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What makes an "honest" owner? We have trainer responsibility and liability, what about owners? Yes, horses and owners are getting suspended. However, at a certain point, and owner is going to litigate this. Unless you are going to prove that an owner was involved or knew about illegal activities, how are you going to suspend an owner? Because he picked a high-percentage trainer? Do we have to get into specifics? Are Burke's owners honest? Nancy Takter? Jenn Bongiorno? Tony Alagna? Joe Holloway? Steve Elliott? Brett Pelling? Look at the leading owners and the major players in the game. They are with trainers who win. George Segal has had trainers like Gene Riegle, Bob McIntosh, Blair Burgess, Brett Pelling, Tony Alagna, Linda Toscano, and others. Any of them have "no positive tests ever" in their career?This is not about one trainer getting a positive for bute and another getting a positive for some designer or exotic drug that has no business being on the farm or track. Those are two ends of the spectrum. The latter should be banned and eventually I think HISA is going to do this. But most of this exists between the extremes. I for one am curious what makes an owner honest.
The horse's best interest - you own this lifeThat those now responsible for that life that you choose care deeply for it above all elseWinning races, cashing tickets, having a hopeful producer is done ethicallyIf and when the time would come that you realize that in order to compete that you have to tap those willing to cross that ethical line, *don't*, retract, lower your competition, regroup, rehab...That you know the difference for a positive for an ambiguous withdrawal time and a mother fucker juicing your horse to deathHave and Assemble - Good motives, good team, good planning, being financially sound, always be evaluating also means maybe you don't always have to micromanage. (ignorance is not an excuse.)
I’ve been in the horse business for a long, long time. I’ve groomed, trained, driven (poorly) and owned horses since before most of you were born. Never had a positive test. Since I have started employing trainers (15 to 25 horse stables) I tell the trainer “no positive tests”.. If there is one I am out of here. I have been lucky and made money over the years but the most discouraging thing has been watching a horse drop 2 seconds after I sell them. Its not my trainer as use 3 different ones. Well, maybe it is as they don’t use drug and my vet bills are very, very low.