Thanks To Inked, Former Racetracker Fadenholz Is Writing A New Story

When Kirsten Fada (now Fadenholz) first reunited with Inked, a then-4-year-old gelding she had once galloped on the track, her life was very different. It was spring 2020, and Fadenholz was living near Louisville, Ky., galloping for trainer Brendan Walsh at Churchill Downs in the mornings and working with her own retraining projects in the afternoons.

“I was really tired of moving so much and a little homesick. I've always had the passion for horses more than the sport,” she said. “The sport wasn't what drew me in; the horses drew me in. And where else can you see so many horses in one place?”

“I was working my horses in the afternoon. I loved it. I loved the peacefulness. I enjoyed seeing them learn all these new things. I'd worked on young horses on the track and that's where my passion is, is to see the growth in the horse.”

Finding Inked again reinvigorated Fadenholz. After years of wondering and worrying about where he'd gone after he left her barn, the perfect twist of fate had brought the horse to the very property where she was retraining off-track Thoroughbreds (OTTBs).

Read our Eclipse Award-winning story about Inked's cross-country journey back to Fadenholz here.

The improbability of it all resonated with Fadenholz and made her reexamine the path she was on.

Just two years later, life looks very different. Fadenholz married and gave birth to a daughter, Josie, earlier this year. She left the racetrack and bought a farm in Wadsworth, Ohio, naming it Yellow Pine Farms. She offers boarding, training, lessons, and sales of sport horses – a few of them are Warmbloods, but her specialty is the off-track Thoroughbred.

“We've become 'the Thoroughbred people,'” she said. “Being in Ohio, it's not Lexington, Kentucky. To be the Thoroughbred people is pretty neat. We know how to feed them, how to care for them. We've had a lot of inquiries and people come to us for help with their Thoroughbreds. Most of the boarders we have are Thoroughbreds. It's nice to take Kentucky home.”

Fadenholz has made it her mission to gather up the horses she had in her string as an assistant to trainer Conor Murphy around the time she had Inked and help connect them with their next careers. So far, she's up to 10 she has tracked down and trained for resale or still has at home.

The most recent of her herd to come “home” was Frankincense, a son of Frankel who is now eight years old. Fadenholz had kept tabs on him while he ran but didn't know where he ended up after finishing seventh in a claiming race at Colonial Downs last summer. She later found him for sale by Sewickley Stables in Lexington, Ky., which like Yellow Pine specializes in selling off-track Thoroughbreds on to new careers.

Fadenholz bought “Frankie” and is taking aim at next year's Thoroughbred Makeover with him.

Her most sentimental reunion was with an Irish import named Emmaus. Murphy used to say the dark bay gelding was “her” horse because she galloped him exclusively when he was in her string. Emmaus showed talent as a stakes winner in England before his import, and was Grade 2-placed for Murphy at Woodbine.

“When you ride a horse like that, the feeling he gives you is incredible,” she said. “You feel like you could go into battle. It's the craziest thing.”

Emmaus suffered a tendon tear at Kentucky Downs in 2020 and Fadenholz knew he had been laid up for an extended period since then. He had nearly recovered when he was turned out and reinjured the same leg. Murphy turned Emmaus over to Fadenholz earlier this year but the leg wasn't progressing as she'd hoped. She later learned that its initial healing had been incomplete and resulted in stiff, inelastic scar tissue in the old tear so he was constantly re-tearing it with normal movement of the leg. After receiving pessimistic prognoses from various consulting veterinarians, she made the difficult decision to put him down. She ended up having to make the appointment with her vet three different times, each one being cancelled due to conflicting schedules for the vet or the equine undertaker.

Kirsten Fadenholz with Emmaus

“The third time, I had the horse on the hill. I'd already cut his tail off,” she said. “He's still lively. He's jumping around. We're on the hill and he's acting a fool. I just called it. I took him back into the barn and said I'm not going to think about this for another month. This horse doesn't want to go.”

With corrective shoeing and careful, targeted exercise, Emmaus is able to enjoy turnout now and runs and plays with friends, although the injured leg still doesn't function normally.

“Will he be anything other than a pasture pet? No,” she said. “Will we have him two years from now? I can't tell you that much. But he's here, and that's what means the world to me. I can provide him a good life, however long that may be.”

It has been a challenge to launch a new business, teach lessons, put training rides on young horses and launch show careers while also caring for a young child, but Fadenholz said she's had incredible support from family. She also believes her pregnancy gave her a new perspective on the athletic transition that horses experience leaving the track. Fadenholz spent most of her pregnancy out of the saddle, and it was a big transition.

“It helps me relate to what they're going through,” she said. “It's hard to be in work and you have a routine and all of a sudden you can't do it. That's how I felt with my pregnancy, and it's maybe how they'd feel if they were at the track and then got injured and they're sitting in a stall somewhere. I totally understand stir crazy. I relate to that.”

One thing that hasn't changed is Inked. He is still Fadenholz's star, and was the horse she trusted for her first ride after she had Josie.

“He's the jack of all trades,” said Fadenholz. “He's my lesson horse. He's my eventing schooling horse; we go schooling every so often and just play. We did go to a show over the summer at 2'6” which was my first time doing that … more than anything it was fun.

“Inked is still my go-to trail horse and pony. He's still my steady eddy. My stepson's nine; right now he rides a pony but in a year or two he'll be able to ride him. When Josie gets a little bigger, she'll be able to ride him, too. He's just the man.”

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He was there for her when she was ready to get back into the saddle after her daughter was born. And he's been there for her husband Mitch, too. Mitch was not, as they say “a horsey person” before he and Kirsten met, but Inked was the horse who guided him through his first Western riding lessons. After watching Fadenholz log many hours in a dressage saddle, Mitch now wants to learn dressage as well and Inked is still his steady, happy teacher.

Inked was the first dream come true on the path to a much bigger dream – looking down her barn aisle at Yellow Pine and seeing many of the same faces she had at Oaklawn.

“The whole crew's here,” she said. “I wonder if they recognize each other.”

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Surgical Option For Specific Poll Problem Often Successful 

A recent study has found that horses with cranial nuchal bursitis often improve with surgery. Horses that have this type of injury to their poll often stretch down and carry their head low; horses in the beginning stages of injury are often reluctant to flex at the poll and are resistant to go “on the bit,” reports EQUUS magazine.

Bursa are fluid-filled sacs found between bones and soft-tissue structures designed to decrease friction. The cranial nuchal bursa runs along the top of the horse's neck between the nuchal ligament and the atlas vertebra. 

Dr. José M. García-López, with Tufts University, led a team of scientists who examined the records of 35 horses diagnosed with cranial nuchal bursitis at Rhinebeck Equine in New York and Utrecht University in the Netherlands. The horses were between 5 and 22 years old. The majority were English sport horses, specifically dressage horses. This supports the idea that postural demands may contribute to cranial nuchal bursitis development, García-López says.

For the study, 14 of the horses were treated with anti-inflammatories; the remainder had minimally invasive surgery to address the problem. The procedure allowed the surgeon to examine the inside of the bursa, then flush and remove debris and inflamed tissue.

The scientists found that 78.6 percent of the horses that had surgery returned to their previous level of work. Of the horses that received anti-inflammatories only, 66.7 percent returned to work, though some of the horses had to have the surgery later on to completely correct the issue. Of those, 25 percent were able to return to their previous performance level.

The horses that responded best to the anti-inflammatories had fluid buildup only – they didn't have debris or thickening of the lining of the bursa. Guided ultrasound or radiology can determine the extent of bursa damage. 

Horses with inflammation only – no debris or thickening of the bursa lining – can be treated with a combination of steroids and polyglycan or hyaluronic acid. If there is debris present – or if the inflammation returns after the steroid combination, surgery should be performed as soon as possible. 

Read more at EQUUS magazine

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Sunday Racing Resumes New Year’s Day At Tampa Bay Downs

When Tampa Bay Downs conducts its first Sunday card of the meet on New Year's Day, more than 36 years will have passed since Thoroughbreds first competed on a Sunday at the Oldsmar, Fla. oval.

The date was Dec. 7, 1986, less than a month after track President and Treasurer Stella F. Thayer and her brother, Howell Ferguson, purchased the track outright in an auction from the George Steinbrenner family for $16.5-million.

That first Sunday helped establish a tradition that remains strong, with a crowd of 5,893 exceeding that season's Opening Day attendance. “Today was very much like the Super Bowl,” the track's late General Manager Lorraine King said at the time.

King's hyperbole could be forgiven; the Tampa Bay Buccaneers were on their way to a 2-14 season, so there is no question area sports fans were looking for other outlets, and a Sunday at the races more than fit the bill.

Sunday racing will be part of the schedule throughout the season, with the popular “Kids and Family Day” events featuring bounce houses, games and a visit from track mascot Mouse the Miniature Horse on Jan. 29, Feb. 5, Feb. 19, Feb. 26 and March 5.

A full day of racing on Jan. 1 – sounds like a “Super” way to kick off 2023.

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‘I Think Everything Is Up In The Air’: Miss J McKay Scores Abundantia Repeat At Gulfstream, Retirement To Breeding Shed Could Be Postponed

The plan for Miss J McKay going into Saturday's $100,000 Abundantia at Gulfstream Park: Give the multiple stakes-winning mare an opportunity to defend her title in the five-furlong turf sprint for fillies and mares during a winter campaign before sending her off to the breeding shed.

“The original plan was to run her this winter and put her in foal, but after the way she won today, I think everything is up in the air,” said Miguel Clement, trainer and part-owner Christophe Clement's son and assistant trainer. “I'm sure my father and his partners will think about that afterwards.”

Purchased at the Keeneland November Breeding Stock Sale for $335,000, Miss J McKay was in peak form Saturday, surging from off the pace in the stretch and drawing away to a convincing 1 ¼-length victory under Tyler Gaffalione. The 5-year-old daughter of Hangover Kid's fourth stakes success was her first start for Oakwood Stables, Cheyenne Stable LLC and Clement, who had previously trained the Maryland-bred mare for another partnership.

“Her 'A' races are pretty spectacular to watch. She's been a little unlucky in some of her races the past year,” Miguel Clement said. “My father always loved this filly. I don't know if you noticed but he's part-owner of this filly. He's always loved her. He's very happy to be a part of the filly. When she went to the ring, he decided he had to put another partnership together to keep her in the stable.”

Miss J McKay recovered from a slight bump at the start to settle off the early pace set by multiple-stakes winner Miss Auramet, who was under intense pressure from the start from Imagery and Stony Point to her outside. Miss J McKay started a three-wide rally leaving the backstretch before swinging five-wide into the stretch and launching her impressive winning drive.

Miss J McKay ($9.80) ran five furlongs over a turf course rated as good in :56.68. Imagery finished second, a neck ahead of Stony Point.

The Abundantia co-headlined the Christmas Eve program with the $100,000 Janus, a five-furlong turf dash for 3-year-olds and up won by Peace Sign Stable's Belgrano ($23.40).

The Frank Russo-trained 8-year-old son of War Front took advantage of a hotly contested early pace to rally late to score a narrow decision over pacesetter Nothing Better. Paco Lopez rode Belgrano, who ran five furlongs in :55.94.

The Sunshine Meet's leading trainer was Saffie Joseph Jr., and the leading jockey Miguel Vasquez.

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