Archive for the ‘Featured’ Category

Kobe vs. LaBron

Monday, June 28th, 2010

Funny thing happened on the way to David Stern’s PERFECT NBA finals…. again…

In a perfect world, after all the hype, the Lakers and Cavs would be playing in a hotly contested finals game 7 with ratings through the roof!

Magic and Bird changed the basketball landscape in the early 80′s with their finals match ups. Before that, you couldn’t even watch the finals live in most markets. I should know, I watched the Laker’s win their first championship in the 80′s tape delayed on CBS after “Sports Central” which came on after the 11 o’clock news….

As far as the other side of Kobe vs LaBron – who’s the better player – we’re not entering this hornets nest yet, except to say that at the end off the season, who’s got the rings?

Kobe built a team around him. LeBron – he surrounded himself with some great players on Dwayne Wade’s team in Miami. We have our thoughts, please comment and share below.

Now for your viewing pleasure here are some Kobe & LaBron images:

Planter’s Punch – Rum Filled Tropical Cocktail!

Sunday, July 12th, 2009

planters-punch

Planter’s Punch is a classic rum drink that first appeared in print in a 1908 edition of the New York Times. Like other drinks, this has a disputed origin: one claim refers to the Planter’s Hotel in St. Louis and another tells of a Jamaican planter’s wife who concocted it to cool down the workers.

This recipe is just one version, others include combinations of curacao, bitters or other juices such as pineapple and orange. At some bars a bar punch mix is used to fill. Also, you can easily increase the recipe’s volume and serve it as a party punch or you can go with the non-alcoholic Planter’s Punch.
Ingredients:

* 2oz dark rum
* 1/4 oz grenadine
* equal parts sour mix and either pineapple or orange juice to fill
* club soda (optional)
* maraschino cherry for garnish
* lemon or orange slice for garnish

Preparation:

1. Pour the grenadine and juice mix into a mixing glass filled with ice cubes.
2. Shake well.
3. Strain into a highball glass filled with ice cubes.
4. Top with club soda if you want.
5. Garnish with the lemon slice and cherry.

Personally, I prefer to simply drop the cherry in the punch, thus allowing it to soak up all that great flavor!

For a thirsty crowd, multiply the recipe by number of servings and serve in a pitcher with ice.

Go Get ‘Em Danica!

Sunday, May 24th, 2009

What a woman. I could easily be talking about Shirley Muldowney, the “First Lady of Drag Racing” or  Hayley Wickenheiser, hockey player extraordinaire, or slam dunk star Candace Parker, or even Extreme Sport genius Darian Boyle. But today I am here to honor none other than Indy racing star Danica Patrick.

Danika Is Number One!

“Lyfe U Want” celebrates women. Their beauty, femininity, intelligence, sexiness, and their moxie. And Danica has all of the above and more (Did you catch her bikini photo shoot? Pretty hot stuff. Girl has got it goin’ on!). She may not be the first Goddess to grace the racing scene (kudos to Janet Guthrie for that), but she has proven to be the fastest. In 2008 she won an IRL race in Japan. After becoming the first female driver to win a major open-wheel race she said, “Finally. It’s a long time coming”.  Today she tools on up to the starting line again at the Indy 500. Four words come to my mind: “Go get ‘em Danica!”

The awesome thing is the message she sends to other women: Stand up for what you believe in no matter what it looks like. Fight the odds. Do what you love. She also reminds all of us women of our strength, courage, boldness, and brilliance (BTW fellas, it seems to me that she could be reminding you of that too…).

So to you women: When you are celebrating Danica today, don’t forget to celebrate YOU.

And to you men: Whether you’re there at the Indy 500 screaming in the stands or kicking back a cold one in your living room and hollering at your TV, take the time to celebrate the amazing woman in your life–your wife, girlfriend, Mom, work colleague, or even just the woman at the other end of the bar that you really want to talk to. Remember: if it wasn’t for women, you wouldn’t even try…

Thanks Danica. You rock!

Soldier Fights Taliban Wearing Pink Boxers!

Thursday, May 21st, 2009

Teenage soldier went into battle against Taliban… wearing ‘I love New York’ pink boxer shorts

soldier

Taking on the Taliban in pink boxer shorts, t-shirt and flip-flops is not regarded as conventional military uniform.

Especially when the shorts declare ‘I love New York’.

However when Zachary Boyd, 19, was woken up by a Taliban assault on his platoon he only had time to grab his weapon, helmet and body armour before springing into action.

Most of the time his appearance on the Afghanistan’s frontline would have gone unnoticed by the eyes of the world.

However, Boyd managed to pick the day when a photographer was on hand to capture him going into battle in the pink boxers, red t-shirt and flimsy footwear.

Zachary Boyd had been asleep when the firefight erupted in the mountains of Afghanistan. So he only had time to put on his helmet, body armour and grab his weapon

Zachary Boyd had been asleep when the firefight erupted in the mountains of Afghanistan. So he only had time to put on his helmet, body armour and grab his weapon

The image of the fight at Firebase Restrepo in the Korengal Valley of Kunar Province later ended up on the front page of The New York Times.

‘I knew he was a boxer guy. I knew that for sure. I did not know they were pink, and I didn’t know they said, ‘I love New York,’ father Tommy Boyd told his local Texas radio station WBAP.

‘After I saw the picture I just laughed for about five minutes.’

Boyd phoned his mother Sheree Boyd to warn her that he might be in the paper.

‘He said: “I hear the Times is what they put on the President’s desk”,’ she said.

‘Then he told us, “I may not have a job any more after the President has seen me out of uniform”.

‘It was typical. He has always been an interesting little character.’

Boyd, who graduated from Keller Central High School in 2007, decided to join the army because of the September 11 attacks.

He was promoted to the rank of Army Specialist last week.

The Ministry of Defence today said that A British soldier has died in an explosion in Afghanistan.

The soldier, from The Royal Marines Armoured Support Group, was killed yesterday while travelling in a Viking vehicle near Lashkar Gah, in Helmand Province.

Next of kin have been informed.

Lieutenant Colonel Nick Richardson, spokesman for Task Force Helmand, said: ‘We are numb with grief at this loss of a noble Marine, who served his country for the good of the Afghan people.

‘Our thoughts and prayers are with his family, friends and colleagues who feel the greatest loss.

‘He will always be remembered as a true hero.’

The marine is the 159th British Army soldier to have been killed in Afghanistan since conflict began in late 2001.

Britain has more than 8,000 troops based in Afghanistan, the vast majority serving in Helmand, a desert province that remains a heartland of Taliban-led insurgency.

U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates on Thursday praised an Army soldier in eastern Afghanistan who drew media attention this month after rushing to defend his post from attack while wearing pink boxer shorts and flip-flops.

In fact, Gates said he wants to meet the soldier and shake his hand the next time he visits Afghanistan.

“Any soldier who goes into battle against the Taliban in pink boxers and flip-flops has a special kind of courage,” Gates said in remarks prepared for a speech in New York.

“I can only wonder about the impact on the Taliban. Just imagine seeing that: a guy in pink boxers and flip-flops has you in his cross-hairs. What an incredible innovation in psychological warfare,” he said.

Army Specialist Zachary Boyd, 19, of Fort Worth, Texas, rushed from his sleeping quarters on May 11 to join fellow platoon members at a base in Afghanistan’s Kunar Province after the unit came under fire from Taliban positions.

A news photographer was on hand to record the image of Boyd standing at a makeshift rampart in helmet, body armor, red T-shirt and boxers emblazoned with the message: “I love NY.”

When the image wound up on the front page of the New York Times, Boyd told his parents he might lose his job if President Barack Obama saw him out of uniform.

“I can assure you that Specialist Boyd’s job is very safe indeed,” Gates said in the speech.

The U.S. defense chief was scheduled to deliver the speech at New York’s annual Salute to Freedom dinner in Manhattan.

Zachary Boyd: This Bud’s for you!

The Real Bond Girls

Monday, May 4th, 2009

bondclassified1

Bond is an Australian/British string quartet that specializes in classical crossover music. Bond has been described as the best selling string quartet of all time, selling over four million records with their style of music. The quartet consists of Haylie Ecker (first violin, from Perth, Australia), Eos Chater (second violin, from Cardiff, Wales), Tania Davis (viola, from Sydney) and Gay-Yee Westerhoff (cello, from Hull, England).

They are the four piece string quartet girl band that have revolutionized classical music with their raunchy image and revealing outfits. For your viewing pleasure, a little gallery and for your reading pleasure, an interview with the girls…

What instruments do you play and why did you choose them?
Tania: I chose the Viola, I just love the sounds it can make.
Eos: I chose the violin because my older sister played it. I wanted to be like her.
Gay-Yee: I chose the cello because I think the sound it akes is really intriguing.
Haylie: I play the violin and the piano, my parents suggested I learn the violin and I learnt the piano as part of my musical education.

What made you decide to develop your interest further and take up music as a career?
Eos: I just love music so much and I’m quite good at it so I thought, this is your dream go for it girl!
Gay-Yee: It wasn’t really a conscious decision to go into music, I just couldn’t see myself doing anything else and being happy.
Haylie: I was lucky enough to travel as a child with my family and in LA I had this amazing teacher who, at the time had a few child prodigies who were getting recognised. I decided I wanted to be just like them.

How were you first introduced to each other?
Tania: Haylie and I have been friends since we were teenagers in Australia. I met Eos and Gay-Yee through Tania at college in London.

What did you initially think of forming a band, rather than going down a more traditional route?
Tania: We wanted to do something with music, we all wanted to write and perform our own songs, and we are friends, what could be more fun?
Eos: I had been playing with other bands before but when I met the girls I thought, this is who I want my band to be with.
Gay-Yee: Originally we just saw ourselves as a string quartet. When we formed we didn’t know where we were headed we just wanted to play. Now we feel like a band.

Who came up with the name Bond and why?
Tania: Haylie came up with our name, it was inspired by our love of the music in James Bond films by John Barry, passionate and dramatic!
Haylie: I had a boyfriend at the time who said we should all take on a bond girl persona, in a Spice Girl type way; we just thought it would be really fun! It’s a play on words really, the bond of music and friendship.

Did any other artists inspire you – if so which ones and why?
Tania: Missy Elliot is a huge inspiration, she writes, performs, and produces. She is a very positive powerful artist.
Eos: Artists strong in instrumental music inspire me, like John Barry, Daftpunk and Goldfrapp.
Haylie: Heaps! Music is so personal, I just can’t explain why a musician or a piece of music hits a chord with me.

You have quite a raunchy and fashionable image – do you think that helps to make classical music more up to date?
Tania: We are a band that loves so many different types of music, the music we play is pop with classical influences, so we are classy ladies who have a pop image!
Eos: We don’t see our music as classical. We are a pop band who is influenced by classical music. We also normal girls who love to shop! Having a strong image is important to get our music to a wider audience.
Gay-Yee: Our music is pop that is classically influenced; I hope that will bring classical music in to the mainstream. Also we are girls that dress how we want to, that probably helps too!
Haylie: We don’t do classical music as such; our music is classically inspired. Bond is more pop, hence our image.

Who does the arrangements of your pieces?
Tania: We write and arrange a lot of our music. But we also enjoy working with other people. Over a third of “Classified” is written by us.
Haylie: Matt Dunckley did our orchestral arrangements.

What is your favourite piece of music to play and why?
Tania: For me it has to be Explosive, it is the most powerful and invigorating track to play.
Eos: I love the feeling I get playing Rachmaninovs 2nd symphony, its so powerful I feel like I’m apart of something really amazing.
Gay-Yee: Ace of spades by Motorhead! It makes me feel ready for anything!
Haylie: Dreamstar is my favourite because it reminds me of Kenya. I was on holiday there when I wrote it, it always brings back happy memories.

Describe your new album Classified?
Tania: Classified mostly takes well known classical themes and develops them into new tracks with dance, hip hop, pop and chill out influences. The best way for people to understand Classified is to listen to it!
Eos: Classified is more classically influenced than both Bond and Shine. We are really excited about it.
Gay-Yee: Exciting, Invigorating and Alive.
Haylie: Well that’s Classified… unless you buy it or legally download it of course!

You were the first female instrumental band to enter the UK pop charts ever, and have gone on to have numerous achievements. What do you feel has been your proudest moment?

Tania: Being number 1 in the pop charts in Australia at the moment is the most amazing feeling; all my friends and family in Sydney are so excited.
Gay-Yee: I feel so proud just having the opportunity to perform all over the world.

If you could play with any musician / artist alive or dead, who would you choose and why?
Tania: Jeff Buckley, he was an amazing musician, his music has real emotions behind it.
Eos: I would really like to play with Ravi Shankar.
Gay-Yee:I would love to work with Eminem or Dr. Dre. That would be amazing
Haylie: Henri Mancini, I love his arrangements they are so luscious and Hollywood in feel. I love that.

What would be your words of advice for aspiring Bonds out there?
Tania: GO FOR IT!
Eos: Practice! Go out and join an orchestra, or a group, just enjoy it – music is fun and social. It’s also challenging and technical but it’s worth it, trust me.
Gay-Yee: Enjoy every second of it, that is what music is all about.
Haylie: Just follow your heart and be strong.

What is next for you, and when can we next see you in the UK?
Eos: We are touring Asia, Australia and the USA for the next few months and then back in the UK early next year.

The Amazing Willie Gault

Monday, May 4th, 2009

willie-gault

This is from a great article on Yahoo by writer Jonathan Littman about Olympic Bobsledder, former Chicago Bears NFL Champion, Olympic Sprinter and all around shredder, Willie Guilt.

Nearly 25 years after Willie Gault helped the Bears win a Super Bowl, he races men half his age and holds his own.

The man in blue in Lane 2 looked just like the ripped young runners on either side of him, chiseled from head to toe. Yet there was a subtle difference in his demeanor. Cool and measured, he didn’t leap up and down like the others before settling into his blocks.

“On your marks,” boomed the starter.

Taking his sweet time, the man eased his lean frame into position for the open 100-meter dash at the Mt. SAC Relays in Southern California. One runner couldn’t hold back and popped a false start, but the man in blue paid no mind. The gun fired again, and he exploded off the line, his long, muscled legs seeming to float off the ground.

A football fan might have imagined him dashing under a long pass from Jim McMahon in the 1985 Super Bowl. Any spectator could have been forgiven for rubbing his eyes as if experiencing a flashback.

The man in blue was Willie Gault. A 48-year-old Willie Gault. The same Willie Gault who played 11 seasons in the NFL after getting drafted in the first round – in 1983.

Decades later, Gault still has world-class speed. His 10.80 clocking at Mt. SAC a couple weeks ago – not bad for his first 100 of the season – was only seven tenths of a second slower than his personal best nearly 30 years ago.

Gault shook his head and smiled. “Age is just a number,” he said.

How’s that for good stuff. At 48 years old, Willie’s still hanging with the young bucks.

Time can be especially cruel to sprinters, but Gault keeps clocking swift times and beating the odds. To put his accomplishments in perspective, few professional sprinters win beyond their 20s, and most hang up their spikes for good in their early 30s after the hamstring pulls and the years of pounding have taken their toll. Furthermore, most NFL veterans approaching the half-century mark suffer from arthritic knees and assorted aches and pains. Most consider themselves lucky if they can golf without pain.

Compare that to Gault, who can still crack 10 seconds in the 100-yard dash, and last year ran the 40 in a blistering 4.27. Age-grading track and field tables suggest that his recent 10.80 for the 100 meters at 48 is the equivalent of 9.76 by a man in his 20s – only a step behind Usain Bolt, and fast enough for a silver medal at the Bejing Olympics.

In this steroid and HGH-obsessed age, it’s a fair question to ask: Is Gault on the juice? He said he’s clean, and his consistently swift performances the past 30 years without the injuries associated with drug use would argue against any chemical shortcuts.

“What would I have to gain?” he said. “I’m not getting any money from running. I do this because it keeps me in shape. This is the only body I get. I understood that in high school.”

Lyfe is Good – get on with it!

read the rest of the article.

Danica Patrick ROCKS!

Monday, May 4th, 2009

Danica Patrick Sports Illustrated

With the Indy 500 coming up, we thought it only fitting to give some props to our favorite racer – Danica Patrick.

The Perfect Cinco de Mayo Kiwi Margarita!

Monday, May 4th, 2009

kiwi-margarita

What do you do when you find yourself with 5 pounds of kiwis? Make margaritas! With a zippy kick-in-the-pants, this is a great new way to enjoy an old favorite.

  • 1-1/2 cups superfine sugar
  • 1 cup gold tequila
  • 1 cup triple sec
  • 6 large kiwis, peeled
  • 3 cups fresh lime juice
  • 6 cups small ice cubes

Combine the sugar, tequila, triple sec, kiwis, and lime juice in a blender; fill with ice cubes; blend until smooth. The other option is to blend everything except the ice and serve “on the rocks”.

Hint: You also make these with strawberry kiwi, kiwi mango and guava, as well as other mixed fruit combinations. Enjoy

Top 10 Cities for Beer Lovers

Sunday, May 3rd, 2009

beer-cities

Munich’s Oktoberfest has come and gone, but that’s no reason for beer lovers to sit home and drown their sorrows in a frosty mug. The world is full of destinations where the natives know – and love – their beer, and where you can sample some local brew all year long. We sipped our way around the world and came up with ten great destinations for beer lovers – how about a visit to a German city that’s home to over a dozen beer gardens? Or perhaps a visit to the world’s oldest brewpub is more your pint of ale? And we can all probably agree that a city in Asia where beer is sold in vending machines is definitely worth a visit. So no matter how you say “cheers” – whether Prost! Na zdraví! Kampai! Salúd! – our list will help you raise a glass around the globe.

1. Amsterdam
Cozy, neighborhood watering holes serving beer (or pils as the locals call it), the Dutch way – with exactly two fingers’ worth of foam on top – aren’t hard to find in this city. Heineken, Grolsch, and Amstel are three of the best-known native brews, but a sampling of artisanal blends and witte (wheat) beers from neighboring Belgium are also on the menu at Amsterdam’s cozy “brown” bars, so called for their antiquated, nicotine-stained walls. If your interest in hops goes beyond consumption, take a tour of the Heineken Experience, where tastings are encouraged.

2. Berlin
Is there any place on earth better to sip Berliner Weise (beer with woodruff or raspberry juice) than in its city of origin? The city boasts more then 20 beer gardens where you can enjoy this local favorite – along with hundreds of other frothy ales. Though the city is a haven for beer lovers all year round, August in particular stands out, when the first week of the month is devoted to Bierfestival, and the city center turns into a 1.2 mile-long beer garden hosting 240 breweries from 80 countries, representing 1,750 different brands of beer.

3. Brugge
Slightly smaller than the Belgian capital of Brussels, Brugge (also known as Bruges) is renowned for its fine lace, Godiva chocolate – and beer. Indeed, this tiny city is, amazingly enough, a prime place to sample over 450 unique varieties of Belgian brew, each served in its own specialized glass. You’ll find a preserved pub, Café Vlissinghe (www.cafevlissinghe.be), that dates back to 1515, breweries that still use antiquated brewing techniques, and even museums, like De Gouden Boom Brewery Museum, where beer has been produced since 1455.

4. Burlington
Set between two beer-bustling locales – Montreal to the north, and Boston to the southeast – Burlington, Vermont is a university town with one of the best brew cultures in New England. Home to the quirky micro-brewery Magic Hat, visitors can do as the locals do and sample homegrown brews such as #9, Fat Angel, and Blind Faith IPA to name a few. Church Street, a four-block pedestrian-only zone buzzes with vibrant bars with top-notch beer on tap, including Vermont brewed Otter Creek and the Long Trail beer collection, whose specialty beers change seasonally.

5. Dublin
No beer list of any kind would be complete without a nod to the Irish and its capital city of Dublin, where pub culture thrives and the favorite local pastime is imbibing in age-old taverns where luminaries like James Joyce perhaps once did. Dubliners and visitors alike can’t resist the smooth creamy flavor and dark body of Guinness, the city’s finest, home-brewed stout. The Guinness Storehouse, where visitors can watch the brewing process and learn to pour themselves the perfect pint, and The Porterhouse, Dublin’s first brew pub and a must on any pub crawl, are two of the city’s top draws.

6. Mexico City
Una cerveza por favor! These words will have you sipping Mexico’s finest in two shakes of a maraca. Corona, the signature Mexican brew, is produced in Mexico City, at Grupo Modelo, the country’s largest brewing company. While brewpubs are rare in the capital, fun taverns, mariachi clubs, and bars abound where you can taste your share of local beers. Our favorite brands include Negra Modelo, a chocolaty-smooth dark lager (also produced by Grupo Modelo), Bohemia, a pilsner-style lager with a semi-dry flavor, and Dos XX, a golden lager-style beer.

7. Montreal
There’s more to this Québec province then Labatt and Molson. Montreal, in particular, boasts several brewpubs, like Le Cheval Blanc, Dieu du Ciel, and Sergent Recruteur that serve up first-rate micro-brewed beer in flavors that typically change with the season. Rather than be classified as lager, ale, and the like, beer here is commonly differentiated by color – blonde, rousse (red), ambrée (amber), and noir (dark) – and are ordered as such at the bar. If you happen to be in town in early June, don’t miss the annual Mondial de la Bière beer festival.

8. Portland
In Portland, there are plenty of drafts to go around. Indeed, with 28 breweries based here – more per capital than any other city in the country – this Pacific Northwest city clearly boasts the motherload of American microbrews. One of the city’s oldest and largest breweries, Widmer Brothers Brewing Company, produces over 200,000 barrels a year, including a top-selling German-style Hefeweizen; drop by on a weekend for free tours and tastings. Other popular draws here include Gasthaus, where hard-to-find brews like Snowplow Stout and Cherry Bomb are on tap, and BridgePort, Portland’s oldest microbrewery.

9. Prague
Beer lovers love Prague for two main reasons – the first being the high quality of the beer brewed here, the second being its price – which is very inexpensive by North American standards. The city is home to U Fleku, the world’s oldest brewpub, and one of Europe’s most famous beer halls. It’s also home to the original (and many would say better) Budweiser, known locally as Budvar. Traditionally, beer halls only poured one brand, but have recently begun pouring two or three, so you won’t have to pub crawl to sample Prague’s best suds. For serious enthusiasts, Plzen, home of the world’s first beer museum and the original Pilsner, is just 50 miles away.

10. Sapporo
Think the Japanese sit around sipping sake all day? Think again. Beer is the most popular alcoholic drink here – so popular, in fact, that you can purchase it from vending machines on the street. The town of Sapporo, in northern Japan, is a name beer lovers are familiar with, thanks to the golden beverage that shares the town’s namesake and which usually appears in a silver tall-boy. Since Sapporo beer is the city’s most popular export, it makes sense that it has its own museum – the only one of its kind in Japan. Next door, a beer garden with a daily barbeque creates the perfect setting for kicking back with cold draft beer.

Whew… I need a beer!

Kentucky Derby Goes Steroid Free First Time Ever

Saturday, March 14th, 2009

Kentucky DerbyThe Canadian Press says that the biggest change at this year’s Kentucky Derby won’t be noticed by any fan or disrupt the routine of any horse. In fact, its only evidence will be sealed and stored in a padlocked refrigerator minutes after the race.

For the first time, the signature American thoroughbred race is screening for anabolic steroids – a quiet step that industry officials are hoping will make a loud splash in public relations.

“Our existence depends on public confidence,” longtime breeder Arthur Hancock said. “If we lose that, we lose our livelihood. Its extremely important we get this mess cleaned up.”

Last year’s Derby winner, Big Brown, was on steroids at the time of his victory – a fact known only because trainer Rick Dutrow acknowledged it. Dutrow explained he injected the horse with regular doses of the then-legal steroid stanozolol, sold under the brand name Winstrol, although he insisted the intent was not to build muscle but to increase his appetite and brighten his coat.

What a difference a year makes. If the winner of this year’s Derby tests positive for more than a trace amount of stanozolol, the horse will be disqualified and the trainer will be subjected to a lengthy suspension.

That drug is now allowed in the sport only for therapeutic uses, and no shot can be given in Kentucky within 60 days of a race – more than enough time for any performance-enhancing effect to wear off. Only three other anabolic steroids are allowed even in minuscule doses anymore. Dozens of others have been banned completely.

At the time of last year’s Derby, only 12 of 38 racing states had banned steroids. Now 35 have, representing more than 99 per cent of the races subjected to pari-mutuel betting, according to the Racing Medication and Testing Consortium, an industry group that pushed a national testing standard.

“We went from completely unregulated to uniformly regulated in a year and a half,” said Scot Waterman, RMTC’s executive director. “There are plenty of people in this industry that never thought they’d see that day.”

Pennsylvania banned anabolic steroids last April but had previously conducted tests to see how many of its racehorses would have tested positive. Waterman said the results were staggering – showing nearly two-thirds of the horses tested had a noticeable concentration of the drugs in their bloodstream.

Those numbers don’t surprise Larry Jones, who trained last year’s Derby runner-up Eight Belles. The filly pulled up lame jogging past the finish and had to be euthanized with two fractured ankles. With speculation swirling the muscular horse was using steroids, Jones called for not just the regular necropsy but a more sophisticated one that included a drug test to prove she was clean.

“Every wrongdoing you could do to a horse, we had been accused of it,” Jones said. “We were probably the only one of the 20 (Derby starters) not on steroids.”

Bryce Peckham, Kentucky’s chief equine veterinarian, said he has heard such claims from many owners and trainers. Now the testing will prove it.

“If everybody’s on the same level playing field, I don’t think you’ll find people squeaking so much,” Peckham said.

The blood and urine samples collected from the top four finishers of the Derby will be sealed with tamper proof evidence tape and stored in a locked refrigerator until officials from Kentucky’s new testing lab at the University Florida can examine them. If there is a positive test at the Derby, it could be several days before that result is known, Peckham said.

Science still hasn’t determined the true effect steroids have on racehorses. While there is clear evidence that the drugs build muscle mass in human athletes that lead to more power or strength, racing for years focused on other performance-enhancing drugs instead that were perceived as more dangerous to the animals.