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#1
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With regard to your question about whether the suspension will effect the performance of a barn, it can have a big effect. I think it depends alot on how hands on the head trainer is in the first place. If he is very hands on, then it can have a big effect. Sometimes the assitant is as good as the head trainer, but often times he is not. I think that Asmussen's absence has made a big difference in terms of the performmance of first-time starters. Blasi is only winning at a 9% clip with first-timers. I think Asmussen was at around 20%. |
#2
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Common he can pay Assmusen legaly by saying he did work for him on the side away from the track and cut him a check. Phone records?? Its not aginst policy to talk to someone that is suspended. Lets see he can mow my lawn for 20K a week, everyone sees what I am getting at. Plus how do you think Meche end up on Appealing Zophie?? |
#3
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I believe the terms of these suspensions are that you are to have no contact with anyone from the barn including the assistant. |
#4
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![]() Blasi is pretty good repent. I think the operation runs almost exactly like it did before, very little change. I think you are on point, really not much difference at all. He knows the program, he knows how they do things, and very little has changed.
I think in this case the Assistant is as good as the Trainer.
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p4ySSg4QG8g |
#5
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#6
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![]() didn't a ceo of a company just get fired and charged with criminal acts due to bugging telephones?
all they can do is suspend these guys. they don't have the legal right to track phone calls and finances. they have no right to subpoena any of that stuff. it's horse racing, not the fbi. they can limit access to property under their control, that's about it.
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
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#8
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If you read any of the articles about trainers who get caught with positives, you probably know that once you get caught with a positive, they search your barn, they search your car, I think I read that they even searched a guy's house. They can pretty much do whatever they want. |
#9
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#10
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![]() Perhaps a trainer or someone involved with a governing body or something of the like can clarify this, however -- when a trainer gets suspended, besides being barred from the grounds, the racing commission or board can prohibit him/her from speaking with their assistant? I would want to see some site on that.
In addition, the same applies to financial side? I am sure it doesn't happen, but are the rules clear on this? Can anyone clarify this? Eric |
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#12
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By the way, just to give you guys an idea of how far government agencies will go at times, I have a friend who bought just a small amount of stock in a company a few days before they got bought out. He didn't have a huge position by any means. He had bought about 300 shares of this $12 stock. Then a month later, he bought another 700 shares at about $15. The company got bought out for $18 a share a few days later. About a year or so later, my friend got a subpoena from the SEC. Not only did he have to go to their offices and answer questions for hours, but they checked his phone records, they checked all of his bank statements, they demanded he hand over his address book, etc. They thought that maybe he had gotten some inside information on the stock. Anyway, nothing ended up happening to my friend. There was no evidence that he had any inside information. But this just gives you an idea how powerful these government agencies are. By the way, this incident happened back in the early 1990s. Last edited by Rupert Pupkin : 12-03-2006 at 07:28 PM. |
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