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#1
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Quote:
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When I think of vintage Jorge Chavez - I think of his Breeders Cup Classic ride on the hopeless chance NY Bred gelding L'Carriere. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ydT4S...A54CBFBDE8DA99 The horse had the exact same running sytle as Cigar and was about the first throwout on paper because he figured to be looking Cigar in the eye and hooked with him for pretty much the whole way. Chavez guns him out of the gate - and rushes up inside to get position on the tire tracks - the same tire tracks Inside Information rode that day - and under an all-out drive for almost every step of 10fs - L'Carriere runs 2nd to Cigar and is coming back to him late. The "Chop Chop in the slop" was a VERY legit betting angle. Chavez's ROI on on wet tracks was incredible. The guys who hated Chavez as a rider are the guys who don't value a jockeys ability on the front-end. He was very mediocre from off the pace. |
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#2
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L'Carriere wasn't as hopeless as you are making him out to be.
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#3
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Yes - he was only 51/1 and probably should have been 5,000/1 in a fairly run race.
http://www.equibase.com/premium/eqbP...try=USA&race=8 |
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#4
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I was at Saratoga in 1995 when L'Carriere was 2nd to Unaccounted For (wnd choice in the Classic) in the Whitney. I was also there a few weeks later when he romped (with Bailey up) in the Saratoga Cup over Unaccounted For (not one of Pat Day's better rides). I was also there the following year when he defended his crown in the Saratoga Cup. He had great wet track breeding and ran his best races going 10 furlongs. Like I said, he wasn't as hopeless as you're making him out to be. Did Justin Dew steal your login? |
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#5
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Ok, whatever. I hope you boxed that exacta with Cigar and cleaned up.
I guess Chavez always sucked and Solis is some kind of dominant west coast jockey I've somehow massively underrated - while simultaniously overrating a half dozen to a dozen other guys in the same room - over all of these years. My lying eyes and lying stats be damned. I'm also going to take a stab and say that Chavez isn't a good rider anymore as a 50-year-old man because his riding style was by far the busiest I've ever seen from an accomplished jockey. Not being at peak fitness and health probably isn't as important when you just sit still and urge late. |
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#6
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I grew up watching Chavez ride, man. He was a very good rider back in the day and a terrific wet track rider. I never said he wasn't and it was common knowledge to anyone playing NY. But stat wise, Solis has had a better career. That's it. |
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#7
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I guess we value different type of stats.
You must have respected the success of Fernando Jara, Shaun Bridgmohan, and Martin Garcia. Chavez - on horseback - looked like a monkey trying to fucl< a football. Even as he's faded away - I still enjoy watching him from time to time. He was my Grandpa's favorite. He called him "The Dish Washer" |