#61
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Thought this should be bumped...How is the old guy doing? Any new updates? Happy Thanksgiving Tin Man...
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#62
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Still keeping him in my thoughts.
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#63
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I hope he is still getting better
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#64
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any news on the old guy? hope it all good news .
__________________
"Always keep your heads up and act like champions." Coach Paul Bryant |
#65
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was just thinking about him earlier. wonder how he's doing. hopefully as good as ever.
__________________
Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
#66
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Last I heard he was doing well and they had started to handwalk him.
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#67
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C'mon old man...we all love you. Please be a good boy for us...please do not break our hearts...
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#68
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I turned on TVG on the sunday before Xmas and I heard my girl there talking about him on how things were going smoothly. Obviously if Honu sees the thread we will get a better update than that
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#69
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Update by Jay Hovdey in today's DRF. Looks like a full recovery.
On the other side of the continent, another battle-scarred racing warrior turned the ripe old age of 10. The Tin Man, still in recovery mode in stall No. 1 at Richard Mandella's Santa Anita barn, was foaled on Feb. 18, 1998. With any luck at all, The Tin Man would have been back in some sort of action by now for his owners and breeders, Ralph and Aury Todd. Maybe not in the 1 1/2-mile San Luis Obispo Handicap, which is Saturday's feature at Santa Anita, and which he won in February 2003. But certainly some kind of racing plan would have been cooking, if only he hadn't cracked a knee while emerging from the anesthesia administered during diagnostic surgery last October. It was tense for awhile. The Tin Man's self-inflicted injury was more serious than any of the several racing maladies that he had weathered through a seven-year career, during which he won $3.3 million. Founder in an off leg was very possible, and the fracture was complex. But with the help of the occasional tranquilizer, and more hands on care than you can imagine, he is out of danger and ready for the next chapter of his remarkable life. "We probably could have sent him to the farm a month ago, but I kind of like having him around," said Mandella, who can be seen late most mornings, hand-walking The Tin Man and letting him bask in the sun. "The X-rays show good bone growth in the knee, although he's developed an arthritis on the outside of the knee," Mandella said. "He walks a little stiff and he always will. But he's dealing with it okay, and he's not in any pain." The Tin Man, once a free-running geriatric hero who won the Arlington Million at age 8 and the Shoemaker Mile at 9, now must be content with being described as pasture sound. That pasture, at least for the time being, will be at River Edge Farm in the Santa Ynez Valley, where farm manager Russell Drake will provide The Tin Man with a home for as long as he wants. "He'll need a little time to be let down and get used to living in a pasture," Mandella added. "If I know him, he will try to run off." |
#70
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Thanks for the update.
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#71
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Happy belated birthday Tin Man. Thanks for the updates.....
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#72
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Truely amazing.
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