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#21
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There is no legal raceday medication that would have any bearing on horses breaking down. Nice sentiment but pretty much not a factor in horses breaking down,. You say "we all know horses are running when they arent supposed to be". I say how do you know except in an after the fact, monday morning quarterbacking way? How do you determine what is ok and what isnt? That is a question that trainers ask themselves each day and let me tell you there is no simple solution because as Bigs said before, virtually no horse is 100% everytime. A lot of times horses with chronic issues are the safest ones to run because they seemingly know their limitations and the ones that seem completely sound are the ones that overextend and breakdown. The idea that scaling back racing schedules will lower the % of breakdowns is interesting yet probably not valid. Less races makes less oportunities to make money which leads to increased pressure to make the spots that are available. The training of horses has changed but not because of the speed of the tracks. The training of young horses has changed dramatically because owners dont allow horses to race themselves into shape and they reward trainers whose horses come out running first time out. Look at a guy like Nick Zito and how he has changed his training methods with babies. He used to almost always give them a race first time out which is the way he learned from the trainers in the 60's. But a few years ago he started cranking them up like everybody else because he was losing owners to guys that won with firsters. When established guys like Zito have to change successful training methods in order to keep owners and get horses, you can see that the trend has become the rule. Guys like Charlie Whittingham (for those who arent familiar, he was pretty good) almost never won first time and really didnt even want to, prefering to get horses experience before taking on more advanced rivals. Horses are running as much as they were in the 60's except many of the races are run for no purse in the morning. But since horses are investment tools in many cases there is pressure to not run until they are 99% ready to run their best and then they have to run well as to not diminish "value". Personally I would be very content in giving my horses a race or 2 as two year olds before really cranking them down but the market simply doesnt allow that anymore. Another thing that a trainer has to be concerned with is win % and losing too many prep races is bad for the old percentage. I would love to have rules like Hong Kong but only if we had a setup like they have with laws that back up the rules. If we had one training track, 2 days of races a week for 9 months out of the year and purses that averaged $130000 per race with high tech security and vets that worked for the association no problem. until we do their systemm wont work here. Exactly what would you do to make the breeding industry not a sham? All these ideas are interesting but i have yet to see anything that would serve any direct ability to prevent breakdowns. |
#22
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![]() " I say how do you know except in an after the fact"
First hand knowledge, at the time I was young and just thought that's what everyone does. To be fair none of those horses who were given medicines for pain ever broke down. "The idea that scaling back racing schedules will lower the % of breakdowns is interesting yet probably not valid. Less races makes less opportunities to make money which leads to increased pressure to make the spots that are available." yes this is a bit theory but I know, again first hand knowledge, that trainers have entered horses in California to fill for the secretary with full knowledge they were not ready to run. "The training of horses has changed but not because of the speed of the tracks. The training of young horses has changed dramatically because owners don't allow horses to race themselves into shape and they reward trainers whose horses come out running first time out" absolutely zero disagreement there, its a win first mentality perpetuated by the media and breeding industry. "I would love to have rules like Hong Kong but only if we had a setup like they have with laws that back up the rules. If we had one training track, 2 days of races a week for 9 months out of the year and purses that averaged $130000 per race with high tech security and vets that worked for the association no problem. until we do their system wont work here." So we should let trainers who bend the rules skate because we don't have the same purse structure? I say the model we have is broken. There are to many tracks, to many races, the wagering dollar is stretched to thin, yet purses have to go up to make it work for the owners and the trainers to make money. That's broken. But we can just keep raising take out, I am willing to bet Ky is on its way up now that NY just raised there to obscene levels. "Exactly what would you do to make the breeding industry not a sham" To start the cosmetic surgeries should not be allowed. Medications should not be allowed for these two year old in training sales. Maybe stallion restrictions should be considered. Maybe horses should not be inbred like they have been. I hate the status quo. This will sound sadistic but I want the whole thing to blow up because its broken. From ADW's, to breeding, to regulation, to product, etc etc...its broken. |
#23
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I dont know that the media or breedng industry have as much to do with pressure to win early as does the economics of the business. One of the main reasons that the horseman are united and sticking together on the ADW issue is that we NEED more money while the tracks want more money. Day rates are not covering expenses for most trainers, shipping, feed, and hay expenses are up 30 to 40% but very few of us can raise our day rates because very few owners are willing to lose MORE money, not that I blame them. Therefore people are looking to show off their horses for resale, not necessarily just for for breeding purposes. We understand that everybody is under financial stress but we were in a bad spot before gas was $4.00 a gallon. Some owners simply dont have the time to develop horses like the Phipps. I would probably say most. I didnt say that trainers should be allowed to bend rules or skate but Hong Kong is a much different situation than we are in here, therefore we cant look to the model or penalty system there as a guide. It is simply too different in terms of setup and the legal system. It would be like imposing NFL franchise regulations on high schools. I have been in the middle of the road about the surgeries because they may actually help soundness in some ways though they do make it hard no breeders because the real conformation is a bit hidden. I wouldnt cry if they were outlawed but I dont think as poorly about them as much as I used to. Medications at the 2 yo sales have been cut back but to me the simple solution to the 2 year old in training problm is to just not participate very much. |
#24
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If you need medication to race you shouldn't race. Right now very unsound horses can compete at all levels because they have medications to mask the pain. Then you get unsound horses just producing more unsound horses. Vindication was unsound and I assume he will produce plenty of unsound horses. |
#25
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I'm just curious, I see you have named yourself for a horse currently racing in NY......do you think he should be allowed to race?
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Just more nebulous nonsense from BBB |
#26
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"Very unsound horses can compete at all levels because of medication?" This is not true. "Unsound horses " is not a catagory of horses. If you fall down and break your arm should you not be able to reproduce because you are unsound? This type of thinking is not only stupid, is it totally without merit. |
#27
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#30
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#31
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#33
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I agree that you can't retire every horse that had an injury. That's not the point here. Here's an expensive yearling that ran a 2008 debut race that suggested he's worth far more than $50K unless he had a hole in him. I suppose you think that the suspicious drop in for a tag and the fact that the horse broke down are purely coincidental. Last edited by parsixfarms : 06-23-2008 at 01:05 PM. |
#34
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
#35
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Hire a Blue ribbon team of vet's Engage them in a think tank that would analyze each and every horses medical status before said horse was entered. Do complete medical testing after each and every movement(works or bowel)... Come on already this horse had an issue but every single horse has an issue and too boot we are speculating that the horse had an issue that caused im to lose his life. You can't possibly suggest that an owner with 100 head is suppose to be privy to all the medical issues of each and every animal.. Has far as we know.. ASS could have just told Jackson the horses didn't work out and Jess said lose him in a claimer.. So I bought this colt I send him to a quality trainer and he debuts with a 54 beyer and gets dinged up now my trainer after 4 months off gets the colt working again and says maybe we want to just go in claimer with the other dinged horses instead of a MSW.. Who am I to argue I hired the guy because he is suppose to have my best interests at heart and the horses. It's silly if you think I am going to retire him because he was laid up.. I am sorry the horse died but it happens and IMO Jackson is hardly to blame. |
#36
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The issue is not about retiring the horse; it's about whether the horse was sound to run on the day in question. If not, then the owner always has the option of laying him up to get over the problem. That's why we see layoff lines in DRF every day. Look, the reason I pointed this one out is because Jackson, in his holier than thou testimony before Congress last week, challenged the industry to look out for the welfare of the horse. All signs indicate that, as it relates to Vinstar, he did not heed his own words. Those in glass houses shouldn't be throwing stones (especially given the hypocrisy of him using Asmussen as his trainer). |
#37
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![]() If the horse cost 170k or 700k it doesn't mattter.. You are missing the most important point.. His staff and or trainers would not have put the horse in the race if they thought he was not capable of competing and succeeding without incident.. The guy just lost 700k plus 18 months of training and vet fees use common sense did he need the 50k? He was told the horse was OK and that is the important part.. Remember this horse had how many workouts since the layoff without incident?
The last thing a guy needs is a horse to die on him and the thought that he but the horse in the race to hopefully get 50k is nuts |
#38
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You mentioned his workouts. Doesn't it raise a red flag that he was shipped to Keeneland from Churchill and that his last two workouts were over the Polytrack rather than a conventional dirt surface? And then he's dropped precipitously in price. |
#39
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So you want a man who entered the business 20 minutes ago wallet a blazin and someone who knows less about horses then me to be able to figure out and more impotantly be accountable for how and were the horse(700k albatross) is working out? Its the mans hobby he employees what some people think are the most outstanding bloodstock agents(other then DrugS), farm managers, and trainers etc. to run his HOBBY.. Do you want the owner of the Knicks to not let a NBA player play even after a team of doctors and like personnel cleared him to play.. All an owner can do after this occurs is question his employees and suggest they use more common sense protecting his good name and even that is a lot to ask IMO |
#40
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That's not always the case. There are some owners who are very actively involved. There are some trainers that tell their owners everything. They will tell their owners exactly what is wrong with their horse. If a horse comes back from a work with a slightly puffy ankle, they will tell their owners immediately. I don't know the relationship between Jackson and Asmussen and I don't know how actively Jackson is involved. I don't know if Asmussen tells Jackson when a horse has a problem. But I would say that in general, when you have one of these big-time, smooth talking trainers working for a really rich guy that doesn't know much about horses, the owner will usually know very little about what is going on physically with his horses. |