I have to say as a some time defender of NH in the past this is a poor do.
Have I missed something ? The implication of the question was the lack of an entry was because the person in charge of the horse and the medical book knew it was wrong .
What could Henderson do other than admit that ?
18 months later the BHA still look at best very amateurish and at worst utterly clueless - one of the basic rules/regulations for holding a license, working on licensed premises, owning a horse, attending horses in a racing yard should be willingness to attend any inquiry held by the BHA - failure to attend should result in being warned off for bringing the sport into disrepute, as should attempting to prevent someone from attending or for that matter interfering with a witness.
Good point Rory - tbh I was rather confused as to why they didn't tell the owner (even though she is The Queen) that racing the horse wasn't the best idea, think I read somewhere that TS had seen her bleed 10 times at home prior to debuting.
My view above would be the ideal situation - "interference" being from a boss or an owner telling him to do X or Y and cover it up or help cover it up. In the ideal world everyone would have to attend any inquiry that the BHA call or face being warned off - I doubt that will happen as the way I've phrased it sounds like some Eastern European dictatorship but with the way the trainers and owners seem to be behaving that is probably what British racing needs right now - not that it will happen as the applecart is something the BHA don't seem to want to upset.
The Queen can be a right bitch when she wants to be.
The person in charge of the horse is surely the trainer, especially when the horse is owned by the Queen. Henderson has been playing the innocent as if the running of his yard is none of his business, which might be true, but doesn't reflect well on him.
True but surely Henderson has admitted to taking his eye badly off the ball and relying on the vet to know his stuff. It does indeed suggest he did too much " delegating without supervision"
If he had known that it was banned , the idea he would have allowed it to be done to an outsider owned by the Queen strikes me as bizarre.
True but surely Henderson has admitted to taking his eye badly off the ball and relying on the vet to know his stuff. It does indeed suggest he did too much " delegating without supervision"
If he had known that it was banned , the idea he would have allowed it to be done to an outsider owned by the Queen strikes me as bizarre.
Henderson, and most other trainers in the country know exactly what tranaxemic acid is, what it does, and why it's banned. He's also known James Main for many years, and I doubt anything has gone on without his general knowledge.
Exactly this. The Queen is a very knowledgeable horsewoman and I really can't see that she would be adamant the horse had to run if she was aware of its history of bleeding.I agree entirely Rory - the question that should be asked is why a mare who'd bled so often on the gallops that they felt the need to give her a banned substance in order to aid recovery was deemed fit enough by the persons involved (most notably Nicky Henderson) to race.
And your evidence is ?
Ardross,
As one of Murphy's longest standing owners pointed out, the RCVS would do well to find out exactly how much TA (which no-one in Lambourn has heard of) has actually been ordered by the Veterinary practices which serve those yards. It would certainly make interesting reading.