Jerry, I was working for a dealer at the time. That tractor, too, had lower hours, under 1000 as I recall. The owner told me that some of his crew had been operating with a dead battery, stopped the engine and couldn't get a truck to it to restart, so they pulled it back to the road somehow while it was still in low range. As I was told, it was at a pretty good clip too, which is probably what damaged it in the first place. Said they got it running and going again but it wasn't right. We got it in the shop and found lots of metal in the filters. Teardown revealed that even the housings were damaged, where the charge pump rides among many other places. It was a worst case scenario. Our service rep at the time had a look at it and said he'd never seen one or heard of one (nationwide) in that condition and didn't think that it was even possible.
The story we got may not have been the truth. The owner was told by his workers what happened, so you know how it is, could've been changed a time or two between worker #1 and whoever. We did notice that he was using some tractor supply hydraulic oil, and we looked at the bucket and it did not say it was UDT compatible. Don't know if that had anything to do with it or not. Also, the oil cooler was completely stopped up with dirt, which probably didn't help either.
Unlike cars, there isn't enough of a market for aftermarket companies to offer slow-moving parts for tractors, such as complete HST assemblies. You'll find aftermarket starters, dyamo's, alternators, maybe a water pump or two but that's about it. Faster moving parts.