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what does steve say...you cant stop em ....you can only...
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Heat Index of 115*F. They run at Lone Star during the summer and they're alright. It's hotter than Hell in late July there everyday.
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They run at Lone Star during the summer and they're alright
You sure about that? I saw the movie Deliverance. "Your not alright Spider" |
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'Most' of the trainers and jockeys? The opinion was mixed... Some said run.. some said don't.. There was no majority either way.. Every track on the Eastern Seaboard was CLOSED.. There is the matter of how it looks that NY is "willing to endanger the horses, riders, employees and patrons" when most every other track within 500 miles wasn't.. And by the way, 5 races off the lost 9 race card was made up with 'extras' between then and the end of the meet, so the 'lost handle' element was reduced to about 4 races.. |
Let me put it another way, every other racetrack affected by the heat cancelled, so how would it have looked for everybody's favorite whipping boy ( NYRA ) if they were the only ones to run?
And, furthermore, how would it have looked had something heat related and bad happened? Perception is often as bad as truth, and this is certainly true in our game, thus sometimes these decisions are far from black and white. And, by the way, I like to spend my days at the track, and I was in Saratoga that day, and it was f'n HOT! |
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The jockeys are the reason for tomorrow's cancellation....not NYRA. The simple fact is they could not be relied on to race and it was unfair to expect people to bring their horses to the detention barn, at the time the temperature would have been at its coldest, and then have them not even race. The decision was made out of fairness to everybody BECAUSE of the unreliability of the riders. As opposed to Saratoga, where it was correct to cancel, I think tomorrow's cancellation is a mistake. It is winter racing in the Northeast, at a racetrack just off the bay, you can't cancel when it gets cold. |
if they run n bad conditions , trainers will scratch their horses and you'll have 4-5 horse fields.
I live in Illinois. if you don't like the weather , wait . it will change. It is hard to get climatized. The heat kills. The extreme cold.. reduces fields and the ones that run risk injury. I have experienced heat stroke/exhaustion thought I was going to black out and die. I've seen horses doing some strage things after the heat gets to them. This one at Oaklawn was doing sumersaults. Have you ever seen something that big going head down and rolling around over and over. |
3yo Fillies
Just hope this help fills the 2/11 overnight state bred sprint stake...Not that Albertrani was hurt by the last one not filling..Looks like Street Sass is the only one that would have gone in allowance company tommorow
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I have a solution. Race the horses with no jockeys. The horses can handle the cold weather, they love it. If the jockeys cant take it, let them have a day off. Just slap the numbers on there and let them race. They'll find their way to the finish line and the results wont be much different. Contessa's horses can do just about anything these days.
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They will set track records for every condition! |
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"Our data show that exercising in cold air can provoke airway changes in otherwise healthy horses and may in fact be a part of the cause of the eventual development of chronic airway disease in equine athletes," explained lead researcher Michael S. Davis, DVM, MS, PhD, Dipl. ACVIM. http://www.thehorse.com/ViewArticle....her%20exercise |
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I agree with you on that. Thanks for posting it. To me, they run best at about 55 degrees...maybe even a little lower. When it's a lot lower, it can do some damage. On a side note, do you know what a leather saddle feels like when it's less than 20 degrees? Yikes! Makes "warming the buns by the fire" take on a whole new meaning. |
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