Instead, New Year’s Day will embark upon a new career at stud in 2014.
A leading candidate for an Eclipse Award as champion two-year-old colt, New
New Year’s Day was to make his stakes debut in the September 28 FrontRunner
Lining up in the November 2 Breeders’ Cup Juvenile off a two-month layoff,
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New Year’s Day returned to the worktab at Santa Anita on December 15,
covering three furlongs in :37 4/5. Plans called for him to kick off his
sophomore season in the February 8 Robert B. Lewis, until injury struck.
Baffert told DRF that New Year’s Day was walking gingerly following a
gallop early this week, and X-rays revealed a chip in the sesamoid in his left
hind leg.
“It’s gut-wrenching for me,” the Hall of Famer said.
The Wests opted to retire the colt straightaway, their racing manager Ben
Glass told TDN.
“Mr. and Mrs. West decided that rather than trying to make more money with
this horse and go on with him, that the best thing to do for the horse was just
to retire him.
“Sesamoids are nothing to mess with,” Glass added, “so we just went ahead and
made the decision to retire him.”
Bred by Clearsky Farms in Kentucky, New Year’s Day was purchased by Glass, as
agent for the Wests, for $425,000 as a yearling at Keeneland September. He is
the first registered foal from multiple Grade 2 winner Justwhistledixie.
With the retirement of New Year’s Day, there will once again be no Breeders’
Cup Juvenile/Kentucky Derby double. The only horse to accomplish that unique
feat is champion Street Sense (2006 Juvenile/2007 Derby), who like New Year’s
Day, is by Street Cry.