Royal Delta suffers cut on flight; Awesome Feather seeks
second BC win
Trainer Bill Mott said the champion and defending Breeders’ Cup Ladies’
Mott said the four-year-old filly received a tetanus shot when a vet repaired
“She had some sutures for a superficial laceration,” he said. “It appears as
Mott said the cut happened when Royal Delta was entering the stall on the
“I’m guessing that there must have been a pin or a latch that was not in the
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Mott said he was pleased with the way the filly looked at the barn Tuesday
morning.
“She’s good,” he said. “The site that was sutured looked really good. If it
stays the way it is right now, it will be a non-issue as far as her performance.
There are a lot of things that can happen to horses that we can’t see that are a
lot worse than that. This is just a layer of skin that got sewn back. That’s
it.”
Stronach Stable’s unbeaten champion filly Awesome Feather is one of several
standouts in a star-studded field for the Ladies’ Classic that also includes the
unbeaten champion My Miss Aurelia and multiple Grade 1 winner Questing.
Awesome Feather shipped to California from New York Monday ahead of Hurricane
Sandy. Trainer Chad Brown said she shipped well and jogged on the track at Santa
Anita on Tuesday morning.
The Ladies’ Classic will be Awesome Feather’s third start in 2012 and just
her fifth race since she won the 2010 Juvenile Fillies. Frank Stronach purchased
her at auction following that Breeders’ Cup win and turned her over to Brown,
who soon after discovered that she had a bowed tendon in her left front.
Given time and therapy, Awesome Feather has come back from what is often a
career-ending injury for a second run in the Breeders’ Cup. She returned after
an 11-month layoff to win twice in late 2011. She then won the Sunshine Millions
Distaff in January 2012 but needed another long break. Awesome Feather prepped
for the Ladies’ Classic by winning an overnight stakes by 11 1/4 lengths on
September 20 at Belmont Park.
Brown said he could not compare her recovery from the injury to others he has
seen.
“I’ve had tendons, but this is a totally different situation,” he said. “This
horse is a special horse. On the average, you don’t see this type of thing
happen with a tendon.”
Brown said the horse deserves the credit for getting back to racing.
“Not every soft tissue injury is black and white,” he said. “It depends where
it is, the extent of it, or a horse’s own tolerance for pain or healing. Every
horse is different and every injury is different. I don’t think there is a set
formula for bringing a horse back like this. There is a lot of luck involved.
“The most important component to the whole equation is her, the filly. She’s
overcome it. We’ve tried to help her along and stay out of her way.”
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