Thursday, June 29, 2006

Recuperating Barbaro 'happy, healthy horse,' Sweeney says

Posted: 6/28/2006 2:35:07 PM
"Thoroughbred Times"

Barbaro gets brushed

Kentucky Derby (G1) winner Barbaro continues to please veterinarians with his progress in his recovery from surgery to repair his shattered right hind leg sustained in the Preakness Stakes (G1) on May 20.

The colt remains in intensive care at the George D. Widener Hospital for Large Animals at the University of Pennsylvania's New Bolton Center in Kennett Square, Pennsylvania.

"Barbaro continues to improve; he is maintaining his weight and his coat looks good," said Corinne Sweeney, D.V.M, executive director of the Widener Hospital. "I would say he is a happy, healthy horse."

 

Barbaro wearing new cast well; remains 'grand patient'

"The Thoroughbred Times"

Posted: 6/23/2006 3:45:09 PM



Dr. Liberty Getman checks out Barbaro's new cast.


Kentucky Derby (G1) winner Barbaro has adjusted well to his new fiberglass cast and continues to be comfortable as he recovers from surgery to repair a shattered right hind ankle at the University of Pennsylvania's New Bolton Center.

"That's the absolute good news, because you don't know. Every cast is put on with the idea that it will be a perfect fit, but time tells and he's wearing this one very well," George D. Widener Hospital Executive Director Corinne Sweeney, D.V.M., said Friday.

"The fiberglass cast is a light type of cast. This cast is the same type of cast that was put on him right after surgery, it's just a replacement. It's not any different; it's just a new one."

Barbaro suffered a fractured sesamoid, a fractured proximal phalanx, or long pastern—which was splintered into more than 20 pieces—and a condylar fracture of the cannon bone during the opening yards of the Preakness Stakes (G1) on May 20 at Pimlico Race Course. The Dynaformer colt also dislocated his fetlock.

Dean W. Richardson, D.V.M, chief surgeon at Penn's veterinary school performed the five-hour operation on May 21 that required 27 screws and a locking compression plate to stabilize the joint.

"He's a lively, bright, happy horse," said Richardson, who replaced the cast on Barbaro's hind leg on June 13. "I'm very pleased with the progress he's made in the last month."

A graded stakes winner on both turf and dirt, Barbaro proved a standout on the track while winning the first six races of his career, capped by a 6 1/2-length romp in the Kentucky Derby. Nearly five weeks after major surgery, Sweeney said he does not appear too far removed from his racing career.

"He is a grand patient, he's all boy," Sweeney said. "He acts like, `Give me a chance to run, I'm ready to go.' He acts he's ready to go back to doing what he was doing. When you open the door to bring him out for his bath, he's like, 'OK, let's go.'

"He has a cast on his leg so he has to walk like he has a cast on his leg, but other than that he moves around just like you or I would walk if we were pretending we were stiff in the ankle," Sweeney continued. "He bears full weight on it and he still does his little romps in the stall, so it hasn't affected his style."

Barbaro, a homebred of Roy and Gretchen Jackson's Lael Farm, has been an ideal patient and accepted his new life confined to a stall with charisma.

"There's nothing mopey about him," Sweeney said. "He has adjusted to his current plight in life, probably with the same style that he adjusted to knowing that he was supposed to go out there and run races. He's maintaining his weight, if not putting on a little bit. He's not moping around, and that's important for any patient that has a long-term hospitalization. If a positive attitude has any effect on outcome, he's certainly got that positive attitude."

Nurses in the Intensive Care Unit at the New Bolton Center have helped Barbaro occupy his time with a variety of games in the stall, one of which he is particularly adept.

"To amuse him, besides feeding him some snacks, some of the nurses on the ward line peppermints up on the edge [of his stall], and he's gotten very clever at being able to get to each one between the bars before they fall off the edge," Sweeney said. "Any patient that is there for an extended period of time, all of the staff here forms a good relationship with. He's now been a resident of the hospital for almost five weeks, and he certainly has endeared himself."—Mike Curry

Thursday, June 22, 2006

My Involvement With Barbaro and A Remarkable Video

I have been wondering why I am so consumed with Barbaro, and how I think of him daily, sending prayers,  looking for updates, and how my heart soars when I read good news about this incredible thoroughbred. I have never been involved in the sport of racing. I was, however, very active with pleasure riding, some showing and volunteering in the Therapeutic Riding for the Handicapped program.In fact, I presented my master's thesis to complete my Social Work degree using my experience in the program and extensive research on the subject.

So I have been really asking myself why I am so consumed (and it feels like that for me) with Barbaro. It finally "hit me" this morning. I am still grieving for the loss of my beloved horse, Pat De Foi ( Patti), who died while seven months pregnant. She would have had a filly, sired by a former Race Horse, Jolly Thief. He was a really sweet, dynamic and statuesque stallion. Our filly would have been a spectacular dabbled bay.

Patty was a registered Quarter Horse, Liver Chestnut, mare. The snip on her nose resembled the map of Africa. Barbaro has an almost identical snip on his nose. 

Many years ago I wrote an article about the loss of a beloved companion horse, and its impact on us, which was published in the CHRONICLE OF THE HORSE. You can read it and see her picture here: GOODBYE TO PATTI

Grieving the loss of a beloved horse for so many years, may seem strange to some folks, but she touched me so deeply and filled me with so much love and admiration. She not only was a wonderful pleasure horse, but she eagerly contributed to the Therapeutic program as her temperament and easy going ways made her a natural. Many children adored her. She was easy to love.. everyone did

But my love for Barbaro and my admiration for his courage, is certainly not odd, nor am I alone. This horse has become a symbol of courage, beauty, bravery and heart. But what I identify the most with, is the love that his owners, trainer, Veterinarians and staff feel for him.

So this video really touched me and I just wanted to share it with my readers, and also to explain why this journal has been devoted to Barbaro and his journey toward healing. Grief comes in many forms and can last a lifetime. It is only by sharing it with others that ultimately we can heal and allow the love to remain inour hearts without the pain of the loss.

BEAUTIFUL BARBARO

Monday, June 19, 2006

Barbaro Doing Great a Month After Breakdown

by The Associated Press
Date Posted: 6/18/2006 3:03:48 PM
Last Updated: 6/19/2006 10:19:32 AM

Trainer Michael Matz visited Barbaro on Friday at the New Bolton Center.
Photo: AP/Sabina Louise Pierce
By RICHARD ROSENBLATT
AP Racing Writer
His coat gleaming and muscles rippling, Barbaro still has the look of a champion. One month after the Kentucky Derby presented by Yum! Brands (gr. I) winner's life-threatening breakdown in the Preakness Stakes (gr. I), the colt remains cooped up in the intensive care unit at the George D. Widener Hospital for Large Animals at New Bolton Center in Kennett Square, Pa.

But he's making such steady improvement even surgeon Dean Richardson can't help but smile when discussing the world's most famous equine patient.

"This horse has had a remarkably smooth progression of events, he's just done everything right so far," Richardson said. "He's a lively, bright, happy horse. If you asked me a month ago, I would have gladly accepted where we are today."

In his spacious corner stall, Barbaro walked around with head held high, sporting a new fiberglass cast that protects the catastrophic injuries to his right hind ankle at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore on May 20.

Once a visitor stepped inside his cubicle, the bay colt approached with eyes bright, ears up and barely a hitch in his step. He eagerly devoured a handful of sugar cubes, followed by a peppermint for dessert, then shook his head up and down and gave a little whinny as if asking for a second helping.

"When someone walks in the door, he's ready to head out -- not because he's bored or frustrated, but because he's full of energy," says Dr. Corinne Sweeney, the hospital's executive director who sees Barbaro nearly every day. "He's been full of energy since he came in here and he remains that way."

Barbaro is working on a new life, and these days he's the master of his domain in the six-stall ICU. Mares have come and gone since his arrival, and Barbaro has flirted with many of them. In the neonatal ICU -- elsewhere in the building -- Barbaro's former mare-next-door was tending to her premature foal. Over the weekend, a stallion replaced the mare as Barbaro's new neighbor.

The day Jazil won the Belmont Stakes (gr. I), June 10, ABC Sports visited Barbaro and put him on television. There was even a TV set placed in the ICU. Would Barbaro watch the Belmont?

At first, he seemed interested: When the call to the post sounded, the 3-year-old colt walked to the front of his stall, ears pricked and head up, Sweeney said. By the time the field turned for home, though, Barbaro had turned away, walked to the back of his stall and relieved himself.

For the most part, Barbaro is a cooperative patient.

"He's very personable, he knows his job," Sweeney said. If someone comes in to groom him or clean his stall, "he kind of moves over as if he's saying, `OK, I don't want to fight you. You're just trying to do your job."'

While Barbaro appears friendly, frisky and a bit feisty -- a note on his stall door read: Caution: Bites. He's got a long road to recovery, and the staff at the New Bolton Center knows complications could develop at any time.

Months of healing remain before the cast comes off for good and decisions are made about Barbaro's future, but Richardson was feeling better after fitting the colt witha new hock-to-hoof cast last week. His left hind leg has been fitted with a special shoe and support apparatus to ensure his weight is evenly distributed.

Most encouraging was Richardson's first look at the 18-inch incision he made to piece together three broken bones with a titanium plate and 27 screws.

"I was thrilled to see the incision had healed fairly well," Richardson said. "There's not a lot to see in X-rays after just three weeks, but everything looked fine. We're very encouraged."

The only visible blemish on Barbaro is the blistered skin on his left side, caused by the sling used for his initial surgery, and then again when the cast was changed. As with humans, wearing a cast is not the most comfortable thing in the world.

"Horses aren't usually capable of taking a pen or a coat hanger and guiding it down there and scratching it," Richardson said. "All he can do is stomp his foot."

The day after the Preakness, Richardson and a team of doctors performed perhaps the most complex surgery of the surgeon's career -- a five-hour plus procedure. Afterward, Richardson told a hospital conference hall full of reporters that Barbaro's chance of survival was a "coin toss." It could have been a lot worse.

Ten days later, he revised the figure to 51 percent, calling Barbaro an elite athlete and a model patient who knows how to take care of himself.

Today, Richardson is guardedly optimistic. He says the odds are "going up," and adds: "Until he actually walks out of the hospital with no cast on, the radiographs look normal and he's bearing full weight, it won't even jump to 75 percent.

"If and when that happens, it will probably creep up ... and when I decide it's time to leave the hospital, maybe I'll finally admit that something worked," he said.

The next major concern is the healing process: Will the bones heal before the hardware begins to loosen?

"He's a large active horse and the metal really isn't meant to bear the weight for a very long period of time," Richardson said. "There's always this race between healing the fracture and continued structural support from the implant. If they start to fail, that could be a problem, so that is a continued concern."

Owners Roy and Gretchen Jackson, who live down the road in West Grove, Pa., are daily visitors, as is trainer Michael Matz. They remain amazed at the colt's ability to handle so much adversity.

"If that was mein that stall, I don't think I'd have as good an attitude he has," Roy Jackson said. "He just seems to know he's got to go through this. It was the same thing with his racing. He knew what he had to do and did it."

Barbaro won his first five races, then blew away his rivals in the Kentucky Derby by 6 1/2 lengths. He was being hailed as the next Triple Crown winner before the Preakness, and a misstep a few strides out of the gate nearly cost him his life.

But now, hopes are high for Barbaro. He still receives e-mail at www.vet.upenn.edu/barbaro/ -- no indication that he is computer literate -- and cards, flowers, stuffed animals and posters keep pouring in.

"I just can't explain why everyone is so caught up in this horse," Roy Jackson said. "Everything is so negative now in the world, people love animals and I think they just happen to latch onto him. People are looking for a hero, for something positive. The fact that he's gotten through this and is a fighter, people seem to relate to that."

The Jacksons will be spending tens of thousands of dollars as Barbaro wends his way toward recovery. If he is able to breed -- male Thoroughbreds must stand on their hind legs during breeding sessions -- he will be able to pass along some of his regal genes. But even with a full recovery, Richardson said Barbaro always would have a hitch in his giddyup. That is not a bad thing, though.

"Actually, he could run around, he could trot, but he wouldn't have a symmetrical gait," Richardson said. "A best scenario is he would have an asymmetrical gait but would be absolutely comfortable."

Thoughts of a Triple Crown -- Matz will always believe Barbaro could have been the first Triple Crown winner since Affirmed in 1978 -- have been replaced by a more pastoral vision.

"I hope he heals up so he can at least be out in a field and have some grass and be in more of a natural environment," Jackson said. "That's what we're hoping for."

The Jacksons are not alone.

"It's impossible for us to thank everybody who has supported the horse as he goes through this," Jackson said. "It's meant the world to all of us."

Saturday, June 17, 2006

An Excellent Barbaro Video

ESPN'S RECENT VIDEO FOR BARBARO

Let's keep the prayers and well wishes flowing.  He is doing so well.. and with all of us sending all the love and great energy.. we know he will be able to sire some amazing "little Barbaros"

Jo

Thursday, June 15, 2006

Barbaro Has Cast Replaced On Shattered Right Hind Leg.

Updated: June 13, 2006, 2:35 PM ET


KENNETT SQUARE, Pa. -- Barbaro had the cast replaced on his shattered right
hind leg Tuesday, another huge stride in the recovery of the Kentucky Derby winner who suffered a life-threatening injury at the Preakness.

Barbaro's cast was replaced under general anesthesia, and the 3-year-old bay colt
had a very smooth pool recovery, the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine's New Bolton Center said in a statement.

Dean Richardson, the chief of surgery at the George D. Widener Hospital for Large Animals, replaced the cast he first put on Barbaro's leg during surgery May 21.

"His leg looks excellent," Richardson said in the statement. "The incision has healed
well and judging by the radiographs, the graft is opacifying (taking). Callus is forming nicely, and all of the implants look unchanged."

Barbaro remains in intensive care at the New Bolton Center, where he underwent five hours of surgery one day after he broke a few hundred yards from
the starting gate at Pimlico Race Course.

Saturday, June 10, 2006

Barbaro Stronger All The Time: ESPN/ABC To Feature Barbaro During Coverage Of Belmont Stakes.

News Releases

Gail Luciani 
(215) 898-1475
luciani@vet.upenn.edu


Dr.Dean Richardson spends some affectionate time with Barbaro!

June 9, 2006

KENNETT SQUARE, PA – Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro continues to please veterinarians at the George D. Widener Hospital for Large Animals with his progress on this day before the running of the finale of horse racing’s Triple Crown. Barbaro is recovering from a shattered hind leg sustained at the Preakness on May 20 , and remains in intensive care at the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine’s New Bolton Center.

Though Barbaro won’t be at the Belmont Stakes on Saturday, June 10, current plans for airing the race on ESPN (noon until 5 p.m.) and on ABC Wide World of Sports (5 p.m.–7 p.m.) include live shots of Barbaro in his stall.

Excellent Information About Barbaro


photo by Alex Brown

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Barbaro (middle) walking to the track at the Fair Hill Training Center a week after winning the Kentucky Derby. Photo by: Alex Brown (website may be viewed at:Alex Brown

Barbaro (born April 29, 2003) is an American thoroughbred racehorse. He won the 2006 Kentucky Derby and was expected by many to win the Triple Crown. However, while running as a heavy favorite in the Preakness Stakes on May 20th, 2006, he suffered a career-ending injury shortly after the start of the race, as he fractured three bones in and around the ankle of his right hind leg. On May 21st, 2006 he underwent surgery at the New Bolton Center at the University of Pennsylvania for his leg injuries.

Shortly before the operation, the surgeon, Dr. Dean Richardson, called the injuries "life threatening" and also said "You do not see this severe injury frequently because the fact is most horses that suffer this typically are put down on the race track.

Barbaro broke his leg in three places; a broken cannon bone above the ankle, a broken sesamoid bone behind the ankle and a broken long pastern bone below the ankle. The fetlock joint was dislocated. The surgical team successfully inserted metal implants to hold the fractures together and enable Barbaro to place weight on the injured leg as it heals.

Concern for the horse as an "individual" is strong among his connections and many racing fans, yet the monetary aspect of the situation cannot be ignored: if Barbaro recovers, the injury should not prevent him from breeding, and his value as a stud will probably be very high, provided the injury itself is not traced to a heritable predisposition. Owners Roy and Gretchen Jackson have all the possibilities covered with insurance policies on both Barbaro's life and on his stallion potential, but the horse's earnings at stud are likely to be significantly higher than the payout of either policy.
For more information from Wikipedia Visit them at:wikipedia.org

More Incredible Videos To View

Here are some really fantastic videos that Barbaro fans have made. There are several that are spectacular. The first one is really wonderful. The music alone is peaceful and healing. With all this support and love that is being poured out to him, there is no question in my mind that this horse will recover and be able to sire some fantastic offspring. I personally cannot wait to see his babies flying around the fields, playing and running with their moms.

Take a few minutes out of your busy day,  to enjoy these wonderful videos.

DAILY MOTION BARBARO VIDEOS

One Of the Most Amazingly Awesome Videos For Barbaro- Prayers

A dear friend sent me the link to this amazing video. It is hauntingly beautiful. There are pictures of the accident, so I add a word of caution here. However, the thought, the love and the care that went into this video is truly awe inspiring. I invite you to visit the site and send your prayers while you are watching. Much love to all... and continuing prayers are coming from all over the world for this magnificent horse.

There is a short download in this file which will default to your temporary internet files. You can save it, or you can delete it. It is safe, virus and spyware free.

OUR PRAYER FOR BARBARO

Thursday, June 8, 2006

Barbaro continues to improve; fellow athletes support equine recovery pool

Gail Luciani 
(215) 898-1475
luciani@vet.upenn.edu
June 5, 2006

KENNETT SQUARE, PA – Veterinarians at the George D. Widener Hospital for Large Animals continue to be pleased with Barbaro’s condition, which improves daily. The Kentucky Derby winner is recovering from a shattered hind leg sustained at the Preakness on May 20 . “He spent a restful weekend and is doing well,” said Chief of Surgery Dean W. Richardson.

Barbaro remains in intensive care at the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine’s New Bolton Center.

Concern and support for Barbaro continues to pour in, often from unexpected sources. After seeing a photo of Barbaro lowered in our special equine recovery pool last month, the Notre Dame Masters Swim team—in support of a fellow athlete—made a donation for maintenance of the pool.

Horses waking from general anesthesia in an unfamiliar environment will opt for a “flight” response. When Ruffian shattered her leg in 1975, veterinary orthopedic surgeons worked to repair it. However, when the filly awoke from anesthesia, she thrashed about wildly, causing severe damage to the original break and fracturing the opposite leg.

Dr. Jacques Jenny, considered the father of large-animal orthopedic surgery, envisioned a system where horses could emerge from anesthesia without injury. To that end, the operating room at the George D. Widener Hospital is equipped with a monorail that runs from the OR to the recovery pool. Our pool-recovery system allows the disoriented animal to waken suspended in a specially engineered harness and rubber raft, allowing him to gallop or flail in the warm water until fully conscious, significantly reducing the risk of re-injuring the damaged limb. Once awake, the horse is hoisted from the raft and moved to the recovery stall where he can stand at once.

The recovery pool is located in the C. Mahlon Kline building at New Bolton Center. Named in memory of C. Mahlon Kline, the building was erected in 1975 through the generosity of his family and the C. Mahlon Kline Foundation.

A quick look at Barbaro: 6/6 ESPN News

Associated Press
Horse Racing News Wire


A quick look at Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro and how he's progressing from lifesaving surgery at the New Bolton Center in Kennett Square, Pa.:

MEDICAL UPDATE: Dr. Dean Richardson said Tuesday that Barbaro's cast on his right hind leg is causing no problems, and it could be weeks before it is changed. However, Richardson said the decision remains day to day: "All his vital signs are normal, his blood work is good, he could not at this moment look better in terms of his medical condition."

HIS DAY: Jockey Edgar Prado saw Barbaro for the first time since he pulled up the injured colt at the start of the Preakness on May 20. Also stopping by were owners Roy and Gretchen Jackson, along with their daughter, Lucy, and her husband, Tom Zungailia.

WHAT'S NEXT: Richardson will decide each morning whether to change the fiberglass cast that runs from Barbaro's right hock to hoof.

QUOTE: "He will never be able to do a dressage test. He won't be able to gallop, he won't be able to jump. He will have, at the very best, a hitch in his giddyup. He will not be quite right, but there's lots and lots of horses that can walk, trot, canter, gallop, spin around and somewhat importantly, mount a mare ... all those things that you use your hind legs for. That's their hope, that he can do all those things." - Richardson on what Barbaro can do if he fully recovers.

Monday, June 5, 2006

Barbaro Continues to Improve; Answers to Frequently Asked Questions

News Releases

Gail Luciani 
(215) 898-1475
luciani@vet.upenn.edu


June 2 , 2006

KENNETT SQUARE, PA – Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro continues to improve daily as he recovers from a shattered hind leg sustained at the Preakness on May 20. “I’m very pleased with the progress Barbaro is making,” said Chief of Surgery Dean W. Richardson. “Everything is fine.”

Barbaro remains in intensive care at the George D. Widener Hospital for Large Animals at the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine’s New Bolton Center.

New Bolton Center has received many inquiries about Barbaro; below are the answers to some of those most frequently asked.

1.  In addition to hay, what, if anything, is he being fed?  Do you have a special diet for cases like his?

He's being fed sweet feed (the same kind he ate while racing), three times a day. We do like to see cases like this gain or at least maintain their weight, so often we add corn oil to their diets, which Barbaro is getting in his grain.  We also encourage him to eat alfalfa because it is high in calcium and helps with weight gain.  Finally, he gets fresh grass several times daily, which we try to do for our horses that are stall-bound and can't get out to graze.

2.  How do you keep water from entering the cast while a horse is awakening from anesthesia?

The horse is not actually "in" water; he is inside a rubber raft. His legs are placed into extensions that are at the bottom of the raft – like waders fishermen use. In addition to being protected inside these leg holes in the rubber raft, the injured leg is wrapped in a thick plastic bag (like a shower curtain), the air is removed from around it, and then the bag is sealed to the leg with duct tape. So, he actually is completely protected from the water.

3.  Can he be groomed, or would that be too stimulating?

Barbaro is groomed from head to tail at least once a day, not to mention all the "scratching" sessions he gets.  We try to give all of our stall-bound patients as much stimulation as possible to keep them from becoming too bored.

4.  What size is his stall?

Approximately 12' X 13', complete with a 2' X 2' window.

5.  If he survives this ordeal and it is eventually deemed safe for him to be in a paddock, how would his leg be protected and supported? Will his hoof touch the ground in the normal position?

Ideally, if he survives, he will need minimal if any extra support once his leg is fully healed.  His foot should touch the ground as a normal horse's would, but the angle of his fetlock may be different.



  Donors can find out how to offer monetary gifts at: www.vet.upenn.edu/giving/giving_ways.html

Well-wishers can send e-mail to Barbaro via a form at: www.vet.upenn.edu/barbaro.

For pictures and updates on Barbaro’s condition, visit: http://www.vet.upenn.edu/newsandevents/news/Barbaro.htm

 About Dean W. Richardson, DVM

Dr. Dean W. Richardson is Chief of Surgery and the Charles W. Raker Professor of Equine Surgery at Penn Vet’s Widener Hospital at New Bolton Center. He is an internationally recognized orthopedic surgeon whose research focuses on cartilage repair. Dr. Richardson has been part of New Bolton Center since 1979.

About New Bolton Center

The University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine’s New Bolton Center in Kennett Square, Pa., is one of the busiest large animal teaching veterinary clinics in the nation. Each year the George D. Widener Hospital for Large Animals sees more than 6,000 patient visits, and its Field Service sees more than 19,000 patient visits. In addition to its role as one of the nation’s finest equine surgical facilities, New Bolton Center encompasses hospital facilities for the care of large animals and livestock as well as diagnostic laboratories serving the agriculture industry and the monitoring of emerging infectious disease.

About the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine

Penn’s School of Veterinary Medicine is one of the world’s premier veterinary schools. Founded in 1884, the school was built on the concept of Many Species, One Medicine™.

The birthplace of veterinary specialties, the school serves a distinctly diverse array of animal patients at its two campuses, from companion animals to horses to farm animals. The school’s Matthew J. Ryan Veterinary Hospital, located on Penn’s campus in Philadelphia, Pa., houses classrooms, laboratories, medical care and one of the nation’s busiest urban veterinary emergency rooms. In addition, the school successfully integrates scholarship and scientific discovery with all aspects of veterinary medical education.

A quick look at Barbaro

Updated: June 3, 2006, 11:34 PM ET
Associated Press
Horse Racing News Wire


A quick look at Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro and how he's progressing from lifesaving surgery at the New Bolton Center in Kennett Square, Pa.:

MEDICAL UPDATE: Dr. Dean Richardson said Wednesday that he is continuing his daily assessment of Barbaro's cast on his right hind leg. Barbaro continues to do well, and his vital signs and appetite remain good.

WHAT'S NEXT: Richardson will decide each morning whether to change the fiberglass cast that runs from Barbaro's right hock to hoof. It could happen soon, or in several weeks.

QUOTE: "The new excitement for the day was that he got a bath. He's been groomed daily but today he got a good soaping and he loved it." - Corinne Sweeney, executive director at the University of Pennsylvania's New Bolton Center.

Barbaro is progressing well, and Prado pays a visit

Updated: June 3, 2006, 7:36 PM ET

Associated Press
Horse Racing News Wire


KENNETT SQUARE, Pa. - Dean Richardson is a pretty funny guy, and not a bad surgeon, either.

Dr. Richardson said Barbaro was progressing so well 10 days after his awful breakdown in the Preakness, that he was happy to amend the initial "coin toss" - 50-50 - chance he gave for the survival of the Kentucky Derby winner.

"I was going to call a news conference to say it's officially 51 percent," Richardson said Tuesday. "Seriously, every day that goes by is a big day."

Though upbeat, Richardson conceded that the colt who shattered three bones in his right hind leg will have a "hitch in his giddyup" if he makes a full recovery, which is still many months away.

"He will never be able to do a dressage test. He won't be able to gallop, he won't be able to jump. He will have, at the very best, a hitch in his giddyup," Richardson said during a news conference at the University of Pennsylvania's George D. Widener Hospital for Large Animals, where he and a team of assistants performed more than five hours of surgery on Barbaro the day after the Preakness.

"He will not be quite right, but there's lots and lots of horses that can walk, trot, canter, gallop, spin around and somewhat importantly, mount a mare ... all those things that you use your hind legs for," he added. "That's their hope, that he can do all those things. We are way, way away from that."

Still, there were good signs.

The hoof-to-hock fiberglass cast on Barbaro's leg may stay put for several weeks because there's no compelling reason to change it.

"He's had an incredibly good week - far better than I would have ever hoped so far," Richardson said. "Every day that goes by, I think his chances of survival are better."

The risk of infection diminishes after the first 10-to-14 days of recovery, but other problems can occur later, including laminitis, an often fatal disease sometimes brought on by uneven weight distribution, or, in this case, the bones not healing properly.

"Things are definitely better eight days post op," he said.

The sunny outlook, so far, is in sharp contrast to the shock and sadness that reverberated throughout the nation May 20 when Barbaro's right hind leg flared out awkwardly just after the start of the race at Pimlico.

His run for the Triple Crown was no longer what counted; his very survival was at stake.

Edgar Prado saw Barbaro for the first time since the breakdown, stopping by his stall in the intensive care unit for a 10-minute visit. The jockey has been credited with saving the colt's life by pulling him up quickly to avoid further injury.

"I definitely feel a lot better," said a smiling Prado, who arrived in a black stretch limousine. "I'm feeling heartbroken, but I'm feeling better. His progress is helping a lot, but he isn't out of the woods yet. We're just happy that he continues to do good."

Back for their daily visit were owners Gretchen and Roy Jackson, accompanied by their daughter, Lucy, and her husband, Tom Zungailia.

Richardson said his prized patient has shown the ability to adapt from one extreme to another: Two weeks ago, the horse was spending every morning galloping around a track, and now spends 24 hours a day in his 12-by-12 stall barely moving. A good attitude has been a huge help.

"It makes a big difference in terms of how well they rest," Richardson said. "Certain horses rest well. They figure out how to take care of themselves in a stall, how to lie down and get up without injuring themselves. I think this horse, so far, has shown every evidence that he is that type of horse."

Prado has been asked time and again to replay the start of the Preakness, especially when Barbaro broke early from the gate and was reloaded for the official start. Much has been written about the possibility Barbaro may have been injured the first time out of the gate.

"He was feeling so good in the post parade, he was ready," Prado said. "Unfortunately, he heard a noise from the last door (closing) and thought it was time to go."

Prado said Barbaro pushed open the starting gate, which is controlled by magnets, with his head and front leg, but "I didn't think that was real bad."

Prado said he checked out the horse, as did a vet at the track, "and he was jogging fine. ... So we led him back into the gate."

When the field broke, Barbaro got off "nice and clean," Prado said. He said the colt "took about four strides and then the incident happened."

"A lot of horses go through the gate and they probably don't run their race - but they don't break down three or four jumps out of the gate," he said.

The Jacksons, meanwhile, are trying to save the best horse they've owned in 30 years in the business.

"The chance of running for the Triple Crown is behind us," Roy Jackson said. "We're just glad he is doing well and are looking forward to his recovery."




This story is from ESPN.com's automated news wire. Wire index

Sunday, June 4, 2006

Surgeon Concurs Barbaro Likey Bumped In Race- Ends Rumors!

By DICK JERARDI

jerardd@phillynews.com

Dr. Dean Richardson is much more interested in the now and the next than the then, but the surgeon who operated on Barbaro said, "My impression from the beginning was that the horse was bumped right before the injury."

While saying "I'm not a forensic scientist" and "This isn't 'CSI: Pimlico,' " Richardson thinks Pimlico executive Lou Raffetto's theory that Barbaro's right rear hoof was inadvertently struck by Brother Derek's right front hoof during the first few hundred yards of the Preakness is "the most reasonable explanation."

Raffetto, after thoroughly scrutinizing the tapes, said in Tuesday's Daily News he is "80 percent certain" that the two hooves coming together might have caused Barbaro's foot to twist awkwardly, resulting in the three fractures Richardson repaired.

"I did not examine the tapes," Richardson said. "But if this helps dispel all the notions that he was lame going to the gate, that is a good thing."

Richardson understands that when something so unexpected happens, everybody wants an explanation, even one not terribly satisfying.

"It is just possible to have a catastrophic accident, and that is all there is," Richardson said.

Like trainer Michael Matz, Richardson, chief of surgery at the New Bolton Center in Kennett Square, where Barbaro continues his remarkable recovery, is much more interested in the recovery than the reasons for the accident.

"I completely agree with Michael that it is not important in terms of assigning any blame, but it might help lay to rest some of the concerns about the horse injuring it while breaking early from the gate," Richardson said. "The concept of just bad racing luck is difficult for some to grasp."

Richardson has seen enough races to know that "horses come together all the time." With 1,000-pound animals running 35 mph in tight spaces, this happens in races every day at every track.

Almost always, nothing more happens. This time, something terrible happened. That is the really bad news.

The really good news is that, according to Richardson, Barbaro continues to be "more comfortable than I had hoped" at this point of his recovery. And each day that goes by gives just a bit more hope that what looked so ominous on May 20 may very well have the happy ending everybody had hoped tosee on a race track.

Penn Veterinary Medicine Website: Recent Update On Barbaro

News Releases spacer spacer

Gail Luciani 
(215) 898-1475
luciani@vet.upenn.edu

Barbaro's Condition Excellent; Equine Reproduction Expert Answers Questions

June 1 , 2006

KENNETT SQUARE, PA – Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro’s condition is excellent today, according to Chief of Surgery Dean W. Richardson, “He looks great and everything is fine.”

Barbaro remains in intensive care at the George D. Widener Hospital for Large Animals at the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine’s New Bolton Center. He continues to improve daily as he recovers from a shattered hind leg sustained at the Preakness on May 20.

New Bolton Center has received many inquiries about the importance of a stallion’s hind leg in the reproduction process. “To register offspring from Thoroughbred stallions, all breeding must be done by natural service,” said Sue McDonnell, of the Equine Behavior Laboratory. “This means that artificial insemination and assisted reproductive techniques are not allowed.” McDonnell explained that mares must be mounted, which is a fairly athletic activity, requiring good hind-limb strength and agility.  The stallion needs to be relatively fit and free from discomfort; therefore, after an injury heals, the stallion needs to re-build his cardiovascular and musculoskeletal fitness to the fullest extent possible.

“In a case such as Barbaro’s, his medical team would plan and monitor physical therapy with breeding in mind,” she said. “Amazing things have been done to accommodate disabled breeding stallions, from custom-built breeding ramps to supportive splints or casts, to medications that reduce the amount of effort required. But in most cases, simple old-fashioned careful attention to detail, such as highly skilled stallion and mare handlers who can allow the stallion to compensate for his limitations, good athletic surfaces, and a breeding schedule customized to the stallion’s fitness and fertility, can help sports injured stallions enjoy remarkably normal and successful breeding careers.”

Veterinary reproduction and behavior have made great strides in recent years, and New Bolton Center has been a leader in developing methods of assisting aging and disabled stallions to breed.

Donors can find out how to offer monetary gifts at: www.vet.upenn.edu/giving/giving_ways.html

Well-wishers can send e-mail to Barbaro via a form at: www.vet.upenn.edu/barbaro.

For pictures and updates on Barbaro’s condition, visit: http://www.vet.upenn.edu/newsandevents/news/Barbaro.htm

 

About Dean W. Richardson, DVM

Dr. Dean W. Richardson is Chief of Surgery and the Charles W. Raker Professor of Equine Surgery at Penn Vet’s Widener Hospital at New Bolton Center. He is an internationally recognized orthopedic surgeon whose research focuses on cartilage repair. Dr. Richardson has been part of New Bolton Center since 1979.

About New Bolton Center

The University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine’s New Bolton Center in Kennett Square, Pa., is one of the busiest large animal teaching veterinary clinics in the nation. Each year the George D. Widener Hospital for Large Animals sees more than 6,000 patient visits, and its Field Service sees more than 19,000 patient visits. In addition to its role as one of the nation’s finest equine surgical facilities, New Bolton Center encompasses hospital facilities for the care of large animals and livestock as well as diagnostic laboratories serving the agriculture industry and the monitoring of emerging infectious disease.

About the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine

Penn’s School of Veterinary Medicine is one of the world’s premier veterinary schools. Founded in 1884, the school was built on the concept of Many Species, One Medicine™.

The birthplace of veterinary specialties, the school serves a distinctly diverse array of animal patients at its two campuses, from companion animals to horses to farm animals. The school’s Matthew J. Ryan Veterinary Hospital, located on Penn’s campus in Philadelphia, Pa., houses classrooms, laboratories, medical care and one of the nation’s busiest urban veterinary emergency rooms. In addition, the school successfully integrates scholarship and scientific discovery with all aspects of veterinary medical education.

Thursday, June 1, 2006

Is The Relationship Between Human and Horse Mystical?

by: Jo Singer, LCSW

Picture: thanks to Jmuhjacat

The excellent and inspiring articles written by Pat Forde and  Melissa Isaacson, (below)  got me to thinking about the mystical and deep connection between horses and humans. Horses can take one's breath away! We can fall in love with them deeply, as we enter into a rich and powerful relationship with them We can be moved to tears just seeing a beautiful horse galloping in a field, free, mane flowing, nostrils flared, whinnying with delight and pleasure. We can be touched deeply when seeing a mare with her foal.

I often wonder what touches us so profoundly in this rather unique relationship that we have with horses. Small, domesticated animals have shared our homes and hearts and have become companions to us, often in a more trusting and caring manner than our relationship with our fellow human beings. Often they are our soul mates. We confide in them, we share our deepest secrets with them. They keep us company while we are sick, make no demands or judgments, and they become teachers for us in our capacity to give and receive unconditional love. Often we develop an anthropomorphic relationship where we attribute human qualities to our pets.


Our connection with horses, on the other hand, is often one that is devoted to sports, pleasure riding, equine competition and other related activities. This being said, many people who share their lives with horses love them deeply and can form very deep bond with them. This got me to thinking about the anthropomorphic component in these relationships or, if we unconsciously resonate to aspects of their beauty, strength, courage and power. We cannot recognize what we do not possess in ourselves so perhaps the horse is that great mirror which permits us to become more aware of these aspects in our personalities. So perhaps, with this understanding, the way in which we view our horses can lead to a more profound communication with them.

We  partner with horses.  We can try and dominate them. We can inspire their athletic abilities, and we can break their spirit. It is the skilled and patient person who can genuinely tickle out the talent, willingness and desire to please us for which the horse is famous.

The horse has been a companion to humans for ages. This relationship has existed for over 50,000 years,and while it originated as a source of food for people, it soon evolved to serve as a means for travel, warfare, and hunting. Through many years of evolution, the horse became a very special part of our lives.   Driving horses preceded actual "riding" but as the partnership between equine and human evolved, riding horses became commonplace.

(See a really thorough history of the horse- The International Museum Of The Horse)

Then we started using horses in sport. Racing, Rodeo, Polo, Hunter/Jumpers,Dressage and pleasure riding are just some of the countless equine related activities at the present time, evolving from our history "using" horses to serve us.

Of course we fell in love with our horses. And they loved us. There are countless books and legends about this topic; the cowboy and his horse, the child and his/her pony, the warrior and his steed. All of this has become a rich part the tapestry of our connections with horses.

I, personally, have had the extreme pleasure and honor to have shared my life with three wonderful horses. While they never became "cuddly lap pets" of course (although it would have been wonderful), they occupied a huge part of my life and heart. They were my confidants, my soul mates, the reason for me to get up at times, and all of them gave me special gifts. Two of them contributed to children with special needs, as they participated in the Riding For The Handicapped program. Those horses loved andprotected their small charges. And the relationship was healing to the children, many of whom walked and talked as a direct result of this "therapy." It is far better to be on a warm horse than a machine.


So when Barbaro was injured so tragically, and so seriously, the outpouring of well wishes, prayers and concern touched me deeply. But I felt it was much more than his just being an extremely talented racehorse --more than a potential Triple Crown winner, he represented something so awesomely powerful and touched millions of people.We may have connected with the wounded parts of ourselves. 

For a moment the world stopped and came together powerfully in prayer and well wishes. There was a cause that was common to so many of us, not only horse lovers. And these well wishes continue as Barbaro recovers. It is almost like I am personally connected with this horse that I never will touch, but his huge and brave heart has most certainly touched mine, and many, many more.

So I continue to add updates to my journal as I find them. And I continue to ask for prayers to be left here. We all are participating in Barbaro's recovery. and this has to have a very powerful effect on the outcome. Let's make it so!

Picture by M00NLTSNTA- Rosi- With Thanks.

 

Barbaro's Fight For Survical Strikes a Human Chord

People nationwide are pulling for champion thoroughbred who suffered a heart-rending break in the Preakness

By Melissa Isaacson
Tribune staff reporter
Published May 23, 2006

It was with a keen clinical eye based on years of experience working with and treating champion horses that Martin Allen watched Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro's right hind leg buckle at the Preakness Stakes on Saturday.

But it was with a heavy heart that the veterinary surgeon from the University of Illinois with no personal connection to the horse "had to stand up and choke back tears."

Whether it is the basic human reaction to seeing an animal suffering or a deeper response stirred in anyone who has ever watched a beautiful thoroughbred in action, there is a romanticism associated with the racehorse that exists with no others.

And so it was that from those in the industry to the casual fan to people who simply heard on the news or read in the newspaper of Barbaro's plight, that the horse's traumatic injury has touched so many.

"My initial reaction was like everyone else, that my heart absolutely sank," said John Nicholson, executive director of the famed Kentucky Horse Park, the retirement home of John Henry, Cigar and other noted racehorses. "People who get close to horses understand what Winston Churchill was talking about when he said there's something about what the outside of a horse does to the inside of a man.

"When you see such a magnificent animal who has so much heart and so much character and the worst kind of bad luck threatening his life, it touches something very deep, deep down inside of us."

Barbaro, considered by many to be headed for the first Triple Crown in racing since Affirmed accomplished the feat in 1978, was in stable condition Monday after surgery over the weekend to repair shattered bones that required 23 screws to help fuse the joint.

It was an injury of rare severity, and an even more extraordinary procedure performed at the University of Pennsylvania. And at least one veterinarian was mesmerized.

"I was ecstatic," said Allen, who in addition to his duties at Illinois, one of the nation's top veterinary facilities, also comes from a harness racing family that has bred several world champions. "In many other parts of the country, the horse would have been euthanized at the racetrack, but with Dr. [Dean] Richardson as close as he was and with the technology and education and means to do the surgery, we owe it to the horse to do it."

Horses with injuries far less severe than Barbaro's are often put down for several reasons. One, said Allen, is that a horse will shift all of its weight to the unafflicted limbs, leaving those more susceptible to break down. Death can also be hastened by the blockage of blood supply to the lower limb and by infection, particularly if there are breaks in the skin, which Barbaro did not have.

Though horses are not quite as fragile as they look with their 1,000-plus-pound bodies perched atop legs as narrow as piano legs, they are "a marvel of evolution, a marvel of nature," said Dan Rosenberg, president of Three Chimneys Farm in Midway, Ky.

"The horse is actually standing on his middle toenails, and the amount of stress and pressure on those bones running at top speed is just enormous," Rosenberg said. "But they are creatures of fear and flight, and nature and breeding has equipped them to run that fast."

But it is more than physiology that makes a champion racehorse like Barbaro so deserving of our admiration, and the sight of jockey Edgar Prado pulling back on the still-eager 3-year-old colt was testimony to that. Prado further shielded Barbaro while still on the track so that he would not see the other horses racing down the homestretch.

"Unfortunately, one of the qualities that makes us love horses so much is their undoing," Rosenberg said. "When I'm tired, I sit down. But it's in a horse's nature to give all they have and more. I've heard it said that a horse has no choice and a human athlete does. But a horse does have a choice. You can't make a horse do anything it doesn't want to do, and a horse not so fiercely competitive as Barbaro would not keep trying to compete."

Bill Thayer, senior vice president of racing at Arlington Park, said watching Barbaro on Saturday conjured up memories of Ruffian, whose jockey, Jacinto Vasquez, kept the filly standing after she broke down in a match race with Kentucky Derby winner Foolish Pleasure in 1975 at Belmont Park.

Ruffian, like Barbaro, also tried to keep running and later underwent surgery to repair a compound fracture. But unlike Barbaro, whose doctors called a "good patient," Ruffian reinjured herself when she came out of anesthesia and was euthanized the next morning.

"It just hurts so much to see such a great horse like Barbaro, undefeated until that moment, go down like that," Thayer said. "I thought he was an absolute cinch to go on and win the first Triple Crown in 28 years. I didn't think there was a horse in America that could beat him.

"When it happened, I said, `Oh, my God, no.' Now he'll probably go on to become a daddy, but you hated to see it. Everyone was struck by it."

Barbaro's injury could end his career in both racing and as a stud. But spending tens of thousands of dollars, which Richardson estimated the price of his care could cost, is not at the heart of the matter, all agree.

"This has nothing to do with the money," Allen said. "A horse that valuable was probably insured for mortality. It would have been cheaper to euthanize the horse on the racetrack. It's more an obligation to do what's best and right for the horse."

The cards and flowers that have poured into the George D. Widener Hospital for Large Animals attest that Barbaro's fans agree. Hand-painted signs stating, "We Love You, Barbaro," hung outside the gates.

"There is something about our partnership and bond that has existed between human beings and horses all these centuries that gives us a real sympathy and empathy for a horse when he's imperiled," Nicholson said. "In a way, it's returned to us as well. The relationship between mankind and the horse has been one of absolute necessity. We've been partners. I think that's ingrained in us."

----------

misaacson@tribune.com

 


Copyright © 2006, Chicago Tribune

Overwhelming Outpouring For Barbaro No Surprise

Updated: May 26, 2006, 2:02 PM ET
By Pat Forde
ESPN.com
Archive

The e-mails come from across the globe, deluging a University of Pennsylvania Web site with personal pep talks for an utterly oblivious beast.

"Barbaro, I am only 12 but if I was 30 I would become a vet and make you better in one second!" wrote Maeve Geismar of Annapolis, Md.

AP Photo/Garry Jones
Robert Lewis of Louisville signs one of two cards for Barbaro at Churchill Downs this week.

"You are such a sweet baby! Our love for horses is so represented by the outpouring of well wishes for you! Mend and have the best life!" wrote Mary Baird, 49, of Pflugerville, Texas.

"My Mom had a new hip and was just fine, and so will you be just fine," declared Kathy Fish, 63, of New York, N.Y.

The means of expression have changed since the Ice Age, when prehistoric man drew pictures of horses on cave walls -- more images of horses, according to one study, than of any other animal. The emotion behind the expression remains the same in the computer age. Barbaro's jarring journey from champion to victim to (so far) survivor serves as a societal reminder: Our bond with equine kind is indefinable, intimate and infinite.

"The horse is still sort of a shadowed deity in the culture," said John Jeremiah Sullivan, a writer-at-large for GQ whose fascinating 2004 book, "Blood Horses," in part examines the joined histories of man and horse. "There's just this inexplicable sense of attachment that goes back to the very beginning. … The closest thing I have to a theory is that this association has been part of the species for so long -- this instinct to venerate them -- that it has almost wired itself into our cultural DNA."

That wiring is rarely more conductive than when a thoroughbred is injured.

We can -- at least some of us -- watch news footage of starving African children without feeling a burning call to action. But the sight of a race horse's right hind leg flaring out at a hideously incongruous angle last Saturday made America -- at least some of us -- snap like Barbaro's bones.

For about two days we flat lost it on behalf of a horse. And we're just now starting to get it back.

Barbaro's injury and the efforts to save him -- not Barry Bonds' 714th home run, not the NBA playoffs, not the Stanley Cup -- was the dominant sports news Sunday and Monday. It's been a prominent story on every network morning news show this week. Coal miners trapped underground might not have been monitored as anxiously by the public as the colt undergoing surgery to repair his lower leg.

Since coming out of surgery, Barbaro has been bombarded with more than just thousands of e-mails. Bushels of apples and carrots have arrived at Penn Veterinary Medicine's New Bolton Center -- enough to feed every horse in the hospital's care. Cards, pictures, posters -- even religious figurines have been sent, tribute to Sullivan's shadowed deity.

Up until Barbaro's bad step in the Preakness, he'd produced exactly 121.36 seconds of athletic connection with the populace -- the time it took him to win the Kentucky Derby on May 6. Yes, he had won five previous races, but the vast majority of the e-mailing, nail-biting, hard-praying public had never seen them. They only knew the colt they saw win the Derby by a resounding 6½ lengths.

So by the time the gates opened at Pimlico Race Course -- the second time, not the first, when the colt ominously false started -- Barbaro had not done enough to make America fall in love with him. But it has long been in love with horses in general.

That didn't start with domestication of the animal, which Sullivan's book estimates occurred 7,000 years ago. Nor had it ended after we ceased using the species as a primary means of transportation. Our affection for horses always has extended beyond utility.

And when a race horse is severely injured before our very eyes, the reaction is outsized.

The natural questions: How can human suffering be trumped by animal suffering? How can human sporting achievement be trumped by animal sporting injury?

A couple attempts at answers:

• In drama-addicted America, human starvation does not resonate like a horse breaking his leg. You cannot see starvation happen on live television, per se. You can, however, see Barbaro limping awkwardly and desperately on three legs, holding his wounded limb in the air, and feel the panic and pain of the moment.

Even worse, this breakdown happened right in front of the grandstand -- in full view of many of the paying patrons. Think back through the most memorable and traumatic breakdowns in racing history and they generally occurred front and center, in the stretch: Go For Wand's ghastly crash in the 1990 Breeders' Cup and Ruffian's shattered leg in the 1975 match race with Foolish Pleasure.

Barbaro's injury immediately conjured images of Ruffian: two undefeated horses seemingly on the cusp of an historic achievement -- for Barbaro the Triple Crown, for the filly Ruffian a battle-of-the-sexes triumph over the reigning Kentucky Derby winner -- when they shockingly were hurt. Some fans still aren't over the loss of Go For Wand and Ruffian, who were destroyed. The same would be true this time, if Barbaro does not pull through.

• Bonds' hitting 714 was inevitable. Barbaro's breaking his leg certainly was not. It was a wholly unpredictable outcome -- especially to casual fans who don't know the grisly statistics on how common thoroughbred breakdowns really are.

And while it is easy to cheer against Bonds and other athletic churls, cheaters and chokers, race horses are -- like most domesticated animals -- almost universally laudable creatures. They try hard, do not complain and do not get in much off-the-track trouble. They're pure.

And they are absolutely beautiful, at rest and especially in motion.

Their involuntary presence in our sporting marketplace is probably a large part of the empathy that pours out when an animal gets hurt. Racing is a guilty pleasure to many fans, who sublimate concerns about the manifold health risks to the animals in order to enjoy the thrill of the sport. Those concerns confront us when a horse breaks down.

"There's this hypocrisy to it, too," Sullivan said of the societal fondness for its race horses. "Of course this kind of thing happens because they're being asked to do something their bodies aren't able to do."

That is the tormented nature of the current relationship with our old friend the thoroughbred. We don't e-mail the healthy ones.

 

Pat Forde is a senior writer for ESPN.com. He can be reached at ESPN4D@aol.com.