In the NFL’s entire 103-year history, exactly one – one – player has died during a game. On January 1 of last year, three horses died at Ohio’s Northfield Park – in the same race.
Let’s start with this in regard to the cardiac arrest suffered by
the Bills’ Damar Hamlin during an NFL game Monday: I wish nothing
but the best for him, full return to health and resumption of his
career. That said, what happened in Cincinnati further illustrates
the utter obscenity of classifying horseracing as just another
sport. Aside from the obvious – racehorses are enslaved; human
athletes are not – the reactions of players/fans and, even more
telling, the response by the NFL speaks volumes.
The game, as I’m sure many of you know, was postponed, and rightly
so, as this was not a run-of-the-mill football injury. But.
Racehorses are killed every day on American tracks.
Every single day. With some of those dying in full
public view – vet out, tarp up, pink in (sometimes this isn’t
even necessary: the horse is dead on impact), body hauled away. And
then the game resumes, with not even a perfunctory moment of
silence. So please dispense forevermore with the lie of
horseracing-as-sport, racehorses-as-athletes. It isn’t; they’re not.
(For a definitive comparison of in-game deaths between the four
major U.S. sports and horseracing, see
Death on Game Day Alone Gives the Lie to
Horseracing-As-Sport
Here’s a preview: In the NFL’s entire 103-year history, exactly one – one – player has died during a game. On January 1 of last year, three horses died at Ohio’s Northfield Park – in the same race.)