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Sorry..... you know i love him. Couldn't resist. |
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... "she" lost 24 of "her" 52 races .... 46% ... and "she" wasn't even the best female sprinter of her era ... because ... ... Tosmah beat "her" three out of three ... twice crushingly. Did I say "Tosmah" ... the champion 2YO and 3YO filly who was lapped on Hedevar when he equalled the world record for a mile ... while spotting him eight pounds ... and who was still winning G1 handicaps while spotting weight to colts as a 5YO? Yeah ... I guess I did. |
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... and only when they disappoint there ... are they tried on the lawn. As far as "turf is where most all champions run" ... that's patent nonsense ... since 7 of the 10 Eclipse Awards are given to horses which race on dirt ... and I'm being generous by considering jumpers to be turf horses. You're not one of those Euroweenies .. are you? |
I certainly think a turf specialist can be great. IF for example, Showing Up stays on turf and wins the rest of his races through his 4 year old year including 2 BC Turf races, he would certainly be considered a great horse...but then of course he would have 2 turf championships under his belt so he would meet criteria set by BB.
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Lava Man, at very least an HOY candidate, was tried on the turf this year. In recent years, so have dirt successes such as Peace Rules and Congaree. |
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A couple points...I do think there have been American raced horses who ran only on the turf that I would consider great...Manila, for example, I rank #74. Regarding the statement that a Triple Crown winner isn't necessarily great...I disagree! I think a TC winner is great by definition...of the 11 winners, the lowest ranking I give any is Sir Barton at #50. So many wonderful horses have failed to capture the TC...Native Dancer, Spectacular Bid, Risen Star, Sham to name just a few...all ranking in my top 50 yet failing to capture the TC. As others have said, winning the TC requires much more than 3 good races...a horse has to perform throughout the fall and winter of his/her 2 year old campaign and through to the first Saturday in May and then come back on two weeks rest and again on three to the most grueling races of his/her career...only a great horse does that!
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Let's round up all the awards from every country that has racing, and then see how many "champions" run exclusively on the turf versus our 7 Eclipse awards. When I said "turf is where most all champions run," I was right. It is probably 100+ to 7. |
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Why choose to look at her losses and not her wins? 28 and (I believe) Affectionately hit the board 42 times total..... Stop finding the negative Bold..... turn it around, open your eyes and embrace the positive. Oh and admit that she was A CHAMPION.:p |
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---------------------------------------------------- On a different tangent ... I have never been a big fan of efforts to rank international/all-time competitors in all-inclusive best-ever/great lists. We ("we" defined as "posters on this board") could easily sit at our computers all day and argue relative merits of two US-based horses that were running in the last year or so, maybe even against each other, in races that we saw (on TV or otherwise) against competitors that we know well. And given that that's true, the idea of reliably producing lists of "greats" or "best-evers" from vastly different places and times with which we have little to no familiarity is difficult. First, there's the inevitable effect of the dulling edge of time and space. There could be a really great horse running right now in South Africa, but chances are, no one on this board voraciously follows the everyday minutiae of racing in South Africa sufficiently to properly appraise said horse's efforts. Likewise, there were great horses running 75, 100 years ago that many people on this board (including me) have never even heard of. This is simply a truth, not an indictment. After all, many of us learned - and continue to learn - about racing from the media, and the basic elements of news dictate that news media concentrates on the here and now. That's great when you're reading today's news, but that's not so great when you're undertaking an effort to identify greatness in all places and times. Unless your knowledge of racing is entirely founded in old books, ancient yellow newspapers, or material imported from other countries, it is almost impossible to avoid the effect of having lesser knowledge of places and times other than your own. But really, this problem is surmountable. Information exists if you care enough to go looking for it. The problem is, when you find it, you will judge it by your standards of greatness. Therein lies the biggest issue in trying to judge horses from different eras and places. What ultimately ends up being debated is less the greatness of the horses involved but of the various ways in which racing observers from different places and times defined greatness. Some contemporary horses that are considered "great" would not be considered thus by observers who had different expectations of greatness, whether that expectation was based upon lengthy careers, weight-carrying, running against open company, racing over a distance of ground, etc. Likewise, we may not consider some great of the past to be as great as his or her contemporaries did simply because our measures of greatness have changed. How great does the general modern population of racing fans think Gallorette - who lost more than two-thirds of her races - is now? Fifty years ago, many reasonable observers thought she was the best female in US racing history. High-class horses are generally campaigned in a manner to demonstrate greatness by their contemporary standards. Gallorette did not have a 10- or 15-race career, limited to filly/mare opposition, as would a good filly today; if she had, her race record would be more impressive to modern viewers but of course she would not have impressed observers of the 1940s. Likewise, Ghostzapper did not have to run more than four times a year in order to impress his contemporary observers. Perhaps he might have been great by standards of some other day, but he never had to prove it. Ghostzapper would've looked much less great to the modern eye if he'd lost some races because he raced a lot and gave gobs of weight to stakes-class horses, just as Gallorette would've looked much less great to eyes of her time if she'd been raced infrequently against inferior competition but had retired with a higher win percentage. (I'm not, BTW, picking on either of these horses here, merely using them as examples of products of very different standards of greatness.) The seeming answer would be to assign greatness, or rank horses, by the standards of their day rather than one's own, but this is a tricky exercise since a human being, with preferred standards of greatness, has to make command decisions. I, for example, realize intellectually that a Ghostzapper should be measured by standards of greatness of the early 21st century, but my standards are based on a different paradigm and I find greatness, by early 21st century standards, to be unpalatable and inferior. If I were to make a "great" list, it's very unlikely that a Ghostzapper would be on it. But truthfully, what's being judged is not the horse but the standard that made a career like his not just acceptable, but desirable. The problem is, greatness is pretty much impossible to quantify objectively or judge fairly. |
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that would be Mr. That Dude to you. |
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... he'd have to beat After Market ... and that's not likely. Could the undefeated multiple-champion After Market be considered "great" ... hmmm ... since I've already predicted big things for him ... I'd have to recuse myself as a judge in the matter. |
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And unlike you ... I saw "her" run ... in person ... many times ... as I did with all Jacobs horses ... just to get a glimpse of my darlin' Patrice ... the only decent human to look at in the paddock in those days. I had a great deal of affection for "her" ... and many fond memories ... her 137-pound trick was spectacular ... but as good as "she" was ... Tosmah was better ... not to mention Smart Deb, What A Treat, Terentia, Discipline, Steeple Jill, and Destro. Those were the days when there were lots and lots of professional fillies and mares around ... not just a bunch of "fresh" "spaced-out" runway models. |
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... is ask me. |
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Here's a question I'd like to see answered ... How did The Blood-Horse panel include Phar Lap on the list of 20th Century American greats ... off a single race in Mexico ... but exclude Whisk Broom ... who won the three most difficult races then run in America ... packing weight as high as 139 pounds ... in his three races here? |
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... she didn't really face the best of those years ... 1964 & 1965 ... very much ... and the few times she did ... she was crushed. When she came to life in 1966 ... the others were mostly gone. The most underrated filly of those days was Terentia ... who experienced horrible racing luck in the big showdown races ... causing her to lose them ... and the championships .. by the scantest of margins. |
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... this in an extremely ignorant person ... who tops my "Ignore" list. In my post ... I clearly said "their respective Triple Crown races" ... but this dumb-as-a-catcher's-mitt loser obviously doesn't understand the usage of "respective" in that context. You'll save your eyes a lot of wasted wear-and-tear ... if you add him to your "Ignore" list as well. Take care, good buddy. |
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... don't they speak English in England too? |
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I think turf horses should be held is higher regard that dirt horses. Dirt horses have many more options in the US than do grass horses. Grass horses usually face larger fields and they always have a blanket finish. In addition, US turfers get bombarded with Europeans. US Dirt horses dont have to worry about that. I think a turf horse who consistently performs at the top is more of a great horse than a horse that raced on selective tracks with selective races.
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... when you look over your shoulder ... and see King Glorious closing like a freight train. I make May 24, 2007 the under/over day ... for King taking the lead. Watch yourself, dude ... errr ... Mr. Dude. |
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Now Pup is here too! Hey ... is there anyone left over "there" ... aside from the hyenas? Pretty soon ... those alpha-females won't have anyone left to prey on ... so ... maybe we should "pray" for them? |
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Phar Lap, of course, was a phenomenal success down under and if that victory in Mexico was indicative of how he might have run in North America, it's reasonable - for people who like to do such things - to extrapolate how good he might have been here. Though classic-placed at 3, Whisk Broom II was not a major player in England prior to his return to the US. His accomplishments in his native land take place over less than a month's time and his Suburban was always tainted by the near-certainty that the record time was wrong by at least two seconds. (This is hardly the horse's fault, but many later references to Whisk Broom II, up until the record was finally broken, involved some reference to it.) Moreover, as racing had just returned to New York that year after disruption that seriously shook up the sport in this country (resulting in many good horses and bloodstock being shipped overseas), there has to be some doubt as to the caliber of horses he met. Contemporary observers did not place him among the pantheon of greats. I believe that these factors led to how he was remembered (or not) by later generations. |
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I see you are about to go on another secret mission. These folks probably don't know that the "Bond" character in Ian Flemming's books were largely based on the adventures of Mr Brooklynite. |
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Hey, Pup ... stick around ... this is a very interesting place ... 100% hyena-free. King Glorious, Damascus, Fupeg, Ez, lots of others ... are here now. Even War Emblem will be here full-time soon. Steve Byk ... who runs this joint ... is an all-time great mensch. |
Obviously it's a very subjective evaluation, and I don't think you can attach any hard guidelines or rules such as a certain percentage of wins. Wins at different tracks, distances, divisions, etc, all contribute, but you still can 't put hard and fast rules in place to determine greatness.
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One race in Mexico ... technically in North America ... is still only one race ... so how does that get him to #22 on the list? Plenty of other foreign horses won their first starts in stakes races here ... so why aren't they #20, #21, 23, #24, #25 ... ? And while Whisk Broom's time was suspect ... that 139 pounds on his back surely wasn't ... they had very accurate scales in 1913 ... nor were his decisive victories in the Metropolitan, Brooklyn, and Suburban handicaps. And ... as I always ask ... but never get a serious response to ... if it were so easy for European horses to come here in 1913, 1914, 1915 ... and sweep the handicap triple crown ... how come no one else did it? Whisk Broom's foreign form wasn't near Phar Lap's ... but again ... weren't they supposed to be ranking North American form? And All Along ... who also won three G1 stakes here within a month's time ... after a spotty European career ... one G1 against fillies in 6 G1 starts ... and then lost 3 G1 races here ... got spotted at #68. Say what? The Blood-Horse panel did a mostly good job ... but this was a blatant and inexplicable floperoo on their part. |
And ... as I always ask ... but never get a serious response to ... if it were so easy for European horses to come here in 1913, 1914, 1915 ... and sweep the handicap triple crown ... how come no one else did it?Well shipping back in 1913,1914,1915....was not as easy as it is today. In addition, European racing was held in higher regard back then as well. There was no reason to ship their horses to the US.
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... and no one else did. |
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... just in case anyone from the panel was lurking on this thread. You're the (second) best !!! |
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