Media Coverage
SPORTS ILLUSTRATED
May 2008
Time For Some Horse Sense
Selena Roberts
GABRIEL
SAEZ speaks in a voice that sounds as if it travels through
cotton, each word soft and muffled, suggesting a persona more
horse whisperer than whip snapper."People treat me like a
monster," Saez said as he leaned on a Ping-Pong table in the
jockeys' room at Pimlico Race Course last Friday, "but I
keep going."
For an instant Saez seemed almost worthy of
a PETA pity party. The animal-rights group toted signs near
the Pimlico gates last Saturday in Baltimore to protest
horse-racing
cruelty, with the filly Eight Belles as their poster martyr and her former rider Saez as
their sworn enemy.
As if the 20-year-old Panamanian jockey could have looked any more like a victim: His
cheeks
were as hollow as potholes from the jockey diet, which has no
book because there would be no pages required. In preparing
to race on the Preakness undercard he shed two pounds from
his thumb-sized frame by sitting for 20 minutes in a sweatbox that
could steam clams.
Here was the incredible shrinking villain. Fair or not, someone had to be to blame for
the
chilling ending at Churchill Downs on May 3, when Eight Belles
broke her two front legs after finishing second in the Kentucky
Derby and had to be euthanized on the track. So PETA fixed
on Saez, accusing him of whipping the filly mercilessly-he struck
her at least eight times down the stretch-and calling
for his suspension. Trainer Larry Jones defended his jockey,
explaining the whip was meant to keep Eight Belles from drifting
into the rail. But just when my inner Mister Ed started to go
sweet on Saez, he defended himself with loopy logic. "The whip is
half a pound, and the horse is 1,200 pounds," he explained.
"It doesn't do anything to the horse."
Who knows the
pain tolerance of a horse? And why beat its hide at all? In a
tight Saturday matinee race aboard Buy the Barrel,
Saez repeatedly flailed his whip down the stretch to win.
"Some horses resent the whip," says Jones, who trains Buy the
Barrel. "But if the horse responds when you hit it, you owe it
to the public to try to get that horse the best place you can
because they put their money on the horse to do it."
This calculating view of profiteering off the bamboo legs of racehorses-bred for speed at
the expense of durability in the rush for money-is part of Jones's job, but it's also
the
kind of philosophy that sends PETA's faux fur flying. In his
white cowboy hat the folksy Jones is one of many likable horsemen
who cannot wrap their 10-gallon heads around the
changing Marley & Me world order: Animals are the
new people. Long removed from an agrarian society, we've
morphed into technobots in an often isolating age of iPod earbuds,
text messages and impersonal e-mails. Sometimes, pets provide
the only authentic connections for those weary of facing RE: MEMO
every day.
Pets are uncomplicated and unplugged. This culture shake-up is catnip to PETA as it
gains momentum and members (1.8 million strong), while amplifying the outcry over
four-legged victims at every turn. On behalf of dogs, the group used the images of
mutilated
pit bulls and Michael Vick. With horse racing, a photo of Eight
Belles collapsed on the track is the picketers' pick. Visceral
visuals work. And while PETA rages
against horse doping, faulty breeding methods and the practice of turning thoroughbreds
into
pet food when their money-earning days are over, it has a face and
a prop to bolster its cause with Saez and his whip.Take
the whip away and vanquish a symbol of cruelty. This
wouldn't merely be a sop to PETA-it's a move industry types from
legendary jockey Jerry Bailey to race caller Trevor
Denman support if it can help restore credibility to every
owner and trainer who proclaims that the horse's health is a
priority."
I keep getting told the jockey needs the
whip for control," says Dr. Wayne McIlwraith, an equine
orthopedic researcher at Colorado State. "I think we've got reins
to do that."Jones counters with the New Coke approach: "If
they want to go to a lighter
whip, where the horse would still hear the popping sound, I'd be great with that." But
lighter
is still visible. It's public perception that empowers the PETA
point of view and leaves a soft-spoken jockey like Saez
vilified for using the crude tool of his trade."Perception?"
Jones said with a smile, standing next to a truck bearing a
green
Eight Belles bumper sticker. "I know it's about perception. But I also know some people
who say they use whips in the bedroom. Now to me that wouldn't be good. But hey, it's what they like."
Eight Belles didn't have a choice.
Coalition To Ban
Horse-Drawn Carriages
A Committee of the Coalition For New York City Animals, Inc.
Contact:
The Coalition for
NYC Animals, Inc.
P.O. Box 20247
Park West Station
New York, NY 10025
e-mail
Coalition@banhdc.org