By Linda
Breazeale MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Visionaries may not have dreamed big enough when
plans began for the construction of a harness track at
Mississippi State University, but now that it is
operational, several upcoming events will compliment the
track's training purposes. Members
of the Mississippi Trotting Association were the first to
see the need for a harness training track, and a location
near MSU's College of Veterinary Medicine seemed the logical
choice. They approached then-Commissioner of Agriculture and
Commerce Jim Buck Ross and the plans began for the track
along with MSU's new AgriCenter. Eric
Tinsey of Terry, president of the Mississippi Trotting
Association, talked to Commissioner Lester Spell when he was
a candidate for Ross's post. Tinsey lobbied for increased
support of trotting horses in a state where quarter horse
programs were already sufficient. "Mississippi
has had a significant increase in interest in harness racing
in the last five years," Tinsey said. "Unlike in states with
parimutuel betting, harness racing in Mississippi is an
expensive hobby, but it is something you do from the heart.
The events are like huge picnics with spectators tailgating
and enjoying themselves." A
harness racing event is planned at the new MSU track on May
30, Memorial Weekend. The benefit race will raise money for
future trotting association competitions. Plans for harness
events during a Golden Triangle Regional Fair, Aug. 25
through 28, also are underway at the AgriCenter. "Illinois
and Ohio have 40 to 60 fairs each year that have harness
racing events," Tinsey said. "Mississippi has only had the
Neshoba County Fair and a weekend event at Camden in Madison
County." Tinsey
said most of Mississippi's harness racers are clustered in
the Jackson and Starkville areas. Local
harness racers began using the MSU training track this
spring in preparation for the upcoming season. In addition
to the few competitions in the state, Mississippi trainers
journey across the region and further north during the
racing season, which lasts from about May through the middle
of September. Robert
Outlaw, a trotting horse owner and trainer from Starkville,
said the track enables him to evaluate each horse in a safer
setting. "Training
is a long, slow process that takes about a year. Endurance
is a big issue, so we work on building up the horses'
muscles and lungs for competition," Outlaw said. "Only about
half of the horses we work with ever make it to a
race." Webb
Flowers, MSU AgriCenter manager, said the university's goal
is to increase the use of the track and enable more people
to enjoy the facility. "The
location and facilities are a natural for major events that
utilize all we have to offer including the main AgriCenter
arena, the barns and the harness track," Flowers
said. Released:
April 26, 1999
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
New Harness Track
Offers Opportunities
Contact: Webb Flowers, (662) 325-9351
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 17-Aug-07 14:27:54
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