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Cocaine used to dope greyhounds
ROVER
DOSED
By
Brian Radford
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RUTHLESS
gamblers are fixing dog races by feeding the greyhounds COCAINE,
the News of the World can reveal.
The
drug stops dogs winning because it "fries" their brains,
preventing them from running on top form, and crooked punters
cash in by betting on the doped greyhounds to LOSE.
There
have been four cases of dogs testing positive for cocaine and
none of them finished first but it is feared many more have
gone undetected.
In
an exclusive interview, Noel Thompson, security co-ordinator for
the National Greyhound Racing Council, said: "People are
giving drugs to dogs which they know will stop them."
Cocaine
is a stimulant in humans, but when the drug is mixed in with a
dog's food, its nervous system is overstimulated and the animal
becomes disorientated.
"A
doped greyhound will often struggle to go round bends and lose
vital ground," said Mr Thompson. "Certain drugs will
take the edge off a dog."
He
added that the callous fixers are cruelly playing with the dogs'
lives."They are giving them poison, because that's what drugs
are," he said. "An overdose could kill a dog, just as
it would a human being.
"We
know for sure a number of gambles have taken place involving a
greyhound which later tested positive. Inevitably gambles have
been landed on greyhounds that were not tested."
Trainer
Around
10,000 dogs a year are tested and in 2005 up to 30 were found
to be doped with drugs, including cocaine. The most recent cocaine
case involved Dark Ranger at the Pelaw Grange track near Chester-le-Street
in Durham last September. Both his trainer and kennel-hand were
fined £1,000 and disqualified after the 7-4 chance finished
third.
Mr
Thompson said: "It's unlikely that a dog is got at'
without a trainer or someone on the staff being involved. People
are definitely trying to buck the system."
He
added: "Apart from cocaine, another big stopper is Cyclizine,
the travel sickness pill.
"Beta-blockers,
heart drugs, chocolate and amphetamines have all been used on
greyhounds, I believe."
Another
trainer, Andrew Gardiner, was severely reprimanded and fined £1,000
after his dog Emma The First was doped with beta-blocker Propranolol
at Brough Park stadium, Newcastle upon Tyne, in October.
And
greyhound agent William O'Donoghue was reprimanded and fined £400
after theophylline, an asthma treatment, and caffeine were found
in a urine sample taken from Kiel Sensation at Perry
Barr, Birmingham, last July.
Even
the 2003 Greyhound Derby winner Droopys Hewitt tested positive
for a painkiller in the third round of the competition, although
the result was not known until after he had won the £75,000
final, two weeks later, when it was disqualified.
Millions
of punters bet on greyhounds in betting shops, at dog tracks every
day and on TV worldwide.
Annually
greyhound racing generates a colossal £2.3 billion in off-course
bets, and £87.5 million in Tote on-course bets at the UK's
31 tracks.
Wrecking
Online
betting exchange Betfairwho offer punters the chance to
gamble on greyhounds to lose raceshas teamed up with the
National Greyhound Racing Council to hound out the crooks.
When
Betfair spot suspicious betting patterns they alert NGRC investigators
who launch an immediate probe.
Mr
Thompson says the sport's security squad is doing its "absolute
best" to stop the dopers wrecking the country's second biggest
gambling sport after horse-racing.
He
added: "I think it is awful and disgusting for anyone to
dope greyhounds, and our stewards look at it in the same way
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