Laurel Park to cancel weekend’s racing * The Racing Biz

The dogs were up at Laurel Park in April after the shtudown of the track. Photo by The Racing Biz.

The Maryland Jockey Club will not race December 3-5 as state racing stakeholders scramble to put the brakes on a sudden cluster of equine fatalities.

“While racing is suspended, the Maryland Thoroughbred Horsemen’s Association and the Maryland Jockey Club are working with industry experts to analyze surface composition and maintenance procedures directed at the safest possible racing surface,” the groups said in a statement, adding, “The Maryland racing industry remains laser focused on this problem and collectively pledges to do whatever is necessary to ensure that Maryland’s historic racing industry remains world-class.”

Seven horses have perished as a result of fractures sustained during races or in morning training on the newly renovated Laurel Park dirt surface in a cluster that began November 6, and an eighth collapsed while galloping and died as a result of what the Maryland Racing Commission report calls “sudden death.”

The decision not to race this weekend was among the recommendations made by John Passero, the former longtime MJC track superintendent.

“I said, the best thing I think can happen is, I wouldn’t race Friday, Saturday, or Sunday,” Passero said. “Give yourself some time to get everything straightened out.”

The unexpected cluster of deaths, coming just a couple of months after Laurel’s newly renovated dirt course reopened, set off alarm bells within the industry and caused a flurry of meetings to take place over this past weekend and into this week.

“We’re all over this thing,” said Michael Hopkins, Racing Commission executive director.