I Want Revenge Scratched From Kentucky Derby 2009

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JEFFREY McMURRAY | May 2, 2009 06:06 PM EST | AP

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Hot walker Jose Herra walks Kentucky Derby hopeful I Want Revenge after his morning workout for the 135th Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs Friday, May 1, 2009, in Louisville, Ky. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Jeff Mullins rarely spoke publicly this week about I Want Revenge, the horse he was training for the Kentucky Derby. When he did, it was to stress the things that went right: a fast workout, ideal post position and the colt's status as the morning-line favorite.

Then Saturday morning, just hours before the race, something went wrong.

A hot spot causing inflammation was detected on the horse's left front ankle, an injury not believed to be career-threatening but troublesome enough to prompt Mullins and the colt's owner, David Lanzman, to make the difficult decision to pull the 3-year-old horse out of the race.

"I've been in this business kind of all my life," Mullins said. "Most of the things I've learned in this business I've learned by hard knocks in more ways than one. Your biggest dream is to get here, but the biggest nightmare is to get to race day and have to scratch. Right now I don't think it's really sunk in that much, but pretty disappointing."

IEAH Stables president Michael Iavarone, co-owner of the colt, said just before the Derby that I Want Revenge would be sent to Rood and Riddle Equine Hospital for a thorough examination but doesn't think the injury is too severe.

"We found nothing," Iavarone said. "It's not lame."

Since the morning line was put in the racing program in 1949, no other favorite had scratched on race day. The last major contender to do so was second choice A.P. Indy in 1992. Coincidentally, I Want Revenge is a grandson of A.P. Indy, who went on to win the Belmont later that year.

I Want Revenge and 19-year-old jockey Joe Talamo were to start from post No. 13. The duo established themselves as one of the Derby favorites after a last-to-first dash in the Wood Memorial last month.

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"I'm just glad the horse is OK," Talamo said. "It could have been a lot worse. Something could have happened on the track. I'm just glad it happened in the stall."

Although I Want Revenge was the lone Saturday scratch, he was the fourth Derby contender to pull out this week due to injury.

One possible favorite, Quality Road, was withdrawn with a hoof problem. Also pulled were Win Willy, due to an ankle problem, and Square Eddie, because of a shin injury.

Safety issues have been at the forefront of racing this year following the breakdown of filly Eight Belles at last year's Derby. She was the first horse euthanized in the 134 runnings of the race. The death of that horse sparked changes in the sport, including new regulations on the kind of whips that can be used, better padding on starting gates and close monitoring of track conditions. Post-race drug tests on the top four finishers now screen for steroids for the first time.

With I Want Revenge out, Friesan Fire replaced him as the favorite. Larry Jones, who trained both Eight Belles and Friesan Fire, praised the handlers of I Want Revenge for erring on the side of safety.

"Nobody's wanting to take a chance," Jones said. "Nobody wants to be the next one out here for that to happen to."

Trainer Todd Pletcher, who sent three starters into the Derby, said the health and welfare of the racehorses should always be the deciding factor.

"I'd like to think that we're all doing the responsible thing every time," Pletcher said. "This year should be no different."

An X-ray and ultrasound test did not find any damage to I Want Revenge, but the ankle was tender when it was flexed. With a wet track expected, Lanzman said there was really no choice.

"When the word came out that running could hurt the horse, I looked at both doctors and said, 'Then this is no debate,'" he recalled. "'What are we talking about? We'll fight another day.'"

Larry Bramlage, the on-call veterinarian at the Derby, said the horse didn't look injured while jogging for doctors.

"Unfortunately, this close to the Derby, there's not a way to gauge how bad that is," he said.

Mullins begins serving a seven-day suspension at 12:01 a.m. Sunday for administering an over-the-counter medication to another of his horses, Gato Go Win, in a detention barn just before a race in New York several weeks ago.

Mullins' suspension will be over in time for the Preakness Stakes in two weeks, but he said it's unlikely the horse will be ready by then. He remained at the barn Saturday, and there were no immediate plans to take him to an offsite clinic.

"If you walk by his stall, you're not going to know anything is wrong with him," said veterinarian Foster Northrop, who treated the horse. "He's bucking and kicking. He doesn't even know he's hurt."

___

Associated Press Writer Malcolm C. Knox contributed to this report.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Jeff Mullins rarely spoke publicly this week about I Want Revenge, the horse he was training for the Kentucky Derby. When he did, it was to stress the things that went right: a...
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Jeff Mullins rarely spoke publicly this week about I Want Revenge, the horse he was training for the Kentucky Derby. When he did, it was to stress the things that went right: a...
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- ywcachieve I'm a Fan of ywcachieve 125 fans permalink

What a great race. He left the others horses in the dust. I was blown away by this horse, with odds of 50-1. Those are the kinds of races I love. And when I heard he only cost $9500. Awesome.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:20 PM on 05/02/2009
- exPatPatti I'm a Fan of exPatPatti 38 fans permalink
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FANTASTIC RESULT!!!!

Couldn't be happier for the connections of this wonderful little horse.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:58 PM on 05/02/2009
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Can you imagine a $9500 horse doing this? I'm wondering if the horse has any Irish TB in him. His legs look so solid.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:07 PM on 05/02/2009
- exPatPatti I'm a Fan of exPatPatti 38 fans permalink
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Yeah I was looking at his legs.. they are pretry ordinary, not TB looking legs at all. Chunky.

I bought my racehorse at the sales for 9500 too. I got goosebumps after this race when they said how much he had cost.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:12 PM on 05/02/2009
- naschkatze I'm a Fan of naschkatze 101 fans permalink

Oh, HuffPo, take down that lead story about the Republicans and the pizza, and cover the Derby. This is a story to warm the hearts of all populists.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:56 PM on 05/02/2009
- naschkatze I'm a Fan of naschkatze 101 fans permalink

Wow, what a race. Another Seabiscuit. Mine That Bird cost $9500, small, and a 50 to 1 shot. And thank God, no disaster this year.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:46 PM on 05/02/2009
- exPatPatti I'm a Fan of exPatPatti 38 fans permalink
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He was 103 to 1 here in Australia!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:02 PM on 05/02/2009

I Agree! Great Race! no disaster! I am so happy that it once again shows that anyone can win if they work hard and have faith .............not to mention, what a beautiful creature that horse is!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:05 PM on 05/02/2009
- exPatPatti I'm a Fan of exPatPatti 38 fans permalink
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Gives us small time owner/trainers hope.

Google Takeover Target. The owner/trainer was living in a mobile home. Horse cost him $1200 and had bad legs. The horse as of yesterday passed the $6,000,000 mark in earnings at 9 years old.

Now that's a hopeful story!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:08 PM on 05/02/2009
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And the trainer drove the horse all the way from NM ina pick-up with horse trailer, with a right leg broken in 12 places from a motorcycle accident this winter.
It continues the trend...............Susan Boyle, Capts. Sullenburger, & Phillips little people doing what they do with excellence and hard work, and being rewarded for it.
I think the days of gain without earning it are winding down!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:31 PM on 05/02/2009
- exPatPatti I'm a Fan of exPatPatti 38 fans permalink
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Change we can believe in!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:10 PM on 05/02/2009
- exPatPatti I'm a Fan of exPatPatti 38 fans permalink
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Here we go. All these know nothings commenting on what you know nothing about. The sport is not cruel. Sure there are some unscrupulous people in racing. But no worse than any other sport. Successful racehorses love their job. You cannot force a horse to race. Either it loves to race or it won't race.

As a horse owner and a very experienced one at that, I can tell you that my sport horses are dearly loved and have the best lives. From my racehorses to my paddock ponies.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:13 PM on 05/02/2009
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I think you're correct, ePP.

I was wholly against this type of thing until I actually got to know the sport and some of the people and horses involved in it.

The owners I've met are some of the most animal-friendly and respectful of humane practice they could possibly be.

The horses seem to LOVE racing, and totally come alive through their training, upkeep and competition.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:16 PM on 05/02/2009

humane treatment is the Key word here.............and I do believe there is a respect that goes hand in hand/or is this case hoof and hoof

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:09 PM on 05/02/2009
- naschkatze I'm a Fan of naschkatze 101 fans permalink

I admit I am a know nothing. What color is Mine That Bird?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:55 PM on 05/02/2009
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LOL. He's a bay gelding.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:02 PM on 05/02/2009
- exPatPatti I'm a Fan of exPatPatti 38 fans permalink
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Looks like a bay but not sure. Could be chestnut. He's a very plain looking horse, narrow in front , ordinary legs, but a terrific back end.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:05 PM on 05/02/2009
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Patti is correct. I have 2 horses, including an ex-racehorse. They love having a job, they love doing new things. If I put my mare in an arena she will sometimes do the jumps in a course all on her own, just for fun. To say they get the best of care is an understatement.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:06 PM on 05/02/2009

Horse racing is a cruel, cruel "sport." It needs to be stopped.

Every person who participates, including spectators and gamblers, is guilty of the most dreadful animal cruelty.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:41 PM on 05/02/2009
- bubbuh I'm a Fan of bubbuh 165 fans permalink
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Enjoy your vegetables.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:06 PM on 05/02/2009

There is the most bizarre disconnect between the picture you use to identify yourself and your advocating cruelty to animals in the form of horse racing.

Suggestion: capture you, put you in the starting gate, along with other proponents of, and contributors to, horse racing and whip you to the end of the track at speeds beyond your natural endurance. No prizes for the winners -- just money for your captors. That way you can personally experience the realities of this "sport."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:15 PM on 05/02/2009
- exPatPatti I'm a Fan of exPatPatti 38 fans permalink
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bull

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:14 PM on 05/02/2009

Human being arrogance...
Use animal to entertain the common man...
Greeks, Rome, Bull fighting, coq fighting, dog fighting...
Poor miserable animals...
Last year, I watched the most painful thing on TV , a noble
horse in his prime, being shot right there on the field because
a bunch of primates wanted to be entertained...
I hope that swine virus...gets so virulent that it'll bring
armgaedon...this earth has been raped times and again
by the human race...it is time we move on to dust...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:13 PM on 05/02/2009
- bubbuh I'm a Fan of bubbuh 165 fans permalink
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You first.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:06 PM on 05/02/2009
- exPatPatti I'm a Fan of exPatPatti 38 fans permalink
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I like your style.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:34 PM on 05/02/2009
- Libertyfan I'm a Fan of Libertyfan 7 fans permalink

Wonderful. And if there are no humans what does it matter what shape the earth is in.? The only reason any of this matters is because we, human beings, are here to appreciate it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:21 PM on 05/02/2009

Wrong...if you start with the premise that human beings are the only
species gifted with intelligence and emotions...
do some readings about chimps, whales, etc...
look around you the earth is not flat, and revolves around the sun and
there are billions of glaxies and planets...
By the way how is my Neanderthal cousin doing...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:35 PM on 05/02/2009
- bubbuh I'm a Fan of bubbuh 165 fans permalink
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Whether one likes it or not horse racing keeps horses in the public eye and employed. This in turn keeps them part of our culture. There are somewhere between 6,000,000 and 9,000,000 horses of all types in the USA. Maybe, three quarters are involved in the equestrian sports: racing, steeplechase racing, dressage, barrel racing, etc. A bit less than 10% are raised strictly for food, just like cattle. If horse racing were banned, the bans would have to include the horse sport activities as well since, except for dressage, they are as dangerous or more dangerous than than flat racing.

How would a racing ban effect the horse population in the US? If would halve it at least. Eventually, horses would be something one would see in zoos. Unlike dogs and cats, the average the vast majority of families can't keep p a pet horse.

Until 1950's the majority of horses in the United States were "heavy" horses, Percherons, Belgians, etc. They worked our farms and did our heavy hauling. Heavy horses are now less than two per cent of our horse population. Put simply, large domestic animals which don't have an economic niche disappear.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:26 PM on 05/02/2009
- bubbuh I'm a Fan of bubbuh 165 fans permalink
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I forgot this link. It illustrates the problem of keeping "uneconomic" horses.
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/06/30/national/main4221476.shtml

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:30 PM on 05/02/2009

"Uneconomic" horses. The term assumes horses are supposed to contribute to GDP and the economic well being of human beings.

How absurd! How pathetic! How tragic! How foolish! How cruel!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:46 PM on 05/02/2009

"Three quarters are involved in equestrian sports."

The horses are not involved in any way, shape or form. Only human beings are involved.

It is time to end this dreadful cruelty to animals. No argument for horse racing will detract from the cruelty of it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:44 PM on 05/02/2009
- bubbuh I'm a Fan of bubbuh 165 fans permalink
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You know nothing about horses; nor, do you care about horses.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:01 PM on 05/02/2009
- exPatPatti I'm a Fan of exPatPatti 38 fans permalink
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ignorance must be bliss. Have you had a life with horses as I have? Have you sacrificed for your horses? Have you stayed up all night sitting in cold damp sawdust in the middle of winter with your sick horse's head in your lap? Have you cried for weeks after losing one? Have you saved a horse from a bad life only to rehabilitate rehome or compete later on? Have you experienced the horse's own excitement and pride after winning a ribbon in a pony show and winning a cup race? Have you even ever ridden on the beach and gallopped as partners?

I think not.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:24 PM on 05/02/2009

When I grew up, we had three horses. They ran free in acres and acres of pasture with plenty of green grass, water, food and shade trees.

Not one of them ever lined up at one end of the pasture to gallop faster and faster to the other end of the pasture until all breath was squeezed from its lungs.

Having had a friend who owned race horses, I have been close to horses being led from the track back to their stables. It broke my heart, watching them being dragged back, grasping for every breath. I vowed never to go to a track ever again. No one who has ever witnessed that scene can argue that it is good for the horses, that the horses like it, that it is an economic good, or that it is not the most monstrous of cruelties.

It must be stopped.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:30 PM on 05/02/2009
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Fortunately here in Maine they still have an economic niche. There are farms that use them instead of gasoline powered equipment..........Several teams of them pull wagons in the square in Portland at Christmas time ( for the whole month of December) and I am sure there are other similar venues around the state.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:26 PM on 05/02/2009
- bubbuh I'm a Fan of bubbuh 165 fans permalink
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We should also ban all professional sports. We can start with pro football whose practioners have a life expectancy of less than 60 years. I admit that's a great improvement over the expectancy of 48 years they had during the 1960's

http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Life_expectancy_professional_football_player

Isn't that one of the primary arguments against tobacco, for instance?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:49 PM on 05/02/2009

Those who participate in professional sports, willingly make the decision to do so. Horses have no say in being captured to race for the enjoyment of mindless and thoughtless human beings.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:48 PM on 05/02/2009
- bubbuh I'm a Fan of bubbuh 165 fans permalink
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Nor, do pets get to choose, do they? You folks are remarkably unacquainted with logic.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:03 PM on 05/02/2009
- exPatPatti I'm a Fan of exPatPatti 38 fans permalink
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Captured? Are you kidding me??? LOL

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:26 PM on 05/02/2009
- GwenElle I'm a Fan of GwenElle 33 fans permalink

As thrilling as I find the union of human and horse and the sprint to the finish, after what happened to Eight Belles at the 2008 Kentucky Derby, I have vowed to never watch another derby or horse race again. I don't trust the *industry* and I don't like seeing animals exploited for fun and spectacle.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:46 PM on 05/02/2009
- bubbuh I'm a Fan of bubbuh 165 fans permalink
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http://www.livescience.com/health/060614_sport_injuries.html
Ban basketball, biking, trampoling and golf.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:44 PM on 05/02/2009
- bubbuh I'm a Fan of bubbuh 165 fans permalink
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"The industry recognizes it has to do better," she said. "We've been given a mandate by the public and, to some extent, Congress. And we don't think we're going to get a second chance."

"Kathy Guillermo, director of laboratory investigations for People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), salutes what was accomplished. "This is more progress than we've seen in the last decade," she said, while noting there is work to be done. PETA plans to demonstrate outside Churchill Downs this weekend.

"As part of the Welfare and Safety of the Racehorse Summit last April, Scollay reported 1.47 fatalities per 1,000 starts on synthetic tracks. On traditional dirt tracks, there were 2.03 deaths for every 1,000 starts. Darren Rogers, senior director of communications at Churchill Downs, reports seven deaths there since the last Derby."

http://www.usatoday.com/sports/horses/triple/derby/2009-05-01-racing-safety-cover_N.htm
Opinions are like hair, almost everyone has an unearned head full.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:33 PM on 05/02/2009
- sbrown80 I'm a Fan of sbrown80 43 fans permalink

Where are the angry Vick haters Now? But this is legal.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:30 PM on 05/02/2009
- JonShank I'm a Fan of JonShank 45 fans permalink
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WHAT???

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:41 PM on 05/02/2009
- bubbuh I'm a Fan of bubbuh 165 fans permalink
    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:27 PM on 05/02/2009
- JonShank I'm a Fan of JonShank 45 fans permalink
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YES!!! Completely unnecessary 'sport'.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:41 PM on 05/02/2009
- mommadona I'm a Fan of mommadona 183 fans permalink
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I quit watching the sport after that horrendous putting down of the filly and the favorite of last years.

This sport is brutal on young 'hot-house' bred animals.
All for the mighty buck & 'prestige' - some weird southern thingie involved in that.

Good for the horse it has a caring owner.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:26 PM on 05/02/2009
- LeftTexas I'm a Fan of LeftTexas 8 fans permalink
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I quit watching in the 70's when the horse broke his leg during the race and kept running.

I too am glad that they did what is best for the horse today and you are correct, it is a brutal sport.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:49 PM on 05/02/2009
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