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the track announcer said as much during the call of the race.. don't blame tvg for that one |
It was certainly not a good performance for Black Caviar relative to her reputation -- and though the rider misjudged the finish -- he never pulled her up and merely stopped riding for a split second. Might have cost her a half length absolute tops.
The final time for the race was 1:14.10 for six furlongs. You could have thrown a blanket over many of them at the finish. In the very next race, a useful handicap horse named Dandy Boy won a 29 runner event clear by 1.25 lengths in 1:13.87 Perhaps Dandy Boy just loves sprinting at Ascot -- he's 2-for-2 and won a 29-runner event there in 2010. Dandy Boy has now beaten all 56 horses he's faced sprinting on that course and just posted a time faster than Group 1 sprinters on the same day, distance, and only 35 minutes apart time wise. Black Caviar had to deal with some international travel and a whole new climate. She didn't get the best of rides and she's getting up in age. It was a great win for her resume but not a performance consistent with that of an elite turf sprinter. |
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She ain't gonna know what hit her when Ben's Cat or Chamberlain Ridge goes Euro. |
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2011: A pair of 25-to-1 shots finished 1st and 2nd. 2010: 50-to-1 shot 2nd. 2009: 20-to-1 winner, Cannonball 2nd for Wesley Ward, 33-to-1 third. 2008: 33-to-1 winner 2007: 9-to-1 winner 2006: 33-to-1 winner by a neck over 50-to-1 second place. Euro turf horse are more and more superior to our turf horses as the further distances increase. Don't get me wrong, I'm sure their sprinters might be a little better than our turf sprinters ... but we have the fastest horses in the world and if all our good dirt sprinters and milers were tried on turf I think we'd probably have the worlds top turf sprinter on most years. We have the fast horses here and we have the dirt horses here. When you start talking about turf racing distances of 12 furlongs, 14 furlongs, 16 furlongs... they completely own us. Even at a mile and 10 furlongs they have us. |
Did anyone notice on the coverage when Black Caviar came back to her handlers. Trainer Moody was conversing with the jock then the jock took Black Caviar off for a little jog, turned around and jogged back to the trainer. He could have been parading her in front of the crowd, don't know for sure. But she wasn't jogging so smooth..Hope she's ok...
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http://youtu.be/cVn9Ss0x0vU
Comments from Moody and Nolen. Moody says she'll be prepared for the spring racing carnival in Melbourne. November is enough months away for Moody to consider a detour if the $$$$ was right. I just think it'd be awesome to see her run down the hill. I wouldn't care nearly as much if it were on one of the normal turf courses where the average springt distance is 5-6f, but since it is at Santa Anita, she can go down the hill on that firm turf... Maybe she gets smoked, but it would be so cool to see. |
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Hardly any ever try. The mighty Cannonball almost won this race a few years ago.
He's a New York bred who is 4-for-36 lifetime -- but was in pretty good form at the time. He returned here and won the Commentator Stakes at 5.5f on the turf (Commentator, now there's a great turf sprinter) and finished 3rd in the BC Turf Sprint that year. Cannon Shell trained the dam of Cannonball. |
I'd like to see More Joyous come for the BC Mile but Gai Waterhouse probably wouldn't ship another horse.
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Yeah. He was just an alw turf sprinter here for Mott and probably one of your inspiration for trying Battle One in Hong Kong.
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Good eye. Probably explains why the ungraded stakes race at the same distance went faster in the next race. Her competition was the only thing that saved her yesterday. |
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Black Caviar's injury during the race - not the suspensory. She's torn her chest muscles before. Good reason for her awkward striding, and amazing she won. Nolen did a good job trying to protect her. May cause her to retire:
http://msn.foxsports.com/horseracing...cot-win-062412 The 6-year-old Black Caviar's mere presence created a real buzz at Ascot meeting, but the Australian horse tore back muscles during her victory in the Diamond Jubilee Stakes, which extended her winning streak to 22 races. She is a perfect 22 for 22 in her career. Black Caviar's owners will make a decision on her future in the next three or four weeks and retirement is an option for the world's second-ranked flat racing horse, who gained a status akin to a national heroine in Australia after her Ascot triumph. A veterinarian exam revealed two muscle tears and some bleeding in the area, The Australian newspaper reported Sunday. "She's torn some muscles up high behind (hindquarter) and pulled up very tender," trainer Peter Moody told The Australian. "I'm just so proud of what she did in the circumstances. She's certainly going to enjoy a rest." |
See you in October, Black Caviar!
Good news! Black Caviar is not retired.
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Now the slow race doesn't look so bad. Actually it looks pretty damned impressive.
Very glad she's coming back. Hats off to Peter Moody and the owners for doing the right thing and keeping a race horse in racing...not breeding. Take notes, sissy rich Americans. |
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She was clearly not 100% before the race. Even the Aussie punters/reporters were restrained on how she was looking going up to the race and they are some of the most biased lot in all of sports. And really American racing fans should be kinda reserved about criticizing slow international races. Nothing was slower than the Mother Goose. |
Yes. The mare usually wins by 3 to 6-7 lengths eased up. She's done it repeatedly in excellent times against good Grade 1 company (Hay List, Buffering), setting records, against older and colts, different tracks, etc.
If you are trying to make the argument this race at Ascot was average for Grade 1, yes. It was rated a 115. I don't see anybody arguing this race was outstanding. If you are trying to use one of the worse races of Black Caviar's career, a race in which she was injured during the running, yet still won, as an indicator of the quality of the mare, that's wrong. The mare was the Top Rated grass sprinter in the world before Ascot, and she still is, today. Her races are all on YouTube for anyone to see, and the times, distances and quality of competition is well-documented. |
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The 6.5 furlong races on Santa Anita's turf course is run downhill. The track record is 1:11 flat. |
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Black Caviar's race record: 22 22-0-0-0
1000 meters = 4.97 furlongs 1200 meters = 5.965 furlongs 1400 meters = 6.959 furlongs 2-year-old: NA 1000 m 0:56.63 won x 5.0 lengths LR 1200 m 1:09/76 x 6.0 3-year-old: LR 1200 m 1:11:15 x 3.0 G2 1200 m 1:09.96 x 0.8 G2 1200 m 1:10:18 x 2.3 4-year-old: G2 1000 m 0:56:68 x 1.3 G2 1200 m 1:11:01 x 5.5 G1 1200 m 1:07:96 x 4.0 G1 1000 m 0:57.20 x 3.3 G1 1200 m 1:07:36 x 3.0 G1 1200 m 1:10:00 x 1.8 G1 1200 m 1:08:71 x 2.8 G1 1200 m 1:08:85 x 2.0 Five-year-old year: G2 1000 m 0:56:73 x 4.3 G2 1200 m 1:10:13 x 6.0 G1 1200 m 1:08:03 x 2.8 G2 1200 m 1:09:44 x 4.3 G1 1400 m 1:25:14 x 3.3 G1 1000 m 0:55:53 x 1.8 G1 1200 m 1:10:65 x 4.5 G1 1200 m 1:10:32 x 1.3 G1 1200 m 1:14.10 x 0.1 |
The record time for 5 furlongs on turf here is Starfish Bay's 53.75 seconds. That's an avg furlong of 10.75 for the entire race.
She did it as a 4-year-old for Pletcher at Gulfstream in 2010. http://www.equibase.com/premium/eqbP...try=USA&race=9 Raw times are always pretty useless without a variant. In the above example, the horses had a 150 foot running start till the timer was tripped. I have no doubt Black Caviar has been the worlds best 5 furlong turf sprinter and is an all-time great at that specialist distance and surface. A lot of Aussie and NZ breds have done very well in Europe. They've won 3 of the last 6 runnings of the Group1 King's Stand at 5f in England. Black Caviar's only had one lifetime try beyond 6f and it was her least impressive race at home. She won a 7f Group 1 race easily -- but didn't run to the form of her typical wins. A Group 2 race also at 7fs was faster that day. People go nuts for an undefeated record -- and couple that with a filly beating colts. She's obviously a great turf sprinter, but she's a turf sprinter. Never thought I'd see a turf sprinter get the love and hysteria that she gets. |
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I don't mean to knock Black Caviar, as she's obviously a very cool horse, but perspective got lost when Al Gore invented the internet. |
i think its cool she made the trip.and won wile things were stacked against her ie the going and her injury. very sporting of the connections..imo
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I'm not willing to put synthetic horses on equal footing with turf horses. Whether it's 5 furlong specialists or routers.
I'd rather be wrong and say Black Caviar is a much better horse than Zenyatta. And quite frankly if Zenyatta shipped to Ascot she would get drowned in a route race. But again I'm lower on the know it all food chain so I digress. Edit: removed a bad word that offends superior folk. |
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I personally rate Black Caviar ahead of Zenyatta, too. Agree, it's difficult to compare sprinters with route horses. But the pure speed and power of an exceptional sprinter is exciting in it's own right. Caviar, IMO, has been more impressive over her career in her domination of all competition.
A lot of people can't appreciate a horse that can do 2 miles over 4-foot fences, either. I think the point is to be able to realize you are watching an exceptional horse when you see it. And being able to appreciate that. |
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I'm not willing to take those dirt races she had and compare them to 22 races of Black Caviar and say she's better Zenyatta may have been better but her connections were blatant cowards. One trip over the rockies doesn't make up for how weak Jerry Moss was. It's impossible to know who is actually better. And it's asinine that it was brought up in the first place. |
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It is sweet seeing you and Riot agreeing here however. Maybe that's really what is bothering you. |
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I know what I am, f.uckface. And I've been completely over myself for some time. You, on the other hand, are an a.sshole of epic proportions representing the biggest bunch of incompetent douches in all of horse racing. And to even bring up a synthetic specialist against a horse who runs on a traditional surface just shows how completely out of touch you are. Yeah Geelong, Wolverhampton, and F.ucking Lingfield are the future of racing. GTFO with your nonsense. |
In 3 months of competition Black Caviar faced the boys 4 times at 4 different tracks compared to Zenyatta who had 2 races against the boys in the span of 12 months.
Yeah Zenyatta is clearly better and you're an idiot if you think otherwise said the paid shill. Keep listening to the guy about everything. He's never wrong. Me? I'm out of here. Can't continue this nonsense with people I'm basically supporting. Starve midget. Cry over that word you insignificant narcissistic midget. |
I was more impressed with Black Caviar than I thought I would be when I spent the time studying her form, performances, and home competition the best I could.
She is a true killer at her specialist distance. It's hard to win by those type of margins in turf sprints and the caliber of turf sprinter in AUS and NZ are better than I assumed. 20 wins over males and splitting them open and running times that appear very fast for the track in a lot of cases. Obviously fillies and mares have more success against the boys in sprint races than route races. A lot of female speed sprinters have performed outstanding in the BC Sprint and few have been tried. Fillies and Mares also have more success against males on turf than they do on dirt. It's obviously a lot more rare for females to do well in dirt routes than turf sprints. Like BTW mentioned earlier in the thread, there is a value system in horse racing and it's very hard to put turf sprint specialists with racers in the upper echelon. They just aren't even close to being important relative to horses who compete in the big races between 8-to-12 furlongs. To use a general sports analogy -- Mariano Rivera was GREAT at throwing one pitch (a cut fast-ball) and pitching one inning. He was a specialist. Black Caviar has done a lot of great things and looks impossible to beat going 5 furlongs. However, a closer in baseball is far more valued than a turf sprinter is in horse racing. Closers like Dennis Eckersley and Eric Gagne have won Cy Young awards. You'll have players in the Hall of Fame for what they've done as a closer. Turf sprinters get absolutely no respect in American horse racing year-end awards and Hall of Fame voting. And in Europe, only one turf sprinter has ever been European Horse of the Year ... that was the mare Lochsong in 1993. |
I think Drama Queen of the Day has been settled.
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dBh1iOpQQ_s |
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I can't have any of this Andy and had to respond - if you want to say more accomplished etc yeah than the races that Zenyatta has won has trumped Black Caviar in terms of prestige and accomplishment but I doubt you could find a rating system that had Zenyatta as a better horse than Black Caviar - Timeform and Racing Post Ratings have BC as a fair few pounds ahead of Zenyatta. For example Zenyatta never ran a race according to the Racing Post Ratings over 130 - in comparison Black Caviar has 9 such races! her recorded times, speeds etc are extraordinary in a fairly competitive open sprint market in Australia beating very good sprints comfortably. In my eyes there is no question who the better horse is but hey that's just my take on it - I'm just interested in how you can rate Zenyatta as a far superior horse? |
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