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Martin Dwyer given seven weeks suspension

  March 21 , 2013
   

English jockey Martin Dwyer has been suspended by the Stewards of the Royal Western India Turf Club for seven weeks starting from April 6 to May 31 for not permitting Ice Age to run on merits. Ice Age had cut an erratic course during the race and even bled after the race.


Martin Dwyer, devastated by suspension.


There was violent protest by the public following the loss of Ice Age and the Stewards had declared the horse as a non-starter. The Stewards reportedly did not consider the fact that the horse bled, thereby compromising the performance of the horse and the horse cutting an erratic course. The 56-day suspension effectively works out to about eight months of racing under RWITC rules of racing. With the British season getting into full swing, there is racing all the seven days of the week.

The inquiry to look into the running of Ice Age had generated unprecedented interest with a full house present for the hearing with nine club stewards and two state government nominees including Director General of Police (Anti-Corruption) Raj Khilnani acting as jurors at a meeting held after the last race on Thursday.

Trainer Cooji Katrak who lost about 40 horses following Ice Age`s erratic running, reportedly went against the jockey, accusing him of stopping the horse. His version appeared to be completely in variance from what he had stated in the preliminary enquiry. Ice Age had bled even after its previous run as it had been scoped by one of the leading vets practising at RWITC. This matter has not been enquired into by the Stewards despite records being available to check this fact. How Ice Age was entered to race by the trainer within a short span of time is something that Stewards have not bothered to look into. There was also no reported track work of the horse from its previous run to the controversial one. The horse has run eight times and yet to break the maidens` ranks.

There is not a single instance of a jockey or trainer being punished in the history of racing in RWITC after the horse had burst a blood vessel during the race. For that matter at any racing centre in India.

The punishment, which is to last till May 31, is subject to appeal and Dwyer has the option of filing a plea against the verdict with the club`s Board of Appeal within 72 hours of receiving an official letter from the stipendiary stewards.

It is learnt that Martin Dwyer will be appealing against the suspension.

 
 
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Total Comments : 4
Posted by miraclechip on ( March 22 , 2013 )
It just makes you wonder what would have been the case if these stewards were inthe real Judiciary! Dwyer had to run for cover from pelting stones at the courtyard. A nominal fine and a Three days suspension would have been more than sufficient in this particular case. The trainers stand on this issue is indeed something very low for one of his stature.
 
Posted by Sanjeev Buddhdev on ( March 22 , 2013 )
As a horse racing fan and Indian who`s seen a tens/hundreds of thousands of races worldwide this decision really brings Indian racing to shame. How can anyone take Indian racing seriously when the mob rules and the stewards act to appease the mob mentality? Indian racing is a laughing stock right now.

The horse hung right, the jockey had the whip in the correct hand but there is nothing you can do that quickly.

Shame on the stewards, shame on India, shame on the trainer and shame on the press for not stating the obvious that the horse hung for whatever reason (maybe the nose bleed) and it wasn`t the jockeys fault. I hope they have the decency to at least overturn the decision on appeal as the jockey will be losing his livlihood at the busiest time of UK racing through no fault of his own.

I have no idea why the UK jockey club adheres to Indian stewards decisions but I very much doubt you`ll see many UK jockeys head to India in the future.
 
Posted by Robert Gibson on ( March 23 , 2013 )
I am a British racing fan of 40 years and a lover of India (I lived in Mumbai from 1997 to 2001). I am very heartened by the sanity of the comments on this forum just as I am disheartened by the insanity of the verdict. To RWITC`s credit, they make the video available to all, but it makes a total mockery of their stewards` verdict. Here in the UK there is general disbelief at what has happened, and I think a very real chance that the BHA will not uphold the ban if appealed. God help British jockeys in front of Indian stewards next year if that happens...
 
Posted by Ros on ( March 22 , 2013 )
Words fail me.
Since the RWITC is so keen on transparency, perhaps they will reveal to us the evidence on which they have deprived a jockey of his livelihood.
Hopefully sense will prevail at the appeal level.
If not, it is time for reciprocating jurisdictions to look into the merits of a case, otherwise they are just as liable for gross injustice.
As for the Trainer doing a u-turn and blaming the jockey in total, I am sure no one is in the least surprised. Par for the course, I’d say. Time for the jockeys association to boycott these low lives.
 
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