Derby Trail Forums

Go Back   Derby Trail Forums > Main Forum > The Paddock
Register FAQ Members List Calendar Today's Posts

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #21  
Old 08-15-2006, 09:52 AM
GPK GPK is offline
5'8".. but all man!
 
Join Date: May 2006
Location: 3 miles from Chateuax de la Blaha
Posts: 21,706
Default

Because I have the time to do this.....the odds on his mounts through those 54 races and his finishing position.

23.40 - 9th of 10
15.20 - 8th of 8
34.25 - 3rd of 10
22.40 - 6th of 12
7.50 - 4th of 10
3.40 - 6th of 9
4.60 - 8th of 10
4.60 - 3rd of 6
7.80 - 2nd of 9
3.60 - 3rd of 11
5.80 - 7th of 10
5.60 - 2nd of 6
21.30 - 5th of 11
0.70* - 5th of 8 (Relaxed Gesture)
32.00 - 7th of 12
2.85 - 5th of 10
9.20 - 3rd of 8
9.60 - 6th of 8
34.75 - 5th of 9
13.80 - 3rd of 10
9.80 - 5th of 9
5.90 - 2nd of 8
26.00 - 5th of 9
17.50 - 4th of 5
1.80* - 6th of 12 (Grand Opening)
14.80 - 6th of 9
15.20 - 7th of 9
1.35* - 2nd of 9 (Karakorum Knockout)
35.50 - 7th of 7
3.10 - 5th of 11
3.00 - 5th of 7
5.70 - 7th of 8
23.10 - 3rd of 9
28.00 - 6th of 12
43.75 - 7th of 9
5.80 - 3rd of 8
7.20 - 5th of 8
4.60 - 3rd of 9
2.85 - 4th of 9
4.60 - 2nd of 6
13.20 - 7th of 7
3.35 - 9th of 9
16.50 - 4th of 9
6.10 - 3rd of 5
31.50 - 6th of 12
5.40 - 3rd of 10
22.00 - 3rd of 9
1.55* - 3rd of 9 (Watchtower)
26.50 - 6th of 10
12.90 - 4th of 13
33.50 - 5th of 9
0.85* - 5th of 10 (Yankee Thunder)
Reply With Quote
  #22  
Old 08-15-2006, 09:53 AM
Rupert Pupkin Rupert Pupkin is offline
Del Mar
 
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 5,102
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Rupert Pupkin
Johnny nailed his ass good in the 2nd race yesterday.
I thought I was home-free on that first-timer in the 2nd race yesterday. I had $200 to win and place on that horse. That was a heart-breaking loss. It's pretty rare to lose a race like that. How often does a horse that you blow by at the 1/8th pole come back and beat you? I can't fault the ride. It was a case of Pletcher's horse being fitter than Weaver's horse. Weaver is not a guy that has his first-timers cranked up. He only wins with first-timers at a 7% clip. I knew that going in but I had seen that horse work at the Ocala Feb Sale and I thought the horse could run so I bet him despite the fact that I thought he might be a little short.[/quote]
I just watched that race again. I still can't believe I lost that race. He blows by that horse at the 1/8th pole by 2 lengths and that horse comes back and beats him. That was a tough beat. The $5.10 he payed to place was a little consolation but not much. You expect to win those kinds of races.
Reply With Quote
  #23  
Old 08-15-2006, 09:55 AM
GPK GPK is offline
5'8".. but all man!
 
Join Date: May 2006
Location: 3 miles from Chateuax de la Blaha
Posts: 21,706
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Rupert Pupkin
I thought I was home-free on that first-timer in the 2nd race yesterday. I had $200 to win and place on that horse. That was a heart-breaking loss. It's pretty rare to lose a race like that. How often does a horse that you blow by at the 1/8th pole come back and beat you? I can't fault the ride. It was a case of Pletcher's horse being fitter than Weaver's horse. Weaver is not a guy that has his first-timers cranked up. He only wins with first-timers at a 7% clip. I knew that going in but I had seen that horse work at the Ocala Feb Sale and I thought the horse could run so I bet him despite the fact that I thought he might be a little short.
I just watched that race again. I still can't believe I lost that race. He blows by that horse at the 1/8th pole by 2 lengths and that horse comes back and beats him. That was a tough beat. The $5.10 he payed to place was a little consolation but not much. You expect to win those kinds of races.[/quote]


That was a Point Given baby that won that race too, wasn't it? I still think PG may throw out some big time turf runners. I think Go Between has a lot of potential for next year.
Reply With Quote
  #24  
Old 08-15-2006, 09:55 AM
Gander Gander is offline
Del Mar
 
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 5,336
Default

Thanks Kev. Sort of says it all.
Reply With Quote
  #25  
Old 08-15-2006, 09:56 AM
Gander Gander is offline
Del Mar
 
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 5,336
Default

Its almost as if he let that horse win that race. Very strange finish. I'd be furiously bummed if I needed Granny Pack for the Win.
Reply With Quote
  #26  
Old 08-15-2006, 10:01 AM
Rupert Pupkin Rupert Pupkin is offline
Del Mar
 
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 5,102
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Gander
Its almost as if he let that horse win that race. Very strange finish. I'd be furiously bummed if I needed Granny Pack for the Win.
It's tough for those first-time 2 year olds to be totally fit to run 1 1/16 miles first-time out. In addition, Weaver usually doesn't have them totally ready first-time out. He only wins at a 7% clip first-out compared to Pletcher who wins at a 23% clip first-out.

Granny Pack just wasn't quite ready to go 1 1/16 miles. She just got a little tired. If the race was just a little shorter she would have won.

Last edited by Rupert Pupkin : 08-15-2006 at 10:04 AM.
Reply With Quote
  #27  
Old 08-15-2006, 10:47 AM
KY_Sasquash KY_Sasquash is offline
Golden Gate
 
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 365
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Gander
Believe me, Desormeaux does not ride 54 horses without a chance. Its not like this guy rides for low % trainers. He rides for Frankel and Clement.
Not sure if Pletcher rides the guy, I dont think he ever does. And now I know why.
True and I heard Frankel was pissed at Kent D and chewed his agent out the other day at his barn after one of Kent D's ride where he decided that he'd ride the horse his way instead of what Frankel told him to do; he ended getting stuck behind horses and running 3rd or 4th and I dont think Clement was too confident in him for the Sword Dancer. Kent has been absolutely horrendous and it has been to my advantage to toss out any horse that he's on unless that horse laid over the field.
Reply With Quote
  #28  
Old 08-15-2006, 10:53 AM
oracle80
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Rupert Pupkin
I thought I was home-free on that first-timer in the 2nd race yesterday. I had $200 to win and place on that horse. That was a heart-breaking loss. It's pretty rare to lose a race like that. How often does a horse that you blow by at the 1/8th pole come back and beat you? I can't fault the ride. It was a case of Pletcher's horse being fitter than Weaver's horse. Weaver is not a guy that has his first-timers cranked up. He only wins with first-timers at a 7% clip. I knew that going in but I had seen that horse work at the Ocala Feb Sale and I thought the horse could run so I bet him despite the fact that I thought he might be a little short.
I just watched that race again. I still can't believe I lost that race. He blows by that horse at the 1/8th pole by 2 lengths and that horse comes back and beats him. That was a tough beat. The $5.10 he payed to place was a little consolation but not much. You expect to win those kinds of races.[/quote]

Rupert I just got home from taking my friend the clocker out to see some yearlings that he wanted to scout for an owner. He was absolutely filled with depression and rage at Gomez for that ride. He really emptied out on Weaver's horse and could not believe what Gomez did. Rupert you simply cannot ride a two year old making his or her first start going two turns as Gomez did. He rides every horse as if it is a 6 year old gelding who knows what to do in a race. He had so much horse underneath him and yanking her wide and setting her down hard to try and blow the field away was not the thing to do. She came up short due to the huge burst she was asked to use. Meanwhile Johnny saved all the ground and didn't panic when she blew by him, he stayed with his mount and had horse at the end. Gomez definitely blew that race. My clocker's exact words were "Gomez stinks, he does stupid things every time I bet him". Now this is a guy who trained grade one winners and has spent his life at the track.
You can rail on about anything you want but the bottom line is this, you go ahead and find me ONE ride at the entire meet where Johnny or Edgar gave a single ride like the one Gomez gave Milwaukee. Try it, you will fail. They will give bad rides like anyone else but they will not commit complete disasters from start to finish like Gomez has given so many times this year like Sigfreto and Milwaukee. Its why he goes 0-5 days and the other two don't. You won't EVER see Prado or Velazquez go 0-5 days, ever, never. It does not happen. Gomez simply refuses to adapt his style to the shorter priced horses he rides. Every ride has to be a thrill seeking daredevil event. Sure when he pulls one off he looks great. But when you are riding the caliber of animal he now rides you are supposed to keep many of them clear, near the lead, and out of harms way. He refuses to do this. You have said about Edgar thathe looks weak down the stretch and have expressed amazement that he wins like he does. many say Johnny doesn't do anything special most of the time. Races aren't about looking like a daredevil superstar every time, races are about winning. Give me the guy who stays three wide and out of trouble when hes on the best horse over the guy who tries to hit every moving hole at 35 MPH. In the long run the guys who ride smart will win more races and not give bettors or trainers heartburn. If johnny or Edgar ever gave a ride like the ones Gomez gave Violette's maiden last week on teh grass, Sigreto, or Milwaukee they would hang themselves. You can rail on about money won this year but you and I both know thats not really accurate or fair. The money in california is huge in the winter while Gulf's is horrible. It evens out when the eats Coast goes to Keeneland and then Belmont and Gomez took Johnny's mounts when he was hurt. If you honestly think that Gomez would be leading either Johnny or Edgar without that injury you are delusional. He will get run down before the year is out and we both know it. All I know is since the day you came on here chirping that Gomez was leading rider he has served up some delicious bagels with cream cheese and watched three guys pass him and two others tie him despite his live mounts. At the highest level of any profession its all about consistency and the other two have it and he does not. Thats what seperates them.
Reply With Quote
  #29  
Old 08-15-2006, 01:17 PM
dalakhani's Avatar
dalakhani dalakhani is offline
Del Mar
 
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Washington dc
Posts: 5,277
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Gander
Believe me, Desormeaux does not ride 54 horses without a chance. Its not like this guy rides for low % trainers. He rides for Frankel and Clement.
Not sure if Pletcher rides the guy, I dont think he ever does. And now I know why.
Frankel and Clement's barns at Toga arent exactly massive. And its not like Kent rides first call on all of their horses.

Kent was riding like **** during this streak...no way to defend that. But at the same time, all riders go through that and its not like he was blowing chalk every other race. Some of those horses simply didnt have a chance. In trying to establish himself in the east, Kent is taking mounts he wouldnt have taken on the west coast.

He is a good rider and does anyone want to bet that he finishes with a pct in the teens?

As for the ride on Relaxed Gesture, kent got stuck in no mans land. His horse broke really sharply and there was no pace. If he would have ridden on the lead the whole way, everyone would have asked why he was on the lead. The horse wouldnt relax and he did what he could. Some of you act as if Relaxed Gesture never burned money. This horse is a money burning machine regardless of who is riding. Kent's ride certainly wasnt optimal but give some credit to the horse too.
Reply With Quote
  #30  
Old 08-15-2006, 01:20 PM
dalakhani's Avatar
dalakhani dalakhani is offline
Del Mar
 
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Washington dc
Posts: 5,277
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by oracle80
I just watched that race again. I still can't believe I lost that race. He blows by that horse at the 1/8th pole by 2 lengths and that horse comes back and beats him. That was a tough beat. The $5.10 he payed to place was a little consolation but not much. You expect to win those kinds of races.
Rupert I just got home from taking my friend the clocker out to see some yearlings that he wanted to scout for an owner. He was absolutely filled with depression and rage at Gomez for that ride. He really emptied out on Weaver's horse and could not believe what Gomez did. Rupert you simply cannot ride a two year old making his or her first start going two turns as Gomez did. He rides every horse as if it is a 6 year old gelding who knows what to do in a race. He had so much horse underneath him and yanking her wide and setting her down hard to try and blow the field away was not the thing to do. She came up short due to the huge burst she was asked to use. Meanwhile Johnny saved all the ground and didn't panic when she blew by him, he stayed with his mount and had horse at the end. Gomez definitely blew that race. My clocker's exact words were "Gomez stinks, he does stupid things every time I bet him". Now this is a guy who trained grade one winners and has spent his life at the track.
You can rail on about anything you want but the bottom line is this, you go ahead and find me ONE ride at the entire meet where Johnny or Edgar gave a single ride like the one Gomez gave Milwaukee. Try it, you will fail. They will give bad rides like anyone else but they will not commit complete disasters from start to finish like Gomez has given so many times this year like Sigfreto and Milwaukee. Its why he goes 0-5 days and the other two don't. You won't EVER see Prado or Velazquez go 0-5 days, ever, never. It does not happen. Gomez simply refuses to adapt his style to the shorter priced horses he rides. Every ride has to be a thrill seeking daredevil event. Sure when he pulls one off he looks great. But when you are riding the caliber of animal he now rides you are supposed to keep many of them clear, near the lead, and out of harms way. He refuses to do this. You have said about Edgar thathe looks weak down the stretch and have expressed amazement that he wins like he does. many say Johnny doesn't do anything special most of the time. Races aren't about looking like a daredevil superstar every time, races are about winning. Give me the guy who stays three wide and out of trouble when hes on the best horse over the guy who tries to hit every moving hole at 35 MPH. In the long run the guys who ride smart will win more races and not give bettors or trainers heartburn. If johnny or Edgar ever gave a ride like the ones Gomez gave Violette's maiden last week on teh grass, Sigreto, or Milwaukee they would hang themselves. You can rail on about money won this year but you and I both know thats not really accurate or fair. The money in california is huge in the winter while Gulf's is horrible. It evens out when the eats Coast goes to Keeneland and then Belmont and Gomez took Johnny's mounts when he was hurt. If you honestly think that Gomez would be leading either Johnny or Edgar without that injury you are delusional. He will get run down before the year is out and we both know it. All I know is since the day you came on here chirping that Gomez was leading rider he has served up some delicious bagels with cream cheese and watched three guys pass him and two others tie him despite his live mounts. At the highest level of any profession its all about consistency and the other two have it and he does not. Thats what seperates them.[/quote]

What i bolded is simply not true. Ive seen them all go winless. I saw bailey go 0 for like 8 one day at Aqueduct on a stake day no less. Johnny and Edgar blow rides just like everyone else and they certainly have gone 0 for 5 during a day of racing.

***edit***

I just re-read your post and now i am wondering if i misunderstood you. Did you mean 0-5 during a day of racing or did you mean not winning a race in five days? If you meant the latter, my apology.
Reply With Quote
  #31  
Old 08-15-2006, 01:36 PM
Gander Gander is offline
Del Mar
 
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 5,336
Default

You are right about Relaxed Gesture, he is a money burning machine. There is a lot of creedence to that. I do think the better move would have been to simply stay on the lead and run as far as he could. Probably would not have beaten the winner, but I still think he would have finished better than he did.

I am a complete moron for keying this horse.
Reply With Quote
  #32  
Old 08-15-2006, 01:51 PM
Rupert Pupkin Rupert Pupkin is offline
Del Mar
 
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 5,102
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by oracle80
I just watched that race again. I still can't believe I lost that race. He blows by that horse at the 1/8th pole by 2 lengths and that horse comes back and beats him. That was a tough beat. The $5.10 he payed to place was a little consolation but not much. You expect to win those kinds of races.
Rupert I just got home from taking my friend the clocker out to see some yearlings that he wanted to scout for an owner. He was absolutely filled with depression and rage at Gomez for that ride. He really emptied out on Weaver's horse and could not believe what Gomez did. Rupert you simply cannot ride a two year old making his or her first start going two turns as Gomez did. He rides every horse as if it is a 6 year old gelding who knows what to do in a race. He had so much horse underneath him and yanking her wide and setting her down hard to try and blow the field away was not the thing to do. She came up short due to the huge burst she was asked to use. Meanwhile Johnny saved all the ground and didn't panic when she blew by him, he stayed with his mount and had horse at the end. Gomez definitely blew that race. My clocker's exact words were "Gomez stinks, he does stupid things every time I bet him". Now this is a guy who trained grade one winners and has spent his life at the track.
You can rail on about anything you want but the bottom line is this, you go ahead and find me ONE ride at the entire meet where Johnny or Edgar gave a single ride like the one Gomez gave Milwaukee. Try it, you will fail. They will give bad rides like anyone else but they will not commit complete disasters from start to finish like Gomez has given so many times this year like Sigfreto and Milwaukee. Its why he goes 0-5 days and the other two don't. You won't EVER see Prado or Velazquez go 0-5 days, ever, never. It does not happen. Gomez simply refuses to adapt his style to the shorter priced horses he rides. Every ride has to be a thrill seeking daredevil event. Sure when he pulls one off he looks great. But when you are riding the caliber of animal he now rides you are supposed to keep many of them clear, near the lead, and out of harms way. He refuses to do this. You have said about Edgar thathe looks weak down the stretch and have expressed amazement that he wins like he does. many say Johnny doesn't do anything special most of the time. Races aren't about looking like a daredevil superstar every time, races are about winning. Give me the guy who stays three wide and out of trouble when hes on the best horse over the guy who tries to hit every moving hole at 35 MPH. In the long run the guys who ride smart will win more races and not give bettors or trainers heartburn. If johnny or Edgar ever gave a ride like the ones Gomez gave Violette's maiden last week on teh grass, Sigreto, or Milwaukee they would hang themselves. You can rail on about money won this year but you and I both know thats not really accurate or fair. The money in california is huge in the winter while Gulf's is horrible. It evens out when the eats Coast goes to Keeneland and then Belmont and Gomez took Johnny's mounts when he was hurt. If you honestly think that Gomez would be leading either Johnny or Edgar without that injury you are delusional. He will get run down before the year is out and we both know it. All I know is since the day you came on here chirping that Gomez was leading rider he has served up some delicious bagels with cream cheese and watched three guys pass him and two others tie him despite his live mounts. At the highest level of any profession its all about consistency and the other two have it and he does not. Thats what seperates them.[/quote]

I really can't criticize Gomez' ride on that 2 year old filly yesterday. Every jock is asking their horse for everything at the 1/8th pole. I don't know any jock that is still sitting chilly at the 1/8th pole. If this was like the movie Groundhog Day and he could ride the race over again, he'd have to try soemthing different only because what he did didn't work. If he had to do it again, I'd tell him not to really ask her until the 1/16th pole, but that's only in hindsight. Normally you expect your jock to be all out at the 1/8th pole.

I actually think that Prado's ride on Naughty New Yorker was terrible. Nobody is going to criticize the ride because it worked. But the only reason it worked was because he had the best horse by 10. It wasn't totally Prado's fault. The bad post was what put him in a bad place to begin with. Then Castellano's premature move on Chowder's First put Prado in a worse spot. The one smart thing that Prado did was take back approaching the half-mile pole and give his horse a breather until the 3/8th pole. But even then he moved to soon at the 3/8 pole. He could have waited to the 1/4 pole. Then he did another stupid thing. At the 1/8 pole, instead of hitting the horse left-handed to make sure that he and CF don't get too close and brush each other, he's hitting the horse right-handed. He finally switched to the left-hand after he passed CF to make sure that he didn't get taken down for coming over on CF. That was smart but he should have been doing that earlier. There's nothing that drives me crazier than when a jockey is on the outside and has a ton of horse and he's hitting his horse right-handed. Why hit the horse right-handed? There are just too many things that can go wrong. There is no reason to take chance of coming in on the other horse. You want to stay away from the horse to your inside. Hit the horse left-handed and stay out in the middle of the track where there is no chance of any type of contact with the horse to your inside. That is actually one thing that Gomez is very good about when he's on the outside with a lot of horse. He hits his horse left-handed and stays away from the horse to his inside. Anyway, I thought Prado made a ton of mistakes on Naughty New Yorker but he had much the best horse and won any way.

Last edited by Rupert Pupkin : 08-15-2006 at 01:58 PM.
Reply With Quote
  #33  
Old 08-15-2006, 02:04 PM
Rupert Pupkin Rupert Pupkin is offline
Del Mar
 
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 5,102
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by dalakhani
Frankel and Clement's barns at Toga arent exactly massive. And its not like Kent rides first call on all of their horses.

Kent was riding like **** during this streak...no way to defend that. But at the same time, all riders go through that and its not like he was blowing chalk every other race. Some of those horses simply didnt have a chance. In trying to establish himself in the east, Kent is taking mounts he wouldnt have taken on the west coast.

He is a good rider and does anyone want to bet that he finishes with a pct in the teens?

As for the ride on Relaxed Gesture, kent got stuck in no mans land. His horse broke really sharply and there was no pace. If he would have ridden on the lead the whole way, everyone would have asked why he was on the lead. The horse wouldnt relax and he did what he could. Some of you act as if Relaxed Gesture never burned money. This horse is a money burning machine regardless of who is riding. Kent's ride certainly wasnt optimal but give some credit to the horse too.
As I said before, I can't criticize Kent for taking Relaxed Gesture back going into the clubhouse turn. I think that was the smart thing to do. You don't want to go head and head on the lead in a 1 1/2 mile race. For that matter, you really don't want to go head and head on the lead in any route race, especially on a horse that's not even a speed horse.
Reply With Quote
  #34  
Old 08-15-2006, 03:34 PM
KY_Sasquash KY_Sasquash is offline
Golden Gate
 
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 365
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Rupert Pupkin
As I said before, I can't criticize Kent for taking Relaxed Gesture back going into the clubhouse turn. I think that was the smart thing to do. You don't want to go head and head on the lead in a 1 1/2 mile race. For that matter, you really don't want to go head and head on the lead in any route race, especially on a horse that's not even a speed horse.

What about for taking the horse straight to the lead? That's not thehorse's running style?
Reply With Quote
  #35  
Old 08-15-2006, 03:55 PM
Rupert Pupkin Rupert Pupkin is offline
Del Mar
 
Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 5,102
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by KY_Sasquash
What about for taking the horse straight to the lead? That's not thehorse's running style?
I don't think he planned on going to the lead and I don't think he really tried to go to the lead. He broke good and there was absolutely no pace early and he found himself on the lead. That happens sometimes. Even if you have a horse that has never been anywehre near the lead in his life, if they go slow enough he can end up on the lead. It 's only a bad ride if a horse is on the lead and is going much faster than he normally goes. Relaxed Gesture is a horse who usually runs the half in :48 and change or :49. In the race on Saturday they went the half in :49 1/5 and he found himself on the lead. He's gone to the lead before. In the Man O War last year at Belmont, he was on the lead going :48 3/5. He ran 2nd that day.
Reply With Quote
  #36  
Old 08-15-2006, 04:28 PM
oracle80
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by dalakhani
Rupert I just got home from taking my friend the clocker out to see some yearlings that he wanted to scout for an owner. He was absolutely filled with depression and rage at Gomez for that ride. He really emptied out on Weaver's horse and could not believe what Gomez did. Rupert you simply cannot ride a two year old making his or her first start going two turns as Gomez did. He rides every horse as if it is a 6 year old gelding who knows what to do in a race. He had so much horse underneath him and yanking her wide and setting her down hard to try and blow the field away was not the thing to do. She came up short due to the huge burst she was asked to use. Meanwhile Johnny saved all the ground and didn't panic when she blew by him, he stayed with his mount and had horse at the end. Gomez definitely blew that race. My clocker's exact words were "Gomez stinks, he does stupid things every time I bet him". Now this is a guy who trained grade one winners and has spent his life at the track.
You can rail on about anything you want but the bottom line is this, you go ahead and find me ONE ride at the entire meet where Johnny or Edgar gave a single ride like the one Gomez gave Milwaukee. Try it, you will fail. They will give bad rides like anyone else but they will not commit complete disasters from start to finish like Gomez has given so many times this year like Sigfreto and Milwaukee. Its why he goes 0-5 days and the other two don't. You won't EVER see Prado or Velazquez go 0-5 days, ever, never. It does not happen. Gomez simply refuses to adapt his style to the shorter priced horses he rides. Every ride has to be a thrill seeking daredevil event. Sure when he pulls one off he looks great. But when you are riding the caliber of animal he now rides you are supposed to keep many of them clear, near the lead, and out of harms way. He refuses to do this. You have said about Edgar thathe looks weak down the stretch and have expressed amazement that he wins like he does. many say Johnny doesn't do anything special most of the time. Races aren't about looking like a daredevil superstar every time, races are about winning. Give me the guy who stays three wide and out of trouble when hes on the best horse over the guy who tries to hit every moving hole at 35 MPH. In the long run the guys who ride smart will win more races and not give bettors or trainers heartburn. If johnny or Edgar ever gave a ride like the ones Gomez gave Violette's maiden last week on teh grass, Sigreto, or Milwaukee they would hang themselves. You can rail on about money won this year but you and I both know thats not really accurate or fair. The money in california is huge in the winter while Gulf's is horrible. It evens out when the eats Coast goes to Keeneland and then Belmont and Gomez took Johnny's mounts when he was hurt. If you honestly think that Gomez would be leading either Johnny or Edgar without that injury you are delusional. He will get run down before the year is out and we both know it. All I know is since the day you came on here chirping that Gomez was leading rider he has served up some delicious bagels with cream cheese and watched three guys pass him and two others tie him despite his live mounts. At the highest level of any profession its all about consistency and the other two have it and he does not. Thats what seperates them.
What i bolded is simply not true. Ive seen them all go winless. I saw bailey go 0 for like 8 one day at Aqueduct on a stake day no less. Johnny and Edgar blow rides just like everyone else and they certainly have gone 0 for 5 during a day of racing.

***edit***

I just re-read your post and now i am wondering if i misunderstood you. Did you mean 0-5 during a day of racing or did you mean not winning a race in five days? If you meant the latter, my apology.[/quote]


I stated what I meant, 0-5 days. Gomez has done this several times this year already that I know of, maybe more. Lots of luck trying to find Johnny or Edgar going 0-5 days, it DOES NOT happen.
Reply With Quote
Reply



Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 06:39 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.