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Post by patricia on May 19, 2006 10:17:38 GMT -5
Yes, tomorrow is the Peakness and it will be a very exciting race. Barbaro, who won the Derby is the favorite going into the race. If he wins the Peakness, which is the second jewel of the Triple Crown, he has a good chance of winning the Belmont. Barbaro trained here in Maryland. Maryland also has another horse in the Peakness, Sweetnorthersaint, one of the youngest, yet, has a great racing future. Michael Matz, is Barbaro's trainer. Matz, a former equestine rider who turned to training thoroughbeds after winning a silver medal in the 1996 Olympics, was given orders to prepare the colt to race, which of course he did. Michael Matz is also a true hero. Nearly 17 years ago, a DC-10 plane that he was traveling on, crashed in a Iowa cornfield. The crashed killed 111 out of 126 passagers and crew members. Matz led two brothers and their sister, who were traveling without their parents away from the buring weakage. Matz and another passager then went back in the plan to help rescue others. He heard cries from a baby and pulled the baby out of the luggage compartment. He is a wonderful person and an outstanding trainer, who loves his horses. Good luck to all and I'll see you at the Peakness! ;D It will be a fun day for all! Go Baby Go!
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Post by dad2paisley on May 19, 2006 18:29:11 GMT -5
Should be a great preakness. Can't wait to see it.
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Post by augenj on May 20, 2006 19:05:25 GMT -5
Sad story about Barbaro. I had $20 to win on Bernardino the winner but I'd gladly give that up for a good outcome for a really nice horse - Barbaro. They called it a "bad step" but it's really a bad track with an uneven surface under the dirt cushion.
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Post by dad2paisley on May 20, 2006 20:50:01 GMT -5
Sad news. Here is the headline.
BALTIMORE (Reuters) - Lightly raced longshot Bernardini easily captured the Preakness Stakes Saturday after Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro pulled up in the first quarter-mile with a career-ending leg injury.
Barbaro, tipped by many to become the first Triple Crown winner since 1978, suffered a fracture above and below the ankle in his right hind leg. "There are some major hurdles," said track veterinarian Larry Bramlage. "There are at least a couple of aspects of it that are very life threatening for him.
"His career is over. This will be it for him as a race horse. Under the best of circumstances, we're looking to try to save him as a stallion."
The horrific injury suffered by Barbaro overshadowed a stunning victory by Kentucky-bred Bernardini and jockey Javier Castellano.
Bernardini, who did not run in the Kentucky Derby and entered the Preakness with only three career races, saved ground along the rail and swung out four-wide at the quarter-pole.
The son of brilliant sire A.P. Indy out of Cara Rafaela exploded down the stretch under a hand-ride by Castellano to trounce runner-up Sweetnorthernsaint by 5 1/4 lengths.
Hemingway's Key, a chestnut colt trained by Nick Zito, finished a distant third, while Santa Anita Derby champion and Kentucky Derby morning line favorite Brother Derek was fourth.
FIRST LOSS
Barbaro, suffering his first loss in seven career starts, broke through the gate before the start of the race and had to be re-loaded into his number six post position.
When the nine-horse race began, the dark bay Barbaro was in last place before jockey Edgar Prado pulled the colt up when it became apparent the he could no longer run.
While the stunned crowd at Pimlico Race Course gasped at the unfolding scene, Prado jumped off Barbaro before the first turn and tried to calm him down to prevent further injury.
After the race was over, Barbaro was loaded into an ambulance and taken off the track amid an eerie silence by the record Preakness crowd of 118,402.
"When he went to the gate, he was feeling super and I felt like he was in the best condition for this race," said Prado. "He actually tried to buck me off a couple of times.
"He was feeling that good. He just touched the front of the doors of the gate and went right through it.
"During the race, he took a bad step and I can't really tell you what happened. I heard a noise about 100 yards into the race and pulled him right up."
ANIMAL HOSPITAL
Barbaro, who won the 20-horse Kentucky Derby by an astounding 6 1/2 lengths, was shipped to an animal hospital in Kennett Square, Pa., about an hour west of Philadelphia.
"We didn't expect this," shaken Barbaro owner Gretchen Jackson said of her 1-2 Preakness favorite. "You can expect being beaten. You didn't think about this."
Bernardini, owned by the Darley Stable which is operated by Dubai's Sheikh Mohammed, paid $27.80, $9.40 and $5.80 for a $2 ticket. Illinois Derby winner and local Maryland favorite Sweetnorthernsaint returned $7.80 and $5, and Hemingway's Key paid $8.
Castellano, 28, said he had "two different emotions" about winning his first Preakness aboard his 12-1 longshot.
"I'm really excited for me and for my group to win the Preakness," he said. "But at the same time I see the horse right in the middle of the track with everybody trying to help it.
"It's really, really sad. It really is bad."
The winning time by the bay Withers Stakes winner of 1:54.65 was well off the Preakness record of 1:53.40 set by Louis Quatorze in 1996 and Tank's Prospect in 1985.
My sister heard on the news that Barbaro is getting a full complete escort to PA to the hospital up there.
Good luck and sending white light to you Barbaro. #12_3_46#
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