Location:  Home » Books » Headless Horsemen: A Tale of Chemical Colts, Subprime Sales Agents, and the Last Kentucky Derby on Steroids  

Headless Horsemen: A Tale of Chemical Colts, Subprime Sales Agents, and the Last Kentucky Derby on Steroids

Headless Horsemen: A Tale of Chemical Colts, Subprime Sales Agents, and the Last Kentucky Derby on SteroidsAuthor: Jim Squires
Publisher: Times Books
Category: Book

List Price: $25.00
Buy New: $13.35
as of 3/10/2010 16:12 CST details
You Save: $11.65 (47%)



New (24) Used (9) from $13.08

Seller: cuddling-currys
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 14 reviews
Sales Rank: 245569

Media: Hardcover
Pages: 272
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8
Dimensions (in): 8.4 x 5.5 x 1.2

ISBN: 0805090606
Dewey Decimal Number: 798.4009730905
EAN: 9780805090604
ASIN: 0805090606

Publication Date: August 4, 2009
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  • ISBN13: 9780805090604
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
  • Click here to view our Condition Guide and Shipping Prices

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Headless Horsemen: A Tale of Chemical Colts, Subprime Sales Agents, and the Last Kentucky Derby on Steroids

Similar Items:


Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

A pointed and irreverent critique of thoroughbred racing’s breakdown, by a prominent journalist turned horse breeder

Jim Squires was in trouble. He had gone from one business seemingly intent on committing suicide to another, both led over the cliff by visionless leaders. First it was the newspaper bean-counters’ blind adherence to the demands of Wall Street. Then in horse racing it was a clannish group called “the Dinnies” refusing to share power and unable to see that vast overproduction and unbridled greed had created a subprime-like bubble in the market. Overpriced animals of dubious quality and drug-enhanced performance on the track were undermining the integrity of competition and ultimately the very breed itself. With its economic model broken, its tawdry sales practices under attack, and its public image in tatters after a series of televised fatal breakdowns by horses in famous races, the sport was overdue for a reckoning.

Headless Horsemen is Squires’s comic but poignant critique of what is happening to the sport and the animals he loves, as he and a small group of unlikely heroes agitate for a return to fair dealing. For anyone who cares about the soul and survival of horse racing, this book is an impassioned call to arms.




Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 14



5 out of 5 stars A Must Read For Horseracing Fans   August 12, 2009
B. Clark
10 out of 11 found this review helpful

Squires book is an insiders take on what is ruining the horse racing industry. The thing I like
best about Squires book is that he holds no punches and is painfully candid.
From health battles, to personal feuds, to taking his finger and clearly pointing it at who is exactly at fault, the book is amazing. Squires has boldly gone where no horse racing author has gone before. He takes on the biggest and richest leaders in the racing world with an incredible amount of humor and humility.
I would recommend this book for every 2 dollar better to anybody who has been lucky enough to bid on or own a thoroughbred. Three cheers for Squires.



5 out of 5 stars Shining a Light Where Needed   September 8, 2009
Erika E. Holderith (los angeles, ca United States)
6 out of 7 found this review helpful

Eight Belle's tragic death after her excellent 2nd place finish to Big Brown's Kentucky Derby victory initiated much scrutiny into the practices of breeding and racing thoroughbreds. The resulting US House of Representatives Subcommittee on Energy and Commerce Hearings brought to light the urgent need for reform within the thoroughbred racing world. I was particularly struck by the testimonies of Allie Conrad (CANTER USA - an organization which finds homes for horses no longer able to race), Jess Jackson (owner of Curlin and Rachel Alexandra), Arthur Hancock (Hancock family thoroughbred breeding and racing enterprises) and Hall of Fame trainer Jack Van Berg.

Unfortunately, there is little coverage of any follow-through on the recommendations presented at the hearings. Jim Squires has done an excellent job of reporting on the current state of affairs. His status as breeder of Kentucky Derby winner Monarchos and as former editor for the Chicago Tribune well-position him to provide the reader and hopefully the thoroughbred industry with a clear description of what problems any much-needed organizational reform needs to address.

For those that care about thoroughbreds and horse racing, this is the first book that I would recommend.



5 out of 5 stars hEADLESS HORSEMEN IS WORTH READING IF YOU ARE IN ANY SEGMENT OF THE HORSE INDUSTRY   March 7, 2010
Glory Ann Kurtz (Boyd, TX USA)
This book could eerily be talking about any segment of the horse industry. It's scary - but it's true. Great reading and a "must read" for anyone in the horse industry.


5 out of 5 stars Squires is one of America's Best Story Tellers!   September 16, 2009
BookWoman/BookMan TV REVIEWS (Nashville, Tn United States)
2 out of 4 found this review helpful

"Insiders rule what goes on at the horse track and what they do to win is better than any true crime book out today. No one tells a better story than best-selling author and a true lover of horses - Jim Squires. Now if he would just write that sequal to Secrets of the Hopewell Box!"


4 out of 5 stars Dark Shadows in the Winner's Circle   August 4, 2009
Mr. Richard D. Coreno (Berea, Ohio USA)
13 out of 15 found this review helpful

Greed. Unbridled greed.

Author Jim Squires caught lightning in a jar when his Kentucky-based Two Bucks Farm bred 2001 Kentucky Derby winner Monarchos. Chronicled in his 2002 book, Horse of a Different Color (2003 paperback; Perseus Books Group: PublicAffairs), it is a wonderful story of a small breeding farm defying the odds and permanently carving its name into the Thoroughbred record book.

But there is no joy in Headless Horsemen: A Tale of Chemical Colts, Subprime Sale Agents, and the Last Kentucky Derby on Steroids (August 4, 2009; Times Books: Henry Holt and Company, LLC), as Squires provides a candid account of the other side of the "Sport of Kings," which includes a small club of influential owners and their sycophants who run the industry for private gain, the proliferation of illegal drugs being pumped into equine athletes and the unseemly price manipulation at public auctions and in private deals by "agents" who knowingly inflate prices in a game to boost profits, with a total disregard to the true reality of the marketplace.

The sordid saga is laced with Squires piecing together accounts from a variety of sources - but oftentimes lacking a "smoking gun" of documentary evidence - which is not surprising, since every facet of the industry has mostly avoided the public and professional scrutiny found in other sports. There are explosive allegations that may not be new to those who meticulously follow racing, but are now available to a wider audience.

Squires believes that steroids entered the sport as early as the 1950s and other dangerous drugs like cocaine were used to boost the performances of racers for many years. He alleges that the iconic Secretariat - the 1973 Triple Crown champion and considered by many historians and fans as the greatest ever - may have raced while on steroids.

And as with the now tainted 1998 season-long home run derby between Mark McGwire (70 homers) and Sammy Sosa (66), it was two recent equine superstars that brought the steroid debate in racing to the national stage. Two-time Horse of the Year (2007-2008) Curlin and 2008 Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes winner Big Brown each competed while on steroids, with the dosages used legal in certain states.

"These two champions are poster boys for the steroid era in racing," writes Squires.

The bloodlines in the boardroom are often as impressive as those found in the winner's circle in many top races, but - according to Squires - does not always deliver the same results, especially in The Jockey Club. Founded in 1894, it is the authority for all Thoroughbreds in North America, Canada and Puerto Rico. Because of the power wielded by two individuals - Ogden Mills Phipps and William S. Farish III - Squires says the organization has shirked establishing a firm leadership role within the industry.

Phipps is the grandson of Henry Phipps, who founded Bessemer Trust, and the son of Ogden Phipps, who was a racing executive and Thoroughbred owner/breeder, philanthropist and art collector. Farish III - the U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom from 2001 to 2004 - is the grandson of William S. Farish II, the founder and vice president of Humble Oil and Refining Company and president of Jersey Standard, who - in 1942 - pleaded "no contest" to criminally conspiring with the Nazi government in Germany.

There are also several shadowy veterinarians and an incident last year that Squires says was a conspiracy to silence his criticism of the industry. In November, the Delaware Thoroughbred Racing Commission upheld a stewards ruling against trainer Larry Jones for Stones River failing a drug test after winning a June 8 race at Delaware Park. The runner is owned by Squires and it was the first ruling against Jones - who was suspended for seven days and fined [....]- in more than 25 years of training. Squires says the incident involved sabotage of the horse or drug test.

Squires suggests a number of major policy changes that ultimately centers on Thoroughbred racing receiving federal antitrust exemption, like Major League Baseball, which would open the barn doors to - for example - uniform drug reform and stringent oversight of sales organizations through a national commissioner's office.

For more than 30 years, Thoroughbred racing has seen the erosion of its popularity with sports fans and railbirds to the point where survival for many tracks now hinge on alternative gaming revenues generated through slot machines and card tables. But the problems in the industry run deeper than finding cash to bolster purses for races. Squires does not mince words in his very public attempt to end the cycle of greed...once and for all.


Showing reviews 1-5 of 14



Copyright © 2009 Horse Racing
animal production  book review  equine  horse racing  horses