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LD
Fire, the co-winner of this year's $1 million Ed Burke Million Futurity and the
beaten favorite in Friday's $1,272,750 Golden State Million Futurity, was
euthanized on Tuesday morning following health complications according to part
owner and trainer Jaime Gomez.
LD Fire Racing
for Mike Abraham, Alfonso Pasquel, and Gomez, LD Fire won three of five career
starts and earned $313,509. She finished in a dead-heat for first with Streakin
Laquinta in the Ed Burke Million - the first dead-heat in the long history of
that futurity. LD Fire was sired by Walk Thru Fire and out of the Grade 1
winning mare Prima LD. The
2-year-old filly finished 10th in the Golden State after a rather dull effort as
the heavy favorite. Upon her return to the barn, Dr. Rick Overly, a mainstay
veterinarian at Los Alamitos, could see that she was uncomfortable and shifting
her weight but it was apparent to him that she had not suffered a lower limb
injury or that she was suffering from colic. He treated her on Friday night and
Saturday and his team kept a close eye on her on Monday. "By
Monday afternoon, LD Fire had not been up all day," Dr. Overly said. "She had a
fracture somewhere in her pelvic region. She had no sensation on her hind limbs
and was basically suffering from paralysis. We gave her until this morning for
her condition to improve but unfortunately it did not. I talked it over with
(her owners) and that's when the decision was made. Unfortunately, there's no
surgery that could have helped her." "We
are sad and feel terrible for the filly," said Abraham, who also bred LD Fire.
"My biggest regret is that we will never know how great she could have been. I
think we only scratched the surface of her talents. She was lightly raced, well
taken care of, and we babied her so much, and that makes this hard to take," he
added. "It's easy to say right now that she would have been a great one, but you
look at her size and her potential and we really felt that there was no telling
what she could have done and accomplished. We feel so terrible for
her." "Today
is a bad day for all of us," Gomez added. "She was a priceless filly, one of the
greatest that I've ever trained. We had to lift her because of the injury just
so that she could drink water. (Jockey Alejandro) Luna felt that something was
wrong right after the break. She was moving back in the gate and because she's
so huge, maybe she was standing wrong when the gate opened. It's a tough thing
to understand and a terrible thing to try to explain." "It's
a bizarre injury," Dr. Overly added. "This case hurts me more because I've never
had a top horse go through something like this. I believe she slipped out when
she left the gate, maybe she stepped so far back into the gate that she stepped
over the breaking bar leaving the gate. It was a weird set of circumstances that
led to the perfect storm to create this injury." Overly
began to treat LD Fire upon her return from racing in the Golden State Million.
"I treated her for pain on Friday and I was hoping that she had sacrum injury,
which is a soft tissue injury that a horse can live with," he said.
After
further examination and treatment on Saturday, LD Fire appeared to have turned
the corner and was doing well Sunday morning. "She was eating and drinking and
looking okay," Dr. Overly said. "I felt good about it, and I was hopeful that at
the best case it was just a ruptured blood vessels that made her
uncomfortable. On the back of my mind I was always fearful of the possibility
that she had suffered a fractured vertebrae. We could have tied her up (on
Friday and Saturday), however with every second that the mare was standing she
would become more agitated and uncomfortable. When she was lying down she was
more comfortable and at ease with herself." -30- |
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