Quote:
Originally Posted by the_real_Barleycorn
When I heard this my first thought was, I'm supposed to believe the media now? If...If the horse was drugged then who did it? With all the testing done in horse racing did someone think this the case of the East German Women's Olympic Team? Two people could profit; the owner if he thought he could evade a drug test or someone who wants that horse (owner or trainer) to be disqualified and humiliated. I personally lean towards a third party. I can't believe that someone would be so stupid.
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they aren't. the OP is trying to make this about Trump. it's not. the real story below..
the trainer, owner and vet
knowingly used betamethasone a legal and regulated treatment for inflammation. commonly used in training and legal. with a catch. you can't treat the horse with various regulated drugs too close to a race. for several reasons, the big two are unfair advantage and the other is part of the dark side of the sport, to run a horse that would otherwise be unable to run.
https://sports.yahoo.com/derby-winne...145029344.html
Derby winner Medina Spirit tests positive for regulated drug, trainer Bob Baffert says he'll fight it
Betamethasone is a Class C anti-inflammatory, and while it's not banned, it's regulated: a horse must be off the drug within 14 days of racing. Medina Spirit tested for more than twice the allowed amount.
they miscalculated the time it would take to drop below the accepted limit.