Rest in Peace - New Joysey Jeff

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Tairaterces
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Rest in Peace - New Joysey Jeff

Postby Tairaterces » Mon Jul 31, 2006 2:39 pm

STAKES RUNNER NEW JOYSEY JEFF EUTHANIZED AFTER INJURY :cry:

New Joysey Jeff, who finished third in the second division of the Oceanside Stakes on Del Mar’s opening day program July 19, suffered fractured sesamoids in his left front leg while working on the Jimmy Durante Turf Course this morning, and was euthanized.

The 3-year-old son of Bright Launch, trained by Mark Glatt, was in the midst of a 5-furlong work when the injury occurred. He was the first worker on the course and the rest of today’s work schedule was canceled.

In the Oceanside, the colt got to the lead in mid-stretch but ducked out under left-handed whipping and was outfinished by winner Obrigado and Porto Santo. He was put on the steward’s list following that race.

Jockey Corey Nakatani, who was on the horse for today’s work, said of the Oceanside incident, “He was lugging in on me and I was trying to straighten him out. I hit him left-handed and he ducked out severely. He’s a colt with a ton of ability, though, and we’ve just got to work to make him better.”

In Hollywood Park’s Grade III Cinema Breeders’ Cup Handicap, his race prior to the Oceanside, the horse ducked out in the stretch and dumped rider Jose Valdivia, who suffered a broken collarbone in the incident.
"and Secretariat let no one down on the unforgettable afternoon of June 9, 1973, when he ran a hole in the wind"
~Bob Ehalt~

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SoLongCharley
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New Joysey Jeff

Postby SoLongCharley » Mon Jul 31, 2006 5:00 pm

This just breaks my heart! I know he had his troubles in his past couple of races, but I was such a fan of his - I thought he was a wonderful horse. Rest in peace, beautiful boy, I'll miss seeing you at the track. SO very sad!

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Postby louis finochio » Mon Jul 31, 2006 5:09 pm

TB that suddenly bear out are in pain and are telling us that their hurting.

Long ago Hall of Fame jockey Eddie Arcaro was a co host on Derby day and made mention of the above.

Sore TB that are raced back too soon will be injured and their career is over.
Those without sin cast the first stone.
Louis Finochio

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Postby SoLongCharley » Mon Jul 31, 2006 5:36 pm

Thank you, Louis. Poor, poor New Joysey Jeff. This one really got to me. I saw him run, I think it was at Santa Anita - my favorite track. When I read what had happened to him today, it just broke my heart. My next thought was - WHY did Nakatani hit him on that side?? (Did he have to hit him at ALL??) Wasn't that the side he was hit on when Jose Valdivia fell? And wasn't that the same side that he was hit on, when he did the very same thing in his last & final race? Wasn't Nakatani on him in THAT race? I know he managed to stay aboard, but wouldn't you think Nakatani would have known not to DO that? I can't help but believe you're corret in what you posted. I'm just SO sad about him.....this just shouldn't have happened. There was definitely something wrong with this poor boy. Why was not someone paying closer attention??

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Postby louis finochio » Mon Jul 31, 2006 7:01 pm

My favorite TB was Native Diver, ND started 81 times and was 37/7/12.

ND won 34 stake races and won the Hollywood Gold Cup at 6, 7, and 8 years of age.

ND was sound and had the speed to carry him over a distance of ground.

The TB of today are averaging 6 lifetime starts. For those TB breeders who were not around to see ND run, they were born too late.

How are the TB breeders going to breed a sounder horse than we are seeing today ?

I have my plan to breed a sounder individual, and it does not have 10-12 crosses of the same sire line to accomplish the task.

ND thanks for the memories, and to Jerry Lambert ND jockey thanks for those great rides on the diver.
Those without sin cast the first stone.

Louis Finochio

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Postby zinn21 » Mon Jul 31, 2006 7:14 pm

That's too bad. He was a quirky horse (at least on the turf) but had a lot of raw talent. In his last two races, he made a sharp right turn in mid stretch. Never heard any solid consensus on what he was ducking from. I would imagine he was on the stewards list after his last race. Wonder if he was working for an ok to run?? I hate to see what seems to be so many horses falling by the wayside at Del Mar.

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Sysonby
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Postby Sysonby » Tue Aug 01, 2006 6:43 am

zinn21 wrote:Wonder if he was working for an ok to run??


Per DRF, that's what he was doing.

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Postby Tairaterces » Tue Aug 01, 2006 8:48 am

DRF article . . . . that poor horse!!!!!!!!!!! (see below in red)
:cry:

Del Mar
New Joysey Jeff euthanized at 3
By JAY PRIVMAN
DEL MAR, Calif. - The eventful, curious career of New Joysey Jeff came to a sudden, tragic, and ugly ending Monday morning at Del Mar during a workout on turf, when the 3-year-old stakes-class colt suffered multiple fractures in his left front leg that necessitated his euthanization soon after.
According to an official veterinarian report filed with the California Horse Racing Board by New Joysey Jeff's attending veterinarian, Dr. Ted Simpson, New Joysey Jeff had a "displaced and compound fracture" to his left front cannon bone and had fractures in that leg's sesamoid bones.

"With that kind of injury, it's exceedingly obvious" that there was no hope to save New Joysey Jeff, Simpson said later when reached by phone. "There's no way to treat an injury like that successfully because of the contamination" caused by the compound fracture, Simpson said.

New Joysey Jeff had become something of a cause celebre in recent weeks. On June 25 at Hollywood Park, while headed to an apparent victory in the Cinema Breeders' Cup Handicap, New Joysey Jeff suddenly ducked out, dislodging jockey Jose Valdivia Jr., who suffered a fractured collarbone.

New Joysey Jeff made his next and final start on July 19 at Del Mar, in the second division of the Oceanside Stakes. With Corey Nakatani replacing the injured Valdivia, New Joysey Jeff again tried to duck out at midstretch, but Nakatani stayed on. New Joysey Jeff finished third. He interfered with Obrigado and Porto Santo, but since they subsequently finished in front of New Joysey Jeff, there was no disqualification.

The antics in the Cinema and the Oceanside, however, caused New Joysey Jeff to be placed on the stewards' list. In order for him to race again, he would have to be approved by the stewards.

Monday's workout was an attempt to get New Joysey Jeff off the stewards' list. Mark Glatt, the trainer of New Joysey Jeff, watched the work from the frontside in the company of stewards Scott Chaney and George Slender.

Although there had been turf racing all weekend, turf works scheduled for Saturday were postponed by light rain and moved to Sunday. But light rain again on Sunday postponed scheduled turf works to Monday. It rained overnight Sunday into Monday, but six horses were scheduled to work over the grass on Monday morning.

New Joysey Jeff was the first one on the course, at 9:50 a.m. He began his work at the five-furlong pole and cruised to the top of the stretch while working well out from the rail, outside orange cones, known as dogs, that were placed past the middle of the course.

But just as he changed leads at the furlong pole, New Joysey Jeff broke down.

Nakatani pulled up New Joysey Jeff in less than 100 yards, but the colt's left leg was clearly damaged severely. Glatt raced from the box seats to New Joysey Jeff, but when he got there and saw the damage, he walked over to the outside rail, grabbed it, and his body went limp.

A lengthy process began that resulted in New Joysey Jeff waiting 19 minutes to be placed in the horse ambulance.

The horse ambulance, which was parked on the backside near the three-furlong pole, at first attempted to access the turf course at the half-mile pole. But it could not get up the incline there from the main track to the turf course. So, the horse ambulance was brought around the main track to the homestretch, where another attempt was made to access the turf course, this time at a gap just inside the furlong pole.

Again, however, the ambulance could not get from the main track to the turf course. "The main track was wet, and the turf was wet, and the ambulance kept slipping," said Leif Dickinson, Del Mar's turf course superintendent.

New Joysey Jeff's left front leg had been placed in a Kimzey splint, but because the ambulance could not get closer to him, New Joysey Jeff had to be walked from the spot where he had been pulled up to where the ambulance sat, a distance of about 60 yards. He hobbled to the ambulance, hopping on his right front leg, with his two rear legs pushing forward.

Glatt was at the barn minutes later, sitting in a chair, looking shaken.

"There's not much to say," Glatt said, his eyes red. "We already put him down."

The other five horses who were scheduled to work were not allowed on the course.

"The part of the turf where he broke down needed to be repaired," Dickinson said. "I wanted to repair it right, not quickly. There was no divot. The turf there was 'toupeed.' It was flipped back."

Based on the way the turf looked where New Joysey Jeff was injured, Dickinson said, "It's hard to tell if he took a bad step or slipped. It might have been a slip. The area where he was working was relatively pristine."

Dickinson maintained the turf was safe despite the wet weather.

"We really haven't had that much rain," he said. "It was a steady soaking. The turf is wet, but the profile," he said, referring to the base, "is relatively dry. It's such thick turf that it takes awhile to go down.

"I'm literally shaking now," Dickinson said. "This is hard for everyone involved."

New Joysey Jeff is the second horse to suffer a fatal injury on the turf this meet. On opening day, Blazing Sunset broke down in the same division of the Oceanside in which New Joysey Jeff ducked out.
"and Secretariat let no one down on the unforgettable afternoon of June 9, 1973, when he ran a hole in the wind"

~Bob Ehalt~



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Postby HR LLC » Tue Aug 01, 2006 10:58 am

Why would you work a stakes horse on wet turf??

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Postby reese » Tue Aug 01, 2006 11:25 am

HR LLC wrote:Why would you work a stakes horse on wet turf??


Spook Express :(

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Postby henthorn » Wed Aug 02, 2006 3:42 am

Hindsight is always twenty-twenty. Let's not judge everybody's choices; be thankful for the great times New Joysey Jeff had, and mourn his loss. There will be enough second-guessing from the people involved. :cry:
Rocking H

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Postby Sysonby » Wed Aug 02, 2006 6:23 am

henthorn wrote:Hindsight is always twenty-twenty. Let's not judge everybody's choices; be thankful for the great times New Joysey Jeff had, and mourn his loss. There will be enough second-guessing from the people involved. :cry:


Exactly. And if I may be so bold, I understand that NJJ had followers of a sort because of his antics so this technically doesn't apply to him but does every freakin' breakdown have to get so much play on these boards from so called fans? Not a single post about Aragorn when he ran one of the most amazing races all a few weeks ago and half the Bernardini posts after the Jim Dandy talked about Barbaro in the Preakness.

Is it just more fun to be appalled and outraged? Is that what our racing fan discourse on the net is limited to, who broke down today? If these are fans, I'd like to see what the enemies say. Racing is in worse shape than I thought.

Sorry but too many weeks of too many threads like these while at the same time ignoring good racing and I'm venting. :evil:

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Tairaterces
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Postby Tairaterces » Wed Aug 02, 2006 7:40 am

reese wrote:
HR LLC wrote:Why would you work a stakes horse on wet turf??


Spook Express :(


What her connections did to her still pizzes me off . . . . :evil:
Here was a mare that they knew HATED soft turf and they ran her anyway. After everything she gave them . . .just shows how much they cared for her($$) . . . .bu**sh*t!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

T
"and Secretariat let no one down on the unforgettable afternoon of June 9, 1973, when he ran a hole in the wind"

~Bob Ehalt~



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Postby louis finochio » Fri Aug 04, 2006 7:00 am

I was at Mark Glatt's barn on Thursday and they said NJJ slipped on the wet turf.
Those without sin cast the first stone.

Louis Finochio