A movement is underway in horse racing to clean up the sport by enacting uniform safety standards that everyone in the industry would have to abide by.
An integrity and safety bill is being reviewed by the Senate that could put national standards in place by the start of 2022. In the meantime, different states and tracks are implementing rules to address concerns about doping, medication and optics.
The rules include eliminating performance-enhancing substances, restricting the use of an anti-bleeding medication and placing limits on the use of a bronchodilator that can enhance muscle development. There would also be restrictions on how — and how many times — a jockey can whip a horse consecutively during a race.
"At some point, we need to get those rules so that nationwide we have the same rules everywhere," trainer Kenny McPeek said this week before saddling Preakness-winning filly Swiss Skydiver in the Distaff at the Breeders' Cup world championships this weekend.
The U.S. government catching two prominent trainers involved in a widespread scheme to drug horses, and California's Santa Anita racetrack getting through its fall season without a single racing fatality are examples of independent efforts to clean up the sport.
But without a national governing body, horse racing has long relied on jurisdictions making their own rules, which partially contributed to the suspicious success of indicted trainers Jason Servis and Jorge Navarro and the death of Grade 1 winner X Y Jet in Navarro's care.
If the "Horseracing Integrity and Safety Act" that made its way through the U.S. House of Representatives is passed by the Senate and signed into law, as expected, those types of incidents would likely be prevented going forward because an independent authority would set regulations that the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency would then enforce.
"It will be a game changer, I think, for the industry when it comes time to protect the health and safety of the horses and the integrity and fairness of the competition," said Travis T. Tygart, CEO of USADA, which already is getting calls to its anonymous tip line on horse racing. "It is going to be clearing out the bushel to get to, 'All right, let's clean this thing up and restore this sport to what it once was.'"