Quality Road scratched from $5M Classic

ARCADIA, Calif. (AP)—Quality Road was scratched from the $5 million Breeders’ Cup Classic on Saturday after he bucked violently in the starting gate and scraped his hind leg.

The 3-year-old refused to enter the gate before the signature race of the two-day world championships at Santa Anita. Handlers tried everything to get him loaded, leading him in circles and even placing a hood over his head.

After he was finally pushed in, Quality Road bucked numerous times and had to be backed out. Fearing an injury, the decision was made to scratch the Todd Pletcher-trained horse.

“We got the worse luck at the worst time on the biggest day,” Pletcher said.

Veterinarian Larry Bramlage initially said Quality Road scratched his hind leg.

“He’s a bit of a juvenile delinquent anyway,” Bramlage said. “It became a contest of wills. There wasn’t anything that helped. He wasn’t going in the gate today.”

Fellow vet C. Wayne McIlwraith said the horse sustained superficial cuts to his limbs.

“You can’t race when you have a bleeding laceration,” McIlwraith said.

The rest of the field also was backed out of the starting gate because of the delay. They were led back in moments later and, after getting off to a slow start, unbeaten mare Zenyatta rallied to the victory before a crowd of 58,845.

Quality Road had been impressive in his last race, edged out by Belmont Stakes winner Summer Bird in the Jockey Club Gold Cup. The colt won the Florida Derby and was considered the Kentucky Derby favorite before hoof injuries sidelined him for the Triple Crown season.

Quality Road has a history of acting up at the gate. This time, it cost his connections a shot at winning North America’s richest race.

“It was bad timing,” Pletcher said.

5 Comments

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  1. Susan
    5. Posted by Susan Wed Nov 11 11:58am EST

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    Todd Pletcher is not really a horse trainer. He is a D Wayne Lukas clone who is merely a businessman.
  2. ron g
    4. Posted by ron g Tue Nov 10 7:25pm EST

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    Wow!!! One of the scariest moments I've seen regarding horseracing. After they put the hood on Quality Road, she went ballistic. And couldn't get it back off. Hats off to the handler who inheireted the wild horse. He was in a dangerous situation and still managed to hold on to the horse. Should be nominated for Person Of the Week (On CBS news).
  3. starlight
    3. Posted by starlight Mon Nov 9 9:47am EST

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    So this colt acted up violently, and cost his connections a big bunch of money as a result. This doesn't say good things to me about the quality of the care and training he's getting, not at all. A horse that acts like this needs to have some major work done with him, and it would help enormously if he had his nuts removed. That's what happens to performance and sport horses who act like that- they get their whole bag of tricks knocked off, and then they get worked and worked, and worked, until they get the message. Seems to me that Pletcher and his staff need to do some of that with this colt. JMHO.
  4. WTF
    2. Posted by WTF Sun Nov 8 12:27pm EST

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    He knew he wasn't going to win anyway with the way Zenyatta was running so he quitted. What a smart horse.
  5. Wither
    1. Posted by Wither Sat Nov 7 11:04pm EST

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    Sounds like more schooling at/in the gate would be worth the time it takes to help him overcome his issue. Where's the horsemanship here?
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