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Black Caviar at Royal Ascot Saturday AM
Just a reminder that the undefeated Aussie sprint champion mare Black Caviar will race at Royal Ascot tomorrow (Saturday) morning.
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What time eastern or central? I don't have tvg but I might go to Canterbury to watch it
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UK Royal Ascot first race 9:30am, Nelly is in the third race, 10:45 am eastern time. PP 11, 15 in the race.
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Nelly?
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Here are 21 facts about the star mare – one for each of her wins – that you need to know.
1. She is the greatest sprinter in the world and the second highest-rated horse on the planet behind the British-trained miler, Frankel. Both horses are set to race in QIPCO British Champions Series races during Royal Ascot, with Frankel targeting the Queen Anne Stakes over a mile on the first day, Tuesday 19 June, [ Frankel won by open lengths ] and Black Caviar the Diamond Jubilee Stakes over six furlongs on the final day, Saturday 23 June. Black Caviar is then expected to contest the Darley July Cup at Newmarket on Saturday 14 July. 2. The undisputed queen of the turf collected her 20th straight victory in the Sportingbet Classic at Morphetville on 28 April 2012, beating the previous Australasian record of 19 straight wins set by both Desert Gold (1915-1917) and Gloaming (1919-1921) almost 100 years ago. 3. That 20th victory also broke the modern day international record for the top level of thoroughbred racing set by the brilliant USA-trained mare, Zenyatta, who scored 19 consecutive wins before tasting defeat in her 20th and final start. Black Caviar subsequently made it 21 out of 21 in the Distinctive Homes Goodwood at Morphetville on 12 May. 4. Her fastest 200m split is 9.98sec between the 600m and 400m in the 2012 Lightning Stakes (her 19th win). She’s the first horse in Australia to break 10secs for 200 metres in an official thoroughbred race, giving her a top speed of 72.14km/h or 44.83mph. 5. Eleven of her 21 victories have been in Group 1 races, the highest class of thoroughbred race, and she has won over five furlongs (1000 metres) five times, six furlongs (1200 metres) 15 times and seven furlongs (1400 metres) once. However, she has never run outside Australia before, so testing herself against the best in Europe on her next start at Royal Ascot is a very brave step to take for her connections and will secure her international superstar status forever if she is successful. 6. Black Caviar cost $A210,000 (about £132,000 at today’s rates) and she has now won over £3.6 million in prize money with a potentially very lucrative breeding career ahead of her once she retires. To illustrate this, her half-sister (by the sire Redoute’s Choice) just sold for $A2.6 million (£1.64m) at the Inglis Easter Yearling Sale – a record price for a yearling filly in Australia. 7. She has won her 21 races by a combined total of exactly 70 lengths – about 560 feet or 170 metres, or the equivalent of about 13 London buses! 8. She has started odds-on favourite in the betting on every occasion except her first ever race on 18 April 2009 at Flemington in Melbourne. The shortest price she started at was 1/33 meaning that if you had put £33 on her to win, your return would have been just £34! The local totalisator has taken numerous $100,000+ bets on her, the biggest being $200,000 at $1.04 when she won the Sportingbet Classic to record her 20th win – the punter’s profit was just $8,000. She is currently available with British bookmakers at 4/9 for the Diamond Jubilee Stakes and a huge number of Australians are expected to back her. 9. She is trained by Peter Moody at his stable at Caulfield racecourse in Victoria, Australia. 10. Luke Nolen has been her jockey in 18 of her 21 races, missing only her first two starts (when she was ridden by 16-year-old apprentice Jarrad Noske) and her first Group 1 victory in the Patinack Farm Classic in November 2010 (when Ben Melham was in the saddle as Nolen was suspended). 11. Black Caviar is owned by a group of life-long friends, Colin and Jannene Madden, Gary and Kerryn Wilkie and Neil Werrett, several of whom go right back to nursery school. They came up with the idea of buying a racehorse when enjoying their annual holiday together on a houseboat on the Murray River, not far from Adelaide. Neil Werrett knew Peter Moody, who, as it happens, had just come back from the sales with a big black yearling filly. They agreed to buy her, adding two others to their syndicate to spread the costs – Jannene Madden’s sister, Pam Hawkes, and another friend, David Taylor. 12. The wife of part-owner, David Taylor, was dead against her husband buying a share of the horse, so he had to do it behind her back – a brave move that paid off big-time and all is forgiven now! 13. Aussie Rules football star, Dale Thomas, who plays for top AFL team Collingwood, had a bet with David Taylor that Black Caviar wouldn’t win 20 consecutive races. Thomas has now fulfilled the terms of the bet by having an image of Black Caviar tattoed on his backside! 14. It was part-owner Pam Hawkes who came up with the Black Caviar’s name. The seafood lover explained: “Black Caviar’s grandmother was called Scandanavia. Helsinge, the name of her mother, is in Scandanavia and that’s where the salmon live. It made sense.” She added: “Besides my husband and children, Black Caviar is the best thing that has ever happened to me. It is a dream come true to have this beautiful horse.” 15. It was Gary and Kerryn Wilkie’s daughter who came up with the jockey’s very appropriate colours – salmon pink with black dots to represent the caviar! Gary said about Black Caviar: “You can’t imagine it. It’s a little surreal. You see the way she affects people, this animal we have equity in, and you just think, ‘How lucky am I’?” 16. When Black Caviar is running, racedays become something of a logistics challenge. The owners, their families and extended friends regularly push the number of attendees up to over 60, but that’s nothing compared with the party that will be at Royal Ascot on 23 June when she is due to contest her next race, the Diamond Jubilee Stakes. It will number over 150 people! 17. Black Caviar, who was bottle fed as a foal, was born on 18 August 2006 – her sire is Bel Esprit and her dam Helsinge. She is known in her stable as Nelly. 18. Her height is 16.2 hands (5 foot 4.8 inches or 164.6 centimetres). 19. She loves swimming and going to the beach [Australian horses are walked in the salt water on the beach very frequently ] 20. She has a massive fan base in Australia, where she is revered as the greatest racehorse since the legendary Phar Lap, who died 80 years ago. She has her own range of merchandise, from T shirts and baseball caps to ties and key rings. One of her fans made a 30+ hour round trip from Chicago to see her record her 18th victory at Caulfield, staying in Australia for only 24 hours, while thousands of Australians are expected to go racing when she runs in the UK. 21. After her British foray, she will return to Australia to be prepared for the all-important Spring Carnival in Melbourne, where her legions of fans will be looking forward to welcoming “The Wonder from Down Under” back to Australian racing. |
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20 minutes!
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Love this horse. Come on Nelly!
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I may not want her to win but I'll be fine if she does. At least she got me up at 730a to watch.
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Jeez. What was Nolen thinking?
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Gotta give her the credit now. A nose or 10 lengths, the result is the same. Can't say I walked away feeling like I just saw the best or second best horse in the world or an all-time great sprinter but she got the job done. Maybe it was jockey error that nearly got her beat but her talent overcame him.
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Great ride.
More amazingly, a winning streak survived a long plane ride. |
She didn't look her best all week. There was legitimate concern.
Still won. Saved Nolen. |
so long champ
she was getting out and will most likely be retired after this race. she looks like she has a tremendous turf foot from what i could see
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The obvious question is who would win a matchup between her and Frankel? I think at 6f, she might have a shot. I'd take him though. At 7f, he'd win with ease and at 8f, it would be a massacre.
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From Racing Post Twitter..
"Black Caviar was not 100 per cent in the race. We'll look at her when we get home and she might be retired," Peter Moody. |
I believe Nolen felt something go wrong 100 meters from the wire. She looked to be laboring a little.
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Lots of speculation she was hurt/injured during the race, which if true, makes her performance even more amazing.
It's a good thing the flight from Australia to Europe doesn't go over the Rockies. |
Lol premature jock elation is the quote on twitter.
Also seeing a lot of injury/retired tweets. Shame. She looked choppy. We might be whipping a jock who was preserving his injured mount. Dandy Boy just ran a second faster... |
Linky. Not a great picture (clearly someone just video'd his or her TV), but for those of us who didn't get to see it live:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qzbrC...eature=related |
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There was a minimal chance at best that she was gonna run down the hill in November anyway... Just imagining how fun to watch that would be.
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Also, we need to lighten up on the jock, because Nolen nose best.
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Black Caviar vs. California Flag. Giggity giggity. |
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Pure emotional response and it's valid at the time but now it's time to reflect. She didn't look all there today and still won. |
Interview with Luke Nolen on TVG coming up...either that or he left a pint with Simon.
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Caviar! Oh, I love this great race mare! Thanks, Team Caviar!
Nolen admits immediately he underestimated track, made a mistake. Sez don't emphasize his "brain fart". Moody says "you only have to win by 1/4 inch". I know Nelly has had chest muscle tears in the past from a start she bad, but her right front suspensory has been a problem in her career for some time now (required time off already). Hope it's alright, so they will continue to race her through the end of the season, not send her to mommy-hood yet! But whatever happens, this great mare has nothing to prove. Bravo, Black Caviar! And Luke Nolen, and Peter Moody! PS, here's yet another video I found, official feed http://www.joe.ie/sports/horse-racin...scot-0026205-1 |
Nolen said afterward he’d underestimated the testing nature of the Ascot turf, which was laboring and slow-playing Saturday, assuming that Black Caviar had done enough to win.
That was from DRF. From me: "It's nice to know that the maximum IQ requirement to be a jockey is recognized internationally instead of just in the USA and Italy". I can think of maybe only two or three jockeys ever who were clever enough to fool jockey regulators into thinking they were stupid enough to be permitted to ride horses for a living. |
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Handicap older horses - you don't want to win by any more than the minimum it takes, or you'll carry weight next time. Hard for me to get used to, seeing them back off before line and pose as soon as the race is run. Not often done in America. Anyway, Nolen did a good job, won the race on a great mare. |
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I musta missed that. |
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Good race! PS watching it again, she started on her left lead, switched to her right lead for two furlongs downhill, but then spent the majority of the rest of the race on her left lead. Wonder if her right front suspensory is bothering her again, or something new? |
Are the Breeders Cup people proactive enough (and have the extra means) to put more incentive into a race to get her (and/or Frankel) to run? Even if Caviar gets a long layoff, get in a prep in late September/early October in Australia, and if she comes out of that alright, send her over.
Say if the Turf Sprint were worth 2 million instead of a million? |
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Look at it this way ... Nolen got ahead of them, then gave them four strides to catch up again, then beat them again ;) What a great race horse. |
Hope all is well with the mare. As for her and frankel....can someone prevail upon the bc folks to get rid of some of the lame, ridiculous races and throw that purse money into the races that would draw top int'l stars? Quality over quantity!!
Enjoyed black caviar, hope nothing serious is amiss. |
I often find it interesting the way people see the same event different depending on what your position was going into it. I will say that I didn't want her to win for reasons that I've stated before that are admittedly, kind of dumb. I won't say I over or underestimated her because I wanted to reserve judgement until I saw her against better competition. I credit her for getting the job done, especially if she did it while injuring herself. I think she proved herself as a legit racehorse to those of us that had our doubts as to her ability. I don't think that she proved herself to be one of the two best horses in the world and I don't even think top 5-10 is accurate. I didn't think it was the jockey error that almost got her beat either. It was so quick that I really doubt it cost her. I don't think she even had time to process his relaxing and starting back up so fast. I don't think it's even possible for her reaction time to be that quick.
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