19/11/2025
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Justify’s Controversial Triple Crown:🇺🇲👇
Justify, trained by Bob Baffert, made history in 2018 by winning the Triple Crown, which includes the Kentucky Derby, the Preakness Stakes, and the Belmont Stakes. He went undefeated in his short but spectacular career, becoming only the second horse to win the Triple Crown without racing as a two-year-old.
However, Justify's path to greatness wasn’t without controversy👇
The Failed Drug Test🐴👇
After winning the Santa Anita Derby (a key prep race for the Kentucky Derby), Justify tested positive for scopolamine, a banned substance. Scopolamine can affect a horse’s performance by acting as a bronchodilator and potentially enhancing stamina — a serious concern in racing.
Why He Was Still Allowed to Run:
The California Horse Racing Board (CHRB) did not act swiftly on the positive test. Instead of disqualifying Justify or holding a hearing before the Kentucky Derby, the case was quietly investigated and later dismissed. The CHRB ruled that the positive test was likely caused by environmental contamination, possibly from jimson w**d (a plant that contains scopolamine) found in hay or feed.
As a result, Justify was not scratched or suspended and went on to compete — and win — in all three legs of the Triple Crown.
Why the Triple Crown Is Contested:🏆🇺🇲
Many critics argue that the CHRB’s handling of the drug test lacked transparency and favored powerful connections. They believe that if the rules had been strictly followed, Justify might have been disqualified from the Santa Anita Derby — and thus ineligible for the Kentucky Derby, as qualification points come from these prep races.
This has led some to question the integrity of his Triple Crown title, even though it remains officially recognized.
27/05/2025
Most horse's show signs of becoming colic victims before it really reach that stage,3 tings, stools very hard in balls,not much stools,and then the animal is passing air that is very strong with stomach toxins,when you seeing these signs,you must clean the horses gut before to late,that's why thy guts lap when rolling to ease the cutting pain in they belly that gas and back up stool is deadly,always watch and see how your animals are stooling and urinating,sometimes on weekends give your horses Epson salts and bicarbonate soda,and sweet spirits of niter,to much oats sometimes harden some horses belly,and be carefull with stale green grass,or grass that is to green,sometimes put it in the sun and let the sun beat out some of the green substance out of the grass,that green substance is call chlorophyll,if a horse walks about and graze that's a diffrence cause if he don't want it he'll pick on other tings,and you will want to know,why he eating that and that and not de green grass,but when he thinks it's time for green grass,he picks it,they know wat they want and when they want,and watch to much molasses.
21/08/2024
24s 6 lugs F/S. IF INTERESTED, INBOX
18/05/2024
OLIVER LEWIS (1856-1924)
In 1875, Oliver Lewis became the first jockey to win the Kentucky Derby, America’s longest continuous sporting event. Lewis was born in 1856 in Fayette Country, Kentucky, to his parents Goodson and Eleanor Lewis. Lewis was born free, but there is little known about his parents or family.
Lewis was only 19 years old when he entered the first Kentucky Derby. The race was held at what was then the Louisville Jockey Club on May 17, 1875, but is now known as Churchill Downs. Ten thousand spectators watched this first race. Lewis rode a horse named Aristide, which was one of two colts entered by their owner, H. Price McGrath of Jessamine, Kentucky. The other horse, Chesapeake, was ridden by William Henry. Although the same owner entered both horses, Chesapeake was favored to win the $2,850 purse, and Lewis was told that his job was to lead most of the race to tire out the other horses. Out of the fifteen jockeys in the field, at this first Kentucky Derby, thirteen of them were African American. Aristide’s trainer, Ansel Williamson, was also an African American.
Oliver Lewis followed his instructions and was pushing most of the field while trailing a horse named Volcano for most of the race. However, in the last stretch, Chesapeake was unexpectedly far back in the pack while Aristide and Volcano were running neck and neck for first place. Lewis and Aristide pulled away near the finish line and won the race by two lengths. With that victory Lewis became the first jockey to win the Kentucky Derby. Later that season, Lewis came in second in the Belmont Stakes in New York and won three more races at the Louisville Jockey Club, riding Aristide in all of them. He would never ride in the Kentucky Derby again, however, and would retire after that racing season for unknown reasons.
After retiring, Lewis worked for a short time as a day laborer, but then began providing handicapping tables and racing forms to bookies. He later became a bookie himself which was legal in Kentucky at that time.
Lewis married although his wife’s name is unknown. The couple had six children including James who inherited his lucrative bookmaking business. Oliver Lewis died in Lexington, Kentucky in 1924 at the age of 68.