Derby Trail Forums

Derby Trail Forums (http://www.derbytrail.com/forums/index.php)
-   The Paddock (http://www.derbytrail.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=2)
-   -   Mullins/Gato Go Win SCR story emerging (http://www.derbytrail.com/forums/showthread.php?t=28837)

gales0678 04-06-2009 02:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kasept
Mullins defends detention barn actions
by Ed DeRosa

Jeff Mullins was not happy that New York stewards scratched Gato Go Win from the Bay Shore Stakes (G2) on April 4 at Aqueduct due to a detention barn violation, but the Southern California-based trainer saw a bright side to the situation.

Had security personnel at the Aqueduct detention barn not scolded Mullins for administering AirPower to Gato Go Win, then the trainer most likely would have also administered the drug to I Want Revenge before the Wood Memorial Stakes (G1) later on the program.

I Want Revenge won the Wood despite a troubled trip, and the Stephen Got Even colt is one of the favorites for the Kentucky Derby Presented by Yum! Brands (G1). Joe Mahoney, a spokesman for the New York State Racing and Wagering Board, said Sunday that I Want Revenge was under surveillance in the security barn prior to racing, and that his connections did not violate any rules concerning his prerace preparations.

Mullins blamed Aqueduct’s security personnel for the mix-up, saying that they should have confiscated anything that did not belong in the detention barn.

“They looked at everything I carried in, so when they let me through [with AirPower], in my mind, everything was fine,” Mullins said. “Everything was out in the open. Two investigators watched me give the horse the treatment then five minutes later they wanted to see it. If they saw the AirPower and dosing syringe on me the whole time, then why didn’t they stop me?

“If they hadn’t stopped me after I gave [AirPower] to Gato Go Win, then I would have done the same with I Want Revenge.”

MORE: http://www.thoroughbredtimes.com/rac...n-Actions.aspx


here is nyra's problem steve - if the above is true , what the heck is nyra allowing him to go in there with this stuff in the 1st place?


can you get mullimns on steve and ask him the tough questions ?

parsixfarms 04-06-2009 02:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by philcski
As for future trips to New York for racing, Mullins said that the only time he would want to race in New York again would be in the Belmont Stakes (G1) if I Want Revenge wins the Derby and Preakness Stakes (G1).

“I’ve never had a good experience anytime I go to New York, and I will avoid New York at all costs,” Mullins said. “I hope to go there one more time with a Derby-Preakness winner, but I won’t be looking for reasons to go.”
Mahoney said that stewards would confer on Mullins’s detention barn violation later this week—most likely on Wednesday.

A real intelligent comment when one considers that NY officials are going to mete out Mullins' penalty, NY owners just bought 50% of I Want Revenge, and Mullins engaged in conduct that could justify him losing the horse.

HaloWishingwell 04-06-2009 03:11 PM

Jeff Mullins walked into the detention barn with Airpower this time but knowing his past, what's not to say he was seeing how much he could get away with in the detention barn? If he wouldn't have been stopped what's not to say his next visit to the barn would have been with something else more potent than Airpower?

Dunbar 04-06-2009 03:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by doll0608
Just to clarify a few things about the detention barns at NYRA:

If you are one minute late to the detention barns you are fined and scratched.

Everything is searched when you go in...All bags are emptied, even your electric cords are checked.
There are security cameras in place in all barns.

You can only bring unopened drinks into the holding area. At first they wouldn't allow gatorade but they allow that now.

You have to have someone with your horse pretty much the whole time. There needs to be someone there for the pre-race vet exam, Lasix, and if you are in a race that is selected fro pre-race CO-2 testing.

As for having NYRA staff handling your horses, No way in hell. The horses are removed from their familiar surroundings and moved into total chaos. There are people moving around, horses in and out. They need someone there that knows the horse and knows how to keep them calm before they race.

This is actually consistent with what Mullins said. If everything was searched and emptied, why didn't they confiscate the Air Power and syringe when he entered?

The attempt to cheat is so outrageously stupid, it's easier for me to believe the guy somehow thought what he was doing was okay. I know that will not be a popular view here, but how else can you explain him trying to do something so stupid when there are security guards and security cameras?

--Dunbar

Honu 04-06-2009 03:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by gales0678
here is nyra's problem steve - if the above is true , what the heck is nyra allowing him to go in there with this stuff in the 1st place?


can you get mullimns on steve and ask him the tough questions ?

R u f uc cking kidding me , like Jeff didnt know it was not allowed to give a horse anything but water orally the day of the race , freaking liar , I dont get him , wtf , the crap doesnt work that much anyway . He will make a mockery of this whole thing ..........stupid ass/s because now he has a case , they let him in with it , he claims stupid and assumes its legal to give anything but water in a horses mouth on raceday , AWESOME JOB!!!!!!!!!

Coach Pants 04-06-2009 03:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by HaloWishingwell
Jeff Mullins walked into the detention barn with Airpower this time but knowing his past, what's not to say he was seeing how much he could get away with in the detention barn? If he wouldn't have been stopped what's not to say his next visit to the barn would have been with something else more potent than Airpower?

:rolleyes:

Hickory Hill Hoff 04-06-2009 03:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Oaklawnfan
Real "Fat Head" potential:D

More like 80's pornstar

pointman 04-06-2009 03:54 PM

I don't know the rules, but I was under the impression that the connections cannot administer anything to the horse in the detention barn and if anything is to be administered, i.e. lasix, it is done by a NYRA vet. If this is not the rule, it should be.

The truth is until the syringe and the horse are tested, who knows what was in that syringe? And if the NYRA people allowed him to administer the drug under their supervision, then the procedures clearly need to be changed.

It seems to me that logic dictates that if he was going to administer it to IWR as well there must have been some reason for it other than to treat a cough, the odds are not too high that he had the only two coughing horses in the detention barn. If it is not for a cough and it doesn't enhance performance, what was the purpose?

As for Mullins comment regarding New York, sorry, Jeff, I don't feel sorry for someone who is unwilling to learn the rules of the racetrack they are racing at, particularly with regard to such big stakes. It sucks that you can't get away with things in New York that you can elsewhere.

SCUDSBROTHER 04-06-2009 05:01 PM

Sicko is gunna have an excuse for everything he does wrong. This is the equivalent of going 80 mph, and saying the cops didn't stop me. Must be cool with the law, or they surely would of let my sorry a-s-s know.

TalkToTheHoof 04-06-2009 05:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pointman
It seems to me that logic dictates that if he was going to administer it to IWR as well there must have been some reason for it other than to treat a cough, the odds are not too high that he had the only two coughing horses in the detention barn. If it is not for a cough and it doesn't enhance performance, what was the purpose?

Good point.

He also sent Air Power along with IWR when the horse went to the security barn before the Gotham last month. Not only does Mullins have the only two coughing horses in the barn, but one of them has had a cough for over a month.

Mullins has no idea if the Air Power was or wasn't administered to IWR before the Gotham. Why should he know what his horses are getting before a race? After all, he's only the trainer. :confused:

pgardn 04-06-2009 05:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Honu
R u f uc cking kidding me , like Jeff didnt know it was not allowed to give a horse anything but water orally the day of the race , freaking liar , I dont get him , wtf , the crap doesnt work that much anyway . He will make a mockery of this whole thing ..........stupid ass/s because now he has a case , they let him in with it , he claims stupid and assumes its legal to give anything but water in a horses mouth on raceday , AWESOME JOB!!!!!!!!!

I dont know if he could have given a response worse
than he did. If he does not know the rules he should lose
his lisence.

Pathological liar. And a cheater.

doll0608 04-06-2009 05:27 PM

I am just going to clarify a few things that need to be addressed in this discussion. In absolutly no way am I defending this scuz ball........

What he was trying to administer to his horse is just a "breathing aid". These products are usually Menthal or Eucalyptus based. They work the same way as "Vicks" works if you put it under your nose. The instructions for these medications are to admister a few hours before the horse "performs". Sometimes we will give a horse Wind-Aide before they gallop for a chronic cough just to clear their airway. However, what this trainer did was a blatant, defience of the rules. I am pretty sure that in Saratoga the rules are posted right in the entry way and it reads that you are not allowed to bring any substances to aid the horses in any way before they race. We have an massage machine that we use daily and that is not even allowed in to the detention barn.

Unless this guy lives under a rock he knew that what he was doing was clearly a violation the rules. I am sure that he didn't walk through the gate with the mouth syringe in clear view and i am almost positive he had to conceal it somewhere on him. He needs to just get over it and face the fact that he got caught with his hand in the cookie jar.

outofthebox 04-06-2009 05:34 PM

Most likely why the security at the entry gate did not catch the "Air Power" bottle was because there was none. Mullins knows it's not allowed in the det. barn, he's no dummy and has been down this road before. So it was placed either an a empty labeled alcohol bottle, or in the syringe in which he was caught with. I've been in the det. barn numerous times and always had my totes or boxes searched, but never my body. And he's actually putting the blame on NYRA security..what a joke this guy is...

docicu3 04-06-2009 05:40 PM

“If they hadn’t stopped me after I gave [AirPower] to Gato Go Win, then I would have done the same with I Want Revenge.”

Mucolytics "Airpower" (medications used to mobilize or clear secretions or surpress cough) are voo doo. They are ineffective in thinning secretions and do nothing to supress cough or dilate bronchi or airways in humans.

Given how likely Mullins was to get caught administering anything in the DB, I can't help but wonder if their was more in this syringe than a useless cough medicine and mucolytic but that the contents was undetectable by conventional drug testing. The whole thing makes no sense as the risk far exceeds the reward as the facts are known and written currently.

Either of these two horses would likely have been scratched if they had real upper respiratory illness why would Mullins take a chance of this magnitude to give a horse a useless substance that has no data to support it's use in humans or horses. It's more likely that we don't know what he actually has or had planned to give his horses.

I would not have come to this conclusion until reading that he planned that both horses would get the same OTC medication.

pointman 04-06-2009 06:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by doll0608
I am just going to clarify a few things that need to be addressed in this discussion. In absolutly no way am I defending this scuz ball........

What he was trying to administer to his horse is just a "breathing aid". These products are usually Menthal or Eucalyptus based. They work the same way as "Vicks" works if you put it under your nose. The instructions for these medications are to admister a few hours before the horse "performs". Sometimes we will give a horse Wind-Aide before they gallop for a chronic cough just to clear their airway. However, what this trainer did was a blatant, defience of the rules. I am pretty sure that in Saratoga the rules are posted right in the entry way and it reads that you are not allowed to bring any substances to aid the horses in any way before they race. We have an massage machine that we use daily and that is not even allowed in to the detention barn.

Unless this guy lives under a rock he knew that what he was doing was clearly a violation the rules. I am sure that he didn't walk through the gate with the mouth syringe in clear view and i am almost positive he had to conceal it somewhere on him. He needs to just get over it and face the fact that he got caught with his hand in the cookie jar.

I appreciate you trying to clearify some of the rules of the detention barn and you obviously have much more knowledge than I do regarding this subject. Here are a few questions that I have that I would appreciate if you or someone else can answer that would shed light on some this.

First, do the rules allow the administration of any substance by syringe to any horse in the detention barn by the connections?

Is anyone allowed to administer a substance in the detention barn other than the NYRA veternarian or under his/her supervision?

Doc, I agree that there certainly needs to be some clarification of the facts. Was a bottle of Air Power found on Mullins or is that what he is claiming the substance in the syringe to be? If it was, why did he feel the need to administer this substance to two horses on Saturday? I agree that if the horses indeed had breathing problems, why were they racing?

The shame of this is that it has a high likelihood of placing a cloud over what was otherwise a terrific performance. IWR showed he could relax, he could move when his rider wanted him to, he didn't mind getting dirt kicked in his face, that he could overcome trouble and move into tight holes. It looked to me that when Talamo was initially blocked in the stretch that he tried to take IWR inside but finding no room, he jerked IWR's head to the outside where there was a tight hole which IWR immediately moved through and once clear he went on in hand without the use of the stick prompting him. It further validated his big Gothem performance regardless the drop in Beyer considering the trip he had. It just amazes me that Mullins would even take the risk of putting himself in this position considering that the spotlight was on him Saturday.

Coach Pants 04-06-2009 06:16 PM

I feel like this thread is a Scooby-Doo episode where Shaggy and Scooby accidentally solve the case.

Danzig 04-06-2009 06:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Coach Pants


i'm the boogie man....

Danzig 04-06-2009 06:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by randallscott35
Mullins simply missed the "No Syringes" sign on the way into the detention barn. No biggie.


right below the no smoking sign?

doll0608 04-06-2009 06:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by pointman
I appreciate you trying to clearify some of the rules of the detention barn and you obviously have much more knowledge than I do regarding this subject. Here are a few questions that I have that I would appreciate if you or someone else can answer that would shed light on some this.

First, do the rules allow the administration of any substance by syringe to any horse in the detention barn by the connections?

Is anyone allowed to administer a substance in the detention barn other than the NYRA veternarian or under his/her supervision?

Doc, I agree that there certainly needs to be some clarification of the facts. Was a bottle of Air Power found on Mullins or is that what he is claiming the substance in the syringe to be? If it was, why did he feel the need to administer this substance to two horses on Saturday? I agree that if the horses indeed had breathing problems, why were they racing?

The shame of this is that it has a high likelihood of placing a cloud over what was otherwise a terrific performance. IWR showed he could relax, he could move when his rider wanted him to, he didn't mind getting dirt kicked in his face, that he could overcome trouble and move into tight holes. It looked to me that when Talamo was initially blocked in the stretch that he tried to take IWR inside but finding no room, he jerked IWR's head to the outside where there was a tight hole which IWR immediately moved through and once clear he went on in hand without the use of the stick prompting him. It further validated his big Gothem performance regardless the drop in Beyer considering the trip he had. It just amazes me that Mullins would even take the risk of putting himself in this position considering that the spotlight was on him Saturday.

I know that some trainers feel that it is important to rinse the horses mouth out before putting the bridle on. When NYRA implemented the rules we opted to not even press the issue and not bring any type of mouth syringe in the barn. I am not sure if you can even bring these in empty or not.

The only vets allowed into the detention area are the state vets and the only medication they are allowed to administer is lasix. I remember the first year of the detention barn a horse was colicing which needed immediate attention by the trainers own vet. Every medication, needle and syringe brought into and out of the barn was closely monitored by security and the state veterinarians. As soon as the horse was stable enough to leave the barn, the horse, trainer, groom and vet were all walked out together escorted by security. NYRA takes this detention procedure very seriously, it was not implemented just to please the public. Also, some trainers were trying to get around the 6 hour hold by having vets give medications right before their horses were sent over. They would send the horses over with dried blood on their neck. After a week of these findings the state vets had a meeting with track veterinarians telling them that if they were found to have done this they would be punished and the horse would be scratched. NYRA has tried to do the best they can do. Yes cheaters will always find a way to cheat.

Danzig 04-06-2009 06:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by philcski
As for future trips to New York for racing, Mullins said that the only time he would want to race in New York again would be in the Belmont Stakes (G1) if I Want Revenge wins the Derby and Preakness Stakes (G1).

“I’ve never had a good experience anytime I go to New York, and I will avoid New York at all costs,” Mullins said. “I hope to go there one more time with a Derby-Preakness winner, but I won’t be looking for reasons to go.”
Mahoney said that stewards would confer on Mullins’s detention barn violation later this week—most likely on Wednesday.



Good. DON'T EVER COME BACK!

oh, what--it's new yorks fault this guy is a moron/idiot/imbecile/cheater?!?! nice. the rules are clear. no race day except salix (lasix). that means NO race day, not 'no race day unless you have a mullet, repeat offenses, and are from out of state'. just how clear do they have to be?


the owners are culpable as well, as they probably will keep him as trainer. hell, they hired him to begin with, they must like his mode of operation. i doubt ieah has an issue with how he does things.


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 01:26 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.