imaufo
13-09-2005, 08:01
Bellamy Road out for the year
By David Grening
Daily Racing Form
Bellamy Road, the star-crossed 3-year-old colt owned by George Steinbrenner, will miss the remainder of the year with an injured splint bone in his right foreleg, his connections said Monday.
The injury is similar to the one Bellamy Road suffered in his left foreleg when he finished seventh as the favorite in the Kentucky Derby on May 7. In his only race since then, Bellamy Road finished second to Flower Alley in the $1 million Travers Stakes last month at Saratoga.
According to Ed Sexton, the racing manager for Steinbrenner's Kinsman Stable, trainer Nick Zito noticed something amiss with Bellamy Road last Thursday. On Sunday, Michael Chovanes, the private veterinarian who works on Steinbrenner's farm, flew to Saratoga and confirmed the injury.
"His body hasn't filled into his bones yet," Sexton said. "Everything's not maturing as quickly as it could be. The injury's very minute, but it's time-consuming. We said let's stop for a while, let him put his head down, and take a break. He'll be a hell of a 4-year-old."
Sexton said Bellamy Road will leave Saratoga by van Friday and arrive at Kinsman Farm on Saturday. He'll be given ample time off before resuming training for a 4-year-old campaign.
"We'll start training him here," Sexton said. "We'll get him three quarters fit and send him to Nick at Palm Meadows."
The injury is another blow to the Breeders' Cup Classic, a race that has incurred numerous defections throughout the year. Ghostzapper and Roses in May, the 1-2 finishers in last year's Classic, were retired earlier this year, as were developing stars Eddington and Southern Image. Kentucky Derby winner Giacomo is out for the year, and Preakness and Belmont champion Afleet Alex is doubtful to make it back from injury in time to run in the Classic.
Bellamy Road vaulted to prominence in the spring when he won the Wood Memorial at Aqueduct by 17 3/4 lengths, equaling a track record by running nine furlongs in 1:47.16. That performance earned him favorite status in the Kentucky Derby.
Off a 112-day layoff, his connections debated between running Bellamy Road in the King's Bishop at seven furlongs against Lost in the Fog or in the Travers at 1 1/4 miles on Aug. 27. They opted for the Travers, in which Bellamy Road set the pace and gave way grudgingly in the final furlong, falling 2 1/2 lengths short of Flower Alley.
Sexton said he asked Chovanes if running in the Travers over the King's Bishop may have played a role in the injury.
"He said no," Sexton said. "The fractions in the Travers, they were walking. It was a race from the half-mile pole. If he ran in the King's Bishop, he'd have hooked up with Lost in the Fog and he'd gotten his butt run off for seven furlongs. It was sitting there waiting to happen. The one thing that beat us more than anything was time."
http://sports.espn.go.com/sports/horse/news/story?id=2159574
By David Grening
Daily Racing Form
Bellamy Road, the star-crossed 3-year-old colt owned by George Steinbrenner, will miss the remainder of the year with an injured splint bone in his right foreleg, his connections said Monday.
The injury is similar to the one Bellamy Road suffered in his left foreleg when he finished seventh as the favorite in the Kentucky Derby on May 7. In his only race since then, Bellamy Road finished second to Flower Alley in the $1 million Travers Stakes last month at Saratoga.
According to Ed Sexton, the racing manager for Steinbrenner's Kinsman Stable, trainer Nick Zito noticed something amiss with Bellamy Road last Thursday. On Sunday, Michael Chovanes, the private veterinarian who works on Steinbrenner's farm, flew to Saratoga and confirmed the injury.
"His body hasn't filled into his bones yet," Sexton said. "Everything's not maturing as quickly as it could be. The injury's very minute, but it's time-consuming. We said let's stop for a while, let him put his head down, and take a break. He'll be a hell of a 4-year-old."
Sexton said Bellamy Road will leave Saratoga by van Friday and arrive at Kinsman Farm on Saturday. He'll be given ample time off before resuming training for a 4-year-old campaign.
"We'll start training him here," Sexton said. "We'll get him three quarters fit and send him to Nick at Palm Meadows."
The injury is another blow to the Breeders' Cup Classic, a race that has incurred numerous defections throughout the year. Ghostzapper and Roses in May, the 1-2 finishers in last year's Classic, were retired earlier this year, as were developing stars Eddington and Southern Image. Kentucky Derby winner Giacomo is out for the year, and Preakness and Belmont champion Afleet Alex is doubtful to make it back from injury in time to run in the Classic.
Bellamy Road vaulted to prominence in the spring when he won the Wood Memorial at Aqueduct by 17 3/4 lengths, equaling a track record by running nine furlongs in 1:47.16. That performance earned him favorite status in the Kentucky Derby.
Off a 112-day layoff, his connections debated between running Bellamy Road in the King's Bishop at seven furlongs against Lost in the Fog or in the Travers at 1 1/4 miles on Aug. 27. They opted for the Travers, in which Bellamy Road set the pace and gave way grudgingly in the final furlong, falling 2 1/2 lengths short of Flower Alley.
Sexton said he asked Chovanes if running in the Travers over the King's Bishop may have played a role in the injury.
"He said no," Sexton said. "The fractions in the Travers, they were walking. It was a race from the half-mile pole. If he ran in the King's Bishop, he'd have hooked up with Lost in the Fog and he'd gotten his butt run off for seven furlongs. It was sitting there waiting to happen. The one thing that beat us more than anything was time."
http://sports.espn.go.com/sports/horse/news/story?id=2159574