Why Bob Baffert is banned from the 2022 Kentucky Derby, explained

The Hall of Fame trainer will have to miss out on horse racing’s biggest event this year.

Even the most casual horse racing observers have probably heard the name Bob Baffert. The majority of them could probably pick the silver-haired trainer out of a lineup. The 69-year-old has won the Kentucky Derby six times, claimed two Triple Crowns (2015, 2018) and was the handler behind American Pharoah, Justify, Authentic and Medina Spirit.

And it’s that last name that helps explain why Baffert isn’t allowed at the 2022 Kentucky Derby.

Shortly after winning the 2021 Kentucky Derby, Medina Spirit tested positive for the banned steroid betamethasone. While Baffert initially denied ever administering the drug, a subsequent investigation revealed the substance was found in an ointment applied to the horse.

Following the confirmation of a positive drug test in June 2021, Baffert was banned from all Churchill Downs properties for two years—a punishment that will expire following the 2023 Spring Meet. The trainer was also hit with a 90-day suspension, which precludes him from entering any of the Triple Crown races this year.

Medina Spirit died on the track following a workout at Santa Anita Park in California last December.

Bob Baffert has done irreparable harm to horse racing. But will this force a change?

It’s long past time for a reckoning.

There was a theory — or maybe a hope — during the 37-year lull between Triple Crown winners that having a super horse come along again would reinvigorate the sport.

Then American Pharoah won the Kentucky Derby, Preakness Stakes and Belmont Stakes in 2015.

Justify did it in 2018.

Not much changed. Those events remained appointment viewing for a large number of sports fans, and crowds flocked to them (unless there was a pandemic.) Betting on horses remained robust at around $10 billion a year, even as betting on other sports expanded.

The lesson: Horse racing is already wedged into America’s sports consciousness, and that’s enough to keep the industry going.

The only thing threatening this whole equilibrium is, well, what we saw play out this year, with Kentucky Derby winner Medina Spirit testing positive for a prohibited anti-inflammatory drug.

Despite that potentially disqualifying test result — which has not yet been confirmed by a second sample from Kentucky — Medina Spirit was allowed to run (with special conditions, including extra tests that he passed) in the Preakness, where he finished third.

Perhaps, as USA TODAY’s Dan Wolken argued, that’s for the better. The controversy over the scandal would have only grown as the colt chased a Triple Crown. The horse’s trainer, Bob Baffert, was already doing what he could to minimize his own exposure and opted not to attend the Preakness Stakes.

The problem is this: The damage is done, and yet it does not seem likely that we’re any closer to a true reckoning that would lead to lasting change.

Baffert, in a statement given to NBC, maintained his innocence:

“I have been deeply saddened to see this case portrayed as a ‘doping’ scandal or betamethasone labeled as a ‘banned’ substance. Neither is remotely true. Betamethasone is an allowable and commonly used medication in horse racing. Further, 21 picograms would have zero pharmacology in a horse. All I ask is that everyone not rush to judgment and allow all of the facts, evidence and science to come to light.”

In case you haven’t been following the story closely, Baffert originally claimed that Medina Spirit had never been given betamethasone before changing his story to say that an ointment used on the horse included the drug.

And that’s the problem: If the most well-known trainer, with seemingly unlimited resources, is not really sure what medications are being used on his horses, what’s going on with the rest of the sport?

Baffert should be different. He should be the exemplar of a clean trainer who takes impeccable care of his horses. But he has now been cited five times for violations in the last year; the New York Times found 29 violations over 40 years. Baffert has deflected many of these charges successfully: Justify, for instance, tested positive for a banned substance after the Santa Anita Derby, but the case was eventually dismissed because it was blamed on contaminated feed. If Medina Spirit’s second sample comes back positive, you can expect a long, drawn out legal challenge that will throw the “official” result of the Kentucky Derby in doubt for years.

Maybe that helps Baffert sleep better at night, but it does nothing for horse racing’s reputation. Every time the Triple Crown chase involves talk of drugged horses, it alienates bettors who want a fair contest but also threatens to awaken casual sports fans to how horses who aren’t running in million-dollar races are treated. It creates discussion around the ethics of driving such young horses — or any horses, for that matter — to be so competitive, and the lengths some might go to in order to keep them running.

Perhaps that’s a conversation we should be having, but there’s still a lot of money at stake in horse racing so it’s not going anywhere anytime soon.

So what can be done? There’s long been talk of forming a national governing body to establish rules and regulations around the sport. Right now, much of that is left to individual state racing commissions, leading to confusion.

Thanks to legislation passed late last year, the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency will take over monitoring the medicines used on horses and a regulatory board will monitor other track safety issues starting in July 2022. That could lend a sheen of legitimacy to horse racing.

Whether the sport as a whole accepts these changes remains to be seen. Horse racing is made up of many disparate interests — trainers, owners, breeders — and it’s hard to imagine them all openly embracing one national program.

But it needs to happen.

Having a Triple Crown winner (or two) turned out to be only a nice boost to the sport. It was not transformative.

Having horses continue to test positive for substances that should not be in their blood on any race day let alone the biggest one of the year, though, could be transformative. It could bring the whole thing down.

The 146th Preakness Stakes live stream, post positions, odds, start time, how to watch

The running of the 146th Preakness Stakes will take place on Saturday from Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Maryland.

The running of the 146th Preakness Stakes will take place on Saturday from Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore, Maryland.  Post time is scheduled for 6:50 p.m ET and live coverage will start at 2:30 p.m. ET.

Medina Spirit is the favorite in today’s second leg of horse racing’s triple crown, The Preakness this afternoon. Both the trainer Bob Baffert and the horse are in a lot of controversy surrounding the horse testing positive for a substance that is banned on race day.

Regardless, both his horses will be running today and this will be one you won’t want to miss, here is everything you need to know to stream the action:

146th Preakness Stakes

  • When: Saturday, May 15
  • Live Coverage begins: 2:30 p.m. ET
  • Post time: 6:50 p.m ET
  • TV Channel: NBC
  • Live Stream: fuboTV (watch for free)

Preakness Stakes Post Positions & Odds

Post position, horse, trainer, jockey, morning-line odds

1. Ram, D. Wayne Lukas, Ricardo Santana Jr., 30-1

2. Keepmeinmind, Robertino Diodoro, David Cohen, 15-1

3. Medina Spirit, Bob Baffert, John Velazquez, 9-5

4. Crowded Trade, Chad Brown, Javier Castellano, 10-1

5. Midnight Bourbon, Steve Asmussen, Irad Ortiz Jr., 5-1

6. Rombauer, Michael McCarthy, Flavien Prat, 12-1

7. France Go de Ina, Hideyuki Mori, Joel Rosario, 20-1

8. Unbridled Honor, Todd Pletcher, Luis Saez, 15-1

9. Risk Taking, Chad Brown, Jose Ortiz, 15-1

10. Concert Tour, Bob Baffert, Mike Smith, 5-2

Preakness Stakes Odds and Betting Lines

Horse Racing odds courtesy of BetMGM Sportsbook. Odds updated at 3:30 p.m. ET.

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PSA: Your Kentucky Derby Medina Spirit bet will stand even if horse is stripped of title

Whew.

If you bet a bunch of cash on Medina Spirit — who won the 2021 Kentucky Derby but who is under investigation after a positive drug test for betamethasone and could be stripped of his title if a second positive confirms it — don’t worry about having to give it back.

For one, there’s no way Churchill Downs or any other sports book to track down each and every bettor and ask for the money back, mostly because that would be hilarious (“Uh, hey Charles, can we have our $30 back? Appreciate it!”) and it’s possible everyone spent their winnings. For another, this is just how it is: once the race is officially called, it’s all over.

As the New York Times wrote, it’s true not just for situations like horse racing:

This statute of limitations applies to other kinds of sports wagering. When Reggie Bush returned his 2005 Heisman Trophy five years later in the wake of a recruiting scandal, none of those who bet on him to win it had to return their profits. Entire teams can be stripped of their moments of triumph. Bettors cannot.

Yes, Mandaloun — who finished second — would technically be the winner, but if there are legal proceedings and such, that could take a while.

Here’s a quote from BetMGM data analyst John Ewing via Yahoo Sports that should make you feel even better:

“All bets will stand as settled. The race result has already been determined official and paid. Disqualifications from positive drug tests will not change the results.”

That’s that! Your bet is safe.

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Twitter had lots of jokes about Bob Baffert trying to blame cancel culture for horse doping allegations

LOL, Baffert.

Medina Spirit’s victory earlier this month at the Kentucky Derby is in jeopardy of being revoked after the horse failed a drug test following the race.

That seems like a pretty easy thing to understand – if you cheat and get caught then you pay the consequences, right?

Well, the horse’s trainer, Hall of Famer Bob Baffert, doesn’t think it’s as simple as that as he came out on Monday and blabbered about how cancel culture is the thing to blame for the predicament that he and his horse find themselves in.

For real. He thinks cancel culture is to blame for this!

Come on, bro.

Twitter had lots of jokes:

Watch Medina Spirit win the 2021 Kentucky Derby in thrilling fashion

Medina Spirit took an early lead and never lost it in the 147th Kentucky Derby.

Medina Spirit took an early lead right out of the gates for Saturday’s 147th Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs and never relinquished it, holding off its hard-charging competitors for a thrilling four-wide finish.

The only real time Medina Spirit, a Bob Baffert trainee, saw serious competition for the lead was coming off the final turn when Mandaloun was nearly even with the front-runner. Down the last stretch, Hot Rod Charlie and race favorite Essential Quality tried to keep pace with the leaders, and at one point, it looked like any one of those horses could win the first leg of the Triple Crown.

But Medina Spirit with jockey John R. Velazquez held on for the victory — and a record seven Kentucky Derby wins for Hall of Fame trainer Baffert — while Mandaloun, Hot Rod Charlie and Essential Quality finished second, third and fourth, respectively.

(Velazquez and Baffert also won last year’s Kentucky Derby with Authentic.)

Check out this exciting finish:

“If you have him on the lead, he’ll fight,” Baffert told NBC Sports after the race.

Here’s the full video of the 2021 Kentucky Derby:

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