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genuine risk remains the best filly in the spring classics, and she's not even the best filly all time. |
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Certainly? Who knew that you speak for " most people? " |
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Please she is beating swill.. I like Rachel and believe she is terrific but the best ever because she beat a midget birdstone colt.. have a heart |
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lol yeah, ok. at any rate, she's skipping the belmont so she'll have to wait a bit longer for greatest ever status. besides, i said 'i would think'. that doesn't exactly sound like an emphatic statement, does it? |
They would've had to be certifiably insane to run her back in this race.
Jack and Ass ... or Jackass, for short ... are a lot of things, but at least we now have some undeniable proof that they're not insane. |
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i obviously was referring to the first part of the post, where i said 'i would think'. genuine risks record in the three tc races speaks for itself. of course the last sentence was my opinion alone. i guess i should have put the ubiquitous IMO in there? |
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The Preakness was clearly no walk in the park for her, 'stupid.
She would've been very vulnerable in a long 12f affair so soon after that taxing effort. Not to mention the very real possibility that she may not want that kind of distance to begin with. Asmussen, not being as dumb as he looks, surely realized this and made the prudent decision in this spot. Not sure why you're bringing up premature retirements, tho? |
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:rolleyes: |
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I also wouldn't run Mine that Bird. I don't think there is anything at all to gain by running him or Dunkirk or any horse that a trainer has high hopes for later. If it's a situation like the Zito horses or where you don't think you really have a top level horse and know that now is a good chance to catch a sorry field in an irrelevant race, yeah, I'd run. |
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the only way to really nip this argument in the bud is for someone to go thru and make a list of every horse than ran in the classics, and then look at what every one of them did after. producing a short list of horses, presumably the ones who did the best in the races, and then using their prematurely ending careers in no way proves anything-except that most of them, due to wins in the classics, were far more in demand for breeding. when outrageous sums of money are about to change hands, i would not in the least be surprised at any early, and lucrative retirement.
i think some are confusing success in the classics with suffering injuries in the classics. there's a huge difference between risking a horse in a race, and a horse being unable to race. |
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