I hope this isn\'t settled, and the details of the horses medical care and findings are eventually made public.
Edit: and I\'m going to add this:
Why speculate on conspiracy theories or \"something else\", when everything fits easily with the common and obvious, with what was alleged in the lawsuit?
The horse got an injury three weeks out, yet they were trying to carry the horse through the Derby, without telling the partnership and trying to keep it secret.
As you say, nothing new (that the public doesn\'t know the true health of the equine athletes they bet upon) - especially when big bucks, partnerships, future stallion shares, etc. are involved.
Mullins gets upset learning about \"supertesting\" at the last minute, simply because both front ankles were injected April 28th, four days before the Derby, as alleged in the lawsuit.
That\'s cutting it close with more sophisticated testing, if mepivicaine were used (and we don\'t know what was used)
What\'s the withdrawal time for mepivicaine in Louisville, Kentucky? It\'s 96 hours - 4 days.
So if the ankles were injected LEGALLY 4 days before the Derby with mepivicaine, with supertesting, there could absolutely be the risk of a low positive.
And the horse could still certainly have a subtle grade 1-2 lameness to the vet\'s eye (exactly as reported), at the vetcheck Derby morning, that \"people watching\" didn\'t appreciate.
The horse could have been being injected with mepivicaine all along, enabling the continued workouts.
That horses that work fast or have supreme efforts are at greater risk of subsequently developing injury as a result of that exceptional effort isn\'t really news, not in any horse sport (or human sport, for that matter).