I hope nobody even suggests that Joshua Ramsey has anything to do with this. I spoke with him a few nights ago, and he was pretty concerned, but mostly for the people who used the bull, and of course for his own creditability. Josh said right from the first time he posted a picture of Ivy League that he was going to get him TH tested , and if he was a TH carrier, he would be a show steer. If he was clean, he would maybe be promoted as a bull, if he continued to develop. Well, he was tested and he was found to be TH free. Ivy League did continue to develop and Joshua and his family did a great job of promoting him. He was an eye opening sire when he was displayed in Denver. I don't think I have ever seen a calf as thick made as he was at his young age. He had lots of hair but there was a very thick bull under the hair.
I think now is the time to be supporting Joshua and his family and I certainly hope that this doesn't develop into a clubby bashing thread. I think that is most inappropriatiate, to say the least. I can just imagine what they must be going through right now as they have spend a substantial amount of money, promoting and collecting this bull.
This is now the third bull that I have heard of in the past 3 years that this has happened to. I had a bull that this same thing happened with. A breeder wanted to buy my bull, and I would not even price him until he was tested. The test results came back that he was TH free. I priced the bull and he was sold. The people who bought my bull only had 1 carrier female in their herd. She calved with the third calf born from him, and it was a TH defective calf and was diagnosed as such by a Vet College. AgriGenomics said that the test was 100% accurate, but when they retested the same blood sample a second time, it came back as a TH Carrier. This is the exact same thing that happened with Ivy League and with the other bull I have heard about. For all I know there may have been more of these errors... but I certainly hope not. To me, this only suggests that the test itself may truly be 100% accurate, however, there is still room for error from the human component. ( ie: the people doing the tests).
This is not the time or place to attack the breeders and owners of this bull. Let's use a little common sense in this discussion.