No sperm taken from euthanized Barbaro
Meanwhile, grieving owners are unsure where to put horse's ashes
![]() Matt Rourke / AP Barbaro co-owners Roy and Gretchen Jackson have not decided where to bury Barbaro yet. |
|
Slide show |
No crown for Big Brown Big Brown fails to capture Triple Crown as long shot Da' Tara goes on to win the 140th running of the Belmont Stakes more photos |
Special feature |
Triple Crown winners Only 11 horses have won the Kentucky Derby, Preakness Stakes and Belmont Stakes in the same year. NBCSports.com |
KENNETT SQUARE, Pa. - Barbaro’s owners will take their time before determining the final resting place for their beloved Kentucky Derby winner.
It could be the Kentucky Derby Museum, just a few hundred yards from the scene of his greatest triumph in the 2006 Derby at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky. Or it could be in the bluegrass of Lexington, Ky., at the 1,200-acre Kentucky Horse Park.
Barbaro’s final home might even form the basis of a regional racing museum in Pennsylvania.
“There’s a concept for some kind of museum for horses from this area,” Barbaro’s co-owner Gretchen Jackson said Wednesday. “We’ll be looking at that the next few days before deciding where Barbaro goes.”
Barbaro, who had been at the University of Pennsylvania’s New Bolton Center since shattering three bones in his right hind leg in last May’s Preakness, was euthanized Monday.
“He was cremated,” Jackson said. “I assume it has taken place.”
Gretchen and Roy Jackson thought about burying Barbaro’s ashes at their 190-acre farm in West Grove, Pa., a few miles from New Bolton Center.
|
The Jacksons are thankful the Derby museum and the horse park are interested in helping, but burying Barbaro’s ashes at a local racing museum is appealing, too.
One issue Jackson cleared up is that no sperm was taken from Barbaro before he was euthanized. Precise rules have been established that thoroughbreds must breed with mares naturally.
“We don’t even know if he was potent,” Jackson said. “It would be great to have his babies, but it won’t happen.”
Richardson said future fertility would have been a bonus, but “we only were interested in saving his life.”
|
During Richardson’s morning rounds Tuesday, there were no bright eyes staring back at him from the corner ICU stall Barbaro occupied.
“I’ve been getting up before six every morning for the last eight months to look at the horse,” Richardson said, pausing to collect his thoughts. “And he’s not there. It’s kind of tough.”
There was still plenty of work, though. Back in surgery, Richardson popped out briefly in the lobby to give one person a medical update on her horse, cracking a few jokes and putting the owner at ease about her stallion.
“That’s what I do,” Richardson said.
|
“I’m still having trouble dealing with it,” Richardson said, his voice cracking. “I don’t really want to talk about it. It’s still hard to deal with.”
On Wednesday, Richardson told CBS television: “I really wanted him to survive and go on and become a stallion, so it’s very disappointing.” In the end, he said, “In some ways you’ve got to fight back certain elements of your own ego or personality to recognize what’s in the best interest of the horse.”
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
- Rate Story:
LowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM HORSE RACING |
| Add Horse racing headlines to your news reader: |
Sponsored links







