Kan. Admin. Regs. § 112-7-22 - Post to finish
(a) No horse shall
be permitted to start unless it has been tattooed and fully identified.
(b) Each horse shall take a
position in numerical order from the inside rail. The order shall be determined
by post positions.
(c) Each horse
shall be a starter after the doors of the starting gate in front of it open
when the official starter dispatches the horses.
(d) Each horse shall be ridden past the
finish line in every race and shall carry the assigned weights from the post to
finish, unless disquali-fied.
(e)
Each horse that leaves the course during a race shall be disqualified.
(f) The following rules shall
apply to the running of a race.
(1) In a
straightaway race, each jockey shall maintain the horse as nearly as possible
in the lane in which it starts.
(2) Each jockey shall make a best effort to
control and guide the mount in such a manner as not to cause a foul.
(3) No jockey shall willfully strike or touch
another jockey or another jockey's horse or equipment during a race for the
purpose of interfering with the horse or jockey. No jockey shall strike the
jockey's horse on or about the head.
(4) Any rider may be fined or suspended, or
both, by the stewards for willful fouling or careless riding. The nature and
seriousness of the offense shall be considered by the stewards.
(5) Any jockey whose horse has been
disqualified or who unnecessarily causes the horse to change or shorten its
stride for the purpose of losing a race may be fined or suspended.
(g) The stewards shall be vested
with the discretion to determine the propriety and nature of a disqualification
and whether it applies to any other part of an entry. The stewards' decision
shall be final.
(1) To determine the
disqualification of a horse in any race, the stewards may either place the
horse behind the horse or horses with which they believe it interfered, they
may place it last or they may unplace it.
(2) When a horse of one ownership or interest
is coupled with a horse or horses of the same or another ownership or interest,
the disqualification of one shall not necessarily affect the placing of the
other.
(h) Each jockey
shall give the best effort in races. Any instructions or advice to jockeys to
ride or handle their mounts except for the purpose of winning shall be
prohibited and shall subject each person giving or following those instructions
or advice to disciplinary action by the stewards and the commission. If two
horses run in one interest in any race, each horse shall be ridden to give its
best effort.
(i) Only the owner,
trainer or jockey alleged to be aggrieved shall make a protest relating to the
running of the race. Each protest shall be made to the stewards, the outrider
if designated by the stewards or the clerk of scales before or immediately
after weighing in. Any owner, trainer or jockey who makes a frivolous protest
may be fined or suspended.
(j) No
person shall help a jockey remove the equipment that is to be included in the
jockey's weight from the jockey's horse unless the stewards give permission.
(k) No person shall throw any
covering over any horse at the place of dismounting until the jockey has
removed the equipment that is to be included in the jockey's weight.
(l) Each dead heat shall be governed in the
following manner.
(1) If two or more horses
run a dead heat, the dead heat shall not be run off.
(2) Each horse shall be considered a winner
in a dead heat for first place.
(3) If two or more horses finish in a dead
heat and a protest is filed and allowed against a horse that finished in front
of the dead heat, the horses that ran the dead heat shall be deemed to have run
from the higher position.
(4)
Owners of horses that finish in a dead heat for any position shall divide
equally all money and other prizes. If no agreement is reached as to which of
them shall receive an indivisible prize, they shall draw lots for it in the
presence of one or more of the stewards.
(m) If a race is run by all of the horses at
the wrong weights or over a wrong distance, and if a protest is filed and
allowed before the flashing of the "official" sign on the totalisator board,
the stewards shall declare the race no contest.
(n) Each of the following procedures shall
apply if any horse is disabled or otherwise is unable to finish a race.
(1) The horse shall be dismounted, unsaddled
and removed from the racetrack without passing the stand. The horse shall not
be destroyed on the racetrack or in the presence of the public without the
permission of the stewards.
(2) If
a bone is broken and the horse is disabled, the horse shall remain on the
racetrack until the horse ambulance arrives and removes it.
(3) If destruction of the horse is necessary,
the animal health officer shall destroy the horse by use of an intravenous
injection out of the vision of the public. If destruction in the view of the
public is necessary, an ambulance screen shall be made available by the
organization licensee.
(4) If a
horse is disabled, a drug test for prohibited substances shall be performed on
the horse. If destruction of the horse is necessary, a postmortem examination
may be performed upon order of the stewards at the expense of the owner.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.