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  #1  
Old 09-25-2006, 12:14 PM
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King Glorious King Glorious is offline
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I guess this is my problem with this. Remember back when baseball went on strike and they used replacement players? Well, even though they were giving us a lesser product, ticket prices remained the same. There was still a home run leader, an rbi leader.....everything stayed the same except the product was of lesser talent. Kind of the same thing with racing. There will still be a Derby winner, a Met Mile winner, a BC Classic winner every year. But it seems like more and more, the quality of the overall product is decreasing. And because so many people just sit and say "we should be lucky that we have a Bernardini this year" and are content with the continuous garbage that they are feeding us, there is no incentive for them to ever change anything. It won't be until we start demanding a better product that things will start to change. Why does everyone seem so content with the way things are and just resigned to accept that this is all we are going to get?
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The real horses of the year (1986-2020)
Manila, Java Gold, Alysheba, Sunday Silence, Go for Wand, In Excess, Paseana, Kotashaan, Holy Bull, Cigar, Alphabet Soup, Formal Gold, Skip Away, Artax, Tiznow, Point Given, Azeri, Candy Ride, Smarty Jones, Ghostzapper, Invasor, Curlin, Zenyatta, Zenyatta, Goldikova, Havre de Grace, Wise Dan, Wise Dan, California Chrome, American Pharoah, Arrogate, Gun Runner, Accelerate, Maximum Security, Gamine
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  #2  
Old 09-25-2006, 12:16 PM
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Cajungator26 Cajungator26 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by King Glorious
I guess this is my problem with this. Remember back when baseball went on strike and they used replacement players? Well, even though they were giving us a lesser product, ticket prices remained the same. There was still a home run leader, an rbi leader.....everything stayed the same except the product was of lesser talent. Kind of the same thing with racing. There will still be a Derby winner, a Met Mile winner, a BC Classic winner every year. But it seems like more and more, the quality of the overall product is decreasing. And because so many people just sit and say "we should be lucky that we have a Bernardini this year" and are content with the continuous garbage that they are feeding us, there is no incentive for them to ever change anything. It won't be until we start demanding a better product that things will start to change. Why does everyone seem so content with the way things are and just resigned to accept that this is all we are going to get?
Until the breeders start breeding for quality instead of "cheap speed", we won't see the quality improve. The breeders won't do that because that isn't what sells. Just my two cents.
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  #3  
Old 09-25-2006, 01:36 PM
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Cannon Shell Cannon Shell is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by King Glorious
There will still be a Derby winner, a Met Mile winner, a BC Classic winner every year. But it seems like more and more, the quality of the overall product is decreasing. And because so many people just sit and say "we should be lucky that we have a Bernardini this year" and are content with the continuous garbage that they are feeding us, there is no incentive for them to ever change anything. It won't be until we start demanding a better product that things will start to change. Why does everyone seem so content with the way things are and just resigned to accept that this is all we are going to get?
The more horseracing becomes a "business", the less joy there is in it, for fans and competitors alike. When people that are worth hundreds of millions of dollars retire horses because "they have residual value" or "nothing left to prove" you are heading down the wrong path. The biggest problem with expensive and talented horses is that the connections are afraid to lose. It is the biggest difference between racing now and 20 years ago. One of the reasons that the Pletchers of the world "space " so much is to try to find the softest spot possible, to try to keep the horses and his personal record intact. Not that I blame them, because they are playing by the rules that the owners and breeders have set. Breeders lowered their standards in the late 70's to early 80's to produce more horses to keep up with the first bloodstock boom. In doing so they accepted more flawed horses, soundness, bleeding, conformation, etc. Now with huge stallion books that problem is even greater but the bloodstock machine which sucks in hundreds of millions of dollars per year needs to continue to be fed. So a filly that has a race record of 2 wins in 4 starts is bred to a stallion that made nine starts and the market will continue to buy those types of horses.

Sorry to sound so pessimistic but horseracing is really becoming a soulless "sport"
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  #4  
Old 09-25-2006, 01:47 PM
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King Glorious King Glorious is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cannon Shell
The more horseracing becomes a "business", the less joy there is in it, for fans and competitors alike. When people that are worth hundreds of millions of dollars retire horses because "they have residual value" or "nothing left to prove" you are heading down the wrong path. The biggest problem with expensive and talented horses is that the connections are afraid to lose. It is the biggest difference between racing now and 20 years ago. One of the reasons that the Pletchers of the world "space " so much is to try to find the softest spot possible, to try to keep the horses and his personal record intact. Not that I blame them, because they are playing by the rules that the owners and breeders have set. Breeders lowered their standards in the late 70's to early 80's to produce more horses to keep up with the first bloodstock boom. In doing so they accepted more flawed horses, soundness, bleeding, conformation, etc. Now with huge stallion books that problem is even greater but the bloodstock machine which sucks in hundreds of millions of dollars per year needs to continue to be fed. So a filly that has a race record of 2 wins in 4 starts is bred to a stallion that made nine starts and the market will continue to buy those types of horses.

Sorry to sound so pessimistic but horseracing is really becoming a soulless "sport"
This is exactly the way I feel. I couldn't have written it better myself. And the best part in it was when u said "not that I blame them". It's hard to blame them but that doesn't mean we have to like it.
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The real horses of the year (1986-2020)
Manila, Java Gold, Alysheba, Sunday Silence, Go for Wand, In Excess, Paseana, Kotashaan, Holy Bull, Cigar, Alphabet Soup, Formal Gold, Skip Away, Artax, Tiznow, Point Given, Azeri, Candy Ride, Smarty Jones, Ghostzapper, Invasor, Curlin, Zenyatta, Zenyatta, Goldikova, Havre de Grace, Wise Dan, Wise Dan, California Chrome, American Pharoah, Arrogate, Gun Runner, Accelerate, Maximum Security, Gamine
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  #5  
Old 09-25-2006, 01:50 PM
SniperSB23 SniperSB23 is offline
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The only idea I have ever heard that could help solve the problem is to not allow any horse to stand stud until they were 5 years old. Unfortunately there is about as good a chance of that happening as there was for Bluegrass Cat running as a 4yo.
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  #6  
Old 09-25-2006, 01:55 PM
Gander Gander is offline
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This is the only meaningful post on this thread. Thanks Merasq!

this thread has not helped my hangover one bit...i find myself agreeing with king g AND dixie in the space of 5 minutes and my head is spinning (but if sun king is a sprinter u better gettahold of zito asap )-later gaters
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  #7  
Old 09-25-2006, 02:08 PM
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Dunbar Dunbar is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SniperSB23
The only idea I have ever heard that could help solve the problem is to not allow any horse to stand stud until they were 5 years old. Unfortunately there is about as good a chance of that happening as there was for Bluegrass Cat running as a 4yo.
Agree completely, Sniper. Restricting breeding is not unheard of. They do not allow artificial insemination, for example. Yet whenever the idea of restricting breeding until a horse is 5 is brought up, people say it wouldn't be fair to the owners/breeders. Meanwhile, the sport seems to be in a downward spiral that will eventually do in the owners/breeders anyway. Or maybe it will be reduced to the sheiks racing against each other in the deserts of the Middle East.

--Dunbar
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Curlin and Hard Spun finish 1,2 in the 2007 BC Classic, demonstrating how competing in all three Triple Crown races ruins a horse for the rest of the year...see avatar
photo from REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
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  #8  
Old 09-25-2006, 02:08 PM
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Cannon Shell Cannon Shell is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by King Glorious
This is exactly the way I feel. I couldn't have written it better myself. And the best part in it was when u said "not that I blame them". It's hard to blame them but that doesn't mean we have to like it.
I know a lot of blame is placed on trainers and though I have to admit I may be a bit biased the problem really lies with the owners. All these huge syndication deals and high profile yearling and 2 year old prices has many owners with stars in their eyes.

Quick story. Friend of mine has been the business as an owner on a serious level for 3 years. Says to me the other day "You know what my goal is in horseracing? Sell one of those 3 million dollar yearlings." I said to him what happened to trying to win big races and having fun. He said "I cant compete with the Arabs or Pletcher's owners, but maybe I could sell them an expensive horse". I told him that sounds more like horse breeding than horse racing.
The moral of the story is that this guy and many other owners are trying to come up with valuble breeding stock rather than racehorses. And the way the game is played, racing them once they have accomplished something, even one graded win or placing(with mares) is just too risky to their way of thinking.
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