Drape\'s article seizes on the hot button issues-- drugs and high profile
fatalities-- in describing the dismal state of NY and US racing, and how much
healthier the sport seems to be in Europe, where racing is conducted without
medication.
Some other contrasts between US and European racing, only briefly mentioned, or
inferred, in Mr Drape\'s article--
1) Horses in Europe are trained in an entirely different manner and most racing
is conducted on grass.
2) Someone named \"HRH The Queen\" is still very actively involved in English
racing, but in the US what passed for royalty in racing---Mellon, Vanderbilt,
Whitney is pretty much gone.
In his anxiousness to blame \"drugs\" for a lot of racing\'s problems, Mr. Drape
basically ignores some of racing\'s other problems, like an overexposed product
(too much racing, not enough quality racing) and deteriorating facilities which
are not fan friendly, especially here in NY.
Mr. Drape\'s contention is that the public will not support a sport weighted down
by drugs and corruption, which doesn\'t explain the wild popularity of
professional baseball,basketball and football, and the greatest sham of all,
NCAA Division I football and basketball.
Speaking of basketball, Micheal Ray Richardson, at the end of a particularly
dreadful Knicks season in the 80s, was asked by a sportswriter for a prognosis
on the Knicks chances. MRR replied \"The ship be sinking.\" When the sportswriter
asked the follow up question \"How far can the ship sink?\", Richardson replied
\"The skys the limit.\"
Without quick action, MRR\'s analysis might pertain to racing.