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Elastikon Research Award goes to project on track surfaces The second annual Elastikon Equine Research Award, funded through a grant made by Johnson & Johnson Consumer Products Company to Grayson-Jockey Club Research Foundation, has been awarded to Dr. Wayne McIlwraith of Colorado State University and Dr. Mick Peterson of the University of Maine for their research designed to enhance the safety of race tracks for horses. The project uses a drop hammer, with a simulated hoof, along with ground-penetrating radar, to analyze racing surfaces. Researchers agree that uniformity of a race track surface is a key component to keeping horses sound, and the McIlwraith and Peterson project will assist track superintendents in achieving that goal. The project will address dirt tracks as well as synthetic surfaces. The research project will create a protocol for track maintenance personnel to establish baseline information and maintain consistency on their race tracks. For synthetic surfaces, the research will include data on wax content and melt point. "Elastikon is pleased to be able to support research which has a great potential to reduce injuries to race horses," said Jack Weakley, director of the Sports Medicine Group of Johnson & Johnson's Consumer Products Company. "When Grayson-Jockey Club told us this project had been highly evaluated and recommended by its board and its Research Advisory Committee, we felt strongly that it was an excellent project for us to join in supporting. The safety of the competitors is inherent in Elastikon's very role in the industry, as is true of Grayson-Jockey Club Research Foundation's." The $43,000 track evaluation project is one of two dozen research projects currently being funded by Grayson-Jockey Club Research Foundation.
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