Churchill Downs, home of the famed Kentucky Derby, will suspend racing at the conclusion of this weekend’s competition to examine safety measures after 12 horse deaths in the past month, officials said on Friday.
With operations shut down at the iconic track in Louisville, Kentucky, the remainder of its Spring Meet, scheduled to run to July 3, would be relocated to Ellis Park in Henderson, Kentucky, starting on Saturday.
Churchill Downs Inc said in a statement that officials would conduct a “top-to-bottom review of all safety and surface protocols and integrity measures in collaboration and consultation with nationwide experts.”
Photo: Grace Hollars-USA TODAY
The move came a day after Churchill Downs announced that new safety measures would be implemented aimed at improving horse safety.
Those moves included restricting horses to four starts in a rolling eight-week span and eligibility bans for horses that do not perform well.
Officials also paused a program of track-based incentives, including trainer start bonuses and purse payout allocations to every race finisher through last place.
Photo: AP
However, with the reason for the spike in equine fatalities still a mystery, Churchill Downs officials have opted to pursue further evaluation of track safety measures out of “an abundance of caution.”
“Following a thorough internal review and concurrent investigations conducted by the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission and Horseracing Integrity and Safety Authority, no single factor has been identified as a potential cause and no discernable pattern has been detected to link the fatalities,” the statement said. “Diagnostics testing of the racetrack by experts have not raised concerns and the experts have concluded that the surface is consistent with prior measurements from Churchill Downs in past years.”
Mage won the Kentucky Derby on May 6, capping a disturbing week at Churchill Downs when seven horses died within 10 days — two of them euthanized after they were injured in support races on Derby day.
The 11th and 12th fatalities occurred on May 26 and 27, when Lost in Limbo and Kimberley Dream sustained injuries while racing and were euthanized.
Ellis Park is also owned and operated by Churchill Downs Inc, and chief executive Bill Carstanjen said moving the remainder of the meeting there would allow it to meet its “immense responsibility as the economic engine of the thoroughbred industry in Kentucky, which provides jobs and income for thousands of families every day.”
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