The recent inquiry into jockey Andrew Fortune has done more than close a disciplinary file. It has reopened a broader governance debate inside the National Horseracing Authority of Southern Africa: who is actually best placed to judge performance-based riding offences in modern racing?
At the centre of the discussion is Rule 22.3.4, which reshaped the composition of Inquiry Boards in cases where a charged party elects legal representation. It removes National Board members and NHA employees from sitting on such panels, while still allowing stipendiary stewards to conduct routine inquiries in their ordinary capacity.
On paper, the intent is clear: strengthen independence, reduce internal influence, and protect procedural fairness. In practice, it has shifted certain inquiries decisively toward legal adjudication models rather than racing-specific tribunals.
A case that sits in the grey zone of judgment
The Fortune inquiry involved an allegation that is notoriously difficult to prove with precision: whether a jockey failed to ride out between the 400m and 200m mark.
Unlike interference, whip offences, or rule breaches that leave objective traces, “not riding out” cases sit in a grey area of interpretation. They rely on visual assessment of effort, reading intent under pressure, understanding a horse’s response, and judging what constitutes professional riding in context.
These are not purely legal questions. They are technical racing judgments, often shaped by experience at the coalface of the sport.
In this instance, the inquiry was chaired by legal professionals, including Mr B A Reardon and labour lawyer A Flok. After hearing evidence, the panel found Fortune not guilty.
Independence achieved, but at what cost?
Few would dispute the value of independence in sporting regulation. Racing has long needed distance between disciplinary decision-making and operational structures. Removing internal administrators from adjudication is, in principle, a safeguard against perceived bias.
But independence is only one half of the equation. The other half is competence in the subject being judged.
Legal professionals are trained to evaluate evidence, test credibility, and apply procedural fairness. Those are essential skills in any disciplinary system. However, racing presents an additional layer: performance interpretation in a high-speed, dynamic environment where outcomes are influenced by split-second decisions that rarely translate neatly into legal categories.
This is not a criticism of the individuals involved in the Fortune case. It is a structural question: whether legal expertise alone is sufficient in disputes that hinge on riding technique and competitive intent.
The role of stipendiary stewards—and their absence here
Historically, racing jurisdictions have relied heavily on stipendiary stewards to bridge this gap. Stewards are typically drawn from within the sport, with deep experience in race riding, tactics, and equine behaviour. Their value lies in interpreting what actually happened on a racehorse under pressure.
Rule 22.3.4 preserves their role in routine inquiries, but once legal representation is elected, their presence is excluded.
That creates a structural tension. In high-stakes, contested cases—the ones most likely to involve legal representation—the system risks sidelining the very expertise designed to interpret racing nuance.
A system drifting toward legal formalism
The broader trajectory is clear: the system is moving toward a more formal legal model of adjudication.
That has advantages: clearer procedural safeguards, stronger appeal resilience, reduced perception of internal bias, and improved consistency in legal reasoning.
But it also risks something more subtle: over-legalising sport-specific judgment calls.
Not every racing dispute is a legal puzzle. Some are interpretive sporting calls that depend on lived experience of riding and race dynamics. When those decisions are filtered exclusively through legal professionals, there is a risk that the sport becomes slightly detached from its own technical language.
The Fortune verdict is not the real issue
The outcome itself—an acquittal—does not need to be reframed or questioned in isolation. The inquiry followed due process and reached a conclusion under the rules of the governing body.
The more important question is structural: if a different panel, perhaps including experienced racing stewards, had sat on the same evidence, would the interpretation of “riding out” have been meaningfully different?
There is no simple answer. But the question itself is telling. It reflects an underlying uncertainty about whether the current model is optimally balanced.
The governance dilemma
Every racing authority eventually faces the same dilemma: prioritising internal expertise risks perceptions of bias, while prioritising external legal independence risks losing technical nuance.
The current framework clearly leans toward the second option. That is not inherently wrong. Many modern sports regulators are moving in the same direction.
But independence is not the only measure of good adjudication. Expertise matters just as much—especially in performance-based offences.
Conclusion: a system in transition
The Andrew Fortune inquiry sits at the intersection of law and sport, where neither discipline fully dominates the other. The structure that produced the verdict is legally sound and consistent with Rule 22.3.4. It reflects a deliberate policy choice to prioritise independence through legal separation.
But it also exposes a quiet tension: when racing disputes become too legal, they can drift away from the lived reality of racing itself.
The question is not whether the system is legitimate. It clearly is. The question is whether it is optimally equipped for the kinds of judgments it is now being asked to make.
And in a sport where outcomes can turn on half a stride or a moment’s hesitation, that distinction matters more than it might first appear.
Video of the race with the camera on Andrew Fortune.
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