Fairmount1 Wrote:
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> These are sincere questions in reply miff.
>
> You have discussed \"stacking\" before and other
> examples of legal things that are done for horses
> to legally run as well as possible. Do you
> believe this is the trainer that has mastered
> this? Or do you believe he/she has been able to
> hire vets that are able to master the chemistry of
> the game for owners that can afford it?
>
> I am truly curious your thoughts on the situation
> with Jane Cibelli. A vet, presumably she hired,
> was injecting a horse\'s knee on race day and got
> caught. Owner is told by Cibelli that the horse
> was mistakenly given an antibiotic and a reporter
> for drf wrote that investigators said the syringe
> did not contain an antibiotic as claimed. The vet
> gets kicked off the grounds and ever since Cibelli
> has not been the same trainer as far as win
> percentage goes....not even close. This low win
> percentage carried into the Monmouth meet. This
> is all reported in Paulick Report and I\'m sure
> everyone on here is aware of it.
>
>
http://www.paulickreport.com/news/ray-s-paddock/ve> t-caught-injecting-cibelli-horse-suspended-90-days
> -agrees-to-cooperate/
>
> Now, Miff, I\'m not trying to antagonize or get
> into a war of words. But you always ask for
> names, names, names of trainers that are doing
> nefarious things when people make bold statements
> that they distrust the game. Obviously JC was not
> the vet but it is awfully coincidental she
> couldn\'t win at 30 percent plus since then. In
> fact, last I saw I think she was approaching 10
> percent at Monmouth. So, I\'ll just leave it open
> ended to keep the discourse open hopefully. What
> do you make of this situation? I feel like this
> is just one of the situations where someone got
> caught doing something many, many trainers or vets
> are doing. I also think jurisdiction where it
> happened mattered concerning testing but am open
> to being persuaded otherwise. Your thoughts?
Cibelli is hitting at something resembling her historical batting average . . . at Delaware. Above that level, not so much . . .