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#1
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![]() 2002 started paying attention.....
2003 became a fan... 2004 became addicted.
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"You miss 100% of the shots that you don't take." Follow me with the Rays grounds crew at https://twitter.com/TripleCrown59 www.facebook.com/TripleCrown59 K&S pics- http://share.shutterfly.com/action/w...0BYtWrhw2csXLA |
#2
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![]() Point Given 2001
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Reppin the Duquesne University class of 2009 . (Then its time to get a real job ![]() I cant believe what a bunch of nerds we are. We're looking up money laundering in the dictionary. www.myspace.com/dustinfabian |
#3
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![]() This is my first post. I've been reading posts for about a year and a half now, first at ESPN, now here. This site is much better. I really admire the involvement most of you have in the sport.
As to the topic, I've been following racing since the late 50's when my family watched any sport on TV and horse racing was popular. The names of famous racehorses, jockeys, owners, and trainers were household words. I remember the newspaper stories when Nashua's owner was shot, when Tim Tam broke down in the Belmont, and when Eddie Arcaro retired. I was hooked and really followed the sport the year that Kelso won the "Handicappers Triple Crown", when Carry Back made his triple crown bid. My favorites at that time were Kelso, Bowl of Flowers, and Jaipur. |
#4
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![]() For me it was when I was 5 or 6. I used to go to the track with me dad
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#5
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![]() For me it started in 1989 at age 12 when I watched the greatest horse race ever in that year's Preakness Stakes. I was (and remain) a HUGE Sunday Silence fan. I was a Triple Crown/Breeders' Cup fan for the next decade or so.
Then after I moved to NYC a few years back, the quality of the racing there hooked me as a year-round fan. And though I have sense left the greatest city in the world, I doubt I'll ever stop being a fan of the greatest sport in the world. |
#6
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http://www.facebook.com/cajungator26 |
#7
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![]() Two Words:
My Father sat me down at age 2 and literally forced me to watch the 1973 Belmont Two More Words: Fred Hooper a true champion of the sport, who I had the pleasure of knowing attend Hooper Academy named for the Hall-of-fame owner & co-founder of Gulfstream Park Two More Words: Mike Pawluk his love from the sport is contageous and also unequaled have learned a lot about the sport and also made a great friend Two More Words: Real Quiet was down after graduating collegeand had no Mrs. Robinson to cheer me up the colt was my Mrs. Robinson special thanks also go to Pat Day, Jim McKay, The Miller's, John Jeremiah Sullivan, Byk, Personal Ensign, and Wil Harbut's pal "The Mostest" |
#8
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#9
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lucky you to have seen all those fabulous horses, many of which most of us have only seen in pictures or the occasional grainy black and white film footage. kelso was an amazing horse.
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
#10
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![]() I was hooked for life after Secretariat's Belmont. "He is moving like a tremendous machine." It still gives me chills.
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#11
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![]() I loved Easy Goer. My alltime favorite is Secretariat. I waited so long to join because I did feel a little intimidated by the inside knowledge that a lot of you seem to have, but tonight I figured what the heck. It's nice to be a part of a group that shares the same love and interest.
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#12
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http://www.facebook.com/cajungator26 |
#13
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![]() My older sister never liked Secretariat, or rather never really respected him until that Belmont. During the running of the Preakness that year, I got to her house right after the field entered the backstretch and she said to me that it was Sham's race. When I saw the replay, I realized why she said that; if it had been any other horse making that move around the clubhouse turn, she would have been right. That race, as much as the Belmont, marked Secretariat as truly something special. After the Belmont, she called me up and said that he was a wonder horse, but she still didn't like him. Her favorite was Seattle Slew and before that Nashua. She won't hear of any case for Swaps maybe being the better racehorse.
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#14
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Welcome aboard ![]() |
#15
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#16
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![]() I remember being very upset by Swale's death, but the first horse I ever followed from beginning to retirement was Gulch. Man, I loved that horse; he was so classy and even when he ran at distances beyond his best, he never quit. I was lucky to have him as my first horse.
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#17
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![]() Speaking of Easy Goer... one of his granddaughter's is being auctioned right now at Fasig Tipton.
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http://www.facebook.com/cajungator26 |
#18
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gulch, i remember him. champ sprinter the same year that personal ensign beat him in the whitney. now she was something! but i think most remember gulch these days because he's thunder gulchs pop--but you could certainly be remembered for worse things!!
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
#19
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![]() Welcome. |
#20
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2004 - all three of the above. Thank you, Smarty Jones. I'm hooked. |