The
Thoroughbred is a
horse breed best known for its use in
horse racing. Although the
word "thoroughbred" is sometimes used to refer to any breed of
purebred horse, it technically refers only
to the Thoroughbred breed. Thoroughbreds are considered a "
hot-blooded" horse, known for their
agility, speed and spirit.
The
Thoroughbred as it is known today was first developed in 17th and
18th century England
, when native
mare were crossbred with imported Arabian stallions. All modern Thoroughbreds
can trace their pedigrees to three stallions originally imported
into England in the 1600s and 1700s, and to 74
foundation mares of English and
Oriental (Arabian, Turkoman or
Barb)
blood.
During the 1700s and 1800s, the Thoroughbred
breed spread throughout the world; they were imported into North America starting in 1730 and into
Australia, Europe,
Japan
and South America
during the 1800s. Millions of Thoroughbreds exist worldwide
today, with over 118,000
foals registered
each year worldwide.
Thoroughbreds are used mainly for racing, but are also bred for
other riding disciplines, such as
show
jumping,
combined training,
dressage,
polo, and
fox hunting. They are also commonly
cross-bred with other breeds to create new breeds
or to improve existing ones, and have been influential in the
creation of many important breeds, such as the
Quarter Horse, the
Standardbred, the
Anglo-Arabian, and various
Warmblood breeds.
Thoroughbred racehorses perform with maximum exertion, which has
resulted in high rates of accidents and other health problems.
Racing has been proven to have a higher fatality rate than all
other legal human and animal
sports. Also,
Thoroughbreds are prone to other health complications, including
bleeding from the lungs, low
fertility,
abnormally small hearts and a small hoof to body mass ratio. There
are several theories for the reasons behind the prevalence of
accidents and health problems in the Thoroughbred breed, and
research continues into how to reduce the accident rate and treat
those animals that are injured.
Terminology
The Thoroughbred is a distinct breed of horse, though people
sometimes refer to a
purebred horse of any
breed as a "thoroughbred". The term for any horse or other animal
that is derived from a single
breed line is
"
purebred". While the term probably came
into general use because the English Thoroughbred's
General Stud Book was one of the first
breed registries created, in modern
usage, horse breeders consider it incorrect to refer to any horse
or other animal as a "thoroughbred" except for horses belonging to
the Thoroughbred breed. Nonetheless, breeders of other species of
purebred animals may use the two terms interchangeably, though the
term "thoroughbred" is not used as often for describing purebred
animals of other species. The term is a
proper noun referring to
this specific breed, although it is often not capitalized,
especially in non-specialist publications, and outside the US; for
example, the Australian Stud Book, the
New York Times, and the
BBC do not capitalize the word.
Breed characteristics

Thoroughbreds have a well-chiseled
head.
The typical Thoroughbred ranges between 15.2 to 17.0
hands (hh) high ( ), averaging 16 hh ( ).
They are most often
bay,
seal brown,
chestnut,
black, or
gray.
Less
common colors, recognized in the United States
include roan and
palomino. White is very rare, but is also recognized
color separate from gray. The face and lower legs may be
marked with white, but white will generally
not appear on the body. Coat patterns that have more than one color
on the body, such as
Pinto or
Appaloosa, are not recognized by mainstream breed
registries. Good quality Thoroughbreds have a well-chiseled head on
a long neck, high
withers, a deep chest, a
short back, good depth of hindquarters, a lean body, and long legs.
Thoroughbreds are classified among the "hot-blooded" breeds, which
are animals bred for agility and speed and are generally considered
spirited and bold.
Thoroughbreds that are born in the Northern
Hemisphere
are officially considered a year older on the first
of January each year; those born in the Southern
Hemisphere
officially are one year older on the first of
August. These artificial dates have been set to enable the
standardization of races and other competitions for horses in
certain age groups.
History
Beginnings in England
Early racing
Flat racing existed in England by at least 1174,
when four mile races took place at Smithfield
, in London
.
Racing continued at fairs and markets throughout the
Middle Ages and into the reign of King
James I of England. It was then that
handicapping, a system of adding weight
to attempt to equalize a horse's chances of winning as well as
improved training procedures, began to be used. During the reigns
of
Charles II, Queen
Anne of Great Britain, King
William III, and King
George I the foundation of the
Thoroughbred was laid. Under James' grandson, Charles II, a keen
racegoer and owner, and James' great-granddaughter Queen Anne,
royal support was given to racing and the breeding of race horses.
With royal support, horse racing became popular with the public,
and by 1727, a newspaper devoted to racing, the
Racing
Calendar, was founded. Devoted exclusively to the sport, it
recorded race results and advertised upcoming meets.
Foundation stallions
All modern
Thoroughbreds trace back to three stallions imported into England
from the
Middle East in the late 17th and early
18th centuries: the Byerley Turk
(1680s), the Darley Arabian (1704),
and the Godolphin Arabian
(1729). Other stallions of oriental breeding were less
influential, but still made noteworthy contributions to the breed.
These included the Alcock Arabian, D'Arcy's White Turk, Leedes
Arabian, and Curwen's Bay Barb. Another was the Brownlow Turk, who,
among other attributes, is thought to be largely responsible for
the
gray coat color in Thoroughbreds.
The addition of Arabian bloodlines to the native English mares
ultimately led to the creation of the
General Stud Book (GSB) in 1791 and the
practice of official
registration of
horses.
Each of the three major
foundation
sires was, coincidentally, the ancestor of a grandson or
great-great-grandson who was the only male descendant to perpetuate
each respective horse's male line:
Matchem
was the only descendant of his grandsire, the Godolphin Arabian, to
maintain a
male line to the present;
the Byerly Turk's male line was preserved by
Herod (or King Herod), a great-great-grandson;
and the male line of the Darley Arabian owes its existence to
great-great-grandson
Eclipse, who
was the dominant racehorse of his day and never defeated. One
genetic study indicates that 95% of all male Thoroughbreds trace
their direct male line (via the
Y
chromosome) to the Darley Arabian. However, in modern
Thoroughbred pedigrees, most horses have more crosses to the
Godolphin Arabian (13.8%) than to the Darley Arabian (6.5%) when
all lines of descent (maternal and paternal) are considered.
Further, as a percentage of contributions to current Thoroughbred
bloodlines, Curwen's Bay Barb (4.2%) appears more often than the
Byerly Turk (3.3%). The majority of modern Thoroughbreds alive
today trace to a total of only 27 or 28 stallions from the 18th and
19th centuries.
Foundation mares
The
mares used as foundation breeding
stock came from a variety of breeds, some of which, such as the
Irish Hobby, had developed in northern
Europe prior to the 13th century. Other mares were of oriental
breeding, including Barb,
Turk and
other bloodlines. The 19th century researcher Bruce Lowe
identified 50 mare "families" in the Thoroughbred breed, later
augmented by other researchers to 74. However, it is probable that
fewer genetically unique mare lines existed than Lowe identified.
Recent studies of the
mtDNA of
Thoroughbred mares indicate that some of the mare lines thought to
be genetically distinct may actually have had a common ancestor; in
19 mare lines studied, the
haplotypes
revealed that they traced to only 15 unique foundation mares,
suggesting either a common ancestor for foundation mares thought to
be unrelated or recording errors in the GSB.
Later development in Britain
By the end of the 18th century, the English
Classic races had been established.
These are the
St. Leger Stakes,
founded in 1776, the
Epsom Oaks, founded
in 1779, and the
Epsom Derby in 1780.
Later, the
2,000 Guineas
Stakes and the
1,000 Guineas Stakes were founded
in 1809 and 1814. The 1,000 Guineas and the Oaks are
restricted to
fillies, but the others are open
to racehorses of either sex aged three years. The distances of
these races, ranging from to , led to a change in breeding
practices, as breeders concentrated on producing horses that could
race at a younger age than in the past and that had more speed. In
the early 18th century, the emphasis had been on longer races,
up to , that were run in multiple heats. The older style of race
favored older horses, but with the change in distances, younger
horses became preferred.
Selective breeding for speed and racing ability led to improvements
in the size of horses and winning times by the middle of the
19th century.
Bay
Middleton, a winner of the Epsom Derby, stood over
16 hands high, a full hand higher than the Darley Arabian.
Winning times had increased to such a degree that many felt further
improvement by adding additional Arabian bloodlines was impossible.
This was borne out in 1885, when a race was held between a
Thoroughbred, Iambic, considered a mid-grade runner, and the best
Arabian of the time, Asil. The race was over , and although Iambic
was
handicapped by carrying
(63 lbs) more than Asil, he still managed to beat Asil by
20 lengths. An aspect of the modern British breeding
establishment is that they breed not only for flat racing, but also
for
steeplechasing. Up until the end of
the 19th century, Thoroughbreds were bred not only for racing but
also as saddle horses.
Soon after the start of the 20th century, fears that the
English races would be overrun with American-bred Thoroughbreds
because of the closing of US racetracks in the early 1910s, led to
the
Jersey Act of 1913. It prohibited the
registration of any horse in the General Stud Book (GSB) if they
could not show that every ancestor traced to the GSB. This excluded
most American-bred horses, because the 100-year gap between the
founding of the GSB and the American Stud Book meant that most
American-bred horses possessed at least one or two crosses to
horses not registered in the GSB. The act was not repealed until
1949, after which a horse was only required to show that all his
ancestors to the ninth generation were registered in a recognized
Stud Book.
Many felt that the Jersey Act hampered the
development of the British Thoroughbred by preventing breeders in
the United
Kingdom
from using new bloodlines developed outside of the
British Isles.
In America
The first
Thoroughbred horse in the American
Colonies was Bulle Rock, imported in 1730 by Samuel Gist of
Hanover County,
Virginia
. Maryland
and Virginia
were the centers of Colonial Thoroughbred breeding,
along with South
Carolina
and New York
. During the
American Revolution importations of
horses from England practically stopped but were restarted after
the signing of a peace treaty. Two important stallions were
imported around the time of the Revolution;
Messenger in 1788 and
Diomed before that. Messenger left little impact on
the American Thoroughbred, but is considered a foundation sire of
the
Standardbred breed. Diomed,
who won the Derby Stakes in 1780, had a significant impact on
American Thoroughbred breeding, mainly through his son
Sir Archy. John F. Wall, a racing historian, said
that Sir Archy was the "first outstanding stallion we can claim as
native American." He was retired from the racetrack because of lack
of opponents.
After the American Revolution, the center of Thoroughbred breeding
and racing in the United States moved west.
Kentucky
and Tennessee
became notable centers. Andrew Jackson, later
President of the United
States, was a breeder and racer of Thoroughbreds in Tennessee.
Famous match races held in the early 19th century helped
popularize horse racing in the United States.
One took place in
1823, in Long Island,
New York
, between Sir
Henry and American Eclipse.
Another was a
match race between
Boston and
Fashion in 1838 that featured bets of
$20,000 from each side. The last major match races before the
American Civil War were both
between
Lexington and Lecompte.
The first
was held in 1854 in New Orleans, Louisiana
and was won by Lecompte. Lexington's owner
then challenged Lecompte's owner to a rematch, held in 1855 in New
Orleans and won by Lexington. Both of these horses were sons of
Boston, a descendant of Sir Archy. Lexington went on to a career as
a breeding stallion, and led the sires list of number of winners
for sixteen years, fourteen of them in a row.
After the
American Civil War, the
emphasis in American racing changed from the older style of
four-mile (6 km) races in which the horses ran in at least two
heats. The new style of racing involved shorter races not run in
heats, over distances from five
furlongs up
to . This development meant a change in breeding practices, as well
as the age that horses were raced, with younger horses and
sprinters coming to the fore. It was also after the Civil War that
the American Thoroughbred returned to England to race.
Iroquois became the first American-bred
winner of the Epsom Derby in 1881. The success of American-bred
Thoroughbreds in England led to the Jersey Act in 1913, which
limited the importation of American Thoroughbreds into England.
After
World War I, the breeders in
America continued to emphasize speed and early racing age but also
imported horses from England, and this trend continued past World
War II.
After World War
II, Thoroughbred breeding remained centered in Kentucky, but
California
, New York, and Florida
also emerged as important racing and breeding
centers.
Thoroughbreds in the United States have historically been used not
only for racing but also to improve other breeds. The early import,
Messenger, was the foundation of the Standardbred, and Thoroughbred
blood was also instrumental in the development of the
American Quarter Horse. The
foundation stallion of the
Morgan breed
is held by some to have been sired by a Thoroughbred. Between World
War I and World War II, the
U.S.
Army used Thoroughbred stallions
as part of their Remount Service, which was designed to improve the
stock of
cavalry mounts.
In Europe
Thoroughbreds began to be imported to
France
in 1817 and
1818 with the importation of a number of stallions from England,
but initially the sport of horse racing did not prosper in
France. The first Jockey Club in France was not formed until
1833, and in 1834 the racing and regulation functions were split
off to a new society, the
Societe d'Encouragement pour
l'Amelioration des Races de Chevaux en France, better known as
the
Jockey-Club de Paris. The
French Stud Book was founded at the same time by the
government. By 1876, French-bred Thoroughbreds were regularly
winning races in England, and in that year a French breeder-owner
earned the most money in England on the track. World War I almost
destroyed French breeding because of war damage and lack of races.
After the war, the premier French race, the Grand Prix, resumed and
continues to this day. During World War II, French Thoroughbred
breeding did not suffer as it had during the first World War, and
thus was able to compete on an equal footing with other countries
after the war.
Organized
racing in Italy
started in
1837, when race meets were established in Florence and Naples and a
meet in Milan was founded in 1842. Modern flat racing came
to Rome in 1868. Later importations, including the Derby Stakes
winners Ellington (1856) and Melton (1885), came to Italy before
the end of the 19th century. Modern Thoroughbred breeding in
Italy is mostly associated with the
breeding program of
Federico Tesio, who started his breeding
program in 1898. Tesio was the breeder of
Nearco, one of the dominant sires of Thoroughbreds in
the later part of the 20th century.
Other
countries in Europe have Thoroughbred breeding programs, including
Germany
, Russia
, Poland
, and
Hungary
. However, none of these countries have made
a large mark on the breeding of Thoroughbreds.
In Australia and New Zealand
Horses arrived in
Australia with the
First Fleet in 1788 along with the
earliest colonists. Although horses of part-Thoroughbred blood were
imported into Australia during the late 1700s, it is thought that
the first pureblood Thoroughbred was a stallion named
Northumberland who was imported from England in 1802 as a
coach horse sire.
By 1810, the first
formal race meets were organized in Sydney
, and by 1825
the first mare of proven Thoroughbred bloodlines arrived to join
the Thoroughbred stallions already there. In 1825, the
Sydney Turf Club, the first true
racing club in Australia, was formed. Throughout the 1830s, the
Australian colonies began to import Thoroughbreds, almost
exclusively for racing purposes, and to improve the local stock.
Each colony formed its own racing clubs and held its own races.
Gradually, the individual clubs were integrated into one
overarching organization, now known as the
Australian Racing Board.
Thoroughbreds from Australia were imported
into New
Zealand
in the 1840s and 1850s, with the first direct
importation from England occurring in 1862.
In other areas
Thoroughbreds have been exported to many other areas of the world
since the breed was created. Oriental horses were imported into
South Africa from the late 1600s in
order to improve the local stock through crossbreeding. Horse
racing was established there in the late 1700s and early 1800s, and
Thoroughbreds were imported in increasing numbers.
The first
Thoroughbred stallions arrived in Argentina
in 1853, but the first mares did not arrive until
1865. The Argentine Stud Book was first published in 1893.
Thoroughbreds were imported into Japan
from 1895,
although it was not until after World War II that Japan began a
serious breeding and racing business involving
Thoroughbreds.
Registration, breeding, and population
About 37,000 Thoroughbred
foals are
registered each year in North America, with the largest numbers
being registered in the states of Kentucky, Florida and California.
Australia is the second largest producer of Thoroughbreds in the
world with close to 30,000 broodmares which produce about 18,250
foals annually. Britain produces about 5,000 foals a year, and
worldwide, there are more than 195,000 active
broodmare, or females being used for breeding,
and 118,000 newly registered foals in 2006 alone. The
Thoroughbred industry is a large
agribusiness, generating around
$34 billion in revenue annually in the United States and
providing about 470,000 jobs through a network of farms,
training centers and
race tracks.
Unlike a significant number of registered breeds today, a horse
cannot be registered as a Thoroughbred (with
The Jockey Club registry) unless conceived
by "live cover"; that is, by the witnessed natural mating of a mare
and a stallion.
Artificial
insemination (AI) and
embryo
transfer (ET), though commonly used and allowable in many other
horse breed registries, cannot be used with Thoroughbreds. One
reason is that a greater possibility of error exists in assigning
parentage with AI, and although DNA and blood testing eliminate
many of those concerns, AI still requires more detailed record
keeping. The main reason, however, may be economic: a stallion has
a limited number of mares who can be serviced by live cover. Thus,
the practice prevents an oversupply of Thoroughbreds, though modern
management still allows a stallion to live cover more mares in a
season than once was thought possible. By allowing a stallion to
cover only a couple hundred mares a year rather than the couple
thousand possible with AI, it also preserves the high prices paid
for horses of the finest or most popular lineages.
Concern exists that the
closed stud
book and tightly regulated population of the Thoroughbred is at
risk of loss of
genetic diversity
because of the level of inadvertent
inbreeding inevitable in such a small population.
According to one study, 78% of
alleles in the
current population can be traced to 30 foundation animals, 27
of which are male. Ten foundation mares account for 72% of maternal
(tail-female) lineages, and, as noted above, one stallion appears
in 95% of tail male lineages. Thoroughbred pedigrees are generally
traced through the
maternal line, called the
"distaff" line. The line that a horse comes from will often
determine the price paid regardless of the actual talent or
potential of the horse.
Value
Prices on Thoroughbreds vary greatly, depending on age,
pedigree,
conformation, and other market factors.
In 2007,
Keeneland Sales, a United
States based sales company, sold 9,124 horses at auction, with a
total value of $814,401,000, which gives an average price of
$89,259. As a whole for the United States in 2007, The Jockey Club
auction statistics indicate that the average
weanling sold for $44,407, the average yearling
sold for $55,300, average sale price for two-year-olds was $61,843,
broodmares averaged $70,150, and horses over two and broodmare
prospects sold for an average of $53,243. For Europe, the July 2007
Tattersall's Sale sold 593 horses at auction, with a total for the
sale of 10,951,300
guineas,
for an average of 18,468 guineas. Doncaster Bloodstock Sales,
another British sales firm, in 2007 sold 2,248 horses for a total
value of 43,033,881 guineas, making an average of 15,110 guineas
per horse.
Averages, however, can be deceiving. For example, at the 2007 Fall
Yearling sale at Keeneland, 3,799 young horses sold for a total of
$385,018,600, for an average of $101,347 per horse. However, that
average sales price reflected a variation that included at least 19
horses that sold for only $1,000 each and 34 that sold for over
$1,000,000 apiece.
The value of a Thoroughbred may be influenced by the purse money it
wins. In 2007, Thoroughbred racehorses earned a total of
$1,217,854,602 in all placings, an average earnings per starter of
$16,924. In addition, the track record of a race horse may
influence its future value as a breeding animal. Stud fees for
stallions that enter breeding can range from $2,500 to $300,000 per
mare in the United States, and from ₤2000
pounds to £75,000 pounds or more in
Britain.
Uses

Race horses competing on turf (grass
racetrack) in Germany.
Most races in Europe are run on turf, while most races in the
United States are run on dirt.
Although the Thoroughbred is primarily bred for
racing, the breed is also used for
show jumping and
combined training because of its athleticism, and
many retired and retrained race horses become fine family riding
horses,
dressage horses, and youth show
horses. The larger horses are sought after for hunter/jumper and
dressage competitions, whereas the smaller horses are in demand as
polo ponies.
Horse racing
Thoroughbred horses are primarily bred for racing under
saddle at the
gallop.
Thoroughbreds are often known for being either distance runners or
sprinters, and their
conformation usually reflects what they
have been bred to do. Sprinters are usually well muscled, while
stayers, or distance runners, tend to be smaller and
slimmer. The size of the horse is one consideration for buyers and
trainers when choosing a potential racehorse. Although there have
been famous racehorses of every height, from
Man o' War and
Secretariat who both stood at 16.2 hands
to
Hyperion (15.1), the best
racehorses are generally of average size. Larger horses mature more
slowly and have more stress on their legs and feet, making them
more predisposed to lameness. Smaller horses are considered by some
to be at a disadvantage due to their shorter stride and a tendency
of other horses to bump them, especially in the starting gate.
Historically, Thoroughbreds have steadily increased in size: the
average height of a Thoroughbred in 1700 was about 13.3 hands
high. By 1876 this had increased to 15.3. The United States
champion racer
Forego, foaled in 1970, stood
17 hands. Statistically, fewer than 50% of all race horses
ever win a race, and less than 1% ever win a
stakes race such as the
Kentucky Derby or the
Epsom Derby.
In 2007, there were 71,959 horses who started in races in the
United States, and the average Thoroughbred racehorse in the United
States and Canada ran 6.33 times in that year. In Australia, there
were 31,416 horses in training during 2007, and those horses
started 194,066 times for
AUD$375,512,579 of
prize money. During 2007, in Japan, there were 23,859 horses in
training and those horses started 182,614 times for
AUD$857,446,268 of prize money. In Britain, the British
Racing Authority states there were 8,556 horses in training for
flat racing for 2007, and those horses started 60,081 times in
5,659 races.
Horses finished with a racing career that are not suitable for
breeding purposes often become riding horses or other equine
companions. A number of agencies exist to help make the transition
from the racetrack to another career, or to help find retirement
homes for ex-racehorses.
Other disciplines
In addition to racing, Thoroughbreds compete in
eventing,
show jumping
and
dressage at the highest levels of
international competition, including the
Olympics. They are also
used as
show hunters,
steeplechasers, and in
western riding speed events such as
barrel racing.
Mounted police divisions employ them in
non-competitive work, and recreational riders also use them.
Thoroughbreds are one of the most common breeds for use in
polo in the United States. They are often seen in the
fox hunting field as well.
Crossbreeding
Thoroughbreds are often crossed with horses of other breeds to
create new breeds or improve existing ones. They have been
influential on many modern breeds, including the
American Quarter Horse, the
Standardbred, and possibly the
Morgan, a breed that went on to influence many
of the
gaited breeds in North America. Other
common crosses with the Thoroughbred include crossbreeding with
Arabian bloodlines to produce the
Anglo-Arabian as well as with the
Irish Draught to produce the
Irish Sport Horse. Thoroughbreds are often
crossed with various
Warmblood breeds due
to their refinement and performance capabilities.
Health issues
Although Thoroughbreds are seen in the
hunter-jumper world and in other disciplines,
modern Thoroughbreds are primarily bred for speed, and racehorses
have a very high rate of accidents as well as other health
problems.
One tenth of all Thoroughbreds suffer orthopedic problems,
including fractures. Current estimates indicate that there are 1.5
career-ending breakdowns for every 1,000 horses starting a race in
the United States, an average of two horses per day. The State of
California reported a particularly high rate of injury, 3.5 per
1000 starts.
Other countries report lower rates of
injury, with the United Kingdom having 0.9 injuries/1000 starts
(1990–1999) and the courses in Victoria, Australia
producing a rate of 0.44 injuries/1000 starts
(1989–2004). Thoroughbreds also have other health concerns,
including a majority of animals who are prone to bleeding from the
lungs (
Exercise
Induced Pulmonary Hemorrhage), 10% with low fertility, and 5%
with abnormally small hearts. Thoroughbreds also tend to have
smaller hooves relative to their body mass than other breeds, with
thin soles and walls and a lack of cartilage mass, which
contributes to foot soreness, the most common source of lameness in
racehorses.
Selective breeding
One argument for the health issues involving Thoroughbreds suggests
that
inbreeding is the culprit. It has
also been suggested that capability for speed is enhanced in an
already swift animal by raising
muscle mass,
a form of
selective breeding that
has created animals designed to win
horse
races. Thus, according to one theory, the modern Thoroughbred
travels faster than its skeletal structure can support.
Veterinarian
Robert Miller
states that "We have selectively bred for speeds that the anatomy
of the horse cannot always cope with."
Poor breeding may be encouraged by the fact that many horses are
sent to the breeding shed following an injury. If the injury is
linked to a
conformational
fault, the fault is likely to be passed to the next generation.
Additionally, some breeders will have a veterinarian perform
straightening procedures on a horse with crooked legs. This can
help increase the horse's price at a sale and perhaps help the
horse have a sounder racing career, but the genes for poor legs
will still be passed on.
Excess stress
A high
accident rate may also occur because Thoroughbreds, particularly in
the United
States
, are first raced as 2-year-olds, well before they
are completely mature. Though they may appear full-grown and
are in superb muscular condition, their bones are not fully formed.
However, catastrophic injury rates are higher in 4- and 5-year-olds
than in 2- and 3-year-olds. Some believe that correct, slow
training of a young horse (including foals) may actually be
beneficial to the overall soundness of the animal. This is because,
during the training process, microfractures occur in the leg
followed by bone remodeling. If the remodeling is given sufficient
time to heal, the bone becomes stronger. If proper remodeling
occurs before hard training and racing begins, the horse will have
a stronger musculoskeletal system and will have a decreased chance
of injury.
Studies have shown that track surfaces,
horseshoes with toe grabs, use of certain legal
medications, and high-intensity racing schedules may also
contribute to a high injury rate.
One promising trend is the development of
synthetic surfaces for racetracks, and one of the first tracks to
install such a surface, Turfway Park
in Florence, Kentucky
, saw its rate of fatal breakdowns drop from 24 in
2004–05 to three in the year following Polytrack
installation. The material is not perfected, and some areas
report problems related to winter weather, but studies are
continuing.
Medical challenges
The level of treatment given to injured Thoroughbreds is often more
intensive than for horses of lesser financial value but also
controversial, due in part to the significant challenges in
treating broken bones and other major leg injuries. Leg injuries
that are not immediately fatal still may be life-threatening
because a horse's weight must be distributed evenly on all four
legs to prevent
circulatory problems,
laminitis and other infections. If a horse
loses the use of one leg temporarily, there is the risk that other
legs will break down during the recovery period because they are
carrying an abnormal weight load. While horses periodically lie
down for brief periods of time, a horse cannot remain lying in the
equivalent of a human's "
bed rest" because
of the risk of developing sores, internal damage, and
congestion.
Whenever a racing accident severely injures a well-known horse,
such as the major leg fractures that led to the
euthanization of 2006
Kentucky Derby winner
Barbaro, or 2008 Kentucky Derby runner-up
Eight Belles,
animal
rights groups have denounced the Thoroughbred racing industry.
On the other hand, advocates of racing argue that without horse
racing, far less funding and incentives would be available for
medical and biomechanical research on horses. Although horse racing
is hazardous, veterinary science has advanced. Previously hopeless
cases can now be treated, and earlier detection through advanced
imaging techniques like
scintigraphy can keep at-risk horses off
the track.
See also
Notes
- Merriam-Webster The Merriam-Webster Dictionary of English
Usage p. 905
- Patten Light Horse Breeds pp. 191–195
- Bongianni Simon & Schuster's Guide to Horses and
Ponies section 12
- Montgomery The Thoroughbred pp. 338–354
- Henry All About Horses, pp. 60, 66.
- Phifer Track Talk p. 38
- Wall Famous Running Horses pp. 7–8
- Milner The Godolphin Arabian pp. 3–6
- Wall Famous Running Horses p. 8
- Willett The Thoroughbred p. 25
- Phifer Track Talk p. 45
- Morris Thoroughbred Stallions pp. 1–2
- Milner The Godolphin Arabian p. 140
- Willett The Thoroughbred pp. 38–39
- Willett The Thoroughbred p. 37
- Pickrell "95% of thoroughbreds linked to one superstud" New
Scientist
- Cunningham "Microsatellite diversity" Animal
Genetics
- Erigero "Who's Your Momma III" Animal
Genetics
- Erigero "Who's Your Momma II" Animal
Genetics
- Erigero "New Research Sheds Light on Old Pedigrees"
Animal Genetics
- Willett The Classic Racehorse pp. 34–36
- Willett The Classic Racehorse pp. 39–41
- Willett The Classic Racehorse p. 57
- Derry Horses in Society p. 41
- Willett The Classic Racehorse pp. 111–113
- Willett The Classic Racehorse pp. 71–74
- Willett The Classic Racehorse p. 56
- Robertson History of Thoroughbred Racing in America p.
16
- Bruce The American Stud Book Volume 1 p. 10
- Montgomery The Thoroughbred pp. 131–136
- Wall Famous Running Horses pp. 114–115
- Montgomery The Thoroughbred pp. 142–143
- Montgomery The Thoroughbred pp. 143–147
- Montgomery The Thoroughbred pp. 152–154
- Wall Famous Running Horses p. 119
- Willett The Thoroughbred pp. 159–163
- Willett The Thoroughbred pp. 165–171
- Willett The Thoroughbred pp. 175–176
- Evans The Horse pp. 28–29
- Evans The Horse pp. 23–27
- Evans The Horse p. 36
- Derry Horses in Society pp. 136–137
- Buecker Fort Robinson pp. 27–29
- Willett The Thoroughbred pp. 119–122
- Willett The Classic Racehorse p. 30
- Willett The Thoroughbred pp. 125–128
- Willett The Thoroughbred p.134
- Willett The Thoroughbred pp. 139–143
- Willett The Thoroughbred pp. 180–82
- Willett The Thoroughbred pp. 182–187
- Willett The Classic Racehorse pp. 162–169
- Willett The Classic Racehorse pp. 202–211
- Willett The Thoroughbred pp. 202–205
- Willett The Thoroughbred pp. 213–215
- Willett The Thoroughbred pp. 233–235
- Willett The Thoroughbred pp. 238–40
- Equine Research Breeding Management and Foal
Development p. 349
- Napier Blood will tell pp. 17–18
- Traditionally, the obsolete guinea, £1.05, formerly 21
shillings, is retained as the unit
of account for these sales.
- Phifer Track Talk p. 26
- Montgomery The Thoroughbred pp. 183–186
- Bongianni Champion Horses pp. 112–113
- Bongianni Champion Horses p. 56
- Hedge Horse Conformation p. 35
- Barakat "Why Size Matters" Equus
- Phifer Track Talk p. 24
- Jones "Fox Hunting in America" American Heritage
Magazine
- Rosenblatt "Barbaro's Legacy" Washington
Post
- Oke, "Understanding and Preventing Catastrophic Injuries",
The Horse, 26–36.
- Arthur Diagnosis and Management of Lameness in the
Horse p. 872
- Kluger "Bred for Speed...Built for Trouble" Time
Magazine
- Finley "Sadly, No Way to Stop Deaths" New York Daily
News
- Miller "And They Call Us Horse Lovers" Cowboy
Magazine
- Bourke "Fatalities on racecourses in Victoria" Proceedings
of the 10th International Conference of Racing Analysts and
Veterinarians
- Oikawa "Effect of restructuring of a racetrack on the
occurrence of racing injuries in thoroughbred horses" Journal
of Equine Veterinary Science
- Pedulla "Injury steps up scrutiny on Triple Crown
Schedule" USA Today
- Walker "Barbaro's injury highlighted problems, medical
advances" Baltimore Sun
- Grady "State of the Art to Save Barbaro" The New
York Times
- Mackey "Stress fractures of the humerus, radius and tibia in
horses" Veterinary Radiology
Footnotes
References
- which cites
- which cites
- which cites
External links