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Then of course you have the conspiracy theorists----sorry, I mean, people----who say lasix covers up the really serious stuff they are using, or causes the horse to piss and the releasing agent in the serious stuff gets pissed out first, and so on. Regardless, if a horse legit bleeds, and the vet scopes the horse, they'll give out the lasix slip. In NJ, there used to be a # of days (if it were a race?), but I don't remember.
Real reason for Lasix. There's no profitability with a horse that bleeds from the lungs. Lasix was the savior being legalized for use. However, I believe the actual term for bleeding is Exercise Induced Pulmonary Hemorrhage. Which clearly says what we do by racing a horse is the cause. The people I warned all of you about that use that see it as abusing a horse. Because you're admitting that by racing them you cause harm. When's the last time you brought a horse in from running like a maniac and they were bleeding from the nose, or horses in the wild, do they bleed when they push too hard? Sorry, I love being the devil's advocate. But I have sat in on a few meetings with people who are paid very good money to lobby against you. Curtis Sliwa asked me a couple weeks ago what the reason for a tongue tie is. He's running for mayor again in NY and fighting to end the carriage horses. I told him why I was there and what my involvement was because of harness racing and finding Standardbreds. Point is, people do notice things.
Once again no horses in the wild do not get Lasix. When they suffer from EIPH they get eaten by predators. Just like horses that get lame. Next time you have a medical issue just ignore it and don’t seek a medical cure and we won’t have to listen to your dumbass again
Not a conspiracy theory. Robinson Cano was suspended by MLB for taking Lasix, because it improved his odds of avoiding steroid detection.
My 3 year old filly didn't race on lasix at 2 due to it not being allowed in Minnesota, came back last month at Cal Expo on lasix for a qualifier and 2 starts and raced worse on it so she was taken off it but did not have to qualify again in order to race off of it.
Is there a rule in harness racing regarding adding lasix ? There’s a horse racing tonight that qualified on the 14th, stopped badly but still paced enough to qualify. Last quarter 33.1. 5 days later racing tonight. First Time Lasix.
this horse in question finsihed 10th beaten 27 lengths and paced a last quarter in 32.2in my topic I wanted to know if there was a lasix rule -- that if a horse truly needed it, is there a minimum amount of days before you can drop into the box to effectlively treat the reason for bleeding... This horse raced back 5 days off a qualifier which meant he was possibly dropped in the box the day after a qualifier that he finished the last quarter in 33.1