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-   -   Murray Johnson has a complete meltdown after the Pacific Classic (http://www.derbytrail.com/forums/showthread.php?t=3510)

Coach Pants 08-21-2006 12:44 PM

Murray Johnson has a complete meltdown after the Pacific Classic
 
http://www.signonsandiego.com/sports...s21dmside.html

Quote:

DEL MAR – Did some late-night grading of Del Mar's main track set up the 16th Pacific Classic for a speedy Lava Man to cruise to his historic victory?

That's the thinking of trainer Murray Johnson, whose 7-year-old gelding, Perfect Drift, only managed to close to a fourth-place finish after getting second in the race two years in a row. Perfect Drift is heading back to Kentucky after his ninth straight loss, and the usually cool-headed Murray was steaming and crying foul.


“I got real disappointed last night when I came back and saw a grader on the racetrack at around 9 o'clock,” Johnson said. “That tells me the whole story. Why would you grade a racetrack the night before a Grade I race? And they're trying to stop breakdowns, and they take dirt off the track. Well, guess who that helps?

“They pushed dirt off the rail, which makes the track harder and makes the track more conducive to a speed horse (like Lava Man) going a mile and a quarter and more conducive to breaking a horse down.”

Joe Harper, CEO and president of the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club, said it's not unusual for a grader to be on the track late at night.

“That's basically the way we do it every night to level it off,” Harper said.

Del Mar trackman Steve Wood said much the same.

“I don't know any track in the country that doesn't grade their track before the next day's races,” Wood said. “Here at Del Mar, this track is made on a hill. The material slides toward the rail, and if we don't grade it, it slides to the rail and is uneven.”

Johnson wasn't buying it. “(Lava Man is) a good horse, but when you get things catered toward you,” Johnson said. “Polytrack (artificial surface) will be good for this industry. It will take the trackman out of the equation.

“There are a lot of people who manipulate things in this game. It's like the drugs and what they treat the horses with. They all think they've got an edge. We know how (Lava Man) does back East when he travels. (Lava Man hasn't won outside California.) I'd love to know his bicarb (bicarbonate) level, too. I'll guarantee it's in the 30s. Which means he's . . . it's not a legitimate thing. I'm not bitching because I lost. I'm just telling you what I saw.”

Winning trainer Doug O'Neill wasn't buying the criticism.

“We won, so obviously the track seemed great to us,” O'Neill said. “But I didn't see any signs of them doing anything funny with the track. And even if they sped it up, or slowed it down, we all had to run over it. What was the final time, 2 minutes and change (2:01.62, the slowest in Pacific Classic history), so it wasn't overly quick. Being run at 2:01, that gave everyone the opportunity. It set it up for a closer. I think the equal weights evened things out a little bit.”

Jockey Garrett Gomez, who rode long-shot runner-up Good Reward, said the track seems softer than earlier in the year.

“I was here the second week of the meet, and it seemed harder then,” said Gomez, who has been riding at Saratoga. “Today it seemed to have a little bounce to it, wasn't as jarring for the horse.”

It was a tough week for Johnson, the affable Australian who brought Perfect Drift to Del Mar three straight years for two seconds and now a fourth. Johnson's father, Geoffrey, suffered what could have been sudden cardiac death, but fellow trainer Joe Herrick and Del Mar Fairgrounds medical staff saved his life.

“Joe administered CPR and took him from no pulse to a pulse and got him breathing again, saved his life,” Johnson said, adding that his father will remain in a local hospital for a week or so before going back to Louisville, Ky., and eventually returning to Australia.
Wow!

Buffymommy 08-21-2006 12:48 PM

Honestly, after what happened to his father, the dude is allowed to be a little irrational.

Best of luck to you Geoffrey.

Bold Brooklynite 08-21-2006 12:49 PM

Sounds like Sergio Garcia ... when he said the wind was against him and in favor of Tiger.

Poor Murray ... he needs a pacifier ...

... a Pacific Pacifier.

kentuckyrosesinmay 08-21-2006 02:00 PM

That was very, very irrational indeed.

1st_Saturday_in_May 08-21-2006 02:17 PM

Stranger things have happened. It seems that tracks just love to soup up the surfaces for the 'next big thing'

Danzig 08-21-2006 04:55 PM

completely ridiculous theory from mr johnson, but i'm sure stress got to him.

del mar is going to risk a breakdown in a high profile race with a HOY contender to 'soup up' the track?? they've had a lot of injuires and fatalities, and this would be a legit response by them? oh please!

i'd imagine if the drifter had won, there would have been zero criticism of the track...simply ridiculous.

Downthestretch55 08-21-2006 05:12 PM

Another "conspriracy theory"...
Now if we had just dug up Lee Harvey Oswald and lashed his bones to the sturrips...who knows?
The UFO's could have seen it all from their observation post in the sky, and Sasquach would have seen it from his clubhouse box.
The CIA, Pentagon, and FBI will continue to deny.
My astrologist told me this would happen someday soon.
She was right!

For you doubters..."Madame Zelda"...138th and 10th. Bring money...lots.

Danzig 08-21-2006 05:37 PM

and it wasn't just the track that johnson had on his mind!!

http://dailynews.com/sports/ci_4212629

how 'bout some cheese to go with that w(h)ine???


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