Closing Up

Nev was picked up yesterday to head to her new home: a new, state of the art, small thoroughbred breeding facility in Georgetown Kentucky.  She will join a couple of ex-racers in a broodmare band for Triple Crown LLC, a new farm that will start their breeding program in the spring.

As Heather and I will be in Georgetown before the Breeders’ Cup, I am going to see if we can stop by and say hello.

We checked with several people, horsemen, well-respected bloodstock agents and others to try and assess her value.  She was the 7th foal to race from a dam that, thus far, has produced no winners.  Her last foal only sold for $1,300 so her value, as it were, was non-existent.  The goal became to get her to a good home where she can have a nice life and a second career.

Several people vouched for this new operation so we felt comfortable in getting the filly there and moving forward.  The owner was very forthcoming in producing all his information and giving us a rundown of his operation as well as his plans for the future.

I will do a more in depth recap in a week or so but suffice to say it is profoundly disappointing to have not one a race this year, though it was nice that we raced so often at home and that Nev was bringing home decent checks.

What will happen going forward is that we will tally up the last few bills and then come up with a final total which will be divided up among all the members (184 if I’m not mistaken).  Those of you that are staying in for another year will not have to do anything except make up the difference for the new buy in by the end of February.  Those of you stepping away will have checks sent out to you.

There is no timetable on this yet.  Since we are already into mid-October, I would not anticipate getting our final vet bill until mid-November and not getting completely closed out until sometime thereafter.

Thanks for being a part of the Club this year.  Not winning not withstanding, I hope that we made it an enjoyable and educational experience and that we see you back again next year.

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“I Never Give Up” Retired

I Never Give Up was X-rayed this weekend and her left front ankle revealed a crack on one of the bones of her ankle.  The Super Saver filly was still acting oddly after her right front foot was outfitted with a special shoe to help alleviate the tenderness she was experiencing in it so Nevada ordered a set of x-rays.  The right front came back fine but the left front revealed a crack in one of her ankle bones that will force her to be retired from racing.

The oddity of the left being the issue is even more astounding when viewed through the prism of the way she raced and was working.  As we know, she lugged in toward the inside rail when she would switch leads for the run down the stretch.  Generally, if a horse is sore, they will shy away from the side that hurts.  In other words, a disturbance in her right front would have caused her to lug in NOT a bone break in her left front.

Of course we don’t know how long the injury has been in place and may have only affected her in the last race since she was never quiet able to bounce back from that one, though she certainly came close.  The vet was amazed at what must be her pain tolerance threshold.  She could jog every morning yet when Nevada push on her a little harder to get her closer to a work then a race, she would come back not quite right.  She would walk out of it eventually and continue to be able to jog okay, but not go really hard.

She could make a relatively nice broodmare for someone so that’s what we’re looking at now.  If we can’t move her quickly she will be relocated to a farm for turnout since that expense is considerably less than being on track.

In an odd year that saw us earning money but not winning races, this is certainly an ignominious end to a frustrating 2018 season.  We ran a lot, hit the board but couldn’t get to the line first.

Once we get the filly off the payroll we’ll gather up the last bills, pay everyone off and then take a look at the season and see what, if anything, we can do differently in 2019.  We want to keep this fun an educational but we also want to win races.  It is tough having a year where we didn’t win a race since that has never happened in the Club’s history.  Bad year’s happen but that doesn’t mean we can’t step back, take a hard look and see what we can do differently in coming years.

Settled In Kentucky

I Never Give Up made an uneventful trip to Kentucky where she is stabled for the time being at Keeneland.  Initially Nevada was given a handful of stalls at Churchill but he was pushed to Lexington with the promised arrival of all the shippers for Breeders’ Cup weekend.

In any event, she shipped well and is settled in.  Her new shoes seem to be working well for her but we’ll know a lot more about that later in the week/weekend when Nevada sends her out for a workout.  That kind of pressure and exertion is exactly what we need to test how she responds to them.

The breeze will also tell us how much fitness she has retained/lost from her time away from the track when she was recovering and the few days of track training she missed shipping.  She was dialed in pretty good at the close of the meet so hopefully she will come out of the work strong.

We’ll be looking at both Indiana and Kentucky to enter her and we realistically have a shot at 3 races before the meets there wrap.  There are a pair of maiden claiming $15,000 races at Keeneland in a couple of weeks but both are on the dirt – not that she can’t handle the dirt, she can.  We just think she’s better on the turf.  That said, we could use that as a prep race to get her back in the groove before gunning at Churchill or Indiana Grand.  She’ll most likely need one to tighten her up anyway and she was only nosed out for show at Oaklawn in a MCL $16,000 because her rider mailed it in late, so she can certainly be competitive.

Once Nevada gets a work in her we’ll know better where we’re at and I’ll let you all know!