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In the interest of speed and timeliness, this story is fed directly from the Associated Press newswire and may contain spelling or grammatical errors.
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Stevens spill just the latest in the racing game
Sunday August 17, 2003
By RICHARD ROSENBLATT AP Racing Writer
Gary Stevens' horrifying spill at the end of the Arlington
Million was just the latest in a series of thoroughbred racing
accidents this summer.
While the Hall of Fame jockey and one of stars of the movie
``Seabiscuit'' may be the most well-known rider to be injured
recently, he is far from the only one.
There have been at least five serious spills at racetracks
around the country since July 23, leaving one rider in a coma at a
St. Louis hospital, another who may never walk again, two others
with fractured vertebra in their lower backs and no less than four
horses humanely destroyed.
Jockeys understand their life is on the line every race in the
scary side of a beautiful sport. But danger is part of the game.
``It happens more than you think, unfortunately,'' jockey John
Velazquez said Sunday from Saratoga, where he's the leading rider
for the meet. ``Every day we go out there, we have to watch out. It
could happen, doesn't matter when or where.''
Earlier this year, Hall of Famer Laffit Pincay Jr. was forced to
retire after breaking his neck in a spill at Santa Anita on March
1. Pincay won a record 9,530 races.
Stevens appears to be lucky. His agent, Craig O'Bryan, told The
Blood-Horse magazine's Web site Sunday that Stevens was extremely
sore but ``as of now it appears he was very lucky and didn't break
anything.'' An onrushing horse stepped on the fallen rider's left
shoulder, but came frighteningly close to Stevens' head.
The fall occurred just when it looked like Stevens' horse,
Storming Home, had won the Million. But the horse suddenly lunged
toward the outside as he crossed the finish line, interfered with
other horses, and Stevens was flung to the ground. Sulamani was
moved up to first after Storming Home was disqualified.
Not even the best riders can control their horses all the time.
``Who knew the horse (Storming Home) was going to do what he
did?'' said Jose Santos, who rides Kentucky Derby and Preakness
winner Funny Cide. ``Whatever happens is going to happen. It can
happen any time, any day.''
There likely have been more mishaps that did not make national
news this summer, but this most recent series of spills calls
attention to the frightening side of racing.
Chris Quinn was thrown from his horse and trampled during a
race at Fairmount Park in Collinsville, Ill., on July 19. A recent
report in the Daily Racing Form said Quinn suffered severe head
trauma and was being kept in a drug-induced coma.
Remi Gunn has a spinal cord injury after the horse she was
riding during an Aug. 6 race at Ellis Park in Kentucky clipped
heels and fell. There is still no official word on Gunn's
condition, but reports from friends who visited her said the rider
could be paralyzed from the waist down.
Also injured in the two-horse spill was Greta Kuntzweiler, who
had a separated shoulder.
There were two spills at Del Mar in California one Monday,
the other a few hours after Stevens' fall.
The first was a chain reaction involving five horses and five
riders. Three of the horses were humanely destroyed; jockeys
Anthony Lovato and Jose Silva fractured vertebra in their lower
backs and Tyler Baze broke his foot. The other horses and riders
were not injured.
``It was scary,'' Del Mar spokesman Mac McBride said. ``These
things are happening in rapid-fire order. It's very unsettling.
It's extremely unfortunate we lost three race horses. It could have
been much, much worse.''
On Saturday, a three-horse spill resulted in one horse being
euthanized and one jockey Max Corrales sustaining shoulder and
knee injuries.
``You just have to concentrate on what you do on your horse,''
Santos said, ``and you don't worry about it.''
In Sunday's last race at Saratoga, Pablo Fragoso may have
injured ribs after his horse, Bon Lil, slammed into the inside rail
and unseated the jockey. Fragoso bounced off the rail, but got to
his feet and walked off the track. Officals said he was taken to a
hospital for X-rays.
Among others injured in spills this year were Julie Krone and
Patricia Cooksey, racing's winningest female jockeys.
On April 12, Cooksey broke both legs when her horse clipped
heels with another horse during the first race at Keeneland in
Lexington, Ky.
Krone broke her back when she was thrown from her horse at the
start of a race at Santa Anita in March. Krone, who returned to
riding in November after retiring 3{ years earlier, recovered from
fractures in her lower back and began riding again last month.
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Associated Press writer Mark Johnson contributed to this story
from Saratoga Springs, N.Y.<
(Copyright 2003 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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