RacehorseGirl

A More In-Depth Look at Eight Belles and Derby 134 Tragedy

May 4th, 2008 · 7 Comments

I know I’m obsessing over the events of yesterday right now, but I feel like I want to do something regarding Eight Belles and I can’t, so I’m trying to provide all of the information that I can.

Paul Moran (writer of one of my favorite blogs), wrote this touching and informative piece for ESPN.com:

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Big Brown won the 134th Kentucky Derby on Saturday at Churchill Downs. Obviously, he came as advertised, arriving at the wire comfortably ahead, in what was only the fourth race of his career. He upheld every confident prediction made by his trainer, Rick Dutrow, during the week leading up to the Derby. He overcame a prodigious collection of historical obstacles and won from Post 20 with unmitigated authority.The most valiant effort in the Derby, however, was not Big Brown’s. He established his superiority with aplomb.

Eight Belles ran her heart out — and she was all heart. Eighteen males finished behind her. The nearest, Denis of Cork, was 2¾ lengths in her wake and overmatched, while the others staggered toward the wire outclassed not only by Big Brown, but by the only filly in the field whose effort will be remembered in eulogy rather than history.

Eight Belles’ heart carried her to places she had never been, surrounded by a thundering phalanx of horses, racing a distance that carried them all into the unknown, well beyond any in her experience. For every stride of 10 furlongs she gave everything she had, then, the race over, a statement made in exclamation, she gave her life.

Eight Belles ran on with a courageous determination seen in few horses — the best horses, the horses you remember — running the race of her life, which would not see another sunrise. She followed the early speed, and ran past them when they tired. Though Big Brown ran past her — no horse was going to beat Big Brown on Saturday — the others never threatened Eight Belles.

Thirty-nine fillies have run in the Derby. Three won. Only one other, Lady Navarre in 1906, finished second. After delivering what was by any measure a truly remarkable effort — one of the five best by a female in the Derby in 134 years — Eight Belles galloped beyond the wire and around the clubhouse turn beneath jockey Gabriel Saez. Entering the backstretch, her front ankles collapsed simultaneously. While a crowd of 157,770 thundered in salute to Big Brown’s victory, she fell.

“She started galloping funny and I tried to pull her up,” Saez said, “but she went down.”

When veterinarians reached the spot at which the gunmetal-grey filly lay motionless, there was no choice. Eight Belles was euthanized. Her heart had carried her to a place beyond where her legs were meant to go.

“She didn’t have a leg to stand on,” said Dr. Larry Bramlage, the on-call veterinarian who represents the American Association of Equine Practitioners. “In my years in racing, I have never seen this happen. This was tough enough had it been one, but it happened in both and it happened on the same stride. She just collapsed right in front of the outrider, so there was not really any warning.

“When horses really tire they are taking a lot of load on the skeleton because their muscles are fatigued. So, we will occasionally see a catastrophic injury after the wire, when the horse is slowing down. The difficult thing to explain with her is that it was so far after the wire and she was easing down like you’d like to see a horse slow down by that point. Then, all of a sudden, she goes over the brink in both legs. I don’t have an explanation because I have no background to draw on. I’ve never seen anything like this before.”

Trainer Larry Jones, awaiting the return of the filly to be unsaddled, was celebrating her effort a year after Hard Spun, whom he trained for the same owner, finished second in the 2007 Derby, unaware of the cruel fate that met Eight Belles until he saw Saez return on the back of a pony ridden by broadcaster Donna Brothers.

“We were kind of high-fiving. But then horses came back, were unsaddled and led off the track. Someone said, ‘That’s your rider on that pony,’” Jones said. “I said, ‘What’s up?’ He gave me a hug and said, ‘Mr. Jones, they put her down.’ Both cannon bones were broken when I got to her.”

It is not insignificant that Eight Belles was withdrawn from Friday’s Kentucky Oaks, which was won by her stablemate, Proud Spell. But a decision by owner Rick Porter to run probably the best 3-year-old filly in the nation against 19 males in the Derby put her in the precarious position that she overcame on sheer talent at the cost of her life. She proved her owner’s point, but the cost was far too great.

“She ran the race of her life,” Jones said. “We were through racing; all we had to do was come home. There’s a reason for everything, but I see no reason for this. The main thing is that she didn’t suffer. She went out in a blaze of glory. … Losing an animal like this …

“I don’t know what to say.”

[source]

Tags: bigbrown · eightbelles · kentuckyderby · larrybramlagedvm · larryjones · richarddutrow

7 responses so far ↓

  • 1 Judy Souza // May 4, 2008 at 12:49 pm

    I too am deeply saddened over the tragic loss of “Eight Belles” and feel a strong need to express my condolences to Rick Porter and Larry Jones. Is there an address where cards and notes can be sent to them.
    “Eight Belles” death brought back the still vivid memory of Ruffian’s horrible accident and death so many decades ago.
    Thank you. Judy Souza, life-long animal lover

  • 2 Gabriel Echenique // May 4, 2008 at 5:47 pm

    Jen, my english is not very good, but I think that I’d not find the proper words in my home language either…

    I just want to share this with you:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mHfpIKCxw7g&feature=related

    Gabriel (Uruguay)

  • 3 MARTHA SMITH // May 5, 2008 at 10:54 am

    WE WERE SO SADDENED BY THE SUDDEN TRAGIC DEATH OF THE GORGEOUS FILLY EIGHT BELLES, EXPECIALLY AFTER THE MAGNIFICENT RACE TO THE END. I CAN ONLY IMAGINE THAT THIS IS LIKE LOOSING A FAMILY MEMBER, A CHILD. PLEASE KNOW THAT OUR THOUGHTS AND PRAYERS ARE WITH YOU NOW–WE WILL NEVER FORGET THIS MOMENT. MARTHA AND MCKAMY SMITH

  • 4 Elysium Drumm // May 5, 2008 at 11:36 am

    I am entirely unfamilar with horse ownership, racing and the like, so this may not be a good question, but I hope you can help me sort through it. This whole thing is killing me. I keep coming back in my mind to the idea of ‘clearing’ atheletes (in this case the horses) for a race. I keep hearing about ‘drug testing’ and the like as necessary to qualify for a race, but has anyone ever required an independent veterinarian(??) to perform a pre-race exam. I wonder that prior to the race, maybe this poor soul had existing hairline fractures, or some sort of other formative defect that would not have presented itself but for an xray or other scan. I keep thinking, maybe if they examined the horses immediately prior to a race, and the injured horse sent to recuperate, instead of run top-speed, we might be able to stop these catastropic injuries from happening. Maybe they already do this? I guess it just doesn’t make sense why this poor girl blew out both legs in a mile & a quarter if nothing was the matter previously.

  • 5 Mike G // May 5, 2008 at 11:04 pm

    Eysium Drumm, yes pre-race vet inspections are done. vets and trainers are very astute at catching these types of things but of course it is not full proof. It’s not standard proceedure to x-ray before every race. In this case it is highly unlikely that Eight Bells had pre-existing fractures. She ran to well to suspect that. The fractures she suffered given the fashion in which she suffored them is very rare. Personally I have watched thousands of races and have never seen anything like it.

  • 6 Debbie Brickel // May 8, 2008 at 12:33 am

    I want to know was Eight Belles wearing horseshoes with toe grabs and if so, what height? From my reading on the internet, they can cause these sudden catastrophic injuries in horses. How can we find this out?

  • 7 mike // May 10, 2008 at 6:01 am

    mr.larry jones said. “the main thing is that she didn’t suffer”. i guess that a filly with two fronts broken in half thrashing and screaming is not suffering. the industry continues to try to pull wool over the publics eyes, not giving a damb about these animals. lets get to the real reason this is happening and make the money grubbers like larry jones go away.