PartialLogo
News

O'Briens and Coolmore sue over 2020 Arc weekend feed contamination drama

Aidan OâBrien oversees his string on a morning at Ballydoyle.Photo: Patrick McCann/Racing Post09.05.2022
Aidan O'Brien: among ten plaintiffs suing Glanbia over the Zipaterol contamination issue that blew up over Arc weekend in 2020Credit: Patrick McCann (racingpost.com/photos)

Aidan O’Brien and his son Donnacha are among ten plaintiffs associated with Coolmore and Ballydoyle who this week began the process of suing the animal feed supplier Glanbia over the contaminated feed controversy on Prix de l’Arc de Triomphe weekend in 2020.

After it emerged that five horses – none of whom was trained by the O’Briens – had tested positive in France for Zilpaterol, Gain Equine Nutrition, which is owned by Glanbia, issued a statement to trainers on Friday, October 2, 2020 advising them not to feed their products to horses.

Zilpaterol is unlicensed in Europe but used elsewhere, including in the US, to promote weight gain in cattle.

The directive from Gain prompted the O’Brien family to change their feed supplier immediately and ultimately withdraw 11 intended runners from Sunday’s Longchamp card, including four intended starters in the Arc, Europe’s most prestigious Flat race. Two of the 11 were trained by O’Brien’s eldest son Joseph, who is not believed to be party to the legal proceedings that began this week.

Mogul, Japan, Sovereign and Serpentine, all trained by Aidan O’Brien, were taken out of the €3 million showpiece, the Derby hero Serpentine having been supplemented for the race at a cost of €72,000.

Serpentine gives Galileo his fifth Derby success
Serpentine: Derby hero was withdrawn from Arc after being supplemementedCredit: Edward Whitaker

While none of the O’Briens’ runners returned a positive test for Zilpaterol on the track – it later emerged that LGC laboratory, which is used by the Irish Horseracing Regulatory Board and the BHA, does not test to such a sensitive level as the French lab, Laboratoire des Courses Hippiques (LCH), for the substance – all of the samples that the Ballydoyle handler sent directly to LCH returned positive.

On that basis, O’Brien and his sons withdrew all 11 horses from Longchamp’s Sunday card and formal legal proceedings began on Tuesday, with ten companies associated with Coolmore and Ballydoyle initiating proceedings against Glanbia Foods Ireland.

The Zilpaterol contamination was traced to one of Gain’s ingredients, molasses, which was supplied by ED&F Liquid Products. It has been reported that in March Glanbia took legal action against ED&F as a result.

Glanbia claimed the issue cost the company €9m. The Irish Times reports that ED&F did not object to Glanbia’s legal action against it being admitted to the Commercial Court, the fast-track division of the High Court that handles business disputes.


Read more on this subject:

Aidan O'Brien and sons forced to withdraw all Longchamp runners on Sunday

'The cost is incredible' says a distraught O'Brien at missing out on Arc


Stay ahead of the field with 50 per cent off the ultimate racing subscription. Enjoy the Racing Post digital newspaper and award-winning journalism from the best writers in racing. Plus, make informed betting decisions with our expert tips and form study tools. Head to the subscription page and select 'Get Ultimate Monthly', then enter the code WELCOME22 to get 50 per cent off your first three months.

First three payments will be charged at £17.48, subscription renews at full monthly price thereafter.

Customers wishing to cancel will need to contact us at least seven days before their subscription is due to renew.


Ireland editor

Published on inNews

Last updated

iconCopy