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Briefs for print – wed

2 min read

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At The Meadows

Bags For All, an elite-level performer mired in a 23-race losing streak, snapped that skid Tuesday at The Meadows when she captured the $18,000 Filly & Mare Winners Over $10,000 Life/Preferred Handicap Trot.

Bags For All often finished near the winner over her long losing streak but couldn’t get by late. That changed Tuesday when, at 9-1, the 6-year-old daughter of Swan For All-Bags Packed followed the live cover of She Nuit and poured through the lane for Mike Wilder to prevail in 1:55.4. Homepage rallied for second, 3/4 lengths back, while early leader Jewels In Hock saved show.

Randy Bendis trains Bags For All, who extended her career bankroll to $286,265, and owns with Tom Pollack. It was one of five wins for Wilder, including a pair for Bendis, on the 12-race card.

Iditarod dogs test positive

Cycling. Baseball. Track. Horse racing. Now dogsledding has become the latest professional sport to be engulfed in a doping scandal, this one involving the huskies that dash across the frozen landscape in Alaska’s grueling, 1,000-mile Iditarod.

The governing board of the world’s most famous sled dog race disclosed Monday that four dogs belonging to four-time Iditarod champion Dallas Seavey tested positive for a banned substance, the opioid painkiller Tramadol, after his second-place finish last March.

It was the first time since the race instituted drug testing in 1994 that a test came back positive.

Seavey strongly denied giving any banned substances to his dogs, suggesting instead that he may have been the victim of sabotage by another musher or an animal rights activist. He accused the Iditarod of lax security at dog-food drop-off points and other spots.

Race officials said he will not be punished because they were unable to prove he acted intentionally. That means he will keep his titles and his $59,000 in winnings this year.

But the finding was another blow to the Iditarod, which has seen the loss of major sponsors, numerous dog deaths, attacks on competitors and pressure from animal rights activists, who say huskies are run to death or left with severe infections and bloody paws.

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