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September 17, 2009

Pick Your Poison

By Lauren Lee

For a moment, let’s not debate the rule itself.

I think just about everyone in the industry has, by now, said his or her piece on whether Ontario’s new whipping rule is good or bad or something in between.

Obviously, the disqualification of Angostura in the Peaceful Way stakes elimination due to Trevor Ritchie’s whipping infraction has been a lightning rod for negative feedback on the rule. People like Trevor Ritchie. People like trainer Dan Creighton. People holding winning tickets on Angostura would’ve liked to cash them. People aren’t quite sure why the owner, trainer and bettors had to suffer for the driver’s mistake.

Beyond those factors, many have turned their minds to the ‘spirit of the rule’ and how something seems amiss when the most notoriously punished whipping offender is now Trevor Ritchie, one of the least likely candidates to ever abuse a horse.

If the spirit of the whipping rule is to prevent horses from being abused, was that really accomplished by disqualifying a mare who may, or may not, have been tapped twice by Ritchie in a momentary brain-freeze?

The judges, of course, acted correctly by enforcing the rule to the letter of the law. As written, and implemented, Ritchie did break the rules when he took the lines in one hand and used his whip. The judges are afforded no discretion to consider factors such as intent or the driver’s history or character, or the fact that the race was an elimination for a very lucrative event.

Much like the poor tennis line judge, at last week’s U.S. Open, who incurred the wrath of Serena Williams by calling a foot fault at a pivotal point in the match, there is no wiggle room in the rules to abstain from calling infractions at inconvenient times. The rule in tennis is black and white: Did the server’s foot touch the service line or not?

If we want mitigating factors to be considered or discretion to be used in such cases, we are back to the same refrain that has been repeated ad nauseam for years now — we need a commissioner.

National Football League (NFL) commissioner Roger Goodell and National Hockey League (NHL) commissioner Gary Bettman (in collaboration with his right-hand man Colin Campbell) exercise their personal discretion all the time when it comes to meting out punishment for infractions committed in their leagues.

Remember the final minutes of Game 2 in last year’s Stanley Cup finals? Leading scorer Evgeni Malkin of the Pittsburgh Penguins, who went on to win the Conn Smythe trophy as playoff MVP, instigated a fight with Detroit Red Wings star Henrik Zetterburg in the last five minutes of the game, an easy win for the Wings.

By rule, a player instigating a fight in the last five minutes of the game is to be suspended for the next game. Bettman, however, ruled that Malkin would not be suspended for pivotal Game 3 in the series, reasoning that the purpose of the instigator penalty was to prevent tough guys from ‘sending a message’ or taking advantage of more skilled players in the dying seconds of the game and not to suspend a frustrated superstar who landed a few soft punches on Zetterberg’s shoulder pads.

Fans in Detroit wanted the rule to be applied. Fans in Pittsburgh wanted discretion. It didn’t matter what they wanted because the only opinion that mattered belonged to Bettman, who had absolute power.

Similarly, how did Goodell arrive at the number of NFL games Michael Vick would be forced to sit out as punishment for his conviction in operating a dogfighting ring? He picked a number off the top of his head. Because he can.

Goodell originally said that Vick could be suspended for the first six weeks of the football season, then reduced the suspension to two weeks because he was impressed by Vick’s behaviour, community service and association with mentor Tony Dungy.

Like it or not, in a commissioner system, these men hold all the cards.

Would a harness racing commissioner have looked at Ritchie’s past history, his good character and the unharmed Angostura and decided that a disqualification was not in the spirit of the new whipping rule? Maybe. 

Would he or she ensure that the rules are applied fairly and reasonably in all instances? Maybe not.

Do we want black-and-white or shades of grey? Do we want structure or discretion?

Pick your poison.

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Ritchie sick, but standing tall after owning up to “worst mistake I’ve ever made”

 

 

Trevor Ritchie knows the magnitude of his mistake. On Wednesday morning, the veteran driver said he has been on the verge of throwing up since Monday night.
 
“I’m sick to my stomach for, of course, (trainer) Dan (Creighton) and all the connections of the mare (Angostura),” Ritchie said. “If Dan loses his appeal, it may be up to a quarter-million-dollar mistake on my part. Of course, that weighs heavy. Then, secondary, all the people that bet her had to rip their tickets up.
 
“This is likely the worst mistake I’ve ever made in my life driving-wise, but what are you going to do? I’ve got to suck it up and go on.”
 
If, to paraphrase Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., the measure of a man is how he deals with adversity, then even the diminutive Ritchie is practically an NBA centre.
 
Which, admittedly, is cold comfort to the driver, the connections of the two-year-old trotting filly and those who bet on her, but it does tell you a lot about a man that unequivocally owned up to his mistake and didn’t lay a shred of blame elsewhere.
 
There’s no way to soft-sell it — Ritchie pulled a doozy of a brain cramp when he violated Ontario’s new whipping rule driving Angostura to victory at Mohawk Monday in the first $30,000 elimination for Sunday's $500,000 Peaceful Way final. The filly won by a head but was disqualified because Ritchie took the lines in one hand and, allegedly, tapped Angostura lightly with his whip.
 
“I knew the rule going in. I’ve got nobody to blame but me,” said Ritchie, who took the lines in one hand to pull out her earplugs — which is allowable — because he could not reach the earplug cord with his foot. Ritchie said he then forgot to return a line to each hand and may have touched Angostura with the whip, though he’s not sure he did and that’s why Creighton is appealing the judges’ disqualification.
 
“I said to the judges, ‘I didn’t think it was a DQ if you didn’t hit the horse with the lines in one hand.’ They said, ‘Well, it isn’t, but in our opinion you hit the horse...’ That’s why it’s under appeal.”
 
The stakes are high. Not only does the Peaceful Way final carry a half-million-dollar purse, but elimination winners get to pick their posts for the final, meaning Angostura would have had a plum post.
 
The sad part in all this is this was not an example of a horse being abused in any way and, regardless, Ritchie is one of the least likely to abuse the whipping rule. For that very reason, he thought he might fall victim to it when it was instituted Sept. 1 of this year.
 
“I’ve told people that I was likely going to get nailed because I’m not a whipper and I wasn’t thinking about it. This scenario I never put into my head was where I would put the lines in one hand to pull the plugs and then forget to put the line back in my hand.”
 
Ritchie is also the driver most likely to warn visiting reinsmen about the new restrictions and the possibility of being disqualified for whipping with the lines in one hand, which he said have been stressed time and again by judges.
 
Yet, despite his self-inflicted misfortune, Ritchie refuses to blame the new whipping rule for his plight — and he’s been publicly against the rule for over a year strictly over safety concerns. Ritchie is all for protecting the welfare of horses, but he said he has grave concerns over drivers shaking the lines instead and not having control of their horses.
 
“I think it is a terrible rule, but not for the reasons in this situation. It was all for safety. All along for me, I’ve been against this rule because I think it’s going to promote a more unsafe environment for drivers on the racetrack. I’m convinced that I’m right and nobody’s going to convince me otherwise. After watching the races and the way these horses get handled, I am absolutely certain I’m right on that count,” he said.
 
As for whether his mistake has cost him a friend in Creighton, Ritchie said, “I hope not, but I wouldn’t blame him if it does. He knows I made a mistake. I’ve apologized to him a gazillion times already. I’m human. I make mistakes.”
 
No matter which way the appeal goes, the incident is sure to be a deterrent against drivers taking lines in one hand. Ritchie said a chill went through the Mohawk drivers’ room on Monday.
 
“It was pretty quiet because everybody was likely sick for me, because they can likely put themselves in same position,” Ritchie said.
 

 

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The Jug and Well Said: Steve Elliott’s not shooting off his bazoo and neither should you

 

 

Nothing burns Steve Elliott’s butt more than people racing his horses for him. So, when the talk began floating around that Well Said was going to skip the Little Brown Jug, it’s a safe bet it irked the trainer (above, Claus Andersen photo).
 
“You know how it is. Everybody can manage your horse better than you,” Elliott said Monday. “It’s always been that way.”
 
Let’s not forget, Elliott managed Donato Hanover to darn-near perfection, among many others. 
 
The fact Well Said is the best sophomore pacer in racing is motivation enough for tackling the Jug despite its pitfalls, but we can all thank spite for having at least a small role in helping make up Elliott’s mind to head for Ohio.
 
Don’t think Well Said should or can race in the Jug? You’ll see a week from Thursday.
 
Not that Elliott is bragging about the colt. Talk about pitfalls — Elliott’s seen too many trainers shoot off their big bazoos only to end up with a bazoo full of crow. To this he refers readers to another favourite expression: “I’m never going to let my mouth overload my ass. You know what happens when people start talking... If the horse is good, he’ll talk for himself.”
 
That’s not to say skipping the Jug wasn’t discussed in the Well Said camp. And yes, I realize Well Said’s owners — Jeff Snyder and Sue Grange — have the final say. But the trainer does have some significant influence in the process.
 
They all would be fools not to at least consider passing on Delaware. Going heats on a bullring for a relatively small purse against more than the usual number of cowboy drivers trying to make a name for themselves is a treat for everyone but the top participants.
 
As a spectacle, the Jug is hard to beat. Virtually everyone, including Elliott, would love to win it. But, a determiner of equine greatness, the Jug is not.
 
As Elliott said, one just has to have the best horse — and a decent post — on that one day.
 
Which isn’t to say Well Said will be the best horse on Jug Day, but in the race before the race — the one where we all love to call the shots on other people’s horses, to the chagrin of people like Elliott — Well Said’s already got the best post one can draw.
 
Have an opinion on the great Jug debate? Click on “Tack Trunk Debate” and put yourself in Steve Elliott’s shoes. We look forward to your comments.
 

 

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