After “disaster,” jockey John Hiraldo hoping to pick back up

Mid-Atlantic Three Stars: July 10

8 Comments

  1. Mike
    09th Jul 2023

    Good job by Frank to raise these questions. Maybe with expensive HISA fees the initial testing can be improved.

  2. Linda
    09th Jul 2023

    Ridiculous…Defamation of character. Social media amplifies and adds fuel to the falsehood.

  3. Anonymous
    09th Jul 2023

    5

  4. James Poulos III
    15th Jul 2023

    “According to Moysey and Hiraldo, the test employed by the Delaware Thoroughbred Racing Commission is one available over the counter at a local drug store. That could not be independently confirmed by The Racing Biz, but if true, those tests, while generally reliable, are not considered to be as accurate as those conducted by laboratories.”

    If Delaware Park isn’t using the most accurate test then Delaware park should not be suspending anyone for a positive test. I think the jock should sue the silks off anyone and all involved in his suspension. And the rest of us involved in the industry should sue for damages. These false positives and taking down horses for pico grams of non banned substances just plays into the false narrative that horsemen are cheaters. The industry is killing itself and HISA is the grand facilitator.

  5. rick be
    15th Jul 2023

    Unless there is some other evidence,like a field sobriety test the suspension
    should not have been enforced until the lab test came back.

  6. Frederic William Baldwin
    15th Jul 2023

    Unless these tests become infallible they should not be given.

Comments are closed.

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