the Preakness. I mean, what's the likelihood?
We even see that horse, get to the Travers or to the Breeders
Cup. I mean it's it's a lot, right?
It's certainly as you know, I was fortunate, I interviewed the
delgado's and wonderful people and I was so happy for them and
congratulated them. Die.
Happy to see, they're entering the Preakness.
But if you notice the same things happening them, that
happened to for today, we're a little nervous.
They didn't want to race in the Florida Derby at the time I
interviewed him. They weren't sure some of the
people said we should. We shouldn't we at cetera, you
know, everyone want to go. Didn't want to go against the
Giant Killer there. You know, Alan Jerkins those
days. He felt the horse was a little
bit vulnerable and he had a good horse.
He raced the horseback people forget onion.
He was only, I think it was onion.
It was proved how one of those two things was proved out.
Maybe he resource back only after after six days.
Is running. He just said I got this young
horse in the barn that just he came back and he sup he looks
great. Let's get them back out there
and he beat Secretariat but I'm glad that.
I'm glad that the delgado's erased Mage in the derby.
They were considering shipping cross-country might have been a
different Derby this year if they had done that things
happen, when you ship. Yep.
And and also things happen tying that into Some people that I was
one of them used to believe you go to the track early for a few
weeks and you train your horse on that track to get used to the
track but maybe if it's a different track conditions,
maybe your slowly creating some damage there.
Thinking the horse got familiar with the track but he's doing
new things to remodel his bone years ago I remember
representing a relative at horse training at the Moran.
Place in Pennsylvania on five bar and I brought a trainer out
with a rich tyminski looked at the horse.
And I said, what do you think? He said, he said doc, if We had
the horse in this afternoon at Belmont.
It would have won. Just about any race.
He said, get me the horse to the track and it took two weeks of
the horse qualified to get on the track and with those two
weeks, he bucked The Shins bone remodeling.
Yeah. Interesting.
What if, what about, what about the breeding do you feel that
that has led anything to brittle?
Bones is the breeding industry with the horses at all?
Then sexual side of it. I guess.
You know honestly, I don't know if I knew I would I would tell
you my instinct that it might have something to do with it.
There's a lot of people to blame all sorts of things on the
breeding. It may be.
The only thing I can tell you which to some degree is sort of
a problem in Thoroughbred. Again, it's been a prominent
Standardbred. They're trying to outbreed now,
to Europe and bring another Bloodlines, we're down to the
horses of bring the most dollars at a sale, or all the tappets,
and we'll all the other horses that are Have I remember when
Northern dancer it goes back? Many years.
I remember Northern dancer in his later years he couldn't
breed to. Well, he only bread a few mares
and they may not take her. They may take and there was
people that were paying one and a half million dollars for
breathing with no security. Meaning, if they don't take,
they don't take, we both will give it a good breeding and we
don't see that today, but, but your question is a good
question. I don't know that there's anyone
there. That could really answer it.
I think that You would hope to believe that.
If a horse is unsound, you don't want to breed them.
If he sound, you want to breed them, but I've seen horses and
you know them horses that have one that have done nothing
substantial to track. I mean a good Bloodlines and
they didn't do anything substantially broke down and
they turned around. They become Super Stallions.
Yeah. Yeah, so my wife calls me good
for you. That sounds like a good
marriage. So one last thing and again this
is probably getting real back to the basics but then when I want
to make sure we were respectful of everyone's time and we get
you going, explain to the Casual person.
Why if a horse has a lower limb injury, why they have to
normally be put down Well I can sum it up with basically two two
basic procedures. One first of all, unfortunately
is a horse worth the value to try and make Valiant efforts to
try to do this. I mean they tried with Barbaro
actually. One of my colleagues from new
boat and Center, Dean Richardson was a guy got assigned, the case
and and you work valiantly and did everything he could, they
have a swimming pool Recovery Center there, they've got
everything set up to do it the right way and they couldn't save
him. So that's, that's one example,
checkered. The great secretary was It down
for leg infirmities Lama, Titus later in his life that even the
best veterinarians. I knew one of about five
Superstars that were brought in everyone had a slightly
different opinion. I know, Lauren Evans from new
Bolton and he said, you know, he gave his two cents on it, but no
one could stop the laminitis, but there's no such thing as a
three-legged horse that could do anything.
Although, although I did, I did see a three-legged horse High
dilution, Lawrence born, one year that dr.
Keefer worked on that, say that. That horse for a period of time
until the colic and he put up prosthetic on it, but that's a
rare occurrence. So you have to have a horse
worth of value. It's not Humane to put them
through all the stuff that it would take to put them through.
Can they be saved? Well, an effort can be given but
what people don't realize is very little muscle in the lower
leg. It's all bone and tendon and
things like this, but the muscle brings blood supply and helps in
healing. So, some of the muscle portions
of the body like if they rip in the starting gate and you have
to show up a mushroom, It'll heal.
But when you start getting lower leg with the, with a circulation
could be cut off. That is a major problem.
So we'll never solve that 100%. There is improvements, but it
can be devastating. And I think for if a horse runs
and they keep running, I'm blanking the horse.
Now for Billy badgett years ago at Belmont, they kept running
and running and running and the same thing happened with
Ruffian. He kept running and running, and
he just pulverize the leg. So there was nothing left to
really to save. So, If the damage is too great,
The main thing is to put them down if they're of tremendous
value. And it's worth that kind of an
effort, you try to save them even if it's just for
humanitarian purposes. But the people going in that on
the horse and trainer would say, we know we're signing up for a
difficult battle here, but, can it be done?
There's a lot of things could be done and hopefully there's some
advances in the future to. So the best thing is prevention,
and that's what we're working on.
Hopefully today. And hopefully the message we're
going to get from all these drug issues and breakdowns through.
This hiss aboard through the Kentucky Horseman's through
Churchill through the cooperation, is what's the best
thing we can do? And I'm going to tell you that,
I think prevention is the key. We have that now was the first
guy in the east coast. Privately to put a nuclear
scintigraphy for horses. We could find stress fractures
before they were even obvious to a radiograph.
This is what we have to be concentrating on to prevent
these from even happening. I love it.
Let's get on the good side of the problem with let's prevent
and try to minimize that number. But We know will never be zero,
but the more we can get that close to zero the better.
So doc really appreciate you. How can people find more about
you and read all the good stuff that you put out there?
Well, I didn't go to then go to my website, don't know, it's not
that you have a horse doc.com as was up doc.com, that's how I'm
sorry. No, it's okay.
It's the www. Dot was wz U PD o si.com.
I thought I saw that earlier in there you might have changed it
or changed or Something now that's all right.
Yeah but anyway that's the website and you'll see that I
have a bunch of YouTube's are under talking horses.
That's it and I do talking horses and I have interviews
with safia have interviews with a delgado's.
I have interviews with a bunch of these people and even have
that for winning the Travers and I have a bunch of things like
that. People enjoy, they got any
questions, please send them to me and I'm glad to contribute
with you guys. If you ever need me for any
other opinions again, I'll try and do it as politically correct
as possible and get it done. Now we're going to we're going
to have a whole lot more collaboration with you so I'm
looking forward to it. So doc I'll talk to you later.
Thank you so much for me right back.
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