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  #1  
Old 05-25-2009, 05:45 PM
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GenuineRisk GenuineRisk is offline
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I don't think D Wayne really cares about whether the TC races are changed; I think he cares about getting his name in the paper and is very good at giving quotes that will do just that. And he succeeded, because here's a whole thread based on an editorial based on something he said.

I think the best thing that could be done to raise the chances of a Triple Crown would be to limit the size Derby field. The more horses in a race, the more luck factors into the win. I think if the Derby field in '05 had been 14 we'd be arguing about whether Afleet Alex was a deserving Triple Crown winner and who did he really beat.

That said, I don't know that I'd change it. Even with the huge field permitted, we've had lots of near misses in the TC since Affirmed won. It'll happen again. The 11 TC winners were lucky as well as good (some luckier than others, I guess, seeing as how only six of them are in the first 20 of Bloodhorse's Top 100 of the 20th Century).
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Old 05-26-2009, 12:54 AM
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Phalaris1913 Phalaris1913 is offline
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Some won it when it was four weeks after the Belmont. Perhaps if you had given Smarty Jones or Real Quiet an additional week of rest before the Belmont, they too could have won it.

Yeah, but the TC winners whose Belmont was four weeks after the second leg were not getting any additional rest, since they all ran in other races between the Preakness and Belmont.
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Old 05-26-2009, 10:19 AM
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Thunder Gulch Thunder Gulch is offline
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While I'm not in favor of any changes to the triple crown races, I do think the Belmont is raced at an obsolete distance and winning today is no indicator of class and talent.
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Old 05-26-2009, 09:17 AM
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The Indomitable DrugS The Indomitable DrugS is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kasept
You don't see Neil Howard, John Shirreffs, and Shug McGaughey having trouble developing horses as an example, because with the owners they are associated with, there is no urgency to earn back what's been invested within year one of the owner's horses on the racetrack.
There was a time when John Shirreffs was bar none the best trainer in the game with first time starters .. he made someone like a Wesley Ward look like an ultra conservative trainer who's MO is bringing them along slowly.

Those 505 horses he had would run their eyes out on debut and never develop much. Once he lost 505, it was as if he became a much different kind of trainer.
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Old 05-26-2009, 09:22 AM
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Kasept Kasept is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by The Indomitable DrugS
There was a time when John Shirreffs was bar none the best trainer in the game with first time starters .. he made someone like a Wesley Ward look like an ultra conservative trainer who's MO is bringing them along slowly.

Those 505 horses he had would run their eyes out on debut and never develop much. Once he lost 505, it was as if he became a much different kind of trainer.
Proving how good a horseman he is and that trainers operate in response to owners' interests, instructions, demands... Or in the case of Shirreffs, Howard and McGaughey, at the luxury of having owners who can afford to be patient with the horses they breed or buy.
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Old 05-26-2009, 10:59 AM
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dalakhani dalakhani is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kasept
Proving how good a horseman he is and that trainers operate in response to owners' interests, instructions, demands... Or in the case of Shirreffs, Howard and McGaughey, at the luxury of having owners who can afford to be patient with the horses they breed or buy.
And isn't that type of owner more of an anomaly in today's racing world? What is the likelihood racing is going to go back to where that owner is the norm? it appears to this non-insider that racing is going further and further away from that type and more toward the IEAH's of the world.
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Old 05-26-2009, 11:18 AM
Danzig Danzig is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dalakhani
And isn't that type of owner more of an anomaly in today's racing world? What is the likelihood racing is going to go back to where that owner is the norm? it appears to this non-insider that racing is going further and further away from that type and more toward the IEAH's of the world.
not going to happen. i think things began to change when the commercial breeders took over. instead of racing being about breeding a good horse to further the breed, it has become purely about the bottom line. that's why you have so much emphasis on precocity, so you can 'get out' on a horse early. that's also why you have so many early retirements-a desire to get a horse in the shed before a defeat can spell disaster for his stud fee. it's no longer about runners being a showcase for a stallion, but about finding a runner who can wow someone enough to demand five figures at stud-altho six would be better...that also explains the increasing shuttling of stallions, which is no better for a stud than having 170 mare books.
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  #8  
Old 05-26-2009, 11:49 AM
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Kasept Kasept is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dalakhani
And isn't that type of owner more of an anomaly in today's racing world? What is the likelihood racing is going to go back to where that owner is the norm? it appears to this non-insider that racing is going further and further away from that type and more toward the IEAH's of the world.
I'd say we actually are headed back in trhe right direction somewhat, though I would need Chuck and similar breeding business participants to support my impulse... There's a very wide array of ownership these days, and there seem to be more operations than in recent memory that are assembling broodmare bands and producing homebreds to race, and sell, with eyes on quality. There are operators/operations like Satish Sanan (Padua), Ro Parra (Millenium), Nathan Fox (Richland Hills), Ahmet Zayat, etc., who are breeding, racing, selling, etc., as well as Brereton Jones, Charlotte Weber, Ned Evans, Heilingbrodt, The Mosses, et al, off the top of my head. Stonerside was until selling out. I guess Jess Jackson is trying to as well... Do they equal Calumet, Claiborne, Darby Dan, the Phipps operation, etc.? Maybe...

As an aside, an IEAH isn't really a negative at all in the overall equation. They are buying ready-made horses as investments hoping to get on to 'syndicatable' sires that will have long, profitable shed careers. They did buy Stardom Bound of course, (hoping for glory but with obvious fall-back potential as marketable broodmare), and have geldings in their racing operation too.. But since they are looking for sire material for the most part, they aren't looking first and foremost at quick return type horses that for the last 15 years have ben defined as 'win early' types. And they are overpaying for horses which can only help re-circulate investment dollars back into the industry. Remember that the horses that they buy have likely been through the breeding/auction, system perhaps as pinhooks or whatever. So if they get bought another time, it's just plus revenue into the greater horse business money pool.
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