granger
Senior Jockey
The old guard was certainly looked after
James Main, the vet at the centre of the doping inquiry which saw Nicky Henderson banned from making entries for three months last summer, will face a full disciplinary hearing into his role in the case early in the new year.
Main refused to attend the British Horseracing Authority's hearing into the case of Moonlit Path, who was injected with tranexamic acid, a banned blood-clotting agent, a few hours before she was due to make her racecourse debut. Henderson, her trainer, was also fined £40,000 but, since the BHA does not regulate vets, it could not compel Main to attend the hearing. The panel's written findings registered its frustration at his absence.
Main resigned from two BHA committees – the veterinary committee and the counter-analysis committee – following the hearing, while the BHA passed the detailed findings from its inquiry to the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons, the profession's regulator, in July 2009.
While Main has offered no public comment on the case, the news that the RCVS has finally decided that he has a serious charge to answer means that his long silence will finally be broken. The hearing, likely to take place at the RCVS's headquarters in London, is scheduled to start on 14 February.
Vet admits injecting
Queen's horse at hearing
By Paul Eacott 0:01AM 15 FEB 2011
JAMES MAIN, the vet at the centre of the inquiry that resulted in Nicky Henderson being fined and banned frommaking entries for three months in 2009, pleaded guilty on Monday to a charge of injecting the Queen's Moonlit Path with tranexamic acid on the morning of its racecourse debut and in doing so knowing that he was in breach of the rules of racing.
Main, the vet most closely associated with Henderson's yard from 1982 up until the timeof the incident, denied six other charges at a disciplinary inquiry held by the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons in London, among them dishonestly concealing the injection in his clinical records and "disgraceful conduct in a professional respect".
The charges were read out to the committee at the start of the hearing yesterday by Alison Foster QC, representing the RCVS.
Main's legal representative Kieran Coonan QC said his client admitted the first charge, which is a breach of rule 221 B (i).
The committee then heard at length evidence from the first expert witness, Professor Tim Morris, the BHA's director of equine science and welfare. Morris told the committee that on the day ofracing, horses can only have water and their normal feed.
He said: "The BHA rules are such that it is clear it [any substance] must not be given on the day of the race and must not be present on the day of the race, if the intention is to affect the racing performance or in the knowledge that racing performance could be affected."
Moonlit Path finished sixth of ten, having been sent off a 16-1 chance, some 116 lengths behind her stablemate, the odds-on favourite Ravello Bay.
Morris also said that he believed that the use of TA could help Moonlit Path, a known bleeder, or any other horses susceptible to exercise-induced pulmonary haemorrhage to recover from any illeffects if they were injected after the race if permission was granted from the BHA.
He also said that he felt the use of the drug in UK horseracing was "relatively uncommon" as there have only been two positive tests for it.
Although interviewed as part of the BHA probe into the positive drug test provided by Moonlit Path, who was injected with the banned blood-clotting agent TA before her race at Huntingdon on February 19, 2009, Main did not attend the BHA disciplinary inquiry despite, in the panel's view, having "potentially crucial evidence to give."
He subsequently resigned from two BHA committees, but it was only after a lengthy investigation into the findings of the BHA inquiry, which were forwarded to the RCVS in July 2009, that it was announced charges had been brought against him.
Main, who is a partner at O'Gorman, Slater, Main and Partners, the Newbury-based practice whose clients include many leading racing yards in the area, could be suspended for up to two years by the RCVS or struck off from the register of vets if found in breach of their rules.
The hearing, which is expected to last six days, continues on Tuesday when Henderson is scheduled to give evidence.
'Staff member must have known drug was banned' - Nicky Henderson
By Paul Eacott 8:11PM 15 FEB 2011
NICKY HENDERSON on Tuesday said a member of his staff must have been aware that the use of the drug tranexamicacid on raceday was contrary to the rules of racing as he insisted he himself was unaware that doing so was a breach of regulations.
Henderson was giving evidence on day two of a disciplinary inquiry held by the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons in London into the role of veterinary surgeon James Main in an incident that resulted in the trainer being fined and banned from making entries for three months last year.
Main, who on Monday admitted injecting the mare Moonlit Path, owned by the Queen, with 20mg of the banned blood-clotting agent on the morning of her debut at Huntingdon on February 19, 2009, could be given a suspension of up to two years by the RCVS or struck off from the register of vets if found in breach of their rules. He denies six other charges.
The committee heard evidence that the injection was not recorded in the yard’s medical book, which contained a blank entry save for some scribbling out.
Henderson said that at the time neither he nor Main knew that to give such treatment on a raceday was against the BHA rules but accepted that a member of staff at his Seven Barrows yard in Upper Lambourn must known this.
Explaining the absence in the medical book of a record of the injection – which was written on an invoice as a pre-race check – Henderson said: “Somebody must have been aware of the fact that it should not have been done.”
“Somebody must have been aware of the fact that it should not have been done.”
I particularly like:
"Invited to explain his actions, Main said Moonlit Path had "a chronic history of bleeding" and that he gave her TA "because the trainer was concerned about the welfare of this horse and I was concerned about the welfare of this horse."