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RACE BAN 鈥 Hugh Neff and his dog team arrive at the Dawson checkpoint during the 2016 race. Neff will not be able to run the 1,000-mile race again until 2021 at the earliest.

Neff responsible for dog care: Quest officials

The Yukon Quest barred two-time champion Hugh Neff from competing in next year鈥檚 race

By Dustin Cook on April 25, 2018

The Yukon Quest barred two-time champion Hugh Neff from competing in next year鈥檚 race after the final necropsy report from a dog who died during the 2018 race showed many issues including a whipworm infestation, stomach ulcers and muscle wasting.

Following the announcement of the decision Tuesday morning, Dr. Kathleen McGill, the chair of the rules committee, said it was these other findings that were of the greatest concern and showed lack of dog care on the part of Neff.

鈥淭hese things are very disturbing, and this dog was in a bad condition before it even aspirated and that was our biggest concern,鈥 she said in an interview with the Star Tuesday afternoon.

The final necropsy report determined that the dog, Boppy, died of aspiration pneumonia caused by inhaling vomited stomach contents 鈥 as was the initial finding. But it also determined that the dog wasn鈥檛 healthy ahead of that.

鈥淭hese things didn鈥檛 just start on the race, they were before the race,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he dog should not have had whipworm. There should be a deworming process in the kennel.鈥

McGill said although there are vet checks before and during the race, the main responsibility lies with the musher as they are with their dogs all the time and know their behaviour.

鈥淢ushers should be picking up if a dog鈥檚 not eating well,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e looked at the vet books and the weight did drop. In the severe cold, you need to feed more.鈥

Based on the findings, the rules committee made the decision to apply a censure not allowing Neff to compete in the 2019 running, in either the 300 or 1,000-mile races, and he will have to run the YQ300 race before entering the 1,000-mile race again.

The rules committee made the decision based on the Code of the Trail as well as the Yukon Quest rules pertaining to treatment of dogs and expired dogs. The rules state that the death of any dog may result in the prohibition from entering future races, but this is the first time in race history that a musher is faced with this type of censure.

鈥淪omebody has to speak for the dog is what it comes down to,鈥 McGill said.

鈥淭he Yukon Quest has put more emphasis on dog care.鈥

Quest head veterinarian Dr. Nina Hansen, who oversaw the final necropsy, said she believes the severe weight loss of Boppy during the race was the main issue that guided the rules committee and the board.

Boppy died while Neff and his team were stopped at the Clinton Creek Hospitality Stop between the Eagle and Dawson checkpoints 鈥 which is about a 150 mile distance.

Neff and his team were stopped at the hospitality location already with the plan to scratch in Dawson when the aspiration occurred.

鈥淭here鈥檚 no vet checks in that long stretch so they鈥檙e responsible for caring for their own dogs in that period to ensure they鈥檙e eating well and in good condition,鈥 Hansen said.

Prior to the race, Hansen said Neff鈥檚 dogs completed their pre-race vet check with his own veterinarian in Fairbanks.

The Quest vet team received the results after the checks and Hansen said they were all good and showed no negative signs.

鈥淓verything according to those records were good. All his dogs were in good body condition,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檓 not putting any blame on his veterinarian. I think she did a great job and provided complete records.鈥

But, the pre-race vet checks don鈥檛 include blood work or a fecal floatation test, Hansen explained, which is why some of the conditions found in the necropsy could have been pre-existing but weren鈥檛 spotted by the vet teams.

McGill, who is also a former head vet of the Quest, said unlike the Idiatord they don鈥檛 have the budget to include these tests in the race checks.

鈥淲hipworm and ulcers, you can鈥檛 see that from the outside,鈥 McGill said.

鈥淭hese things indicate to us this dog wasn鈥檛 on the top conditioning that it should have been when it came to the race, but these are things the vets aren鈥檛 going to see.鈥

The intestinal parasite whipworms were probably in Boppy鈥檚 system before the race, Hansen said, because they take time to grow.

She said the Quest will be reviewing their deworming protocols as a result of the finding.

After the final necropsy report was submitted, McGill said the rules committee met via conference calls on several occasions to make a decision. She said any ruling must be unanimously agreed upon by the committee and then recommended to the Alaska and Yukon boards who voted on the decision.

鈥淭he message is that we鈥檙e looking more closely, if you will, we鈥檙e scrutinizing. At any point in time we鈥檙e looking at the care of the dogs and the responsibility is not only with the vet team, but more importantly with the musher,鈥 she said.

鈥淪omebody has to speak for the dog and that鈥檚 where we feel our responsibility lies.鈥

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) released a statement Tuesday on the necropsy findings.

鈥淭his poor dog鈥檚 intestines were inflamed, his skeletal muscle cells were dying, and his muscles were wasting away, yet Hugh Neff forced him to pull a sled until he inhaled his own vomit and died of pneumonia. This should earn Neff a lifetime ban from the Yukon Quest and the Iditarod 鈥 which allowed him to compete just a month later and drop seven suffering dogs along the way 鈥 and all other races,鈥 executive vice president Tracy Reiman said.

When reached this morning, Neff said he will not be answering questions at this time, but is planning to release a statement and a video.

McGill said Neff was notified of the ruling Tuesday and according to the rules he has 30 days from that date to request an informal hearing.

Comments (1)

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Angry Yukoner on Apr 26, 2018 at 11:10 am

Hugh Neff should be charged with animal abuse. Boppy was run to death on the Canadian side, that's where he died. Where is Jay Lester our animal welfare officer? If the Yukon Quest won't ban this animal abuser for life, the law should.

I am haunted, thinking about what this creature went through all under the watchful eyes of Hugh Neff, and race vets and race judges. This is insane and has to stop.

Also consider this. The Yukon Government tourism department funds the Yukon Quest. They must demand higher standards of dog welfare and that Neff never runs a team in this race again.

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