And so it went, until men began to domesticate wolves and other wild canines. Apparently, the ancient Egyptians were especially fond of the wild, greyhound dogs who roamed the earth in their time, and they began to breed them for their own pleasure and purpose. Greyhounds were prized for their grace and beauty, as well as their deadly skill as hunters and coursers, and gatherers of game.
The greyhound eventually found its way to Europe and to the New World, and was always prized for the same attributes and aptitudes that so enchanted the Pharaohs and their subjects.
Western World greyhound fanciers and those in rural, agricultural areas, who employed greyhounds to dispatch vermin and pests, soon undertook the task of "selectively breeding" only the fastest of the fast, in order to produce a more lethal hunter and courser, gifted of ever greater speed and stamina, so that they were able to perform their job in the grand scheme of human survival and progress, ever more efficiently.
According to his writings, possessed by the family of Owen P. Smith, the man who invented the mechanical lure, (which impelled the advent of track racing for greyhounds), said that one of the primary motivations for his invention was to spare the use of live rabbits, which were once coursed by greyhounds in competition.
His invention allowed athletic competition between and among greyhounds, without the need for live game, and on a specially prepared and maintained surface, which was considerably more forgiving than the often rocky or otherwise rugged terrain of the coursing field or hunting grounds.
So a new sport and new business sprung up around the Greyhound, beginning, in earnest, in the early 1930s. States became attracted to it, because of the windfall of taxes and fees they could levy on those who gambled on greyhound racing, those who owned the Racing Greyhounds, and those who owned the racing venues i.e. the racetracks.
The public, always fascinated by speed and animals, lionized greyhound racing, and the Racing Greyhound became known as the "poor man's racehorse." The sport, because of the greyhound's historic favor among royalty, became known as "The Sport of Queens."
Hundreds of millions of dollars for the public good has been generated by greyhound racing over the decades, and it remains one of, if not the most liberally taxed businesses in the country and the Commonwealth.
Photo courtesy of Christopher Grieb, www.followthathound.com
For his part, the Racing Greyhound, not to be confused with the "show" greyhound, is the functional, modern day incarnation of those wild, prehistoric greyhounds, who found their way into the kingdoms and the hearts of the Pharaohs and their subjects, all those centuries ago.
Thanks to Greyhound Racing, and to the selective breeding of only the most well-adapted and perfectly evolved specimens from the population which competitive racing demands and compels the Racing Greyhound, as an individual with unique and specific set of athletic/survival aptitudes, and as a unique and highly functional population, differs very little from his prehistoric ancestors.
He is kept genetically vibrant, and diverse, only because of greyhound racing, which alone supports the Racing Greyhound population, and the 46 different female families of Racing Greyhounds, from which flow the wellsprings of all greyhound vitality and well-being.
Just as in nature, the way the prehistoric greyhound evolved, only the most well-adapted, dispositionally and genetically sound and "successful" Racing Greyhounds are bred and we measure this genetic success, by formal, state-regulated racing competition among Racing Greyhounds.
Those greyhounds who distinguish themselves and their families by excellence in their racing performance, are the only greyhounds "selected" by breeders to carry on with the breed.
Form follows function. Racing Greyhounds are bred to race, and their form is the same basic form as their prehistoric forbears, because their function is still essentially the same, racing being the only expression of the greyhound's ancient and natural survival mechanism that is available to them today.
It is no accident, that of all large canine breeds, the only breed that is free of the congenital, degenerative, crippling and excruciatingly painful defect of hip dysplasia is the Racing Greyhound. The genetics of morbidly unsound hips simply cannot exist in such a meticulously bred population of functional, performing athletes.
The Racing Greyhound has the largest heart and greatest lung capacity of all canines, is among the most long-lived of the large breeds, and is, pound-for-pound, over 10 times faster than a Thoroughbred racehorse.
American Kennel Club breeders of non-racing greyhounds have once again opened their "studbook" to Racing Greyhounds, in order to reinvigorate and revitalize their tightly inbred bloodlines with the diverse and functional genetics of our 46 female families of Racing Greyhounds.
While there are 75,000 in-training or actively racing and breeding Racing Greyhounds in the country, the entire population of non-racing greyhounds in the US numbers somewhere in the area of only 4,000 individuals, less than 10 percent of whom might be "breeding specimens" a dangerously small population, and a disastrously small breeding population.
The visionary AKC breeder realizes that this small non-racing population will benefit immensely from genetic dosing with the highly refined athleticism of functional Racing Greyhound genetics which are preserved and nurtured by greyhound racing, and the selective breeding of only it's most functional specimens, who are illuminated, objectively for breeders, by competitive greyhound racing.
Far from being an object of pity, the modern Racing Greyhound is a marvel of breed husbandry and custodianship, selective breeding, and athletic adaptation, but one whose prosperity and future is entirely dependent upon greyhound racing, which is the only thing that maintains, preserves and supports its diverse genetic wellsprings and therefore its genetic well-being.
Greyhound Racing is the mechanism that makes Racing Greyhounds who and what they are. After 80 years and dozens and dozens of generations of selective race-breeding, it is fair to say that every cell of the Racing Greyhound is "racing imbued."
Photo courtesy of Christopher Grieb, www.followthathound.com
As for the bigots of Grey2K, they are an animal rights political action group, and they donate not one penny to the welfare of the racing greyhound, and they never have.
None of their spokespersons has ever worked in a racing kennel, or raised a litter of racing greyhounds, or trained one as a racer. How they purport to know so much about racing and Racing Greyhounds is a matter for some conjecture on the part of reasonable people of good will toward their fellow man and their neighbor. Or by those who simply don't want to be bilked into donating to a "cause," the true purpose of which is to extract magnanimous salaries for its "braintrustees" from those donations.
In a strictly regulated, state-run gaming enterprise like greyhound racing, it is simply unreasonable to think that the same people who spend hundreds of thousands, and even millions of dollars on the breeding, raising and acquisition of Racing Greyhounds, would deliberately or ignorantly subject them to the mythological abuses, or risks, such as those alleged in the literature and in the press releases of politically motivated hate-groups like Grey2K.
It simply defies logic, as it defies financial feasibility, or more simply, fiscal sanity. Racing Greyhounds are finely tuned athletes, and as such, like any other athlete; they require an extremely high level of preparation, maintenance and human attention and affection, to perform their athletic function on a regular basis, and to fulfill their athletic potential.
As an example of their sensationalized propaganda, Grey2K notes a state study on injuries, done at Raynham/Taunton Greyhound Park, over the course of a year.
According to Grey2K's own website, the study cited 262 greyhound injuries sustained by greyhounds while racing, in the 15,000 greyhound races which Raynham put on that year everything, from a broken toenail, to a pulled muscle, to a fractured hock.
Sounds pretty gruesome, doesn't it? That's what Grey2K would like you to think. And hopefully, you'll donate money to them. Rest assured, none of it will be spent on greyhound welfare. None of it ever has been.
Nevertheless, an astute fifth grader would realize that 15,000 greyhound races translates into 120,000 individual greyhound performances since there are 8 dogs in each single race.
So there were roughly 120,000 chances for greyhounds to be injured while racing at Raynham/Taunton during the duration of the study, and 262 of them sustained some sort of injury. So in fact, the actual incidence of greyhound injuries, as opposed to individual greyhound racing performances, is 0.218%.
Which means that the real frequency of any single greyhound sustaining any sort of injury during any single racing performance is about 1 in 450.
How does that relate to pets who are simply horsing around at the local dog park, or even in their own backyard? I really don't know, and neither does Grey2K. And here we have come to the gaping yaw of their agenda of bigotry and prejudice, and to the depths of their hatred, unreason and myopia.
The true measure of Racing Greyhound welfare is not ever referred to in any anti-racing propaganda article, or shrill, hysterical animal rights diatribe. The true measure of the wherewithal of the Racing Greyhound, or any other specific population of canines, is in how their well-being relates to the rest of the canine population. Period.
In a society that euthanizes over 12 million abused, unwanted or abandoned pets a year, it was estimated by the independent animal welfare organization, Make Peace With Animals, that 85-90 percent of the yearly retiring population of Racing Greyhounds are placed in adoption programs, or sent back to breeders to carry on with the breed.
Thanks to the hard work of selfless adoption volunteers and breed enthusiasts, as well as many from the "supply side" of greyhound racing, and the racetracks themselves, the Racing Greyhound has found a receptive and enthusiastic adoptive audience, which is increasing on a daily basis.
It may comfort you somewhat, and reduce the level of your vitriol and outrage, to know that your neighbor not only trained Racing Greyhounds, but was fortunate enough to have found a group of enthusiastic Racing Greyhound owners and breed benefactors, many of whom are adoptive owners, and we began Race For Adoption.
The winnings of the greyhounds who take part in the Race For Adoption concept are donated directly to adoption groups. We have raised nearly $100,000 in a year and a half. I had hoped that the tired, old politics of class-hatred, prejudice, bigotry, propaganda and prohibition, as expressed so eloquently by Grey2K, were a thing of the past. Apparently not. Silly me.
Now that they have deliberately and disingenuously hidden their once-failed agenda of racing prohibition from the state's voters, behind a sudden and entirely newfound interest in dog fighting and service dogs, that should speak volumes to you about the legitimacy of that anti-racing agenda.
If that fails to move you, neighbor, please consider the scientific facts of greyhound genetics, and that as formal venues for racing greyhounds disappear, the population of racing greyhounds is exponentially reduced, effectively and exponentially also reducing its unique genetic diversity.
Since many deadly and degenerative syndromes and diseases in canines are a direct result of disastrously reduced and inbred populations, the Grey2K agenda of prohibition/reduction/extinction is a patently anti-greyhound agenda.
Please feel free to contact me, neighbor, if you would like to know any more of the truth about Racing Greyhounds and greyhound racing. After all, it's a small world, and an even smaller state. Hopefully it's not so small that there still isn't room to let those greyhounds run and race, as nature designed them to. An entire population of Racing Greyhounds is counting on it.
Dennis McKeon
Swansea, MA
RaceForAdoption.com
Dennis McKeon was a professional greyhound trainer for a couple of decades in the 70s and 80s, and retired from the profession to find more stable and less demanding work, being a family man, and needing to spend time with that family. He has a wife, 4 children and 5 grandchildren. He stayed connected with the sport, having long been a fan and a student of bloodlines, and also a keeper of retired greyhounds as family pets. Today he helps promote his brainchild, Race For Adoption (www.RaceForAdoption.com), and do pedigree analysis and research, free of charge, for anyone who asks. He is a dedicated Committee Member of GRA/America (The Greyhound Racing Association of America - www.gra-america.org). He is working on writing a book about the Racing Greyhound Chromosome X-Factor, which will revolutionize how we view pedigrees and breeding in the future.
Reprinted with permission.