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Butler admits to giving horses steroids

Trainer Gerard Butler says more than 100 horses across Newmarket's stables have received steroids on veterinary advice.

Butler could face a ban from racing after admitting to injecting horses with anabolic steroids.

Butler told the Independent he had made an "unpardonable misjudgement", and comes just days after fellow Newmarket handler Mahmood Al Zarooni was banned for eight years after he admitted to administering anabolic steroids to 15 horses in his care.

The trainer has already informed the British Horseracing Authority that several of his horses had been treated, on veterinary advice, for injured joints with a banned substance.

Butler told the Independent: "I have been totally candid throughout, and it was I who told the BHA that I had treated four colts in December and January.

"I'm not trying to defend myself, just to explain what happened. And I must emphasise I was advised in good faith by my vets. It was an unpardonable misjudgement, purely to cut corners in what is a very expensive treatment.

"I have been very uncomfortable over the past few days, hearing and reading about the Al Zarooni case. I feel people need to know about what has happened in my yard."

Butler believes 'Sungate', the medication in question he used on veterinary advice to treat horses' joints, has been "misunderstood by many others"; he believes that more than 100 horses across the headquarters of British Flat racing have been given the same drug.

He said: "I know I'm obliged to satisfy myself that each and every treatment is within the rules, and I failed to do so in this case.

"But I am certain that this medication has been misunderstood by many others. And I just hope that the BHA is being suitably rigorous in establishing whether that is indeed the case.

"It did not cross my mind that there could be any problem with this medication. And, judging from the fact that the BHA said nothing about it when they saw my medical book, it does not seem to have crossed their minds, either.

"Little Black Book ran on August 4th, and won a couple of weeks later, so they would have known he was clearly in training at the time. In the medical book, I signed that I had authorised use of the drug, and my vet had countersigned for its administration.

"Sungate had for some time been widely used in their practice, with very beneficial results for joint injuries."