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#1
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![]() Once again, Doug O'Neil had a horse test in excess of the permitted levels of bicarbonates. That's a real shock. LOL. The rules stipulate that he will have to have his horses run out of the detentiona barn. He said that he doesn't want to run out of the detention barn. So Hollywood Park said, "Ok, if you don't want to then you don't have to."
I have never heard of such a thing. I didn't know that you don't have to receive a punishment if you don't want to. Punishments are no longer mandatory. Unbelievable. http://www.drf.com/news/article/95463.html |
#2
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Eric |
#3
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In the real world, if you get arrested for something, you are held in jail even before your hearing. Yes, you get a trial but if you do not post bail then you sit in jail while you are awaiting your trial. In some cases, where the public is at risk, there is no bail. |
#4
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![]() My guess is that Hollywood feels like they need O'Neill more than O'Neill needs them (I don't think that's the case, considering how terribly his horses run elsewhere).
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#5
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Personally, I think there should be more integrity in the process. Positive test, appeal -- then there must be an appeal, hearing, whatever, within a certain period of time. That way there is no "banking" of days or deferral of any type. Besides uniform medication rules, there needs to be an overhaul of the process, penalties, etc. Eric |
#6
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I am sure there is more to the political aspect of this, but I'd be curious as to how it plays out. Eric |
#7
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Doug O'Neil will get a hearing. Nobody wants to deny him a hearing. But in the meantime, he needs to run out of the detention barn. That is the way it works in California and that is why people are furious about this. People are furious that Hollywood Park won't enforce the rule. As Ateam said, the main reason Hollywood won't enforce the rule is because Doug O'Neil has a ton of horses and if his horses don't run then there will be smaller fields. He runs 3-4 horses every day on average. |
#8
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![]() I don't understand why people don't think abrupt changes in form could be caused by this. O'neil, Sadler, Mitchell, Mullins, Canani, and Cerin have all been caught doing it.
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#9
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![]() except for the occasional murder suspect or flight risk, most are out of jail while awaiting trial. so unless o'neill is killing horses, i can see why they aren't punishing him while everything moves along-slowly.
__________________
Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
#10
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You picked a capital crime... murder. That's pretty much the only alleged offense that is not bailable. O'Neill is probably less of a flight risk than O.J. was. |
#11
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In the case of trainers milkshaking, there is danger to the public. It's a different kind of danger. It's obviously not life and death. But the rationale is the same. The public needs to be protected. There are millions of dollars being wagered on these races. Anyway, the point was that even out in the real world people are often times in jail while they await their trial. |
#12
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Running his horses out of the detention barn while a trainer awaits his hearing is not quite as bad as being stuck in jail while a person awaits their trial. |
#13
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![]() By the way, every time this has happened in the past, the rule(being forced to the detention barn) has always been enforced.
Last edited by Rupert Pupkin : 06-14-2008 at 04:39 PM. |
#14
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![]() i am surprised that it is taking so long to get the case resolved, this isn't a recent milkshaking case-purse money was redistributed some time ago. but if they generally let a trainer do business as usual while appealing, i don't see how they can make o'neill follow a stricter set of rules, even if he is a repeat offender.
they need to quit with the slaps on the wrist, and the bs involved with rules violations. it's not fair to the bettor as you said rupe, but i don't know what they can do, other than hurry up and hear his appeal.
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
#15
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![]() I think the comparison is also valid for other sports.
You test positive for substances, you sit. Trial might come later. Silly to say the comparison is a bad one, Rupert's comparison is perfectly valid. Last edited by pgardn : 06-14-2008 at 05:05 PM. |
#16
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Are you sure that they redistribute purse money for bicarbonates? I should know the answer to that but I don't. Danzig, they are not trying to give O'Neil stricter rules. They are trying to give him the same rules as they give evryone else. That is why this is so surprising. It is surprising that they are not enforcing a rule that has always been enforced in the past. |
#17
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![]() Horse racing is a joke. The inmates run the asylum. The sport basically lives on thanks to people who will gamble regardless.
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“Next time I come I’ll say, ‘Hey man, my horse is going to win the Breeders’ Cup, babe.” Nobutaka Tada, Racing Manager of Casino Drive |
#18
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![]() The trouble would seem to be if he is forced to run out of the detention barn before his hearing, isnt he serving his penalty unfairly if the hearing winds up overturning the ruling? I understand that the chances are that the ruling will be upheld but shouldn't the guy get his due process? If he is found guilty after that then he can serve the penalty, no? The rule sucks and the tracks should not be forced to do the CHRB's job because there is most certainly a conflict of interest.
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#19
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#20
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As I said earlier, it is not uncommon in other situations for a similar process to be in place. In other fields, if a person is accused of some type of miscounduct, they will often times be put on administrative leave while they are waiting for an investigation to be completed. That is pretty common. Last edited by Rupert Pupkin : 06-14-2008 at 05:38 PM. |