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-   -   2/6 (GP) Donn H. & GP Turf H. (G1's); Suwanee River S. (G3) (http://www.derbytrail.com/forums/showthread.php?t=34187)

Indian Charlie 02-08-2010 12:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RockHardTen1985
I was 12 in 97... I was just getting into the game

I figured as much.

Go into the screening room and go watch IC's races, from earliest to latest.

You'd be also well served, as Andy was getting at, to go check out some vids on Youtube of some of the great horses from previous decades.

tector 02-08-2010 12:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Indian Charlie
Damn you!

Mem...ories....

tector 02-08-2010 12:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by blackthroatedwind
It seems people have either forgotten, or don't even know, that fast horses ( like Indian Charlie ) used to race with some regularity. They weren't as big a deal then because there were a plethora of fast horses around. Now, when one or two surface, they are hailed as great prematurely ( or inaccurately ).

The funny thing was that back in the 90s we thought they weren't racing enough back then. Which was true, compared to the 70s (and earlier).

Now, of course, the problem is even more ridiculous--they've practically become Breyer horses (ashamed to admit I even know of the things--damn you, AOL broads of old).

the_fat_man 02-08-2010 01:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by blackthroatedwind
It seems people have either forgotten, or don't even know, that fast horses ( like Indian Charlie ) used to race with some regularity. They weren't as big a deal then because there were a plethora of fast horses around. Now, when one or two surface, they are hailed as great prematurely ( or inaccurately ).

Ahh, the pardoxes of the FAST crowd.

Let me get this straight: in an era where human athletes are performing at an all time best, equine athletes are not? Of course, the latter are certainly getting their share of 'medicinal' advantages. Why is that I wonder? The accepted position seems to be that horses are no longer bred for stamina (and are certainly much more fragile). Let's buy that and then wonder why SPRINTERS of the present era are not as fast, or faster, than those of prior ones. I've made this assumption based on your comments, as I don't look at figures.

Can you elaborate?:rolleyes:

blackthroatedwind 02-08-2010 01:20 PM

I imagine there are a number of reasons, and one could simply be the bad luck of the draw, in that there have been aberrationally few fast horses, but I imagine Godolphin plays a role in this. I don't mean this as a criticism, but they have simply purchased an inordinate amount of our high end bloodstock over the last two decades, as well as many fast horses that have appeared on our racetracks, and these horses seem to race infrequently at best. Plus, quite often these horses get shipped to Dubai, and are forgotten or rarely heard from again. Check the Dubai Winter Carnival/World Cup entrees, and you will see them littered with " I always wondered what happened to that one " type of horses. People don't even realize many of the horses they purchase.

Surely there are other reasons, or explanations, but I do think there has been a talent drain in this country. If you have spent the kind of dollars the Sheik has over the last two or three decades, you certainly should have done a reasonable job of cornering the talent market, and unfortunately ( for us at least ) many of these horses never seem to race here.

freddymo 02-08-2010 05:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by the_fat_man
Ahh, the pardoxes of the FAST crowd.

Let me get this straight: in an era where human athletes are performing at an all time best, equine athletes are not? Of course, the latter are certainly getting their share of 'medicinal' advantages. Why is that I wonder? The accepted position seems to be that horses are no longer bred for stamina (and are certainly much more fragile). Let's buy that and then wonder why SPRINTERS of the present era are not as fast, or faster, than those of prior ones. I've made this assumption based on your comments, as I don't look at figures.

Can you elaborate?:rolleyes:

Horses are bred to be sold and hence too fashionable stallions. There arent owners who breed to race at the highest end anymore. you used to have 100 owners who breed to race and had no interest in selling at any price to anyone. The Sheik grabbed all the decent stock that has been sale.

Travis Stone 02-09-2010 06:14 AM

All good points, all of which I think are true, but you have to admit it's refreshing to see a 120+ figure again.

Kasept 02-10-2010 07:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by the_fat_man
Ahh, the pardoxes of the FAST crowd.

Let me get this straight: in an era where human athletes are performing at an all time best, equine athletes are not? Of course, the latter are certainly getting their share of 'medicinal' advantages. Why is that I wonder? The accepted position seems to be that horses are no longer bred for stamina (and are certainly much more fragile). Let's buy that and then wonder why SPRINTERS of the present era are not as fast, or faster, than those of prior ones. I've made this assumption based on your comments, as I don't look at figures.

Can you elaborate?:rolleyes:

I've seen a fair amount of equine/veterinary comparative research on this topic, and indeed, human physiology does continue to improve, (with nutrition, training methods and associated tech innovations contributing), while the equine does not... no matter what end on the brilliant to solid spectrum horses are bred. Conclusions have been drawn that they appear physically capable of only reaching a certain top end speed, and no amount of improved nutrition or training appears capable of improving that. Lowering of records in harness racing for instance, has been attributed mostly to innovations and improvement of the buggy like polymer or aluminum frames, etc. I'll try to find the studies, but they're on my home computer and I'm in Florida. This is a fascinating discussion and I can bring it up on ATR with the vet guests.

Antitrust32 02-10-2010 07:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Kasept
I've seen a fair amount of equine/veterinary comparative research on this topic, and indeed, human physiology does continue to improve, (with nutrition, training methods and associated tech innovations contributing), while the equine does not... no matter what end on the brilliant to solid spectrum horses are bred. Conclusions have been drawn that they appear physically capable of only reaching a certain top end speed, and no amount of improved nutrition or training appears capable of improving that. Lowering of records in harness racing for instance, has been attributed mostly to innovations and improvement of the buggy like polymer or aluminum frames, etc. I'll try to find the studies, but they're on my home computer and I'm in Florida. This is a fascinating discussion and I can bring it up on ATR with the vet guests.

does it have anything to do with the fact that humans (unless your frow WV) dont inbreed and races horses are almost all inbred?


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