About Eight Belles

Eight Belles (February 23, 2005May 3, 2008) was a thoroughbred racehorse owned by Rick Porter’s Fox Hill Farms. She finished second to winner Big Brown in the 134th running of the Kentucky Derby held at Churchill Downs, a race run by only thirty-nine fillies in the past . Her collapse just after the Derby’s conclusion resulted in immediate euthanasia.

Events after the 2008 Kentucky Derby

Eight Belles collapsed during her cool-down immediately after passing the winning post. She suffered compound fractures of both front ankles and was euthanized on the spot because of the nature of her injuries.

Dr. Larry Bramlage, the on-call veterinarian, claimed that Eight Belles’ trauma was too severe to even attempt to move her off the track.

According to the The Louisville Courier-Journal, Bramlage said the filly had fractures of the cannon and sesamoid bones in both front legs. That is the same type of break that was suffered by 2006 Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro in one leg.

Eight Belles was buried and memorialized in the garden of Churchill Downs’ Kentucky Derby Museum on September 7, 2008. A race has been renamed in her honor, and will run on the Derby Day 2009 undercard as the Eight Belles Stakes.

Eight Belles at Churchill Downs, May 1, 2008

Eight Belles morning work out at Churchill Downs, May 1, 2008 in preparation for the 134 Kentucky Derby

Remembering Eight Belles

The National Thoroughbred Racing Association (NTRA) asked jockeys riding at Pimlico Race Course during all races over the weekend of the 133rd running of the Preakness Stakes (May 16 and 17, 2008) to wear stickers on their boots or mud pants in honor of Eight Belles. The red and white stickers, made by the NTRA, had a bell, the number 8 and the word “Belles” on them. The Jockey’s Guild wholeheartedly agreed. Jockey John Velazquez said: “It’s something to remind everybody of a great horse. What happened was a really sad thing, and we’re sad. I think it [wearing the stickers] is a good thing to bring awareness to our game. We’ll do whatever is possible to minimize anything that happens like that.”

Necropsy

Kentucky chief veterinarian Lafe Nichols performed a necropsy and tests at the University of Kentucky’s Livestock Disease Diagnostic Center. According to a review of the results by the Associated Press, compound fractures of both front legs at the fetlock joints were confirmed. They described lacerated skin on both legs, an absence of joint fluid in the damaged areas and congested lungs. The filly also experienced a bruised head and hemorrhaging in the left thyroid gland, which the report blamed on her fall after the initial injuries.

Larry Jones, her trainer, commented that he believes the horse just tripped over her own feet. “She’s bad about stumbling while pulling up. She doesn’t pick her feet up very high. It’s one reason she could run very fast and far. She had the perfect motion for being effective and efficient. However, those horses who do that have a tendency to want to stumble.”

The Jockey Club has formed a panel to examine the issues, which include breeding practices, track surfaces and medication.

Above information was taken from Wikipedia