In all, Dave Hoeght “earned” over $130,000 for his various people. And yet somehow, he ends up in a dump of a place, body destroyed – his arthritis was termed “severe” – with not a soul to advocate for him.

Last February 10, two horses – Majestic Heir and Dave Hoeght – were
euthanized at Camarero Race Track in Puerto Rico. Both, I have
learned, were put down for “arthritis” – i.e., they were
irreversibly lame. Nothing unusual there, of course. Nor the fact
that at age six and seven, respectively, they should have just been
entering the equine prime of life. That’s racing. What struck me
were the paths these poor souls traveled before meeting their
respective ends at this, one of the most wretched stops on the
horseracing circuit (and, often, the final stop; much more on that
soon).
Majestic Heir was foaled in Kentucky in March 2013, with a “debut”
in Louisiana three years later. First owner/trainer team: Brittlyn
Stable, Albert Stall. To Kentucky for four races, then to New York
and a race at the world-famous Saratoga Race Course. It was before
that one, in August ’16, that Majestic began a streak of being “For
Sale” 21 straight times. Back down to Kentucky for four more, then
to Louisiana, where he finally “won” his first race. He was, at this
time, also under a new trainer, Ron Faucheux. Three months later,
Majestic was shipped to Florida. Here, he was sold just prior to
bringing up the rear, some 23 lengths back. New owner, Joseph Krong;
new trainer, Victor Barboza. Five more at Gulfstream, then the
now-five-year-old disappeared for over a year before resurfacing at
Camarero in December 2018.
In his first race in Puerto Rico, Majestic finished dead last, 25+
lengths back. He was also under the yoke of a new team: owner, I J
Stable; trainer, Jorge Perez. Two races later, a new owner/trainer:
Angel Calderon. His final five races, all under Calderon:
second-to-last, 13 back
last, 46+ back
last, 42+ back
last, 81+ back
and finally, January 30, 2020, second-to-last, 39+ back
11 days later – dead.
Dave Hoeght was also foaled in Kentucky, in March 2012. His first
race came as a 2-year-old at Churchill Downs. Owner (and also
breeder), Mike Tarp; trainer, Dale Romans. 11 races – in KY, FL, NY
– for this pair followed, then sold to World Wide Promotion and
trainer Marcial Navarro. Several races later, a new trainer: Antonio
Machado. In November ’17, sold again: owner/trainer, Regulo
Rodriguez. Before the next race, sold back to World Wide – with yet
another new trainer, Jose Camejo. A few races later, enter Tyron
Benoit (at this point, he was being raced in TX and LA). Still, the
training carousel continued: back to Camejo, then Angel Rodriguez.
Dave Hoeght’s final race came in Florida in April 2019. Next thing
we know, he turns up dead in Puerto Rico – almost a full year later.
Here was a horse who raced at some of the most prestigious tracks in
the U.S. – Churchill, Saratoga, Gulfstream – and for at least one
big-name trainer (Romans). In all, he “earned” over $130,000 for his
various people. And yet somehow, he ends up in a dump of a place,
body destroyed – his arthritis was termed “severe” – with not a soul
to advocate for him. A dead horse (barely) walking. A dead horse.
Nothing is more important than “equine welfare,” right? The horses
are “like members of the family,” hey? Vile – to the core.